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Economic Report: Durable-goods orders jump 1.3% in October as manufacturers lead U.S. economic recovery

Orders for long-lasting goods such as computers and appliances rose in October for the sixth month in a row and business investment also increased, a sign the ongoing recovery might have plenty of staying power despite another major coronavirus outbreak. Read More...

Manufacturers are on the mend and hopeful about a return to normalcy next year if vaccines for the coronavirus prove effective.

Matthias Hangst/Getty Images

The numbers: Orders for long-lasting goods such as computers and appliances rose again in October and business investment increased for the sixth month in a row, a sign the ongoing recovery might have plenty of staying power despite another major coronavirus outbreak.

Durable-goods orders rose a healthy 1.3% last month, the government said Wednesday. Economists polled by MarketWatch had forecast a 0.5% increase.

Read: Raging pandemic singes economy. Darker days ahead?

What happened: Ordersincreased for computers, networking equipment, fabricated-metal parts and electrical equipment.

Demand for computers and related products has snapped back during the pandemic with so many people working from home and needing upgraded equipment.

Orders fell 3.2% for new cars and trucks and they declined again for commercial planes. Boeing BA has been a drag on orders the entire year because airlines aren’t ordering new planes.

Orders rose 1.3% excluding the volatile transportation industry.

A key measure of business investment known as core capital orders, meanwhile, rose by 0.7% in October. Investment has risen 6.2% over the past year, the fastest 12-month gain in a year and a half.

The acceleration in investment is a particularly welcome sign. A pair of surveys earlier this week showed businesses are increasingly optimistic about a return to normalcy next year on the assumption that vaccines become widespread.

Read: U.S. businesses grow faster despite coronavirus spike

A number of pharmaceutical companies including Pfizer PFE, +0.21% and Moderna MRNA, -2.44% have announced their vaccines are effective. The vaccines could start to become available as early as next month.

The end of a bitterly contested 2020 presidential election has also given businesses more certainty about what to expect from Washington next year. A closely divided Congress is likely to result in few major changes in tax and regulatory policy.

Big picture: Businesses, especially manufacturers, are more optimistic than consumers and are planning ahead to next year. Orders for durable goods — products that last a long time — typically rise when the economy is strong or improving.

Read: Fed’s Bullard sees ‘light’ at the end of the coronavirus tunnel

The big hurdle is the record rise in coronavirus cases. If demand slumps again either at home or abroad, companies will have to scale back, at least temporarily.

In a separate report Wednesday, the government said new jobless claims rose for the second week in a row to a five-week high, pointing to an increase in layoffs due the more government restrictions on restaurants and other businesses that rely on large crowds of customers.

Read: Jobless claims jump to 5-week high amid record coronavirus wave

Manufacturers are less likely to be affected because they have more control over their work environments.

Market reaction: The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA and S&P 500 SPX were set to open lower in Wednesday trades. The Dow topped 30,000 on Tuesday for the first time ever.

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