Durable Goods Orders: More Deceleration, Still No Recession

I normally don’t pay too much attention to durable goods orders. That’s because they are very noisy. They don’t always turn down in advance of a recession (see 2007-08), although they may at least stall, and there are a number of false positives as well (see 2016) as shown in the graph below showing up until the pandemic:

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But in 2022 they were one of the last short leading indicators to be positive. As late as November of last year I still rated them as a “positive.”

That has changed somewhat in the past several months. With the exception of December, durable goods orders have made no progress at all since last June, and while “core” durable goods orders excluding aircraft (Boeing) and defense increased in January, it remains below the level of last August and has generally been flat since then as well:

(Click on image to enlarge)

A YoY view shows that both measures of durable goods are decelerating, but neither are have deteriorated as much as before the last 3 recessions:

(Click on image to enlarge)

But if they continue at their current rate of deceleration, core capital goods will be negative YoY by about mid-year.

This has been a dominant theme in the data - especially some short leading and coincident indicators - for the past number of months: continuing deceleration, but not turning negative yet. 


More By This Author:

Strong Upward Revisions Push Real Personal Income To New Highs
New Home Sales: A Bright Spot In The Housing Indicators
The “Gold Standard” Of Jobs Data Shows A Strong Rebound In Q3 2022

Disclaimer: This blog contains opinions and observations. It is not professional advice in any way, shape or form and should not be construed that way. In other words, buyer beware.

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