U.S. business investment rose in November for 2nd month

WASHINGTON — U.S. businesses stepped up their spending on industrial machinery, steel, and other big-ticket items last month, a sign that one of the economy's weak spots may be improving.

The Commerce Department said Thursday that a measure that tracks business investment rose 0.9 percent in November, after a slight 0.2 percent rise the previous month. Yet those gains follow a 1.5 percent drop in September.

Orders for all big-ticket factory goods fell 4.6 percent, mostly because of a sharp fall in demand for commercial aircraft, a volatile category. Excluding transportation-related goods, orders rose 0.5 percent.

The data "looked awful in the headline tally, but the headline hides a solid performance in core capital goods and total durables," Michael Montgomery, U.S. economist at IHS, said. "The manufacturing sector is looking better for a change."

Aircraft orders dropped 73.5 percent in November, after jumping 94.6 percent in the previous month. Boeing reported receiving orders for 13 planes last month, after 85 in October.

The figures suggest businesses may be loosening their purse strings after more than a year of cutbacks that have weighed on the economy. Business investment spending is down 3.9 percent this year compared with 2015.

Companies have reduced their spending on equipment for four straight quarters, the longest streak since the recession. A drop in oil and gas prices has been a key culprit: Drilling companies have cut their orders for steel pipe and machinery in response.

Read Friday's Arkansas Democrat-Gazette for full details.

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