US business spending rises for 3rd month, boosting factories
WASHINGTON — U.S. businesses ramped up their investment in industrial machinery, semiconductors and other big-ticket items last month, boosting demand for factory goods.
A measure that tracks business spending plans climbed 0.8 per cent in December, after jumping 1.5 per cent the previous month, the Commerce Department said Friday.
Orders for all durable goods, which are meant to last longer than three years, slipped 0.4 per cent, mostly because of a sharp fall in demand for defence aircraft, a volatile category. Excluding transportation-related goods, orders rose 0.5 per cent, the sixth straight increase.
The report adds to recent evidence that manufacturers are climbing out of a roughly two-year rut. A strong U.S. dollar and falling oil and gas prices had sliced demand for factory products, as drillers ordered less steel pipe and other equipment. Yet demand has risen since oil prices have stabilized.


