Orders decrease by 3.7 per cent after the rise in March, when transactions increase in purchase in anticipation of tariffs.
The orders of the United States factories have collapsed in April after the rise in March when transactions have a front-load purchase in anticipation of tariffs.
According to the census Bureau released on Tuesday, US -manufactured goods were reduced by 3.7 per cent on a monthly basis, worse than the economists expected.
The economists who voted for Reuters news agency expected a decline of 3.1 per cent. Dow Jones forecasts a decline of 3.3 per cent. However, on an annual basis, factory orders have increased by 2 per cent.
The April Report is in contrast to a 3.4 per cent increase in March, top of the five straight month increase.
Production of 10.2 per cent of the US economy is under pressure President Donald Trump’s offensive tariffs. Trump sees tariffs as a tool to compensate for the expansion of tax cuts and rejuvenate the long -term industrial base, arguing that in the short term, economists argued that the lack of labor and other structural problems in the short term.
The hardest hit zones
Orders in the transport sector fell 17.1 per cent, due to a sharp drop in the commercial aircraft. In April, flight orders fell 51.5 per cent. Orders for motor vehiclesParts and trailers fell 0.7 per cent.
Power equipment, materials and unit production have fallen by 0.3 per cent. But the production of computers and other electronic products is actually increased by 1 percent.
Machinery orders rose 0.6 per cent. The orders fell 0.5 per cent, except for the transport that caused the exacerbation of the March orders, matching the decline in the transportation of March.
The government reported that the Nandefense Capital goods orders, except for the aircraft, were approximately 1.3 percent, as estimated in April in April, a measure of equipment.
The shipment of this core capital goods fell from 0.1 percent or 8 1.8 billion.
The Institute for Supply Management Survey showed that production was contracted for the third consecutive month in May, and suppliers took a long time for nearly three years to deliver the inflow to the factories.