To: Donald Wennerstrom who wrote (23039 ) 4/29/2005 2:14:12 AM From: Donald Wennerstrom Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 95738 Here is a "follow-up". An article that gives the latest "thinking". <<Evidence presented of economic pause 4/28/05 By Martin Crutsinger Associated Press WASHINGTON — A deep drop in orders for big-ticket manufactured goods provided fresh evidence Wednesday that the economy slowed last month as energy prices rose. At least for now, the new “soft patch” is being viewed as temporary and not the start of something more serious like a recession. But analysts warned that if anything unexpected like a further surge in energy costs could spell trouble for an economy already facing rising interest rates. The Commerce Department reported that orders for durable goods plunged 2.8 percent in March. It was the biggest drop in 21/2 years. It left no doubt, analysts said, that the economy is going through a significant slowdown as consumers and businesses, jolted by a new surge in energy prices, cut back on their purchases. “The economy clearly paused last month and the pause was much broader and more pronounced than we had expected,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Economy.com. “March was an awfully bad month.” In addition to weakness in factory orders, payroll employment showed the smallest gain in eight months and retail sales were disappointing. The stock market has also taken its lumps as investors have grown worried about the possibility, though remote, of a return to the stagflation of the 1970s, where soaring energy costs drive inflation higher as economic growth stalls. The weakness so far has caused economists to slash their estimates for overall growth in the first quarter to perhaps as low as 3 percent, down sharply from the 4.4 percent increase in the gross domestic product turned in for all of 2004. Before the string of weaker-than-expected reports, some analysts were forecasting that first quarter growth could come in as high as 4 percent. The government will release its first look at GDP for the January-March period today. On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 47.67 points on Wednesday to close at 10,198.80 as a drop in oil prices and upbeat earnings news overshadowed the big decline in durable goods orders. The Dow had fallen 91 points on Tuesday. The drop in orders for durable goods — items expected to last three or more years — was the biggest since a 6 percent decline in September 2002. It also marked the third consecutive setback as orders fell by 0.2 percent in February and 1.2 percent in January. Orders haven’t fallen for three straight months since the summer of 2001, when the country was in the last recession. The weakness was widespread, led by a 7.8 percent decline in transportation, reflecting big drops in demand for civilian and military aircraft and a smaller decline in motor vehicles. Excluding the volatile transportation sector, orders were also down, dropping 1 percent, the second monthly decline. “The March decline was as broad as it was deep with orders falling in machinery, computers, fabricated metals, motor vehicles and aircraft,” said David Huether, chief economist for the National Association of Manufacturers.Huether said American companies are currently sitting on an unusually high $1.2 trillion in cash. They could be investing that money in new plants and equipment, “but uncertainty about many key policies that impact economic growth … are keeping investors on the sidelines,” he said. Other economists said energy prices will be a key influence on whether the current slowdown proves to be temporary or more severe. A big jump in energy prices last year created what Federal Reserve Alan Greenspan labeled a “soft patch” in the late spring and summer. >>