* U.S. factory orders rise 0.9 percent in September
* Durable goods orders revised up
* Shrinking nondurables inventories could curtail growth
(Adds details on auto sales)
By Lisa Lambert
WASHINGTON, Nov 3 (Reuters) - U.S. factory orders rose a
stronger-than-expected 0.9 percent in September, and
inventories continued to shrink, bolstering prospects for a
sustained economic recovery.
It was the fifth month out of the past six U.S.
manufacturers saw orders rise, the Commerce Department said on
Tuesday. Analysts had expected a 0.8 percent increase.
"It's a solid rise in orders. They are consistent with
manufacturing growing again," said James O'Sullivan, chief
economist for MF Global in New York. "Inventories are still
falling so there is more room for orders and production to
grow."
Factories cut their stocks by 1 percent in September, the
13th straight month of declines in manufacturing inventories.
It is the longest streak of falling inventories since a
15-month string that began in February 2001.
The draw-down is good news because it makes it more likely
that any future spending will drive new output.
U.S. stock indexes pared losses on the news, but the data
was overshadowed by a downgrade of the semiconductor sector and
a shake-up at two big British banks. The dollar rose on a
safe-haven bid driven by those concerns.
RECOVERY WORRIES
The factory data followed a week after the government
reported the U.S. economy grew at a 3.5 percent annual rate in
the third quarter, snapping four straight quarters of
contraction and signaling an end to the nation's deepest
recession since the Great Depression.
Worries about the sustainability of the stimulus-led
recovery remain, however, with analysts warning rising
unemployment could sap consumer spending that drives the
economy. The U.S. government will report on the jobless rate on
Friday, which analysts expect to have risen to 9.9 percent in
October from a 26-year high of 9.8 percent in September.
And even Tuesday's data on factory orders and inventories
raised questions by some analysts about the strength of the
recovery.
Because the factory orders report showed a sharper cut in
inventories than the Commerce Department had reported last
week, analysts said it implied third-quarter economic growth
was weaker than the government's initial estimate.
The Commerce Department said last week that a slowdown in
the rate at which businesses were liquidating inventories in
the second quarter added nearly a percentage point to the
increase in U.S. gross domestic product.
Based on Tuesday's factory data, JPMorgan Securities Global
Economic Research said it cut its estimate for third-quarter
growth to 3.1 percent.
Concerns about a fragile recovery will likely inspire the
U.S. Federal Reserve to move cautiously at its two-day policy
meeting that began on Tuesday afternoon. The Fed is expected to
maintain its commitment to hold benchmark interest rates
exceptionally low. For a related story, please see
.
BUILDING BLOCK FOR GROWTH
The factory data came on the heels of a report from the
Institute for Supply Management on Monday that showed U.S.
factory activity hit its highest level in more than three years
last month.
ISM's manufacturing gauge has now come in above 50 -- the
dividing line between expansion and contraction -- for three
months in a row.
There have been other signs that the building blocks of
recovery are in place.
Billionaire investor Warren Buffett on Tuesday called his
$26 billion deal to buy the rest of U.S. railroad Burlington
Northern Santa Fe Corp "an all-in wager on the economic future
of the economy."
October reports from U.S. automakers suggested another
bright spot as sales hit an annualized rate of 10.46 million
units, according to industry tracking firm Autodata, a level
not seen in a year except for July and August when the U.S.
government's "cash for clunkers" incentives program sparked a
surge in sales.
General Motors [GM.UL] posted its first monthly sales
increase in nearly two years on Tuesday as a rebound in
industry-wide U.S. auto sales in October pointed toward a
gradual recovery for the battered sector.
Ford Motor Co (F/PA) said its U.S. sales rose 3.1 percent in
October from a year earlier. It expected U.S. vehicle sales to
come in about at about 10.6 million this year.
For a related story on the auto industry, please see
In other details from the Commerce Department's factory
report, the closely watched inventory-to-sales ratio moved down
to 1.36 from 1.38 in August. It was the lowest
inventory-to-sales ratio since October of last year.
The factory orders report also showed an upwardly revised
gain in orders for durable goods -- long-lasting items that
account for nearly half of overall orders -- to 1.4 percent
from the previously reported 1 percent increase.
Orders for non-durable items rose 0.6 percent in September,
building on the 0.9 percent rise seen in August.
Pierre Ellis, senior economist at Decision Economics in New
York, said the upward revision in durable goods orders was
"heartening, but it's not a game changer. The game changer may
come in October given the general strength in the ISM survey."
(Additional reporting by Richard Leong and Ellen Freilich
in New York; Editing by Andrew Hay)