- Pfizer Plans to Cut Up to 2,400 in Sales Staff
- Layoffs Picking Up Speed—Is Your Firm On the List?
- Worst Is Over for Banks—Not Economy: Pimco's Gross
- Obama: Economy Will Worsen Even With Stimulus
- What's In the Stimulus Plan
- GE Capital to Slash Up to 11,000 Jobs to Cut Costs
- US Weighs New Plan to Buy Banks' Bad Assets: Bair
- Barclays, UK Banks Crash on Short-Selling, Jitters
- Where Has the TARP Bailout Money Gone?
- Your First Move For Tuesday January 20th
- Web Extra: Sign Of Bottom For Autos?
- Big Earnings on Deck
- Ratigan Favorite: The Bailout Video Game
- Pops & Drops: McDonald's, Kimberly-Clark...
- Investing In Uncle Sam’s Shadow
- Is a “Bad Bank” The Answer?
- Stocks Rise In Face Of Bank Bailouts
- Market Orders Are for Suckers
New orders received by U.S. factories plunged a much-greater-than-expected 4.6 percent in November, the fourth straight monthly decline and a sign the sharp drop in manufacturing is deepening the recession, a government report showed on Tuesday.
It was the first time factory orders had fallen for four consecutive months since the government began assembling the data in its current form in 1992, the Commerce Department said. Analysts polled by Reuters were expecting factory orders to drop 2.5 percent.
(Watch the accompanying video for more on the numbers...)
An indicator of business confidence rose, however, as non-defense capital goods orders excluding aircraft rose 3.9 percent, the biggest rise since December 2007.
The total value of shipments fell 5.3 percent, the sharpest drop since the government began assembling the data.
November durable goods orders fell by 1.5 percent, a steeper drop than the 1 percent originally reported. The U.S. factory sector has been particularly hard-hit in the downturn that began in December 2007.
A widely watched gauge of factory activity fell to a 28-year low in December while auto sales plunged by 36 percent that month, recent reports have shown.






