Market OutlookHIGH
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Durable goods orders are a quick check on big-ticket business spending, and the setup is messy: last month jumped 7.9%, while this round is expected to swing to -4.3%. That kind of whiplash can make investors question whether the economy is simply bouncing around or losing momentum. With the market still choppy, a sharp miss or beat could matter for both growth fears and rate expectations.
If durable goods orders fall less than the expected -4.3%, investors may read that as a sign that business spending is holding up better than feared. That can support cyclical sectors and soften recession worries.
If the drop is worse than expected, the market will likely treat it as a warning that firms are pulling back on big purchases. That would tend to weigh on growth-sensitive shares and push the focus back toward slower demand.
If the headline lands near -4.3%, the move may be limited because the prior month was unusually strong at 7.9%. In that case, traders are more likely to ask whether the swing is noise or the start of a real slowdown.
Industrials sit close to factory orders, equipment demand, and capital spending. A weaker report would point to softer business investment; a stronger one would suggest those plans are still alive.