Home: Global Wood | Industry News & Markets |
US Furniture orders shrink for
second consecutive month in June |
According to Smith Leonard's latest Furniture Insight report, new orders in June decreased by 6% in US dollars compared to the same period in 2023, marking the third decline in the past 13 months and the second consecutive month of decline. Orders were down for around two-thirds of survey participants. Compared with May, orders were down 8%. Year to date, orders are up 3% compared with 2023, although that spread has narrowed significantly with the past two months of declines, Smith Leonard said. Shipments in June were down 8% from last year but flat from May. Shipments were down for around 80% of survey participants compared with last year. They¡¯re down 9% year to date. Backlogs were down 6% from last June and down 2% from May. Receivable levels were down 7% from last June and down 1% from May. Inventories were down 16% from last June and are even from May. The numbers of factory and warehouse employees were down 6% from last June and down 3% from May. Year to date, payroll expense is down 7%. Image from Furniture Insights@ ¡°June 2024 marked the second straight month in which both new orders and shipments declined over the comparable prior year month for the companies in our survey,¡± said Mark Laferriere, Smith Leonard assurance partner. ¡°This is in line with the 6% average decline in revenues reported by a representative group of the industry¡¯s public companies in their latest quarterly filings. ¡°As stated before, the national economic indicators continue to be ¡®mixed¡¯ in July/August 2024. Specifically, consumer confidence inched up overall and the housing sales showed some signs of life compared to prior periods, not to mention a relatively positive earnings report from Home Depot. However, consumers are still concerned with the overall labor market in light of recent unemployment data and consumer debt remains high, which is a factor for certain sectors of the industry. ¡°There continue to be indications that interest rate cuts are coming, with many expecting that to occur at the Fed¡¯s next meeting in mid- September. However, it could be next year before the full effect of those trickles down to the industry.¡± Laferriere concluded by saying that retailers were cautiously optimistic about the Labor Day weekend, which should ¡°provide some signal as to which way the industry is headed for the remainder of the year.¡± Source: smith-leonard.com |