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Durable goods numbers may bode well for some stocks (SHLD, HD, AAPL)

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Durable goods are products that should last more than 3 years. That usually includes things like appliances, furnishings, and heavy equipment. The Commerce Department tracks this data and the number of orders for these things popped up an extra 4.9% in July, which was a nice surprise.

Why do I care whether North Americans are buying a new fridge? This is actually a metric you should watch for insight into potential corporate profits. If durable goods (which tend to cost a lot) are being purchased at an increasing rate, it bodes well for the companies that produce and sell those products.

Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL), Sears Holdings Corp. (NASDAQ: SHLD), or The Home Depot Inc. (NYSE: HD) are all examples of stocks with products included in the definition of durable goods. Watching companies like this for some buying opportunities may be a good idea.

The last time the durable goods report really surprised to the downside was November of 2008, which ultimately resolved itself several months later as a double bottom. The durable goods report is sort of a "gut check" for the entire manufacturing and retailing industry. If earnings had been good (which they were) but durable goods were slipping, I would be very worried about a big correction back down in the stock market.

John Jagerson is a co-founder of Learning Markets LLC.

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Last updated: November 28, 2009: 03:44 AM

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