WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S. economic recovery from the recession is on track. <br>
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Solid retail sales, brisk housing activity and improvements for some of the nation's factories gave the economy more momentum in March and early April, the Federal Reserve said Wednesday. <br>
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``The overall tone was positive,'' the Fed said in its latest survey of business conditions around the country. A few Fed regions, however, ``expressed qualifications about the pace of the recovery or the strength'' in their economies. <br>
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For instance, Boston described economic activity as mixed. Cleveland said its economy was improving at a much slower pace than earlier in the year. Kansas City, Mo., and Dallas said their economies remained weak despite some signs of a turnaround. <br>
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The survey, based on information supplied by the Fed's 12 regional bank districts, will be used by Fed policy-makers when they meet on May 7 to discuss interest rate policy. Most economists predict the Fed will not change interest rates - now at 40-year lows - given the fledgling recovery. <br>
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For most regions, retail sales rose moderately or held steady, the Fed said in the survey. Sales of home furnishings did especially well. Car sales were mixed. Tourism activity improved. <br>
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Home sales and construction activity increased in most areas, but commercial real-estate market largely still was weak, especially in San Francisco, Dallas and Atlanta. <br>
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Manufacturing either stabilized or showed signs of improving, with some plants hiring back laid-off workers. Manufacturers' capital spending plans remained limited. <br>
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Producers of auto parts, steel, residential building materials and furniture reported the strongest activity, the Fed said. <br>
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A second economic report Wednesday suggested that for manufacturers, the recovery is in low gear. <br>
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Orders to U.S. factories for big-ticket goods, including cars and computers, edged down 0.6 percent last month after a solid 2.7 percent gain in February, the Commerce Department said. The decline was the first in the past four months. <br>
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The report ``suggests a strong and broad-based recovery has yet to take hold in manufacturing,'' said Jerry Jasinowski, president of the National Association of Manufacturers. <br>
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On Wall Street, stocks moved lower. The Dow Jones industrial average closed down 58.81 points at 10,030.43. <br>
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Economists did not believe the drop in orders was a sign that the manufacturing sector was headed for a serious backslide. They saw it as a temporary rough path along the comeback trail. <br>
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``While there is continued movement forward in manufacturing, clearly the sector has not picked up a whole lot of steam,'' said economist Joel Naroff of Naroff Economic Advisors. <br>
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The government also announced Wednesday that its durable-goods reports would no longer include statistics on orders and shipments of semiconductors because a large number of chip makers declined to give the information. <br>
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Semiconductors accounted for between 3 percent and 3.5 percent of the total durable-goods tracked by the government. March's report was the first in which the information on the sector was not included. <br>
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``It robs us of some information about a key sector that has really been having some problems,'' Naroff said. ``Can we live without it? Yes. But we would prefer not to.'' <br>
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A big cutback by businesses in high-tech equipment was a major reason why the economy fell into a slump. Economists have paid close attention to orders placed for semiconductors and other high-tech equipment to help gauge a turnaround in capital investment, a key ingredient to the economic recovery. <br>
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``Policy-makers and the markets have taken a particularly keen interest in the durable goods indicator as a bellwether of investment,'' said Kathleen Cooper, the Commerce's undersecretary for economic affairs. ``This omission of semiconductor data does not make the remaining data less valuable but it does hinder historical comparisons.'' <br>
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In a third report, sales of new homes fell by 3.1 percent in March, following a strong 6.2 percent rise. Even with the decline, 878,000 homes were sold, at an annual rate, a still-robust level. <br>
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Economists believed the decline largely reflected the return of cold weather in March, making people feel less inclined to look at houses. But a rise in mortgage rates also played a role.
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