US GDP expands at healthy 2.9% pace while slowdown signs mount

30 Jan, 2023 - 00:01 0 Views
US GDP expands at healthy 2.9% pace while slowdown signs mount

eBusiness Weekly

 Bloomberg

The US economy expanded at a healthy pace in the fourth quarter, though signs of slowing underlying demand mounted as the steepest interest-rate hikes in decades threaten growth this year.

Gross domestic product increased at a 2.9 percent annualised rate in final three months of 2022 after a 3.2 percent gain in the third quarter, the Commerce Department’s initial estimate showed Thursday. About half of the GDP increase reflected inventory growth, while government outlays matched the biggest gain since early 2021.

Personal consumption, the biggest part of the economy, climbed at a below-forecast 2.1% pace.

The mixed report suggests that the Federal Reserve still has a path to a soft landing with officials set to further downshift their rate increases next week and debate when to pause. Their preferred price gauge rose at the slowest pace in two years, while a separate report showed unemployment filings remained near historic lows.

The data showed some signs of stress for American consumers whose wages have failed to keep up with inflation and continued to encourage them to draw down savings accumulated from government pandemic-relief programs. The burden of elevated prices and higher borrowing costs is mounting, pointing to a tenuous outlook for the economy.

“When we look at what’s happening with the consumer, which is the backbone of the US economy, we are seeing a clear loss of momentum,” Lindsey Piegza, chief economist at Stifel Nicolaus & Co. in Chicago, said on Bloomberg Television. “Without the consumer happy and healthy out in the marketplace, we simply cannot expect to maintain positive growth, let alone more robust growth similar” to the end of last year, she said.

A key gauge of underlying demand that strips out the trade and inventories components — inflation-adjusted final sales to domestic purchasers — rose an annualised 0.8 percent in the fourth quarter after a 1.5 percent gain. Final sales to private domestic purchasers climbed just 0.2 percent, the weakest since the second quarter of 2020.
The latest Bloomberg monthly survey shows economists see the economy shrinking in the second and third quarters, putting 65% odds on a recession in the coming year.

Stock-index futures and Treasury yields remained higher and the dollar was little changed after the GDP report and better-than-expected weekly jobless claims. Applications for unemployment insurance dropped to 186 000 last week, the lowest since April.

Recent data show cracks are developing more broadly. Retail and motor vehicle sales data showed households are starting to retrench, the housing market continues to weaken and some businesses are reconsidering capital spending plans.

As the Fed continues to hike interest rates to ensure inflation is extinguished, housing and manufacturing have deteriorated quickly while industries including banking and technology are carrying out mass layoffs.

The GDP report showed the personal consumption expenditures price index, a key inflation metric for the Fed, rose at an annualized 3.2 percent rate in the fourth quarter, the slowest since 2020 and down from a 4.3 percent pace in the prior three months.

The core index that excludes food and energy climbed at a 3.9% rate, the slowest since the first quarter of 2021 after 4.7% paces in the prior two quarters. Monthly data for December will be released Friday.

The moderation in price pressures is consistent with forecasts that the Fed will further scale back its tightening campaign next week, when it’s expected to raise rates by 25 basis points. Policymakers boosted the benchmark rate by 50 points in December after 75 basis-point hikes at their previous four meetings.

Last year
The world’s largest economy expanded 2.1 percent last year. In 2021, when demand snapped back from pandemic-related shutdowns, the economy grew 5.9 percent — the best performance since 1984.

The GDP data showed services spending increased at 2.6 percent annualised rate in the October-December period, the slowest since last year’s first quarter. Outlays on goods rose at a 1.1 percent pace, the first advance since 2021.

Business investment slowed sharply after a third-quarter surge. Spending on equipment declined an annualised 3.7 percent, the most since the second quarter of 2020.

Outlays for structures rose at a 0.4 percent pace. Another report Thursday showed bookings for non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft, a proxy for business investment, dropped 0.2 percent in December — the most in three months.

Residential investment slumped at a 26.7 percent annual pace, marking the seventh-straight quarterly decline. Home sales fell last year by the most since 2008 as mortgage rates skyrocketed.

Inventories contributed 1.46 percentage points to GDP, while trade added 0.56 percentage point. Separate data on Thursday showed the merchandise-trade gap widened last month to the largest on record due to the biggest-ever increase in imports. The figures aren’t adjusted for inflation.

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