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Earlier weakness in equipment investment fading The solid rebound in durable goods orders in February suggests that the recent decline in corporate borrowing costs is feeding through to a tentative recovery in business equipment investment. The 1.4% m/m …
26th March 2024
Fed officials still see rate cuts, despite higher core inflation projections Despite upward revisions to the median projections for both GDP growth and core PCE inflation, the median forecast for interest rates – released at the end of the Fed’s two-day …
20th March 2024
Consumer confidence edges down The small fall the University of Michigan measure of consumer sentiment in March is further evidence that the buoyant stock market alone will not prevent consumption growth from slowing. As the current conditions index was …
15th March 2024
Unwinding of weather distortion boosts manufacturing In line with the rebound in retail sales, manufacturing output was boosted in February by the unwinding of the hit from the winter snowstorms that weighed on production in January. Even as that boost …
Weakness in control group sales suggests January fall wasn’t all due to weather The 0.6% m/m rebound in retail sales in February appears to reflect the unwinding of the drag on sales from the winter storms in early January, but the details suggest that …
14th March 2024
Second hot core CPI print could put June rate cut at risk The second consecutive 0.4% m/m increase in core CPI in February leaves Fed officials some way from attaining the “greater confidence” needed to begin cutting interest rates. The annual rate of …
12th March 2024
Labour market conditions easing despite employment strength The 275,000 rise in non-farm payrolls in February may, at face value, add weight to the Fed’s view that there is no rush to start cutting interest rates, but the downward revisions to previous …
8th March 2024
Imports set for stronger gain in first quarter The January trade data point to a potentially larger drag on first-quarter GDP growth than we had assumed, albeit mainly because imports look to have been stronger than previously believed. In nominal terms …
7th March 2024
Powell content to wait for more data Fed Chair Jerome Powell looks set to stick to his previous script in his testimony to Congress today and, assuming we are right that the January strength in core inflation will prove to be a blip, his remarks do not …
6th March 2024
Survey shows little signs of growth or inflation acceleration The fall in the ISM services index to 52.6 in February, from 53.4, left our weighted composite index consistent with a stagnation in GDP in the first quarter. That said, with the survey …
5th March 2024
No evidence to support inflation rebound The unexpected fall in the ISM manufacturing index in February still leaves it on a gradual upward trend, but the more important news for the Fed is that there is still no sign that a material rebound in goods …
1st March 2024
Resurgence in core prices a speed bump rather than pothole The surge in core PCE prices in January was largely as expected after the hot CPI and PPI reports. Although that surge has ruled out an early Fed rate cut, particularly in an environment where …
29th February 2024
Drop in durable goods orders will not derail business investment The sharp drop in durable goods orders in January was mostly driven by volatile transport orders, with the fall in core orders much more moderate. The strengthening in underlying capital …
27th February 2024
Minutes lean a little hawkish, but don’t rule out May rate cut The minutes of the Fed’s late January policy meeting included support for both hawks and doves although, somewhat disappointingly, there was no attempt to quantify what gaining “greater …
21st February 2024
Little change in confidence The surge in consumer confidence due to falling inflation expectations has stalled, with confidence little changed in February. However, with plenty of downward pressure on inflation in the pipeline, there is scope for …
16th February 2024
Adverse weather hits manufacturing & mining, but boosts utilities Adding to the weaker news on retail sales, manufacturing output declined by 0.5% m/m in January although, as with the former, the unseasonably severe winter temperatures and snow storms in …
15th February 2024
Consumption growth finally faltering The 0.8% m/m fall in retail sales in January might partly reflect the unwinding of a previous weather-related distortion, but should temper recent suggestions of an economic resurgence. We continue to expect GDP growth …
Core CPI boosted by strange-looking acceleration in OER The unexpectedly-strong 0.4% m/m increase in core CPI prices in January will feed the “last mile is the hardest” narrative – with core CPI inflation unchanged at 3.9% – but, other than a very …
13th February 2024
Much ado about nothing The annual revision to the seasonal factors used to generate the seasonally adjusted CPI data turned out to be a damp squib, with the new factors almost identical to the old ones. Nevertheless, since some Fed officials were …
9th February 2024
Support to growth from surging exports set to fade A sharp rebound in real exports in December helps explain why net external trade supported GDP growth in the fourth quarter but, with the surveys indicating that external demand is weakening fairly …
7th February 2024
Services activity apparently gaining momentum Following on the heels of the strong labour market data, the rebound in the ISM services index to a four-month high of 53.4 in January, from 50.5, is another signal that the US economy remains impervious to …
5th February 2024
Surging employment may explain Fed’s hawkishness The 353,000 surge in non-farm payrolls in January illustrates why the Fed is apparently in no rush to start cutting interest rates and kills off any remaining chance of a cut as soon as March. Even if that …
2nd February 2024
Manufacturing sector turning a corner The rebound in the ISM manufacturing index to 49.1 in January, from 47.1, indicates that the downturn in the sector is fading and appears to justify the Fed’s view that it can wait a little longer before cutting …
1st February 2024
Fed drops its tightening bias The Fed left its key policy rate unchanged at 5.25% to 5.50% today, but dropped its tightening bias, keeping open the possibility of a rate cut at the next FOMC meeting in mid-March. Admittedly, the new policy statement warns …
31st January 2024
Slower wage growth reinforcing disinflationary trend The further slowdown in wage growth evident in the fourth-quarter employment cost index illustrates that easing labour market conditions are helping to push inflation down. With the moderation in job …
Seven months of annualised core inflation at target The December income and spending data confirm that core PCE inflation has been running at an annualised pace in line with the Fed’s 2% target for seven months now. This reiterates the message that there …
26th January 2024
What landing? Although GDP growth came in hotter than expected in the fourth quarter, underlying inflation continued to slow, with annualised core PCE inflation running at the 2% target in the fourth quarter. The upshot is that an early spring rate cut by …
25th January 2024
Falling inflation finally providing a boost to confidence The surge in the University of Michigan measure of consumer sentiment in January indicates that recent sharp declines inflation are finally feeding through, although we doubt this signals an …
19th January 2024
Manufacturing sector stagnating The muted rise in manufacturing output in December shows that the sector continues to struggle, even as consumption growth remains strong. The 0.1% m/m increase in manufacturing output in December meant that the …
17th January 2024
Consumers end the year on a high The 0.6% m/m rise in retail sales in December may have been supported by the unseasonably mild weather, but it still means there is no sign that households are buckling under the pressure of higher interest rates with …
Core prices boosted by used vehicles & shelter The slightly bigger 0.3% m/m increases in both headline and core CPI would seem to justify the stance of Fed officials that the road back to target could be a little bumpy, but we’re not convinced. The annual …
11th January 2024
Falling imports and exports suggests demand softening at home and abroad The weakness of both exports and imports in November suggests that weaker growth overseas is now being matched by a softening in domestic demand too. The trade deficit shrank …
9th January 2024
Weak ISMs should probably be taken with a pinch of salt The plunge in the ISM services index to a 7-month low in December suggests, at face value, that the economy is sliding into recession. But the poor relationship between the surveys and the hard …
5th January 2024
Employment gains still dominated by non-cyclical growth The slightly bigger-than-expected 216,000 gain in non-farm payrolls (consensus estimate was 170,000) in December coupled with a second consecutive 0.4% m/m gain in average hourly earnings means that …
Minutes more nuanced than expected, given post-FOMC hawkish chatter The minutes of the mid-December FOMC meeting were slightly more dovish that we were expecting – more in line with the message delivered by Fed Chair Jerome Powell in his press conference …
3rd January 2024
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. Modest rebound to end a dismal year Despite the modest rise in the ISM manufacturing index to 47.4 in December, from 46.7, the survey indicates that conditions in the factory …
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. Post-pandemic inflation is over; Fed rate cuts coming soon The confirmation that core PCE prices rose by just 0.06% m/m in November means that, over the past six months, core …
22nd December 2023
Manufacturing boosted by end of UAW strike The 0.3% m/m rebound in manufacturing output in November was, in reality, a disappointment, since it included a 7.1% m/m rebound in motor vehicle output, after the UAW union ended its strike at the Big Three …
15th December 2023
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. Solid consumption growth supports soft landing The rebound in retail sales in November provides further illustration that the continued rapid decline in inflation is not coming …
14th December 2023
Stubborn Fed demonstrates the SEP’s shortcomings The Fed’s reluctance to acknowledge that it will need to begin cutting its policy rate soon – to prevent a run-up in real rates – was predictable enough based on its intransigence ahead of previous turning …
13th December 2023
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. Stronger rise in core prices buys Fed a little more time The slightly stronger 0.28% m/m rise in core consumer prices in November suggests the Fed may be able to hang onto its …
12th December 2023
Inflation concerns easing The plunge in the University of Michigan’s consumer inflation expectations measures in December will give reassurance to the Fed ahead of its meeting next week that there are few signs of inflationary pressures reigniting. …
8th December 2023
Payrolls boosted by returning strikers The 199,000 increase in November payroll employment included 47,000 workers returning from strikes (30,000 UAW members and 17,000 SAG Aftra members). Stripping out that one-off boost, the 152,000 gain was roughly the …
Imports and exports set for further growth in Q4 Despite the widening in the trade deficit in October, net trade looks set to be only a modest drag on fourth-quarter GDP growth. But the survey evidence suggests renewed weakness in exports may still lie …
6th December 2023
Muted ISM services consistent with GDP stagnation; job openings drop back The modest rebound in the ISM services index to 52.7 in November, from 51.8, left our weighted composite index at a level consistent with an outright stagnation in GDP. Admittedly, …
5th December 2023
This page had been updated with additional analysis since the first publication. Manufacturing activity continues to struggle The unchanged reading of 46.7 for the ISM manufacturing index in November suggests that manufacturing activity continued to …
1st December 2023
Falling PCE inflation suggests rate cut speculation likely to grow The muted rise in real consumption and further decline in core PCE inflation in October will reinforce the growing belief in markets that interest rate cuts are on the horizon. Real …
30th November 2023
Equipment investment continues to struggle Aside from the plunge in the volatile transport component, the October durable goods orders data suggest that business equipment investment continues to struggle in the fourth quarter. The 5.4% m/m plunge in …
22nd November 2023
Fed offers something for everyone There is something for everyone in the minutes of the Fed’s early November policy meeting. The FOMC still just about maintained a tightening bias, but the overwhelming impression is that officials thought rates had …
21st November 2023
Output temporarily depressed by UAW strike The 0.7% m/m decline in manufacturing output in October was entirely due to the now-resolved UAW strike, which translated into a temporary 10.0% m/m fall in motor vehicle output. With the UAW securing lucrative …
16th November 2023