US economy forecast to grow slower on weak investments

27-Nov-2018

Weaker-than-projected reports Wednesday on business investment, consumer confidence and the job market signalled the US economy is shifting into a lower gear, leaving less cheer as Americans head into the Thanksgiving holiday weekend.

Orders placed with US factories for business equipment were little changed in October, missing forecasts for a third month, Commerce Department figures showed. An index of consumer sentiment fell to a three-month low in November, according to a University of Michigan survey, while the Labor Department said filings for unemployment benefits rose last week to the highest level since late June.

While another report showed sales of previously owned homes advanced in October, it was the first increase in seven months, a reminder that housing also may have peaked amid rising borrowing costs and high prices. With stocks erasing the year’s gains, the boost from tax cuts possibly ebbing and President Donald Trump’s trade war set to escalate, the latest data collectively point to a moderation in economic growth this quarter—and beyond, if the weakness persists.

“The economy is losing momentum,” said Joshua Shapiro, chief US economist at Maria Fiorini Ramirez Inc. in New York. That “isn’t surprising, but nothing alarming at this stage,” and is in line with his forecast for slower growth this quarter than in the July-September period, when gross domestic product (GDP) expanded at a 3.5% annualized rate.

Investors see the US Federal Reserve as still on track for a widely anticipated quarter-point interest-rate hike in December, its fourth such move this year. At the same time, the pace of tightening in 2019 looks less certain as growth cools and the benchmark rate nears the theoretical, so-called neutral level that neither stimulates nor restrains the US economy.

US stocks were higher on Wednesday following two days of steep declines, as technology shares rebounded. Yields on 10-year Treasuries were also up though were still near the lowest level since early October.

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg expect growth to slow to a 2.6% pace in the fourth quarter, following the best back-to-back gains since 2014. It’s forecast to keep moderating, reaching a 2% rate in late 2019. The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow tracker, updated after Wednesday’s data, predicts fourth-quarter growth of 2.5%.

“The main signal from all the data in aggregate is that growth peaked in the second and third quarter,” said Michael Gapen, chief US economist at Barclays Plc. “What I would caution is that, that doesn’t mean a recession is tomorrow.”

Gapen said that unlike in the previous recession, a downturn in housing is likely to be more a symptom of a cooling economy than a cause. And even with the latest weakness, the factory-orders data are still showing “pretty decent growth,” just not as strong as before, he said.

Source: BLOOMBERG

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