ReportWire

Tag: Economic growth

  • Why Bill Gross expects a U.S. recession to begin by year’s end

    Why Bill Gross expects a U.S. recession to begin by year’s end

    [ad_1]

    Bill Ackman isn’t the only boldfaced Wall Street name who believes the U.S. economy is in worse shape than the official data suggest.

    See: Bill Ackman cashes out bet against Treasury bonds as yields hit 16-year highs

    Bill Gross, a co-founder of fixed-income investing giant Pacific Investment Management Co., said Monday in a post on social-media platform X that the U.S. economy is likely headed for a recession by year’s end.

    “Regional bank carnage and recent rise in auto delinquencies to long-term historical highs indicate U.S. economy slowing significantly. Recession in 4th quarter,” Gross said.

    Such an outcome would represent a remarkable turnaround, considering the Atlanta Federal Reserve’s GDP Now real-time indicator shows the U.S. economy expanding at a 5.4% annualized clip during the third quarter. Official GDP data is due Thursday, with economists polled by The Wall Street Journal looking, on average, for a 4.5% annualized growth figure.

    Many Wall Street economists had anticipated that the U.S. recession would slide into recession earlier this year. However, strength in construction, consumer spending and other areas has helped it defy expectations, as data show it has instead continued to expand at a solid pace.

    Revised data released last month by the Commerce Department showed the U.S. economy grew by 2.1% during the second quarter. Typically, investors only become aware of recessions in hindsight after they’ve been officially declared by the National Bureau of Economic Research.

    Rising auto-loan delinquencies are an alarming portent of economic pain to come, Gross said, citing data from Fitch Ratings, reported by Bloomberg News on Friday, which showed the percentage of subprime auto loans more than 60 days delinquent surpassed 6% in September. At 6.1%, it’s the highest rate ever recorded by the data series going back to 1994.

    As far as how investors might play this, Gross said he’s “seriously considering” investing in shares of regional banks, which have fallen substantially this year: the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF
    KRE,
    one popular exchange-traded fund tracking regional players down more than 30% year-to-date. He also touted some merger-arbitrage plays, a strategy he endorsed in a recent investment outlook.

    He also recommended betting that the Treasury curve will continue steepening as it looks to break out of negative territory for the first time in more than a year. Rising long-term rates have nearly caught up with short term rates, with the 10-year yield
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
    within 30 basis points of the 2-year yield
    BX:TMUBMUSD02Y
    on Monday.

    10-year yields have been lower than 2-year yields for 327 days, according to Dow Jones Market Data. That’s the longest stretch since the 444-trading day streak that ended May 1, 1980.

    Gross is using interest-rate futures for his steepening trade. He expects the curve will re-enter positive territory before the end of the year as a slowing economy forces investors to adjust their expectations regarding the timing of Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts.

    “’Higher for longer’ is yesterday’s mantra,” Gross said.

    Following a decadeslong career on Wall Street, Gross announced his retirement a few years back after a stint at Janus Capital Group. He joined Janus after a contentious exit from Pimco.

    Nevertheless, Gross has continued to share his views on markets in posts on X, as well as in investing outlook letters published to his website, and during interviews with the financial press.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • U.S. home sales fell in September to the lowest level since the Great Recession

    U.S. home sales fell in September to the lowest level since the Great Recession

    [ad_1]

    The numbers: Home sales in September fell to the lowest level since 2010, as high mortgage rates continue to hammer the housing market.

    Aside from low inventory, rising rates are eroding buyers’ purchasing power, and drying up demand. Sales of previously owned homes fell by 2% to an annual rate of 3.96 million in September, the National Association of Realtors said Thursday.

    That’s the number of homes that would be sold over an entire year if sales took place at the same rate every month as they did in September. The numbers are seasonally adjusted.

    The drop in sales was slightly better than what Wall Street was expecting. They forecasted existing-home sales to total 3.9 million in September.

    Compared to September 2022, home sales are down by 15.4%. 

    Key details: The median price for an existing home in September rose for the third month in a row to $394,300. Prices are up 2.8% from a year ago. That was the highest price for the month of September since NAR began tracking the data.

    Home prices peaked in June 2022, when the median price of a resale home hit $413,800.

    Around 26% of properties are being sold above list price, the NAR noted.

    The total number of homes for sale in September fell by 8.1% from last year, to 1.13 million units. Housing inventory for the month of September was the lowest since 1999, when the NAR began tracking the data.

    Homes listed for sale remained on the market for 21 days on average, up from the previous month. Last September, homes were only on the market for 19 days.

    Sales of existing homes rose only in the Northeast in September, as compared with the previous month, by 4.2%. The median price of a home in the region was $439,900. 

    All-cash buyers made up 29% of sales, highest since January 2023. The share of individual investors or second-home buyers was 18%. About 27% of homes were sold to first-time home buyers.

    Big picture: The U.S. housing market is in the midst of a serious slowdown that is primarily driven by high mortgage rates. High rates spook home buyers, drying up demand, and high rates also deter homeowners from selling since they may have to purchase another home. For a homeowner with a 3% mortgage rate for the next few decades, there’s little incentive to move.  

    And the residential sector is likely to see sales fall further in October’s data, as the 30-year mortgage inches even higher. Demand for mortgages has collapsed, and some outlets like Mortgage News Daily are quoting a rate of 8% for the 30-year.

    Existing-home sales in 2023 could fall to the slowest pace since the housing bubble burst in 2008, real-estate brokerage Redfin said on Thursday, at a 4.1 million pace. 

    What the realtors said: “Mortgage rates and limited inventory has been the story throughout this year — no different this month, other than the fact that interest rates are moving higher,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the National Association of Realtors. 

    “The Federal Reserve simply cannot keep raising interest rates in light of softening inflation and weakening job gains,” he added. “We don’t want the Fed to overdo it and cause great harm to real estate.” 

    Yun also questioned whether there will be a “fundamental change” or a temporary one to the “American way of life” due to the slowdown in sales.

    Market reaction: Stocks were down in early trading on Thursday. The yield on the 10-year note
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
    rose above 4.9%.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Here’s what Germany should be called instead of the ‘sick man of Europe,’ says Deutsche Bank

    Here’s what Germany should be called instead of the ‘sick man of Europe,’ says Deutsche Bank

    [ad_1]

    The hurdles facing Germany’s economy in recent years have been plentiful, but the “sick man of Europe,” label is unfair, say Deutsche Bank strategists, who see promise for investors in the region’s biggest economy.

    Contrary to the rest of the eurozone, Germany has only managed to get back to its pre-COVID growth level, yet a title of “sore athlete” is more accurate, say Maximilian Uleer, head of European equity and cross asset strategy and Carolin Raab, European equity and cross asset strategists, in a note to clients that published Friday.

    “Germany has been facing multiple challenges, from rising energy costs, its high manufacturing exposure, to weak demand from its export destinations. Some of the challenges are ‘homemade’ and might persist, while others could start to unwind and soon turn into opportunities,” the pair said.

    Germany’s economy is the worst-performing of the developed world this year, with both the International Monetary Fund and European Union forecasting contractions in growth.

    Read: Germany’s economy struggles with an energy shock that’s exposing longtime flaws

    But the strategists say economic growth is a poor proxy for German equity performance. The German DAX index
    DX:DAX
    is up 18% since the end of 2019. DAX constituents generate just 18% of their revenues domestically, compared to 22% from the U.S. and 15% from China.

    Across the broader HDAX index of 100 members, manufacturing, information technology and financial services are the main contributors to equity performance. That’s as public services, trade, business services and real estate, all of which contributed significantly to GDP over the past four years, are underrepresented in the indexes.

    Germany has also managed to grow its real GDP by 26% over the past 20 years , and keep its debt-to-GDP ratio stable, while the eurozone (including Germany) has seen that debt ratio climb 30% since 2003. The short term has seen lower growth since COVID-19, and rising leverage owing to fiscal support measures to mitigate the pandemic and the war in Ukraine.

    Again, the strategists see a silver lining. “Going forward, in our view, Germany has bigger leeway with regards to its fiscal support capacity, as its absolute debt/GDP ratio remains one of the lowest among the eurozone members,” said Uleer and Raab.


    *Since 2003: Q3 2003-Q2 2023 / since Covid: Q4 2019-Q2 2023. Source: Bloomberg Finance LP, Deutsche Bank Research 09/20/2023

    Among the country’s big hurdles is rising energy costs, with the pair noting that the country’s net-zero goals are laudable, but pose a “substantial challenge” to its energy-intensive industries. Power prices remain substantially higher than three years ago and are double the cost of those in the U.S.

    Also read: Inside Germany’s industrial-sized effort to wean itself off Putin and Russian natural gas

    “This price differential, combined with stronger fiscal support for energy-intensive companies in the U.S. via the Inflation Reduction Act, weigh on the competitiveness of German corporates,” said the strategists.

    As for opportunities, China’s reopening remains a positive for DAX companies, though that country also seems to be making slow progress. Chinese households are sitting on massive savings still waiting to be spent, said the strategists. They advise investors to wait for data that confirms a stabilization of the country’s bumpy property market before they would turn more positive.

    Overall, Deutsche Bank expects inflation to normalize in the coming 12 months and low growth in 2024, but a rebound in 2025.

    Plus: A 1-liter stein of beer at Munich’s famed Oktoberfest will cost nearly $15 this year

    And what’s priced into the DAX already? Even after a gain of 12% this year so far — French
    FR:PX1
    and Greek stocks
    GR:GD
    — are beating Germany by a respective 20% and 30% — the index is still cheap and trading at a 20% discount to its 10-year average on a forward one-year price/earnings basis. Germany can count on stronger U.S. data, even if Europe continues on a weak path.

    “We expect the DAX to hold up in 2024, and do not forecast the index to underperform, despite lower German GDP growth as compared with the rest of the eurozone,” they said.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • The Fed’s got inflation dead wrong. That’s why a 2024 recession is likely, says Duke professor.

    The Fed’s got inflation dead wrong. That’s why a 2024 recession is likely, says Duke professor.

    [ad_1]

    Campbell Harvey, a Duke University finance professor best known for developing the yield-curve recession indicator, says the Federal Reserve’s read on inflation is out of whack. And, as a result, the likelihood that the U.S. slips into a recession is increasing.

    The big question now is the severity of the economic downturn to come, if the central bank continues unabated on its high-interest-rate path.

    On Wednesday, the Fed, which began raising rates from near zero last year, held them at a range of 5.25% to 5.5%, a 22-year high, in its effort to get inflation under control.

    “The [inflation gauge] that the Fed uses makes no sense whatsoever, and it’s totally disconnected from market conditions,” Harvey told MarketWatch in a phone interview.

    The Fed’s measures of inflation are heavily weighted toward shelter costs, which reflect the rising price of rental and owner-occupied housing. For example, shelter inflation has been running at 7.3% over the past 12 months, and also as of the most recent consumer-price index, for August. Shelter represents around 40% of the core CPI reading.

    Harvey says that’s a problem because shelter’s retreat loosely follows the broader trend lower for headline inflation but at a lag, and the Fed wouldn’t be properly accounting for that lag if it decided to keep its target interest rates restrictively high.

    Separately, MarketWatch’s economics reporter, Jeff Bartash, notes that CPI also fails to capture the millions of Americans who locked in low mortgage rates before or during the pandemic and who are now paying less for housing than they had previously.

    “The Fed is … using inflation, in what I call a false narrative,” Harvey said.

    Opinion: Fed’s ‘golden handcuffs’: Homeowners locked into low mortgage rates don’t want to sell

    Also see: U.S. mortgage rates ‘linger’ over 7%, Freddie Mac says, slowing the housing market further

    Harvey said that if shelter inflation were normalized at around 1% or 1.5%, overall core inflation would measure closer to 1.5% or 2%. In other words, at — or substantially below — the Fed’s 2% target.

    Consumer prices ex-shelter were up 1.9% on a year-over-year basis in August, up from 1% in July, according to the Labor Department.

    The Canadian-born Duke professor says that the Fed risks driving the U.S. economy into recession because it has achieved its goal of taming inflation, which peaked at around 9% in 2022, and isn’t making it clear that its rate-hike cycle is complete.

    “Now, the higher those rates go, the worse [the recession] is,” he said.

    Harvey pioneered the idea that an inverted yield curve is a recession indicator, with the curve’s inversion depicting the yield on three-month Treasurys rising above the rate on the 10-year Treasury note
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y.
    Longer-term Treasurys typically have higher yields than shorter-term U.S. government debt, and the inversion of that relationship historically has predicted economic contractions.

    Harvey says that that his yield-curve-inversion model has an unblemished track record — 8-out-of-8 — for predicting recessions over the past 70 years. A recent inversion of U.S. yield curves implies that a U.S. recession is still a possibility.

    Opinion: The U.S. could be in a recession and we just don’t know it yet

    Also see: Are markets getting more worried about a recession? Invesco says a Fed pivot is coming.

    On Thursday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA
     fell 1.1%, while the S&P 500
    SPX
    tumbled1.6% and the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP
    slumped 1.8%, marking one of the worst days for stocks in months. 

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • UK Economy Shrank More Sharply Than Expected in July

    UK Economy Shrank More Sharply Than Expected in July

    [ad_1]

    By Joshua Kirby

    The U.K. economy contracted more than expected in July, suggesting activity is cooling in the face of monetary tightening by the Bank of England.

    Gross domestic product fell 0.5% compared with the previous month, data from the Office for National Statistics showed Wednesday. This missed forecasts for a shallower 0.2% fall in output, according to economists polled by The Wall Street Journal ahead of the release.

    On an annual basis, the economy was flat in July, the figures showed. Economists had expected a 0.4% rise.

    The contraction comes after the economy grew above expectations in the second quarter, driven by a stronger-than-expected services sector. The fallback in July suggests the Bank of England’s policy of raising interest rates is beginning to take some heat out of the U.K. economy.

    The BOE will next week decide to meet whether to raise its benchmark rate again, past its current 5.25%, as it looks to ease rapid price inflation.

    Unemployment figures earlier this week showed the U.K. jobless rate inching up in the three months to July, though wage growth remained steady in the same period.

    Write to Joshua Kirby at joshua.kirby@wsj.com; @joshualeokirby

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Eurozone Braced for Weaker Growth in 2023, 2024, EU Forecasts Say

    Eurozone Braced for Weaker Growth in 2023, 2024, EU Forecasts Say

    [ad_1]

    By Joshua Kirby and Ed Frankl

    The eurozone is likely to grow at a slower pace than previously expected this year and next amid weak domestic consumption and flagging global demand, with the powerhouse German economy notably set to shrink, according to fresh figures published by the European Union executive Monday.

    The 20-member bloc should book growth of 0.8% this year and 1.3% in 2024, revised down from previous estimates in May of 1.1% and 1.6%, respectively, according to the European Commission.

    Weak private consumption amid stubbornly high inflation lies behind the gloomier outlook for economic growth, the EC said.

    “High and still increasing consumer prices for most goods and services are taking a heavier toll than expected in the spring forecast,” the commission said. Eurozone consumer prices rose 5.3% in August, failing to ease from the previous month.

    The forecasts come ahead of a key European Central Bank rate-decision meeting on Thursday, when the central bank will publish its own forecasts for the bloc’s economy and inflation. The bank is widely expected to lower its estimates for growth this year.

    The bloc’s economy notched growth of just 0.1% in the April-June period, according to revised figures published last week, and many economists expect the eurozone to stagnate in the second half of the year.

    Germany’s economy–the largest in the bloc–is now expected to contract, according to the EC’s new estimates. Gross domestic product should be 0.4% lower on year in 2023, compared with a previous estimate of slight growth. It would be the only one of the bloc’s major economies to slip backward, according to the forecasts, which see slightly higher growth for France and Spain than previously estimated.

    Closely watched economic forecasters including the German Institute for Economic Research and the Kiel-based IfW Institute last week ticked down their own expectations for German growth, which has been hamstrung by weaker industrial output.

    Inflation in the eurozone is meanwhile expected to stand at 5.6% for 2023 as a whole, a slightly lower forecast than the 5.8% previously estimated by the EC. However, inflation is set to ease less rapidly next year than previously forecast, with prices to rise by 2.9% on year rather than by 2.8%, according to the new estimates.

    The higher forecast comes despite an easing of the energy bills that spiked last year after Russia’s fullscale invasion of Ukraine, the commission said. Higher oil prices might slow the downward trajectory of inflation next year, but prices for services and food should ease steadily amid high interest rates, lower input prices and smoother supply chains, the commission said.

    Nevertheless, a tighter monetary policy–with an unprecedent cycle of interest-rate rises by the ECB with the aim of stemming inflation–has begun to feed into the wider economy, damping industrial production and demand, the EC said. Industrial output is weakening and services growth is fading, despite resurgent tourism in many eurozone members, it said.

    The sluggishness should continue next year, with little prospect of a major rebound in growth, the EC said. Global demand remains weak as the Chinese economy grinds to a halt, the commission said, meaning the bloc can’t rely on external demand to offset lower domestic consumption.

    Nevertheless, lower inflation, continued strength in the jobs market and resultant rises in real wages offer some bright spots for the coming year, the commission said. The bloc’s labor market has remained “exceptionally strong,” with record low unemployment rates and rising wages, it said.

    “Monetary tightening may weigh on economic activity more heavily than expected, but could also lead to a faster decline in inflation that would accelerate the restoration of real incomes,” it said. The Russia-Ukraine conflict continues to cast a pall of uncertainty over the outlook, the EC said, as does the climate crisis, which has led to disastrous wildfires and floods in many parts of the continent over the summer.

    Write to Joshua Kirby at joshua.kirby@wsj.com; @joshualeokirby, and to Ed Frankl at edward.frankl@wsj.com

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • U.S. economy seen growing at about a 2.2% annual rate in the July-September quarter, according to real-time New York Fed estimate

    U.S. economy seen growing at about a 2.2% annual rate in the July-September quarter, according to real-time New York Fed estimate

    [ad_1]

    The U.S. economy could expand at about a 2.2% annual rate in the current quarter, according to a revamped real-time estimate from the New York Federal Reserve released Friday.

    According to the weekly New York Fed’s Staff Nowcast, the economy has been on an upward trend since late July.

    The regional Fed bank had discontinued the real-time estimate during the pandemic. The New York Fed said the series will now be available weekly.

    The New York Fed’s estimate is much lower than the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model, which shows growth could expand at a 5.6% annual rate in the current quarter.

    Economists say the strength of the economy will be critical going forward in deciding whether the Federal Reserve needs to continue to raise its policy interest rate to cool inflation.

    The Fed has been expecting the economy to slow in the second half of the year. Fed officials forecast only 1% growth for 2023. In the first six months of the year, U.S. gross domestic product is averaging about a 2% growth rate.

    If the economy reaccelerates, it is likely that inflation will also move higher. Fed officials had been hoping that slower economic growth would continue push down inflation.

    Faster growth means “you are probably going to get some inflation numbers that aren’t going to be as good as people were anticipating,” said James Bullard, the former president of St. Louis Fed president and now dean of Purdue’s business school.

    “There is some risk that the Fed will have to go a little bit higher” even than the one more interest rate hike that the central bankers have penciled in this year, he said, in a recent CNBC interview.

    The first official government estimate of third-quarter growth won’t be released until Oct. 26.

    The picture of the health of the economy painted by U.S. GDP statistics can change quickly.

    The growth estimates for the first half of the year could be revised at the end of September when the Commerce Department releases benchmark updates to GDP data.

    The sharp revisions are one of the reasons why the Fed typically pays more attention to the unemployment rate and the inflation data.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Fed’s Williams says monetary policy is in a ‘good place,’ recession talk ‘has vanished’

    Fed’s Williams says monetary policy is in a ‘good place,’ recession talk ‘has vanished’

    [ad_1]

    New York Fed President John Williams on Thursday sounded content with the current level of interest rates, but said he will be watching data closely to make sure the level of rates is high enough to keep inflation moving down.

    “We’ve done a lot,” Williams said during a discussion at a conference sponsored by Bloomberg News.

    “Right now, we’ve…

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • A recession could be nine months away, according to this telltale gauge

    A recession could be nine months away, according to this telltale gauge

    [ad_1]

    The roughly $25 trillion Treasury market first began flashing this telltale sign that a U.S. recession likely lurks on the horizon almost a year ago, according to Bespoke Investment Group.

    It was late October of 2022 when the 3-month Treasury yield BX:TMUBMUSD03M first eclipsed the 10-year Treasury yield BX:TMUBMUSD10Y, resulting in an “inversion” of a key part of the yield curve that’s been a reliable predictor of past recessions.

    Where…

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Wall Street is raising quarterly profit forecasts for the first time in two years, and executives are relaxing about recession prospects

    Wall Street is raising quarterly profit forecasts for the first time in two years, and executives are relaxing about recession prospects

    [ad_1]

    After nearly two years of concerns about a recession, growing optimism about the economy is starting to filter down into Wall Street’s expectations for individual companies’ quarterly results, with analysts growing more upbeat about corporate profit in the months ahead

    While expectations for those quarterly results usually trend lower as earnings season arrives, analysts over the past two months have actually nudged their profit forecasts higher for the first time in two years, according to a FactSet report released Friday….

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • U.S. consumer confidence retreats markedly in August, close to levels signaling recession

    U.S. consumer confidence retreats markedly in August, close to levels signaling recession

    [ad_1]

    The numbers: The index of U.S. consumer confidence dipped to 106.1 in August from a revised 114 in the prior month, the Conference Board said Tuesday.

    Economists polled by The Wall Street Journal had forecast a modest pullback to 116 from the initial reading of 117, which was the highest level in two years.

    The revised July reading was the highest since December 2021.

    Key details: Part of the survey that tracks how consumers feel about current economic conditions fell to 114.8 this month from 153 in July. 

    A gauge that assesses what Americans expect over the next six months dropped to 80.2 from 88. The August reading is just above to 80 level that historically signals a recession within the next year.

    Big picture: The tight labor market had bolstered confidence in June and July. The decline in August reverses all of those gains. The index is still 10.8 points above the recent cycle low in July 2022.

    Economists think that higher gasoline prices were behind some of the decline in August. The price of a gallon of unleaded gasoline is up 19.6% from the start of the year and over 2% from last month.

    What the Conference Board said: The organization said it still expects a recession before the end of the year.

    “Write-in responses showed that consumers were once again preoccupied with rising prices in general, and for groceries and gasoline in particular,” said Dana Peterson, chief economist at The Conference Board.

    What are they saying?  “The August drop does not definitively end the upward trend in place since last summer, and the expectations index still points to faster growth in real consumption spending. We are not convinced, however, in part because some of the strength in July retail sales was due to boost from Amazon Prime Day, which won’t continue, and because near-real-time indicators of discretionary services spending paint a much less upbeat picture,” said Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics.

    Robert Frick, corporate economist with Navy Federal Credit Union, said he didn’t think confidence would rise significantly until inflation falls further.

    Market reaction: Stocks
    DJIA

    SPX
    were trading higher on Tuesday. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
    fell to 4.16%.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Why this abstract concept could rattle stocks when Powell speaks at Jackson Hole

    Why this abstract concept could rattle stocks when Powell speaks at Jackson Hole

    [ad_1]

    There’s one big, but theoretical, concept that has the potential to shake up the stock market the most on Friday, when Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell is scheduled to deliver a speech at an annual symposium held in Jackson Hole, Wyo.

    It has to do with the neutral rate of interest. That’s the level of real short-term interest rates that’s expected to prevail when the U.S. economy is at full strength and inflation is stable. The real neutral rate — known alternatively as r* or r-star— is estimated to be around 0.5%, after subtracting the Fed’s 2% inflation target from policy makers’ latest forecasts for where the fed funds rates is likely to be in the long run. And that neutral rate may be moving higher, given how the economy is performing right now.

    Read: Jackson Hole meeting: When is Jerome Powell’s speech? What investors need to know.

    Settling on the right theoretical level for the neutral rate matters because the U.S. economy appears to be accelerating, even after the Fed has hiked rates by more than five full percentage points to a 22-year high of 5.25%-5.5%. The world’s largest economy grew at a solid 2% pace in the first quarter, followed by a 2.4% pace for the second quarter. Now, the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model is forecasting a third-quarter growth rate of 5.8% for real gross domestic product — a number that’s drawn plenty of skeptics, but underscores just how well the economy seems to be doing.

    See: R-Star Is the New Buzzword. Listen for It at Jackson Hole.

    “The notion of a higher r-star or neutral rate has crept its way into the marketplace and has been a hot topic lately,” said Thomas Urano, co-chief investment officer at fixed-income money manager Sage Advisory in Austin, Texas, which oversaw $23 billion as of July. “The market is trying to digest where the Fed views this neutral rate and is looking to get a little more clarity as Powell speaks in Jackson Hole.”

    If the neutral rate is higher than previously thought, that means policy makers might need to hike the fed-funds rate target even further, in addition to holding borrowing costs higher for longer and delaying the timing of their first rate cut.

    Traders and investors are well aware that the Fed is likely to keep interest rates higher for longer, and they’ve pushed out their expectations about the timing of the first rate cut next year, according to Dan Eye, chief investment officer for Pennsylvania-based Fort Pitt Capital Group, which manages $4.9 billion in assets.

    However, the market is not yet fully positioned for the Fed to put rate hikes back on the table, Eye said via phone on Wednesday.

    Dow industrials
    DJIA,
    the S&P 500
    SPX,
    and Nasdaq Composite
    COMP
    are respectively up so far this year by 4.1%, 15.6%, and 31.3% as investors and traders hold out hope for a soft- or no-landing scenario in which the U.S. economy can emerge relatively unscathed as inflation keeps falling.

    As of Wednesday afternoon, all three major stock indexes were higher, led by a 1.8% advance in the Nasdaq Composite as investors await a fiscal second-quarter earnings announcement from chip maker Nvidia Corp.
    NVDA,
    +2.84%

    that’s due after the close.

    Any remarks by Powell on Friday that can be interpreted as suggesting that more rate hikes are likely to come will produce volatility and “a downdraft in stocks,” Eye said. The best possible outcome for stock investors would be if Powell “stresses data dependency and says that policy makers will continue to consider the cumulative impact of rate hikes that have been done already.”

    The theme of the Kansas City Fed’s Jackson Hole symposium, being held Thursday-Saturday, is “Structural Shifts in the Global Economy,” a topic that’s led to the growing expectation that Powell will address where he and the Fed currently see the neutral rate.

    In the run-up to Friday’s Jackson Hole speech, the Treasury market has already priced in a scenario of better-than-expected U.S. economic growth, with 10- and 30-year yields reaching multiyear highs on Monday and last week. Though both yields pulled back on Tuesday and Wednesday, they could bounce back again if investors sell off long-dated government debt in response to Powell’s remarks, investors said.

    The recent rise in yields has been blamed, in part, for August’s decline in U.S. stocks, with the S&P 500 down more than 3% so far this month.

    “Powell has to sound hawkish, he cannot afford not to do so” because “any signal that the hiking cycle is done will probably lead to such a bullish response in risk assets that it will loosen broader financial conditions,” said strategist Rikkert Scholten at Rotterdam-based Robeco, which oversees $194 billion.

    Still, Robeco’s investment team also expects the Fed chairman to stress data dependence as a way of “credibly” keeping his options open.

    Brad Conger, deputy chief investment officer at Hirtle Callaghan & Co. in West Conshohocken, Penn., which manages $18.5 billion in assets, said he believes the Fed is near the end of its rate-hiking cycle, which began in March 2022.

    Nevertheless, “any discussion about a higher natural rate of interest due to the shifting structure of the economy would set off a bout of uncertainty,” he said. Natural rate is the phrase used to describe where the neutral rate may settle over the longer run.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • What recession? The labor market is sizzling in these states.

    What recession? The labor market is sizzling in these states.

    [ad_1]

    Not so long ago, many economists and very smart people were predicting that an economic recession would take place in the summer of 2023. In reality, the unemployment rate fell in seven states between June and July, and in most other states, the labor market remained strong, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data released Friday.

    The state with the lowest unemployment rate was New Hampshire, with a rate of 1.7%. Thirty-six states are at or below the historically low national unemployment rate of 3.5%, while 14 states, along with Puerto Rico and Washington, D.C., are above that level.

    In four states — Vermont, Hawaii, Florida and Indiana — employment rose from the previous month. Employment in 46 states and Washington, D.C., was essentially unchanged, with the absolute number of new jobs or job losses being statistically insignificant.

    The data are drawn from two different surveys: The unemployment rate is from the Local Area Unemployment Statistics program, which is a household survey, while data on nonfarm-payroll employment is based on a survey of employers and establishments.

    To get another glimpse of the employment situation, see MarketWatch’s interactive that breaks down nonfarm employment by industry.

    Check out the full list of states and their unemployment rates and employment statistics below.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Mortgage rates could hit 8%, economists say, citing a worrying sign not seen since the Great Recession

    Mortgage rates could hit 8%, economists say, citing a worrying sign not seen since the Great Recession

    [ad_1]

    With mortgage rates firmly above 7%, homeownership has become much more expensive. But will rates go even higher?

    Three experts told MarketWatch that if the economy continues to show signs of strength, and the U.S. Federal Reserve hikes its benchmark interest rate once again, rates could go up to 8%. 

    High rates have already taken a toll on the U.S. housing market. Even home builders, who have in recent months experienced strong demand from homebuyers, are reporting a drop in buyer traffic as those rising rates rattle their customers. 

    But experts also stressed that the U.S. economy is showing early signs of cooling, and that the rate of inflation is easing. That could lead to a slowdown — or even a drop — in mortgage rates. But such forecasts are not a guarantee, as Tuesday’s stronger-than-expected U.S. retail sales figures suggested.

    How high can rates go? 

    Even though the 30-year fixed mortgage rate was averaging 7.26% as of Tuesday evening, the highest level since November 2022, economists say rates could go up further.

    The 30-year is “at a critical stage,” Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the National Association of Realtors, told MarketWatch.

    “If the 30-year-fixed mortgage rate can hold at a high mark of 7.2% — and the 10-year yield holds at 4.2% — then this would be the high for mortgage rates before retreating,” Yun said. “If it breaks this line and easily goes above 7.2%, then the mortgage rate reaches 8%.”

    As of Tuesday afternoon, the 10-year Treasury note
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
    was above 4.2%.

    “Mortgage rates could rise significantly if global investors demand higher yields for fixed-income assets,” Cris deRitis, deputy chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, told MarketWatch.

    Currently, the spread between the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage and a 10-year Treasury bond is around 300 basis points, which is “elevated and highly unusual,” he said.

    ‘Historically, the mortgage-rate spread has only been around this level only during periods of financial crisis such as the Great Recession or the early 1980s recession.’


    — Cris deRitis, deputy chief economist at Moody’s Analytics

    “Historically, the mortgage-rate spread has only been around this level only during periods of financial crisis such as the Great Recession or the early 1980s recession,” deRitis added. “The historical average is closer to 175 basis points.” 

    If the 10-year continues to rise — and the U.S. Federal Reserve chooses to interest rates once again — it could go beyond 5%. If the spread stays elevated at 300 basis points, deRitis added, “a mortgage rate of 8% or more is a distinct possibility in the near term.”

    Consumers seem to be prepared for 8% rates. In February, households surveyed by the New York Federal Reserve as part of its Survey of Consumer Expectations, found that they expect mortgage rates to rise to 8.4% by the following year, and 8.8% in three years’ time. Yet few saw the moment as an opportunity to buy.

    To be clear, rates have been far higher in the past. In 1981, the 30-year mortgage rate went up to 18%, according to Freddie Mac
    FMCC,
    +31.97%
    .
    That year, the rate of inflation was 10.3%, according to the Minneapolis Fed. 

    “So in theory, mortgage rates can go up as much,” Selma Hepp, chief economist at CoreLogic, told MarketWatch. “But I don’t think they’re gonna go much beyond where they are right now.”

    The yearly rate of inflation in July was just 3.2%. There was runaway inflation in the early 1980s. Though the year isn’t over yet, it is highly unlikely that the rate will suddenly surge, as economists expect the cost of housing — one of the biggest drivers of inflation — to ease in the coming months.

    What happens to housing if rates surge?

    If the 30-year mortgage interest rate reached 8%, there would be serious consequences for the housing market, Yun said. “At 8%, the housing market will re-freeze, with fewer buyers and far fewer sellers,” he added. 

    But don’t expect high rates to hurt home prices just yet, Yun added: “As long as the job market doesn’t turn negative, then home prices will be stable — though home sales will take another step downward. If there is a job-cutting recession, then home prices will fall as some will be forced to sell while there are few buyers.”

    Other experts said that high rates have already taken a toll on the U.S. housing sector. “A mortgage rate in excess of 6% has already sidelined a large number of potential homebuyers, especially first-time home buyers,” deRitis said. 

    He noted that the monthly mortgage payment for a median-priced home at the prevailing 30-year mortgage rate has risen from close to $1,100 per month in January 2019 to over $2,100 today.  “At 8%, the monthly payment would rise to over $2,300, excluding an even larger number of potential buyers with above-average incomes,” deRitis added.

    High rates also discourage homeowners from selling, since they may have to surrender an ultra-low mortgage with a low monthly payment for a high rate. They may end up with a smaller budget to purchase a home, or worse, not find any listings at all, given an ongoing inventory crunch. 

    With high rates, many home buyers may be priced out of the market. Yet some buyers — particularly baby boomers — who have the means to put in all-cash offers on homes are keeping home prices elevated, Hepp said. 

    So who would be able to buy and sell? Cash buyers. “They tend to be older people like baby boomers who own their homes free and clear,” she added. “If they live in more expensive areas, like anywhere in California, they can sell their home and walk away with in excess of $500,000. And that in some markets buys them two homes.”

    deRitis said that the ultimate fate of home prices falls on the strength of the job market. Even though rates are high for now, home prices may not fall significantly, as some buyers can still purchase homes with cash, he added.

    But “if the labor market should weaken and unemployment rise, home foreclosures would rise,” deRitis added, “placing downward pressure on home prices.”

    “So the housing market is definitely suffering from high rates,” Hepp said. “But I think even higher rates would be pretty devastating for the housing market.” 

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • What Wall Street’s Top Recession Gauge Is Saying Now

    What Wall Street’s Top Recession Gauge Is Saying Now

    [ad_1]

    Wall Street is growing confident the U.S. can avoid a recession. But one key market indicator is still sending seemingly bleak signals.

    Copyright ©2023 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • UK Economy Grew Slightly More Than Expected in 2Q

    UK Economy Grew Slightly More Than Expected in 2Q

    [ad_1]

    By Ed Frankl

    The U.K. economy expanded more than expected in the second quarter of 2023, helped by growing services and industrial output, despite strikes, a series of bank holidays and continued high inflation weighing on growth.

    Gross domestic product grew 0.2% from April to June compared with the previous three-month period, after 0.1% growth in the first quarter, according to data from the Office for National Statistics released Friday.

    The reading is an improvement on the zero growth expected by economists polled by The Wall Street Journal.

    With the U.K.’s economy in June growing by 0.5% on month, it meant quarterly GDP in the first quarter was 0.2% smaller than at its prepandemic level in the final three months of 2019, the ONS said.

    Write to Ed Frankl at edward.frankl@wsj.com

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Why China has few good options to boost its faltering economy | CNN Business

    Why China has few good options to boost its faltering economy | CNN Business

    [ad_1]


    Hong Kong
    CNN
     — 

    Every few days for the past several weeks, a parade of Chinese leaders and policymakers have publicly vowed to do more to boost the sputtering economy, usually by promising to support the beleaguered private sector.

    Sometimes investors appear to have gained confidence from these pledges, sending shares higher.

    More often though, they’ve ignored the flurry of official messaging, hoping for more tangible stimulus measures that economists and analysts tell CNN are now unlikely to come because China has become too indebted to just pump up the economy like it did 15 years ago, during the global financial crisis.

    “We have had plenty of vague promises already, which don’t amount to a great deal so far,” said Robert Carnell, regional head of research for Asia-Pacific at ING Group.

    Except for some incremental steps to help the property market, currently mired in its worst slump in history, and tweaks to interest rates, there have been few signs of the government providing real money to struggling consumers or businesses.

    “Chinese policymakers appear unlikely to enact any major monetary or fiscal stimulus, likely fearing doing so could exacerbate China’s growing debt risks,” said Craig Singleton, senior China fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a Washington-based non-partisan think tank.

    “At most, we can expect meager, mostly-supply side measures ostensibly aimed at, among other things, attracting more private capital and boosting electric vehicle ownership,” he added.

    After a strong start to the year after Covid restrictions were lifted, the world’s second largest economy has lost momentum.

    Since April, a slew of disappointing economic data and population statistics has sparked concern that China may be facing a period of much slower growth and possibly even heading for a future comparable to Japan’s.

    China’s economy barely grew in the April to June months compared with the previous quarter, as an initial burst in economic activity following the end of pandemic restrictions faded. Signs of deflation are becoming more prevalent, sparking concerns that China could enter a prolonged period of stagnation.

    Based on Japan’s experience in the 1990s, there is the risk that China is entering “a liquidity trap,” a scenario in which monetary policy becomes largely ineffective and consumers hold on to their cash rather than spend it, said Alicia Garcia-Herrero, chief economist for Asia Pacific for Natixis, a French investment bank.

    “In other words, there is a risk that Chinese corporates and households, pushed by their very negative sentiment about the economic outlook, prefer to disinvest and de-leverage in the light of falling revenue generation.”

    To get the economy back on track, Beijing needs to match its words with action, according to analysts.

    China “conspicuously” refrained from the giant Covid-era support seen in developed economies, according to analysts at the UBS Global Wealth Management. Fiscal stimulus, for instance, amounted to just a third of the aid offered in the United States, with no nationwide cash handouts.

    While this helped China avoid the rampant inflation shock seen elsewhere, disposable household income fell as wages and property asset values simultaneously stalled, they said in a recent research note.

    Interest rate cuts are not enough, unless they are accompanied by fiscal measures to boost demand.

    “A comprehensive policy mix — covering monetary and fiscal stimulus, including infrastructure, property, and consumption, alongside structural reforms,” would be helpful to rebuild confidence, they said.

    China’s economic trajectory is of great concern for global investors and policymakers who are counting on it to drive global expansion. But, Beijing appears to have run out of ammunition.

    Back in 2008, Chinese leaders rolled out a four trillion yuan ($586 billion) fiscal package to minimize the impact of the global financial crisis. It was seen as a success and helped boost Beijing’s domestic and international political standing as well as China’s economic growth, which soared to more than 9% in the second half of 2009.

    But the measures, which were focused on government-led infrastructure projects, also led to an unprecedented credit expansion and massive increase in local government debt, from which the economy is still struggling to recover. In 2012, Beijing said it wouldn’t be doing it again. The costs were just too high.

    China’s debt woes have only deepened during the Covid-19 pandemic, when three years of draconian restrictions and a real estate downturn drained the coffers of local government.

    Analysts estimate China’s outstanding government debts surpassed 123 trillion yuan ($18 trillion) last year. Nearly $10 trillion of that figure is so-called “hidden debt” owed by risky local government financing platforms.

    In June, Zhu Min, a former senior official at the International Monetary Fund who previously served at China’s central bank, was quoted by Bloomberg as telling the Summer Davos forum in Tianjin that he didn’t believe China would unveil massive stimulus, as the nation was already struggling with high debt levels.

    “No [fiscal stimulus] has been announced, which seems to indicate that Chinese policymakers are still wary about a too rapid increase in public debt,” said Garcia-Herrero.

    And even if Beijing were to take action, it would be less effective than in 2008, Garcia-Herrero said.

    “An infrastructure-led fiscal stimulus would need to be much bigger to have the same economic impact,” she said.

    It also implies that, if action is taken, public debt in China would jump well above the current 100% of GDP, which would place the economy “among the most indebted in the world,” she added.

    What’s worse, under President Xi Jinping, Beijing appears to have doubled down on its strategy to strengthen the party’s control over the economy, analysts said.

    A “correct response” to the economic slump would be for Beijing to return to a pro-market reform path and let the private sector play a bigger role, according to Derek Scissors, senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

    But signs are “limited” that the government is considering that direction, he said.

    According to Singleton, “China’s new economic leadership team has few tools to meaningfully revive growth.”

    “Beijing’s steadfast, albeit unsurprising, refusal to acknowledge the role Xi’s economic mismanagement has played” in exacerbating China’s problems will gravely compound its broader systemic risks, he said.

    The property sector will likely be a drag on growth for years to come, Singleton said, adding that the country’s alarming debt levels and timid consumers domestically and abroad won’t help either.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Service side of the economy slows slightly, ISM finds, but ‘sales have been steady’

    Service side of the economy slows slightly, ISM finds, but ‘sales have been steady’

    [ad_1]

    The numbers: A measure of business conditions for service sector companies like hotels, restaurants and hair salons slowed in July, but still signaled an expanding economy.

    The service-sector index fell to 52.7% from 53.9% in the prior month.

    That was a larger drop than economists predicted. Economists forecast the Institute for Supply Management’s survey to slow to 53.3%.

    The index has been in expansionary territory for seven months in a row, however. Numbers above 50% indicate growth.

    “I think we’re on solid footing right now. It’s just hard to see what might happen down the road,” said Anthony Nieves, chairman of the survey.

    Key details:

    • The index of new orders dipped to 55.0%  from 55.5%. “Sales have been steady,” a senior construction executive told ISM.

    • The production gauge fell 2.1 points to 57.1%

    • The employment barometer dropped 2.4 points to 50.7% 

    • The prices-paid index, a measure of inflation, grew to 56.8% from 54.1% the prior month. “Supplier costs (are) not coming down as much as expected,” a wholesale trade executive told ISM.

    Big picture: Demand for services has been strong in the aftermath of the pandemic. People’s desire to travel and go to restaurants has been a balancing force while the industrial side of the economy remains stuck.

    Looking ahead: “Even though the risks of a recession may be easing, that doesn’t mean the economy is set to enjoy a strong performance over the second half of the year,” said Andrew Hunter, deputy chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics.

    Market reaction: The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA
    and S&P 500
    SPX
    fell slightly in Thursday trades.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Mark Zuckerberg Shakes It Off at Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour | Entrepreneur

    Mark Zuckerberg Shakes It Off at Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour | Entrepreneur

    [ad_1]

    Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is a proud Swiftie, and he doesn’t care who knows.

    The Facebook founder attended Taylor Swift’s “Eras” tour in Santa Clara, Calif. over the weekend with his wife, Priscilla Chan, and their three daughters — and he went all out for the occasion.

    In photos shared to Instagram with the caption “Life of a girl dad,” Zuckerberg is wearing face gems in the shape of a heart around his right eye. Chan was also bedazzled for the show.

    RELATED: Mark Zuckerberg Says He Needs to Eat 4,000 Calories Daily. Here’s What Might Be on the Billionaire’s Menu

    Other photos show Zuckerberg seated with his family and wearing several friendship bracelets – which Swifties are known for trading and collecting at shows – that spell out several of Swift’s album titles including “Midnights,” “Fearless,” and “1989.”

    In the comments, fans praised the entrepreneur – who is worth $117 billion – with one person writing, “Probably hands down the best dad of all the tech giants,” while another added, “ZUCK IN HIS LOVER ERA.”

    According to the pictures from the evening, the family appears to be sitting in a box suite, which can cost up to $50,000 at Santa Clara’s Levi’s Stadium and can hold up to 22 people, the stadium’s website states. (It also includes catering.)

    How Much Money Is Taylor Swift Generating for the Economy?

    While it’s unclear exactly how much Zuckerberg spent on the big-ticket event, Swifties on average have spent $1,300 per show on tickets, travel, and other concert necessities, according to a June survey by research company QuestionsPro.

    RELATED: ‘Historically Unprecedented Demand’: Taylor Swift Fans Caused Ticketmaster’s Site To Crash Over 5000 Times

    At that rate, the “Eras” tour would generate an estimated $5 billion in economic impact worldwide, which is more than the gross domestic profit of 50 countries, the research firm found.

    The Federal Reserve found that Swift’s tour is stimulating the United States economy after the Philadelphia Federal Reserve office announced in a report that the tour boosted hotel revenue for the city.

    Swift performed at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia on May 12, 13, and 14, although it’s unknown exactly how much Swift’s tour brought the city of Philadelphia. However, when the “Eras” tour took Chicago from June 2 to June 4, the city’s tourism and marketing organization, Choose Chicago, found more than 44,000 hotel rooms were used each night of the concert, generating $39 million in hotel revenue for the city.

    Swift has since extended her international tour and is expected to keep going until August 2024.

    [ad_2]

    Sam Silverman

    Source link

  • Consumer spending climbs again as Americans show confidence in the economy

    Consumer spending climbs again as Americans show confidence in the economy

    [ad_1]

    The numbers: Consumer spending rose 0.5% in June in a sign of confidence in the economy as inflation eased again and the U.S. continued to grow.

    Analysts polled by the Wall Street Journal had forecast a 0.5% increase.

    Incomes advanced 0.3% in June, the government said Friday.

    Consumer spending is the main engine of the U.S. economy. Households increased spending by a 1.6% annual pace in the second quarter running from April to June. Outlays have risen seven months in a row.

    Key details: Americans bought more trucks last month and spent more on financial advice. They also increased spending on housing, gas utilities and recreation.

    The U.S. savings rate, meanwhile, slipped to 4.3% from a 13-month high of 4.6%. Savings had fallen late last year to the lowest level since 2005.

    The so-called PCE price index, the Federal Reserve’s favorite inflation barometer, rose a modest 0.2% in June. And the rate of inflation rose at the slowest pace since September 2021.

    Big picture: A strong jobs market marked by low unemployment and rising wages have given Americans the confidence to spend more than enough to keep the economy growing. Services such as dining out, travel and recreation have especially benefited.

    Most economists predict spending will slow, however, as rising interest rates take a bigger bite out of the economy. Whether that’s enough to eventually tip the U.S. into recession is far from clear.

    Looking ahead: “Slower inflation and growing real incomes have provided some breathing room, encouraging consumers to spend on travel and recreational activities,” said senior economist Kayla Bruun of Morning Consult.

    “Momentum may begin to fade as summer splurges dry up, however,” she added. “Morning Consult’s data suggests consumers are growing increasingly price sensitive across a broad range of categories.” 

    Market reaction: The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +0.54%

    and S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.87%

    were set to open higher in Friday trades.

    [ad_2]

    Source link