U.S. economy slows in second quarter; weak business investment a red
flag
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[July 27, 2019] By
Lucia Mutikani
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. economic growth
slowed less than expected in the second quarter as a surge in consumer
spending blunted some of the drag from declining exports and a smaller
inventory build, which could further allay concerns about the economy's
health.
But the fairly upbeat report from the Commerce Department on Friday had
some red flags for the 10-year-old economic expansion, the longest on
record. Business investment contracted for the first time in more than
three years and housing declined for a sixth straight quarter.
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell early this month flagged the two
sectors as areas of weakness in the economy. They are likely to provide
additional cover for the Fed to cut interest rates next Wednesday for
the first time in a decade because of rising risks to the economy's
outlook from a bitter trade war between the United States and China, and
slowing global growth.
"The key to future economic growth is business spending. Evidently,
businesses do not share the ebullience consumers have," said Sung Won
Sohn, an economics professor at Loyola Marymount University in Los
Angeles. "This is not a good sign for the economy because there would be
fewer jobs for consumers. For this reason, the Fed will cut rates next
week."
The Fed is widely expected to cut its benchmark rate by a quarter point
at its July 30-31 meeting.
Gross domestic product increased at a 2.1% annualized rate in the second
quarter, stepping down from an unrevised 3.1% pace in the January-March
period. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast GDP increasing at a
1.8% rate in the second quarter. They estimate the speed at which the
economy can grow over a long period without igniting inflation at
between 1.7% and 2.0%.
President Donald Trump, whose administration has sought to boost the
economy through a cocktail of massive tax cuts, government spending and
deregulation, downplayed the slowdown in growth and blamed the Fed for
the loss of momentum.
"Not bad considering we have the very heavy weight of the Federal
Reserve anchor wrapped around our neck," Trump wrote on Twitter. "Almost
no inflation. USA is set to Zoom!"
Revisions to growth data published by the government on Friday also
confirmed the economy missed the White House's 3.0% target in 2008,
growing at a rate of 2.9%. When measured on a year-on-year basis the
economy only expanded 2.5%, instead of 3.0% as previously estimated.
Trump, who likes to brag about the economy being one of the biggest
successes of his first term, had highlighted the year-on-year growth
figure as evidence of the effectiveness of his policies.
Economists, who are forecasting growth this year around 2.5%, say the
massive fiscal stimulus, which included a $1.5 trillion tax cut package,
had no lasting impact on growth, while driving up the country's debt.
"The data makes one thing clear, the tax cuts did not result in a
permanent shift upward in the growth path of the U.S. economy," said Joe
Brusuelas, chief economist at RSM in New York.
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Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell testifies during a House
Financial Services Committee hearing on "Monetary Policy and the
State of the Economy" in Washington, U.S. July 10, 2019.
REUTERS/Erin Scott/File Photo
The GDP report showed a pickup in inflation last quarter, though the
trend remained well below the Fed's 2% target.
The dollar rose to a two-month high versus a basket of currencies as
robust consumer spending further diminished expectations of a more
aggressive 50 basis point rate cut on Wednesday. U.S. Treasury yields
slipped. Stocks hit record highs, also boosted by robust earnings from
Google-owner Alphabet <GOOGL.O> and Twitter <TWTR.N>.
STRONG CONSUMER SPENDING
Growth in consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of
U.S. economic activity, surged at a 4.3% rate in the second quarter, the
fastest since the fourth quarter of 2017. That followed a more
lackluster 1.1% growth rate in the first quarter, blamed on a 35-day
partial shutdown of the government.
Spending is being supported by the lowest unemployment rate in nearly 50
years and helped offset some of the weakness from exports, which fell at
a 5.2% rate last quarter after growing in the first quarter.
The plunge in exports led to a wider trade deficit, which subtracted
0.65 percentage point from GDP growth last quarter. Trade contributed
0.73 percentage point in the January-March period.
Robust consumer spending helped businesses to whittle down an inventory
overhang. Inventory investment increased at a $71.7 billion rate,
slowing from the first quarter's $116.0 billion pace of increase.
Inventories cut 0.86 percentage point from GDP growth in the second
quarter after adding 0.53 percentage point in the first quarter.
Economists said inventories still remained high and will continue to
hurt manufacturing.
Business investment fell at a 0.6% rate in the second quarter, the first
contraction since the first quarter of 2016. It was pulled down by a
10.6% pace of decline in spending on structures, depressed by decreases
in commercial and healthcare, and mining exploration, shafts and wells.
Spending on intellectual products, including research and development,
increased. Business spending on equipment rebounded at a 0.7% rate in
the second quarter, but is seen constrained by design problems at
aerospace giant Boeing <BA.N>.
Boeing reported its biggest-ever quarterly loss on Wednesday due to the
spiraling cost of resolving issues with its 737 MAX airplane, grounded
worldwide in March after two fatal crashes in Ethiopia and Indonesia. It
warned it might have to shut 737 MAX production completely if it runs
into new hurdles with global regulators to getting its best-selling
aircraft back in the air.
Growth in government investment accelerated, notching its best
performance in 10 years, but spending on homebuilding contracted for a
sixth straight quarter, the longest such stretch since the Great
Recession.
(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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