U.S. wholesale inventories rise strongly; first-quarter GDP seen revised
slightly up
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[May 10, 2022] By
Lucia Mutikani
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. wholesale
inventories increased solidly in March and the pace of accumulation in
the prior month was stronger than previously reported, which could lead
to a small upward revision to the first-quarter gross domestic product
estimate.
The Commerce Department said on Monday that wholesale inventories rose
2.3% in March as reported last month. Data for February was revised
higher to show stocks at wholesalers climbing 2.8% instead of the
previously reported 2.6%.
Economists polled by Reuters had expected March inventories would be
unrevised. Wholesale inventories advanced 22.0% in March on a
year-on-year basis. Inventories are a key part of gross domestic
product. Wholesale motor vehicle inventories accelerated 2.4% after
rebounding 1.9% in February.
Wholesale inventories, excluding autos, rose 2.3% in March.
Inventory investment slowed in the first quarter from the
October-December period's robust pace, subtracting 0.8 percentage point
from GDP last quarter. That combined with a record trade deficit to
weigh on GDP, resulting in the economy contracting at a 1.4% annualized
rate in the first quarter.
Following February's upward revision, economists estimate that
inventories subtracted 0.6 percentage point from GDP, which would trim
the pace of decline in output to a 1.3% rate.
Economists had anticipated the rate of decrease in GDP would be raised
to a 1.5% rate after data last week showed the surge in the trade
deficit in March was bigger than what they said the government assumed
in its snapshot of first-quarter GDP.
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Kathleen Littel shops for Christmas gifts at Hammond's Candies, the
largest U.S. wholesale supplier of candy canes, in Denver, Colorado,
U.S., December 16, 2021. REUTERS/Alyson McClaran
"The real change in inventories in the first quarter
looks strong," said Daniel Silver, an economist at JPMorgan in New
York. "But this is still more modest than the fourth quarter change
in inventories, and we still believe inventories weighed on GDP
growth in first quarter."
The government is scheduled to publish its first GDP revision later
this month. The number could also be impacted by March business
inventories data due next week as well as any revisions to March
retail sales, industrial production, housing starts and durable
goods orders data.
Sales at wholesalers increased 1.7% in March after gaining 1.5% in
February. At March's sales pace it would take wholesalers 1.22
months to clear shelves, unchanged from February.
With the Federal Reserve raising interest rates to curb inflation,
demand is expected to cool. Some economists warn that this, in an
environment of fractured supply chains, could create an inventory
imbalance that could trigger a recession.
"The current supply-chain disruptions are making it difficult for
businesses to manage their inventories," said Matt Colyar, an
economist at Moody's Analytics in West Chester, Pennsylvania.
"Therefore, it's possible that businesses are caught with excess
inventories in a couple of years as they over-order today to
compensate for the delays."
(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Paul Simao and Andrea
Ricci)
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