Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Retail sales, factories take hits as Harvey fallout clouds U.S. economy

- SHOBHANA CHANDRA Bloomberg

WASHINGTON Hurricane Harvey is taking a swipe at the U.S. economy this quarter, though not all of the slowdown can be blamed on the storm.

Three reports on Friday put the impact of the Texas flooding into focus: Retail sales fell last month, according to the Commerce Department; Harvey pushed down factory production in August, the Federal Reserve said; and concern about the economic and inflationa­ry effects of Harvey and hurricane Irma led consumer sentiment to fall in September, a University of Michigan survey showed.

The fallout from the storms will take some momentum off thirdquart­er growth and then probably boost activity later this year and into 2018, when rebuilding efforts are underway.

The swings will make it tougher to gauge the underlying health of the economy for several months, though analysts expect steady hiring and healthier finances will sustain growth, albeit at a slower pace.

“The third quarter is going to look very soft, and most of that will reflect the near-term impact of the storms,” said Richard Moody, chief economist at Regions Financial Corp. in Birmingham, Ala.

While not all of the weakness in demand was related to Harvey, “it doesn’t mean the consumer fundamenta­ls have suddenly deteriorat­ed.”

The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow tracking estimate of third-quarter growth eased to a 2.2 per cent annual rate from three per cent a week ago, while economists at Barclays Plc reduced their tracking projection to two per cent from the previous day’s 2.6 per cent.

Michael Englund, chief economist at Action Economics LLC, cut his gross domestic product forecast to 2.6 per cent from three per cent, while raising it for the October-December period to three per cent from 2.8 per cent.

The economy grew at a threeper-cent annualized rate last quarter, the fastest in two years. Consumer spending, the biggest part of the economy, may now be hard pressed to match the 3.3 per cent gain of the second quarter.

Weaker results at auto dealership­s played a big role in the pullback in retail sales, partly reflecting the hurricane impact and also the ongoing slowdown in the industry.

Purchases at vehicles and parts dealers dropped 1.6 per cent in August after no change in July.

 ?? TED S. WARREN/AP ?? U.S. retail sales fell last month in the wake of Harvey. The fallout from the storms is forecast to take some momentum off third-quarter growth before likely boosting activity later this year and into 2018.
TED S. WARREN/AP U.S. retail sales fell last month in the wake of Harvey. The fallout from the storms is forecast to take some momentum off third-quarter growth before likely boosting activity later this year and into 2018.

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