Arab Times

US consumer spending rises modestly; inflation retreats

Personal income gains 0.4 pct; wages up 0.5 pct

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WASHINGTON, Aug 31, (RTRS): US consumer spending rose slightly less than expected in July and annual inflation advanced at its slowest pace in more than 1-1/2 years, diminishin­g expectatio­ns of an interest rate increase in December.

Inflation remains stubbornly low even as the labor market is near full employment, a conundrum for the Federal Reserve. Other data on Thursday showed a small increase in new applicatio­ns for unemployme­nt benefits last week amid a tightening job market.

“The consumer continues to do the heavy lifting when it comes to economic growth,” said Chris Rupkey, chief economist at MUFG in New York. “Inflation is in the slow lane for now and this is likely to make Fed officials cautious on the need to raise rates a third time this year.” The Commerce Department said consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of US economic activity, increased 0.3 percent last month after a 0.2 percent gain in June. Economists had forecast consumer spending rising 0.4 percent in July.

The personal consumptio­n expenditur­es (PCE) price index excluding food and energy edged up 0.1 percent in July. The so-called core PCE price index, which is the Fed’s preferred inflation measure, has now risen by the same margin for three straight months.

The 12-month increase in the core PCE price index dipped to 1.4 percent, the smallest gain since December 2015. The index rose 1.5 percent in the 12 months through June. The annual rate has dropped by half a percentage point since February and the PCE price index has undershot the US central bank’s 2 percent target for the past five years.

The combinatio­n of moderate consumer spending and tepid inflation casts doubts on whether the Fed will increase interest rates at its December policy meeting, as most economists expect.

The Fed has raised borrowing costs twice this year. It is, however, expected to announce a plan to start reducing its $4.2 trillion portfolio of Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities next month.

People wait in line in hopes of buying water at a grocery store after the water supply to the city of Beaumont was shut down after Hurricane Harvey passed through on Aug 31 in Beaumont, Texas. Harvey, which made landfall north of Corpus Christi, Aug 25, has dumped more than 50 inches of rain in some

areas in and around Houston. (AFP)

Focus

“We expect core inflation to get worse on a year-over-year basis before it gets better, making it an easy decision for the Fed to skip raising rates at its September meeting and focus on the balance sheet only,” said Ellen Zentner, chief US economist at Morgan Stanley in New York.

Financial markets are pricing in a roughly 31 percent probabilit­y of a rate increase at the Fed’s December meeting, down from about 35 percent earlier, according to CME Group’s FedWatch program.

US stocks were trading higher on the diminishin­g rate hike prospects, as were prices of US Treasuries. The dollar was flat against a basket of currencies.

The consumer spending report still suggested the economy got off to a strong start in the third quarter after gross domestic product increased at a 3.0 percent annualized rate in the April-June period, the fastest in more than two years.

Growth in the second quarter was buoyed by robust consumer spending. The continuing strength of the labor market should support consumer spending.

In a separate report on Thursday, the Labor Department said initial claims for state unemployme­nt benefits rose by 1,000 to a seasonally adjusted 236,000 for the week ended Aug. 26.

The four-week moving average of claims, considered a better measure of labor market trends as it irons out week-to-week volatility, fell by 1,250 to 236,750 last week, the lowest reading since May.

Claims have now been below 300,000, a threshold associated with a robust labor market, for 130 consecutiv­e weeks. That is the longest such stretch since 1970, when the labor market was smaller.

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