The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Wall Street turmoil to bend, not break, economic expansion

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THE TURMOIL in financial markets may slow the US economic expansion. But it probably won’t kill it.

While the threat of a downturn has risen, consumers and companies have the wherewitha­l to weather the turbulence in stocks and keep the economy afloat, economists say.

“The risk of a recession in 2016 is pretty low, certainly under 25 per cent,” said David Hensley, director of global economics for JPMorgan Chase in New York. “I’m more worried about growth downshifti­ng to one to two per cent than I am about a recession.”

Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen and her colleagues suggested last Wednesday that they might put off raising interest rates in March in response to the more uncertain economic outlook. The central bank increased rates in December for the first time in nine years.

Since hitting bottom in June 2009, the economy has withstood a series of shocks – a near collapse of the euro zone and a government shutdown in the United States, to name but two – on its way to recording the fourth-longest expansion since the end of World War II. It’s also been the weakest, with gross domestic product climbing at a mere annual pace of 2.2 per cent.

Government figures Friday are forecast to show GDP growth decelerate­d in the final three months of 2015, to a 0.8 per cent annualised rate, from two per cent in the third quarter, according to the median projection of economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Behind the predicted slowdown: A sharp slackening in inventorie­s by manufactur­ers and other businesses and a larger trade deficit.

So far this year through Wednesday, US stock prices have fallen about eight per cent, wiping trillions of dollars off wealth. The steep drop in equities, coupled with a shakeout in the corporate-bond market, also has raised the cost of capital for companies, making it more expensive for them to expand. Businesses are more vulnerable to succumbing to the shock from the markets than consumers, according to Hensley. That’s because companies also are being squeezed by rising labor costs and a general lack of pricing power, while households continue to benefit from a strong job market and falling gasoline prices.

The biggest risk is that a panic in the financial markets so unnerves consumers and companies that they slash spending, driving the economy into recession, said Joel Prakken, co- founder of St. Louis-based Macroecono­mic Advisers.

So far at least, Americans seem to be taking the stock- market rout in stride.

“This is not the first time that I’ve seen a drop, sadly,” said Detroit native Lindsay Madden as she browsed through a Tesla Motors showroom in Washington. “So I am not in a panic, not fussing about it.”

Americans surveyed by the Conference Board this month seem similarly sanguine, with 34.6 per cent expecting equity prices to decline over the coming year. While that’s up from 30.5 per cent in December, it’s still below the 38.5 per cent recorded in September, when financial markets were first spooked by developmen­ts in China.

Overall consumer confidence climbed in January to a threemonth high, according to a sentiment index compiled by the New York-based private research group.

“The gains we’ve seen in employment, the declines in gas prices at the pump and increases in house prices are helping to offset the volatility in the financial markets,” said Lynn Franco, the Conference Board’s Director of Economic Indicators.

An extended bout of turbulence though could sour sentiment and cause consumers to become more cautious in their spending habits. Even before the recent fallout in financial markets, households were electing to take advantage of falling gasoline prices to boost savings.

Franco though said that, in the end, the most important determinan­t of consumer confidence is the job market.

And on that score, the news is first rate. Payrolls expanded by more than 280,000 per month on average in the last quarter of 2015, the strongest three-month showing of the year.

Some economists though worry that the good times for workers won’t last if businesses decide to respond to the tumult in the stock and corporate-bond markets by retrenchin­g.

News on the economy was mixed last Thursday. On the plus side, the Labour Department reported that applicatio­ns for unemployme­nt benefits declined last week from a six-month high, indicating that firings remain low in spite of the financial volatility.

A separate report from the Commerce Department was more downbeat. Orders for business equipment fell in December by the most in 10 months, a sign companies were slashing capital investment even before the turmoil in global financial markets

Companies are under pressure to cut back because sales have been stagnant while their wage bill has been rising, said John Lonski, chief economist of Moody’s Capital Market Research Group in New York. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York on Jan 20. The turmoil in financial markets may slow the US economic expansion, but probably won’t kill it. — WP-Bloomberg photos
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York on Jan 20. The turmoil in financial markets may slow the US economic expansion, but probably won’t kill it. — WP-Bloomberg photos
 ??  ?? Consumers inside anAT&T Inc. store in NewYork on Monday.While the threat of an economic downturn has risen,consumers and companies have the wherewitha­l to weather the turbulence in stocks and keep the economy afloat, economists say.
Consumers inside anAT&T Inc. store in NewYork on Monday.While the threat of an economic downturn has risen,consumers and companies have the wherewitha­l to weather the turbulence in stocks and keep the economy afloat, economists say.
 ??  ?? A maintenanc­e technician inspects a US Air Force Boeing C-17 Globemaste­r III airplane at the Boeing Co. Global Services and Support facility in San Antonio,Texas, last Thursday. Government figures last Friday are forecast to show GDP growth decelerate­d in the final three months of 2015, with a sharp slackening in inventorie­s by manufactur­ers and other businesses and a larger trade deficit behind the slowdown.
A maintenanc­e technician inspects a US Air Force Boeing C-17 Globemaste­r III airplane at the Boeing Co. Global Services and Support facility in San Antonio,Texas, last Thursday. Government figures last Friday are forecast to show GDP growth decelerate­d in the final three months of 2015, with a sharp slackening in inventorie­s by manufactur­ers and other businesses and a larger trade deficit behind the slowdown.

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