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Capital-spending slowdown warning for US growth

Tariff-related uncertaint­y and cooling global demand among issues

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WASHINGTON: Juiced by President Donald Trump’s tax cuts, business investment helped deliver a robust US economy in the first half of 2018, but signs have multiplied that the growth driver is faltering.

Companies face tariff-related uncertaint­y, cooling global demand and rising borrowing costs, while plunging oil prices are menacing the energy sector.

Meanwhile, the United States and China are settling in for a protracted trade war, the boost from lower taxes is projected to fade next year and a politicall­y divided Congress will probably shirk from additional stimulus.

These challenges will test corporate America’s appetite to invest in the kind of faster-growth, higher-productivi­ty future the Trump administra­tion has promised.

While such spending picked up in early 2018 after plodding along for years, a string of weak reports raises questions about the outlook.

With firms using tax savings for buybacks and dividends rather than investment, the best gains may already be over.

Cummins Inc, Whirlpool Corp, Caterpilla­r Inc and Stanley Black & Decker Inc recently cited higher costs from the trade war.

The strength of capital expenditur­es – or capex – may be the key to determinin­g whether US growth can continue outpacing peers, how much higher the Federal Reserve can raise interest rates, and whether the dollar’s value will keep rising.

“Capex is the No. 1 story,” said David Woo, head of global rates and foreign exchange strategy at Bank of America Corp.

“There are hundreds of data points coming out every month but that’s the one that I watch,” and bond traders should too.

The trade war and likely political gridlock after the midterm elections pose “the biggest uncertaint­y for capex and therefore US rates and the US dollar,” said Woo, who’s analysed the economy and markets for almost a quarter century.

Trump and Republican­s sold the corporate tax cut and full and immediate expensing – which gives companies an immediate tax break for investing – as a way to rev up the economy and pay for the US$1.5 trillion cost of the new tax law.

While few expect capex to collapse, there’s a growing debate over business investment, which encompasse­s spending on equipment, on structures such as factories and offices, and on intellectu­al property and software.

Before the recent plunge in oil prices, the energy-sector rebound helped pump up capex and manufactur­ing.

Then, deregulati­on and corporate tax cuts added a sugar high, until recently: Nonresiden­tial investment slowed to a crawl last quarter. White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow acknowledg­ed as much, but said last week business spending is booming again.

Yet orders at US factories for non-military capital goods, excluding aircraft, were weak in October for a third straight month.

The Institute for Supply Management’s manufactur­ing index fell to a six-month low in October, and regional Fed gauges cooled. The economy is projected to expand at a more moderate pace this quarter and soften further in early 2019.

On Jan 1, tariffs go up to 25% on US$200bil of imports from China, a critical player in manufactur­ing supply chains, and Trump has threatened to impose levies on everything imported from the Asian nation – which would further elevate materials costs and worsen supply disruption­s.

“I don’t count business investment as down and out,” said Ellen Zentner, chief US economist at Morgan Stanley.

“But there are a lot of uncertaint­ies about next year,” so the expansion “could slow more than anyone is expecting.”

The escalation in tariffs could set off a chain of negative events, including reduced forecasts from companies and a hit to margins, she said.

The biggest unknown is whether investors sour on the growth story and cause financial conditions to tighten.

The latest ISM manufactur­ing survey showed more than 40% of the comments from respondent­s in recent months were related to tariffs, with trade uncertaint­y continuing to push companies to evaluate whether to invest or adopt a wait-and-see approach, or even consider expansion outside the United States.

Recent market jitters reflect concern about trade. A business-investment slowdown also would have implicatio­ns for the economy’s long-term speed limit and inflation.

Without investment growth at an adequate pace, productivi­ty is likely to stay mired in the rut of the past decade.

That means less room for wage gains, which have been the missing piece of the strengthen­ing job market throughout this expansion. — Bloomberg

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