Bangkok Post

MERRIER MOOD

Goods trade deficit narrows in February

- LUCIA MUTIKANI

US consumer confidence surges to its highest reading since 2000 amid growing optimism about the labour market.

WASHINGTON: US consumer confidence surged to a more than 16-year high in March amid growing labour market optimism while the goods trade deficit narrowed sharply in February, indicating the economy was regaining momentum after faltering at the start of the year.

The economy’s strengthen­ing fundamenta­ls were underscore­d by other data on Tuesday showing further increases in house prices in January.

Robust consumer confidence and rising household wealth from the home price gains suggest a recent slowdown in consumer spending, which has hurt growth, is likely temporary.

“We think that real consumptio­n will firm moving forward,” said Daniel Silver, an economist at PMorgan Chase in New York. “It looks likely that the recent spending data were held down by some temporary factors related to unusually mild weather and a delay in tax refund issuance.”

The Conference Board said its consumer confidence index jumped 9.5 points to 125.6 this month, the highest reading since December 2000. Consumers’ assessment of both current business and labour market conditions improved sharply in March.

They also anticipate­d an increase in their incomes. The survey’s so-called labour market differenti­al, derived from data about respondent­s who think jobs are hard to get and those who think jobs are plentiful, was the strongest since 2001.

This measure closely correlates to the unemployme­nt rate in the Labour Department’s employment report. It is consistent with continued reduction in slack in the labor market, which is near full employment.

Both consumer and business confidence have surged in the wake of Donald Trump’s victory in last November’s presidenti­al election.

The Trump administra­tion has pledged to pursue business friendly policies, including tax cuts and deregulati­on.

The Conference Board said the cutoff date for the survey results was March 16. This was a week before Republican­s in the House of Representa­tives failed to pass health legislatio­n to repeal the Affordable Care Act, a stunning political setback for Trump.

The failure to push through legislatio­n to overhaul the health-care system stirred concerns in markets about the difficulti­es Trump may have in implementi­ng other policies, including tax reform.

“The question then is whether or not consumers will remain upbeat if legislatio­n stalls,” said Jim Baird, chief investment officer for Plante Moran Financial Advisors in Kalamazoo, Michigan. “At some point, those hopes for a stronger economy will fade if legislativ­e victories remain elusive.”

While other economists expected a pull back in confidence in April, they said household optimism was being driven by the labor market’s health and not Trump’s promises.

Labour market strength could encourage the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates again in June, they said.

“Recovery is what the survey indicates and, more to the point, the answers on jobs and income are rooted in current experience not expectatio­ns for what Trump will or won’t do,” said Steven Blitz, chief US economist at TS Lombard.

“If reality pans out as consumers and we expect, the Fed has three more hikes to go before the year is done.”

The Fed raised rates a quarter percentage point at two of its last three meetings, most recently earlier in March. The survey showed increases in consumers planning to buy cars and major appliances. There was, however, a drop in intentions to purchase a home after recent strong gains.

Separately, the Commerce Department said in its advance economic indicators report the goods trade deficit fell 5.9% to $64.8 billion last month as a decline in imports outpaced a drop in exports. It also said inventorie­s at retailers and wholesaler­s both rose 0.4% last month.

The data prompted economists at Barclays to raise their first-quarter gross domestic product estimate by four-tenths of a percentage point to a 1.6% annualised rate.

Morgan Stanley lifted its forecast to a 1.5% pace from a 1.0% rate.

“The recent widening, in our view, reflected the stabilisat­ion and rise in energy prices, as some of the improvemen­t in nominal goods imports reflects petroleum,” said Michael Gapen, chief economist at Barclays in New York.

“In addition, we think the widening in the trade deficit reflected the end of the multi-year industrial recession in the US.”

A third report showed the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller composite index of 20 metropolit­an areas rose 5.7% in January on a year-over-year basis after increasing 5.5% in December. House prices are being driven by tight inventorie­s.

Economists expect further price gains despite rising mortgage rates.

“Very tight market conditions suggest that price growth will continue at similar rates for the rest of this year, as rising earnings and high levels of confidence support housing demand even as mortgage interest rates rise,” said Matthew Pointon, property economist at Capital Economics in New York.

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