San Francisco Chronicle

February spending by U.S. consumers shows just 0.1% rise

- By Martin Crutsinger Martin Crutsinger is an Associated Press writer.

Consumers increased their spending at the weakest pace in six months February, while the 12-month rise in consumer prices was the largest in nearly five years.

Consumer spending edged up 0.1 percent in February following a similarly sluggish 0.2 percent increase in January, the Commerce Department reported Friday. The small gains suggest that overall economic growth likely slowed in the first quarter.

Incomes, however, were up a solid 0.4 percent in February, offering hope for stronger consumer spending in the months ahead.

Meanwhile, an inflation gauge closely watched by the Federal Reserve increased 2.1 percent in February compared with the same month a year earlier. It is the sharpest 12month rise since March 2012 and slightly above the Fed’s 2 percent inflation target.

The Fed raised a key interest rate in March, just three months after an increase in December. Officials have sent signals that the pace of rate increases will accelerate this year after seven years of stagnant rates at a record low near zero. In the last two years, the Fed nudged rates up just one time in each of those years.

The overall economy grew at a 2.1 percent rate in the October-December quarter, supported by a strong gain in consumer spending.

But with the recent weakness in spending, which accounts for 70 percent of economic activity, many analysts believe growth in the January-March quarter could slow to a rate of 1.5 percent or less before accelerati­ng in the months ahead.

“Consumer spending is likely to pick up in March and the second quarter due to a sudden surge in tax refunds in the latter half of February, elevated levels of consumer mood, strong stock market performanc­e, rising employment and disposable income and household wealth,” predicted Chris Christophe­r Jr., director of consumer economics at HIS Markit.

Many economists expect the economy will accelerate later this year to rates around 2.5 percent or more if President Trump is successful in winning approval for his economic stimulus package, which includes tax cuts, infrastruc­ture spending increases and deregulati­on.

Another reason for the optimistic spending outlook is the recent rise in consumer confidence, which by the Conference Board’s measure hit a 16-year high in March.

The February spending figure was attributed in part to an unusually mild winter, which sapped demand for utilities. Services, the category that covers utility payments, was up just 0.1 percent. Spending on goods was also weak, with purchases of long-lasting durable goods such as autos down 0.1 percent. Nondurable goods spending showed no change.

The combinatio­n of a strong gain in incomes and modest rise in spending pushed the saving rate up to 5.6 percent of aftertax income in February, the highest level since October and up from 5.4 percent in January.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States