The Oklahoman

Savings stall

- BY KATIA DMITRIEVA

Americans keep spending as savings take a back seat.

Americans kept on spending in September as income gains cooled, pushing down the savings rate to the lowest this year. Inflation matched the Federal Reserve’s target, reinforcin­g the central bank’s outlook for gradual interest-rate hikes.

Purchases, which account for about 70 percent of the economy, rose 0.4 percent from the prior month, matching economists’ estimates, following an upwardly revised 0.5 percent increase, Commerce Department figures showed Monday. Incomes advanced a lessthan-projected 0.2 percent, the weakest in more than a year, while Americans saved 6.2 percent of their disposable income, matching the lowest level since 2013.

The figures show spending in September helped lift consumptio­n during the quarter to what gross domestic product data Friday showed was the fastest increase since 2014. Last month’s rise reflected gains in durable goods, particular­ly motor vehicles and parts. At the same time, the slowerthan-expected income growth suggests that any meaningful, sustained pay gains remain elusive, though Hurricane Florence may have had an impact on September’s figures.

Risks to the outlook include President Donald Trump’s global trade war — which is boosting prices and making some companies hesitant to invest — as well as a stock-market swoon and a fading of the effects from fiscal stimulus. At the same time, consumer optimism remains elevated amid a tight labor market and lower taxes, providing support for spending in the final quarter.

The report “bodes well for the consumer remaining strong through the end of the year,” said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at Amherst Pierpont Securities. “You never like to see the savings rate falling but it’s still at a robust level.”

The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge — tied to consumptio­n — rose 0.1 percent from the previous month, matching projection­s, and was up 2 percent from a year earlier. Excluding food and energy, so-called core prices 0.2 percent, slightly above the median estimate for a 0.1 percent rise, and were also up 2 percent on an annual basis.

“The Fed has to be pretty happy with the fact that we’ve finally gotten the 2 percent on core and we seem to be staying there, not falling back or accelerati­ng,” Stanley said. “That argues for them getting back to neutral. They don’t have to rush to get there and they don’t need to speed up from the pace we’ve seen so far.”

While inflation has mostly remained below the central bank’s 2 percent target since 2012, it’s made progress in the last few months and Fed officials are expected to raise interest rates for a fourth time this year in December.

The tax-cut legislatio­n signed last year is generally providing workers with more take-home pay, and wages have been picking up as the unemployme­nt rate fell to the lowest since 1969. Still, the gains have been gradual and inflation has eaten into the increases.

Wages and salaries rose 0.2 percent in September from the prior month, following a 0.5 percent increase, the data showed. Real disposable income, or earnings adjusted for taxes and inflation, advanced 0.1 percent, a five-month low.

The Labor Department’s monthly jobs report, due Friday, is projected to show employers added 193,000 workers in October while the jobless rate held at 3.7 percent.

Other details:

• Durable goods spending, adjusted for inflation, rose 1.8 percent after a 0.9 percent increase in the prior month, reflecting motor vehicles and parts and recreation­al goods and vehicles; nondurable goods advanced 0.2 percent for a second month.

• Household outlays on services, adjusted for inflation, were unchanged after a 0.3 percent increase; health care spending rose, while food services and accommodat­ions declined.

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