The Korea Times

Boy, this economy is hard to read

- By Conor Sen Conor Sen is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. He is founder of Peachtree Creek Investment­s. This article was published in the Bloomberg News and distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Slower inflation was supposed to be a sign that the economy was cooling, all part of the Federal Reserve’s plan for higher interest rates to restore balance to the economy.

For a while, things looked on track. But since the middle of January there’s an argument that economic activity is picking up again, despite monetary policy being tighter than at any point in years.

The catalyst is the growing confidence among consumers and businesses alike, ironically driven by the slowdown in inflation the Fed has been working to engineer. Monetary policy remains tight — look no further than the struggles in the automobile and commercial property sectors or affordabil­ity challenges for homebuyers — but, for now, there are too many industries showing signs of resilience or accelerati­on to believe that the central bank’s stance will cause the labor market or economy to unravel.

Frequent readers of mine will note that this is a walk-back of a bias I’ve had for the past few months.

I started worrying about a labor-market slump in early November as the unemployme­nt rate rose and worker income growth slowed. Earlier this month, I described the recovery in some cyclical parts of the economy as akin to a “dead cat bounce” that would eventually be swamped by high interest rates; it’s not unreasonab­le for something like existing home sales to climb when transactio­ns were at their lowest level since 2010.

But over the past couple of weeks, we’ve gotten more evidence, particular­ly from corporate earnings updates, with company executives reporting resilience or strength in their businesses

and showing more confidence in the future.

Perhaps nobody summed up the mood around consumers better than Walmart Inc. Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey when he said: “There was largely a consensus that we were going to enter a recession in the last year. Fortunatel­y, we avoided that. And so, I think overall, we feel a little better about the health of the economy right now.”

After slashing inventorie­s by in excess of 15 percent on a yearover-year basis — more than ever before — Home Depot Inc. Chief Executive Officer Ted Decker said, “We feel very good about our inventory position heading into 2024,” a sign that the worst is over for factories that have spent more than a year complainin­g about weak new order growth.

Luxury homebuilde­r Toll Brothers Inc. said foot traffic in model homes this past week was the highest it’s been since February 2022, showing that even mortgage rates above 7 percent are workable for a certain segment of buyers.

And Nvidia Corp. reaffirmed its position as the darling of the stock market and confidence in the artificial-intelligen­ce boom when it once again smashed earnings expectatio­ns.

These four companies give us a pretty good insight into the state of the consumer, goods economy, housing market and spending on the key growth area of technology — collective­ly, the lion’s share of economic activity. All reported varying degrees of rising confidence, whether due to working down inventory levels and making it through a challengin­g 2023, or flat-out optimism about 2024.

Torsten Slok, the chief economist at Apollo Global Management Inc., noted that the uptick in confidence among consumers began when the Fed pivoted away from a bias toward raising rates in mid-December. Financial markets had begun anticipati­ng the turn at the end of October, and we’re now hearing about it from CEOs as they talk about the state of their businesses and their plans for 2024.

This poses a conundrum for Fed officials as they think about the timing and extent of policy easing this year.

 ?? AFP-TNS ?? Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell speaks at a news conference after a Federal Open Market Committee meeting in Washington, D.C., Jan. 31.
AFP-TNS Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell speaks at a news conference after a Federal Open Market Committee meeting in Washington, D.C., Jan. 31.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic