Financial News Highlights

  • Revisions to GDP data left Q2 growth unchanged, but consumer spending growth was cut in half in financial news. Monthly consumer spending data showed that following at strong gain in July, real consumer spending slowed in August.
  • The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, the core Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) deflator, eased from 4.3% year-on-year to 3.9% in August. However, headline PCE inflation ticked up a notch as energy costs surged higher on the month.
  • Pending home sales, which lead existing home sales by 1-2 months fell a sharp 7.1% in August, as mortgage rates crept above 7% that month.

Yields Realign to Higher-for-Longer


Financial News Chart 1 shows month-to-month percent changes in pending and existing home sales, with the data stretching back to early 2022. The chart shows a strong correlation between the two series when changes in pending home sales are shifted forward by one month. Pending sales fell sharply in August, implying that existing home sales are also likely to record a sharp pullback over the near-term. The Fed has been beating the drum to the “higher for longer” interest rate tune for a while in financial news. Following last week’s FOMC projections, investors are recalibrating their expectations  more in line with this view. Long-term treasury yields pushed higher in the week, with the 10-Year yield rising temporarily to a new 15-year high on Thursday, before easing to 4.53% at time of writing – still almost 10 basis points above last week’s close. Equity markets trended lower through the week, but managed to recoup most of the lost ground after Friday’s soft inflation print.

Revisions to GDP data led to a minor growth upgrade for the first quarter, but left the second unchanged. However, the picture was more nuanced underneath. Most notably, second quarter consumer spending growth was cut in half, to only 0.8% q/q (ann.). August’s Personal Income and Spending data out Friday help fill in the picture for the third quarter. Real disposable personal income fell for the third month in a row in August, while real spending (PCE) growth eased to 0.1% month-on-month (m/m), following a strong 0.6% m/m gain in July. That strength early in the quarter will still make for a strong showing for the consumer, however many hurdles are looming for the fourth quarter (see forecast). Our view is that consumer spending and economic growth will cool along with the weather this autumn, with September’s pullback in consumer confidence reinforcing this view.

Housing, which was the first part of the economy to weaken in the face of rate hikes, continues to struggle. Pending home sales, which lead closed sales by 1-2 months, fell a very sharp 7.1% (m/m) in August (Chart 1). This suggest that existing home sales could soon test new post-2010 lows. The shortage of existing homes for sale has been an added obstacle for transactions. Until recently, homebuyers appeared to have found some solace in the new home market, aided by healthier inventories and builder incentives. But with mortgage rates creeping above 7% in August, this sector is also feeling the pinch. New home sales (an inherently volatile series) trended lower that month. Daily measures show that mortgage rates have risen even higher recently and are now hovering in the 7.4%-7.6% range, a level that will surely further limit the pool of homebuyers.

Financial News Chart 2 shows year-on-year percent changes for the headline and core PCE indexes. The chart shows that headline inflation ticked higher on the month, but the Fed's preferred inflation gauge, core PCE, eased from 4.3% year-on-year to 3.9%. Besides the challenges faced by the consumer, the UAW’s decision Friday to expand its strike and the increasing likelihood for a government shutdown next week, mark two other major potholes for the economy heading into the fourth quarter (see report). The shutdown would not only act as a drag on growth but would also delay access to key economic data, with next week’s payrolls report and the October 12th (CPI) inflation report the next two major items on the list. Having timely access to these reports is crucial with inflation still running well above target.

Thankfully, Friday’s PCE report carried some good news on the inflation front, with the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge easing from 4.3% to 3.9% year-on-year in August(Chart 2). However, the headline measure moved in the opposite direction, given an acceleration in food and energy costs. With the price of crude oil creeping higher to $93 per barrel, energy costs are likely to continue putting upward pressure on the headline measure over the near-term. All in all, it’s still a mixed picture, one that may be further complicated by a government shutdown.

 

Admir Kolaj, Economist | 416-944-6318


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