US Economy: In a Good Place

August 30, 2024

US Economy: In a Good Place

  • US Q2 GDP growth was revised higher and the progress on inflation since April is encouraging.
  • Eurozone August CPI, US July PCE, and Canada Q2 GDP are today’s highlights.
  • Australia retail turnover was unchanged in July. New Zealand consumer confidence improves in August.

USD is consolidating yesterday’s gains triggered by cooler inflation in Germany and upward revision to US GDP growth. The US economy is in good shape. Q2 GDP growth was revised up to 3.0% SAAR from a preliminary estimate of 2.8% and underlying economic momentum was stronger. The growth contribution from private consumption expenditure was higher at 1.95pts vs. 1.57pts previously. Looking ahead, the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model projects solid Q3 growth of 2.0% SAAR.

The US Personal Income and Outlays report is the main domestic highlight today (1:30pm London). Headline and core PCE are both projected to rise 0.2% m/m. Year-over-year, headline PCE inflation is expected to remain at 2.5% for a second consecutive month while core PCE inflation is forecast to rise a tick to 2.7% y/y. The Cleveland Fed’s inflation Nowcast model sees headline PCE rising 0.2% m/m or 2.6% y/y while core PCE is forecast to rise 0.1% m/m or 2.6% y/y. Overall, the progress on inflation since April is encouraging but inflation remains far from the Fed’s 2% target.

US personal income is projected to rise 0.2% m/m for a second consecutive month, personal spending is expected to increase 0.5% m/m vs. 0.3% in June, and real personal spending is forecast to pick-up 0.3% m/m vs. 0.2% in June. As long as jobs are being created, income will continue to grow and consumption will remain robust.

Nonetheless, we need robust US jobs data next week for interest rate futures to significantly trim aggressive Fed funds rate cut bets (100bps by year-end) in favor of sustained USD strength. Fed officials are more concerned with downside risk to employment than upside risk to inflation.

EUR/USD is holding just above yesterday’s low of around 1.1056. The Eurozone August preliminary CPI is the spotlight (10:00am London). Headline CPI is expected to rise 0.2% m/m (vs. 0% in July) and ease to a 38-month low at 2.2% y/y vs 2.6% in July. Core CPI inflation is projected to fall one tick to 2.8% y/y. Attention will also be on services inflation as it has been sticky around 4% y/y since November 2023.

The risk to the Eurozone August CPI print is skewed to the downside following softer than expected inflation in Germany (actual: -0.2% m/m, consensus: 0%) and Spain (actual: 0% m/m, consensus: 0.2%). Of note, France EU harmonized CPI was a tick higher than expected at 0.6% m/m in August. Overall, the Eurozone disinflationary process is tracking the ECB’s 2024 projection and the ECB is widely expected to resume easing in September.

GBP/USD is trading sideways around 1.3170. UK nationwide house prices unexpectedly drops -0.2% m/m in August (consensus: +0.2%) after rising 0.3% in July. On a year-over-year basis, house prices are up 2.4% vs. 2.1% in July which is the highest since December 2022. July aggregate money growth is up next (9:30am London). The annual growth rate of sterling net lending to private sector companies and households (M4Lex) is expected to recover further in July consistent with a gradual pick-up in economic activity. This would reinforce the BOE’s cautious easing policy guidance and offer GBP support.

JPY showed little reaction to the data released from Japan overnight. The data continues to suggest that the bar for an aggressive BOJ tightening cycle is high as underlying price pressures remains low and economic activity is soft.

The Tokyo August CPI print, a leading indicator of the national CPI, overshot expectations but that largely reflects base effects (low readings from a year ago). Headline quickened four ticks to 2.6% y/y (consensus: 2.3%), core ex-fresh food rose two ticks to 2.4% y/y (consensus: 2.2%), and core ex-fresh food and energy increased one tick to 1.6% y/y (consensus: 1.4%). Meanwhile, Japan retail sales grew less than expected in July (actual: 0.2% m/m, consensus: 0.4%, prior: 0.6%) and the pick-up in industrial production was also more subdued than anticipated (2.8% m/m, consensus: 3.5%, prior: -4.2%).

CAD will take its cue today from Canada’s Q2 GDP report (1:30pm London). Consensus is looking for 1.8% SAAR real GDP growth vs. 1.7% in Q1. The Bank of Canada (BOC) has penciled-in more modest growth of 1.5% SAAR in Q2 driven by government spending, household consumption, and business fixed investment. Regardless, Canada’s Q2 GDP report is unlikely to dent market pricing for an additional 75bps of BOC policy rate cuts by year-end because inflation in Canada is easing rapidly.

AUD/USD is firm underpinned by the rally in Asian stocks and a continued recovery in iron ore future prices. But AUD upside momentum is limited partly because we expect the RBA to soon pivot away from its hawkish guidance. Australia households continue to curb non-essential spending, reinforcing the case for an RBA rate cut by year-end (25bps cut is 80% priced-in). Nominal retail turnover was unexpectedly unchanged in July (consensus: +0.3% m/m) after a mid-year sales activity boost of 0.5% in June. The only industry that had a rise in July was food retailing.

NZD/USD is range-bound just under yesterday’s multi-month high of around 0.6300. New Zealand ANZ consumer confidence index rose 4 points in August to a six-month high at 92.2 driven by an improvement in the future conditions index. Nonetheless, consumer confidence remains well below the 20-year average of 114.0 and does not move the dial on RBNZ easing expectations. The swaps market price-in roughly 75bps of additional RBNZ policy rate cuts by year-end which is a headwind for NZD.

Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. (“BBH”) may be used to reference the company as a whole and/or its various subsidiaries generally. This material and any products or services may be issued or provided in multiple jurisdictions by duly authorized and regulated subsidiaries.This material is for general information and reference purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax or investment advice and is not intended as an offer to sell, or a solicitation to buy securities, services or investment products. Any reference to tax matters is not intended to be used, and may not be used, for purposes of avoiding penalties under the U.S. Internal Revenue Code, or other applicable tax regimes, or for promotion, marketing or recommendation to third parties. All information has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but accuracy is not guaranteed, and reliance should not be placed on the information presented. This material may not be reproduced, copied or transmitted, or any of the content disclosed to third parties, without the permission of BBH. All trademarks and service marks included are the property of BBH or their respective owners.© Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. 2024. All rights reserved.

As of June 15, 2022 Internet Explorer 11 is not supported by BBH.com.

Important Information for Non-U.S. Residents

You are required to read the following important information, which, in conjunction with the Terms and Conditions, governs your use of this website. Your use of this website and its contents constitute your acceptance of this information and those Terms and Conditions. If you do not agree with this information and the Terms and Conditions, you should immediately cease use of this website. The contents of this website have not been prepared for the benefit of investors outside of the United States. This website is not intended as a solicitation of the purchase or sale of any security or other financial instrument or any investment management services for any investor who resides in a jurisdiction other than the United States1. As a general matter, Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. and its subsidiaries (“BBH”) is not licensed or registered to solicit prospective investors and offer investment advisory services in jurisdictions outside of the United States. The information on this website is not intended to be distributed to, directed at or used by any person or entity in any jurisdiction or country where such distribution or use would be contrary to law or regulation. Persons in respect of whom such prohibitions apply must not access the website.  Under certain circumstances, BBH may provide services to investors located outside of the United States in accordance with applicable law. The conditions under which such services may be provided will be analyzed on a case-by-case basis by BBH. BBH will only accept investors from such jurisdictions or countries where it has made a determination that such an arrangement or relationship is permissible under the laws of that jurisdiction or country. The existence of this website is not intended to be a substitute for the type of analysis described above and is not intended as a solicitation of or recommendation to any prospective investor, including those located outside of the United States. Certain BBH products or services may not be available in certain jurisdictions. By choosing to access this website from any location other than the United States, you accept full responsibility for compliance with all local laws. The website contains content that has been obtained from sources that BBH believes to be reliable as of the date presented; however, BBH cannot guarantee the accuracy of such content, assure its completeness, or warrant that such information will not be changed. The content contained herein is current as of the date of issuance and is subject to change without notice. The website’s content does not constitute investment advice and should not be used as the basis for any investment decision. There is no guarantee that any investment objectives, expectations, targets described in this website or the  performance or profitability of any investment will be achieved. You understand that investing in securities and other financial instruments involves risks that may affect the value of the securities and may result in losses, including the potential loss of the principal invested, and you assume and are able to bear all such risks.  In no event shall BBH or any other affiliated party be liable for any direct, incidental, special, consequential, indirect, lost profits, loss of business or data, or punitive damages arising out of your use of this website. By clicking accept, you confirm that you accept  to the above Important Information along with Terms and Conditions.

 
1BBH sponsors UCITS Funds registered in Luxembourg, in certain jurisdictions. For information on those funds, please see bbhluxembourgfunds.com



captcha image

Type in the word seen on the picture

I am a current investor in another jurisdiction