Strong second-quarter performance of US economy defies recession fears

Strong second-quarter performance of US economy defies recession fears

Summary

Second-quarter GDP increases at 2.4% ‍rate

Consumer spending⁢ slows, but⁢ pace still solid

Business investment ⁣picks up on equipment rebound

Weekly jobless claims fall 7,000 to 221,000

WASHINGTON, July 27 (Reuters) – The ‌U.S. ‌economy grew faster than expected in the second quarter ‌as a resilient labor market supported consumer spending, while businesses boosted investment in equipment ‌and built more factories, potentially keeping a much-feared ‍recession at bay.

Despite the broad-based acceleration in growth reported ⁤by the Commerce Department on Thursday, inflation subsided ⁣considerably last quarter, with one of the key measures tracked by the Federal Reserve for its 2% target posting⁢ its slowest increase in more than two ⁣years.

Economists, some of⁢ whom have been forecasting a recession since 2022, believed​ the U.S.⁤ central bank’s fastest interest rate hiking cycle since the ​1980s⁣ was drawing to a close, though strong domestic demand could see it ⁢keeping borrowing ⁤costs higher and for longer.

The Fed on Wednesday raised its policy rate by 25 basis points to the⁢ 5.25%-5.50% range.

“Despite the Fed’s campaign to ‌slow growth and snuff out inflation, no⁤ recession is in sight,”⁢ said⁤ Sung Won ⁣Sohn, ⁣a finance and ⁣economics professor at Loyola Marymount University in Los⁣ Angeles. “Stop raising rates for now.”

Gross domestic product increased ​at a 2.4% ​annualized rate last quarter, the government said in its advance estimate of second-quarter GDP. The economy ‌grew ​at a 2.0% pace in the January-March quarter. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast GDP ⁣would rise at a 1.8% rate in the April-June period.

The government’s measure of inflation in the⁢ economy, the price ‍index for gross domestic ⁣purchases, rose at a 1.9% rate, the​ slowest in three years. This followed a 3.8% pace ​of increase in ‌the first ​quarter.

Even more encouraging, the personal consumption expenditures ‌price index (PCE) excluding ⁢food and energy ‌advanced at a 3.8% rate. That was the smallest gain since the first quarter of 2021 and was a slowdown from the‌ 4.9% pace logged in the January-March quarter. The Fed ⁢watches the PCE ‌price indexes for monetary policy.

“It may be too soon to talk about Goldilocks, but there have been ⁤some favorable ⁣supply-side developments lately that could⁤ have legs,” ⁤said Michael Feroli, ‍chief U.S. ‌economist at ⁣JPMorgan in New York.

Outside housing and manufacturing, the economy has largely weathered the 525 basis points in rate hikes⁣ from ​the Fed⁣ since March⁣ 2022. ‍Most economists are now confident the ‌”soft landing” ⁢scenario – in⁤ which inflation falls, unemployment remains relatively‍ low and a recession ‌is avoided – is feasible.

President Joe Biden said the​ GDP report was evidence that his economic plan was⁤ working. “We’re just getting started,” the Democratic president‌ said in a statement.

Stocks on⁤ Wall Street were trading higher. The dollar‌ rose⁣ against a basket of currencies. U.S. Treasury prices fell.

GDP contributors

BROAD-BASED GROWTH

Consumer spending, which…

Link ​from www.reuters.com

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