|

Slowdown is likely behind US as GDP appears to have accelerated in Q2 - BBH

Economists at BBH explain that the US economy slowed from 3.5% in Q316 to 2.1% in Q4 and then 1.2% in Q1 17, however, the slowdown is likely behind the US as GDP appears to have accelerated in Q2.  

Key highlights:

"After being widely criticized for being too dovish, the Federal Reserve has become subject to widespread criticism that is was too hawkish last week in announcing a rate hike and details of its unwinding of QE.  Some argue the economy is slowing, but this assessment is made by looking at the rear-view mirror.  The Fed does not target GDP.  Its mandate is full employment, and that has been approached.  It has a mandate for price stability.  Inflation has softened in recent month, but Yellen and the Fed's leadership wants to look through it as it has been primarily driven by the fall in energy prices and wireless communication.  There are some other quirky things, dragging down core inflation, like owner equivalent rent (falling while rents are rising).  The prices received from the Philly, and NY Fed surveys reached new five-year highs." 

"Underneath Yellen and Dudley's recent comments is a faith in the Phillip's curve, which essentially asserts that businesses will raises prices to offset rising labor costs.  This is a debatable point.  Is labor really simply another input, like raw materials?  Some argue that wages did not fall as much as the economic conditions would have suggested during the crisis given the slack and deflationary conditions.  Others argue that wages should be rising faster now, even though they are growing faster than productivity.  In any event, as long as the labor market is absorbing its slack, at least some Fed officials will be confident that price pressures will rise even if there are unpredictable lag times."  

"At the same time,  some Fed officials, like Chicago's Evans, have expressed concern about "technological deflation."  It appears, for example, that Amazon can deliver food items at around 20% lower than one can buy them in the store from Whole Foods.  Uber, now Lyft, can undercut traditional taxi cabs and black cars.  The idea is that new technology is disruptive, enhances competition and drives prices lower." 

"On the other hand, the kinds of goods that are covered do not seem to be large weights in CPI or core PCE basket.  And the enhanced competition might be a short transition phase.  Consider that Google accounts for nearly 90% of search advertising.  Facebook accounts for almost 80% of mobile social media traffic. Roughly three-quarters of e-books are sold by Amazon."  

Author

Eren Sengezer

As an economist at heart, Eren Sengezer specializes in the assessment of the short-term and long-term impacts of macroeconomic data, central bank policies and political developments on financial assets.

More from Eren Sengezer
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD regains balance, targets 1.1800

EUR/USD has lost a bit of momentum after its earlier push higher and is now attempting to reclaim the key 1.1800 barrier on Monday. In the meantime, investors remain focused on the evolving US–EU trade relationship after President Trump’s announcement of sweeping global tariff hikes.

GBP/USD recedes from tops, back to 1.3500

GBP/USD is extending its move higher on Monday, meeting some resistance around 1.3530 on the back of the widespread bearish tone in the US Dollar amid ongoing uncertainty around tariffs. For now, traders are watching overall risk sentiment and central bank rhetoric for the next directional cue.

Gold advances to four-week highs, focus is on $5,200

Gold is holding onto its bullish tone on Monday, hovering near monthly highs well above the $5,100 mark per troy ounce. Fresh trade-war concerns, coupled with rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, are keeping demand for the yellow metal well on the rise.

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP intensify sell-off as tariff uncertainty weighs

Bitcoin, Ethereum and Ripple are trading amid increasing selling pressure at the time of writing on Monday, as investors react to fresh trade uncertainty over US President Donald Trump’s push for more tariffs.

Supreme Court nixes tariffs, Trump teases 15% global tariff

On February 20th, the Supreme Court ruled that Trump’s global tariffs under IEEPA authority were unconstitutional, effectively nullifying the framework. However, the relief was short-lived. Within hours, Trump floated a 15% blanket tariff under an alternative legal authority.

Top Crypto Losers: Zcash, Pump.fun, and LayerZero extended losses as Bitcoin loses $65,000

The cryptocurrency market starts the week in panic mode, with altcoins Zcash, Pump.fun, and LayerZero. Bitcoin falls below $65,000 as the US President Donald Trump regroups amid renewed trade policy risks.