U.S. Economy Shows More Strength Than Recently Forecast

 | Nov 04, 2022 14:16

In early October the near-term outlook for the US business cycle looked mildly grim and output was forecast to turn slightly negative starting in November. But after four weeks the dark estimate reversed and economic activity is again set to stay moderately positive in the immediate future. Recession risk still lurks on the horizon, but for the moment the near-term macro trend has strengthened.

The latest numbers reflect a moderately stronger trend for the US economy than previously reported by CapitalSpectator.com. On Oct. 5 I wrote that an The US Business Cycle Risk Report. (The outlook was previously noted in the newsletter sent to subscribers a few days earlier.) The expected contraction was mild, virtually indistinguishable from stagnation, which was effectively a sign that the forecast was vulnerable to revision. Yet for the next three weeks the forecast held, until it didn’t.

In this week’s update (sent to newsletter subscribers on Oct. 30) the estimate for November strengthened and US output is now expected to extend its run of slow growth. He explained:

One reason for the improvement: the release of robust consumer spending data in the September report (published Oct. 28 ). As Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan said last week:

“You’re seeing a mitigation of the rate of growth, not a slowdown. Not negative growth. If you raise rates and slow down the economy to fight inflation, the expectation is you have a slowdown in consumer spending. It hasn’t happened yet. So it could happen, but it hasn’t happened yet.”

The relatively firmer activity was picked up by revised forward estimates of the Economic Trend Index (ETI) and Economic Momentum Index (EMI) in the Oct. 30 update of the US Business Cycle Risk Report. After several weeks of posting November estimates below their respective tipping points (50% and 0%), new data lifted the projections, which now show this month will escape the slight contraction previously forecast.