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4/30/14, "U.S. economy stalls on inventories, trade," Reuters, L. Mutikani
"The U.S. economy barely grew in the first quarter as exports tumbled and businesses
accumulated stocks at the slowest pace in nearly a year, but activity
already appears to be bouncing back. Gross domestic product
expanded at a 0.1 percent annual rate, the slowest since the fourth
quarter of 2012, the Commerce Department said on Wednesday.
That
was a sharp pullback from the fourth quarter's 2.6 percent pace and was
worse than economists' expectations for a slowdown to a 1.2 percent
rate. The slowdown partly reflected an unusually cold and disruptive
winter, marked by declines in sectors ranging from business spending to home building.
The
Commerce Department's first snapshot of first-quarter growth was
released just hours before the Federal Reserve wraps up a two-day policy
meeting.
While harsh
weather partially explains the weakness in growth, the magnitude of the
slowdown could complicate the U.S. central bank's message as it sets to
announce a further reduction in the amount of money it is pumping into
the economy through monthly bond purchases.
U.S. stock index futures fell slightly on the report, while U.S. Treasury debt prices trimmed losses. The
first-quarter stall in growth, however, is likely to be temporary and
recent data have suggested strength at the tail end of the quarter. Separately,
the ADP National Employment Report showed private employers added
220,000 jobs to their payrolls in April after increasing headcount by
209,000 in March...
Economists
estimate severe weather could have chopped off as much as 1.4
percentage points from GDP growth. The government, however, gave no
details on the impact of the weather.
INVENTORY GROWTH DECELERATES
Businesses
restocked inventories to the tune of $111.7 billion in the final three
months of last year, but added only $87.4 billion more to stocks in the
first quarter, the smallest amount since the second quarter of 2013.
The slowdown in restocking subtracted 0.57 percentage point from GDP growth in the first quarter. Trade
also undercut growth, taking off 0.83 percentage point, partly because
of the weather, which left goods piling up at ports. Exports fell at a
7.6 percent rate in the first quarter, the largest decline in five
years, after growing at a 9.5 percent pace in the final three months of
2013.
Together,
inventories and trade sliced off 1.4 percentage points from GDP growth. A
measure of domestic demand that strips out exports and inventories
expanded at a 1.5 percent rate.
Consumer
spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic
activity, increased at a 3.0 percent rate, reflecting a spurt in
spending on services linked to demand for heating during the winter and
the Affordable Healthcare Act, which expanded health care coverage to
many Americans.
Spending on services grew at its quickest pace since the second quarter of 2000.
Spending
on goods, however, slowed sharply, indicating that the frigid
temperatures had reduced foot traffic to shopping malls. Consumer
spending had increased at a brisk 3.3 percent pace in the
fourth-quarter.
Harsh weather also undercut business spending on equipment. While investment in nonresidential structures, such as gas drilling, rebounded, the increase was minor. Business spending on equipment fell at its fastest pace in nearly five years.
Investment
in home building contracted for a second straight quarter, in part
because of the weather. But a rise in mortgage rates over the past year
has also hurt.
A second
quarter of contraction in spending on home building suggests a housing
recession, which could raise some eyebrows at the U.S. central bank. A
bounce back is, however, expected in the April-June period."
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