June economic data in goldilocks scenario… for now
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Personal income, spending and inflation all hit a sweet spot in June. Personal consumption expenditures continued to grow, though not by too much; personal incomes continued to cool, but did not contract; and inflation continued to cool. The Federal Reserve’s goal of bringing the US economy in for a soft landing is on track for now, but we expect growth to veer off-course later this year. We forecast a short and shallow recession to commence in Q4 2023.

Highlights
Collectively, this report shows that the US economy is continuing to grow, but that the right parts are cooling. PCE inflation has dropped from 7.0 percent year-over-year in June 2022 to 3.0 percent y/y today. Core inflation, which is more important, is down from 5.4 percent y/y in Feb 2022 to 4.1 percent y/y today. This progress has come under the weight of 525 basis points in Fed hikes since early 2022. Despite the duel headwinds of high inflation and rapidly rising interest rates, the US consumer has not buckled. Real spending has slowed, but not fallen apart, and business investment has largely held together. The real estate market has been hit, but even that is showing evidence of stabilization and recovery.

The Fed has reason to be optimistic that it may defeat inflation without triggering a recession, but we believe this goldilocks scenario will eventually give way to a period of contraction. The Fed will probably not lower rates until its approaches its 2 percent inflation target, which we believe will be around mid-2024. High interest rates, paired with a cooling labor market, dwindling pandemic excess savings, rising personal debt, student loan repayment resumption, and other factors will likely push consumer spending into negative territory and the broader economy into recession. We expect this to happen in late 2023 and early 2024.

Inflation
Headline PCE price inflation fell from 3.8 to 3.0 percent year-over-year (y/y) in June and core PCE price inflation (which excludes food and energy) fell from 4.6 to 4.1 percent y/y. On a month-over-month basis (m/m), headline PCE inflation rose from 0.1 percent to 0.2 percent while core PCE inflation fell from 0.3 percent to 0.2 percent. Prices for goods fell for the quarter, but services prices continued to rise.

Incomes
Overall personal income rose 0.3 percent m/m (in nominal terms) in June, vs. 0.5 percent m/m in May. However, when factoring in inflation, the real month-over-month growth rate dropped to 0.1 percent m/m, vs. 0.3 percent m/m in May. In year-over-year terms, real personal income rose 2.3 percent in June, vs. 1.6 percent in May. Meanwhile the savings rates fell from 4.6 percent to 4.3 percent of disposable personal income.

Spending
Personal consumption expenditures jumped by 0.5 percent m/m (in nominal terms) in June, vs. 0.2 percent m/m percent in May. Spending on services rose by 0.4 percent m/m while spending on goods rose to 0.8 percent m/m. However, after accounting for inflation, real consumer spending was up 0.4 percent m/m in June with spending on goods rising to 0.9 percent m/m and spending of services rising 0.1 percent m/m.

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June economic data in goldilocks scenario… for now

June economic data in goldilocks scenario… for now

28 Jul. 2023 | Comments (0)

Personal income, spending and inflation all hit a sweet spot in June. Personal consumption expenditures continued to grow, though not by too much; personal incomes continued to cool, but did not contract; and inflation continued to cool. The Federal Reserve’s goal of bringing the US economy in for a soft landing is on track for now, but we expect growth to veer off-course later this year. We forecast a short and shallow recession to commence in Q4 2023.

Highlights
Collectively, this report shows that the US economy is continuing to grow, but that the right parts are cooling. PCE inflation has dropped from 7.0 percent year-over-year in June 2022 to 3.0 percent y/y today. Core inflation, which is more important, is down from 5.4 percent y/y in Feb 2022 to 4.1 percent y/y today. This progress has come under the weight of 525 basis points in Fed hikes since early 2022. Despite the duel headwinds of high inflation and rapidly rising interest rates, the US consumer has not buckled. Real spending has slowed, but not fallen apart, and business investment has largely held together. The real estate market has been hit, but even that is showing evidence of stabilization and recovery.

The Fed has reason to be optimistic that it may defeat inflation without triggering a recession, but we believe this goldilocks scenario will eventually give way to a period of contraction. The Fed will probably not lower rates until its approaches its 2 percent inflation target, which we believe will be around mid-2024. High interest rates, paired with a cooling labor market, dwindling pandemic excess savings, rising personal debt, student loan repayment resumption, and other factors will likely push consumer spending into negative territory and the broader economy into recession. We expect this to happen in late 2023 and early 2024.

Inflation
Headline PCE price inflation fell from 3.8 to 3.0 percent year-over-year (y/y) in June and core PCE price inflation (which excludes food and energy) fell from 4.6 to 4.1 percent y/y. On a month-over-month basis (m/m), headline PCE inflation rose from 0.1 percent to 0.2 percent while core PCE inflation fell from 0.3 percent to 0.2 percent. Prices for goods fell for the quarter, but services prices continued to rise.

Incomes
Overall personal income rose 0.3 percent m/m (in nominal terms) in June, vs. 0.5 percent m/m in May. However, when factoring in inflation, the real month-over-month growth rate dropped to 0.1 percent m/m, vs. 0.3 percent m/m in May. In year-over-year terms, real personal income rose 2.3 percent in June, vs. 1.6 percent in May. Meanwhile the savings rates fell from 4.6 percent to 4.3 percent of disposable personal income.

Spending
Personal consumption expenditures jumped by 0.5 percent m/m (in nominal terms) in June, vs. 0.2 percent m/m percent in May. Spending on services rose by 0.4 percent m/m while spending on goods rose to 0.8 percent m/m. However, after accounting for inflation, real consumer spending was up 0.4 percent m/m in June with spending on goods rising to 0.9 percent m/m and spending of services rising 0.1 percent m/m.

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  • About the Author:Erik Lundh

    Erik Lundh

    Erik Lundh is Senior Economist, Global at The Conference Board. Based in New York, he is responsible for much of the organization’s work on the US economy. He also works on topics impacting…

    Full Bio | More from Erik Lundh

     

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