Bloomberg
US retail sales fell by the most in a year and business equipment production slumped, raising concerns that the economy is losing momentum under the weight of tighter Federal Reserve policy.
The value of overall retail purchases broadly fall 1.1% in December after a downwardly revised 1% drop in the prior month, Commerce Department data showed. Separate figures showed a 1.3% decline in factory output last month that wrapped up the weakest quarter for manufacturing since onset of the pandemic.
Taken together, the data show a consumer that’s losing steam and business investment falling, portending weaker growth and raising concerns that the economy may be inching closer to a recession. Combined with easing inflation, the figures put the Fed on track to further slow the pace of interest-rate hikes.
Ten of 13 retail categories fell last month, including motor vehicles, furniture and personal care stores. The value of sales at gasoline stations slumped 4.6% as prices steadily dropped. Excluding gasoline and autos, retail sales fell 0.7%. The figures aren’t adjusted for inflation.
While a strong jobs market has supported shoppers, Americans are still feeling strained — the saving rate is near a record low and credit-card balances have surged.
The data cap a year in which retail sales rose 9.2%, the second-most ever in figures back to 1993, though it also reflects rapid inflation. Resilient spending has been a source of frustration for the Fed as it tries to weaken demand across the economy, and consumers have played a role in keeping prices elevated.
The S&P 500 opened higher and Treasuries rallied on hardened bets that the Fed will downshift to a quarter-point hike in two weeks and follow suit in March. A separate report showed a measure of wholesale prices posted the biggest monthly drop since the start of the pandemic, adding to signs that inflationary pressures are cooling.
Traders lowered where they see rates peaking by a couple of basis points, to about 4.88%, and continue to price in around a half percentage point of easing by the end of the year. In contrast, Fed officials in December projected rates peaking around 5.1% and staying there through 2023.
Fed data highlighted the many challenges the nation’s manufacturers are contending with, including weaker global economic conditions, higher borrowing costs and restrained spending on consumer goods. As concerns permeate about a possible recession, there’s also a risk that businesses will pull back on capital investment in an effort to reduce costs.
The 2% slump in the production of business equipment in December was the most since February 2021. Including the prior month’s drop, the back-to-back decreases were the most since the onset of the pandemic.
And on a quarterly basis, the annualized 2.5% drop in the final three months of the year was the sharpest since pandemic lockdowns shuttered facilities. The decline in output was broad, including decreases in machinery, motor vehicles and furniture.