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Economic Outlook: C+ Balance of Risk: It’s a Spring Thaw for the U.S. Economy Recent data for the U.S. economy show a spring thaw in progress after one of the worst winters on record for parts of the upper Midwest. Consumer spending is picking up, companies are producing more and hiring more workers and houses are being built. Credit is flowing and confidence indexes are improving. We still expect to see a very weak 2014Q1 GDP report at the end of this month. Not only was the bad weather a drag through Q1, but federal discretionary spending was still contracting and we expect to see a renormalization in inventories after last fall’s surge in both farm and nonfarm inventories. If Q1 comes in as weak as we expect, there is a danger that improving confidence will be throttled back, dragging on Q2 economic activity. Hopefully, consumers and businesses will respond to the clearing skies and calming seas in front of them, rather than to the stormy passage behind them. With more confirmation of improving fundamentals, we expect to upgrade our Economic Outlook rating soon. We have not yet been above a C+ rating in its brief history, since September 2011. In a benign economic environment the Federal Reserve will try to unwind extraordinary policy steadily and predictably, but without explicit forward guidance to box them in. We expect the Yellen Fed to be a little more boring than the Bernanke Fed simply because the times are different. Bernanke’s job was to surprise a very bad economy in a good direction. Yellen’s goal will be to avoid bad surprises in an improving economy. At their upcoming April 29/30 meeting, we expect the FOMC to announce another $10 billion reduction in its asset purchase program. We continue to expect to see the first increase in the near-zero fed funds rate around mid-year 2015, as early as the end of April, as late as mid-September. Job growth got back on track in February and March after a weak December and January. In February 197,000 jobs were added. March saw 192,000 net new payroll jobs. Recently stronger labor force growth may be a developing trend. If it is, that could bring the unemployment rate down more slowly than previously thought. We have increased our estimate of labor force growth this year in our April forecast. Consequently, the unemployment rate declines more slowly for the remainder of this year than previously estimated. That does not imply a net worsening of the outlook. The unemployment rate is simply not a well-calibrated measure of economic activity. Vehicle sales stepped up in March to a 16.4 million unit rate. The bounce-back in sales was likely propelled by demand pent up over the winter. Light truck sales in particular were stronger than expected, which is a positive indicator for construction. We look for slightly weaker vehicle sales in April consistent with an overall improving trend. U.S. Economic Outlook, Summary Output & Prices Real GDP (Chained 2009 Billions $) Percent Change Annualized CPI (1982-84=100) Percent Change Annualized Labor Markets Payroll Jobs (Millions) Percent Change Annualized Unemployment Rate (Percent) Interest Rates (percent per year) Federal Funds Rate (Effective) 10-Yr. Treasury Rate a = actual f = forecast 3Q'13a 4Q'13a 1Q'14f 2Q'14f 3Q'14f 4Q'14f 1Q'15f 2Q'15f 2013a 2014f 2015f 15839 4.1 233.5 2.2 15942 2.6 234.1 1.1 15960 0.5 235.1 1.7 16076 2.9 236.1 1.8 16215 3.5 237.2 1.8 16349 3.3 238.3 1.8 16485 3.4 239.4 1.9 16615 3.2 240.5 1.9 15761 1.9 233.0 1.5 16150 2.5 236.7 1.6 16678 3.3 241.1 1.9 136.6 1.6 7.2 137.2 1.8 7.0 137.7 1.4 6.7 138.3 1.6 6.6 138.9 1.6 6.5 139.4 1.7 6.4 140.0 1.6 6.3 140.5 1.6 6.2 136.4 1.7 7.4 138.6 1.6 6.6 140.8 1.6 6.2 0.08 2.71 0.09 2.75 0.07 2.76 0.09 2.70 0.12 2.82 0.15 3.00 0.15 3.15 0.15 3.30 0.11 2.35 0.11 2.82 0.32 3.43 To subscribe to our publications or for questions, contact us at [email protected]. Archives are available at http://www.comerica.com/economics. Follow us on Twitter:@Comerica_Econ. The articles and opinions in this publication are for general information only, are subject to change, and are not intended to provide specific investment, legal, tax or other advice or recommendations. The information contained herein reflects the thoughts and opinions of the noted authors only, and such information does not necessarily reflect the thoughts and opinions of Comerica or its management team. We are not offering or soliciting any transaction based on this information. We suggest that you consult your attorney, accountant or tax or financial advisor with regard to your situation. Although information has been obtained from sources we believe to be reliable, neither the authors nor Comerica guarantee its accuracy, and such information may be incomplete or condensed. Neither the authors nor Comerica shall be liable for any typographical errors or incorrect data obtained from reliable sources or factual information. March Payrolls Increased by 192,000 Jobs 1000.00 GDP Growth in 2013Q4 Revised Up to 2.6% 9.5 Unemployment Rate, Percent (R) 6 Real GDP, Percent Change Annualized 800.00 9.0 600.00 4 2 400.00 8.5 0 200.00 8.0 -2 0.00 -200.00 7.5 -4 -6 -400.00 7.0 -8 -600.00 Total Nonfarm Employment -800.00 J'11 J'12 Total Employed (Household Survey) J'13 6.5 J'14 -10 2008Q1 2009Q1 2010Q1 2011Q1 2012Q1 2013Q1 Figure 1 Existing Home Sales Per Household Housing Markets: Normal, Renormalizing and Above Normal 0.060 Housing markets are a strong indicator of consumer be0.055 havior and the health of the overall economy. At the beginning 0.050 of year 5 of the U.S. economic recovery, some housing market 0.045 metrics appear to be renormalizing while others appear to still 0.040 have upside growth potential. 0.035 0.030 Existing home sales per household are close to normal. 0.025 Historically low mortgage interest rates and favorable pricing Long-Run Average 0.020 supported housing affordability and have been a boost for traditional home sales. High affordability plus a strong renters’ market made existing homes attractive to institutional buyers and Figure 2 New Home Sales Per Household 0.012 investors. A limited supply of new homes in some housing markets also pushed traditional buyers to existing homes. Figure 1 0.010 shows that existing home sales per household are now near 0.008 their long-run average. With approximately 117 million households in the U.S., a 4,578,000 annual unit rate would be consid0.006 ered normal for existing home sales. This is only 108,000 units 0.004 above the total existing home sales of 4,470,000 for 2013 . Long-Run Average New homes sales, which make up a relatively smaller 0.002 portion of U.S. home sales, show much more upside potential for growth. New home sales accounted for about 9 percent of single-family home sales in 2013. The recovery in new homes sales has been tepid compared to the existing home market, with sales increasing by 17 percent in 2013, for a total of only 431,000 sales last year. Figure 2 shows that new home sales per household remain well below their long-run average. A 910,000 unit annual rate would be considered normal for new home sales. We last increased to that sales rate in 2001. House price appreciation is currently above normal and expected to moderate going forward. According to the Case-Shiller 20-City Composite Index, year-over-year house price growth peaked at 13.7 percent in the 12 months ending in November 2013. Since then, house price growth has begun to slow and is expected to moderate in most markets. We expect solid income growth, pent up demand and tight supply to continue to support house price appreciation, but doubledigit price gains are not sustainable over the long run. From 2001 until 2013, the Case-Shiller 20-City Composite index increased an average of 3.6 percent per year, slightly below the average for personal income growth of 3.9 percent. Subscribe to economics publications at: http://www.comerica.com/econsubscribe. Archives available at http://www.comerica.com/economics. The articles and opinions in this publication are for general information only, are subject to change, and are not intended to provide specific investment, legal, tax or other advice or recommendations. The information contained herein reflects the thoughts and opinions of the noted authors only, and such information does not necessarily reflect the thoughts and opinions of Comerica or its management team. We are not offering or soliciting any transaction based on this information. We suggest that you consult your attorney, accountant or tax or financial advisor with regard to your situation. Although information has been obtained from sources we believe to be reliable, neither the authors nor Comerica guarantee its accuracy, and such information may be incomplete or condensed. Neither the authors nor Comerica shall be liable for any typographical errors or incorrect data obtained from reliable sources or factual information. Net Exports and Consumer Spending Supported Q4 GDP Growth Non-Res. Fixed Investment Industrial Production Improved in February 2.0 2013Q1 Contribution to GDP 80 79 Capacity Utilization, Percent (R) 1.5 78 2013Q2 Res. Fixed Investment 2013Q3 77 1.0 2013Q4 Inventories 76 0.5 75 Net Exports 74 Government 0.0 Consumer Spending -0.5 73 72 71 Industrial Production, Percent Change (L) -1.0 -2 -1 0 1 2 70 J'10 3 J'11 Income and Spending Picked Up in February J'12 J'13 J'14 Auto Sales Accelerated in March 4 18 3 Auto and light truck sales, SAAR, mil. 17 Percent Change 2 16 1 15 0 14 -1 13 -2 12 -3 11 -4 10 9 -5 J'11 J'12 J'13 J'14 8 J'10 Income J'11 J'12 J'13 J'14 Spending Canadian Dollar is Weakening Inflation Slowed in February 1.15 14.0 8 Percent Change Year Ago 1.10 7 Canadian Dollar per USD (L) 1.05 13.5 PPI 6 1.00 0.95 13.0 Mexican Peso per USD (R) 5 4 0.90 0.85 12.5 CPI 3 0.80 2 0.75 12.0 Euro per USD (L) 0.70 1 Core CPI 0.65 11.5 J'10 J'11 J'12 J'13 0 J'10 J'14 J'11 J'12 J'13 J'14 House Construction Still Has Room to Grow Existing Home Sales Flat in February 5,500 175 170 5,100 1100.00 1000.00 165 160 4,700 155 SAAR, Thousands 900.00 800.00 150 4,300 145 140 3,900 135 700.00 600.00 500.00 130 3,500 125 J'11 J'12 Existing Home Sales, Ths. SAAR (L) J'13 Case Shiller Comp - 20 HPI (R) J'14 400.00 J'10 J'11 Housing Completions J'12 Housing Permits J'13 J'14 Housing Starts Subscribe to economics publications at: http://www.comerica.com/econsubscribe. Archives available at http://www.comerica.com/economics. The articles and opinions in this publication are for general information only, are subject to change, and are not intended to provide specific investment, legal, tax or other advice or recommendations. The information contained herein reflects the thoughts and opinions of the noted authors only, and such information does not necessarily reflect the thoughts and opinions of Comerica or its management team. We are not offering or soliciting any transaction based on this information. We suggest that you consult your attorney, accountant or tax or financial advisor with regard to your situation. Although information has been obtained from sources we believe to be reliable, neither the authors nor Comerica guarantee its accuracy, and such information may be incomplete or condensed. Neither the authors nor Comerica shall be liable for any typographical errors or incorrect data obtained from reliable sources or factual information. 3Q'13a 4Q'13a 1Q'14f 2Q'14f 3Q'14f 4Q'14f 1Q'15f 2Q'15f 2013a 2014f 2015f 16913 6.2 15839 4.1 10744 2.0 1995 4.8 499 10.3 116 -420 2907 0.4 99.6 2.5 78.0 17090 4.2 15942 2.6 10832 3.3 2023 5.7 489 -7.9 112 -383 2869 -5.2 100.9 5.5 78.7 17184 2.2 15960 0.5 10867 1.3 2045 4.5 494 4.2 72 -387 2867 -0.2 101.6 2.5 78.8 17380 4.6 16076 2.9 10937 2.6 2081 7.3 502 6.6 63 -381 2872 0.6 102.5 3.9 79.1 17607 5.3 16215 3.5 11006 2.5 2124 8.5 513 9.2 63 -380 2887 2.2 103.5 3.7 79.2 17832 5.2 16349 3.3 11068 2.3 2170 9.0 525 9.3 63 -384 2905 2.4 104.4 3.5 79.4 18062 5.3 16485 3.4 11129 2.2 2214 8.3 535 8.3 63 -381 2922 2.4 105.2 3.3 79.6 18289 5.1 16615 3.2 11191 2.2 2254 7.4 544 6.7 62 -382 2943 2.8 106.0 3.1 79.7 16800 3.4 15761 1.9 10728 2.0 1984 2.7 487 12.2 82 -412 2897 -2.2 99.5 2.6 78.1 17501 4.2 16150 2.5 10969 2.2 2105 6.1 508 4.5 65 -383 2883 -0.5 103.0 3.5 79.1 18402 5.1 16678 3.3 11222 2.3 2273 8.0 548 7.8 62 -382 2952 2.4 106.4 3.4 79.8 233.5 2.2 107.4 1.9 106.7 2.0 196.9 2.3 105.9 234.1 1.1 107.7 1.1 107.1 1.6 197.3 0.7 97.5 235.1 1.7 108.1 1.6 107.6 1.8 199.4 4.2 98.6 236.1 1.8 108.6 1.9 108.0 1.7 200.6 2.5 100.0 237.2 1.8 109.1 1.9 108.5 1.8 201.6 2.0 100.0 238.3 1.8 109.6 1.8 109.0 1.9 202.5 1.9 100.0 239.4 1.9 110.1 1.8 109.5 1.9 203.5 1.9 100.0 240.5 1.9 110.6 1.8 110.1 1.9 204.5 1.9 100.0 233.0 1.5 107.2 1.1 106.5 1.4 196.6 1.2 97.9 236.7 1.6 108.9 1.5 108.3 1.7 201.0 2.3 99.7 241.1 1.9 110.9 1.9 110.3 1.9 205.0 2.0 100.0 136.6 1.6 7.2 33.6 316.7 0.8 137.2 1.8 7.0 33.6 317.3 0.8 137.7 1.4 6.7 33.6 318.0 0.8 138.3 1.6 6.6 33.6 318.6 0.8 138.9 1.6 6.5 33.7 319.2 0.8 139.4 1.7 6.4 33.7 319.8 0.8 140.0 1.6 6.3 33.7 320.4 0.8 140.5 1.6 6.2 33.8 321.0 0.8 136.4 1.7 7.4 33.7 316.4 0.7 138.6 1.6 6.6 33.6 318.9 0.8 140.8 1.6 6.2 33.8 321.4 0.8 20.18 2.1 11703 3.0 4.9 20.30 2.5 11725 0.8 4.3 20.45 3.0 11778 1.8 4.2 20.60 3.0 11863 2.9 4.2 20.76 3.1 11957 3.2 4.2 20.92 3.1 12053 3.2 4.2 21.08 3.2 12153 3.4 4.2 21.26 3.3 12255 3.4 4.2 20.14 2.0 11637 0.7 4.5 20.68 2.7 11913 2.4 4.2 21.34 3.2 12306 3.3 4.2 882 4697 388 147.6 11.2 1008 4343 447 151.5 11.4 922 4054 451 154.9 10.0 954 4188 461 158.0 9.7 973 4247 472 161.0 9.1 989 4314 480 163.8 8.1 1010 4371 488 166.4 7.4 1023 4423 495 168.8 6.8 929 4471 431 146.0 10.6 960 4201 466 159.5 9.2 1034 4450 499 170.0 6.6 -2.4 15.7 3057 14.9 -3.2 15.7 3099 13.9 -2.0 15.7 3113 4.9 -1.4 16.0 3150 12.3 -0.9 16.3 3183 11.0 0.0 16.4 3213 9.8 0.7 16.5 3244 10.4 1.2 16.6 3273 9.9 -1.8 15.6 3034 6.1 -1.1 16.1 3165 4.3 1.5 16.7 3289 3.9 0.08 3.25 0.19 0.26 0.12 1.51 2.71 4.09 0.09 3.25 0.17 0.24 0.12 1.44 2.75 3.95 0.07 3.25 0.16 0.24 0.12 1.60 2.76 3.98 0.09 3.25 0.15 0.23 0.11 1.67 2.70 4.09 0.12 3.25 0.17 0.26 0.14 1.72 2.82 4.17 0.15 3.25 0.22 0.32 0.18 1.79 3.00 4.33 0.15 3.25 0.22 0.34 0.20 1.82 3.15 4.47 0.15 3.25 0.23 0.34 0.21 1.85 3.30 4.61 0.11 3.25 0.19 0.27 0.13 1.17 2.35 3.61 April 0.11 3.25 0.17 0.26 0.14 1.69 2.82 4.14 9, 2014 0.32 3.38 0.40 0.52 0.38 1.98 3.43 4.75 Output Nominal GDP (Billions $) Percent Change Annualized Real GDP (Chained 2009 Billions $) Percent Change Annualized Pers. Consumption Expenditures Percent Change Annualized Nonresidential Fixed Investment Percent Change Annualized Residential Investment Percent Change Annualized Change in Private Inventories Net Exports Government Expenditures Percent Change Annualized Industrial Prod. Index (2007=100) Percent Change Annualized Capacity Utilization (Percent) Prices CPI (1982-84=100) Percent Change Annualized PCE Price Index (2009=100) Percent Change Annualized GDP Price Index (2009=100) Percent Change Annualized Producer Price Index, Finished Goods Percent Change Annualized Crude Oil, WTI ($/barrel) Labor Markets Payroll Jobs (Millions) Percent Change Annualized Unemployment Rate (Percent) Average Weekly Hours, Prod. Works. Population (Millions) Percent Change Annualized Personal Income Average Hourly Earnings ($) Percent Change Annualized Real Disp. Income (2009 Billions $) Percent Change Annualized Personal Saving Rate (Percent) Housing Housing Starts (Ths., Ann. Rate) Ext. SF Home Sales (Ths., Ann Rate) New SF Home Sales (Ths., Ann Rate) Case/Shiller HPI (Jan. 2000=100) Year/Year Percent Change Consumer Household Economic Stress Index Auto Sales (Millions) Consumer Credit (Billions $) Percent Change Annualized Interest Rates (percent per year) Federal Funds Rate (Effective) Prime Rate 1-Month LIBOR 3-Month LIBOR 1-Yr. Treasury Rate 5-Yr. Treasury Rate 10-Yr. Treasury Rate 30-Year Fixed Rate Mortgage a = actual f = forecast Subscribe to economics publications at: http://www.comerica.com/econsubscribe. Archives available at http://www.comerica.com/economics. The articles and opinions in this publication are for general information only, are subject to change, and are not intended to provide specific investment, legal, tax or other advice or recommendations. The information contained herein reflects the thoughts and opinions of the noted authors only, and such information does not necessarily reflect the thoughts and opinions of Comerica or its management team. We are not offering or soliciting any transaction based on this information. We suggest that you consult your attorney, accountant or tax or financial advisor with regard to your situation. Although information has been obtained from sources we believe to be reliable, neither the authors nor Comerica guarantee its accuracy, and such information may be incomplete or condensed. Neither the authors nor Comerica shall be liable for any typographical errors or incorrect data obtained from reliable sources or factual information.