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BLOG — Jul 25, 2023
By Ben Herzon and Lawrence Nelson
On balance, the takeaway from a relatively full calendar of data this past week is that the US economy continued to hum along in the second quarter and near the US's "potential" growth rate — the pace that can be sustained from the supply side of the economy.
The resilience of the economy and what that means for employment, wages, and inflation going forward suggests to us that two more Fed rate hikes will be needed to wrestle inflation back to the Fed's 2% target quickly enough to satisfy Fed policy makers. We expect the first of those hikes at next week's meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee.
Several indicators on the health of the housing sector painted a mixed picture. Homebuilders' expectations in July edged higher, and why not? Home prices are rising again, and materials prices are well below recent peaks. Similar sentiment likely drove a solid 2.2% increase in single-family housing permits in June. Multi-family permits on the other hand plunged nearly 13%, and both single- and multi-family starts fell in June. Existing home sales (annualized) slipped in June to a level 2.2 million (34.3%) lower than 17 months ago.
While it appeared that the housing sector, which had weakened over most of last year, had put in a bottom over recent months, the subsequent sharp rise in mortgage rates is likely to take a toll. The 30-year conventional mortgage rate registered 6.78% in the latest week, up from an average of 6.27% in January. We expect the overall slowing in the economy and the higher level of rates to result in slumping home construction over the next few quarters.
This week's economic releases:
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This article was published by S&P Global Market Intelligence and not by S&P Global Ratings, which is a separately managed division of S&P Global.