Published : Feb. 16, 2014 - 19:31
A worker uses a snow blower outside the Internal Revenue Service in Washington, D.C., Thursday. (Bloomberg)
This year’s harsh winter is causing the pace of U.S. economic growth to fall along with the mercury.
February payrolls may be the next victim of the severe weather that has gripped the country during the last three months, following disappointing data on retail sales and manufacturing in January. This week’s snow and ice storms in the eastern U.S. came during the period the Bureau of Labor Statistics refers to in its monthly employer survey, which it uses to calculate changes in payrolls, hours and earnings for the jobs report scheduled for release March 7.
That may make it difficult for Federal Reserve policy makers to gauge whether signs of weakness can be chalked up to the elements, or if the economy has taken a turn for the worse. Firms from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to Morgan Stanley have reduced their estimates for first-quarter U.S. growth, after forecasters entered the year with the most optimism since 2010.
“We had a strengthening pattern in consumer demand and that’s been revised away,” said Mike Englund, chief economist at Action Economics LLC in Boulder, Colorado, who lowered his first-quarter growth estimate to an annual pace of 2.3 percent from 2.5 percent. “The weakening pattern in the first-quarter data probably is attributable to weather.”
A report Saturday from the Fed showed factory production unexpectedly declined last month by the most since May 2009, in part because of the weather.
The 0.8 percent drop followed a revised 0.3 percent gain the prior month that was weaker than initially reported. The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for a 0.1 percent advance in January.
Shoppers may pick up the pace of purchases after the weather improves, other figures Saturday indicated.
The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan preliminary index of sentiment held at 81.2 this month. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey called for a drop to 80.2. A gauge of the economic outlook improved to the highest level in six months.
In the euro area, data showed the economy expanded more than forecast in the final quarter of 2013, led by Germany and France. Gross domestic product rose 0.3 percent after a 0.1 percent increase in the third quarter, the European Union’s statistics office said.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index climbed 0.5 percent to 1,838.63 at the close of trading in New York. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note increased one basis point, or 0.01 percentage point, to 2.74 percent.
The disappointing U.S. data on manufacturing and retail sales followed two straight employment reports that fell short of economists’ forecasts. Payrolls grew by 113,000 in January and by 75,000 in December, the weakest back-to-back gains in three years.
Because this week’s storm fell during the employer survey period, the weather effect may be even greater in February’s report, said Englund.
While his forecast calls for payrolls growth to accelerate to 170,000, “we do see the risk now to the downside,” he said. “We don’t see much room for catch-up. The question now is whether there is going to be an additional hit.”
Government offices in Washington closed Friday as a winter storm that paralyzed the South with snow and ice moved to the Northeast, canceling flights, snarling traffic and downing power lines along the way. This month’s storm follows the coldest January since 1994 in the contiguous U.S., based on gas-weighted heating-degree days, a measure of energy demand, according to Commodity Weather Group LLC in Bethesda, Maryland. The U.S. Northeast is also on track for the coldest winter since 1982, measured from December to February, the group said.
In Washington, snowfall of 11 inches forced Jessica Friedman, a 26-year-old speech pathologist, to take the day off from work after bus service in the city was suspended, limiting commuting options.
“I don’t plan to do any shopping, and I couldn’t go out even if I wanted to,” she said.
To the extent other shoppers reacted like Friedman, retail sales may slump in February, following disappointing data for last month. Sales declined by 0.4 percent in January after a 0.1 percent decrease in December that was previously reported as a gain, Commerce Department data showed Friday. Economists had forecast no change in January.
Companies including McDonald’s Corp., the world’s largest restaurant chain, are pointing to the weather as an explanation for disappointing sales.
Purchases at stores open at least 13 months slid 3.3 percent last month in the U.S. “amid broad-based challenges including severe winter weather,” the Oak Brook, Illinois-based company said in a Feb. 10 statement. The January decline follows drops of 3.8 percent in December and 0.8 percent a month earlier.
The drop in U.S. retail sales reported Friday prompted economists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to cut their tracking estimate for first-quarter gross domestic product to 1.9 percent from 2.3 percent. Morgan Stanley reduced its projection to 0.9 percent from 1.9 percent, while Credit Suisse lowered to 1.6 percent from 2.6 percent. (Bloomberg)