Weekly Economic Summary
For the week ending January 31, 2025
Please see the summary of last week's economic indicator outcomes below (grouped by indicator type):
Housing Market
New Home Sales (Dec) rose to 698K, exceeding the 669K forecast and improving from 674K in November. This suggests continued resilience in the housing sector despite higher interest rates.
Consumer & Business Sentiment
CB Consumer Confidence (Jan) fell to 104.1, below the expected 105.7 and significantly down from 109.5 in December, indicating growing consumer caution.
Chicago PMI (Jan) weakened to 39.5, missing the 40.3 forecast but still an improvement from 36.9 in the prior month, signaling ongoing contraction in business activity.
Manufacturing & Industrial Activity
Durable Goods Orders (MoM) (Dec) declined 2.2%, a sharper drop than the 0.3% forecast and worse than the -2.0% reading in November, reflecting weak demand in the industrial sector.
Inflation & Monetary Policy
Core PCE Price Index (MoM) (Dec) met expectations at 0.2%, slightly above November’s 0.1%, while the YoY figure remained steady at 2.8%, aligning with forecasts. These figures reinforce expectations of stable inflation.
The Fed Interest Rate Decision held steady at 4.50%, matching consensus. The FOMC Statement and Press Conference likely provided further insights into the Fed’s stance on future rate adjustments.
Labor Market
Initial Jobless Claims fell to 207K, lower than the 224K forecast and below the 223K from the prior week, suggesting continued labor market strength.
Economic Growth
GDP (QoQ) (Q4) came in at 2.3%, underperforming the 2.7% forecast and slowing from 3.1% in Q3, indicating some cooling in economic expansion.
Energy Market
Crude Oil Inventories increased by 3.463M barrels, surpassing the 2.200M forecast and reversing last week’s -1.017M draw, implying higher supply levels.
In a nutshell…
Last week, the U.S. economy showed signs of slowing down. GDP growth for the fourth quarter was 2.3%, lower than expected and down from 3.1% in the previous quarter. However, the job market stayed strong, with fewer people filing for unemployment benefits. Inflation remained steady, with prices rising 0.2% in December and holding at a 2.8% yearly rate. Manufacturing struggled, as orders for durable goods fell by 2.2%, and business activity stayed weak.