Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen signaled this past week the central bank will be reluctant to raise interest rates next month if global economic troubles and the punishing slide in markets don’t let up. Still, Yellen didn’t go as far as investors hoped in her congressional testimony, noting the Fed hasn’t yet abandoned plans to raise rates gradually this year amid a healthy labor market. Minutes of the Fed’s January meeting should provide a clearer snapshot of policymakers’ thinking. This week’s economic news also features reports on housing, industrial production and inflation.
Housing has been an economic pillar, helping offset the negative effects of the global turmoil, strong dollar and oil industry crash. Housing starts have been supported by solid job and income growth, low mortgage rates and skimpy home supplies, says Nomura economist Lewis Alexander. New construction, he says, also got a bump late last year from unseasonably high temperatures, but the weather turned colder and snowier in January. As a result, economists surveyed by Action Economics expect the Commerce Department on Wednesday to report that housing starts rose a modest 1.6% last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.17 million.
Industrial production, by contrast, has been hindered by the plunge in oil-sector investment, weak overseas demand and rising dollar, which makes U.S. exports more expensive overseas. A measure of manufacturing activity has shown contraction four straight months, and factory output likely remained sluggish in January, Alexander says. But PNC Financial Services Group says the colder weather lifted heating demand and utility output. Economists figure the Fed will record a 0.3% overall gain in industrial production.
The Fed sent a mixed message in a statement after its Jan. 26-27 meeting. It removed its upbeat view of the risks to its outlook as “balanced” and said it’s monitoring the overseas and market strains and “assessing their implications for the labor market and inflation, and for the balance of the risks to the outlook.” Yet Fed policymakers emphasized the fourth quarter’s strong job growth over the weak rise in gross domestic product, and reiterated plans to raise its benchmark interest rate gradually after boosting it in December for the first time in nine years. Meeting minutes could spell out what Fed officials need to see to raise rates at a March 15-16 meeting, a move markets now deem unlikely. One thing policymakers would like to see before acting again is a pickup in weak inflation. Consumer prices fell in December on cheap gasoline, but a core measure that strips out food and energy and that the Fed watches more closely edged up. Economists reckon the Labor Department will report Friday that a similar dynamic played out in January.