Global Credit Economic Summary & Outlook

Domestic
Summary

Consumer spending and business fixed investment remained strong, pointing to continued domestic economic growth. Notably, business fixed investment growth, represented by private domestic investment, accelerated to 5.4% year-over- year growth in the fourth quarter of 2017, from a low of 0.71% in the third quarter of 2016 (see chart below). Elevated consumer and business confidence surveys also support continued domestic economic growth. The Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index reached 130.0 in February 2018, a level not seen since December 2000. Likewise, the NFIB Small Business Optimism Index increased to 107.6 in February 2018, beating all previous readings except for the reported record high of 108.0 in September 1983. The elevated levels of these surveys underscore the strength behind both consumer and business activity.

Inflation remains benign with the U.S. Personal Consumption Expenditure Core Price Index sitting at 1.60%, well below the Federal Reserve’s stated inflation growth target of 2%. While we believe that inflation will likely move modestly higher over time, we expect that near-term data will continue to reflect subdued inflation.

Outlook

We anticipate that the U.S. GDP growth will continue and may accelerate further due to easier fiscal policies and global economic tailwinds. We currently estimate that U.S. GDP will grow 2.5%-3.0% in 2018; a rate which compares favorably with the 2.6% growth that the economy experienced in 2017.

The Federal Reserve continues to fulfill its dual mandate of full employment and stable prices. In that regard, we believe that slack in the labor force continues, although reported unemployment could fall further. Regardless, the unemployment rate has now held steady at 4.1% since October 2017, yet wage pressures remain very subdued. Labor force slack and lack of significant wage pressure should allow the Federal Reserve to avoid pursuing an overly aggressive rate hike path. We expect inflation to trend higher, although there remains significant question as to whether the stated target of 2% inflation will be reached this year.