Notably, business confidence remained stable for manufacturing and rose substantially for the service sector. The jobs report had a somewhat disappointing headline number but stronger internals. Overall, despite some areas of concern, the tone was more upbeat than in recent weeks.
Both of the major business surveys from the Institute for Supply Management were released last week.
The international trade balance fell to a six-month low, with the U.S. trade deficit dropping from $47.1 billion to $40.4 billion on a decline in exports. Although an improving trade deficit is good news in many ways, in this case, it reflects a substantial decline in consumer goods imports, which ties in closely with weak consumer spending growth. Interestingly, however, this decline reverses a surge the previous month, suggesting that both may just be noise in the data. Goods exports also fell, although by much less than imports—also bad news. As with the manufacturing sector, however, the dollar’s recent reversal may mean this headwind abates over the next couple of quarters.
The jobs report was mixed, with a disappointing headline number but much stronger internal data.
Other supporting details include the fact that most of the decline in job growth came from government, rather than the private sector, while manufacturing employment actually increased slightly. Both suggest that the private economy continues to improve.
Once again, this week’s data is all about the consumer. The two major releases will be the retail sales report and the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index.
After a weak run, retail sales are expected to improve.
If these numbers come in as expected, it will be another signal that the economy is well on its way to recovery after the first-quarter slowdown.
Consumer confidence is also expected to improve, rising from 89.0 to 89.9, putting a stop to a string of declines. Although gas prices have risen, the stock market has largely recovered and the labor market remains strong. Other indicators have recovered as well, suggesting that, while consumers may not be feeling much better, confidence should still show some improvement. Improving consumer confidence would also be consistent with rising spending, so these two reports will be read in conjunction with each other.
Have a great week!