Economic activity slowed since the previous report, with retail sales declining, on average, as “consumers showed more price sensitivity,” the Fed said in its Beige Book economic report, based on anecdotal information collected by the Fed’s 12 reserve banks through Nov. 17. “The economic outlook for the next six to twelve months diminished over the reporting period,” it added.
The more sombre economic outlook comes as the demand for labor continued to ease, with wage growth remaining modest to “moderate in most Districts,” according the report, though there continued to be “difficulty attracting and retaining high performers and workers with specialized skills.”
The pace of inflation “largely moderated” across districts, though prices remained elevated, the report showed, with a notable rise in utilities and insurance costs across most districts. Most districts, however, expect moderate price increases to continue into next year, the report added.
The update comes just a day ahead of fresh inflation data expected to show an ongoing easing in price pressures that has boosted bets of rate cuts in the first half of next year.
Data on Wednesday, however, showed the economy grew faster than initially expected in Q3, potentially muddying the optimism over rate cuts as the Fed has repeatedly called for below-trend growth to help with inflation fight.
“The Fed is buying itself time … the rate cuts are dependent on a cooling economy and cooling inflation, but I don’t see it yet. “We need to see the economic data in Q4,” Scott Acheychek, Chief Executive Officer of REX Shares, told Investing.com’s Yasin Ebrahim in an interview on Wednesday.
“I wouldn’t be surprised if we just stay in this higher for longer camp as the Fed just really wants to buy some time and see some form of a cooling economy,” Acheychek added.
Source: Economy - investing.com