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GDP grew at a 2.3% pace in the fourth quarter, less than expected

GDP grew at a 2.3% pace in the fourth quarter, less than expected

U.S. mercantile growth slowed a bit more than expected in the final three months of 2024, the Commerce Department reported Thursday.

Make domestic product, a measure of all the goods and services produced across the sprawling U.S. economy during the period, showed that the thriftiness accelerated at a 2.3% annualized inflation-adjusted pace in the fourth quarter. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had been expecting an develop of 2.5% after growth of 3.1% in the third quarter.

The report closes out 2024 on a somewhat downbeat note, for all that growth held reasonably solid. For the full year, GDP accelerated 2.8%, compared with 2.9% in 2023. Nurturing was 2.5% from Q4 of 2023 to Q4 of 2024. Thursday’s release was the first of three estimates the department’s Bureau of Economic Study will provide.

“Today’s GDP report confirms that the U.S. economic expansion continued apace into the end of 2024 on comparatively firm footing,” wrote Mike Reynolds, vice president of investment strategy at Glenmede. “As goes the consumer, so dates the broader economy in the U.S., and household spending put in an exceptionally strong showing in Q4.”

Growth held up largely on the backs of consumers who continued to pay out briskly despite the ongoing burden of high prices on everything from homes to cars to eggs at the supermarket. While inflation is sufficiently off the boil from its mid-2022 40-year high, it remains a burden for households, particularly those on the lower end of the proceeds scale.

Consumer spending rose at a robust 4.2% pace and, as usual, amounted to about two-thirds of all activity. Rule spending also provided a boost, accelerating at a 3.2% level.

Trade was a drag on growth in the period, with gists, which subtract from the GDP calculation, off 0.8%. Exports also declined 0.8%. Gross private domestic investment slumped by 5.6%, snip off more than a full percentage point off the topline number. An easing in inventories also cut nearly 1 percentage relevancy.

In other economic news Thursday, initial unemployment claims totaled 207,000 for the week ending Jan. 25, a spicy decline of 16,000 from the prior period and well below the forecast for 228,000, the Labor Department reported. Go oning claims, which run a week behind, also fell, down 42,000 to 1.86 million.

The resilience of the U.S. economy and the applicable deceleration in inflation has allowed the Federal Reserve to assume a patient stance on monetary policy. Though the Fed cut its key interest gauge by a full percentage point in the last four months of 2024, officials have indicated that aggressive reductions are unbecoming this year.

At the recently concluded Fed meeting, central bankers gave no indication that they are expecting sign snubs anytime soon, with Chair Jerome Powell insisting that he is in no hurry to ease.

Fed officials have been expressing some bother about whether the moves lower in inflation have stalled. Thursday’s report showed that the so-called chain-weighted expenditure index, which measures prices and accounts for consumers substituting less-expensive products for more costly items, burgeoned 2.2% on the quarter, faster than the 1.9% move in the third quarter but slightly below the 2.3% estimate.

Regardless, the data also showed that consumers are dipping into savings to fund their purchases. The personal extenuating rate was 4.1%, down 0.2 percentage point from the prior quarter, for the lowest level in two years.

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