Greenspan speaks today. Looks like we will have another up day tomorrow in reaction to this. Jeff
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U.S. Economy Mon, 08 Mar 1999, 5:01pm EST U.S. Economy: Greenspan Lauds Economy's 'Spectacular' Results
U.S. Economy: Greenspan Lauds Economy's 'Spectacular' Results
Washington, March 8 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. economy ''has turned in a spectacular performance in recent years,'' with inflation staying low even as the nation's unemployment rate fell, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan said.
Real gross domestic product has increased around 4 percent in each of the last three years, about 8 million jobs have been created since 1995, and the unemployment rate has fallen below 4.5 percent to its lowest readings in three decades, he said in a speech to the Mortgage Bankers Association. Even so, ''inflation has been well-behaved,'' Greenspan said.
There's also little reason to expect a big acceleration in consumer prices anytime soon, analysts said. That suggests the Fed doesn't have the smoking gun it needs to justify increasing the overnight bank loan rate, now at 4.75 percent, they said.
Commodity prices remain near a 25-year low, gold is near a six-month low, and on Friday the Labor Department reported workers' hourly wages rose just 1 cent in February and 3.6 percent over the past year, the slowest rate of increase in 19 months.
Tomorrow, the Labor Department is expected to report that worker productivity during the fourth quarter of 1998 increased more than first thought, making it possible for companies to produce more at less cost. ''The evidence of inflation is non-existent,'' said Brian Wesbury, chief economist at Griffin, Kubik, Stephens & Thompson Inc. in Chicago. ''Wall Street's fears of the Fed are overblown,'' he said.
Poole Comments
The benchmark 30-year Treasury bond was little changed to yield 5.59 percent in trading today. Stocks were mixed. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 8.47 points, or 0.09 percent, to close at 9727.61, and the Nasdaq Composite index rose 60.5 points, or 2.59 percent, to close at 2397.62.
Earlier today, St. Louis Fed Bank President William Poole offered a different assessment, saying that investors who pushed bond yields to their highest in six months are correct in assuming the Fed's next move is most likely to increase interest rates. ''The market has formed a judgment that the next move is one of tightening,'' Poole said in an interview. ''The market's judgment is probably right.''
Poole, who is not a voting member of the Fed's policy-making Open Market Committee this year, has been a hawk on inflation. As an FOMC member last year he dissented on May 19, voting for an immediate rate increase while the rest of the 12-member committee voted to leave rates unchanged.
Oil Prices Rising
Poole acknowledged few signs of inflation are evident. Still, he said, the Fed must be preemptive, acting before accelerating prices are reflected in the consumer price index.
After falling to levels not seen since the 1950s, inflation is expected to pick up a bit this year. Oil prices, which fell 35 percent last year, have been rising since the middle of February. That in itself should push producer and consumer prices higher. ''I think you've seen the lows for energy prices,'' said Alan Struth, chief economist at Phillips Petroleum Co. in Bartlesville, Oklahoma. Still, he said, it's ''not real clear whether the oil price increase is sustainable at this point. There's still some pretty strong deflationary pressures in the global economy.''
That's showing in commodity prices. The Commodity Research Bureau index hit a 24-year low of 182.93 on Feb. 26. It's up only marginally since then, to 186.64 today. Lower prices for building materials are one reason why new home prices have been contained.
Housing Boost
Greenspan didn't offer any outlook on how the economy will perform in the months ahead, or how Fed policymakers will respond. Instead, he focused his remarks on how declining interest rates have affected the housing market. ''The positive effects of the decline in mortgage rates and the rise in household income have more than offset the negative effects of rising house prices,'' Greenspan said.
The housing market should continue to be strong, he suggested. ''Demographic underpinnings for housing demand have held up surprisingly well,'' he said. In part that's because of a ''continued large influx of immigrants'' and ''delayed household formations by the trailing edge of the baby boom.''
Also helping are the replacement of homes destroyed in natural disasters and a ''marked uptrend'' in demand for second homes.
All of that has helped fuel the U.S. expansion, now the longest in peacetime history. ''We estimate, based on a median period of owning a home nine years, that each home sale since 1995 has averaged roughly $35,000 in capital gains, implying a total of $150 billion annually for the economy as a whole,'' Greenspan said.
Outlook Unclear
Added to that are unknown billions from refinancings, Greenspan said. ''One might expect that a significant portion of the unencumbered cash received by sellers and refinancers was used to purchase goods and services,'' the Fed chairman said.
That may be true of people who don't sell or refinance as well. ''A middle-aged person who is sitting on a substantial unrealized gain in his or her house, but does not plan to sell for 10 years, may still boost consumption today in anticipation of that gain,'' he said.
Mortgage refinancing has fallen off, Greenspan said, ''even though many loans would still appear to be ripe for refinancing,'' especially those with rates above 8 percent, he said. ''Given last year's prolonged period of low mortgage rates, one wonders whether many of those who have not yet refinanced will do so, eve if mortgage rates remain at their current levels,'' Greenspan said.
The Fed, as always, wants to be preemptive, heading off inflation before it takes root. Yet with little reason to expect rising prices ahead, the central bank is sidelined for now, analysts said. ''The Fed is very unlikely against this backdrop to do anything at their next meeting'' on March 30, said Nick Perna, chief economist at Fleet Financial in Hartford, Connecticut. >> |