CONCERNS ABOUT INFLATION DISSIPATED FURTHER IN SEPTEMBER
Hotels, restaurants, and other companies in the hospitality business created new jobs, reflecting strong demand for services such as travel and recreation.
The costs of staples such as food, rent, medical care, and new cars rose last month. We expect the higher cost of borrowing to weaken the economy over the next year and lower inflation.
Retail spending is a big part of consumer spending that drives the US economy. For September, it points towards a slowing; retail sales historically are lower in September because of the month falling between back to school and the end of the year holidays.
The housing market is weakening rapidly, exacerbated by affordability concerns. All signs suggest housing will continue to drag economic growth through the year's balance.
After a disappointing August, U.S. vehicle sales rebounded to a five-month high in September. The gain was primarily the result of the greater availability of new inventory.
The growth rate in business investment is still reasonably robust, but after adjusting for inflation, it’s not as strong as it looks. It’s also slowed considerably since the U.S. emerged from the worst of the pandemic.
THE U.S. FREIGHT VOLUMES CONTINUED TO EXCEED LOW EXPECTATIONS
Since the pandemic recovery began, the manufacturing sector has expanded at the lowest rate.
· Demand eased, with the New Orders Index returning to contraction, New Export Orders Index in contraction for a second consecutive month, the Customers' Inventories Index remaining at a low level, and the Backlog of Orders Index approaching contraction.
The sustained growth in the logistics industry continues to be fueled by high levels of inventory and the associated levels of cost and utilization associated with holding them.
Inventories are merely in a holding pattern and will begin moving again when goods spending picks back up in Q4.
The U.S. freight volumes exceeded low expectations in September, with more buoyant demand than feared at the start of the peak shipping season.
The expenditures component of the Cass Freight Index, which measures the total amount spent on freight, rose 0.3% m/m in September after a 1.9% m/m increase in August.
September order activity is further testimony that there remains a tremendous pent-up demand.
Dealerships need to keep more inventory to meet demand. Larger carriers have yet to maintain their replacement cycles, which continue to drive pent-up demand.