Economic Update 3-17-2025
Economic data included consumer and producer price inflation that came in a bit cooler, and better than expected, although the trend remains above target. Jobless claims fell, despite stress about federal layoffs and carryover to the private sector. A low point was consumer sentiment, now showing bipartisan distress, along with heightened inflation expectations.
Equities fell again last week around the world, with continued tariff uncertainty. Bonds were little changed, with governments outperforming corporates. Commodities were mixed, with gains in metals and little change in crude oil.
U.S. stocks were down for the fourth straight week, having started negatively out of the gate, with the S&P 500 down nearly -3% on Monday. This was as investors absorbed the possibility for additional and sustained tariffs, in addition to signs of a slowing economy (with a major investment bank lowering their 2025 estimate again, to just below-trend GDP) and Friday representing the debt ceiling deadline for ‘extraordinary measures’ (behind-the-scenes accounting shifts) after the debt limit was hit in January. Taken as a whole, the underlying worry is that the administration’s policies are causing more harm than expected. In a media interview the prior weekend, the President referred to the current situation as “a period of transition” and refused to rule out a near-term recession, noting that the stock market isn’t something that should be watched as a gauge of policy success, which was obviously not reassuring to many investors (who tend to watch the stock market). After some back and forth on Canadian steel and aluminum imports, a cooler-than-expected CPI report helped sentiment by mid-week, although volatility about the end game for tariffs continued. To end the week, it appeared the chances of a U.S. government shutdown had fallen, removing one element of uncertainty from investors’ minds (although shutdowns have tended to be non-events for the stock market).