3 Numbers: U.S. Durable Goods Orders On Track For A June Rebound

 | Jul 27, 2017 02:08AM ET

  • Modest growth for UK retail spending is expected in today’s CBI survey data
  • Brexit uncertainty and higher inflation are weighing on consumer sentiment
  • US durable goods orders should surge to a three-year high in the June report
  • The US growth trend to June should firm up in the Chicago Fed's macro review
  • A busy day of economic news awaits for Thursday, including the July report for the UK Distributive Trades Survey, which offers an early estimate of retail spending at the start of the third quarter. Later, two US updates will shed new light on the state of the economy in June via fresh numbers on durable goods orders and the Chicago Fed National Activity Index.

    UK: Distributive Trades Survey (1000 GMT): Economists have been advising that the ongoing decline in real wage growth is a headwind for retail sales in Britain. The hard data for spending in June, however, delivered a stronger-than-expected increase. Analysts will be looking at today’s survey profile for July for deciding if the bullish results for June will spill over into the start of the third quarter.

    Meantime, “a particularly warm June seems to have prompted strong sales in clothing, which has compensated for a decline in food and fuel sales for the month,” a senior statistician at the Office for National Statistics said last week.

    The upbeat results for last month lifted the annual pace of retail spending to a moderate 2.9% increase, sharply above May’s weak 0.9% advance.

    Today’s CBI Distributive Trades Survey report for July offers some perspective on how sales will fare this month. Based on the consensus forecast via Econoday.com, the crowd’s expecting a mildly softer reading: just 9 for July versus 12 in the previous month. That’s a relatively encouraging outlook, although it leaves room for managing expectations down a bit for the next round of hard retail data.

    “The vote for Brexit has created a more uncertain climate for business and a squeeze on consumers from higher inflation,” a senior economic adviser at PwC explained last week. “We face the prospect of weak economic growth this year and next as a result, with PwC’s latest forecasts indicating 1.5% GDP growth in 2017 and 1.4% in 2018, the weakest period for the UK economy since the euro crisis five years ago.”