Customer Logins

Obtain the data you need to make the most informed decisions by accessing our extensive portfolio of information, analytics, and expertise. Sign in to the product or service center of your choice.

Customer Logins

My Logins

All Customer Logins
S&P Global S&P Global Marketplace
Explore S&P Global

  • S&P Global
  • S&P Dow Jones Indices
  • S&P Global Market Intelligence
  • S&P Global Mobility
  • S&P Global Commodity Insights
  • S&P Global Ratings
  • S&P Global Sustainable1
Close
Discover more about S&P Global’s offerings
Investor Relations
  • Investor Relations Overview
  • Investor Presentations
  • Investor Fact Book
  • News Releases
  • Quarterly Earnings
  • SEC Filings & Reports
  • Executive Committee
  • Corporate Governance
  • Merger Information
  • Stock & Dividends
  • Shareholder Services
  • Contact Investor Relations
Languages
  • English
  • 中文
  • 日本語
  • 한국어
  • Português
  • Español
  • ไทย
About
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Email Subscription Center
  • Media Center
  • Glossary
Product Login
S&P Global S&P Global Market Intelligence Market Intelligence
  • Who We Serve
  • Solutions
  • News & Insights
  • Events
  • Product Login
  • Request Follow Up
  •  
    • Academia
    • Commercial Banking
    • Corporations
     
    • Government & Regulatory Agencies
    • Insurance
    • Investment & Global Banking
     
    • Investment Management
    • Private Equity
    • Professional Services
  • WORKFLOW SOLUTIONS
    • Capital Formation
    • Credit & Risk Solutions
    • Data & Distribution
    • Economics & Country Risk
    • Sustainability
    • Financial Technology
     
    • Issuer & IR Solutions
    • Lending Solutions
    • Post-Trade Processing
    • Private Markets
    • Risk, Compliance, & Reporting
    • Supply Chain
    PRODUCTS
    • S&P Capital IQ Pro
    • S&P Global Marketplace
    • China Credit Analytics
    • Climate Credit Analytics
    • Credit Analytics
    • RatingsDirect ®
    • RatingsXpress ®
    • 451 Research
    See More S&P Global Solutions
     
    • Capital Access
    • Corporate Actions
    • KY3P ®
    • EDM
    • PMI™
    • BD Corporate
    • Bond Pricing
    • ChartIQ
  • CONTENT
    • Latest Headlines
    • Special Features
    • Blog
    • Research
    • Videos
    • Infographics
    • Newsletters
    • Client Case Studies
    PODCASTS
    • The Decisive
    • IR in Focus
    • Masters of Risk
    • MediaTalk
    • Next in Tech
    • The Pipeline: M&A and IPO Insights
    • Private Markets 360°
    • Street Talk
    SEE ALL EPISODES
    SECTOR-SPECIFIC INSIGHTS
    • Differentiated Data
    • Banking & Insurance
    • Energy
    • Maritime, Trade, & Supply Chain
    • Metals & Mining
    • Technology, Media, & Telecoms
    • Investment Research
    • Sector Coverage
    • Consulting & Advisory Services
    More ways we can help
    NEWS & RESEARCH TOPICS
    • Credit & Risk
    • Economics & Country Risk
    • Financial Services
    • Generative AI
    • Maritime & Trade
    • M&A
    • Private Markets
    • Sustainability & Climate
    • Technology
    See More
    • All Events
    • In-Person
    • Webinars
    • Webinar Replays
    Featured Events
    Webinar2024 Trends in Data Visualization & Analytics
    • 10/17/2024
    • Live, Online
    • 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM EDT
    In PersonInteract New York 2024
    • 10/15/2024
    • Center415, 415 5th Avenue, New York, NY
    • 10:00 -17:00 CEST
    In PersonDatacenter and Energy Innovation Summit 2024
    • 10/30/2024
    • Convene Hamilton Square, 600 14th St NW, Washington, DC 20005, US
    • 7:30 AM - 5:00 PM ET
  • PLATFORMS
    • S&P Capital IQ Pro
    • S&P Capital IQ
    • S&P Global China Credit Analytics
    • S&P Global Marketplace
    OTHER PRODUCTS
    • Credit Analytics
    • Panjiva
    • Money Market Directories
     
    • Research Online
    • 451 Research
    • RatingsDirect®
    See All Product Logins
BLOG May 08, 2023

US Weekly Commentary: Tighter financial conditions needed

Contributor Image
Akshat Goel

Senior Economist, US Macro and Consumer Economics, S&P Global Market Intelligence

Contributor Image
Ben Herzon

US Economist, Insights and Analysis, S&P Global Market Intelligence

Contributor Image
Lawrence Nelson

Senior US Economist, S&P Global Market Intelligence

Last week's report on April employment underscored recent trends in the broad flow of data on the economy: The economy is growing at a gradually slowing pace; labor markets remain unsustainably tight; inflation is falling way too slowly. Bottom line: The Federal Reserve may have still more work to do if things don't change pretty quickly.

Nonfarm payroll employment rose by an unexpectedly strong 253 thousand in April, consistent with a moderately growing economy, but one where growth is clearly slowing. Over the six months ending in April, gains averaged 278 thousand per month. This is down materially from the average gain over the prior six months (388 thousand per month) and even further below the pace from the six months before that (520 thousand per month).

Importantly, however, at a steady labor force participation rate, the pace of job gains likely remains too rapid to prevent further declines in the unemployment rate. This is problematic, as arguably the labor force participation rate has caught up to the pre-pandemic declining trend, suggesting there is little scope for material increases in the participation rate to prevent further declines in the unemployment rate if job gains continue to exceed 100 thousand per month.

Wait, job gains are good, right? Yes, but wage inflation remains above a pace consistent with the Fed's 2% inflation target. If productivity growth averages 1%-1½%, wage inflation of 3%-3½% would be consistent with 2% inflation, roughly speaking. Average hourly earnings (AHE), for example, seem to be stuck growing around 4¼%. Over the three months ending April, AHE rose at a 4.2% annual rate, only slightly lower than its increase over the last 12 months of 4.4%. Like the elevated pace of core consumer price index (CPI) and personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price inflation we saw reported over the prior couple of weeks, this cannot be comforting to the Fed. Demand for workers is on the cusp of outpacing supply, keeping the labor market tight and preventing wage inflation from declining.

Nudging our tracking estimate

Tighter financial conditions are needed to slow spending and employment growth and tip the supply/ demand balance to reduce upward pressure on prices and wages. If financial markets don't deliver that tightening through some combination of weaker stock prices, higher bond yields, or a stronger dollar, and/or if banks do not curtail lending growth sufficiently in the wake of the recent banking turmoil, then the Fed may have to continue to tighten.

Of note, the latest data for the week ending April 29th showed continued growth in bank credit and deposits, so no sharp pullback there yet. Commercial real estate loans were among the classes of loans that expanded. Other data released in the last week were broadly consistent with the latest official report that GDP grew at a 1.1% annualized pace in the first quarter and that GDP will be roughly flat in the second quarter.

We nudged our second-quarter tracking estimate down over the week from +0.2% to a decline of 0.1%. Financial markets weighed "news" of First Republic Bank's closure and sale to JP Morgan, news that the so-called x-date when the US government will run out of cash is even closer upon us, the Fed's decision to hike rates 25 basis points and lighten up on the tightening bias, and a strong employment report that showed no real signs of easing labor-market tightness or of slowing wage gains. In the end, stock prices and bond yields showed surprisingly little movement.

This week's economic releases:

  • Consumer price index (May 10): We estimate the overall CPI rose 0.5% in April, while the core CPI, which excludes the direct effects of food and energy prices, rose 0.4%. Consumer price inflation remains stubbornly high and the primary focus of the Fed.
  • Produce price index (May 11): We estimate the producer price index for final demand (PPI) rose 0.5% in April, while the core PPI, which excludes the direct effects of changes in prices for food and energy, rose 0.3%.
  • University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index (May 12): We expect the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index to fall 0.7 point to 62.8 in the preliminary May reading. Inflation, a major source of drag on sentiment, is not easing as quickly as consumers might have hoped.

This article was published by S&P Global Market Intelligence and not by S&P Global Ratings, which is a separately managed division of S&P Global.

Previous
Recommended for you

Global Economy
Country Risk
Pricing & Purchasing

A disjointed world

Key economic, geopolitical and supply chain drivers for 2024
Request full report

From neighborhood to nation we have you covered

Regional Explorer: Economics, risk, and data analytics
Learn more
Get a 360 degree perspective

Subscribe to our blog newsletter

Sign up
Related Posts
VIEW ALL
Blog Sep 16, 2020

Weekly Pricing Pulse: Cracks start to appear, but commodity prices continue rising

Blog Sep 16, 2020

Leveraging text as data: Tracking economic recovery from COVID19 in the US

Blog Sep 15, 2020

Geopolitics in a post-pandemic world: A fragmented world

VIEW ALL
{"items" : [ {"name":"share","enabled":true,"desc":"<strong>Share</strong>","mobdesc":"Share","options":[ {"name":"facebook","url":"https://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u=http%3a%2f%2fssl.ihsmarkit.com%2fmarketintelligence%2fen%2fmi%2fresearch-analysis%2fus-weekly-commentary-tighter-financial-conditions-needed-.html","enabled":true},{"name":"twitter","url":"https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?url=http%3a%2f%2fssl.ihsmarkit.com%2fmarketintelligence%2fen%2fmi%2fresearch-analysis%2fus-weekly-commentary-tighter-financial-conditions-needed-.html&text=US+Weekly+Commentary%3a+Tighter+financial+conditions+needed++%7c+S%26P+Global+","enabled":true},{"name":"linkedin","url":"https://www.linkedin.com/sharing/share-offsite/?url=http%3a%2f%2fssl.ihsmarkit.com%2fmarketintelligence%2fen%2fmi%2fresearch-analysis%2fus-weekly-commentary-tighter-financial-conditions-needed-.html","enabled":true},{"name":"email","url":"?subject=US Weekly Commentary: Tighter financial conditions needed | S&P Global &body=http%3a%2f%2fssl.ihsmarkit.com%2fmarketintelligence%2fen%2fmi%2fresearch-analysis%2fus-weekly-commentary-tighter-financial-conditions-needed-.html","enabled":true},{"name":"whatsapp","url":"https://api.whatsapp.com/send?text=US+Weekly+Commentary%3a+Tighter+financial+conditions+needed++%7c+S%26P+Global+ http%3a%2f%2fssl.ihsmarkit.com%2fmarketintelligence%2fen%2fmi%2fresearch-analysis%2fus-weekly-commentary-tighter-financial-conditions-needed-.html","enabled":true}]}, {"name":"rtt","enabled":true,"mobdesc":"Top"} ]}
Filter Sort
  • About S&P Global Market Intelligence
  • Quality Program
  • Email Subscription Center
  • Media Center
  • Our Values
  • Investor Relations
  • Contact Customer Care & Sales
  • Careers
  • Our History
  • News Releases
  • Support by Division
  • Corporate Responsibility
  • Ventures
  • Quarterly Earnings
  • Report an Ethics Concern
  • Leadership
  • Press
  • SEC Filings & Reports
  • Office Locations
  • IOSCO ESG Rating & Data Product Statements
  • © 2025 S&P Global
  • Terms of Use
  • Cookie Notice
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclosures
  • Do Not Sell My Personal Information