First the big news - the US economy is doing OK. No fantastic, not a disaster, just OK. That is not a brilliant insight, as it has been the case for a number of years now.

First the big news - the US economy is doing OK. No fantastic, not a disaster, just OK. That is not a brilliant insight, as it has been the case for a number of years now.

But, as I will discuss in Blog 5 on the Federal Reserve (the Fed), there is enough growth to see the Fed continuing on its very gradual tightening cycle, including an expected rate hike at the 14 December FOMC meeting (taking the Fed Funds target rate to 0.5%-0.75%) and two rate hikes in each of 2017, 2018 and 2019 for a peak around 2%.

The most common phrase on the US economy I heard from my meetings was "slow and steady". Real GDP growth in both Q1 16 and Q2 16 GDP were relatively soft at 0.8% seasonally adjusted annual rate (saar) and 1.4%saar, respectively. But the partial data for Q3 16 received so far indicates that Q3 16 should come at around 3%saar, or even a little higher. Estimates for Q4 16 are for growth at around 2.5%saar-2.75%saar. For 2016 as a whole, real GDP growth is expected to come in a little below 2%/yr - which is not much changed from the 2015 growth rate. At this stage, the outlook for 2017 looks to be a little stronger, but not by much.

Looking at the US economy more closely, some of the expected improvement through the second half of 2016 will come from a better trade performance and better inventory management, both of which should provide a positive (or less negative) contribution to growth in coming quarters.

However, consumer spending does look, like it is fading in recent months after a better performance mid-year. Indeed, after growing by 4.3%saar in Q2 16, consumer spending is expected to come in at around 2.5%saar in Q3 16 and Q4 16 and maintain a pace around this through 2017. However, there are also signs that the areas of consumer spending are narrowing. There appears to be an increasing proportion of the consumer spend on healthcare, experiences and tourism.

Housing starts are generally expected to remain around the 1.2 million units level at an annual rate through the remaining months of 2016 and into 2017. Expectations of higher interest rates in 2017 do not seem to be worrying the housing market unduly. 

Business investment remains soft, although it is expected to pick up a little from the very meagre growth seen in H1 16 - especially as the oil price improves and encourages investment back into the energy sector. Feedback from my meetings and surveys indicate that business investment is soft because final demand has been slow and disappointing, ie. there is no incentive to significantly increase capex given how modest economic growth has been. Two other key aspects to the business capex outlook are the election and views on the global economy. There looks to be clear evidence that the 2016 Presidential election (arguable one of the most divisive in recent times) is causing at least a pause in business investment plans. However, more uncertainty over the global economy (especially China and Europe) is seeing some of the big US multi-national companies spending a little more on US capex and less in international markets.

The pace of real economic growth is evidently enough to keep employment growth at around 150k-200k per month. While this pace of monthly jobs growth could slow a little in the year ahead, it should still be enough to have the unemployment rate drifting lower. Indeed, expectations are that the unemployment rate will be closer to 4.5% by the end of 2017, from a level close to 5% at the end of 2016.

Significantly, general expectations are that US inflation could drift higher in the year ahead. The headline CPI is expected to come in around 2%/yr at the end of 2016, before rising towards 2.25%/yr-2.5%/yr at the end of 2017. Perhaps more importantly, the core PCE measure of underlying inflation is expected to move up from the current 1.7%/yr toward the Fed's 2%/yr target in the year ahead. Very few economists, however, expect core PCE inflation to rise significantly above 2%/yr out to the end of 2018.

Nevertheless, some inflationary pressure is expected to come from the recent pick-up in key commodity prices (ie. oil, iron ore, coal) and a better trend in global PMI indexes and some closing of the output gap. Put another way, some of the cyclical forces holding down inflation (or creating deflation) are expected to slowly reverse over the next year or so. But, the structural forces holding down inflation, especially demographics and technology, remain firmly in place.

An upward trend in wages growth, although from very modest levels, is also beginning to reveal itself in the US and this could also place some upward pressure on inflation - although this would also likely have significant implications for corporate margins.

Higher health costs could also be an ongoing driver of the upward trend in inflation. Expectations are that healthcare premiums could rise by as much as 25% in 2017 for those States using the healthcare.gov portal - which accounts for 39 States and around 77% of the national exchange enrollment. As noted below, Healthcare costs are certainty an issue in the Presidential election and will be a key focus for the next President.

Economic growth through 2017 is also likely to be supported by some fiscal policy easing. Both major Presidential candidates are promising some fiscal policy stimulus, although Hillary Clinton's plans are much more modest that Donald Trump's. Assuming the opinion polls are correct and Hillary Clinton wins the election (I will cover the election in much more detail in Blog 6), an increase in infrastructure spending and some reduction in healthcare costs under President Clinton are expected to provide a modest positive contribution to growth over the next 4 years or so.

So overall, the outlook for the US economy in the year ahead looks like being a bit more of the same - slow and steady with growth averaging around 2%/yr or perhaps a little higher. Probably the biggest change in sentiment since my last trip to the US in September 2015 is a feeling that inflation is now trending a little higher - as some of the spare capacity continues to be taken out of the economy and on the back of some strength in global commodity prices. This slightly higher inflation trend is clearly something the Fed will need to monitor. So Blog 5 will discuss the outlook for the Fed and monetary policy, both in the near-term and on a more medium-term basis.