- Gus Faucher, PNC Financial
The US economy expanded at a stronger than initially expected pace during the final quarter of 2016 amid higher consumer spending. The Commerce Department reported on Thursday the economy grew at a 2.1% annualised rate in the Q4 of 2016, compared to the previously estimated 1.9% pace. Nevertheless, for all of 2016, the economy expanded just 1.6%, the slowest pace of growth since 2011, following a 2.6% expansion in 2015. Moreover, the most recent economic indicators suggested that economic growth slowed further in the Q1 of 2017. According to the Atlanta Fed, the US economy expanded at a 1.0% rate in the Q1. However, economists claim that US employment data is more reliable than output data, as it paint a clearer picture of national income growth. Thursday's data also showed consumer spending advanced 3.5% during the last quarter of 2016, up from the initially reporter 3.0% growth rate. Furthermore, domestic demand climbed 3.4% in the Q4 of 2016, the fastest pace of growth in two years, as imports posted a 9.0% jump, the biggest since the Q4 of 2014. Other data released on Thursday revealed that initial jobless claims dropped 3,000 to a seasonally adjusted 258,000 in the week ending March 25, remaining below the 300,000 level for 108 consecutive weeks.