Trump's blitz of insults and criticism directed at the Fed had slowed in recent weeks, with the most recent occurring two weeks ago when he said US central bankers "don't have a clue but I do." "Take a look around the World at our competitors. Germany and others are actually GETTING PAID to borrow money. Fed was way too fast to raise, and way too slow to cut!" Trump tweeted Thursday, pausing in his focus on the impeachment inquiry against him in Congress.
The European Central Bank left its policy interest rate unchanged on Thursday at -0.5 percent, while the Bank of Japan - also set to meet next week - has a -0.1 percent rate as sluggish economic growth persists. Meanwhile, official government data and industry reports are giving mixed signals about the US economy.
Sales of American manufactured goods had a dismal September, hit hard by Boeing's woes and a protracted work stoppage at General Motors, the Commerce Department reported. Total new orders fell 1.1 percent in September to $248.2 billion. The result meant 2019 so far has been a year to forget, with sales in the first nine months of the year 0.8 percent lower than the same period in 2018.
The largest part of the damage last month was done by the transportation sector, with autos and parts falling 1.6 percent and civilian aircraft falling another 11.8 percent, extending August's decline. New home sales also declined, falling 0.7 percent but they are up 15.5 percent compared to September 2018, according to a separate report on Thursday.
Amid rising wages, low interest rates and historically low unemployment, new home sales forged higher in June, July and August. But the far larger market for existing homes also fell in September, according to industry data released earlier this week. Scarce labor, high costs for materials in part due to tariffs, and fear that Trump's trade wars could scare off would-be buyers had previously made some homebuilders reluctant or unable to add to the supplies.
Economist Yelena Maleyev, of GrantThornton, noted that home prices are rising due to high demand and low supply. "Manufacturing counties, most of which are concentrated in the Midwest, have been hardest hit by the trade war and, more recently, the GM strike; those losses are spilling into the housing market," she said in an analysis.