US small business sentiment near 2½-year high

    • The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) said on Tuesday (Aug 13) its Small Business Optimism Index rose 2.2 points to 93.7 last month, the highest reading since February 2022.
    • The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) said on Tuesday (Aug 13) its Small Business Optimism Index rose 2.2 points to 93.7 last month, the highest reading since February 2022. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Tue, Aug 13, 2024 · 06:18 PM

    US SMALL-BUSINESS confidence jumped to the highest level in nearly 2½ years in July, another indication that financial market fears of a recession following last month’s increase in the unemployment rate were likely overblown.

    The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) said on Tuesday (Aug 13) its Small Business Optimism Index rose 2.2 points to 93.7 last month, the highest reading since February 2022.

    Though businesses continued to worry about inflation, fewer reported raising worker compensation and average selling prices. This bodes well for the inflation outlook. More planned to increase inventory in the coming months, which could provide a boost to gross domestic product.

    The report joined a survey last week from the Institute for Supply Management showing a rebound in its nonmanufacturing PMI in easing concerns that the economy was either in recession or on the cusp of a downturn that was triggered by a surge in the unemployment rate to near a three-year high of 4.3 per cent in July.

    Twenty-five per cent of owners reported that inflation was their single most important problem in operating their business, up four points from June. That, together with policy uncertainty ahead of the presidential election in November, contributed to keeping the NFIB index below the 50-year average of 98 for the 31st consecutive month.

    “Owners are heading towards unpredictable months ahead, not knowing how future economic conditions or government policies will impact them,” said NFIB chief economist bill Dunkelberg.

    Nevertheless, the inflation picture is improving.

    A net 33 per cent of owners reported raising employee compensation. That was the lowest reading since April 2021 and was down five points from June. That aligns with a recent slowdown in wage growth. The share of owners increasing average selling prices fell five percentage points to 22 per cent, which fits in with ebbing price pressures.

    A net 24 per cent planned price hikes, the smallest share since April 2023, down two percentage points from June.

    Cooling inflation and an easing labour market have led financial markets and economists to conclude that the Federal Reserve will start cutting interest rates in September. A 50 basis points rate cut has not been ruled out, especially given that the unemployment rate has risen for four straight months.

    Business owners also anticipated high sales, though the share remained at depressed levels.

    A net 2 per cent planned inventory investment in the months ahead, up four percentage points from June. The last time inventory investment plans were positive was in October 2022.

    Though the labour market is slowing, workers remain in short supply, especially in the construction, transportation and retail industries. The NFIB noted that job openings in construction were up four points from June and 55 per cent of firms had a vacancy they could not fill.

    Thirty-eight per cent of all owners reported job openings they could not fill last month, up one point from June. REUTERS

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