US economy unexpectedly contracted in 1Q

  • Market: Coal, Crude oil, LPG, Metals, Natural gas, Oil products
  • 28/04/22

The US economy contracted at a 1.4pc annual rate in the first quarter, the first decline since the Covid-19 pandemic caused a short, deep recession in the second quarter of 2020.

The first quarter contraction reflected decreases in private inventory investment — or inventories companies keep to support production and distribution — particularly in the automotive sector, as well as reduced net exports, and lower federal, state and local government spending, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) said. Those factors together subtracted 4.5 percentage points from growth.

But the first-quarter contraction is not necessarily a sign of a fundamental change in direction for the economy, as gross domestic product growth was 6.9pc just a quarter earlier. Rather it largely reflects a drop in net exports as imports surged on inventory rebuilding amid snagged supply chains. Exports of goods fell by 9.6pc while imports of goods surged by 21pc.

"Net trade has been hammered by a surge in imports, especially of consumer goods, as wholesalers and retailers have sought to rebuild inventory," said Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics. That level of inventory-building imports cannot last much longer, he said.

"This is noise; not signal," he said. "The economy is not falling into recession."

Consumer spending, the largest part of the economy, grew at a healthy 2.7pc in the first quarter compared with 2.5pc in the fourth quarter.

Still, government support, including "forgivable loans to businesses, grants to state and local governments, and social benefits to households all decreased as provisions of several federal programs expired or tapered off," the BEA said. Federal government expenditures fell by 5.9pc.

Also crimping growth in the quarter, "an increase in Covid-19 cases related to the Omicron variant resulted in continued restrictions and disruptions in the operations of establishments in some parts of the country," the BEA said.


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30/04/24

HSFO demand supports Rotterdam 1Q bunker sales

HSFO demand supports Rotterdam 1Q bunker sales

London, 30 April (Argus) — Total sales of fossil bunker fuels and marine biodiesel blends at the port of Rotterdam were 2.45mn t in the first quarter this year, up by 13pc compared with the final three months of 2023 but 9pc lower year on year, according to official port data. Sales firmed across the board quarter on quarter, even though market participants had described spot bunker fuel demand in the region as "mostly limited" and shipping demand as lacklustre. High-sulphur fuel oil (HSFO) sales rose the most. Disruption in the Red Sea resulted in many vessels re-routing around the southern tip of Africa, increasing the incentive of bunkering with HSFO as opposed to very low-sulphur fuel oil (VLSFO) and marine gasoil (MGO), according to market participants. The longer journeys meant that vessels on the route increased their fuel consumption to reduce delivery delays, supporting conventional bunker fuel sales at Rotterdam. Higher prices for HSFO in Singapore also helped support HSFO demand in Rotterdam. Marine biodiesel sales at Rotterdam increased by 13pc on the quarter and by 76pc on the year in January-March, despite the Dutch government's decision to half the Dutch renewable tickets (HBE-G) multiplier for shipping at the turn of the year. The move has led to a substantial increase in prices for advanced fatty acid methyl ester (Fame) 0 blends in the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp (ARA) hub. The inclusion of shipping in the EU's Emissions Trading System (ETS) from January may have lent support to demand for biofuel blends. Marine biodiesel made up 11pc of total bunker fuel sales at Rotterdam in the first quarter, the same share as the previous quarter, which was a record high. LNG bunker sales at Rotterdam in January-March soared by 45pc on the quarter and by 150pc on the year. By Hussein Al-Khalisy Rotterdam bunker sales t Fuel 1Q24 4Q23 1Q23 q-o-q% y-o-y% VLSFO & ULSFO 857,579 847,862 1,205,288 1 -29 HSFO 818,028 643,218 809,871 27 1 MGO/MDO 383,409 361,585 468,373 6 -18 Biofuel blends 262,634 233,108 149,206 13 76 Total 2,453,610 2,177,078 2,685,515 13 -9 LNG (m³) 131,960 91,305 52,777 45 150 Port of Rotterdam Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Milei's bid to open Argentina's economy passes


30/04/24
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30/04/24

Milei's bid to open Argentina's economy passes

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G7 countries put timeframe on 'unabated' coal phase-out


30/04/24
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30/04/24

G7 countries put timeframe on 'unabated' coal phase-out

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Higher C919 adoption to boost China's Ti demand


30/04/24
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30/04/24

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Gas-fired units win Japan's clean power auction


30/04/24
News
30/04/24

Gas-fired units win Japan's clean power auction

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