ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: THURSDAY, May 4, 1995                   TAG: 9505040091
SECTION: BUSINESS                    PAGE: B-8   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: Associated Press
DATELINE: WASHINGTON                                  LENGTH: Medium


RECESSION TALK BEGINS

THE LEADING ECONOMIC INDICATORS fell again in March and some analysts say an economic slump is around the corner.

The government's main economic forecasting index took its biggest tumble in two years in March, prompting some talk of recession as financial markets rallied in hope that inflation will remain at bay.

The Commerce Department said Wednesday that its Index of Leading Economic Indicators dipped 0.5 percent in March and recorded its first back-to-back declines in nearly three years. The gauge was flat in January and has not moved upward since the end of last year.

The Clinton administration and many private analysts said the decline and a new report that factory orders fell for the second month in a row are signs of a welcome cooling-off period that will help sustain the economic recovery into a fifth year.

``This is all pretty gentle settling down. It's pointing away from a recession,'' said David Munro of High Frequency Economics, a forecasting firm in New York City. ``It's something in between a boom and a bust, and that's a soft landing.''

``What we can say from this number is: It does show a moderation of growth,'' said Laura Tyson, director of President Clinton's National Economic Council. ``Everything so far suggests we are on track for the annual forecast we gave.''

But some analysts said the risk of a recession could increase, particularly because the full impact of interest rate increases by the Federal Reserve are yet to be felt.

``I'm not surprised you're seeing talk of a recession,'' said Daniel Seto of Nikko Securities Co. International in New York. ``But we think it's premature. We're coming off extremely strong growth.'' The Fed doubled short-term interest rates, from 3 percent to 6 percent, in a 12-month period that ended Feb. 1.

While business spending on plant and equipment has remained strong, analysts said higher interest rates are contributing to a marked slowing in consumer spending. That has been particularly true for home buying and for big-ticket items, such as cars, that normally are purchased on credit.

The Index of Leading Economic Indicators is designed to signal the direction of activity six to nine months down the road. Three straight moves by the index in the same direction are considered a good gauge of where the economy is headed.

The Commerce Department said components of the gauge aimed at measuring consumer demand made the biggest negative contributions as only three of 11 components had an upward impact.

The Commerce Department also said orders to U.S. factories fell 0.1 percent in March, the second straight decline. Analysts had expected orders to rebound in March from a drop of 0.3 percent in February.

The economy grew 4.1 percent in 1994, its best showing in a decade. But many expect it to slow to around 2.5 percent this year - a pace analysts believe can be sustained without inflation.

The decline in the Index of Leading Economic Indicators - larger than analysts predicted - is the biggest since March 1993, when the gauge fell 0.8 percent. The last consecutive declines were in August and September 1992.

Six of the gauge's components contributed to the slide, led by a pickup in business delivery times. An increase in the pace of deliveries signals declining demand.

Other factors contributing to the index's drop were falling consumer expectations, a smaller rise in raw material prices, a shorter average work week, fewer building permits and declining factory orders for consumer goods.

Advancing factors were stock prices, new orders for plants and equipment, and more unfilled orders for durable goods. Money supply and the average weekly initial claims for state unemployment insurance were unchanged.



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