Wall Street forecasts are chasing the US economy higher

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The US economy in 2024 has presented Wall Street with a singular challenge — keeping up.

The latest monthly jobs report showed continued signs of strength in a labor market expected to cool quickly in 2024. This data, along with signs of resilience in the consumer, has economists feeling increasingly better about the outlook for economic growth.

"The economy's momentum early this year has been stronger than we were expecting a few weeks (and months) ago," JPMorgan chief US economist Michael Feroli wrote in a note to clients on Friday. "While we still expect growth to slow, we think the economy might perform better in the middle part of the year than we had previously forecasted."

Feroli's call for increased economic growth in the middle quarters of this year matches the broad shifts seen in consensus forecasts.

In January, Deutsche Bank chief global strategist Binky Chadha highlighted in Yahoo Finance's Chartbook that consensus had consistently underestimated economic growth over the past year. That's continued to play out, with quarter-over-quarter projections for economic growth in the first six months of this year increasing significantly since January.

Wall Street economists now expect the US economy to grow at an annualized rate of 1.8% in the first quarter, up from projections for 0.6% offered in January, according to Bloomberg data. Second quarter growth forecasts have also been revised up to 1.3% from 0.4% over that period.

Feroli boosted his firm's forecast for Q2 GDP to 1.5% from 0.5% previously after Friday's jobs report.

A 'sustaining indicator'

Deutsche Bank senior US economist Brett Ryan, whose team removed their call for a recession in 2024 last month, said the shifting narrative in the US economy has largely been driven by a stronger-than-expected labor market preventing a downturn in consumer spending.

"The labor market is not usually a leading indicator, but it is a sustaining indicator," Ryan told Yahoo Finance. "And what you earn is what gets spent."

Average hourly earnings grew 4.3% annually in February, per data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. This was a move down from January's 4.5% annual wage growth, but, notably, that number remains above headline price increases seen in various inflation indicators and helps support consumer spending from a downturn, per Ryan. Headline inflation rose 3.2% in February.

Wage growth also comes as data shows few signs of widespread layoffs in the labor market, despite headlines of layoffs to start the year. That is counter to what Ryan's team at Deutsche Bank had feared entering this year and also contributes to a more bullish outlook for the US economy.