Household worth climbs by $2.95 trillion to record

WASHINGTON – Household wealth in the U.S. increased from October through December, as gains in stock portfolios and home prices boosted Americans’ finances.

Net worth for households and nonprofit groups rose by $2.95 trillion in the fourth quarter, or 3.8 percent from the previous three months, to a record $80.7 trillion, the Federal Reserve said on Thursday from Washington in its financial accounts report, previously known as the flow of funds survey.

More jobs, higher stock prices and improved home values have all helped consumers clean up their balance sheets in the years following the biggest recession since the Great Depression. Additional gains in the labor market and household wealth will be needed to give consumers the means to spend on goods and services, boosting economic growth.

“The gains in wealth are cumulative and they’re likely to have, over time, a more positive effect on consumer spending,” said Sam Coffin, an economist at UBS Securities LLC in Stamford, Conn. Looking ahead, gains will be “a bit less rapid, but we do have continued improvement.”

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The value of financial assets, including stocks and pension fund holdings, held by American households increased by $2.52 trillion in the fourth quarter, according to Thursday’s Fed report.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index climbed 9.9 percent from Sept. 30 to Dec. 31, capping the best yearly gain since 1997.

Home prices

An improving housing market also boosted household wealth. The S&P/Case-Shiller national home-price index rose 11.3 percent in the fourth quarter from the same period in 2012, the biggest year-over-year advance since the first three months of 2006.

Household real-estate assets climbed by $401.1 billion, the data show. Owners’ equity as a share of total household real- estate holdings increased to 51.7 percent last quarter from 50.6 percent in the previous three months.

Household net worth was $11.8 trillion greater than its pre-recession peak of $68.8 trillion reached in the second quarter of 2007. It was $77.7 trillion in the three months ended September.

The Fed is trying to preserve improvements in household net worth by maintaining an accommodative stance, even as it scales back its unprecedented stimulus program.

Fed Chair Janet Yellen said the central bank intends to reduce asset purchases at a “measured” pace, in testimony before the Senate last week. She also said in response to a separate question that the bond-buying program is likely to end in the fall. At the same time, “if there’s a significant change in the outlook, certainly we would be open to reconsidering,” Yellen said.

Payroll forecast

Fed policy makers will likely keep a close eye on the labor market, where gains have been inconsistent over the past three months. Payrolls grew by 113,000 in January following advances of 75,000 in December and 274,000 in November. They’re projected to increase by about 150,000 in February, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg before Friday’s Labor Department report.

Household debt increased at a 0.4 percent annualized rate last quarter, Thursday’s Fed report showed. Mortgage borrowing dropped at a 1 percent pace. Other forms of consumer credit, including auto and student loans, increased at a 5.4 percent pace.

For all of 2013, household debt climbed 0.9 percent, the biggest gain since 2007, even as Americans continued to pay down home loans. Mortgage borrowing fell 0.8 percent, the smallest drop since 2008, which marked the first year of the recession.

Total non-financial debt increased at a 5.4 percent annual pace last quarter, the most in a year. Federal government obligations jumped by 11.6 percent, the biggest gain since the first three months of 2012. Business borrowing rose 7.1 percent. State and local government debt dropped at a 4.9 percent pace.

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