Author: Kenn Lamson

Comments: 0

On balance it could be said that we’ve seen a continuation of improving but uneven growth in the US economy since our last Harmonic Notes e-newsletter in mid-January, with one rather large wrinkle: Inflation concerns are back in the headlines.

DATA OVERVIEW

  • CONSUMER

-        The major negative factor facing consumers remains, of course, stubbornly high un- and underemployment levels. True, the headline unemployment rate fell to 8.9% in February but recent declines have come in part because the “participation rate” fell.  Also, while home sales have recently been mixed, with sales of new homes flat but sales of existing homes rebounding, home prices as measured by the Case-Shiller Home Price Index resumed their decline. A recent reading of consumer sentiment came in sharply lower than expected, presumably a reaction to the recent surge in fuel prices.

+        The broadest measure of un- and underemployment fell to 15.9% in February, its third consecutive monthly decline.  Despite the still-elevated monthly unemployment rate, weekly unemployment claims have recently fallen below the critical 400K level, suggesting a downward bias to the rate in coming months.  Probably influenced by this gradual improvement, retail sales and other measures of consumer spending rose (although the latest readings were taken prior to the recent spike in oil product price spikes). Also, February’s Consumer Price Index showed a moderate +1.4% YoY increase; concerning, however, was the index’s +0.4% month-over-month spike.  More on the CPI and other inflation measures below.

  • BUSINESS

-        Participation in the recovery by small businesses continues to be a sore spot; while the NFIB Small Business Optimism Index ticked up in February to a 3-year high, the index remains at very low levels.  Also, January’s Industrial Production report came in lower than expected but the weakness may be short-lived because warmer than expected weather temporarily cut demand from utilities.

+        The ISM Manufacturing and Service Indices, surveys of mostly large businesses, both continued to surge higher and both remain solidly in expansionary territory.

  • INTERNATIONAL TRADE

-        Imports rose more than exports in January, widening the trade gap. Import growth was driven dominantly by energy prices.

  • GENERAL

+        The +2.8% revised reading on fourth quarter GDP growth was an improvement from +2.6% in 3Q10 but a drop from the initial estimate of +3.2%. The report showed the strongest consumer spending since 4Q06 and received a huge boost from exports. Meanwhile, our favorite coincident macroeconomic indicator, the Chicago Fed National Economic Activity Index, continues to wobble around the neutral mark. And our favorite leading indicator, the ECRI Weekly Leading Indicator, has continued its gradual improvement; after a precipitous decline for about nine months beginning late 2009, it’s risen back into expansionary territory.

GDP growth (white, right scale); Chicago Fed National Activity Index (yellow, left scale); Economic Cycle Research Institute Weekly Leading Indicator (blue, right scale), 5 Yrs ending 3/4/11 {GRAPH: BLOOMBERG}

EMBERS OF ENCOURAGEMENT

Several anecdotal and quantitative pieces of data suggest the economic expansion is becoming self-sustaining1:

  • Respected research firm ISI Group notes that the lower monthly Unemployment Rate has been corroborated by encouraging employment readings from several other sources, including weekly state unemployment claims and surveys by the Richmond and Philadelphia Feds, National Association for Business Economics, the University of Michigan and even the National Federation of Independent Business.
  • Tepid wage growth below 2% poses no wage inflation risk. Since wages are typically the largest portion of a company’s expenses, there appears to be little chance of a wage-price inflationary spiral. Because the cost of labor hasn’t risen, the inflation rate of services has remained quite low; this trend is in contrast to that of goods, especially commodities.

Unemployment rate (white, right scale); Average hourly earnings (orange, left scale); Average workweek (yellow, right scale) {GRAPH: BLOOMBERG}

  • Manufacturing continues to motor along. The strength in the ISM Manufacturing Index has been one of the US economy’s few bright spots since it rose above the 50 mark in mid-2009 (measures >50 show expansion in the manufacturing economy; >42 show expansion in the overall economy). Strength in this rather small (12%) segment of the US economy is being supported by growing foreign economies; declines in the US$, which aids export prices, may continue to support this segment.
  • The ISM Service Index has also showed surprising strength and sits near all-time highs, critical since services comprise about 76% of US GDP.
  • The ISI Group’s weekly survey of trucking companies, which they claim to have the highest correlation with GDP, moved into expansionary territory for the first time in 4 years.

ISM Manufacturing Index (orange) and ISM Service Index (white), 13 years ending February 2011 {GRAPH: BLOOMBERG}


  • The apartment vacancy rate is declining and rents are rising nationally.
  • Manufacturing in the many foreign economies, including Germany and Japan, are on the rise.
  • Vehicle production and sales look to be increasing, with total annualized auto sales jumping in February.
  • Year-to-date global mergers and acquisition activity is the strongest since 2000.
  • Consumer installment debt has expanded for the past four months, indicating that consumers may be feeling more confident about the outlook.

Total Consumer Credit, 3/31/05 to 1/31/11 {GRAPH: BLOOMBERG}


DISTURBING DATA DEEP DIVE

Despite the overall improving data trend there remains plenty of things about which to worry; a partial list2:

  • The impact of the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear accident in Japan are a sizeable question mark for global growth.
  • The residential real estate market remains moribund, with sales rising slowly if at all and national prices turning downward again. According to economist David Rosenberg of investment firm Gluskin Sheff, house prices have about 3 times the wealth effect of stocks, so continuing declines put significant pressure on household net worth.
  • The pace of foreclosures has paused only because of technical concerns about correct paperwork, not because the housing market’s stabilized. There are millions too many houses in the US, the absorption of which almost certainly presents a long-term economic drag.

Case-Shiller 20 City Home Price Index (not seasonally adjusted), January 2005 – December 2010 {GRAPH: BLOOMBERG}

  • State and local budgets are under immense pressure, without benefit of the fiscal stimulus that blunted the effects of the downturn in 2009-2010. Not only is spending by state and local governments the second largest contributor to GDP but such spending tends to impact individuals more directly than spending by the Federal government. This shortfall is an enormous problem that will remain front-and-center for some time to come.
  • The long-term unemployment rate is historically high. Nearly 60% of unemployed Americans were out of work for 15 weeks or more, with nearly 44% of them unemployed for 27 weeks or more.
  • Labor underutilization is also a huge problem, with the broadest measure of under-employment still at 15.9%.
  • Getting a clear read on unemployment remains a challenge. To wit: One respected research firm, ISI Group, recently stated that they have increased confidence in the reported 8.9% unemployment rate because of the corroborating data noted in the “Embers of Encouragement” segment of this report. However, BMO Capital Markets postulated that if many jobseekers had not given up looking for work – that is, if the participation rate had not fallen sharply – the unemployment rate would be near 12%.

  • “Peripheral” Eurozone countries like Greece, Ireland, Italy and Portugal face very real solvency risks because of indebtedness and other imbalances in their economies.
  • Competitive devaluations are a risk as exporting nations try to use their currencies as a tool to maintain global competitiveness. The inability of Eurozone members to do this exacerbates their problem substantially.
  • While they’ve eased recently, consumer price index statistics for global markets are showing signs of inflation, especially in food and energy prices, which put new pressure on an already weakened consumer.
  • Sharply higher food prices act like a global tax and are especially painful for those at the bottom of the wealth ladder. As the world has seen lately, riots and other political unrest are often the result.

{GRAPH: Bloomberg}

  • Rising energy prices also act as a tax on consumers, especially those that must make difficult choices in their consumption. At the same time, companies experience margin pressure if they lack the inability to pass along their rising input prices, so the fair value of their stock prices declines.

INFLATION

Maybe it’s biased by our information sources, but it seems like there’s been an increase in the chatter about inflation lately. We noticed an uptick last summer when Bernanke signaled the Fed’s intention to launch QE2 and it’s really caught the public’s attention since gasoline prices spiked higher.  We thought it worthwhile to dedicate a portion of this newsletter to discussing what inflation is, what we’ve experienced in the past, the most recent readings and where we think we may head.

An online search for definitions of inflation will likely confuse a careful reader. Each school of economic thought offers its definition, the most well-known of which is probably Milton Friedman’s assertion that “inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon”. The difficulty of defining inflation naturally leads to disagreement over how to measure it, and thus whether the US is currently suffering from it. Rather than choosing a side, we’ll simply observe that inflation’s a widespread rise in the general price level in an economy; it’s NOT:

  • a localized increase, like home prices skyrocketing in one city but remaining muted everywhere else in the US
  • a short-term phenomenon, like gasoline prices rising as each summer driving season commences, only to subside in the fall
  • an increase in the price of only a few items when the prices of most other goods and services remain stable.

We’ll focus this discussion on inflation on consumer price inflation so we’ll leave aside a discussion of measures like the Producer Price Index.

The most widely known indicator of inflation is the CPI – the Consumer Price Index. The Bureau of Labor Statistics, which calculates and publishes the Index, reports the CPI with and without the impact of food and energy prices (aka the “core” CPI).  It’s been said that the Fed prefers to look at the core rate since it’s a more stable reading of prices affecting consumers; that may be so, but I don’t know many people who don’t use energy or eat, so I tend to consider both.

Year-over-year change in CPI (orange), “core” CPI (yellow) and PCE deflator (white),

August 1980 to January 2011 {GRAPH: Bloomberg}


The CPI is well-known and broadly used by investors, economists and the media as a proxy for the overall level of inflation in the US economy. In fact, the US government uses the measure to adjust the value of Social Security and other transfer payments. Also, there’s a type of US Treasury bond (which will be discussed in some detail later) that has its principal value adjusted to reflect changes in CPI. However, problems with the calculation of the Index are widely known and include:

  • CPI doesn’t include expenditures made on behalf of households (like employer-paid insurance) only those made out-of-pocket
  • The “market basket” used to calculate the Index is updated every two years.  This methodology might not take into account recently and broadly adopted goods or services (smartphones for instance).
  • The BLS assumes that if the price of a good or service rises, consumers will substitute; for instance, if the price of steak rises sharply, consumers might purchase chicken instead.  This substitution no doubt takes place but consumers might also purchase a smaller amount of steak or simply go ahead with the purchase.
  • The cost of rent or mortgage payments has about a 32% weight of the CPI. The flat home prices of the past several years have clearly weighed on the overall measure.

Another government-produced measure of consumer price inflation is the Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) deflator. It’s a broader measure than the CPI, capturing expenditures made by others on behalf of households. The PCE deflator’s composition changes from quarter to quarter, so it’s more up-to-date than the CPI. The CPI actually represents about 74% of the PCE deflator, with the balance consisting of other price indices. Because of these advantages it’s understood that the Fed prefers to watch the PCE deflator.

As one can easily observe from the graph above, the PCE, CPI and core CPI all currently are near their lows of the past 30 years. The year-over-year change in these measures was in the low single digits as of the most recent reading; at 1.1%, the core rate remains below the 1.75%-2.0% range indicated by the Fed as their target.

An interesting third, but by no means final, alternative inflation measure is one calculated by professors in MIT’s Applied Economics Group called the Billion Prices Project (BPP). The BPP conducts a daily online survey of about 5 million individual items across 70 countries that provide a nearly real-time measure of goods price inflation. Obvious weaknesses of the BPP are that it doesn’t include services and the surveys are conducted online only. However, given the breadth and depth of the survey, the BPP provides an interesting and potentially useful counterpoint to the government-collected statistics.

Each of the aforementioned price indices is retrospective and so is of limited value in estimating prospective inflation. As we build our outlook on the economy and financial markets, Harmonic reviews short-term estimates from several sources, including the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, CXO Advisory Group, and BMO Nesbitt Burns Capital Markets.

GRAPH: CXO Advisory Group LLC

The long-term inflation forecast we find most useful is one that’s derived from the financial markets themselves. We’re of the frank opinion that an investor who’s putting money behind their opinion is a more credible source than an economist who doesn’t. Treasury Inflation-protected Securities (TIPS) are a widely traded type of bond that offers a direct view into the market’s inflation forecast; subtracting the yield of a TIPS bond from a nominal (not inflation-adjusted) bond of same maturity provides an estimate of the average CPI for that upcoming period. For instance, the top panel of the graph below shows the 10-year nominal US Treasury note (orange) and corresponding TIPS yield (white); the lower panel shows the spread, equivalent to the market consensus forecast of the average CPI inflation for the next 10 years, at 2.33%.

{GRAPH: Bloomberg}

Understanding inflation is critical to gauging value in the financial markets and it has an obvious and immediate impact on the quality of life of those it touches. Wages that don’t rise enough to offset higher costs put consumers under greater pressure and may result in undesirable purchasing patterns. In its worst form, hyperinflation, consumers may be relegated to bringing large amounts of rapidly depreciating cash for their purchases.

Inflation also has a measurable impact on the level of interest rates. Since the coupon rate and principal of most bonds is fixed, the price an investor is willing to pay should change in direct negative proportion to anticipated changes in inflation; if inflation is expected to rise, the price of a fixed rate investment should decline to compensate investors for the loss of purchasing power of their securities. Since interest rates move in an opposite direction from bond prices, those price declines create rising market interest rates.

Inflation expectations affect stock prices in two ways: First, since the fair value of an investment is simply the present value of its expected cashflows, higher (lower) interest rates translate into higher (lower) discount rate and therefore lower (higher) estimated fair value. Second, from a fundamental perspective an increase in prices that can’t be passed on to consumers will be seen as pressuring companies’ margins. All other things equal, lower margins mean lower company earnings and lower stock prices.

As can be observed in the bottom panel of the graph above, next-10-year inflation expectations are within a rough “normal” zone of 1.30% to 2.65% despite recent spikes in energy and food prices and widespread concerns regarding the inflation-creating potential of monetary policies like QE2.

We believe that inflation pressures may be building. While velocity of the money supply remains quite low, suggesting that the flow-through of liquidity being pushed to the financial system by the Federal Reserve is being restrained from entering the real economy, velocity may be set to rise because, in part, consumers are no longer deleveraging.

{GRAPH: St. Louis Fed}

Current inflation levels and those short-term forecasts by market participants have risen from 2009 but on balance they appear moderate. We worry, though, that the Fed’s focus on the core rate of inflation, ignoring the affect of energy and food prices, causes the central bank to fail to see the larger picture and to maintain an easy-money policy longer than is necessary.  The pressure on consumers caused by rising food and energy prices is a concern, as are rising rents.  It’s worth remembering too that forecasting models don’t handle structural changes well, such as an increase in the Non-accelerating Inflation Rate of Unemployment (NAIRU) or changes driven by foreign economies, like we’ve seen with commodity demand from emerging markets.

1 SOURCES: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Cantor Fitzgerald, ISI Group, CIA World FactBook

2 SOURCES: Gluskin Sheff, Bureau of Labor Statistics, ISI Group, Global Macro Monitor, CXO Advisory Group, BMO Capital Markets, Federal Reserve, MIT Billion Prices Project,

Author: Kenn Lamson

Comments: 0

The data released since the last edition of the Harmonic Notes e-newsletter in mid-November affirmed our assessment of slow and uneven growth in the US economy.  The data tips the proverbial scales slightly to the positive side but many issues remain that could garrote the recovery.

DATA OVERVIEW

  • CONSUMER

-        The major negative factor facing consumers remains, of course, stubbornly high unemployment levels. True, the headline unemployment rate fell to 9.4% in December but the decline came mostly because the “participation rate” fell.  Also, while home sales have recently been mixed, with sales of new homes flat but sales of existing homes rebounding, home prices as measured by the Case-Shiller Home Price Index resumed their decline.

+        Despite the still-elevated monthly unemployment rate, weekly unemployment claims have fallen nearly to the critical 400K level, suggesting a downward bias to the rate in coming months.  Probably influenced by this improvement, retail sales and other measures of consumer spending again came in stronger than expected. Also, the Consumer Price Index stayed at about 1.0% year-over-year as the economy shows evidence of disinflation but not the dreaded deflation.

  • BUSINESS

-        Participation in the recovery by small businesses continues to be a sore spot; the NFIB Small Business Optimism Index ticked down in December and registered its 36th month at recessionary levels.

+        The ISM Manufacturing and Service Indices, surveys of large businesses, both jumped unexpectedly and both remain solidly in expansionary territory.  Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization were reported better than expected and CapU rose, although it remains at a very low level.

  • INTERNATIONAL TRADE

+        Exports rose more than imports in 2H10, narrowing the trade gap.

  • GENERAL

+        The revised report on third quarter GDP growth showed an improvement from 1.6% in 2Q10 to 2.6%. While this rate is better than the initial report, much of the growth in the third quarter appeared to come from inventory restocking, not more sustainable sources.  Meanwhile, our favorite coincident macroeconomic indicator, the Chicago Fed National Economic Activity Index, continues to wobble around the neutral mark. Finally our favorite leading indicator, the ECRI Weekly Leading Indicator, has continued its gradual improvement; after a precipitous decline for about nine months beginning late 2009, it’s risen back into expansionary territory.

GDP growth (white, right scale); Chicago Fed National Activity Index (yellow, left scale); Economic Cycle Research Institute Weekly Leading Indicator (blue, right scale) {CHART: BLOOMBERG}

“ENCOURAGING WORDS”

As mentioned above and in our last newsletter, data continues to tip the scales over-so-slightly to the positive.  Both anecdotal and quantitative evidence offer glimpses of hope*:

  • While, as noted above, it’d be a mistake to read too much into the drop in the headline unemployment rate, some of the other data included in the monthly release was encouraging. Average hourly earnings moved higher, but year-over-year growth of below 2% poses no wage inflation risk. The average workweek paused its ascendant trend in December at 34.3 hours. According to Marc Pado, economist and strategist at brokerage Cantor Fitzgerald, each 1/10 hour is worth about 400K jobs.
  • The 4-week average of weekly unemployment claims declined from nearly 500K to just over 400K, the level at which economists look for employment growth.

Unemployment rate (white, right scale); Average hourly earnings (orange, left scale); Average workweek (yellow, right scale). {CHART: BLOOMBERG}

  • Based in part, perhaps, on this positive trend, the American consumer may have found her footing. Holiday spending appears to have risen by the most since 2005, even while consumers are borrowing less and paying off debt.  This balance sheet repair is a necessary step before growth can resume.
  • Manufacturing continues to motor along. The strength in the ISM Manufacturing Index has been one of the US economy’s few bright spots since it rose above the 50 mark in mid-2009 (measures >50 show expansion in the manufacturing economy; >42 show expansion in the overall economy). Strength in this rather small (12%) segment of the US economy is being supported by growing foreign economies; declines in the US$, which aids export prices, may continue to boost this segment.
  • The December report on the state of service businesses showed the largest increase since mid-2006.

ISM Manufacturing Index (orange) and ISM Service Index (white), 13 years ending December 2010. {CHART: BLOOMBERG}

  • Vehicle production and sales look to be increasing.
  • Tech spending is up 12% year-over-year.
  • The oil rig count, a good leading economic indicator, surged after the Obama administration said deep water drilling can resume.
  • Speaking of the Administration, the rapidity of its move towards the political center has been breathtaking. The respected research firm ISI Group counts 43 business-friendly moves since the November election, including the extension of the Bush-era tax cuts, a payroll tax holiday and other modifications to the tax code.
  • The apartment vacancy rate declined and rents rose again in 4Q10.
  • January reports by the 12 Federal Reserve districts show strengthening in 9, with none weaker, as 2010 came to a close.
  • Food, fertilizer, and agricultural equipment producers are benefitting from the sharp increase in food prices. Ag related products account for about 8% of total US exports; they’re particularly important for Idaho, for which ag exports totaled almost $1.5 billion in 2009.
  • Fourth quarter 2010 GDP growth is expected to post a healthy 3.5%.

Real GDP growth, 12/31/05 to 9/30/10. {CHART: BLOOMBERG}

DARK CLOUDS

While the worst storms may be behind, that’s obviously not the same as having clear sailing ahead. There remain plenty of things about which to worry; a partial list**:

  • The pace of foreclosures has paused only because of technical concerns about correct paperwork, not because the housing market’s stabilized. There are millions too many houses in the US, the absorption of which almost certainly presents a long-term economic drag.
  • The residential real estate market remains moribund, with sales rising slowly if at all and national prices turning downward again. According to economist David Rosenberg of Gluskin Sheff house prices have about 3 times the wealth effect of stocks, so continuing declines put significant pressure on household net worth.

Case-Shiller 20 City Home Price Index (not seasonally adjusted), January 2005 – November 2010. {CHART: BLOOMBERG}

  • State and local budgets are under immense pressure, without benefit of the fiscal stimulus that blunted the effects of the downturn in 2009-2010. Not only is spending by state and local governments the second largest contributor to GDP but such spending tends to impact individuals more directly than spending by the Federal government. This shortfall is an enormous problem that will remain front-and-center for some time to come.
  • The long-term unemployment rate is historically high. Nearly 60% of unemployed Americans were out of work for 15 weeks or more, with over 44% of them unemployed for 27 weeks or more.
  • Labor underutilization is also a huge problem, with the broadest measure of under-employment still at 16.7%.
  • Many European countries are tightening their belts and this fiscal drag just began January 1st.
  • “Peripheral” Eurozone countries like Greece, Ireland, Italy and Portugal face very real solvency risks because of indebtedness and other imbalances in their economies.
  • Consumer price index statistics for emerging markets are showing signs of inflation, especially in food prices.
  • Sharply higher food prices act like a global tax and are especially painful for those at the bottom of the wealth ladder. Riots and other political unrest are often the result.

{CHART: BLOOMBERG}

  • Competitive devaluations are a risk as exporting nations try to use their currencies as a tool to maintain global competitiveness (see QE2 below.) The inability of Eurozone members to do this exacerbates their problem substantially.

MONETARY AND FISCAL STIMULUS

Our previously noted lack of enthusiasm for the Fed’s stimulus effort, known as QE2, remains unchanged. Commentators have not yet reached consensus regarding the success of the plan (heck, they can’t even agree on what its goals are) but it seems to us that if quantitative easing was meant to improve the employment situation, lower interest rates so they’re more attractive to borrowers, raise asset prices other than stocks and commodities (like houses, for instance) and drive down the value of the US$, it’s not looking so hot. Below is a chart of major asset classes and the US trade-weighted Dollar beginning on the date Fed Chairman Bernanke first floated the idea of QE2.

US Trade Weighted $ (white solid), Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index (yellow dashed), Case-Shiller monthly 20-city home price index (blue dotted), S&P500 (red dotted), S&P Goldman Sachs Commodity Index (green dashed) –daily 8/24/10 to 1/25/10, normalized as of 8/24/10. {CHART: BLOOMBERG}

Our concerns about the program are straightforward: This medicine probably won’t achieve the desired boost to economic growth but may create some undesired side effects, like asset bubbles (remember stocks in 2000 and 2007, and real estate in 2005-2007?) and ultimately inflation.  A major problem with QE – with monetary policy generally –is that it’s dependent on the financial system to execute. As I stated in the last newsletter, it doesn’t matter how much liquidity comes from the spigot if the hose is knotted. This is why the current (or recently ended, depending on your perspective) recession is quite different than any since in the US the ‘30s.

Further, there’s an important philosophical question to be asked about quantitative easing and other monetary accommodation. Not only are attempts to encourage additional borrowing probably counterproductive in an environment where frugality is in vogue, but we must question whether its logical or even ethical to try to repair an economic malaise caused by an overabundance of debt by encouraging more indebtedness.

We’re fans, however, of the recently passed fiscal stimulus that included a payroll tax holiday, extension of unemployment benefits, maintaining the “Bush tax cuts” for another two years and other tax policy changes. We wished aloud for fiscal solutions in the last newsletter; these aren’t as targeted as we’d suggested, and perhaps it’s a good thing to paint with broad strokes when so much is at stake.

The obvious downside of this monetary and fiscal stimulus, however, is a huge and growing budget deficit. The Treasury is issuing debt to fund that deficit, of course.  Much ink and “hot air” has been expended on the need for deficit reduction, much of it with an explicit political bias. As analysts we won’t join that fracas but will point out there’s a practical limit to the amount of debt a nation can service: PIMCO’s Managing Director Bill Gross reminds us in his January commentary that research by Professors Reinhart and Rogoff (of University of MD and Harvard respectively) demonstrates that when a country’s debt approaches 90% of GDP its GDP growth rate is slowed by the drag of interest payments.  The US debt excluding intragovernmental holdings is currently about 60% of GDP (using total debt outstanding the figure’s around 90%). More pressingly, the bond markets will mutiny long before debt hits that threshold, driving interest rates sharply higher and redoubling the pressure on the government and its citizens.

SOURCE: IMF. {CHART: BLOOMBERG}

The effective conversion of private debt to public debt in such massive quantities, how that’s paid for and by whom, its impact on the quality of life, resulting internal and global political shifts, is the end game. How it plays out over the next several years remains to be seen; according to Reinhart and Rogoff’s book This Time It’s Different, in which they examine 800 years of financial crises, the odds are decidedly not good.

FINAL THOUGHT

At the macro level the solution to the problem’s obvious: We must have job creation that can support the prudent use of credit.  Lower interest rates probably won’t do it – in fact, may well hurt in the long run.  To quote a recent commentary by the aforementioned Bill Gross of PIMCO, in order to turn the tide back towards job creation and global competitiveness we should “Stop making paper and start making things. Replace subprimes, and yes, Treasury bonds with American cars, steel, iPads, airplanes, corn – whatever the world wants that we can make better and/or cheaper. Learn how to compete again.” “It can be done with sacrifice and appropriate public policies that encourage innovation, education and national reconstruction, as opposed to Wall Street finance and Main Street consumption.”

Amen to that.

* SOURCES: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Cantor Fitzgerald, ISI Group, USDA Foreign Agricultural Service

** SOURCES: Gluskin Sheff, Bureau of Labor Statistics, ISI Group

Author: Kenn Lamson

Comments: 0

The data released since the last edition of the Harmonic Notes e-newsletter in mid-September suggests continued slow growth but feels a bit wobbly, like that recovering surgical patient we analogized in the last note.  The data is anything but one-sidedly positive to be sure, and many worry that pressures like the ongoing foreclosure crisis could sideswipe the nascent economic recovery.

DATA OVERVIEW

  • CONSUMER

-        The major negative factor facing consumers is, of course, stubbornly (intractably?) high unemployment levels. Also, home sales have recently been mixed, with sales of new homes flat but sales of existing homes rebounding. On an absolute level, however, sales across the board remain at historically low levels.

+        Retail sales again came in stronger than expected, as did other measures of consumer spending. Also, the Consumer Price Index stayed flat at about 1.0% year-over-year and barely positive month-over-month as the economy shows evidence of disinflation but not the dreaded deflation.  Observers got a nice surprise with the release of the October jobs data, which showed a much stronger-than-expected jump of +151K (+159K private payrolls). While Average Hourly Earnings rose only modestly, Average Weekly Hours rose +0.1 hour.

  • BUSINESS

-        Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization were reported worse than expected and CapU remains flat at a very low level. 

+        The ISM Manufacturing and Service Indices both jumped unexpectedly and both remain solidly in expansionary territory. Business productivity rebounded in 3Q10 as costs were flat. With such a high unemployment rate it’s clear there’s no wage-based inflation pressure.

  • INTERNATIONAL TRADE

-        Exports rose less than imports the August trade gap resumed its widening trend.

  • GENERAL

-        The initial report on third quarter GDP growth showed a slight quarter-over-quarter improvement, from 1.6% in 2Q10 to 2.0%. This rate is substandard and at risk for “failure to launch.” Further, much of the growth in the third quarter appeared to come from inventory restocking, not more sustainable sources.  Also, our favorite coincident macroeconomic indicator, the Chicago Fed National Economic Activity Index, fell back into negative territory after rebounding a month earlier.

+        Our favorite leading indicator, the ECRI Weekly Leading Indicator, has continued its gradual improvement; after a precipitous decline for about nine months beginning late 2009, it’s risen slightly since mid-year.

 

GDP growth (white, right scale); Chicago Fed National Activity Index (yellow, left scale); Economic Cycle Research Institute Weekly Leading Indicator (blue, right scale)

HOPEFUL GLIMPSES

It appears as though the economic teeter-totter has risen ever so slightly from being fully pegged down on the negative side, where it remained for an uncomfortably long time.  Both anecdotal and quantitative evidence offer glimpses of hope:

  • The upside surprise of above-mentioned payrolls figure suggested that companies might soon see the need to boost staffing. Year-over-year growth in average hourly earnings of about 2% poses no wage inflation risk. The average workweek continues to gradually lengthen; according to Marc Pado, economist and strategist at brokerage Cantor Fitzgerald, each 1/10 hour is worth about 400K jobs.

Unemployment rate (white, right scale); Average hourly earnings (orange, left scale); Average workweek (yellow, right scale)

  • Based in part, perhaps, on this positive trend, the American consumer may have found her footing. According to a report by the NY Federal Reserve consumer debt continues to decline as consumers are borrowing less and paying off more debt.  This balance sheet repair is a necessary step before growth can resume. We recently read an article describing the current era as one of “productive”, as opposed to “conspicuous” consumption, a characterization with which we’re inclined to agree.
  • CEOs are apparently coming out of the bunker as well, as more earnings forecasts are being raised than lowered.
  • Manufacturing continues to motor along. The strength in the ISM Manufacturing Index has been one of the US economy’s few bright spots since it rose above the 50 mark in mid-2009 (measures >50 show expansion in the manufacturing economy; >42 show expansion in the overall economy). Strength in this rather small (12%) segment of the US economy is being supported by growing foreign economies; declines in the US$, which aids export prices, may continue to boost this segment.

 

ISM Manufacturing Index, 5 years ending October 2010

 

BROWN SHOOTS

While the worst storms may be behind, that’s obviously not the same as having clear sailing ahead. There remain plenty of things about which to worry:

  • After a typical recession we’d have seen plenty of “green shoots” by now. A respected research firm, ISI Group, lists the following concerns:
    • Foreclosures
    • State and local budgets
    • Fiscal drag in Europe (many European countries are tightening their belts)
    • The potential for the Bush tax cuts not to be extended, at least temporarily
    • Low economic growth raises the risk of the economy slipping back into recession (ie, stall speed).

QUANTITATIVE EASING (round II)

The more positive tone of the recently released data buttresses the assertion in our last newsletter that a double-dip recession isn’t in the cards, a situation that’s more certain now that the Fed is on the scene with the cleverly acronym-ed QE2. Shorthand for the Fed’s purchase of bonds in order to drive down interest rates, the recently announced $900 billion quantitative easing program is the 800 pound gorilla in the markets and a giant question mark for the economy.  Its potential effect has been vigorously; it’s an unfortunate truth that even those at the Fed who’ve launched the program in an attempt to stimulate the moribund economy don’t really know what will happen.

Of particular note is the -7.3% drop in the US Dollar since Fed Chairman suggested in late August that QE2 might be forthcoming. While the Dollar’s decline is a boon to US exporters our trading partners appreciate none-too-much that our central bank appears to be manipulating our currency to their detriment, and holders of our debt don’t care much for having their investments eroded to increasing inflation.

Our concerns about the program are pretty straightforward: This medicine probably won’t achieve the desired boost to economic growth but may create some undesired side effects, like asset bubbles (remember stocks in 2000 and 2007, and real estate in 2005-2007?) and ultimately inflation.  A major problem with QE – with monetary policy generally –is that it’s dependent on the financial system to execute. The analogy I recently used to an undergrad class with which I was speaking was that of a spigot with a hose attached (the spigot is an analog for the Fed, obviously): If there’s a knot in the hose it doesn’t matter how wide open you turn the tap.  This is why the current (or recently ended, depending on your perspective) recession is quite different than any since in the US the ‘30s.

SOLUTIONS

The problem of subpar economic growth won’t be solved until credit creation begins again, and that requires both lenders and borrowers to participate. While their comfort may be gradually growing, at the moment lenders remain skittish while borrowers either:

  • Don’t need or want to borrow (ie, large businesses, which have a ton of cash on their balance sheets, and consumers, who are concerned about future job losses) or
  • Are starving for capital but are seen as too great a risk, given the uncertain economic outlook, for banks to lend to (many if not most small businesses).  

To quote the recently released quarterly Fed Senior Loan Officer Survey – “banks eased standards and terms over the previous three months on some categories of loans to households and businesses” but “substantial fractions of banks reported… that standards for many categories of loans would not return to their longer-run averages for the foreseeable future”.

  

Solid Line = large companies; dotted line = small companies  

Fiscal solutions would seem in order – tax cuts targeted at small business hiring, temporary guarantees or mandates to encourage banks to lend to creditworthy borrowers once “well-capitalized” levels have been reached, etc. – but those seem extraordinarily unlikely. We are concerned that, quite bluntly, almost nobody in DC “gets it”. Further, it’s spectacularly naïve to expect that simply because there’s been a change in the party controlling the House that politicians will begin putting the country before their own self-interests. We’ve all heard the old saw “gridlock is good”; that’s true only when the economy is working properly. Consider how counterproductive it would be for doctors to be arguing over treatment while our archetypal surgical patient is slipping into a coma.

At the macro level the solution to the problem’s obvious: We must have credit creation and job creation.  Lower rates probably won’t do it– in fact, may well hurt in the long run.  As always, the devil’s in the details.

Aug 13th

Economic Insight

Author: Kenn Lamson

Comments: 0

The economic world seems to have spun a bit off its axis since the last Harmonic Notes e-newsletter was distributed two months ago.  Virtually all of the measures we consider when evaluating the outlook for the US and global economy have seen their growth slowed, or outright fallen, over the past few months.

  • CONSUMER
    • Retail sales, home sales, home and consumer prices, and consumer sentiment are all lower; most importantly unemployment has stalled at a high rate
  • BUSINESS
    • Manufacturing and services indices are rising at a slower rate and other measures of production are contracting
  • INTERNATIONAL TRADE
    • Import and export growth are slowing
  • GENERAL
    • Chicago Fed National Activity Index has turned lower
    • Economic Cycle Research Institute’s Weekly Leading Index has fallen dramatically into negative territory
    • 2Q10 GDP growth fell to 2.4% from 3.7% in 1Q10 and 5.0% in 4Q09

It seems to us that the rebound seen in the US economy earlier this year and in late 2009 was unfortunately based, as we feared, on little more than restocking of too-low inventories and a brief surge in consumer spending.  As we’ve consistently argued, the path to improving the debt-deflation driven is through private sector job creation that has yet to meaningfully appear. Whether the US’s political and economic leadership is capable of understanding and executing on this (to us, rather obvious) point is a fair subject for vigorous debate; however, it’s clear that end demand will remain weak so long as employment is uncertain and both of those things will probably last longer than most expect.

US Unemployment Rate

For those “keeping score at home” here’s a brief rundown, courtesy of ISI Group, of the reasons the world economy has slowed:

  • The Eurozone crisis hit
  • Stock markets around the world declined
  • China’s economy slowed
  • Fiscal policies are tight everywhere (German and UK budget cuts, Spanish VAT hike, US Federal stimulus fading, US state & local government cutting, etc.)
  • US Federal Reserve balance sheet has stopped expanding and M1 has stopped growing
  • US inventory replenishment is probably over
  • Widening impression that Obama administration is anti-business have probably cooled “animal spirits”

An interesting albeit frustrating feature of this downturn, and one that fools casual observers into believing the economy’s closer to “all’s well” than “batten down the hatches”, is that the economy is now more than ever one of “haves” versus “have-nots.”  Large companies, which are predominantly those represented in the government economic data, are faring much better than their smaller brethren; lending statistics suggest that bank lending is substantially freer to large firms than small. Similarly, large banks seem to be doing much better than their community bank competitors. Another dichotomy is between businesses, which have as a group solidified their balance sheets by hoarding cash and reducing debt (and of course paring human capital) and consumers, a far larger segment of the economy that that has only just begun the balance sheet mending process.

National Federal of Independent Business Confidence Index

For all of our scoffing at the idea of a “V-shaped” recovery, in the ongoing debate over whether US economic growth is simply slowing marginally or will experience a “double-dip” recession we come down on the side of the former. It’s clear growth has slowed dramatically but our research suggests that the nation’s economy won’t relapse into negative growth.

We continue to repeat our steady refrain of the past 21 months, however: The developed economies’ malaise is a debt-reduction, balance sheet driven downturn that’s likely to linger for years, not the run-of-the-mill inventory / employment based correction typical of the post WW2 period.

Jun 01th

“Soft Patch”

Author: Kenn Lamson

Comments: 0

Who’d have thought that, until recently, anyone other than economists at the European Union, International Monetary Fund, European Central Bank would care a whit about the fiscal status of Greece, Italy, Ireland, Portugal, Spain and other small European countries?  US investors have learned more about those nations than they perhaps ever cared to, especially the ability of small nations to unwittingly create dramatic turmoil in the financial markets.  Since we at Harmonic have been focused, like most others, on the explosion onto the world stage of sovereign risk among Euro-zone countries, the never-ending flow of US economic data has been pushed to the back burner. It appears upon examining recently released data, however, that the US economy may have slipped into what research firm International Strategy & Investment (ISI) refers to as a “soft patch.”

The strength of the economic rebound from the painful 2008-2009 recession was surprising to many observers (yours truly included) ; whether that rebound is sustainable remains a legitimate subject for debate. The manufacturing-led and stimulus-fueled rebound appears to have stalled recently:

  • the weekly unemployment figures are remaining stubbornly high
  • consumer spending data released May 28 showed a slowdown
  • ISM’s manufacturing PMI released June 1 remained in growth territory but softened
  • the Economic Cycle Research Institute’s Weekly Leading Indicator,  a composite of several indicators, has slowed markedly of late (chart below)

The downturn of the growth rate and level of the WLI are of particular concern to me; I’ve noted in earlier posts that the WLI has historically been a solid predictor of US economic activity.

Those concerns noted, the balance of economic data released in the past couple of weeks has been positive. Of particular interest were:

  • strength in housing sales (although these were undoubtedly boosted by homebuyers hurrying to capture government tax credits by signing contracts before their April 30 expiration)
  • consumer sentiment was reported rising and higher than expected
  • a very broad coincident indicator, the Chicago Fed National Activity Indicator, has continued to rise and is now in “normal” territory.

The so-called “soft patch” is a reminder that the US and world economies are far from out of the woods; while such pauses in economic recovery are probably to be expected, the exceptionally high unemployment rate, skyrocketing fiscal deficits, number and magnitude of economic problems confronting the US and other world economies continues to suggest a longer and rockier road to stability than in other post-war recoveries.

Author: Kenn Lamson

Comments: 0

The final week of April gave us an uninspiring (and dated) reading on housing prices, the latest snapshot of consumer sentiment, and two readings on the overall state of the US economy – one reviewing 1Q10 and the other looking at March conditions. There were few surprises in the week’s data, which showed a slowly improving economy and initial signs that while they are clearly skeptical, the American consumer may prove more resilient than expected. 

RELEASE (leading, coincident or lagging indicator)

PERIOD

ACTUAL

EXPECTED (consensus) LAST

HIA COMMENT

Case-Shiller 20-city Home Price Index (lagging)

February

144.03

144.80

145.32

On a seasonally adjusted basis home prices fell -0.1% month-over-month but rose +0.6% year-over-year. On an unadjusted basis, prices fell -0.9% MoM.

Chicago Fed National Activity Index (coincident)

March

-0.18

N/A

-0.31

March’s level rose slightly from February and remained above the important -0.70 level.

GDP (lagging)

1Q10 advance

+3.2%

+3.3%

+5.6%

The initial look at first quarter economic growth moderated from 4Q09 anticipated, but consumer spending was stronger than expected.

Univ of Michigan Consumer Sentiment (leading)

April

72.2

71.0

73.6

American consumers’ opinion of their circumstances fell from its March reading.

 

S&P / CASE-SHILLER HOME PRICE INDEX

While the overall level of home prices appears to be slowly improving, this report suggests that the housing rebound that appeared last fall has faded.  Only one of the 20 cities saw a month-over-month price increase, and 6 cities reported new lows in prices.  However, 9 cities saw year-over-year price improvement. Prices stand at their autumn 2003 levels and are down -30.3% from their summer 2006 peak.

As with other lagging indicators, this data is a bit stale and projections made from it may be suspect.

 

CHICAGO FED NATIONAL ACTIVITY INDEX

The CFNAI is a weighted average of 85 indicators of national economic activity. The indicators that comprise the Index are drawn from four broad categories:

  • Production and income
  • Employment, unemployment and hours
  • Personal consumption and housing
  • Sales, orders and inventories

As a reminder regarding this useful but little-known Index, when the 3-month moving average value moves below -0.70 following a period of economic expansion, there is an increasing likelihood that a recession has begun. Conversely, when the 3-month moving average value moves above -0.70 following a recession, there is an increasing likelihood the economic contraction has ended.  When the 3-month average moves above +0.70 more than 2 years into an economic expansion there is an increasing likelihood that a period of sustained inflation has begun.

March’s 3-month moving average rose slightly from February and remained above the important -0.70 level, suggesting that economic activity is muted but continues to improve. According to the CFNAI inflation should not be a significant problem over the coming year.

 We note, however, that the “consumption and housing” component of the index remains negative.

 

GRAPH: Chicago Fed

 

“ADVANCE” GDP

This release is a first look into the first quarter of 2010, which fell slightly short of consensus expectations. The “advance” report will be revised over the next two months as additional data becomes available.  The positive surprise in the report was the better-than-expected showing from the consumer; business investment, exports and “nonresidential fixed investment” also made positive contributions. The slowing from 4Q09 was driven by decelerations in inventory replenishment, exports and housing investment, all which have been signaled by data released earlier.

It appears as though the inventory restocking that drove GDP growth in 4Q09 has subsided and the strengthening US Dollar has taken the wind out of the sails of exporters. The question that has plagued economic observers since the beginning of this recession remains: Can the US consumer – with an unemployment rate near 10%, wage growth nonexistent and housing flat at best – drive the economy forward without creating another debt bubble?

The contributions to growth looked like this:

SEGMENT CONTRIBUTION
Consumer spending +2.55%
Gross private domestic investment +1.67%
Net exports -0.61%
Government spending and investment -0.37%
TOTAL PERCENT CHANGE AT ANNUAL RATE +3.24%

 

 

GRAPH: Bureau of Economic Analysis

CONSUMER SENTIMENT

Consumers may be losing faith in the signals of economic improvement; the U of M Consumer Sentiment Index continued its recent slide, dipping from 73.6 in March to 72.2. The measure of current conditions, which reflects Americans’ perceptions of their own finances and whether it is a good time to buy big ticket items such as cars and homes, declined further from its cycle high in February to 81.0.  The index of expectations six months from now, which more closely projects the direction of consumer spending, also worsened again, from 67.9 to 66.5.

As we’ve noted elsewhere, economic improvement is clearly centered in manufacturing, not in housing and employment, two areas much closer to consumers.

 

Author: Kenn Lamson

Comments: 0

As even a casual observer would recognize, there are hundreds of pieces of economic data available from various departments within the Federal government and private research firms. There’s also lots of anecdotal information, too.  Unfortunately, as a relatively young (17 month anniversary is tomorrow, 3 April!) investment and research firm we don’t have time or the patience to try to analyze and write about what we find interesting, much less every thing that’s available. It’s clear, though, that some data are more important than others, because:

  •  they have a higher information content,
  • their methodology is more robust,
  • they’re more timely,
  • they tend to “move the market”,
  • or they’re familiar to the public at large.

With the able assistance of intern Vu Ngo, a senior majoring in finance at Boise State University, we’ve “separated the economic wheat from the chaff” by creating a list of about 15 indicators on which our research will focus.

We segmented our list by the component of the economy about which it informs us. The list looks like this:

CONSUMER

  • Retail Sales
  • Univ of Michigan Consumer Sentiment
  • New & Existing Home Sales
  • Consumer Credit
  • Real Personal Consumption Expenditures (aka consumer spending)
  • Unemployment Situation
  • Consumer Price Index
  • S&P / Case-Shiller Home Price Index

BUSINESS

  • ISM Manufacturing Index
  • ISM Service Index
  • Durable Goods Orders
  • Industrial Production & Capacity Utilization
  • Productivity and Costs

FOREIGN TRADE

  • International Trade

OVERALL MACROECONOMIC ACTIVITY

  • GDP
  • Chicago Fed National Activity Index
  • Economic Cycle Research Institute Weekly Leading Index

Of course we’ll keep our finger on the pulse of other data, and this list may change if items lose their efficacy. We think, however, it strikes a good balance between data overload and having too narrow a focus.

Author: Kenn Lamson

Comments: 2

The week ending 26 March saw indicators that provided incremental information on housing, the manufacturing sector, the American consumer’s mindset and the overall economy.  The data confirms our thesis that economic growth will continue to be lead by the industrial sector rather than households. We note also that the 4Q09 inventory- and stimulus-driven growth spurt appears to be waning, suggesting a significantly lower 1Q10 GDP print. 

 

RELEASE (leading, coincident or lagging indicator)

PERIOD ACTUAL EXPECTED (consensus) LAST

HIA COMMENT

Chicago Fed National Activity Index 3-month moving average (coincident)

February -0.39 NA -0.13

Three of the four broad categories of indicators that make up the index deteriorated, with only the sales, orders and inventories making a positive contribution.

Durable Goods Orders (leading)

February +0.5% +1.0% +3.0%

Orders excluding transportation rose +0.9% month-over-month.

New Home Sales (leading)

February 308K 315K 309K

New home sales plummeted for a fourth month, down -2.2% MoM.

Existing Home Sales (leading)

February 5.02M 5.00M 5.05M

Sales slipped again, dropping -0.6%.

GDP (lagging)

4Q09 final +5.6% +5.9% +5.9%

The final look at 4Q09 economic growth shaved the rate from earlier reports. Still, the pace of economic growth was the fastest in more than 6 years.

Univ of Michigan Consumer Sentiment (leading)

March 73.6 73.0 73.6

American consumers’ opinion held steady in March.

                                                                                                                                            

CHICAGO FED NATIONAL ACTIVITY INDEX

As discussed in last week’s Economic Insight, the CFNAI will replace the Conference Board’s Index of Leading Economic Indicators in our analyses. 

The indicators that comprise the Index are drawn from four broad categories:

  • Production and income
  • Employment, unemployment and hours
  • Personal consumption and housing
  • Sales, orders and inventories

A zero value for the index indicates the national economy is expanding at its historical trend rate of growth; negative values and positive values indicate below- and above-average growth, respectively.

Month-to-month movements can be volatile, so the Index’s 3-month moving average is used to show a more consistent picture of national economic growth.

When the 3-month moving average value moves below -0.70 following a period of economic expansion, there is an increasing likelihood that a recession has begun. Conversely, when the 3-month moving average value moves above -0.70 following a recession, there is an increasing likelihood the economic contraction has ended.  When the 3-month average moves above +0.70 more than 2 years into an economic expansion there is an increasing likelihood that a period of sustained inflation has begun.

February’s 3-month moving average decreased slightly from January but was higher than at any point since December 2007. The negative reading suggests US economic growth is below its historical trend and that there is low inflationary pressure.

DURABLE GOODS ORDERS

While the overall orders figures fell short of consensus expectations, the important manufacturing sector once again showed solid growth.  Month-over-month growth in new orders was seen in 4 of 8 major industry groups surveyed, including machinery (+4.7% and fabricated metal products (+1.9%). Weakness was centered in electronic equipment (-3.3%) and transportation equipment (-0.7%). 

January’s durable goods inventory figure was revised upward to show +0.1% month-over-month growth, making February’s +0.3% figure the second consecutive month of inventory growth. Perhaps US manufacturers have finally seen the bottom of the inventory cycle that’s been long expected.

Durable goods orders (red) and consensus expectation (green), Jan 2000 – Feb 2010

 

EXISTING AND NEW HOME SALES

According to the National Association of Realtors, sales of existing homes dropped once again in February, following the combined 23% decline in December and January. As noted in earlier commentary the initial wave of first-time homebuyers crested in November but the second (assuming there is one) has not yet fully taken hold. Without sharply higher interest rates or other negative factor intervening, we’ll likely see another surge of first-time buyers in March and April.

The housing market continues to be supported through the Federal Reserve’s purchase of mortgage-backed securities, a key mechanism for providing liquidity to lenders and keeping mortgage interest rates down. Those purchases, however, expand the Fed’s balance sheet and exacerbate longer-term inflationary concerns. This program, like many of the other extraordinary liquidity programs in which the government has engaged, is slated to end on March 31, 2010; it’s an easy bet that rates will likely rise if purchases are ceased.

The NAR report also showed that the reported estimate of existing homes for sale rose for the third consecutive month, by +9.5% to 8.6 months of inventory. Also, the median home prices were essentially flat at $165,100 while the average price fell to $210,500. Lower prices are a logical outcome of lower demand and increased supply. It must also be kept in mind that the reported figures ignore the massive overhang of foreclosed and delinquent properties that have yet to be officially put on the market.   According to one researcher, the actual supply is around 2 years’ worth, a far stronger headwind for the economy to lean against.

The decline was not adversely affected by the weather, as the Northeast and Midwest rose but South and West decreased. 

As with existing home sales, the drop in new home sales can in part be attributed to a lull in purchases via the first-time homebuyer tax credit. Also like the existing home sales release, supply was reported to have risen, in this case from 8.9 to 9.2 months. Unlike the report on existing homes, though, the median and average homes sales prices rose 6% to $220,500 and 5% to $282,600 respectively.

New (white) and existing (red) home sales, February 2005 – February 2010

 “FINAL” GDP

This release is the third and final look into the final quarter of 2009, which once again beat the consensus expectations. The “final” report is based on more complete data than was available at the time of the “preliminary” estimate last month or January’s “advance” estimate.  The report confirmed that fourth quarter growth was dominated by an enormous inventory adjustment. The downward revision from the “preliminary” report a month ago was cause by adjustments to spending on inventories, consumer spending and “nonresidential fixed investment.”

For 2009, this report puts full-year economic growth at -2.4%. 

 Accounting for the additional data released in the “final” report the contributions to growth looked like this:

SEGMENT

CONTRIBUTION

Consumer spending

+1.16%

Gross private domestic investment

+4.39%

Net exports

+0.27%

Government spending and investment

-0.26%

TOTAL PERCENT CHANGE AT ANNUAL RATE

+5.56%

The problem with inventory restocking-driven growth, of course, is that it’s temporary – once the proverbial shelves are full manufacturers will return to lower production levels.  In order to create a self-sustained economic growth we need to see demand from domestic consumers and businesses and/or foreign ones. As regular readers know, the downward pressure on demand is why we continue to focus so much of our work on understanding the unemployment trends.

CONSUMER SENTIMENT

The U of M Consumer Sentiment Index held steady at 73.6 for March. The measure of current conditions, which reflects Americans’ perceptions of their own finances and whether it is a good time to buy big ticket items such as cars and homes, rose to 82.4 in March, the highest reading of this cycle.  Ominously, however, the index of expectations six months from now, which more closely projects the direction of consumer spending, again worsened, declining to 67.9 from 68.4 a month earlier.

As we’ve noted elsewhere, economic improvement appears to be centered in manufacturing, not in housing and employment, two areas much closer to consumers.

 

Author: Kenn Lamson

Comments: 0

The week ending 19 March saw indicators that provided incremental information on housing, the manufacturing sector, inflation and the overall economy.  On balance the data was solid if not spectacular, suggesting that economic growth will continue to be lead by the industrial sector rather than households, and that inflation is not yet problematic for consumers.

RELEASE (leading, coincident or lagging indicator) PERIOD ACTUAL EXPECTED (consensus) LAST HIA COMMENT
Housing Starts (leading) February 575K 565K 591K Seasonally-adjusted annualized Starts fell -5.9%% from January’s rate (10.0% margin of error). Single family Starts were reported to have declined -0.6% (10.6% MoE) over the month.
Industrial Production (coincident) February

(MoM)

+0.1% 0.0% +0.9% Industrial Production rose in February largely due to the inclement weather-related production from utilities.
Capacity Utilization (coincident) February 72.7% 72.4% 72.6% CapU moved upward for the eighth consecutive month but remains well below its average since 1972.
Leading Economic Indicators (leading) February

(MoM)

+0.1% +0.2% +0.3% LEI rose for the eleventh consecutive month. A sister index, the Coincident Economic Index, has been rising slowly since mid-year 2009.
Consumer Price Index

(lagging)

February (YoY) +2.1% +2.3% +2.6% The figure softened again due to a decline in the cost of shelter offsetting continued energy price increases.
Consumer Price Index ex-food & energy (lagging) February (YoY) +1.3% +1.4% +1.6% In contrast to the energy cost-driven volatility of the “headline” Index, the “core” Index has remained quite stable over the past year.

HOUSING STARTS

The drop from January was limited to the Northeast (-9.6%) and South (-15.5%), with the Midwest and West showing a monthly increase in starts. For the US as a whole starts of structures with 5 or more units plummeted -43.1% month-over-month (20.5% margin of error).  As noted in prior months the variability of this series highlights the volatility of the housing market in winter, and the lack of follow-through from permit to actual construction.  It seems clear, though, that housing remains far from a sustainable rebound.

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION

The uptick in February production data supports our thesis of stabilization in the industrial sector. The Industrial Production figures rose modestly, mostly due to weather-related production at utilities. The key manufacturing sector, which represents about 12% of the US economy, took a breather in February, falling back -0.2% after January’s +0.9% spike.  These figures seem to have a habit of being revised downward after their initial release, so the economy may not be as strong as what’s been suggested by this report.

CAPACITY UTILIZATION

Factory capacity utilization remains low and is especially weak in the manufacturing sector, which had a utilization rate of only 69.0% in February. A look at the utilization for the different stages of production shows clearly where the weakness lies:

  • Crude stage = 86.2%, 0.3% below the long-term average
  • Primary / semi-finished stage = 69.6%, 12.0% below the long-term average
  • Finished stage = 70.8%, 6.7% below the long-term average

However, the trend for each stage of production has been positive since bottoming in mid-2009.

While a high degree of spare capacity means inflation is unlikely in the near-term, it also suggests that companies’ profit margins have not sustained the degree of pressure they have seen in prior recessions, so corporate earnings are better than in prior recoveries.

LEADING ECONOMIC INDICATORS

We’ve complained strenuously over the past couple of years that the Leading Economic Indicators Index has lost its efficacy due to questionable readings from several of its most heavily weighted components:

  • The most heavily weighted component, money supply (specifically M2), has exploded as the government has flooded the economy with fiscal and monetary stimulus. Unfortunately, little of that liquidity is being transmitted into the real economy, as bank lending is contracting.
  • The “interest rate spread” is suspect in its usefulness because this recession, stemming from a banking crisis and fueled by massive consumer deleveraging that has required that short term interest rates be held abnormally low, is quite different than other post-WW2 downturn.  
  • Another substantial component of the LEI, the US stock market, is also far from a reliable indicator of the quality of economic growth.

To replace the LEI as a reliable indicator of overall economic activity we’ll be watching two lesser-known series: the Weekly Leading Indicators Index (WLI), published by the Economic Cycle Research Institute, and the Chicago Fed National Activity Index (CFNAI). Like the LEI both of these Indices combine multiple pieces of economic data to create a single Index meant to evaluate the overall health of the US economy. As its name suggests, the WLI intends to act as a leading indicator, whereas the CFNAI is a coincident one.  The chart below, tracking the WLI (blue) and CFNAI (yellow) against GDP (white), demonstrates the potential usefulness of these indicators in understanding one’s position in the economic cycle.

CONSUMER PRICE INDEX

The year-over-year increase in the CPI remains driven by substantial increases in the price of energy. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the shelter component of the Index posted a -0.4% year-over-year decrease; the food component of the Index showed the third full-year decrease since 1961.  The year-over-year “core” rate was reported at the lowest level since February 2004.

February’s month-over-month change in CPI was driven largely by softness in energy costs. A -2.4% decrease in the price of fuel oil was the month’s largest decline, a partial reversal of January’s +6.1% spike.  Gasoline was down -1.4% after January’s +4.4% increase; however, natural gas from utilities rose +3.9%.  However, these increases were somewhat mitigated by an unchanged reading in the index for shelter, which comprises about 40% of the total Index.

While the trend for the “headline” CPI has been higher in recent months, consumer level inflation has yet to become a concern, with the “core” rate remaining stable at a historically moderate level. This data supports the Fed’s assertion that inflation is not currently a concern, and our belief that the FOMC will leave the Fed Funds rate unchanged for some time to come.

Year-over-year change in Consumer Price Index: all items (white) and ex- food & energy (red) Jan 00 – Feb 10