consumer spending

Black Friday to Thanksgiving Weekend, Discontinuities Aside

By |2017-11-28T16:41:10-05:00November 28th, 2017|Markets|

I was expecting quite a bit more, but perhaps should not be surprised at what was actually delivered. The National Retail Federation (NRF) after delaying its Black Friday retail spending estimates updated them later today for the now designated Thanksgiving Weekend. These new figures capture spending activity on both Thanksgiving Day itself as well as the much-discussed Cyber Monday. The [...]

Cyber Monday Was Great, But Inventory Looks At More Than Online Holiday Shopping

By |2017-11-28T12:13:02-05:00November 28th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As expected, Cyber Monday hit records all across the retail industry. According to Adobe Insights, sales recorded by online outlets, including those of traditional brick and mortar stores, hit $6.59 billion. That’s a record not just for a Cyber Monday but any single day in the internet’s two decades of mainstream usage. It was, Adobe said, a gain of 16.8% [...]

Fading Black Friday

By |2017-11-27T15:40:03-05:00November 27th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Black Friday was once the king of all shopping. A retailer could make its year up on that one day, often by gimmicking its way to insane single-day volume. Those days, however, are certainly over. Though the day after Thanksgiving still means a great deal, as the annual flood of viral consumer brawl videos demonstrate, it’s just not what it [...]

Consumer Credit Both Accelerating and Decelerating Toward The Same Thing

By |2017-11-08T17:36:36-05:00November 8th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Federal Reserve revisions to the Consumer Credit series have created some discontinuities in the data. Changes were applied cumulatively to December 2015 alone, rather than revising downward the whole data series prior to that month. The Fed therefore estimates $3.531 trillion in outstanding consumer credit (seasonally-adjusted) in November 2015, and then just $3.417 trillion the following month. Of that $114.3 [...]

Four Point One

By |2017-11-03T13:21:21-04:00November 3rd, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The payroll report for October 2017 was still affected by the summer storms in Texas and Florida. That was expected. The Establishment Survey estimates for August and September were revised higher, the latter from a -33k to +18k. Most economists were expecting a huge gain in October to snapback from that hurricane number, but the latest headline was just +261k. [...]

The (Economic) Difference Between Stocks and Bonds

By |2017-10-30T18:00:04-04:00October 30th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

Real Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) rose 0.6% in September 2017 above August. That was the largest monthly increase (SAAR) in almost three years. Given that Real PCE declined month-over-month in August, it is reasonable to assume hurricane effects for both. Across the two months, Real PCE rose by a far more modest 0.5% total, or an annual rate of just [...]

Retail Storms

By |2017-10-13T11:55:34-04:00October 13th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Retail sales were added in September 2017 due to the hurricanes in Texas and Florida (and the other states less directly impacted). On a monthly, seasonally-adjusted basis, retail sales were up a sharp 1.7% from August. The vast majority of the gain, however, was in the shock jump in gasoline prices. Retail sales at gasoline stations rose nearly 6% month-over-month, [...]

Factory Orders, Too

By |2017-10-05T16:51:45-04:00October 5th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It stands to reason that if US demand for foreign goods is weak because of high inventory levels, then demand for domestic goods will be, too. As noted earlier, US imports are down this year after being substantially higher during the last half of last year. The same pattern to a varying degree is unsurprisingly being exhibited in the domestic [...]

The Damage Started Months Before Harvey And Irma

By |2017-10-05T16:16:29-04:00October 5th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Ahead of tomorrow’s payroll report the narrative is being set that it will be weak because of Harvey and Irma. Historically, major storms have had a negative effect on the labor market. Just as auto sales were up sharply in September very likely because of the hurricane(s) and could remain that way for several months, payrolls could be weak for [...]

Incomes Are What Matters, So Bad Month, Bad Year, Bad Decade

By |2017-09-29T11:52:04-04:00September 29th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Sometimes economics can be complicated, such as why the labor market has slowed in such lingering fashion since early 2015. Sometimes economics can be easy, such as why there is so much less to the economy this year than thought. The easy part relates to the hard part. The labor market slowed and so did national income. Though so much [...]

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