consumer spending

Mainstream Expects All At Once; In the Slowdown There Are Only Bits And Pieces But Still Pointing Down

By |2016-06-01T11:48:09-04:00June 1st, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As with China’s manufacturing, so goes global manufacturing. Rather than rebounding out of 2016’s dismal start, the failure to follow through in April and now May simply proves yet again that nothing has changed. These PMI sentiment surveys are believed to be far more precise than they really are. Even though the ISM Manufacturing PMI, for example, rose slightly to [...]

Investment Risk These Days Includes The Census Bureau

By |2016-05-27T13:02:18-04:00May 27th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When I started in this business more than twenty years ago, I fully expected to be a profession investor in the purest sense of the term. I envisioned spending my days tearing apart corporate financials, especially balance sheets, and matching them to common sense expectations of new products and imaginative advances. It was the 1990’s, after all, and everything seemed [...]

The Mirage of Irregular GDP And How Economists Get Away With It

By |2016-05-23T13:14:00-04:00May 23rd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Last week, Japan reported GDP growth of 1.7% in Q1. That was much better than expected and led to all the usual extrapolations about how bright the future is in Japan now that QQE is working (and NIRP since that was started during the quarter). In this devalued economic world of central banking for the sake of central banking, context [...]

Far Too Late, Industrial Production Revisions Predictably Erased The Recovery

By |2016-05-17T12:33:29-04:00May 17th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Industrial production contracted for the eighth straight month in April, dropping 1.07% year-over-year. That’s a slight improvement from those prior months but likely only until April’s estimate is revised lower in the coming months. That has been the trend of late in both immediate terms as well as serious long-term revision to benchmarks. As far as the former, it suggests [...]

Retail Sales Do Add Up

By |2016-05-13T13:26:06-04:00May 13th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The calendar has been playing an outsized role in economic accounts this year, from leap year adding to February and now different months for Easter. With March entertaining the holiday this year, it seems as if seasonal adjustments might have been unduly harsh with retail sales. Into April, without Easter, seasonal adjustments may have been too charitable. Unadjusted, total retail [...]

Comprehensive Doubts

By |2016-05-05T19:07:25-04:00May 5th, 2016|Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

The underlying fundamentals of oil and energy remain highly negative. Oil prices have been supported by sentiment for some time now, but that hasn’t changed much from between under $30 to over $40 at the front end. In the latest weekly update from the US EIA, domestic oil production fell rather sharply in the last week of April. It was [...]

A Small Adjustment To Gain Needed Labor Market Sense

By |2016-05-04T20:55:29-04:00May 4th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The BLS released its updated productivity estimates showing that Q1 2016 was negative for the second straight quarter and the fourth of the past six. Such negative and flat productivity in any real sense doesn’t make sense. This disparity seems to be, as always, in the BLS serially overstating the employment gains. The level of increase in total hours worked [...]

Proving Yet Again Global Weakness Starts Here

By |2016-05-04T13:20:56-04:00May 4th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When commenting on any weakness in the US economy, it has become common even shorthand for any outlet or author to affix the conventional explanation. Suspiciously low growth rates and far too many outright contractions, especially in manufacturing and industry, are blamed on overseas weakness and the dollar as if absent that foreign interference all would be sailing along right [...]

Ritual Weakness Is More About The Ritual Than The Weakness

By |2016-04-28T18:58:45-04:00April 28th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The worst part of this stilted or stunted economy is that it isn’t nearly good enough to produce widespread prosperity (with very real questions as to whether it produces any prosperity at all). It has become self-reinforcing, however, to the point of circular logic. We (economists) are now so conditioned by the low, unstable growth that we are supposed to [...]

Where Is (Was) The Overheating?

By |2016-04-28T18:11:22-04:00April 28th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With no “unusual” snow or “residual seasonality”, the US economy once again grinds to a halt in Q1 only now with no more reasons to dismiss it. In what has become an annual ritual, GDP barely moves in the quarter immediately following the Christmas holiday. This time, however, it wasn’t just consumers holding back in Q1. The U.S. economy inched [...]

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