consumer spending

The Common Economy of 2015

By |2015-11-13T11:11:26-05:00November 13th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With financial markets sharply glued to the “dollar’s” renewed mischief, that means everything lies at the feet of the global economy. The US economy is supposed to be the one colorful and lively example in that otherwise souring picture, even if it has been temporarily pushed from ideal. In fact, despite all that has happened this year, and “unexpectedly” continues [...]

The Conspicuous Temperature Gradient of Finicky US Consumers

By |2015-11-11T10:30:23-05:00November 11th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Janet Yellen and orthodox economists claim that the economy can only be gaining, and that word is taken, on faith, as if some updated, modern gold standard for meaning. No matter the contrary in actual evidence and observation, the “word” remains as if diktat were the only employ. It has produced some very strange dichotomies, particularly of late, where those [...]

Factory Opposites

By |2015-11-05T13:42:01-05:00November 5th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Economists continue to claim that manufacturing just doesn’t matter and that the service economy is more than fine. Setting aside the obvious link between services and goods to begin with (since so many services are dedicated to managing, moving and especially selling goods), it just doesn’t add up; if consumers are freely spending on services then why would they so [...]

PMI Difference

By |2015-11-02T17:39:10-05:00November 2nd, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

This is fast becoming the “12% recession”, as economists and media commentary rushes to quell any notion of systemic economic retrenchment. If it isn’t “the dollar” or “overseas demand”, then surely the dramatic (and always “unexpected”) reversal of US manufacturing is but a novelty to be regarded as inconsequential on Yellen’s road to the Promised Land. Reuters author Lucia Mutikani [...]

A Tale of Two Recoveries; And The Visible End of One

By |2015-10-26T15:52:57-04:00October 26th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If central banks are now almost exclusively on the defensive, we have no shortage of anecdotes and data to explain it. For a good long while economists and commentary managed to keep the US safely “decoupled” from the “overseas” maelstrom, but the deluge locally has become far too much to ignore. This is far, far deeper than just some indistinct [...]

When Chipotle Becomes McDonald’s, The Story Has Surely Turned

By |2015-10-21T15:39:15-04:00October 21st, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It has become an unshakable article of faith that every customer lost by McDonald’s is one gained by any number of the “progressive” fast food chains that have arisen in the past decade. The common competitor cited is Chipotle; so much that searching for the two restaurant names together results in thousands of versions of what are really the same [...]

Inflation Worlds Apart, Same Monetary Failure

By |2015-10-14T17:34:14-04:00October 14th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The US Producer Price Index declined 0.5% month-over-month in September, much farther than the 0.2% drop expected by economists (statisticians, really). With retail sales providing little positive emphasis even among the large segment of commentary focused exclusively on the monthly variation rather than the intense consequence of wider context, the idea that the Fed will confirm the final stage of [...]

Retail Sales And GDP Still Far, Far Apart

By |2015-10-14T16:27:19-04:00October 14th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The problem with using GDP as the primary means of economic accounting is its very nature. By attempting both comprehensiveness and precision, the resulting calculation is an agglomeration of various methods and sources, many of which are quite dynamic apart from static regressions. By that construction alone, GDP is susceptible to high degrees of kurtosis where assumptions find little. In [...]

Factory Orders As Payrolls

By |2015-10-02T13:28:11-04:00October 2nd, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

You get the same sense from factory orders that you get from payrolls – the economy is obviously and significantly slowing but there isn’t yet any crispness or urgency to any of it. I think that is the business environment reacting to both revenue reality (falling off) without being ready to commit to more serious negative adjustments just yet. In [...]

The Slippery Slope of Denial

By |2015-10-01T12:24:49-04:00October 1st, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The ISM Manufacturing PMI was “unexpectedly” weak yet again in September. Continuing the theme spelled out by the regional manufacturing surveys (the Fed’s and the Chicago BBI), economic momentum has clearly stalled right where the “dollar” said it would. The pattern is blindingly obvious, with a huge slowdown to start the year (coincident to the first “dollar” disruptions including crude [...]

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