durable goods

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 [...]

Even More Recovery Was Erased

By |2016-05-26T18:08:54-04:00May 26th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As if something out of bad dream, the economy continues to shrink. Actually, the economy has been shrunken this whole time, it is only the full recovery narrative that has shriveled as each drastic data revision blasts apart what little is left of the positivity. We are made to believe that government data providers go out into the economy and [...]

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 [...]

The Strict Limits Of US QE

By |2016-04-26T17:17:08-04:00April 26th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In addition to the worrisome durable goods report (in the respect that it just continues the same contraction part of the slowdown), consumer confidence slipped suggesting that the rebound in stocks and prices of other risky assets are not striking a direct correlation. There may be a delayed effect, with “confidence” or sentiment in April still more focused on the [...]

Where It All Went Wrong

By |2016-04-26T15:49:48-04:00April 26th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With the housing recovery, it is perhaps because it has been much more visible and earnest that the disparity is more easily appreciated and understood. Prices have surged in some places as much as the housing mania portion of the great bubble of the 2000’s, yet that has taken place despite levels of overall activity at only fractions of that [...]

The Slowdown Is Consumer-Driven

By |2016-04-26T11:49:59-04:00April 26th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Without the assistance of an extra day as in February, durable and capital goods orders and shipments returned to the usual contraction. As is typical for this part of the slowdown, these are not huge declines but merely the continuation of contraction now stretching into a second year. Durable goods orders (ex transportation) were in March 0.23% less than March [...]

Durable Goods May Not Actually Show Recession, And That Is The Worst Case

By |2016-03-28T13:14:31-04:00March 28th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Orthodox economic theory assigns recession to some exogenous “shock.” Without it, an economy is supposed to grow indefinitely along its trend or potential baseline so long as NAIRU (non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment) is maintained. As you can imagine, economists and policymakers spend most of their time on that latter part which is one reason, though more so ideology, that [...]

Durable Goods Still Contracting Despite ‘Job Gains’

By |2016-02-25T18:00:53-05:00February 25th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Anything with a positive number and the mainstream will jump. The latest was durable goods which only featured a positive number in the seasonally-adjusted series. Still, it was enough to send out the usual notices that the worst is over even for manufacturing. The U.S. manufacturing sector could be on the mend after struggling for the past year with a [...]

Durable Goods Confirm Again The Slope

By |2016-01-28T16:14:21-05:00January 28th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Durable goods orders and shipments declined much worse in December than November, ending any hope that November’s variation was anything other than simply that. Across-the-board, capital goods as well as durable goods, the numbers year-over-year were nearly flat for November, thus suggesting just how bad 2015 was overall when slightly negative seems like a huge improvement. So where capital goods [...]

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