factory orders

What The FOMC Has To Keep Repeating Matters, Not What It Changes

By |2016-07-27T17:58:53-04:00July 27th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As usual, everyone is focused on the wrong part of the FOMC statement. There is already a lot being made about the one sentence inserted as “hawkish” sentiment that puts the economy, supposedly, back on its fruitful, “full employment” track. In a clear sigh of relief undoubtedly in relation to the scary May payroll report, the July 2016 FOMC statement [...]

Examining The ‘Abundance of Strong Data’ From A Realistic Perspective

By |2016-07-20T17:05:15-04:00July 20th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Back in January and even into February, the idea of recession seemed no longer so far-fetched. The FOMC and orthodox economists had been claiming since late 2014 that the only economic fate was “full employment” and the satisfying economic conditions that accompany it. Instead, the latter half of 2015 turned uncomfortably close to the “impossible” nightmare scenario. What was totally [...]

Wholesale Zombie

By |2016-07-12T16:55:45-04:00July 12th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Wholesale inventories have ground to a halt, but since wholesale sales have also the inventory imbalance only continues midway already through its second year. Excluding petroleum, the wholesale inventory to sales ratio surged upward starting in November 2014. By the middle of last year, inventory growth had slowed but that only locked the current imbalance into seeming perpetuity. For the [...]

Factory Orders And More Small ‘d’

By |2016-07-05T16:07:17-04:00July 5th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Factory orders declined slightly year-over-year in May 2016, the 18th contraction in the past nineteen months (the only positive was February and its 29th day). On a seasonally adjusted basis, factory orders fell 1% month-over-month to $455 billion. That was less than the $462 billion for March 2011 back when the end of QE2 was a topic for discussion, before [...]

Factory Orders Get Their Revision

By |2016-06-03T16:24:09-04:00June 3rd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Benchmark revisions continue to flow through manufacturing and industrial figures. The latest were attached to the Census Bureau’s statistics on factory orders. Having already obtained the revisions for durable goods, this series was unsurprisingly left with a major downward adjustment. I believe there is another benchmark adjustment left to be made from the 2012 Economic Census for factory orders with [...]

Supply Chain Slowdown

By |2016-04-08T15:55:38-04:00April 8th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Not to continue beating a dead horse, but I have a stick and the carcass is right in front of me. The entire supply chain inside the US economy is full agreement both on where the economy is right now and, perhaps more importantly, how it came to be that way. Such harmony is not atypical, as synchronicity usually defines [...]

Stacking Contraction

By |2016-03-03T16:16:46-05:00March 3rd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There can be no doubt as to the manufacturing recession in the US, a direct reflection of US consumers. In a fitting confirmation of Chinese manufacturing, US factory orders declined for the 15th consecutive month in January 2016. The year-over-year decline was 3.3%, only slightly better than the revised 4.2% in December, but the length of this continuous decline means [...]

Let’s Get This Over With: Factory Orders More Toward Finality

By |2016-02-04T16:07:17-05:00February 4th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Factory orders declined for the fourteenth consecutive month. At -4.3%, the year-over-year drop wasn’t huge but we are now into comparing consecutive yearly contractions. In other words, factory orders in December 2015 were 4.3% less than December 2014 which were 2.4% less than December 2013. It isn’t so much the magnitude as the time now in that consistency. In seasonally-adjusted [...]

The Very Edge of Overheating

By |2016-01-06T17:22:02-05:00January 6th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Factory orders shrank by 3.5% in November, which was actually the best monthly rate for 2015. Unfortunately, that continues a streak of 13 consecutive monthly declines as the manufacturing recession continues to persist. The more important 6-month average is still worse than -7%, which remains not far off the worst part of the dot-com recession by comparison. Seasonally-adjusted, factory orders [...]

Factory Orders Suggest What’s Next

By |2015-12-03T12:31:10-05:00December 3rd, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As the manufacturing recession becomes more and more unassailable (and I mean that in more than one way), the fact that it still shows no end or let up suggests still greater difficulty beyond manufacturing. As feedback loops become more established and robust, and thus convince more and more non-manufacturing firms to adjust instead of waiting out for Janet Yellen’s [...]

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