gdp

The Inventory Imbalance Might Be The Worst Economic Factor For H2

By |2015-08-04T15:21:32-04:00August 4th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With factory orders continuing to be much worse than they appear, it makes sense to try to measure the effect of over-optimism accounted by inventory. Recessions themselves were once almost exclusively set up by this one factor, as the difference between production and sales, caught up within the supply chain, eventually works out toward alignment. Companies are willing to hold [...]

China Is Much More Than the PMI

By |2015-08-03T16:02:52-04:00August 3rd, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The problem with sentiment surveys is, as I am becoming a broken record, that they don’t often mean what they are taken to mean. At best, they are relative measures of changes and potentially, if captured and refigured just right, inflections. With innumerable problems encapsulated into not just their construction but the idea of a PMI in the first place, [...]

The New Normal Gets A Downgrade

By |2015-08-02T16:07:11-04:00August 2nd, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Taxes/Fiscal Policy|

It was back in 2009 that Bill Gross coined the term New Normal to describe the post-crisis US economy. That economy is marked by a reduced willingness to take risk in the private sector for a variety of reasons. No interest rate is low enough to induce corporate spending in an environment where aggregate demand continues to disappoint. In a [...]

If It Takes 3 Years For The 2012 Slowdown To Hit GDP…

By |2015-07-30T12:28:53-04:00July 30th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

According to the latest GDP revisions I may have been off in my projection of where the recession began. I wrote in 2013 that if pressed I would name October 2012 as the start of the recession. There were many reasons for that assessment; retail sales suddenly and sharply slowing, durable goods and particularly capital goods orders contracting and a [...]

That’s It?

By |2015-07-30T10:33:10-04:00July 30th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For once, the Fed gets it right. Actually, it is three times and only certain parts of the Fed, as the agency is by no means monolithic. In the first two, the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow tracker nailed the preliminary GDP estimate for the second straight quarter. You can appreciate why they unveiled it just recently despite it’s existence going back [...]

The Confidence Experiment

By |2015-07-29T11:50:43-04:00July 29th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I typically stay away from sentiment indicators and measures of “confidence” not just because they are of dubious construction but they often don’t mean what they are taken for. In the case of consumer confidence, you get both problems simultaneously particularly at the ends of each cycle. In other words, just as “confidence” is at its greatest point and economists, [...]

Economists Try To Find ‘Missing’ GDP Rather Than The Lost Economy

By |2015-07-28T16:29:46-04:00July 28th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With the advance report on GDP for Q2 set to be released this week, economists are working hard to explain why it doesn’t represent the utopian delivery that they swear had already occurred via monetary intervention. There is, in immediate terms, the universal appearance of “residual seasonality” in the past few months as an almost complete revulsion to even the [...]

China Completes Another Head-Fake

By |2015-07-24T15:31:28-04:00July 24th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The concept of a head-fake in stock investing is pretty well-established and well-known but it may have to be extended to economics. Every small increase in positive numbers for major statistics is extrapolated into grandiose projections for the final recovery that “everyone” knows has to be coming. Yet, each and every time those expectations are delivered, and swallowed without question [...]

The ‘Dollar’s’ Grand Masterpiece Almost In Full View

By |2015-07-15T11:49:08-04:00July 15th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When US retail sales jumped in May on seasonal adjustments alone, economists and mainstream commentary lost all composure as they were certain that meant the “slump” was over and the dominant narrative would continue. The same occurred in Europe over a slight pickup in overall lending, not even in the household or business sectors, which was proclaimed as nothing but [...]

What Happens When Everything That Was Supposed To Doesn’t

By |2015-07-13T16:43:43-04:00July 13th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Last week, the CBO updated some of its calculations and methods for estimating the effects of “automatic stabilizers” on the deficit. These are Keynesian concepts whereby the government increases spending or redistribution (redundant) without discretion as the economy falls into the downside of a cycle. For the CBO’s purposes, the agency measures automatic stabilizers not on their effects, intended effects [...]

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