Income

Wholesale Problems

By |2015-02-10T17:59:59-05:00February 10th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

One of the primary criticisms I have leveled against economic interpretations based solely on statistics like GDP is that they are relative in the narrowest sense. GDP especially compares one quarter to the prior, meaning that it is susceptible to those that extrapolate short-term trends. In this current age of monetary elongation in the “business cycle”, that is a dangerous [...]

Breakdown In GDP

By |2015-01-30T18:19:04-05:00January 30th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

GDP as an econometric measure is designed to be most favorable toward growth. It accumulates all forms of spending, in dollar terms, treating them exactly the same regardless of source or destination. That is consistent with orthodox theory which holds onto the concept of “aggregate demand”, meaning that all demand is supposedly interchangeable. Thus whatever the source or reason for [...]

Apartments Still Declining

By |2015-01-21T15:58:25-05:00January 21st, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The latest figures on housing construction have almost flipped the circumstances from late 2013. It was apartment construction that kept up hope that any retrenchment in single family construction would not be so devastating. Permit and start activity was, at the margins, almost totally dependent on multi-family construction to offset weakness in single homes. As of December 2014, the flattening [...]

For Want of ‘Booming’ Expansion

By |2015-01-09T16:26:05-05:00January 9th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Payroll Friday lived up to its recent billing, offering those who see the economy as booming their headlines while providing nothing beyond that by which to confirm it. There is maybe a growing sense, given market action (especially bonds), that the headlines are becoming less “moving” and that this disparity has been internalized more so than at any time in [...]

Loss Of Housing Momentum Not Limited To Housing

By |2014-12-31T15:07:02-05:00December 31st, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The S&P/Case-Shiller 20-city home price index declined for the second month in a row in October, matching indications elsewhere that the slight rebound from the depths of last winter may be over. The Y/Y growth rate was the lowest since October 2012 as clearly price momentum has been lost. The upward movement in the index this year is by far [...]

No GDP Resonance In New Home Sales Either

By |2014-12-23T17:29:11-05:00December 23rd, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Perhaps the BEA should have moved the GDP release up a few days to allow mainstream commentary its unbridled and unstained euphoria. Almost as soon as the GDP revisions were released, the upward appearance of economic growth was seriously undermined by income results and the nature of spending “gains.” That was soon followed by a rather dire look into business [...]

It’s Not What You Think When They Have to Totally Reconfigure The Savings Rate

By |2014-12-23T16:20:04-05:00December 23rd, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There is a lot to say about the latest GDP revisions, particularly as it relates to the breakdown of the measure in comparison with something besides itself. The headline was all that was needed to “confirm” the best economic growth in decades, though. “There is a positive feedback loop going on at the moment,” Mike Jakeman, global analyst for the [...]

Retail Sales Confirm Dark Black Friday

By |2014-12-11T12:56:46-05:00December 11th, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The initial indications from private retail metrics on the Black Friday kickoff were not good, though numerous attempts to downplay those results were initiated. The monthly retail sales figures from the Census Bureau will make that much harder as they square with the downbeat Black Friday estimates. In other words, Black Friday wasn’t “off” because consumers were “pulled” to shop [...]

Economists Don’t Even Know What Prosperity Is

By |2014-12-08T10:58:37-05:00December 8th, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Like the initial or preliminary GDP report in Japan for Q3, the first revision caught almost every economist totally the wrong way. Expectations were for upward re-figuring which should have been taken as a contrarian signal. And sure enough, December’s revisions to Q3 GDP were in the opposite direction as expected, and for all the reasons that economists are “experts” [...]

Tough For All That Holiday Online Shopping When Nobody Will (Or Can’t) Use Their Credit Cards

By |2014-12-05T18:19:24-05:00December 5th, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If you don’t have much by way of income growth, then there are other less desirable options for spending sources. There are “entitlements” or transfers and then there is debt. In the current age, the federal government has been responsible for originating and disbursing the vast majority of consumer credit in the form of student loans, in what is really [...]

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