inventory to sales ratio

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 [...]

Full Employment Math: 2 + 2 = 5

By |2016-06-14T18:04:55-04:00June 14th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Inventory is an exceedingly simple concept spaced between the most basic economic fundamentals. Because the modern economy operates upon mass production, the flow of goods is not direct. Thus, there are structural differences between demand and supply, with inventory as the pivot in between. If end demand rises it still gets filled even though production cannot respond instantaneously (no matter [...]

The Inventory Deepens

By |2016-03-15T12:53:39-04:00March 15th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Unlike retail sales in January, wholesale sales won’t need revisions to become highly negative in either the seasonal or unadjusted versions. On a seasonally-adjusted basis, wholesale sales declined rather sharply in January (-1.35% M/M), the fourth consecutive decline, sixth out of the past seven months and making fourteen of the past eighteen since all this began. On an unadjusted basis, [...]

Manufacturers Sales, Inventory All Bad But BLS Says They Are Still Hiring

By |2016-02-12T13:24:10-05:00February 12th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With the release of retail sales, the estimates for inventory across the whole supply chain are completed for December. The inventory-to-sales ratio for total business rose yet again to 1.39; the last time the series was that out of balance was May 2009, a ratio higher than what was registered in October 2008. The ratio for the manufacturing level surged [...]

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 [...]

Pile On Inventory

By |2016-01-20T17:59:30-05:00January 20th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Despite continued cuts in production and supply chain activity, inventory through November persists in great imbalance. With December retail sales demonstrating a Christmas sales season only worse in 2008 and 2009, that isn’t like to have changed. It’s not as if manufacturers and imports have been robust to build that much inventory; production is already in clear recession. The only [...]

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