personal consumption expenditures

GDP: Deja Vu

By |2019-04-26T12:43:35-04:00April 26th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Real GDP growth in the United States during the first quarter of 2019 was much better than expected. The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) estimates that total economic output expanded by 3.12272% in Q1 over Q4 2018. Most analysts were expecting somewhere around 2.3% to 2.5%. Considering mounting uncertainties and growing fears, in the face of a lot of increasingly [...]

A First Look At Why Greater Demand For Scapegoats Than Rate Cuts

By |2019-04-01T16:57:50-04:00April 1st, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

At the end of last week, the Bureau of Economic Analysis reported data on US Personal Income and Spending that hit every sour note. There was the lowest inflation rate, the deflator to those spending figures, in years as well as the clear need to officially anoint a successor to the Verizon madness. The release also featured residual seasonality, and, [...]

BEA Backs Up Census; Residual Seasonality Struck A Month Too Soon

By |2019-03-01T12:38:25-05:00March 1st, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Over the last decade, the US economy has been experiencing “residual seasonality.” It has begun each year unusually weak. For Economists expecting it take off in each and every one, this is more than a thorny contradiction. When it happened again in 2015, at the worst possible moment for the mainstream view, they had finally had enough. The Bureau of [...]

GDP Prices The Final End Of Hysteria

By |2018-10-26T17:59:44-04:00October 26th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Jerome Powell may be hawkish, relatively speaking, but his case rests on one data point alone. There is nothing other than the unemployment right now indicating he’s got the right forecast in mind. This wasn’t true just months ago. At the end of 2017 and for a few months in 2018, inflation was moving upward and above targets and benchmarks. [...]

The Anticipation For The 2011 Inflation Case

By |2018-08-30T18:19:07-04:00August 30th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The PCE Deflator rose 2.31% year-over-year in July 2018, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. That makes five in a row for Jay Powell to try to make his case. Prior to March, the central bank had missed its target for the PCE Deflator in 68 out of 70 months using the 2012 dollar reference. Has something changed? Yes [...]

They Changed The Savings Rate, At Least

By |2018-07-31T12:18:15-04:00July 31st, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I wrote back in August 2016 out of frustration. There were any number of topics to have become flustered over at the time, but on this particular occasion it was the personal savings rate. Because it is, like productivity, essentially a plug in between two statistics whenever those two particular series, income and spending, are subjected to revision it can [...]

There’s No Income So There Can’t Really Be Shortages

By |2018-07-02T11:43:26-04:00July 2nd, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The plural of anecdote is not data. At any given time in any given economy you can find counterexamples. During the Great Depression, for example, millions of Americans were doing very well for themselves. It wasn’t difficult to locate and talk to those who were prospering during what was a legitimate catastrophe. It’s never all or nothing. Rather, the issue [...]

Doubleplusgood Boom

By |2018-04-30T18:09:11-04:00April 30th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In 1967, the US Personal Savings Rate averaged just a little more than 12%. That was pretty consistent with consumer behavior observed throughout the decades before, and the one that followed. What that meant, in terms of economic theory, was that if you as a central bank intended to accelerate the economy via the manipulation of expectations you at least [...]

Scrooge’s Income ‘L’

By |2018-03-29T11:55:25-04:00March 29th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

We keep revisiting the concept of “residual seasonality” quite purposefully, even though on its face it is an absurd one. It is in every way emblematic of the current state of Economics and the commentary derived from it. Residual seasonality is the kind of delusion that has become commonplace, a coping mechanism for an economy that continues to be very [...]

The Outer Limits of Sentiment

By |2018-01-29T11:58:32-05:00January 29th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Of all the moving parts contradicting the narrative of the growing economic boom, it’s incomes that will do it the most disservice. After all, there can be no such thing without them. Until our future robot AI overlords finally descend to either free humanity from labor, or eliminate us altogether, the economy still runs on the basic capitalist premise of [...]

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