productivity

Global Asset Allocation Update

By |2019-10-23T15:11:46-04:00December 2nd, 2016|Alhambra Portfolios, Alhambra Research, Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Markets, Real Estate, Stocks|

Markets have moved sharply over the last month, mostly in the post-election period. Stocks are up - small caps exuberantly so - the dollar is up, bonds and gold are down. Surprisingly though, our indicators did not move all that much. The direction of change in the indicators is consistent with the moves in assets but not the magnitude. The [...]

Bi-Weekly Economic Review: Regime Change

By |2016-11-20T17:16:21-05:00November 20th, 2016|Alhambra Research, Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Markets, Stocks|

Economic Reports Scorecard The reported economic data of the last few weeks (it's been 3 weeks since my last update so I guess technically this isn't the Bi-Weekly Review) provides about as much direction and insight as the polls conducted prior to the election. To my eye, the trend here is trendless with a decidedly mixed set of data, each [...]

One Or The Other Is Wrong, Which Means It’s All Wrong

By |2016-11-04T16:21:40-04:00November 4th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Throughout the 1990’s, calculated productivity in the US skyrocketed in what was taken then as a sign of monetary and economic genius, the “maestro” as it was. By the incomplete measures we have, that certainly seemed to be a plausible case. Starting in 1997, the BLS’s first measure for economic productivity, output per hour, surged. The consequence of that productivity [...]

Huge Wage Bias

By |2016-08-10T12:22:34-04:00August 10th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Basic economics has proven that when the supply of something dwindles, absent an offsetting drop in demand the price should rise. When translating these fundamental terms to the labor market especially of the past few years, the supply means “slack” or the available pool of workers not yet working; demand has been, we are told repeatedly, very robust; therefore the [...]

Productivity Circularity

By |2016-08-09T13:23:46-04:00August 9th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

On June 6, Janet Yellen spoke to the World Affairs Council of Philadelphia in what were highly scrutinized comments. The occasion was just a weekend in between the May payroll report that clearly unnerved her and the rest of the FOMC. Prior to that BLS publication, it was believed that a rate hike in June was all but set. Afterward, [...]

Bi-Weekly Economic Review

By |2016-06-10T15:41:18-04:00June 10th, 2016|Alhambra Research, Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Markets, Stocks|

Economic Reports Scorecard Concern about recession is growing again as formerly strong portions of the economy turn down. The last two weeks brought reports of new weakness in the labor market, continued slowing in construction and renewed weakness in manufacturing. Auto sales were also weak based on the reports from individual manufacturers. The state of auto sales is frankly a [...]

Productivity And Labor; More Evidence For A Supercycle

By |2016-06-08T17:50:05-04:00June 8th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The BLS updated its productivity estimates yesterday to incorporate the BEA’s slight upward revision in GDP for Q1 2016. The changes to the productivity series were also small, where the initial estimate was for -1% (annualized) US labor productivity now revised to -0.6%. Private output, the BLS’s matching point in the BEA GDP series, was revised slightly higher to 0.86%. [...]

A Small Adjustment To Gain Needed Labor Market Sense

By |2016-05-04T20:55:29-04:00May 4th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The BLS released its updated productivity estimates showing that Q1 2016 was negative for the second straight quarter and the fourth of the past six. Such negative and flat productivity in any real sense doesn’t make sense. This disparity seems to be, as always, in the BLS serially overstating the employment gains. The level of increase in total hours worked [...]

Robust Job Growth Doesn’t Make Sense And The Numbers Show Why

By |2016-02-04T18:37:46-05:00February 4th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With the BLS’s release of Q4 productivity figures, we get to check the BLS’s estimates just in time for tomorrow’s increasingly irrelevant payroll report. That much has become thoroughly apparent especially since the middle of last year as the Establishment Survey and unemployment rate only diverge with the overall breadth of economic indications. With GDP no longer corroborative, the labor [...]

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