recession

Beyond Gallup

By |2014-07-25T15:44:30-04:00July 25th, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Since I believe the Gallup poll estimates to be significant, I want to revisit them with the addition of one more factor which I think further illustrates the distinct lack of progress toward escape velocity. By Gallup’s own definitions, they ask respondents (with representative sampling techniques, including a 50% landline/50% cell mix) what they spent yesterday apart from homes, autos [...]

It’s Not Coming

By |2014-07-21T16:13:37-04:00July 21st, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Entrenched narratives die extremely hard, with all due respect to John McClane’s [Bruce Willis] aging franchise, and I cannot remember something so cemented as the recovery idea this year. That is really saying something considering that each and every New Year’s Day after the trough of the Great Recession has brought out the same exact sentiment, year after year like [...]

Another Nail In The Payroll Coffin?

By |2014-07-17T12:20:50-04:00July 17th, 2014|Economy, Markets|

There are a few more pieces of economic accounts to put together before the disaster of a first quarter can be left behind (if only until the next set of revisions). A major part of the economic picture is derived from productivity, as that feature defines sustainability and ties together labor growth with productive investment. Capitalism is the combination of [...]

Not Much Bounce, Con’t

By |2014-07-15T16:16:51-04:00July 15th, 2014|Economy, Markets|

With today’s retail sales report, there is broad confirmation of the diminishing “resilience” of consumer abilities that have been dampening expectations ever since the turn in season failed to produce a massive surge. That is not to say that the past four months have not been better than those just prior, as growth has indeed cleared that low hurdle. It [...]

WSJ: Spring Without Much Bounce

By |2014-07-11T14:53:41-04:00July 11th, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

You hear it repeated incessantly that the US economy is consumer-driven, and perhaps it is in some very narrow aspects. The idea, however, that consumption accounts for 70% of the economy is false, a figure derived from GDP calculations that include, among other artificial creations, an imputation for homeowner rent equivalence (BEA estimates how much a homeowner might pay themselves [...]

Inventory Stasis As Sales Lag

By |2014-07-10T11:11:19-04:00July 10th, 2014|Economy, Markets|

The wholesale inventory estimates seem to have raised more than a bit of optimism. I think that is highly misplaced for both GDP and the economy. On the GDP calculation side, there needs to be another huge gain in inventory to be “highly supportive” due to the second derivative nature of the estimate. As for the economy, even on a [...]

The Dustbin Of Post-Panic History: QE Finally Joins The ‘Stimulus’ Bill

By |2014-07-09T15:52:49-04:00July 9th, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The FOMC policy statement confirms without much doubt that there has been a major shift in conditions and outlook. To reiterate in what cannot be overstated, the purpose of implementing QE was to create economic conditions that conformed to the historical understanding of economic growth. If not so much 1995, Bernanke’s FOMC wanted to return to at least 2005 and [...]

Eonia Not Looking Like Lending

By |2014-07-08T15:55:30-04:00July 8th, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The ECB continues to sell the recovery in Europe despite any actual pickup in activity, Germany excepted. In financial terms, which are all that matter these days for policymakers, lending continues to contract. Despite the outward appearance of asset prices and certain economic accounts, there is no intent to extend further credit across the European zone. The latest figures through [...]

Something Big at the Box Office

By |2014-07-07T11:17:24-04:00July 7th, 2014|Economy, Markets|

Most people today pay little attention to the business of movies, particularly since most new releases are aimed squarely at teenage boys and their appetite for unanchored and gratuitous CGI explosions and mayhem. I’m not saying that movies need to change, not at all, as apparently that is what the current movie market seemingly demands. It was, after all, a [...]

Bartenders and Temps

By |2014-07-03T13:59:30-04:00July 3rd, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The nominal changes in average pay in the past few months, and really going back to October 2012, are not really consistent with the orthodox idea of a reduction in “slack” in the labor market. By that I mean wage growth has been lagging at the same time the mainstream payroll indication has moved upward. It is certainly possible for [...]

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