retail sales

Rebalancing China’s Rebalancing

By |2018-09-14T13:11:22-04:00September 14th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It’s no longer possible to know what state Chinese industry may be in. This is no small matter. Industrial production in China is the bedrock of economic growth throughout the rest of the world. Without it, there really isn’t anything left to do but struggle. And since industry’s performance there is predicated on demand in the Western world, this is [...]

What May Be The Final Month of the Fake News Boom

By |2018-09-14T11:30:23-04:00September 14th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For the second consecutive month, retail sales recorded by gasoline stations surged by an annual rate of more than 20%. It was the fourth month in a row where sales have been up by nearly that amount. Last year’s jump in oil prices is feeding through in a number of ways. From headline inflation rates to now consumer spending, the [...]

What’s Hot Isn’t Retail Sales Growth

By |2018-08-15T15:58:45-04:00August 15th, 2018|Commodities, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Americans are spending more on filling up. A lot more. According the Census Bureau, retail sales at gasoline stations had increased by nearly 20% year-over-year (unadjusted) in both May and June 2018. In the latest figures for July, released today, gasoline station sales were up by more than 21%. The last time they surged this much was September 2011, also [...]

Ugly China’s American Mirror

By |2018-08-14T11:46:26-04:00August 14th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Yesterday, we spotlighted Brazil’s economy as perhaps a leading indicator for where things stand. Today, it’s China’s turn. Neither are very encouraging. Both offer instead only growing concern. The reason isn’t just the possibility of the world economy rolling over in 2018, rather it’s from what level any deceleration might have begun. Despite the characterization of especially the US economy [...]

Unwelcome August

By |2018-08-13T16:58:51-04:00August 13th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy|

There is just something about August. It is irresistible, apparently, in all the wrong ways. For starters, there are big ones and small ones but somehow they all line up against liquidity and plentiful eurodollar money. In the former class there was, of course, August 9, 2007, August 9, 2011, and August 10, 2015. Even in the latter category there [...]

Pay Attention To Nominal Not Real China GDP

By |2018-07-16T16:35:36-04:00July 16th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For the second half of 2015, how dicey did it really get in China? It’s difficult to assess going by something like real GDP given how notorious the Chinese have become for hitting their growth targets no matter what. But for those two quarters we can infer a whole bunch of nasty problems by the difference between real GPD growth [...]

Retail Sales Still In The Green

By |2018-07-16T12:01:24-04:00July 16th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It would be easier if we could just know the right amount of oil futures backwardation. The literal answer for the question of what’s the correct level is the curve’s shape at any given moment in time. That’s a little too close to the theory of perfectly efficient markets for me. Whatever it may be, or could be, the WTI [...]

A Lot Underneath Retail Sales

By |2018-06-15T11:40:22-04:00June 15th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The retail sales report for the month of May 2018 was generally positive on the headline, which is to say it was one of the better months of recent years. Total sales growth was 6.35% year-over-year (unadjusted). A big part of it was due to an 18% year-over-year gain in retail sales at gasoline stations. The problem remains calibration, meaning [...]

China’s Hatches Further Battened

By |2018-06-14T17:46:01-04:00June 14th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The problem with global growth, synchronized or not, is that it isn’t really a thing. It is a made-up concept that accompanies confusion. Why is the economy about to pick up when there is no evidence for that expectation? Global growth. It’s a nonspecific bogeyman that anyone can point to and expect little or often no pushback. It’s nothing more [...]

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