retail sales

The Economy As It Is, Or The Economy As It ‘Should’ Be

By |2016-04-22T16:11:20-04:00April 22nd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The mainstream view of the unemployment statistics suggest that any weakness in the US economy, manufacturing or beyond, will be temporary and shallow because employment growth remains robust. The question is not whether the statistics suggest such a trend but rather if those accounts correspond with anything real. As noted earlier this week, even the Federal Reserve’s relatively new measure [...]

Off By A Factor of Two, Maybe Even Three

By |2016-04-15T11:59:08-04:00April 15th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

You can always tell what kind of monthly variation any economic account provides from the commentary by which it is described. And there are, apparently, only two options: upward variations mean stimulus is working; downward variation just means that there will be more stimulus. Even by this crude cipher, you can still discern the state of the economic world since [...]

Almost Two Years Already, Inventory Indicates Still More Manufacturing Recession To Come In Terms of Time And Depth

By |2016-04-13T18:32:03-04:00April 13th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Given the revisions to wholesale sales (downward) and inventories (upward), we knew that the overall inventory imbalance for the whole supply chain would be pushed up somewhat. Total Business Inventory to Sales was 1.41 in February, the second consecutive month at that extreme. And it really is an extreme since the last time we saw such imbalance was November 2008 [...]

Still Stuck In the Slowdown; Retail Sales Continue

By |2016-04-13T16:55:58-04:00April 13th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Calendar effects, base effects, and holidays continued to plague retail sales estimates. Where February 2016 included a 29th day of extra selling/buying, March finds an early Easter holiday relative to last year (it was in April). The result is difficult comparisons where the unadjusted series is not measuring underlying consumer growth but these other factors. That should change, however, in [...]

Supply Chain Slowdown

By |2016-04-08T15:55:38-04:00April 8th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Not to continue beating a dead horse, but I have a stick and the carcass is right in front of me. The entire supply chain inside the US economy is full agreement both on where the economy is right now and, perhaps more importantly, how it came to be that way. Such harmony is not atypical, as synchronicity usually defines [...]

Payrolls As Statistics

By |2016-04-01T11:32:03-04:00April 1st, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

According to Challenger, Gray & Christmas, layoffs in the US were up 32% in March 2016 over March 2015. Compared to both January and February this year, March was somewhat better but overall for Q1 published layoffs were also 32% more on a year-over-year basis. It wasn’t a very good quarter. Some of that is expected given the death of [...]

Closer To The Shovel-Ready Resurrection

By |2016-03-30T16:34:37-04:00March 30th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Household spending in February 2016 in Japan rose year-over-year for the first time in six months. That was the sum total of any good economic news for the monetary-stricken economy, and it doesn’t really survive closer inspection. The rise in spending was due largely to “other” activities you don’t associate with strong economic rebounds. The overall figure was just +1.6% [...]

Retailers Seem to Agree With Global Manufacturing

By |2016-03-21T12:09:15-04:00March 21st, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

According to Discern Investment Analytics, the number of retail store closings in the first two months of 2016 was about a third more than the closings in the same two months last year. That’s bad news just in terms of the raw increase, but more so given that there was a wave of shutting retailer outlets last year, too. Store [...]

The Actual Direction of Sales

By |2016-03-15T11:42:37-04:00March 15th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It is increasingly difficult to account for the estimates provided by various statistical agencies when there is no consistency not just with other non-governmental series but within each. The latest retail sales report has nothing in common with anything including itself. The mess features major revisions for the prior two months that simply leave the calendar as demarcation. Unadjusted retail [...]

Still Slowing In China

By |2016-03-14T15:42:37-04:00March 14th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Industrial production for the combined January/February period in China fell to just 5.4%, matching the lowest growth rate of the past fourteen years. Only the January/February 2002 IP rate was lower, but that was a single data point giving way to the rising financialization of the late eurodollar period. In 2016, these decelerations are commonplace, determined, and have no end [...]

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