wholesale sales

Wholesalers Cautious On Inventory For Good Reason

By |2016-08-09T15:58:42-04:00August 9th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Wholesale sales for June 2016 declined slightly, -0.6%, year-over-year. Since February, sales have flattened out in unadjusted terms. Seasonally-adjusted, wholesales sales rose nearly 2% from May 2016, and are up $17 billion from February. Of that increase, however, $11.5 billion was petroleum alone. Taking out the volatile swings in oil and oil prices, wholesale sales ex petroleum have been stagnant [...]

Examining The ‘Abundance of Strong Data’ From A Realistic Perspective

By |2016-07-20T17:05:15-04:00July 20th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Back in January and even into February, the idea of recession seemed no longer so far-fetched. The FOMC and orthodox economists had been claiming since late 2014 that the only economic fate was “full employment” and the satisfying economic conditions that accompany it. Instead, the latter half of 2015 turned uncomfortably close to the “impossible” nightmare scenario. What was totally [...]

Nearly Two Years of Manufacturing Contraction, And No Progress In Inventory

By |2016-07-19T16:41:26-04:00July 19th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Manufacturing sales were reported Friday to have declined 2.3% year-over-year in May, following a 4.7% contraction in April. Since sales in May 2015 were almost 6% less than May 2014, the manufacturing sector counts almost 8% less in revenue across two years of contraction. The worst part is, again, the time. In seasonally-adjusted terms, estimated sales of $456 billion in [...]

US IP Down For 10th Straight Month Indicating Growth Is Now The Outlier Scenario

By |2016-07-15T16:08:13-04:00July 15th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Industrial production in the United States remains caught up in the latest downward shift of the 2012 slowdown. The Federal Reserve estimates that overall industrial production contracted for the 10th straight month, falling 0.7% in June 2016. The degree of decline is relatively small, but as with so many other accounts the lingering of the condition for an only increasing [...]

Corroboration Under the ‘Rising Dollar’ Economy

By |2016-07-14T18:50:37-04:00July 14th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Last week, the American Bankruptcy Institute (ABI) released its updated statistics for commercial bankruptcies through June 2016. For yet another month, bankruptcies jumped by 30% over the same month in 2015. Total commercial filings were 3,294 in June, compared to 2,442 in June 2015; Chapter 11 filings were up 36% year-over-year. The turn in apparent liquidity and business struggles occurred [...]

The ‘Costs’ Of Beyond The Cycle

By |2016-07-13T18:01:57-04:00July 13th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

We have to acknowledge that economic statistics are imperfect even under the best conditions. But that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try to measure comparative circumstances where conditions are less than ideal or conventional. In terms of a business cycle, we think of recession as negative GDP; to the point that conventional “wisdom” actually believes two consecutive quarters defines one. Not [...]

Wholesale Zombie

By |2016-07-12T16:55:45-04:00July 12th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Wholesale inventories have ground to a halt, but since wholesale sales have also the inventory imbalance only continues midway already through its second year. Excluding petroleum, the wholesale inventory to sales ratio surged upward starting in November 2014. By the middle of last year, inventory growth had slowed but that only locked the current imbalance into seeming perpetuity. For the [...]

The Polar Vortex Economy of 2014 Was A Warning; Wholesale Sales Prove It Should Not Have Been Dismissed As Weather

By |2016-06-09T18:08:43-04:00June 9th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Wholesales sales are right back on track again after two months of being affected by the calendar. After rising 0.8% in February and 0.6% in March, sales declined by 5.3% Y/Y in April. For the first four months of the year combined, wholesale sales were down nearly 3% compared to the first four months of last year. Since sales in [...]

Inventory Finally Catching Sales But Not Close To Balance

By |2016-05-10T15:51:50-04:00May 10th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Wholesale sales rose just 0.8% in March, following a similar rise in February. For the quarter, sales dropped almost 2% from Q1 2015. More importantly, inventory barely budged in either March or for the quarter. Rising just 0.2% in the latest month, that was the smallest yearly gain since June 2010. In Q1 overall, wholesale inventories were also practically unchanged [...]

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 [...]

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