Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Housing continues in the doldrums, but its decline failed to give rise to a post-pandemic recession

 

 - by New Deal democrat


When it comes to housing, the post-pandemic economy has been odd. That’s because, as of last year by all accounts housing had deteriorated  sufficiently that a recession should already have begun. Not only did that not (quite) happen, but the current situation would be more congruent with such a recession ending than ongoing. In general, that’s because even though job creation stagnated, real incomes did not, and real consumer spending was sufficient to keep the economy in expansion.

In the past few months, the situation has reversed, with real incomes declining, but manufacturing and job creation rebounding. And housing is playing a role in that conundrum as well. Let’s take a look.

In May, almost all of the headline housing data was negative. Starts (blue), which are noisier and slightly lag permits (gold), declined sharply, down -215,000 to 1.177 million units annualized. Permits declined -10,000 to 1.413 million. The one slightly bright spot was that the metric which is the least noisy as well as being most leading, single family permits (red, right scale), rose  5,000 to 886,000: 



Permits, including single family permits, were near five year lows, but close to average readings for the past year. But housing starts had their worst month in over 5 years! But because they are so noisy, I am discounting that. Still an “average” down in the doledrums month is definitely not positive.

Perhaps more interesting is that the recent uptick in mortgage rates (blue in the graph below) due to the Iran war has not really had an effect on the sideways trend:



Still, on a YOY% basis, starts are down -8.7%, while permits are down -0.2% and single family permits are down -7.1%:



This is a sector that, to repeat, is down in the doldrums, and shows no sign of improvement.

On the other hand, as I have noted for the past several months, the YoY downtrend has not been worsening for many months. Typically permits and starts have been down 20% or more at the onset of recessions in the past, although in the 1991 and 2001 recessions, they were only down about -10%; and there have been a number of times, for example 1966, 1987, and 1995, where construction has been down -10% or more YoY without a recession occurring:



On the contrary, the negative but relatively minor and stable negative YoY changes beginning last year have been just as consistent with mid-expansion slowdowns as with recessions, and stable if negative YoY changes have sometimes occurred during recessions a few months before recoveries.

But the statistic in this release that most closely aligns with the actual economic activity represented by the sector is the number of housing units under construction. In May they also declined, by -11,000 to 1.266 million annualized, only 4,000 above their post-pandemic low in March, down -7.1% YoY, and down -26.1% from their peak:



The historical version of this metric shows that more often than not in the past by the time a decline in units under construction had declined by this much, a recession had already begun:



Indeed, typically this metric does not turn upward until after the recession has been over - part of the current conundrum.

Finally, let’s update the graph that additionally shows the typical last shoes to drop before recessions, including houses for sale (gold) and residential construction employment (red, right scale), all normed to 100 as of their respective post-pandemic peaks:



Residential construction employment has been close to flat for the past nine months, and the number of housing units for sale actually rebounded slightly as of its last report for April.

It’s fair to say that the housing market did not follow its typical predictive pattern following the pandemic, and the big increase in interest rates that began in 2022. Although all of the relevant housing metrics fell by percentages from peaks that normally signaled recessions in the past, that did not happen this time. In large part that was because of the huge backlog in building that meant that units under construction did not significantly decline until the mortgage rate and manufacturing situations in the economy stabilized. The latter in particular began to improve substantially beginning in the latter part of 2024, despite the subsequent headwinds of new tariff costs imposed last year. And the continued increases in real incomes and payrolls through 2025 meant that the 75% or so of the economy that is the service sector continued to be fueled by consumer spending. 

But housing is also not contributing positively to the economy, either. That means that if the recent downturn in real incomes continues, the rest of the economy may yet go down.


Monday, June 15, 2026

Goods production sector of the economy remained in expansion in May

 

 - by New Deal democrat


Late last year I noticed that the regional Fed manufacturing indicators were improving - despite the “Liberation Day” tariffs and the general chaos coming out of Washington. It appeared that manufacturers had found a modus vivendi and had adapted to the new environment. That subsequently showed up in a number of manufacturing related statistics, like durable and capital goods orders, and even in manufacturing employment.

It also showed up - as did the Boom in AI data center construction - in industrial production, which was updated this morning for May. I used to call Industrial Production “the King of Coincident Indicators,” but with the shrinking of manufacturing as a share of the US economy to about 25%, that is no longer the case. Nevertheless, it is an important coincident indicator, with the emphasis on *coincident.* It doesn’t tell us where we are going, but is an important signpost about where we *are.*

In April manufacturing (red in the graph below) broke out of that range to the upside, increasing 0.6% for the month, while the more noisy utility production (gold, right scale) increased 1.9%, driving total production (blue) to a 0.7% increase and a new post-pandemic high. May total prodcution and manufacturing continued to be positive, although much more subdued. Total production increased 0.1%, manufacturing production less than 0.1% rounded to 0. Meanwhile utilities declined -0.4% [Note: all values are normed to 100 as of September 2018, the peak month for production in the last expansion]:



On a YoY basis, manufacturing production was up 1.7%, manufacturing up 1.4%, and utilities up 3.1%:



There is no sign yet of any break in the recent trend in any of these indicators. Simply put, the goods producing sector of the economy remained in expansion in May.

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Weekly Indicators for June 8 - 12 at Seeking Alpha

 

 - by New Deal democrat


My “Weekly Indicators” post is up at Seeking Alpha.

There was little change this week, but restaurant reservations - the first expense I would expect stretched consumers to cut back on - did slacken a little bit. And withholding tax payments over the past four weeks barely kept pace with YoY inflation.

As usual, clicking over and reading will bring you up to the virtual moment as to the state of the economy, and reward me with a penny or two for my efforts collecting and organizing the data for you.


Friday, June 12, 2026

The entire US economy is downstream of the AI buildout dam, and that dam is almost certain to fail

 

 - by New Deal democrat


I’ve been ambivalent about whether the mania for AI is a Boom or a Bubble. That’s because whether its use is transformative or, like Steve Jobs’ claims that the Segway would revolutionize transportation, not so much. 

But what has become increasingly clear is that virtually the entire economy has been downstream of its growth. Here’s just how exponential the growth of spending on AI data centers has been:



The stock market has Boomed:



But the stock market Boom has been based almost exclusively on that AI spending:



And the wealth effect of that stock market Boom has led to accelerating spending by the affluent, as shown in Redbook’s weekly retail sales data:



And, as consumption leads employment, that spending has spread out to an increase in not just goods-producing jobs (orange, right scale), but broad service providing jobs (blue, left scale) as well:



Meanwhile, the spike in inflation has caused consumers, most of whom do not have much if any stock holdings, to dig deeper into their savings to a near record low:



In summary, if it weren’t for the Boom in AI related spending, it’s likely that consumer spending would be flat or even negative (remember that real average hourly wages have gone negative YoY, and real aggregate nonsupervisory payrolls have grown just barely in the past year:



In other words, the US economy would likely be in a recession right now.

That’s an awful lot of weight that is being borne by one small sector of the economy.

But I have come to conclude that, even if AI’s usefulness were to live up to its hype, there is one aspect that strikes me as clearly a bubble.

That’s because there are 10 or 20 companies all rushing to build out full-blown all-encompassing data centers. But almost certainly when it all shakes out, even under the best of circumstances there are likely to be only 2 or 3 left. All of the others - and their huge construction and usage footprint - are likely to vanish.

In other words, whether or not the AI Boom is like the dotcom bubble of 1999-2000, it is almost certainly like the browser wars of the 1990s, when there are a variety of providers like Alta Vista and Ask Jeeves, that all got eclipsed by Google and all but vanished from the scene.

And think of the auto industry. Early on there were dozens of manufacturers. But by the end of the second World War, there was one dominant company (GM), one secondary company (Ford) and one also-ran (Chrysler).  In computer chips, there has been one dominant company (Intel) and one (until recently) also-ran (Micron). As Ron Insana pointed out, “In 1895, there w[ere] … 1,000 companies [that] made bikes as the new model of transport. By 1905, they were going out of business.” 

 
Fortunately, I don’t have to write a more extensive piece, because it turns out someone else named Dan Wertman of Noetica/Thomson Reuters got there a short time ago, so I will quote them at length:


“Most people liken the AI boom to the dot com bubble. But the right comparison is the lesser-known portal wars. …

Let’s go back to 1998. The internet had just gone mainstream, and a new kind of company was taking over the web: AltaVista, Excite, Lycos and Yahoo were each racing to become your home base online–the ‘interface’ to the internet. They competed on adding vertical workflows: features like news, email, weather and shopping. Venture capital poured in and they grew fast. For a moment, it looked like any one of them, or all of them, could win, each differentiating themselves in domains in which they were marginally better from the other. 

Then a pair of Stanford graduate students created a new model, a search algorithm called PageRank, which used the web’s own link structure as a proprietary data signal. … [W]ithin a few years, PageRank became what we know as Google and every other portal had been rendered irrelevant.

“We are watching the same movie with AI startups today. Thousands of companies are building products on top of the same AI foundation models — OpenAI’s GPT, Google’s Gemini, Anthropic’s Claude – with no added proprietary content or data, only workflows, each aiming to be the “portal” for their vertical. They have different names, different user experiences, different pitches to investors. What most of them share is that the intelligence powering their product is available to every competitor, every established company, and increasingly to ordinary consumers at low or no cost because they’ve added nothing proprietary to enhance their offerings.”

It’s as if people build 20 Hoover Dams, when only 1 was needed. And the rest will ultimately sit idle - and probably fail.

So, dear reader, let me conclude. This aforementioned AI buildout, and that buildout  (vs. whatever software value AI has) is all but certain to crash. When, and over what period of time, we do not know.

Hopefully not while the rest of the economy, as it is now, is downstream.


Thursday, June 11, 2026

Producer prices suggest 5%+ YoY CPI, and very soon

 

 - by New Deal democrat


I just wanted to drop a brief note about this morning’s PPI report. In May headline producer prices rose 1.1% for the month (the second such increase in a row), and on a YoY basis increased 6.5%. Final demand goods prices are up 9.1% YoY, and final demand services up 4.9%:




So at the producer level, there is really no hiding place from price increases.

Meanwhile raw commodity prices 3.5% for the month, and are up 13.1% YoY. The last few monthly increases have been every bit as much as the worst of the post-pandemic inflationary surge:



This is an extreme reading that has been equalled or beaten only 5x in the past 80 years:



Note that in *all* of those cases, consumer inflation peaked at over 5% YoY, and in 4 cases close to or even higher than 10%, vs. 4.2% in the latest consumer inflation reading.

One important difference with the 2022 experience is that this time, shelter is not participating in the consumer inflation advance. But that is of little comfort since, as the below graph of CPI less shelter shows, that metric was higher by over 10% YoY at the 2022 peak:



Finally, I also want to spotlight that sometimes producer prices lead consumer prices, but sometimes they move simultaneously. In fact over the past 80 years, producer prices for goods (the longest extant main PPI statistic) and consumer price spikes YoY have typically peaked within two months of one another, and frequently simultaneously. Here is the historical look:



Faced with a spike in price for inputs, producers can either absorb the increases, pass them on to consumes, or some of each. The regional Fed indexes for the past few months have indicated rampant input price hikes, with much - but not nearly complete - pass-throughs to consumers. That seems to be what we are seeing in the comparison of producer and consumer price spikes so far now. But as pointed out above, it would be unusual if the YoY peak advance in consumer prices stayed below 5% - and that’s without any renewed Iran war escalation.

Of course, while that is “somewhat” good news for consumers, it does mean a hit to the bottom line for producers. And after lower profits tend to come things like abeyances in hiring, and maybe an increase in firing. But we’re not there yet.


More evidence for the return of post-pandemic seasonality in jobless claims

 

 - by New Deal democrat


Last week I wrote that “we’re coming up on the one year anniversary of that change of regime, so it will be interesting to see if the negative YoY comparisons continue, or if they fade away. This week’s numbers are noteworthy in that regard, because they suggest that - maybe - the pattern of increased claims into midyear is reasserting itself. We’ll find out over the course of the summer.”


This week saw both further evidence for the return of post-pandemic seasonality, as well as continued good YoY comparisons.

Let’s look at the numbers. Initial claims rose 4,000 to 229,000, the highest weekly number in 4 months. The four week moving average rose 4,250 to 219,000, the highest since the end of February. Continuing claims, with the typical one week delay, rose 24,000 to 1.795 million, still very low:



So it very much looks like the post-pandemic seasonality of high claims at midyear may have made a return. Exactly this week one year ago is when initial claims were at their peak for all of 2025, with the exception of one week in September. Over the course of the next 6 weeks they declined nearly by -30,000. If seasonality is back, this pattern will not be repeated.

On the YoY basis more important for forecasting, initial claims were down -6.9%, the four week average down -7.9%, and continuing claims down -7.8%, on par with most of the YoY comparisons over the past few months:



This continues to be a very positive signal for the economy over the next few months.

If the change of regime was a one-time thing, driven mainly by immigrant worker issues, then these good YoY comparisons will fade between now and the end of July. We’ll see.