- by New Deal democrat
[Special programming note: Today we begin the second half of the year. On Friday there will be no data due to the federal holiday. Since I haven’t updated my overall nowcast and forecast for the economy, as well as how average Americans are doing economically, I plan to do so then.
Additionally, in observance of the 250th anniversary of American independence, over the weekend I plan on a Big Picture overview of what history suggests about the status of the Republic, and where it goes from here.]
In the meantime, with the beginning of the new month, we get important looks to two leading sectors of the economy; namely, manufacturing and construction. Additionally, yesterday snuck by without me taking a look at the May JOLTS report, so let me give a brief overview now.
The JOLTS Report
This report comes out one month after the jobs report, but parses the jobs market by hiring, firing, openings, and quits. With one exception, yesterday’s report showed a steady state.
Job openings (blue in the graph below) increased sharply in April, and maintained that high level in May, increasing 9,000 to 7.594 million annualized, the highest level in two years. Hires (red), on the contrary, declined -45,000 to 5.170 million, slightly below the average flat trend of the past two years. Voluntary quits (gold) increased 22,000 to 3.065 million, also slightly below its average flat trend for the past two years as well [Note; in the below graph, all three are normed to 100 as of their pre-pandemic levels]:
Most importantly, both hires and quits have been flat at about 88% of their pre-pandemic average over the past two years. Job openings have clearly increased recently, and are currently about 20% higher than their pre-pandemic level, but I regard that statistic as a “soft” one, vs. the other two.
The most significant number was the level of layoffs and discharges, which increased 41,000 to 1.708 million:
But most noteworthy is that the average level of layoffs declined sharply late last year, and with some noise, has remained at that low level, only about 85% of the already-low pre-pandemic level. This very much confirms what we have been seeing in initial jobless claims ever since 12 months ago.
In summary, the May JOLTS report shows that we have transitioned from a “low hire, low fire” economy to a “low hire, almost *no* fire” one.
ISM Manufacturing
The ISM manufacturing report is for June, the first economic report for that month. And it continued the string of positive reports we have seen here since the beginning of this year. The headline number declined -0.7 to 53.3, still expansionary:
The more leading new orders subindex declined -0.8 to 56.0, which is still strongly expansionary:
But the more important news this month was contained in two other subindexes. First, the employment subindex increased 1.1 to 49.7, virtually in equipoise for the first time in almost 18 months:
And the prices paid subindex showed a sharp deceleration in inflation pressures, down -9.1 to a still-high 73.0:
To minimize noise, I pay particular attention to the three month moving averages, especially of the headline number, which was 53.3, and the leading new orders subindex, which was 55.6.
This was a very positive report, showing expanding production which is likely to continue, a firming of employment, and while there are still inflationary pressures in the pipeline, they are less extreme than in the past few months.
Construction Spending
This report like the JOLTS report above, was also for May. It was much more of a mixed bag.
Total construction spending (blue) rose 0.1% for the month, but was lower -1.5% YoY. Spending in the important leading housing sector (red) rose 0.4%, and was 1.8% higher YoY. But since the price of construction materials (gold) rose 1.1% in the months, in real terms both headline and residential construction spending were down for the month. And since prices for construction materials were higher 5.6% YoY, both were also down YoY [Note: below graphs are normed to 100 as of just before the pandemic]:
Manufacturing construction also continued its slide, down -1.4% for the month, and down 21.9% YoY. The Boom set off by Biden’s infrastructure stimulus has clearly worn off:
The two sectors most closely associated with the AI data center Boom (or bubble) are water supply and power production. Spending for each declined -0.2% for the month. For the last 12 months, water supply construction has only increased 0.2%, and power production by 1.2%:
It may be that the bloom is coming off the rose, particularly when we adjust by the price of materials as noted above.
Finally, although I won’t bother with a graph, there are several other significant components of the headline numbers. Office construction was up 3.6% YoY, highway and street construction by 3.0%, and educational construction up 2.8%. But commercial construction was down -6.0%.
In short, nominally construction spending has increased this year, although interestingly not at all in the two subsectors most associated with AI data center construction. But in real terms, deflated by the cost of materials, all of the significant subsectors, as well as the headline, have declined.
Summary: The manufacturing sector of the economy continues its run of positive, expansionary numbers, while construction in real terms appears to be fading slightly. Meanwhile, job hiring is steady if low, while layoffs are extremely low. Overall the short leading and coincident aspects of these numbers are positive. We’ll see if that run continues in the jobs report tomorrow.