Saturday, August 23, 2014
Weekly Indicators for August 18 - 22 at XE.com
- by New Deal democrat
My Weekly Indicator post is up at XE.com. Summer is nearing its close and the data allows us to put our feet up, sip a libation, and enjoy the view.
Friday, August 22, 2014
The consumer fades further: real retail sales per capita for July
- by New Deal democrat
With the release of the CPI the other day, I can update on of my new favorite economic measures, real retail sales per capita. This takes the real, inflation adjusted sales number and adjusts it further by the number of consumers doing the buying. In the past, when the average individual consumer is puling back, it is an early (as in a year or more) signal of a downturn in the economy:
This measure is slightly below its high from two months ago. I won't really be concerned unless it stays below its May peak for at least two more months.
Now let's look at it a second way, which is the YoY% change:
As I wrote last week in a post at XE.com, there has been a "slow fade" of the consumer since 2010. July's real number continues that fade, although again I won't really be concerned unless the YoY measure turns negative and stays there for several months.
To put this in context of a number of indicators I continually study, there is a lot of evidence that the expansion is significantly past its halfway point (which ain't too bad after a 5 year expansion), but there is no imminent sign of any actual downtrun. My big fear remains the failure of wages to make any real progress in the last 15 years.
Thursday, August 21, 2014
Prices of existing houses have probably made an interim peak
- by New Deal democrat
I have a new post up at XE.com on this morning's report on existing home sales for July.
We have probably hit an interim peak for prices in the last two months. More details in the article.
Wednesday, August 20, 2014
Tuesday, August 19, 2014
Lower mortgage rates = bottom in housing slowdown has probably passed
- by New Deal democrat
I have a new post up at XE.com, looking at today's housing permits report. It looks like the decrease in interest rates that started at the beginning of this year is taking hold in new housing construction.
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