Saturday, February 7, 2015
Weekly Indicators for February 2 - 6 at XE.com
- by New Deal democrat
My Weekly Indicator post is up at XE.com.
Low gas prices and low interest rates, and their effect on housing, are still the big story.
US Equity Market Review For the Week of February 2-6; Minor Upside Breakout Edition
This is over at XE.com
The market is still
facing incredibly strong headwinds coming from several different
directions, starting with a strong dollar. Depending on you source,
S&P 500 companies get between 40%-55% of their earnings from
overseas trade. Even at the low end of the exposure spectrum, (40%),
we’ve still got some pretty major headwinds on the currency front. And,
on that topic, international markets are weak; Japan is coming out of a
technical recession, Australia has some underlying issues, Canada has
to deal with weak oil prices, China is clearly slowing and the EU is
limping along. Tying these two elements together, profits from weaker
overseas economies have to be converted into a strengthening currency,
creating a negative double-whammy. And then there is the negative
impact of oil, as that is destroying the earnings of an entire economic
sector. The sum total of these events is to put a tremendous amount of
downward pressure on the markets.
But, as was
shown last week, the US economy is in good shape, providing a solid
backdrop for continued earnings growth. Last week, that was strong
enough to overcome bearish sentiment. But in this environment, it's
certainly no guarantee that we'll see continued upward price movement.
International Economic Week in Review: A General Malaise, Edition
This is over at XE.com
Two economies – Australia and Canada – have
recently seen a drop in rates, caused by an overall weakness in their
respective economies. Neither are heading toward a recession, but both
are clearly suffering from a certain level of malaise. Both are also
dependent on raw material exports, meaning the drop in commodity prices
is seriously harming both. Japan may be making a slight comeback – at
least based on this week’s numbers – but they are hardly out of the
deflationary woods yet. The US and the UK are both showing some really
strong results. And, the EU is also showing some signs of life.
Germany is still growing and Spain is really starting to come alive.
France is slowing, but their numbers have been just barely negative.
Overall, it could be argued that we’re beginning to see positive signs
from the EU QE announcement, but we certainly don’t have enough data to
make a definitive call.
Friday, February 6, 2015
Nominal and real wages: the agony and the ecstasy
- by New Deal democrat
Among all of the strong data in today's jobs report, probably the most significant on both the upside and the downside were wages.
First, the ecstasy. Here is real, inflation-adjusted earnings for production and nonsupervisory personnel (thus taking out the top 10% or so of wage earners) for the last 10 years:
Note this only goes through December, since January inflation hasn't been reported. December set a new high, exceeding by less than $.01 the previous high in 2010.
Here's the longer term view:
Real average wages are now higher than they have been at any time since late 1979.
But here's the agony. This is the YoY% change in nominal, (i.e., actual) wages:
Not only is there no sign whatsoever of any wage pressures, but YoY% growth in nominal wages has actually decreased. This is an actual bad sign. With the unemployment rate under 6%, nominal wages growth should be increasing, not decreasing. Instead, all of the real growth in wages is coming from the collapse in the price of gasoline.
January 2015 jobs report: almost a blowout, wages still a relative weak spot, but real wages make 35 year high
- by New Deal democrat
HEADLINES:
- 257,000 jobs added to the economy
- U3 unemployment rate up 0.1% to 5.7%
Wages and participation rates
- Not in Labor Force, but Want a Job Now: down 87,000 from 6.445 million to 6.358
- Part time for economic reasons: up 20,000 from 6.790 million to 2.810
- Employment/population ratio ages 25-54: up 0.2% to 77.2%
- Average Weekly Earnings for Production and Nonsupervisory Personnel: up $.07 (or 0.3%) from $20.73 to $20.80, up 2.0%YoY. In real, inflation-adjusted terms, with revisions December's number was a 35 year high, and unless inflation was more than +0.2% in January, which is unlikely, January probably made another 35 year high.
Since the economic expansion is well established, in recent months my focus has shifted to wages and the chronic heightened unemployment. The headline numbers for January show a surge in employment over the last few months, and also rebounded off of the decrease in wages from December.
Those who want a job now, but weren't even counted in the workforce were 4.3 million at the height of the tech boom, and were at 7.0 million a couple of years ago. Since Congress cut off extended unemployment benefits over one year ago, they have risen to 600,000 higher November 2013 post recession low of 5.6 million.
On the other hand, the participation rate in the prime working age group has come back almost half from its post-recession low towards its pre-recession high.
After inflation, real hourly wages for nonsupervisory employees from December to January probably rose by +0.4% or more, in part because because lower gas prices will again show deflation. The nominal YoY% change in average hourly earnings is +1.9%.
The more leading numbers in the report tell us about where the economy is likely to be a few months from now. These were mixed by with a positive bias.
- the average manufacturing workweek rose 0.1to 41.0 hours. This is one of the 10 components of the LEI, and will be a positive.
- construction jobs increased by 39,000. YoY construction jobs are up 308,000 YoY.
- manufacturing jobs were up 22,000, and are up 228,000 YoY.
- Professional and business employment (generally higher-paying jobs) up 39,000 and is up 715,000 YoY.
- temporary jobs - a leading indicator for jobs overall - decreased by -4,100.
- the number of people unemployed for 5 weeks or less - a better leading indicator than initial jobless claims - increased by 25,000 to 2,318,000, compared with December 2013's low of 2,255,000.
Other important coincident indicators help us paint a more complete picture of the present:
- Overtime declined by 0.1 hour to 3.5 hours
- the index of aggregate hours worked in the economy rose 0.2 from 102.7 to 102.9.
- The broad U-6 unemployment rate, that includes discouraged workers increased from 11.2% to 11.3%
- the index of aggregate payrolls rose by 0.7% to 121.5.
- the alternate jobs number contained in the more volatile household survey increased by 759,000 jobs. This represents a 2,994,000 million increase in jobs YoY vs. 3,207,000 in the establishment survey.
- Government jobs decreased by -10,000.
- the overall employment to population ratio for all ages 16 and above rose 0.1% from 59.2% to 59.3%, and has risen by +0.5% YoY. The labor force participation rate rose 0.1% from 62.5% to 67.2%, but is down -0.1% YoY (remember, this includes droves of retiring Boomers).
This was pretty close to a blowout report, particularly with the upward revisions to the prior 2 months. For the last three months we are averaging over 300,000 jobs per month. The employment to population ratio in the prime working age group has risen significantly for the second month in a row, and has now made up almost half of its recession decline. Most of the internals, including the leading internals, were positive. Wages rebounded, completely taking back their December decline and then a little. There is a reasonable chance that, in real terms, the average real wages for nonsupervisory employees made a 35 year high.
The relative negative still remains wages. Nominal wage growth isn't accelerating at all. All of the real wage growth is coming from a decline in inflation due to gas prices.
Thursday, February 5, 2015
Trends in per capita real adjusted gross income: updated through 2013
- by New Deal democrat
On Monday personal income and spending for December were reported, with the most noteworthy monthly news being that it confirmed the prior retail sales report that consumers primarily saved rather than spent their gas price savings (although December was higher than every other month except November).
Secondly, real personal income finally rose above the December 2012 spike (just prior to the "fiscal cliff") to set a new record:
Now let's adjust by population (blue) and by the civilian labor force (red), on an annual basis:
Whether we adjust by population as a whole, or by just the labor force, per capita real personal income has generally grown throughout the last 20 years.
Whether we adjust by population as a whole, or by just the labor force, per capita real personal income has generally grown throughout the last 20 years.
Although it is not nearly as broad a measure as the Bureau of Economic Statistics' "personal income" metric, another way in which per capita income might be looked at is as real per capita adjusted gross income, i.e., the income reported to the IRS on tax forms.
While this is not kept graphically by either the IRS or the St. Louis FRED, I have created the following table showing real adjusted gross income from 1993 through 2011 (the last year available at the IRS site), adjusted per capita both by population, and by the size of the civilian labor force (+those not in the labor force but who want a job now). The second measure is not perfect, but does make a reasonable approximation of taking into account the wave of Boomer retirements (all figures in $Trillions):
Year | Pop adjusted | CLF adjusted | Year | Pop adjusted | CLF adjusted | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1993 | 4.813 | 4.356 | 2001 | 6.008 | 6.014 | |
1994 | 4.864 | 4.486 | 2002 | 5.682 | 5.699 | |
1995 | 5.015 | 4.726 | 2003 | 5.676 | 5.680 | |
1996 | 5.214 | 5.010 | 2004 | 5.950 | 5.974 | |
1997 | 5.520 | 5.534 | 2005 | 6.231 | 6.345 | |
1998 | 5.854 | 5.721 | 2006 | 6.528 |
6.495
| |
1999 | 6.123 | 6.048 | 2007 | 6.708 | 6.685 | |
2000 | 6.365 | 6.365 | 2008 | 6.322 | 6.295 | |
avg 1993-2000 | 5.471 | 5.258 | avg 2001-08 | 6.138 | 6.148 | |
2009 | 5.628 | 5.625 | 2013 | 6.103 | 6.420 | |
2010 | 5.824 | 5.887 | ||||
2011 | 5.823 | 5.911 | ||||
2012 | 6.194 | 6.388 | avg 2006-13 | 6.141 | 6.213 |
Since the IRS separately breaks out the reporting of wages and salaries, another interesting way to slicing their data is to divide the total amount of wages and salaries reported, divide by the number of returns, and then adjust for inflation. The resulting figure gives us the average real wage or salary of all persons reported to the IRS.
In theory this should be identical or nearly identical to the BLS's "aggregate wages paid" index from the monthly jobs report, adjusted for inflation. Aggregate wage information is only available on the St. Louis FRED site from 2007 on, but here's what that looks like:
Now let's compare real average wages reported to the IRS (first column below) with real aggregate wages from the monthly jobs report (second column):
2004 $54,373
2005 $54,514
2006 $55,187 (high)
2007 $54,850 112.4
2008 $54,315 110.3
2009 $53,462 105.8
2010 $53,504 106.0
2011 $52,969 (low) 107.4
2012 $54,370 109.8
2013 $53,791 112.8
2014 n/a 115.8
Based on the aggregate wages data from 2014, I expect the IRS data to show a significant increase in real per capita wages in 2014 when they are reported a year from now.
That being said, there is no doubt that overall the results are consistent with longer term stagnation in real wages.
Tuesday, February 3, 2015
Real median wages surged in Q4 2014
- by New Deal democrat
Something that hasn't gotten much attention from last Friday's GDP report is the brisk increase in real median wages during the 4th quarter of last year.
While the monthly jobs report gives us average wages, median wages aren't reported monthly. There are several quarterly measures, including usual weekly earnings (which will be the subject of a separate post), and the Employment Cost Index, which is reported as part of GDP.
Here is the quarterly % change in the ECI for wages since the inception of the series in 2001:
In the 4th quarter, we had nearly a 1% increase, the best showing since the last time gas prices plummeted in late 2008. The other two times the ECI grew by 0.5%+ in a quarter, in 2001 and 2006, also coincided with substantial declines in the price of gas.
What is perhaps most noteworthy is that median wages grew more than average wages during the fourth quarter. Here's a graph comparing average wages on a quarterly basis, with median wages from the ECI, normed to be equal at the end of the Great Recession:
As a result, median wages are now also within 0.5% of their highs. Average wages are only 0.2% below their 35 year high.
That median wages grew faster than average wages suggests that higher wage jobs grew significantly relative to lower wage jobs, a long-awaited boon.
Monday, February 2, 2015
We probably hit bottom in oil and gas prices last week
- by New Deal democrat
I have a new post up at XE.com.
I have been looking for the bottom in oil and gas prices, which tend to be very seasonal. I think we saw it late last week.
We'll see!