Friday, November 24, 2023

Why the Index of Leading Indicators failed

 

 - by New Deal democrat


I have a post by the above title up at Seeking Alpha.


The Index of Leading Indicators has persistently declined for 22 months, and is off by a level that in the past has been consistent with already ongoing, deep recessions. And yet the economy has continued to improve.

Clearly there has been a misfire. The above article explains in more detail why I believe this has happened, for one long-term reason, and one unique to the post-pandemic environment.

As usual, clicking over and reading should be rewarding for you and a little bit for me.

Thursday, November 23, 2023

On Thanksgiving, enjoying the bounty of foods native to the New World

 

 - by New Deal democrat


Happy Thanksgiving to all readers of this old fashioned blog.


One little fact I did not know until this year is that, with just a couple of exceptions, all of the foods that we traditionally put on the table for Thanksgiving dinner all are native to the New World:, including:

Turkey
Cranberries
Squash
Cornbread
Potatoes
Green beans
Sweet potatoes
Pecans
Pumpkins

So, part of the theme of Thanksgiving is enjoying the cornucopia of plenty that the New World provided to us.

Only bread stuffing and pie shells made from wheat are not native.

Some people might also make use of cashews, peanuts, tomatoes, peppers, and/or chili peppers, all of which are also native to the New World. 

And that doesn’t even include vanilla and chocolate, both of which are celebrated on the other 394 days of the year as well!

Wednesday, November 22, 2023

Initial jobless claims confine to forecast benign employment conditions

 

 - by New Deal democrat


Initial claims declined -14,000 to 209,000 last week, and the four week moving average declined -750 to 220,000. With the usual one week lag, continuing claims declined -22,000 to 1.840 million:




On a YoY basis, both weekly claims and their four week average were up only 4.6%. Continuing claims, which have been much more elevated YoY, were up 24.0%:



This is well below the 10% cautionary level.

There has been some commentary that continuing claims mean a recession is imminent or may even be underway. I am discounting that because initial claims have always signaled first, and also because continuing claims have been in the range of 25%-30% higher YoY for the last 6 months without worsening.

Turning to the update for the Sahm rule, on a monthly basis claims in November so far are up 3.5%. Since initial claims lead the unemployment rate by several months, that suggests an unemployment rate declining to about 3.6% in a few months (i.e., 3.5%*1.035=3.6%) from a more elevated 3.8%-4.0% level:



In short, claims are forecasting continued economic expansion.

Tuesday, November 21, 2023

Existing homeowners with 3% mortgages remain frozen in place, as sales fall to a new 28 year low

 

 - by New Deal democrat


October marked yet another month in the fully bifurcated housing market, in which most existing homeowners are frozen in place by their 3% mortgages, and buyers have turned to new homes (and in particular condos and apartments) instead.

Existing home sales fell yet again, by 16,000 annualized, to 3.79 million, 45% down from their 2021 peak, and the lowest level since 1995:


This is of a piece with the collapse in purchase mortgage applications, which have also declined to 1995 levels, per Edward Yardeni:



With inventory so restricted, prices have held firm, and have even increased. In October, the median price (which is not seasonally adjusted) rose for the fourth month in a row on a YoY basis, by 3.4%, to $391,800 [note: current month’s data not included in the below graph]:


For comparison, here are new home sales since 1995:



So long as the Fed keeps interest rates elevated, we can expect this trend of a frozen existing home market driving people to purchase new single family homes and condos to continue.

Monday, November 20, 2023

Why has residential building construction remained so strong, despite the recessionary-level decline in permits and starts?

 

 - by New Deal democrat


As an initial note, there is no economic news today, and for obvious reasons there won’t be on Thursday or Friday either, so don’t be surprised if I take a couple of days off as well.


In the meantime, I’ve been continuing to ponder why housing under construction remains close to its all-time, 50+ year record set one year ago, even though for the past year permits have been down 25% or more from their high set nearly two years ago, and so is the three month average of actual housing starts:



I did some rooting around over the weekend to see if I could find the reason for this seeming levitation, and found some surprising information.

First off, here is a long term historical look at permits (dark blue), starts (light blue), completions (gold) and housing units under construction (red) from the inception of the series through 2003, for multi-family units:




As usual, housing starts are much more volatile than permits, but accord very closely. Completions and units under construction lag, generally by less than a year, but with the exception of a brief period in the mid-1980s, are also in accord with one another.

Now here is the same information since 2003:



Beginning in 2004, housing units under construction completely diverge from completions, and lag much longer. Multi-family units under construction did not peak until July 2008, more than *2 years* after the peak in multi-family permits in March 2006. Similarly, the three month average of multi-family permits peaked in June 2022 and is down almost 50% since then, even as the record pace of construction continues.

Clearly something of a secular nature started happening then.


the amount of time it takes to complete a multifamily project has also continued to rise.

According to the 2021 Survey of Construction from the Census Bureau, the average length of time to complete construction of a multifamily building — after obtaining authorization — has now risen to 17.5 months.

This authorization-to-completion time has been on an upward trend since 2013. However, the start-to-completion time has remained the same in recent years — evidence that the process of obtaining authorization to begin construction has gotten more burdensome and time consuming.

The average time to build multifamily homes varies significantly by region: The Northeast had the longest time (19.8 months), while the Midwest had the shortest (15.3 months). The number of units in the building is also a significant factor: Buildings with 20 or more units required the most time (19.2 months), compared to 2- to 4-unit buildings which took the least amount of time (14.2 months).


Except here’s the problem. The NAHB’s selection of 2013 as the starting date is almost one decade *after* the secular increase in the “start to completion time” of multi-family units under construction, as I’ve shown in the above graphs. And it turns out the NAHB might be cherry-picking to support their agenda.

One possibility might be that multi-family projects are simply much bigger than they used to be. In the past 15 years, I’ve seen lots of large 3, 4, and 5 story multi-family developments, vs. the 2 story “garden apartments” of the 1950s through 1980s. And maybe that has something to do with it - but couldn’t you simply hire more workers to get the larger jobs done in a similar timeframe?

Well, the Census Bureau helpfully reports the number of workers involved in residential construction every month in the jobs report, dating since the late 1980s. So let’s compare that with the number of housing units under construction (note: because the jobs numbers do not break down workers between single family vs. multi-family construction, I am using total construction data):



And lo and behold! The number of workers involved in construction started to diverge from its previous trend in 2003, and has remained sharply divergent since the Great Recession. To better show just how divergent, I divided the number of total units under construction vs. the number of total workers doing the construction, and here is the ratio we get:



Compared with the 1989-2002 baseline, there were about 10% fewer employees per unit at the end of that housing boom. Layoffs during the Great Recession and thereafter did not keep pace with the huge downturn in construction. And since about 2015, the ratio of workers to units has continued to decline to the point where, since the pandemic, there are only 2/3’s of the number of workers per unit as there were in the baseline period.

Fewer workers per unit under construction means a longer time to get the job done. That seems to be the long and short of why multi-unit construction is taking so long to get done now, and is levitating near its all-time highs. Why that shortage in workers is the case is a much more opaque issue, but my suspicion is that it is not a coincidence that it has occurred as residential building construction has become more oligopolized.