- by New Deal democrat
Although the last federal government shutdown has been over for 2.5 months — and a new one might begin this weekend — with the exception of a few headline indicators like inflation, industrial production, and employment, most of the data is still lagging by at least one month, i.e., it has only been released through November. And some is still two or more months behind.
That means that the many of the most current measures for sales and orders are lagging by at least one month, i.e., the most recent update was for November. And many of the others, especially having to do with sales, rents, and orders, are still lagging by two months or more.
Which means that the most current measures of economic activity in many areas continue to be the ISM manufacturing and non-manufacturing reports, due next week; and the regional Fed banks’ manufacturing and services indexes. While certainly not perfect, in the aggregate they at least sketch on outline of where the economy has been going in the past month.
Today let me update the regional manufacturing indexes for January. While this is only about 1/4 of all economic activity, it is the most volatile, and generally the most leading sector.
The below chart includes, in order, NY, Philadelphia, Richmond, Kansas City, and Texas. Month over month changes are in parentheses, with the absolute values for January following. The final number is the average change and absolute number for all 5 together.
Regional Fed: NY. PHL. RVA. KC. TX. Avg
Headline: (+11.4) 7.7; (+22.8) 12.6; (+1) -6; (-1) 0; (+10.1) -1.2; (+8.0) 2.8
New Orders (+7.6) 6.6; (+9.4) 1.; (+2) -6; (0) 0; (+15.4) 11.8; (+3.5) 5.4
Prices Paid (-1.4) 42.8; (+3.3) 46.9 (-0.5) 7.1; (+4) 44; (+1.9 ) 37.1; (+4.1) 35.6
Prices Rec’d (-11.0) 14.4; (+3.5) 27.8; (-0.4) 4.6; (-3) 19; (+9.7) 18.5; (+1.4) 16.9
Wages* (n/a) n/a; (n/a) n/a; (-10) 14; (n/a) n/a; (-4.3) 17.4); (-7.2) 16.0
Employment (-16.5) -8.0; (-3.2) 9.7; (-5) -6; (+4) 0; (-0.2) 8.2; (-1.8) 0.6
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* only 2 of the banks report this information
To summarize, the January regional Fed reports suggest that headline activity and new orders continue to improve, and at an improving pace (after a pause in December). Inflation in commoditiy prices remains widespread and even increasing (which may also reflect the weakening US), and while the prices they have received also continue to increase significantly, they are not recouping anything like their production costs. Meanwhile employment continues to be just barely positive, but wage growth continues, although at a more subdued pace.
This is of a piece with the most recent data on manufacturers new orders through November, on which I reported on Monday, and the December industrial production report from several weeks ago, both of which indicated improvement in orders and production in the manufacturing sector. It is of interest that the regional growth appears to be concentrated in Texas. Aside from that region, growth (including prices) is must more muted. As per my speculation on Monday, I suspect this has much to do with the building of AI-related data centers.