- by New Deal democrat
Still nerdy after all these years
- by New Deal democrat
- by New Deal democrat
- by New Deal democrat
My “Weekly Indicators” post is up at Seeking Alpha.
- by New Deal democrat
Industrial production is much less central to the US economic picture than it was before the “China shock,” but it remains an important if diminished economic indicator, particularly since the month it has peaked in the past has typically been the month the NBER has chosen as the economic cycle peak.
- by New Deal democrat
Last Friday I summarized the jobs report as “show[ing] a contracting jobs market in all important metrics except the headlines (which, for the record, were positive). …[A]lmost] all of the important leading metrics … were negative, [including the] goods-producing sectors - manufacturing, construction (including residential construction), and temporary jobs - declined, as did the goods-producing sector as a whole. [And] “…[To] be clear: the jobs market is being entirely held up by service providing jobs, which tend to rise even in the earliest stages of recessions. [In short,] This is a jobs report which is ringing the alarms for imminent recession.”
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/fredgraph.png?g=1QuhH&height=490
Note that several of the series have not been updated beyond September or October. The point is, only two of the series - payrolls and real personal income - have exceeded their readings in July, both in September, and both by only 0.1%. Further, since total business sales declined in both September and October, and they do not take inflation into account, it is almost certain that real manufacturing and trade sales did so as well.
In other words, there may have been at least a small cycle peak in July, with at least a shallow downturn during the autumn, and in particular during the government shutdown. Whether if so it was pronounced enough, or will last long enough, to qualify as a recession (pending revisions!) is completely unkown. But the leading metrics in the December employment report are not auspicious.
- by New Deal democrat
First, usually the week following the employment report is very quiet, and I put up “scenes from the report” with some important graphs. With all the releases catching up on old data this week, I haven’t done that; but because jobless claims are the only significant data this morning, I intend to put up a very important update on those “scenes” later this morning.