- by New Deal democrat
In addition to the jobs report, because this is Thursday we also got the latest jobless claims numbers.
- by New Deal democrat
In addition to the jobs report, because this is Thursday we also got the latest jobless claims numbers.
- by New Deal democrat
Below is my in depth synopsis.
- by New Deal democrat
- by New Deal democrat
I concluded last month’s post on construction spending by writing “Putting this report together with this morning’s other report on manufacturing from ISM, it appears the goods-producing part of the economy as a whole is very slightly contracting. It will be interesting to see if this is reflected in a decline in goods-producing jobs in Friday’s report.”
- by New Deal democrat
- by New Deal democrat
This week data arrives in two batches: a smaller batch (ISM manufacturing and construction spending) tomorrow, and a huge tranche (nonfarm payrolls, jobless claims, ISM services, and factory orders) on Thursday. Which means I might take Wednesday off, and/or delay reporting on some of Thursday’s data until Friday.
- by New Deal democrat
My “Weekly Indicators” post is up at Seeking Alpha.
There have been a number of reversals since April, most notably the stock market going from a 12 month low to a new all-time high, but also the front-running by consumers apparent in the weekly Redbook report has also reversed, from over 7% YoY to 4.5%, one of the lowest readings of the past 12 months.
Whether this is more than just a temporary reversals will likely play out over the next two months.
As usual, clicking over and reading will bring you up to the virtual moment as to the state of the economy, and bring me a little lunch money.
- by New Deal democrat
- by New Deal democrat
Jobless claims continue to tell us two things: (1) the jobs market continues to slowly weaken, but (2) it is not recessionary.
- by New Deal democrat
This morning gives us the last of our three measures of home sales, prices, and inventory, new home sales. These are the most important of the three because while they are very noisy and heavily revised, they are the most leading of all housing metrics, and so they can tell us about the underlying upward or downward pressure on the economy going forward one year or more. Additionally, the construction of new homes has a much bigger impact than the sale of existing homes.
In May, new home sales declined 99,000 to 623,000. April’s initial number of 743,000, which had been a 3 year high, was revised downward by -21,000. In the below graph I also show single family permits (red, right scale), which lag slightly but are much less noisy:
Both have until now been rangebound. New home sales this month were close to the bottom of that range, while permits made a new 2 year low.
Over the same 2.5 year period of time, prices also stalled, and then began a very slow deflation on the order of -1% -5% YoY. In absolute terms that trend continued last month. While the median price of a new single family home increased 15,200 to $426,600 in May, that is average compared with the last 2.5 years:
- by New Deal democrat
Yesterday the existing home sales report showed continued deceleration in YoY price increases to 1.3%, along with an increase in inventory of houses for sale, indicative of the ongoing rebalancing of the housing market. This morning’s repeat home sales reports from the FHFA and S&P Case Shiller strongly confirmed that deceleration and ongoing rebalancing.
On a seasonally adjusted basis, in the three month average through April, both the Case-Shiller national index (light blue in the graphs below) as well as the FHFA purchase only index (dark blue) showed a declines of -0.4%, the steepest such declines since the summer of 2023:
- by New Deal democrat
But as I wrote above, prices and inventory were more important this month.
Let’s start with inventory. As I have pointed out repeatedly, the secular decline in inventory began well before onset of the pandemic, reaching a nadir in 2022. Unlike sales, this series is not seasonally adjusted, so it must be looked at YoY, and in May inventory continued to climb, to 1.540 million units, a 20.3% YoY increase, and only 1,000 units lower than May 2020 (May data not shown):
Nevertheless inventory is still below its pre-2014 levels, which typically were in the 1.7 million to 1.9 million range, which means that although it is lessening the chronic shortage still exists.
Finally, let’s look at prices. Builders of new homes are much more able to respond to market pressures, and - leaving the effects of tariffs on building materials aside - this has continued to make new homes relatively much more attractive than the constricted existing homes market, which has had strong upward pricing pressures right through the end of last year.
There was already strong evidence that this upward pricing pressure was abating. And this month added yet more such evidence. Like inventory, this data is not seasonally adjusted and so must be looked at YoY, as in the graph below of the last 10 years (May data not shown):
In the immediate aftermath of the pandemic in 2021-22, prices increased as much as 15% or more YoY. After the Fed started its sharp hiking regimen, prices briefly turned negative YoY in early 2023, with a YoY low of -3.0% in May of that year. Thereafter comparisons accelerated almost relentlessly to a YoY peak of 5.8% in May of 2024, before decelerating to 2.9% in September.
Here are the comparisons since:
In May this deceleration continued, with a YoY% gain of 1.3%, the lowest such gain since earnly 2023.
In summary, this month’s existing home sales report tells us that the rebalancing of the housing market is continuing. Although seasonally adjusted sales remain rangebound, price increases have abated dramatically, and inventory is increasing at a big YoY clip. Although inventory is still low by historical standards, it is possible that by July’s report it could reach the 1.7 million level, i.e. the bottom of its pre-2014 historical range.