- by New Deal democrat
There’s no important economic data today, so this is a good time to write about several important developments in the stock and bond markets.
- by New Deal democrat
There’s no important economic data today, so this is a good time to write about several important developments in the stock and bond markets.
- by New Deal democrat
- by New Deal democrat
My “Weekly Indicators” post is up at Seeking Alpha.
Last week I wrote that exogenous factors - like political decisions - could have nearly simultaneous effects across all timeframes of indicators. In other words, the long and short leading indicators as well as the coincident indicators, could all react at the same time.
This week there was evidence of exactly that.
As usual, clicking over and reading will bring you up to the virtual moment as to the state of the economy, and reward me a little bit for organizing the data for you.
- by New Deal democrat
- by New Deal democrat
This week’s report on initial jobless claims was of particular interest, because of the issue of whether Federal employees laid off by the new Administration would cause an increase. It appears they did.
- by New Deal democrat
I almost always start out my post on new home sales by indicating that, while they are the most leading of all housing metrics, they are very noisy and heavily revised.
That was true in spades for this morning’s report for January. As shown in the graph below, sales of new single family homes declined -10.5%, or by 77,000 annualized, to 657,000, from December’s level of 734,000, which was upwardly revised by 36,000, or about 5%, from its originally reported level of 698,000.
That’s why I usually compare them with single family permits (red, right scale), which lag slightly but are much less noisy or revised:
Just like existing home sales, which I discussed earlier this week, new home sales have been rangebound in the past two years, varying between a low of 611,000 and a high of 741,000.
So despite the sturm and drang of the monthly decline, really this just shows a steady and flat market.
What is perhaps more important is what is happening with prices. To reiterate my theme from the past few months, Ive been looking at new and existing home sales more in tandem, with a rebalancing of the market in mind. For that to happen we need price increases to abate in existing homes, and prices to remain flat or still declining in new homes.
So in summary January continued the “steady as she goes” pattern for sales, but broke that trend for prices (subject to noise and revisions next month!). With mortgage rates still close to 7%, I do not expect any upward breakout in sales soon. Which, while it isn’t *bad* news for the economy, is definitely not good news either.
- by New Deal democrat
There was unwelcome news in this morning’s repeat home sales reports from the FHFA and Case-Shiller. On a seasonally adjusted basis, in the three month average through December, according to the Case-Shiller national index (light blue in the graphs below) prices rose 0.5%, and the somewhat more leading FHFA purchase only index (dark blue) rose 0.4%. Both of these continue the trend of re-acceleration we have seen in house prices in the second half of 2024 [Note: FRED hasn’t updated the FHFA data yet]:
- by New Deal democrat
This will be income, spending, and housing week, but that won’t start until tomorrow. While there’s no news today, there was an important update to employment data last week; namely, the QCEW for Q3 of last year.
- by New Deal democrat
My “Weekly Indicators” post is up at Seeking Alpha.
For now the status quo continues, of problematic interest rates, but excellent short term and coincident data. Political events affecting the economy may start to show up in the next few weeks, however. The first tiny inkling may have been the 9.5% YoY increase in weekly initial claims.
As usual, clicking over and reading will bring you up to the virtual moment as to the economic data, and reward me a tiny bit for collecting and organizing it all for you.
- by New Deal democrat
Existing home sales have been flat in the general range of 3.85 -4.10 million annualized for two years, and that continued in January, as on a monthly basis sales decreased -4.9% to 40.8 million from an upwardly revised December number of 4.29 million annualized:
The slightly better numbers in the past few months are of a piece with the slight uptrend in housing permits and starts we saw earlier this week, likely driven by recent lower mortgage rates (which have now ended).
- by New Deal democrat
- by New Deal democrat
As promised, economic data resumed this morning, and with it my extended posts.
- by New Deal democrat
There is no new significant economic data today, and I am on the road. Meaningful reporting should resume tomorrow with housing permits, starts, and construction.
In the meantime, here is a look at a high frequency series I keep track of: Redbook retail sales, for the past year:
There are some peaks and valleys, generally around Holidays like Thanksgiving, Christmas, and the like, but the average over four weeks has stayed fairly steady at +5% YoY, which is about normal during expansions.
Since consumer inflation, especially ex-housing prices, has remained in the 2%-3% range, this means there has been a fairly steady increase in consumer spending that has continued over the past year.
In other words, “steady as she goes.” And since the consumer economy is about 70% of the whole economy, that has pretty much been the story for the entire economy.
- by New Deal democrat
There’s no significant economic news today. Since I didn’t publish a link to my “Weekly Indicators” post up at Seeking Alpha over the weekend, here it is now.
Left to its own devices, as I’ve written a number of times recently, the economy is in “steady as she goes” mode, with few significant moves in any of the indicators, with the short term forecast and the nowcast both continuing to look good.
Of course, it’s the “left to its own devices” which is, shall we say, chancy at the moment. But in the meantime, clicking over and reading will bring you up to the virtual moment as to the state of the economy, and reward me with some lunch money as well.
- by New Deal democrat
It’s that time of month again for my favorite indicator for the consumption side of the economy: retail sales have been tracked for over 75 years. When they are lower YoY, that has historically been a good (not perfect) indicator that a recession is near. That’s because that same 75 year history empirically demonstrates that consumption leads jobs. In other words, it is the change in sales that causes employers to add or lay off employees (not the other way around, as I have sometimes seen claimed).