- by New Deal democrat
With no news today, let’s take a look at why two releases tomorrow are especially important.
Still nerdy after all these years
- by New Deal democrat
With no news today, let’s take a look at why two releases tomorrow are especially important.
- by New Deal democrat
My “Weekly Indicators” post is up at Seeking Alpha.
While job growth has almost completely stalled, and inflation shows signs of picking up, both consumer spending and the stock market continue to plow forward at full speed. It’s an odd situation that may be powered almost exclusively by people at the top end of the income distribution.
In any event, clicking over and reading will bring you up to the virtual moment as to the economic data, and reward me with a penny or two for collecting and organizing it for you.
- by New Deal democrat
Now that we have the consumer inflation number for August, let’s take a look at real wages and income for ordinary workers.
- by New Deal democrat
- by New Deal democrat
I’ll post about the CPI later this morning. But unusually, the biggest news of the morning was initial jobless claims, which spiked to 263,000, an increase of 27,000 from the previous week. The four week moving average increased 9,750 to 240,500. Meanwhile, with the typical one week delay, continuing claims were unchanged at 1.939 million:
- by New Deal democrat
Consumer price inflation will be reported tomorrow. In the meantime, this morning producer prices for August were reported. Normally I don’t pay too much attention to producer prices - and I won’t this month, either. But let me put that in some context.
In the past, when producer prices have outstripped consumer prices, that has meant that producers aren’t able to pass on the full amount of price increases to consumers.
Since the summer of 2024, final demand producer price gains have been approximately equal to consumer price gains. If producer prices were to spike even higher, we should expect that to show up in corporate profits within another quarter or two, and possibly even this quarter. And when corporate profits turn down, they think about scaling back hiring, and even layoff off workers.