- by New Deal democrat
The Bonddad Blog
Still nerdy after all these years
Friday, June 19, 2026
Rethinking the long leading indicators
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Preliminary evidence that both business expansion - and widespread inflation - have continued in June
- by New Deal democrat
Yesterday, in addition to the retail sales report, general business sales and inventory were reported - but unfortunately only through April. Nominally, sales (red in the graph below) increased 1.2% while inventories increased 0.5%:
More evidence for the re-emergence of residual seasonality in jobless claims, but still very positive
- by New Deal democrat
From 2023 through midyear 2025, there was a distinct pattern of unresolved post-pandemic seasonality to jobless claims, which rose in the first half of the year, and then declined in the second half. Beginning at the end of June last year, though, there was a “change of regime in jobless claims numbers,” probably related to the collapse of immigration and/or fear in immigrant communities, resulting in significantly lower claims on a YoY basis. In the last few weeks there have been signs that the post-pandemic seasonality may be reasserting itself, so as I wrote last wek, “it will be interesting to see if the negative YoY comparisons continue, or if they fade away. If the change of regime was a one-time thing, driven mainly by immigrant worker issues, then these good YoY comparisons will fade between now and the end of July.”
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
Even adjusting for gas prices, consumers went on a (wealth effect- generated?) spending spree in May
- by New Deal democrat
On a YoY basis, nominal total retail sales were up 6.9%, but in real terms were only up 2.6%. Excluding gasoline, nominal sales YoY were up 5.4%, and deflating by using CPI excluding energy were up 2.5%:
In both the March and April personal income and spending reports, we saw that consumes handled gas prices increases by essentially just putting the extra spending on their credit cards. Last month I suggested that consumers might have switched to a “wait and see” mode, but this month’s report indicates that consumers have been spending with wild abandon - as has been indicated for weeks by the Redbook sales report, the four week average of which as of this week is up 9.1% YoY nominally!:
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
Housing continues in the doldrums, but its decline failed to give rise to a post-pandemic recession
- by New Deal democrat
Monday, June 15, 2026
Goods production sector of the economy remained in expansion in May
- by New Deal democrat




























