The Recession Is Far from Over 21 comments
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Last week I wrote a blog titled "Recession over? Tell the bankrupt and unemployed". I took a lot of flack from readers saying that I picked a lagging economic indicator and was unfair in my criticism of the Fed's press release. For those of you who followed me in the 2008 Strategy Lab you might remember that I always looked forward to and commented on The Conference Board's US Business Cycle Indicators. Just like I look at BarChart every week to get a read on the short, mid and long term market movement, I look at the Conference Board to give me the Leading, Coincident and Lagging economic indicators.
The latest report is dated September 21, 2009 and has the Leading Economic Index (LEI) up 0.6%, the Coincident Economic Index (CEI) unchanged and the Lagging Economic Indicator (LAG) down 0.1%. How do we interpret this data? When I taught Graduate School I told the students to think of the economy as a roller coaster with 21 cars.
When the coaster gets to the top, the first cars go over and begin to go down while the last cars are still going up. When it gets to the bottom of the trough, the leading cars begin going up while the last cars are still going down. The LEI is like the lead cars, the CEI the middle cars and the LAG the last cars. Not really that hard to figure out.
Let's take a minute and list the components of the Indexes:
Leading (LEI) -- 10 indicators 5 were up for a 0.6% increase.
- Average weekly hours, manufacturing
- Average weekly initial claims for unemployment insurance
- Manufacturer's new orders, consumer goods and materials
- Index of supplier deliveries -- vendor performance
- Manufacturer's new orders, nondefense capital goods
- Building permits, new private housing units
- Stock prices, 500 common stocks
- Money supply, M2
- Interest rate spread, 10-year Treasury bonds less federal funds
- Index of consumer expectations
Coincident (CEI) -- 4 indicators 3 were up of an unchanged
- Employees on nonagricultural payrolls
- Personal income less transfer payments
- Industrial production
- Manufacturing and trade sales
Lagging (LAG) -- 7 indicators 3 were up for a 0.1% decrease
- Average duration of unemployment
- Inventories to sales ratio, manufacturing and trade
- Labor cost per unit of output, manufacturing
- Average prime rate
- Commercial and industrial loans
- Consumer installment credit to personal income ratio
- Consumer price index for services.
Are all these indicators 100% right and do I understand each one? No, but I don't need to. I don't understand all the technical analysis indicators on BarChart but I can see where the short term, mid term and long term indicators seem to be going. I don't have to understand all of the Conference Board's economic indicators but I can tell if the leading, middle and last cars on the economic roller coaster are going up or down.
Disclosure: No positions mentioned
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To build on the previous post, not only are consumers reducing debt and saving more.....their savings will be gutting by rising taxes (to reduce deficit and pay for healthcare) and inflation (caused by continuing weakness in the USD, making imports costly).
The American consumer is about to be hit by a "perfect storm" via the combination of:
1) Restricted credit access
2) Weaker greenback
3) Higher taxes
4) Higher unemployment
5) Increased borrowing costs (eventually)
6) Higher inflation (eventually)
7) Higher energy costs
When you really think about it, there is nothing out there that will lend any support to the consumer for the next 5 to 10 years! Beyond that, there are still signficant headwinds....
Without the consumer....there will be no recovery for America.
It seems bizarre that a worse economy would lead to a more loose fed, hammering the USD helping the market? Unemployment & Bankruptcy staying bad keeps the Fed fueled party going?
Thats the logic going around right now... the USD is toast.
Thoughts?
On Sep 22 01:21 PM Mr. Big wrote:
>
> Without the consumer....there will be no recovery for America.
What would Chuck Norris do?
.
The dollar is at the level it was a year ago but commodities are much lower right now. Will we get commodities "bubble" again in anticipation of lower dollar, I am not sure. CFTC is trying to crack down on commodities traders to prevent the repeat of last year and delay the inevitable.
It is clear that the market is betting on a weaker dollar, rising US Treasury rates, lots of government stimulus, and a stagnant economy with possible inflation. That means less treasuries more equities and commodities, money moving offshore, bets on government run bubble mayhem, and a high chance that when stimulus starts to end a steep fall off in stock market prices unless even more wasteful spending is substituted for it. If the latter: then rinse and repeat until the dollar becomes a substitute for toilet paper (which you wouldn't be able to afford).
Yes. U.S. consumers may reduce their purchases of higher priced commodities to some degree. But I recall that when gasoline went to over $4..00 per gallon previously, the roads were no less congested. People did not stop driving. Those who could reduced driving some. But this nation's commerce is too dependent upon the gas-powered transportation to just say no! That may be unfortunate, but it's the truth. We have an unhealthy dependency and have not taken the necessary steps to get clean.
On Sep 22 03:18 PM Gary A wrote:
> The dollar will not be toast. Reason is, when these commodities go
> through the roof people will just quit spending. You watch. Milk
> went to 5 bucks a gallon and people simply stopped buying. If gas
> goes to 4 people will stop driving. The consumer is the great equalizer,
> the preserver of the dollar and the ruin of the arrogant and yet
> dependent financial system. Goldman can drive oil to the moon, but
> then no one will drive to the store, let alone to the moon.
And the winner is - roller coaster cars don't have an engine in front!
In the words of Peter Shiff "We are not the engine. We are the caboose and we are being cut loose". Shiff for senator.
On Sep 22 05:33 PM The Geoffster wrote:
> Jimmy Carter will save us. I'm sorry I meant Barack Obama. Like Mad
> Hedge, I'm showing my age.
> The dollar will not be toast. Reason is, when these commodities go
> through the roof people will just quit spending. You watch. Milk
> went to 5 bucks a gallon and people simply stopped buying. If gas
> goes to 4 people will stop driving. The consumer is the great equalizer,
You may be right: consumers will change their behavior in response to rising prices. I also have no doubt that the dollar will keep diving and we'll see expensive commodities. My concern is what the feds are going to do when this happens. Wage/price controls? Capital controls? War? When government gets desperate, I get scared.
These two countries couldn't survive very long without a major default. The amounts would be staggering. When you look at it from that aspect then Zimbabwe doesn't seem that far away. Hyper-inflation may be closer than you think. LOL Looking after your money.
On Sep 22 01:07 PM chap08 wrote:
> The economy is like the roller coaster cars - there is no engine.