Leading Economic Indicators Losing Strength
Posted on Thursday, November 19, 2009
The AP details the "best in 25+ year" run of the leading economic indicators that still somehow managed to disappoint:
A private forecast of economic activity over the next six months edged up less than expected in October, signaling slow, bumpy growth next year.Taking a look at the details of that 7 month run, we see that October was a downside outlier in terms of performance (less "upside" in aggregate and consumer expectations / building permits causing a drag).
The Conference Board said Thursday that its index of leading economic indicators rose 0.3 percent last month. Economists polled by Thomson Reuters had expected an 0.5 percent gain.
The index climbed 1 percent in September.
"We're still getting some positive momentum, but it looks like things are slowing down again," said Jennifer Lee, economist at BMO Capital Markets. "A lot of the economic growth has largely been driven by the government stimulus packages."
The government's Cash for Clunkers program boosted the auto sector and consumer spending, while tax credits for homebuyers have propped up the housing market.
Still, the indicators have risen for seven straight months. The Conference Board said last month that the 5.7 growth rate in the six months through September was the strongest since 1983. That ticked down to 5 percent growth in the six months through October.

Another disappointment is the performance of the indicators less the HUGE contribution of the interest rate spread (i.e. the steepness of the yield curve), which actually printed a negative number in October.

Why exclude interest rate spread? While the spread still relays the current monetary policy (i.e. when the yield curve is steep, the Fed is typically adding liquidity to the system which drives growth), this becomes less relevant when individuals and business aren't utilizing that liquidity (i.e. borrowing) to invest in "actual" economic activity. Instead we see that the liquidity is just being used to drive up prices of already rich, but not yielding 0% assets and/or to recapitalize a beaten down, but not yet out banking system.
Source: Conference Board
--
Source: http://econompicdata.blogspot.com/2009/11/leading-economic-indicators-losing.html
~
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
Comments
Calendar
Tag Cloud
Archives
-
▼
2009
(196)
-
▼
November
(58)
- 1.2% over 10 Years?
- Chicago PMI: Strength, but No Jobs
- Durable Goods Down, But Out?
- The Scale of Hedge Fund Gold Purchases
- Japanese Industrial Production Up, but Disappoints
- EconomPics in Brief (Tryptophan Edition)
- Why the U.S. is Broke... Personal Current Tax Edition
- Recovery in Perspective: Nominal GDP Edition
- Q3 GDP Revised Down to 2.8%
- Existing Home Sales Jump
- Agency Mortgage Bonds are RICH
- The New Moon... Women LOVED It... Men... Not So Much
- EconomPics of the Week (11/20/09)
- Selecting a Domestic Fixed Income Benchmark
- Leading Economic Indicators Losing Strength
- Gone Fishing
- CPI and Capacity; Auto Prices and CFC
- CPI and Capacity; Auto Prices and CFC
- Housing Starts and Permits Down.... GOOD
- What Stinkin' Inflation? PPI Edition
- 1 in 7 Americans Affected by Food Insecurity
- Has Euro CPI Seen Its Lows?
- Japanese GDP... 4.8% Growth and Ugly?
- No Inventory Correction in September
- Retail Sales Upside Suprise... Still Weak
- Consumers Don't Enjoy Unemployment
- Trade Deficit Jumps in September
- Eurozone GDP Breaks Through Zero... Concerns Still...
- Just One Super-Secular Mean Reversion?
- Spending Down + Deficit Up = Not Good
- Where are Long Bond Yields Going: Late 70's / Earl...
- Will Their be Appetite for Another Stimulus Plan?
- Aussie Miracle Continues
- China is Ripping... Bears are Smoking... Dope
- The Job Market and Equities
- Where are Long Bond Yields Going?
- Germany: Improving Economy, Idea of Fast Turnaroun...
- The State of States: They're Broke
- The "Paradox of Deleveraging"
- Civilian Hours vs. Real GDP
- Health Care Bill Passes Through House
- Job Losses... Again, Worse than Reported
- Stay in School...
- Civilian Hours per Week Cliff Dive Continues
- Importing Goods for IOU's
- Broader Unemployment to 17.5%
- Retail Sales... "Low-End" Bias Dissapating
- Who Needs Workers Anyhow?
- Did We Learn Anything? Carry Trade Edition
- ISM Services Slowly Expanding
- ADP Job Loss at 203,000
- Euro Zone Producer Prices Continue to Decline
- Auto Sales Stabilize
- Anyone Ready to Ride the Golden Bubble?
- What Goes Down... Must Come Up... Factory Orders E...
- ISM Manufacturing Points to Upside Surprise
- Correlation Across Stocks Spikes w/ Sell-Off
- Problem Banks on a Parabolic Rise
-
▼
November
(58)
Leave a Reply