disposable personal income

Weekly Market Pulse: Not Dead Yet

By |2023-05-01T08:36:20-04:00May 1st, 2023|Alhambra Research, Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Markets, Real Estate, Stocks|

Bring out your dead! CUSTOMER: Here's one. CART MASTER: Nine pence. DEAD PERSON: I'm not dead! CART MASTER: What? CUSTOMER: Nothing. Here's your nine pence. DEAD PERSON: I'm not dead! CART MASTER: 'Ere. He says he's not dead! CUSTOMER: Yes, he is. DEAD PERSON: I'm not! CART MASTER: He isn't? CUSTOMER: Well, he will be soon. He's very ill. DEAD PERSON: I'm getting better! CUSTOMER: No, you're not. You'll be stone dead in [...]

More and More The Economic Inflection

By |2019-05-31T18:32:05-04:00May 31st, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

You do wonder sometimes whether the person responsible for writing these things ever cringes while they do so. Are they ever shocked by a sudden bout of conscience? Then again, most of it is bland boilerplate language and when it’s not the difference is hidden under a maze of intentionally induced complexity or misdirection. The statement the FOMC released after [...]

There’s No Income So There Can’t Really Be Shortages

By |2018-07-02T11:43:26-04:00July 2nd, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The plural of anecdote is not data. At any given time in any given economy you can find counterexamples. During the Great Depression, for example, millions of Americans were doing very well for themselves. It wasn’t difficult to locate and talk to those who were prospering during what was a legitimate catastrophe. It’s never all or nothing. Rather, the issue [...]

Doubleplusgood Boom

By |2018-04-30T18:09:11-04:00April 30th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In 1967, the US Personal Savings Rate averaged just a little more than 12%. That was pretty consistent with consumer behavior observed throughout the decades before, and the one that followed. What that meant, in terms of economic theory, was that if you as a central bank intended to accelerate the economy via the manipulation of expectations you at least [...]

Questions Not of Success, But of the Effectiveness of Illusion

By |2018-03-06T11:54:09-05:00March 6th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Last week, Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda unleashed a mini-controversy with remarks he now claims were taken somewhat out of context. On March 2, speaking before Japan’s parliament, the central banker sure sounded quite confident: Right now, the members of the policy board and I think that prices will move to reach 2 percent in around fiscal 2019. So [...]

It’s Q1 Again, Do You Know Where Consumer Spending Is?

By |2018-03-01T16:24:34-05:00March 1st, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Residual seasonality isn’t a residual, but it is seasonal. The concept was introduced several years ago mostly because Economists were finally being embarrassed about their meteorological predilections. It had become common, far too common, to blame snow, cold, and general wintry like conditions during the winter. Thus, something else had to be brought forward to explain why what looked like [...]

The Outer Limits of Sentiment

By |2018-01-29T11:58:32-05:00January 29th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Of all the moving parts contradicting the narrative of the growing economic boom, it’s incomes that will do it the most disservice. After all, there can be no such thing without them. Until our future robot AI overlords finally descend to either free humanity from labor, or eliminate us altogether, the economy still runs on the basic capitalist premise of [...]

Incomes Are What Matters, So Bad Month, Bad Year, Bad Decade

By |2017-09-29T11:52:04-04:00September 29th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Sometimes economics can be complicated, such as why the labor market has slowed in such lingering fashion since early 2015. Sometimes economics can be easy, such as why there is so much less to the economy this year than thought. The easy part relates to the hard part. The labor market slowed and so did national income. Though so much [...]

Missing Income

By |2017-07-03T12:21:17-04:00July 3rd, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With inflation tailing off as oil price base effects fade, statistics that turn nominal into real terms will start looking better. Real Disposable Personal Income per Capita, for example, increased in May 2017 at a faster rate than in January. The difference, however, isn’t all that much. The CPI in January was 2.50% and 1.87% in May, but Real DPI [...]

Fading Further and Further Back Toward 2016

By |2017-06-20T18:41:01-04:00June 20th, 2017|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Earlier this month, the BEA estimated that Disposable Personal Income in the US was $14.4 trillion (SAAR) for April 2017. If the unemployment rate were truly 4.3% as the BLS says, there is no way DPI would be anywhere near to that low level. It would instead total closer to the pre-crisis baseline which in April would have been $19.0 [...]

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