recession

Unbreaking Okun

By |2016-03-18T12:56:31-04:00March 18th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There was a robust debate inside economics earlier in the recovery period over Okun’s “Law”, the seemingly stable relationship between the unemployment rate and real GDP. The Great Recession was stunningly large in terms of the skyrocketing unemployment rate given that initial estimates for real GDP were bad but not as catastrophic. This was more than a theoretical problem for [...]

No Rate Hikes Because FOMC’s Models Don’t Even Believe the Unemployment Rate

By |2016-03-16T18:39:44-04:00March 16th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If there is any doubt as to the confusion inside the FOMC, one needs only to examine its models. The latest updated projections make a full mockery of both monetary policy and the theory that guides it. Ferbus and the rest don’t buy the labor market story, either, which is why the Fed can only be hesitant at best about [...]

Industrial Production Drops For A Fourth Straight Month

By |2016-03-16T16:17:43-04:00March 16th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

US Industrial Production contracted for the fourth consecutive month in February, falling 1.03% year-over-year. It was the third drop of more than 1% in those four months, leaving the 6-month average now at -0.57%. A single month of -1% is usually associated with recession, let alone three of the past four and a negative six-month average. Except for one four-month [...]

Bubble Cycle Inefficiency And Valuations

By |2016-03-15T17:32:57-04:00March 15th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Last week the Federal Reserve updated its quarterly Financial Accounts of the United States Z1 (formerly Flow of Funds) meaning that we can recheck valuation levels of the stock bubble from alternate points of view (data). The most common valuation given by the report is Tobin’s Q which compares the estimated value of corporate equities (liability) to nonfinancial corporate business [...]

The Inventory Deepens

By |2016-03-15T12:53:39-04:00March 15th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Unlike retail sales in January, wholesale sales won’t need revisions to become highly negative in either the seasonal or unadjusted versions. On a seasonally-adjusted basis, wholesale sales declined rather sharply in January (-1.35% M/M), the fourth consecutive decline, sixth out of the past seven months and making fourteen of the past eighteen since all this began. On an unadjusted basis, [...]

The Actual Direction of Sales

By |2016-03-15T11:42:37-04:00March 15th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It is increasingly difficult to account for the estimates provided by various statistical agencies when there is no consistency not just with other non-governmental series but within each. The latest retail sales report has nothing in common with anything including itself. The mess features major revisions for the prior two months that simply leave the calendar as demarcation. Unadjusted retail [...]

Still Slowing In China

By |2016-03-14T15:42:37-04:00March 14th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Industrial production for the combined January/February period in China fell to just 5.4%, matching the lowest growth rate of the past fourteen years. Only the January/February 2002 IP rate was lower, but that was a single data point giving way to the rising financialization of the late eurodollar period. In 2016, these decelerations are commonplace, determined, and have no end [...]

Now We Know Why the ECB Panicked

By |2016-03-10T16:18:32-05:00March 10th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The only immediate silver lining may be in the end the most fruitful of long-term prospects. Central bankers have done us a profound favor by overplaying their hand time and again. The catalog of false statements and expectations is long and getting longer. The ECB then assured “us” that this was different and that the LTRO’s, massive as they were, [...]

Earnings Follow Recession, Stock Prices Still On Yellen’s Version

By |2016-03-08T16:35:20-05:00March 8th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

Just a few weeks ago FactSet was reporting analysts’ estimates for Q1 2016 EPS were looking to be a 6.9% decline year-over-year. Their latest update now suggests -8.0%, as the deterioration in earnings outlook is becoming the most significant part of the trend. During the first two months of Q1 2016, analysts lowered earnings estimates for companies in the S&P [...]

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