Summary: Today we look at the latest economic data, drawing an important conclusion — listening to doomsters leads to mistakes. You’ll learn little from them, and can never recover those lost minutes of your life. The economic picture remains mixed. I forecast slowing with some chance of confusion. A recession looms in the distance, still beyond our sight but too close to ignore. {2nd post of 2 today.}
Contents
- Fearful World Trade numbers?
- Another day, another Fed survey
- Are new homes crashing down on us?
- A blizzard of PMIs
- One Indicator to rule them all
- Conclusions
- For More Information
(1) Fearful World Trade numbers?
(2) Another day, another regional Fed survey
Looking at individual regional Fed surveys guarantees confusion. As we see at ZeroHedge: “Richmond Fed Manufacturing Survey Collapses To 2-Year Lows.” Yes, but that’s hardly pants-wetting data.
(3) Are new homes crashing down on us?
ZeroHedge goes into full denial mode: “New Home Sales Data Goes Full Retard With Report Frozen Northeast Saw 153% Surge.” Closing your eyes to contrary economic data works as well as it does on the highway. See the report for yourself.
(4) A blizzard of numbers from the world’s purchasing managers
Markit conducts surveys of the world’s purchasing managers, generating a monthly blizzard of usually confusing numbers. Careful selection produces clickbait heaven of confusing news headlines. Just today we got “U.S. Manufacturing PMI hits five-month high in March“, prompting the ZH spin “US Manufacturing PMI ‘Survey’ Defies Every Hard Data Print In Last 7 Weeks, Jumps To 5-Month Highs.” Plus “Eurozone growth gathers momentum as PMI nears four-year high“, “Operating conditions deteriorate slightly in March” (to an 11 month low), and Japan’s “Production growth slows to weakest since October 2014.” My take on all this: it nets out to small change.
(5) One Indicator to rule them all
There is none. But here’s my favorite global activity indicator, balancing reliability and timeliness: the OECD’s Composite Leading Indicator. The March graph: not too exciting, not too bad (see the report for regional and national trends). That sums it up, a picture contrary to that painted by both the doomsters and the permabulls.
(6) Conclusion
There are signs of slowing in the US, Japan, and China — offset by stronger growth in Europe. It adds up to continued steady slow growth, which is nothing to cry about. It provides little cushion not just against the inevitable shocks but also risks slowdowns below “stall speed” becoming recessions. With so many governments already running moderate to strong stimulus programs, fighting a downturn might prove difficult — unless, as I expect, they go full unconventional. We’re already in a new world — seen in the widespread zero interest rates and some negative rates. A recession would take us decisively and irrevocably into a new economic regime. What might that look like? That’s a subject for another day.
(7) For More Information
If you liked this post, like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter. See all posts about economics, monetary policy, and stimulus programs. Of special interest are these about the state of the economy:
- Dreams of a boom fade & attention turns to secular stagnation.
- How close are we to the next recession? — More indicators.
- Status report on the US economy: darkening sky, rough waves ahead.
- Highlights of the jobs report, the good news & the bad.
- New economic data only deepens the mystery.
- Updating the recession watch; & what might the government do to fight a slowdown?
