All posts by joel

August Housing Starts and Permits and Jobless Claims

KEY DATA: Starts: -14.4%; 1-Family: -2.4%; Permits: -5.4%; 1-Family: -0.8%/Claims: 280,000 (down 36,000)

IN A NUTSHELL:   “Home construction keeps bouncing around but with builder confidence soaring, it is likely the August slump will be followed by a September surge.”

WHAT IT MEANS:  Housing starts cratered in August but the Alfred E. Neuman in me holds strong: I am not worried.  July’s level was revised up to the highest rate in nearly seven years.  A 31.5% decline in buildings of five units or more was the major reason for the August drop and this component is extremely volatile.  For the first eight months of the year, starts are up by nearly nine percent, keeping up hopes that we could see another double-digit rise in construction activity.  I think that is likely for two reasons.  First, permits are still running above starts.  That points to an acceleration in construction.  Second, the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index surged in August to its highest level since November 2005.  Builders can get irrationally exuberant at times, but that is usually when construction activity is surging.  So look for a rebound when the September numbers come out.

With the Fed still focusing on labor, the sharp drop in the weekly jobless claims number was eye opening.  We are about as low as can be expected.  Don’t be surprised if this number soars soon.  The closing of three casinos in Atlantic City will likely mess up the data for a short time.   Also, the Philadelphia Fed’s Business Outlook Survey showed that activity grew at a somewhat slower pace in September.   Nevertheless, orders were strong, backlogs grew and hiring jumped.  Those details point to continued strength in the manufacturing sector.

MARKETS AND FED POLICY IMPLICATIONS: Housing continues to improve even if the gains are inconsistent.  Builders are a pretty confident bunch and that can only be because they are seeing activity pick up.  Thus, the fall off in construction activity should not be viewed as any sign of weakness.  With the labor market tightening, Janet Yellen may be repeating her point that if the data are stronger than expected, the Fed is prepared to act sooner than whatever the term “extended period” means.  Indeed, if housing starts do bounce back and manufacturing continues to grow strongly, that is precisely what the Fed will have to do.  Regardless, investors may be a bit confused by the inconsistencies of these numbers but that has never stopped them before.

A further thought on the Fed’s leaving in “extended period” in the statement.  Given her weird comments about the meaning of the phrase, that it was not calendar based but data based, I can only conclude that the Fed members would like to remove the words but only when they think the markets will not overreact.  They don’t want another 100 basis point gap up in rates.  I suspect that as soon as there are consistently robust job gains and the unemployment rate drops below 6%, which could happen by the end of the year, the phrase will be removed.  December is my guess.

Sept 16-17 ‘04 FOMC Meeting

In a Nutshell: “… a range of labor market indicators suggests that there remains significant underutilization of labor resources.”

Rate Decision: Fed funds rate maintained at a range between 0% and 0.25%

Quantitative Easing Decision: Bond purchases reduced by $10 billion to $15 billion.  Quantitative easing is expected to end at the next meeting.

One again, the FOMC and Janet Yellen tried to provide some clarity about how the monetary authorities will proceed with rate hikes when they eventually come.  And again, we did not get much that was new.

On the economic front, the economy continues to improve but there remains a significant amount of slack in the labor market.  That was Chair Yellen’s reason why wages are showing little change.  It is all about a tight labor market and the Fed doesn’t see that situation occurring soon.  As it does four times a year, the FOMC released the members’ forecasts for growth, inflation and unemployment rates. The central tendency of the forecasts puts full employment in the 5.2% to 5.5% range, which is not expected to be reached until sometime in late 2015 or early 2016.  However, the members are a bit more optimistic about pace of decline in the unemployment rate.

As for when the Fed might tighten, those who thought that the FOMC might signal that rates could rise sooner rather than later were disappointed.  The Fed Chair made it clear that she was in no hurry to raise rates.  But she also noted that the decision is not “calendar driven” but is “data driven”.  The hawks are not making very much inroads into Fed policy.

Finally, the Committee went over procedures for normalizing policy.  One new thing was that the FOMC would be targeting rate ranges rather than a given rate.  That may be reflection of the concern that transitioning to a normal Fed policy and a normal Fed balance sheet will likely have some bumps in the process.  It would be amazing if the Fed pulls off the normalization process without any hiccups.

So what should we make of all this?  Janet Yellen is firmly in command at the Fed and we should stop doubting it.  She is a dove and until the data make her think differently, she will run monetary policy accordingly.

But I have some issues with the Fed’s forecast.  The unemployment rate has declined by about 0.7 percentage point for the past three years yet the members think the decline will slow sharply starting in 2015 and only edge down in 2016 and 2017.  Yet growth is expected to be a lot stronger over the next two years than it had been.  This doesn’t seem to be consistent.  But it is necessary for the members to argue that the funds rate will not be increased soon and will not be raised quickly, which they seem to be indicating.

August Industrial Production

KEY DATA: IP: -0.1%; Manufacturing: -0.4%; Vehicles: -7.6%

IN A NUTSHELL:   “If you believe that vehicle production is crashing, I have a bridge for sale and you can buy as much of it as you like.”

WHAT IT MEANS:  One of my more common warnings is that the headline number hides what is truly going on and the devil is in the details.  Well, welcome to the August industrial production report.  Output fell in August for the first time since January, and we know what the weather did to everything that month.  Worse, manufacturing production was down sharply.  So, has the industrial sector finally come to a grinding halt?  Yeah, right.  The biggest decline was in vehicles, where assembly rates dropped by nearly 12%.  Of course, the pace of new vehicle construction had surged by almost 13% in July, highlighting the problem with seasonal adjustments when trends change.  The important point is that vehicle sales in August hit their highest level in 8½ years, so output is likely to expand further.  It is clearly not shrinking.  Indeed, the 3-month assembly rate average was the highest since early 2006, when the housing bubble was funding everything that moved and didn’t move.  Meanwhile, the rest of the economy was doing just fine.  Production of high tech products, consumer products, business equipment and business and construction supplies were all up. 

Adding to the belief that the manufacturing sector is in great shape was the September Empire State Manufacturing Survey, a product of the New York Federal Reserve Bank.   The index hit its highest level in almost five years as new orders surged, hiring jumped and backlogs built.  Enough said.

MARKETS AND FED POLICY IMPLICATIONS:  It is sometimes good to get a headline that is so obviously misleading as today’s industrial production number.  It is not that the data are wrong; it is just that sometimes the marquee number is not reflective of what is actually going on.  The data are often volatile and the seasonal adjustments sometimes don’t work right if conditions change.  That was true with today’s industrial production decline and was likely the case with the weak August employment report.  Basically, the manufacturing sector is strong and should continue to lead the way.  The FOMC starts its 2-day meeting tomorrow and on Wednesday Janet Yellen will hold a press conference.  I expect the statement and the discussion to focus on changing the thinking from rates staying low an extended period to the strategy that the data will drive decisions.  If the numbers are stronger than projected, the Fed will be prepared to move sooner than expected.  This report changes nothing and investors will have to start getting used to the reality that the Fed is going to raise rates, most likely during the first half of next year.

August Retail Sales and Import Prices

WHAT IT MEANS:  The missing link in this economy is strong household consumption.  It’s hard to buy more when your pay is barely keeping up with inflation.  But wage gains are slowly improving and with so many more people working, income is growing.  The added funds are being spent on just about everything.  Retail sales jumped in August, led by a surge in vehicle sales.  With the vehicle sales pace of 17.4 million units being the highest in over eight years, that was hardly a surprise.  But even when you exclude vehicles, consumers were pretty frisky.  Demand for furniture, appliances and electronics, sporting goods, home building supplies, medical products and clothing were all up.  We even went out to eat again.  The only weak links were department stores and gasoline stations.  The decline in gasoline purchases was probably due to the sharp drop in prices, not a fall off in purchases, as these data is not inflation-adjusted.  All this came on top of an upward revision to July sales.

Household spending power is not likely to be eroded very much by inflation.  Import prices dropped sharply in August as fuel costs cratered.  Excluded energy, prices rose just a little, with only vehicles showing a gain, though that was minimal.  The only real trouble spot is manufactured food import costs, which continue to surge.  As for exports, U.S. firms are also getting less for their products with the farm sector once again suffering sharp drops in its goods.

MARKETS AND FED POLICY IMPLICATIONS: The second quarter is setting up to be pretty good.  Consumers are spending again and not just on vehicles.  Right now they are being helped by the drop in gasoline costs, which is leaving a lot more money in their wallets.  Indeed, low inflation is has kept consumption from largely disappearing and with import prices essentially going nowhere, minimal inflation pressures are likely to continue.  Once we get better wage gains, spending could really surge.  The Fed generally treats energy costs as an indicator of consumer spending, not inflation and it looks like the downward trend in prices and the upward trend in household spending should continue.  Since it is all about a tightening labor market and the potential for rising wages, this report should buoy the spirits of the inflation hawks who worry that the Fed is waiting too long to start raising rates.  The FOMC meets next week and the pressure is building for the statement to drop the words “extended period” when describing how long rates will be kept low.  That would provide the flexibility to start tightening sooner than expected.  I suspect that will happen, since the public discussion about doing that has largely taken away any shock that would occur if the statement actually drops that language.  As for investors, it is the usual: Does good economic news trump rising rates?  Who know what side of that coin comes up on any given day?