Inquiring minds are reading the Philadelphia Fed June Business Outlook Survey for clues on the economy.
The survey’s broadest measure of manufacturing
conditions, the diffusion index of current activity, decreased notably from a
reading of 21.4 in May to 8.0 in June. The index, which had edged higher for
four consecutive months, fell back to its lowest reading in 10 months.
Until this month, firms’ responses had been suggesting that labor
market conditions were improving, but indexes for current employment and work
hours were both slightly negative. For the first time in seven months, more
firms reported a decrease in employment (18 percent) than reported an
increase (17 percent). The largest percentage (62 percent), however, reported
steady employment levels. The workweek index also declined into negative
territory, its first negative reading in eight months.
Firms Report Reduced Cost Pressures
Nineteen percent of firms reported higher input prices this month, down
significantly from 39 percent last month. The prices paid index decreased 26
points but remains positive, now at 10.0. On balance, firms reported declines
in their own manufactured goods — slightly more firms reported
decreases in their prices (15 percent) than reported increases (9 percent).
The largest percentage, 71 percent, reported no change in the prices of their
manufactured goods. The prices received index fell 10 points, to ‐6.5, its
lowest reading in nine months.
Current Conditions vs. Expectations
click on chart for sharper image
While current conditions have deteriorated rapidly, expectations six months
from now are generally higher. One of these sets of numbers is wrong and my
belief is expectations are way optimistic and business activity has at best
stalled and more likely will soon be contracting.
Economic headwinds are enormous as noted in Fed Ponders What To Do If Recovery Fails.
Risks to Growth All on Downside
The reality is reflation has already failed and other than unsustainable
government spending (and massive increases in public debt), the US economy would
still be in recession.
Looking ahead, the risks to growth are all on the downside. Here are some of
them.
·
China overheats and has to step on the economic
brakes
·
Spain or Italy need Euro bailouts
· Property bubbles in China, Canada, Australia pop.
·
Austerity measures throw the Eurozone back in
recession
·
Huge public worker layoffs in the US
·
US housing demand weakens further, housing prices
slip, construction dips, and inventory rises from already high levels
· US unemployment
starts to rise
· UK heads bank in
recession
·
Congress starts huge trade wars with China by
labeling China a currency manipulator and employs large punitive tariffs
I expect everyone of those to happen with the possible exception of labeling
China a currency manipulator. Thus, this is not a case of what the Fed will
do "if" the recovery fails, but rather what the Fed will do
"when" the recovery fails.
Bear in mind that the only semblance of economic recovery is from government
spending, nearly all of it wasted or taking from future demand, thus the
reflation efforts have already failed.
Finally, given an expected dramatic shift in Congress this November coupled
with increasing worry over deficits and public anger over bailouts to date,
reflation round two will play out much differently than did round one.
Mish
GlobalEconomicAnalysis.blogspot.com
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Mish's
Global Economic Trend Analysis
Thoughts on the great
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silver, currencies, interest rates, and policy decisions that affect the
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