Daily Archives: August 18, 2006

SUMMER HAZE

In a perfect world, the writing on the economic wall would be clear and concise. But as any student of the dismal science knows, we instead live in an alternative universe where trends are fuzzy, data is suspect, and stuff happens that degrades the value of otherwise reasonable analysis. Welcome, in short, to reality.
Reality, it seems to us, continues to be on display in all its exasperating shades of gray this year, and yesterday’s batch of economic releases continued in that vein. Let’s begin with the Conference Board’s leading economic indicators for July, which fell 0.1% last month. “The leading index has decreased in four of the last six months and the leading index has fallen below its most recent high reached in January,” the Conference Board explained in a press release. For the year through July, the leading indicator is down by 0.7%. “At the same time, real GDP grew at a 2.5 percent annual rate in the second quarter, following a 5.6 percent gain in the first quarter,” the press release observed. “The behavior of the leading index so far suggests that slow to moderate economic growth should continue in the second half of the year.”
That will cheer the Fed, which is currently staking its prestige on an economy that will moderate enough to take the edge off inflation but without creating a recession.
In fact, there’s an even split in trend among the ten factors that comprise the Conference Board’s leading indicator. By this metric, the economy is teetering, but which way it falls remains to be seen. Five of the factors rose last month, and five fell, allowing optimists and pessimists more than a little fodder for battling over what it all means. Consider the positive contributors, starting with the largest gainer, followed by those in descending order of import:
1. average weekly manufacturing hours
2. vendor performance
3. stock prices
4. index of consumer expectations
5. manufacturers’ new orders for consumer goods and materials.
In contrast, the negative contributors to the leading index, beginning with the largest negative contributor:
1. building permits
2. average weekly initial claims for unemployment insurance
3. interest rate spread
4. manufacturers’ new orders for nondefense capital goods
5. and real money supply
Deciding if one trumps the other, or if one side cancels the impact from the other, is the debate du jour. But for those who see the potential for more than a mild slowdown, yesterday’s update on weekly claims for jobless benefits suggests that there may be more strength in the economy than the leading index suggests.

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