Personal income and spending jumped in September, offering an encouraging reversal from August’s sluggish pace. The revival was particularly strong for consumer spending. The numbers aren’t all that surprising in light of yesterday’s mildly upbeat GDP report for the third quarter. Surprising or not, today’s spending and income numbers reconfirm the statistical case for arguing that there was no sign of a recession in Q3. Deciding what happens in Q4 is guesswork, of course, but there seems to be a bit of momentum in the macro numbers these days and so a bit of optimism is the new new thing again… at least for the weekend.
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Jobless Claims: Still Going Nowhere Fast
Initial jobless claims slipped by a mere 2,000 last week to a seasonally adjusted 402,000. This leading indicator seems to be telling us that the economy can avoid a new recession–maybe–but that’s about as far as the good news goes.
US Economy Grew 2.5% In Third Quarter
The economy continues to struggle and recession risk is elevated, but today’s official estimate of third-quarter GDP shows that the economy didn’t surrender to contraction in the last three months. That may change, but for now the recession talk is on the defensive.
The Forecast File: US Q3 GDP
GDP Growth Rate May Run Out of Steam
The Wall Street Journal | Oct 27
The Commerce Department will release its first estimate of third-quarter U.S. gross-domestic-product growth Thursday. Economists expect GDP in real terms to expand at about a 2.7% seasonally adjusted annualized pace, helped by a rebound in auto production after Japan-related shutdowns this year. This would be an improvement from the economy’s average 0.9% growth rate in the first half of the year.
Brooklyn Bound
I’m heading off to the NAPFA Practice Management & Investments Conference at the Brooklyn Marriott. I’m the luncheon speaker tomorrow (Wed). The topic: asset allocation. Strategy chatter on a full stomach. Is that wise? We’ll see. In any case, blogging will go dark for the next day or so, with a resumption of the usual fare on Thursday.
Meanwhile, I see that today’s S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices were up in August. “We see a modest glimmer of hope with these data,” David Blitzer of S&P said via the press release.
Hayek’s Solution
There’s no shortage of worrisome trends on the macro stage, but perhaps the most troubling is the trend in real (inflation-adjusted) hourly earnings and personal consumption expenditures. Both have been falling persistently on a year-over-year basis. Some economists see this as a dark sign for the business cycle. It’s also a test of Hayek’s idea that falling wages will plant the seeds of economic recovery. By that standard, macro salvation is coming.
Another Look At The Stock Market & The Business Cycle?
The stock market’s annual performance is comfortably in the black again. After a brief slump into negative territory on a year-over-year price basis in late-September and early October, the S&P 500 is higher by 4.9% through Oct. 21. Is that a sign that the economy will keep growing? History offers some evidence for responding with a cautious “yes.”
A Precarious Optimism For Q3 GDP
Worries about a new recession have been on a roll over the past month, but some forecasters are having second thoughts. “The U.S. economy probably grew in the third quarter at the fastest pace this year, easing anxiety that the recovery was on the verge of stalling, economists said before a report this week.” Bloomberg reports. “Gross domestic product, the value of all goods and services produced, rose at a 2.5 percent annual rate after advancing 1.3 percent in the previous three months, according to the median forecast of 68 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News before the Commerce Department’s Oct. 27 release. Orders for business equipment rose in September and new-home sales stabilized, other data may show.”
Book Bits For Saturday: 10.22.2011
● The Vigilant Investor: A Former SEC Enforcer Reveals How to Fraud-Proof Your Investments
By Pat Huddleston
Interview with author via Financial Impact Factor Radio
Today on the Financial Impact Factor Radio we had Pat Huddleston, author of “The Vigilant Investor: A Former SEC Enforcer Reveals How to Fraud-Proof Your Investments“, lawyer and CEO of Investors Watchdog LLC. As a former SEC Enforcer, he has seen more scams than you could imagine. With his new book, he takes those stories and the effect it has had on the victims and gives us the ultimate tell-all on how to spot what the people we may trust are actually doing – often right under our noses.
Strategic Briefing | 10.21.2011 | US Leading Indicators
September Leading Economic Index
Conference Board | Oct 20
The Conference Board Leading Economic Index (LEI) for the U.S. increased 0.2 percent in September to 116.4 (2004 = 100), following a 0.3 percent increase in August, and a 0.6 percent increase in July. Says Ataman Ozyildirim, economist at The Conference Board: “September data shows moderating growth in both the LEI and the CEI. The weaknesses among the leading indicator components have become slightly more widespread in September. Moreover, the CEI suggests current economic conditions have been slow, with weak gains in all four components over the past six months. The slow pace in the LEI suggests a growing chance that this sluggish economy is going to be here for a while.”