Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty and newly minted Presidential candidate thinks that a new recession is coming. He’s right, of course. There’s always a new recession coming. There have been 33 economic contractions in the U.S. since the mid-1800s, according to NBER, and it’s a safe bet that number 34 is waiting in the wings. As Richard Fisher, president of the Dallas Fed, recently remarked: “I devoutly hope our next downturn won’t come for quite some time, but it surely will come eventually.”
ADP: Private Nonfarm Payrolls Rise In March
U.S. private sector employment rose by a net 201,000 (seasonally adjusted) last month, according to this morning’s release of the ADP Employment Report. That’s slightly down from February’s 208,000 gain, although the message is clear: job growth rolls on, albeit at modest levels relative to what the economy needs to bring about a large and relatively quick drop in the still-elevated jobless rate.
Treasury Market’s Inflation Forecast: 2.5%
The Treasury market’s inflation forecast has recently risen to the levels that prevailed before Lehman Brothers collapsed in September 2008, which triggered a financial crisis and fears of a deflationary spiral. Using the yield spread between the nominal and inflation-indexed 10-year Treasuries, the market’s outlook has come full circle since the dark days of late-2008.
Bound For Boston…
Blogging will be light to nonexistent for a day or so as I head up to Boston to chat about asset allocation at tomorrow’s World Series of ETFs and Indexing.
Consumer Spending & Income Rise In February As Inflation Bubbles
Personal income and spending rose again last month, the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis reports, although the numbers are tainted somewhat by the fact that inflation ticked up as well.
Housing Will Recover. But When?
What passes for optimism on the housing market these days is a pale reflection of the glory days of five years ago. “Housing is dead,” writes MarketWatch’s Rex Nutting. “There is no doubt about that. Housing is as dead as a door nail.” The good news, such as it is, is that “housing is just too small to do any real damage to the economy any more,” he adds. Perhaps, but housing’s not likely to help any time soon either.
Book Bits For Saturday: 3.26.2011
● Future Babble: Why Expert Predictions Are Next to Worthless, and You Can Do Better
By Dan Gardner
Review via New York Times Book Review
What does the future hold? To answer that question, human beings have looked to stars and to dreams; to cards, dice and the Delphic oracle; to animal entrails, Alan Greenspan, mathematical models, the palms of our hands. As the number and variety of these soothsaying techniques suggest, we have a deep, probably intrinsic desire to know the future. Unfortunately for us, the future is deeply, intrinsically unknowable. This is the problem Dan Gardner tackles in “Future Babble.”
Q4 GDP Growth Revised Up To 3.1% Pace
The U.S. economy grew at a 3.1% real annual rate in last year’s fourth-quarter, the government reports in its third and final estimate for Q4 GDP. That’s up from the previously reported 2.8% pace. For all of last year, the economy expanded by 2.9%.
Strategic Briefing | 3.25.2011 | Inflation & Oil Prices
Another year of living dangerously
The Economist | Mar 24
Even as higher oil prices and hobbled Japanese production reduce growth they add to mounting inflation risks (Britain is now fretting over inflation of 4.4%). But most rich-world economies have ample economic slack, and in several countries fiscal tightening will tug at recovery. Britain’s coalition government has reaffirmed its commitment to austerity with this week’s budget (see article), and America has begun to cut spending. Both the Bank of England and the Federal Reserve should resist the temptation to tighten soon. The European Central Bank seems intent on raising interest rates next month. That would be a mistake. In the euro zone underlying inflation and wage growth are both subdued and inflation expectations are under control. By raising rates the ECB would strengthen the euro and frustrate the efforts of countries like Greece, Ireland and—the next in line for bailing out—Portugal to grow their way out of their debts. There is only so much economic policymakers can do about crises that spring from war or nature. In this case, the priority should be not making matters worse.
Durable Goods Unexpectedly Fall In February
Orders for durable goods, a leading indicator of economic activity, fell 0.9% last month on a seasonally adjusted basis, the Census Bureau reports. The decrease follows a strong 3.6% gain in January. Economists were expecting a gain. Monthly data is volatile, however, and so it’s not clear if there’s something more ominous afoot.