Archive for the ‘Leading Indicators’ Category

US Leading Economic Index Preview

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

The July US Leading Economic Index(LEI) is expected to fall 0.2% following a 0.1% decrease in June and a 0.2% decrease in May. The July LEI was down 2.1% year-over-year and was down 1.7% on a 6month annualized basis. The June Coincident Index was up 0.1% in June following a 0.1% decrease in May and the June Lagging Index was down 0.3% in June following a 0.2% drop in May.

Positive contributions to the July LEI include:

• Improvement in the 10yr Treasury relative to Fed funds. The 10yr yield fell to 4.095 early in July before improving to 4.33% later in the month.
• Improved UofM Confidence data. The UofM Confidence survey bounced off an all time low in June, and though still generally negative will help boost July LEI.

Negative contributions to the July LEI include:

• Declines in equity markets. The S&P cash index was dropped nearly 5% in July.
• Higher initial jobless claims. Initial jobless claims grew to 449k during the last week of July from 348k during the first week of the month.
• Fewer building permits. July building permits fell to 937k from an upwardly revised 1.138mln in June.

Other Index components expected to have limited impact on July LEI include:

• ISM supplier deliveries which were unchanged at 55.1 in July
• Roughly unchanged factory workweek
• Nearly unchanged Consumer Goods Orders
• Nearly unchanged M2 money supply
• Slight improvement in real non-durable consumer goods orders

US Mortgage Applications Composite Index Up 2.8% In Aug 1 Week

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

JUNE US LEADING INDICATORS DOWN 0.1%, COINCIDENT UP 0.1%, LAGGING DOWN 0.3%

Monday, July 21st, 2008

The Conference Board said today that its Composite Index of Leading Economic Indicators fell 0.1% in June, matching expectations and following a downwardly revised 0.2% drop in May (previously reported as a 0.1% rise).

June’s decline was driven by falling stock prices, weekly jobless claims, and real money supply, and weakness among the leading indicators continues to be widespread, the Board said.

May’s number was revised lower due to revisions in the manufacturing sector’s average work week and new orders for consumer goods, the Board said.

Meanwhile, the June Coincident Index rose 0.1% after falling 0.1% in May, while the Lagging Index dropped 0.3% following a 0.2% drop prior.

“The domestic economy is showing no sign of strength,” said Conference Board labor economist Ken Goldstein. “The Leading Index has started to signal slow growth since last spring, and the Coincident Index has been flat to declining since last fall.

“The deep financial crisis, a prolonged, intense slump in housing, high gasoline and food prices, and weak consumer confidence and a weak dollar are all combining to produce unrelenting downward pressure on economic activity,” Goldstein said. “This is also why it wouldn’t take much to push the economy so that it’s even weaker in [H2].”

June Leading Economic Index Preview

Monday, July 21st, 2008

The June US Leading Economic Index is expected to fall 0.1% in June after gaining 0.1% in May. The Leading Index in May was down 1.8% on a y-o-y basis and down 1.4% on an annualized basis. The Coincident Index grew 0.1% in May after falling 0.1% in April and the Lagging Index gained 0.2% in May following a flat reading in April.

A roughly balanced mix of positive and negative factors are expected to produce a muted index reading for a 4th consecutive month but is still expected to reveal its first decline since February. However, the eye-popping and somewhat conspicuous increase in June permits poses upside risk to the June index.

Improvements are expected in the following index components:

* Building permits will provide the most support for the index after gaining 11.6% in June;
* The increase in the spread between the 10yr and the 2% Fed funds rate over the period;
* The increase in the ISM June Deliveries Index from 53.7 to 55.1.

Declines are expected in the following components:

* Steep declines in the real M2 money supply (physical currency, bank deposits under 100k);
* Declines in the S&P 500 index;
* Increase in jobless claims;
* Decrease in average weekly manufacturing hours;
* Further declines in UofM Consumer Confidence;
* Marginal declines in consumer goods orders and non-durable consumer goods orders

June Leading Economic Index Preview

Friday, July 18th, 2008

The June US Leading Economic Index is expected to fall 0.1% in June after gaining 0.1% in May. The Leading Index in May was down 1.8% on a y-o-y basis and down 1.4% on an annualized basis. The Coincident Index grew 0.1% in May after falling 0.1% in April and the Lagging Index gained 0.2% in May following a flat reading in April.

A roughly balanced mix of positive and negative factors are expected to produce a muted index reading for a 4th consecutive month but is still expected to reveal its first decline since February. However, the eye-popping and somewhat conspicuous increase in June permits poses upside risk to the June index.

Improvements are expected in the following index components:

* Building permits will provide the most support for the index after gaining 11.6% in June;
* The increase in the spread between the 10yr and the 2% Fed funds rate over the period;
* The increase in the ISM June Deliveries Index from 53.7 to 55.1.

Declines are expected in the following components:

* Steep declines in the real M2 money supply (physical currency, bank deposits under 100k);
* Declines in the S&P 500 index;
* Increase in jobless claims;
* Decrease in average weekly manufacturing hours;
* Further declines in UofM Consumer Confidence;
* Marginal declines in consumer goods orders and non-durable consumer goods orders

MAY LEADING ECONOMIC INDICATORS UP 0.1%

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

The Conference Board said today that the composite index of leading indicators rose 0.1% in May after an unrevised 0.1% increase in April and no change in March.

The coincident index rose 0.1% after a 0.1% decline in April. The lagging index rose 0.2% following no change the prior month.

The board said the US economy is very weak heading into the summer, with gas and utility bills possibly heading even higher,” said labor economist Ken Goldstein. “But latest data suggest the economy has not fallen into a contraction and may not undergo one in the 2nd half of this year. In fact, the economy might even begin to turn a corner early next year.”

May Leading Economic Indicators Preview

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

The May US Leading Economic Index is expected to be unchanged after a 0.1% increase in April. The 6-month annualized average for the LEI was down 2.3% in April, but better than the -3.4% reading in March and below the -4.5% recession threshold. The LEI was down 1.8% y-o-y in April.

The Coincident Index was unchanged in April and the Lagging Index gained 0.1%.

Potential Additions to the May LEI include:
* Widening of the 10yr-Fed Funds spread
* Gains in the S&P 500

Likely subtractions to the index include:
* Decreased M2 money supply
* Worst Michigan Consumer Confidence number since May-80
* Slightly higher Initial Jobless Claims
* Slowdown in Building Permits
* Lower ISM supplier deliveries

Since the formula to calculate LEI changes so frequently, it is better at at confirming past downturns than predicting future ones.

May Leading Economic Indicators Preview

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

The May US Leading Economic Index is expected to be unchanged after a 0.1% increase in April. The 6-month annualized average for the LEI was down 2.3% in April, but better than the -3.4% reading in March and below the -4.5% recession threshold. The LEI was down 1.8% y-o-y in April.

The Coincident Index was unchanged in April and the Lagging Index gained 0.1%.

Potential Additions to the May LEI include:
* Widening of the 10yr-Fed Funds spread
* Gains in the S&P 500

Likely subtractions to the index include:
* Decreased M2 money supply
* Worst Michigan Consumer Confidence number since May-80
* Slightly higher Initial Jobless Claims
* Slowdown in Building Permits
* Lower ISM supplier deliveries

Since the formula to calculate LEI changes so frequently, it is better at at confirming past downturns than predicting future ones.

Apr. Leading Economic Indicators Up 0.1%, Coincident Flat, Lagging Up 0.1%

Monday, May 19th, 2008

The Conference Board reports April Leaders were up 0.1% in April after a 0.1% gain in March and a 0.2% drop in February. The past 2 months’ gains come on the heels of 5 straight monthly losses on the Index. Conference Board Labor Economist Goldstein notes that while these data indicate a weak economy, they do not indicate a recession.

Stock prices, the interest rate spread and housing permits were positive for the Index this month while average weekly hours and consumer expectations were negative elements.

The Coincident Index was unchanged in April and March after a 0.3% decline in February. Indeed the Coincident Index has not been up in 8 months. Industrial Production and Employment declines were offset by gains in Personal Income and Real Manufacturing and Trade sales. The Coincident Index is down 0.7% on an annual in April.

The Conference Board notes some stabilization in the Leading Index but notes widespread weakness in the Coincident Index components. The Conference Board expects economic activity to remain weak in the near term.

Apr. Leading Economic Indicators Preview

Monday, May 19th, 2008

The Apr. US Leading Economic Index is expected at -0.1% following a 0.1% increase in Mar. The 6-month annualized average for the LEI was down 3.3% in Mar. and Feb. following a 4.5% decrease in Jan., which is considered the “recession threshold.” The LEI was down 2% y-o-y in Mar. after being down 1.7% y-o-y from Dec.-Feb.

The Coincident Index fell 0.1% in Mar. and is down 13.5% y-o-y. The Lagging Index gained 0.3% in Mar. and is up 2.8% y-o-y.

Potential Additions to the Apr. LEI include:

-Gains in the S&P 500
-Improvements in the 10yr yield relative to Fed Funds
-Increase in building permits
-Fewer Initial Jobless claims
-Improvement in ISM deliveries

Likely subtractions to the Index include:

-A decline factory workweek hours
-Atrocious Consumer confidence data

Downside risks to the Apr. LEI are expected to mitigate potential upsides and yield a flat index reading over the period.