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RISING TIDE OF GOOD NEWS
ISN’T LIFTING ALL ECONOMISTS
We’re looking at a “yes-but” economy.
Yes, many sectors are
improving steadily, but
the improvements are: a) Not as great as
analysts predicted; b) offset, or likely to be, by other
negatives; c) too fragile to be sustained; or some
combination of all of the above. Consider these
examples from recent business news reports:
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“The U.S. economy grew briskly in
the first quarter, but its pace was a little
weaker than originally thought.” |
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“Consumer anxiety [is easing],
but some fear, not for long.” |
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Home sales increased “but anyone
expecting a robust rebound will be sorely
disappointed.” |
It’s not hard to imagine these folks
telling friends who have just gotten big raises to
consider the risk that they could be fired. True
enough, but….
In fairness, the May employment numbers,
which just about everyone expected to end up
emphatically in the “yes” column, instead registered a
resounding “but.” Payrolls increased by 431,000 for the
month, but most of the increase (411,000) reflected the
hiring of temporary workers for the 2010 census.
Private sector employers added only 41,000 workers to
their payrolls – far short of the gains economists had
been predicting following the encouraging 218,000
increase in April.
“Hiring looks soft,”
Michael Feroli,
chief U.S.
economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co., told Bloomberg
News. “It does raise some red flags that businesses
are still pretty cautious.”
More Positive Indicators
The red flags continue to wave, despite
the positive indicators that have been accumulating
steadily since the beginning of the year. With the
exception of last week’s employment numbers, recent
economic reports have been mostly encouraging:
·
The nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
increased at an annual rate of 3.2 percent in the first
quarter, spurred by what an Associated Press report
described as “the biggest advance in consumer spending
in three years.” That spending increase – 3.5 percent –
nearly doubled the fourth quarter increase of 1.6
percent
·
After-tax corporate profits increased by
9.7 percent in the first quarter, up from 8.2 percent in
the final quarter of last year and nearly 43 percent
ahead in the year-over-year comparison.
·
The Federal Reserve, which has hardly
qualified as a Pollyanna of late, revised its growth
forecast for the year to between 3.2 percent and 3.7
percent, up from the 2.8 percent to 3.5 percent range
Fed economists were predicting in January. Still, Fed
Chairman Ben Bernanke has emphasized that unemployment
remains a major concern for policy makers and a
continuing drag on the pace of the economic recovery.
·
Durable goods orders increased by 2.9
percent in April, more than double the 1.3 percent gain
economists had predicted and the best showing for this
indicator in three months, providing further evidence
that the manufacturing recovery is gaining strength.
·
Factory orders registered their eighth
consecutive monthly increase, rising by 1.2 percent in
April after a 1.7 percent gain in March. “Business
investment remains healthy,” Sal Guatieri, a senior
economist at BMO Capital Markets, told Bloomberg.
“Business capital spending will continue to lead the
economy,” he predicts.
·
The Institute for Supply Management’s
(ISM’s) business barometer slipped a bit in May,
registering 59.7 compared with April’s 63.8
¾
a five-year high. Even so, the index remains well above
the 50 mark dividing contraction and expansion.
·
The service sector expanded for the fifth
consecutive month. The ISM’s index of non-manufacturing
business held steady at 55.4 in May, while the
non-manufacturing employment gauge climbed to 50.4 from
49.5, reaching its highest level since the recession
began. The business activity component of this index
climbed to 61.1 from 60.3 in April, representing a
four-year high.
·
Industrial production increased by 0.8
percent in April, according to the Commerce Department,
as factory output jumped by “a brisk” 1 percent and
business inventories increased by 0.4 percent, adding to
the 0.5 percent increase posted in February. “The
manufacturing recovery is getting more diffuse,” David
Heuther, chief economist for the National Association of
Manufacturers, said in a report. “It looks more durable
and deeper.”
Confidence Growing
The Conference Board’s Consumer
Confidence Index increased to 63.3 in May from 57.7 in
April, beating all estimates to reach the highest level
in two years. Consumers became much more positive about
the outlook for the next 6 months, boosting that
component of the index to 85.3 from 77.4. The University
of Michigan’s confidence index also increased in May,
although only marginally – the first time in several
months that both of these barometers have moved in the
same direction. The Michigan report nonetheless
produced another “but,” noting that consumers continue
to express concerns about “a wide range of issues,” the
employment outlook primary among them.
Those lingering concerns haven’t dampened
consumer spending as much as might have been expected,
however. Spending levels, in fact, had been increasing
steadily all year until April, when they flattened, even
though incomes posted a small gain. The spending
reports have produced some of the largest “buts” from
economists, who have pointed out that the gains have
come almost entirely from the most affluent consumers
with little input from the middle class. “The economy
can grow if lower-income households aren’t able to
spend, but it can’t flourish,” Mark Zandi, chief
economist at Moody’s Economy.com, told the
Los Angeles Times.
“Payback” Coming in
Housing
“Yes-but” concerns also prevail in the
housing market, where analysts agree that strong sales
increases have been driven almost entirely by the
federal home buyers’ tax credit. Existing home sales
increased by 7.6 percent in April, new home sales jumped
by 15 percent, and the National Association of Realtors’
pending home sales index increased by 6 percent,
indicating that sales will remain strong for a few more
weeks.
“But expect a payback in July and
August,” Stan Humphries, chief economist for the on-line
real estate database, Zillow.com, told MSNBC. “A lot of
current demand in the marketplace has been stolen from
those months,” he noted.
Although new home starts increased by
nearly 6 percent in April, building permits, an
indicator of future construction activity, slumped by 12
percent, spurring concerns that the housing recovery may
stall. Adding to those concerns, inventory levels rose
in April, despite the sales gains and home prices, which
had shown signs of stabilizing, also seemed to lose
ground in March, as the closely watched Case-Shiller
index fell 0.5 percent below the February level.
Year-over-year, prices in the 20-city index increased by
2.3 percent, but they were 3.2 percent below the reading
for the first quarter of last year, leading economist
Robert Shiller, co-founder of the index, to warn, “It
looks like a double-dip already. There is a very real
possibility of some more decline,” Shiller told MSNBC.
Some economists are resisting the
‘yes-but’ syndrome. The National Association of
Business Economics found that the 46 economists
responding to the group’s May survey have become a
little more optimistic about the outlook, predicting
that the economy will grow by 3.2 percent this year and
next – a little better than April’s consensus forecast
of a 3.1 percent growth rate for both years.
“Although risks involving [the sovereign
debt crisis] in Europe have recently escalated, the
outlook in this country has improved in most respects,”
NABE President Lynn Reaser said in a press statement.
“Growth prospects are stronger, unemployment and
inflation are lower, and worries relating to consumer
retrenchment and domestic financial headwinds have
diminished.”
Of course, Reaser’s comments and the NABE
survey came before the disappointing May employment
report, and you know what that means ---Yes, some
economists are more optimistic, but they’re going to be
saying “yes, but” for some time to come.
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