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It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so (Mark Twain)

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THE DAILY EDGE: 20 JANUARY 2023

NOTE: Technical issues at my hosting provider yesterday delayed posting well beyond my 8:30am target. Some of you may have missed this great post Winking smile:

No Retail Recession Yet
Fourth-Quarter GDP Growth Estimate Unchanged

Post retail sales and industrial production yesterday:

On January 19, the GDPNow model estimate for real GDP growth in the fourth quarter of 2022 is 3.5 percent, unchanged from January 18.

On to Q1’23:

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(layoffs.fyi)

  • Only 190,000 Americans filed for unemployment benefits last week, the lowest since September, even amid more headlines about massive tech layoffs. Initial jobless claims fell by 15k in the week ended January 14 (consensus +9k). The four-week moving average fell by 7k to 206k. Continuing claims rose by 17k to 1,647k in the week ended January 7. The horizontal line (230k) below is where claims were in Q4’20.
fredgraph - 2023-01-19T110901.564
Philly Fed’s Manufacturing Business Outlook Survey

Just South of the NY Fed’s district which released its survey earlier this week.

Manufacturing activity in the region continued to decline overall, according to the firms responding to the January Manufacturing Business Outlook Survey.

The diffusion index for current general activity rose from a revised reading of -13.7 in December to -8.9 in January, its fifth consecutive negative reading and seventh negative reading in the past eight months.

The current new orders index rose 11 points but remained negative at -10.9, and the current shipments index climbed 12 points to 11.1 after turning negative in December.

On balance, the firms reported increases in employment, and the employment index improved from -0.9 in December to 10.9 this month. The majority of responding firms (65 percent) reported steady employment levels. The average workweek index also turned positive, rising from -6.6 to 4.0.

Chart 1. Current and Future General Activity Indexes

The indexes for prices paid and prices received continue to indicate overall price increases for inputs and firms’ own goods. The prices paid index declined 12 points to 24.5, its lowest reading since August 2020 and slightly below its long-run average. Nearly 40 percent of the firms reported increases in input prices, while 15 percent reported decreases; 45 percent of the firms reported no change.

The current prices received index edged up 2 points to 29.9. Almost 39 percent of the firms reported increases in their own prices, 9 percent reported decreases, and 51 percent reported no change.

Chart 2. Current Prices Paid and Prices Received Indexes

In this month’s special questions, the firms were asked about changes in their various input and labor costs over the past year and their expectations for changes in costs for the coming year. For all categories, the average percent change in costs expected for 2023 was smaller than the average percent change in costs reported for 2022.

The respondents were also asked to rank the importance of various factors in setting prices. Demand for their own goods/services was the most important factor, followed by maintaining steady profit, wage and labor costs, and nonlabor costs. (…)

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Discover Drops After Warning About Rising Credit-Card Losses

 imageThe firm expects net charge-offs to climb as high as 3.9% this year, Riverwoods, Illinois-based Discover said Wednesday in a presentation posted on its website. That compares with the 1.82% it booked for all of 2022 and is higher than the 2.8% analysts in a Bloomberg survey were expecting. (…)

Q4’22 NCOs were 2.37%. CC loans jumped 21.2% YoY in Q4. Discover users are generally low-middle income.

Summers Warns of 1970s Crisis If Central Banks Relent on Rates

Going soft on inflation will plunge economies back into the recessionary depths of the 1970s and have “adverse effect on working people everywhere,” former US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers warned.

The remark is a response to suggestions from economists including Olivier Blanchard, a former International Monetary Fund chief economist, who have suggested lifting inflation targets from 2% to 3% to avoid recessions. (…)

Summers warned: “It would be a grave error for central banks to revise their inflation target upwards at this point. Having failed to attain the 2% target and having re-emphasized repeatedly the commitment to 2%, to then abandon the target would do very substantial damage to credibility. If you can adjust once, you can adjust again.” (…)

Fed Vice Chair Lael Brainard indicated in remarks Thursday she was supportive of slowing the pace of rate rises to a more traditional quarter percentage point at the central bank’s next policy meeting, which is Jan. 31 to Feb. 1, joining a number of colleagues.

New York Fed President John Williams said at a separate event Thursday evening he was encouraged by signs interest-rate increases were having their desired effect in slowing growth and keeping consumers’ and businesses’ expectations of future inflation in check.

“We are seeing the shifting gears of tighter monetary policy having the desired effects,” he said during a speech to bond market analysts in New York. But, he added, “we still have a ways to go to get” the Fed’s policy rate “to the level that I think is sufficiently restrictive to achieve our goals.”

Investors in interest-rate futures markets expect the Fed to raise rates by a quarter point on Feb. 1. (…)

Many Fed officials this month have said they expect the central bank will need to raise rates to a level slightly above 5% this year, but Ms. Brainard didn’t say how high she expected rates to rise and instead cautioned that it would take time to get inflation down to the Fed’s 2% target. “Policy will need to be sufficiently restrictive for some time to make sure inflation returns to 2% on a sustained basis,” she said. (…)

The Commerce Department is set to release next week December figures for the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, the personal-consumption expenditures price index. Other inflation data suggests the index will rise 5.1% from a year earlier and at a 2.3% annualized rate over the last three months, Ms. Brainard said.

Excluding food and energy prices, the so-called core PCE index likely ran at a 3.1% three-month annualized rate in December, lower than the 4.5% increase from a year earlier, she said. (…)

Ms. Brainard said there are a “range of views on what it will take to bring down this component of inflation [core services ex-shelter] to pre-pandemic levels,” and that weaker demand for labor is one possible channel. But to the extent that non-wage costs “may have been responsible in part for important price increases for some nonhousing service sectors, an unwinding of these factors could help bring down nonhousing services inflation,” she said. (…)

The slowdown in inflation in recent months, together with the impact of the Fed’s rate rises that could continue to slow the economy, “may provide some reassurance that we are not currently experiencing a 1970s-style wage-price spiral,” said Ms. Brainard. “For these reasons, it remains possible that a continued moderation in aggregate demand could facilitate continued easing in the labor market and reduction in inflation without a significant loss of employment.” (…)

Ms. Brainard, like Mr. Powell, is focusing on the blue bar below, CPI-services ex-rent, which disappeared in October-November and rose only 0.2% MoM in December.

fredgraph - 2023-01-20T065926.107

The “non-wage costs” she mentions are mainly energy costs for service providers.

Luckily, widespread mild weather is helping.

But companies like P&G keep rising prices, willingly sacrificing volume:

After lifting prices to new heights, Procter & Gamble Co. reported lower quarterly profit and declining sales volumes as the rising costs of Tide detergent and other staples prompted consumers to cut back on purchases at the end of 2022.

Sales volumes fell 6% at P&G—the biggest quarterly drop in years—with declines at each of the company’s five major business units in the three months ended Dec. 31 compared with a year earlier. P&G increased prices by 10% in the period, helping the company report a 5% boost in organic sales, which exclude currency swings and acquisitions. (…)

The company estimates that growth in the consumer-products market will continue but slow to 3% to 4% growth, from a 5% to 6% range. Pricing will likely continue to drive growth, while volumes are set to fall further, the company said. (…)

Mr. Schulten said shoppers remain willing to pay more for high-end products, though more are looking for deals. Demand is up both for items that come in smaller package sizes and for bulk offerings at club stores.

“Consumers are holding up globally relatively well,” he said. (…)

At P&G, prices in the quarter ended in December increased by 13% in the division that makes Tide, by 11% in the division that houses Gillette and by 8% in the division that makes Pampers diapers. (…)

Competition???

Japan Core Inflation Hits 4% for First Time in Four Decades Core consumer-price inflation reached a fresh 41-year high of 4% in December, adding to pressure on the Bank of Japan to unwind its decade long monetary easing.

Consumer prices excluding volatile fresh food prices rose 4% from a year earlier in December, the fastest pace since December 1981 and double the BOJ’s inflation target, government data showed Friday. Overall prices including fresh food also rose 4%, the first time that figure reached 4% since 1991. (…)

Consumer-price inflation has been above the BOJ’s 2% target for nine consecutive months.

“Because it is already 4% and has been above 2% for quite a long time, it has become difficult to say this is just transitory,” said Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities strategist Naomi Muguruma. (…)

Consumer prices excluding fresh food and energy prices rose 3.0% from a year earlier in December, higher than November’s 2.8% increase. (…)

US bond fund inflows surged last week.

Source: Deutsche Bank Research via The Daily Shot

THE DAILY EDGE: 19 JANUARY 2023: No Retail Recession Yet

Weak US Retail Sales, Factory Data Heighten Recession Concerns

The value of overall retail purchases broadly decreased 1.1% in December after a downwardly revised 1% drop in the prior month, Commerce Department data showed Wednesday. Separate figures showed a 1.3% decline in factory output last month that wrapped up the weakest quarter for manufacturing since the onset of the pandemic.

Weak US Retail Sales, Manufacturing Raise Recession Concerns | Value of retail purchases declines most in a year, equipment output falls

(…) So-called control group sales — which are used to calculate gross domestic product and exclude food services, auto dealers, building materials stores and gasoline stations — dropped 0.7%, the most in a year. (…)

Taken together, the data show a consumer that’s losing steam and business investment falling, portending weaker growth and raising concerns that the economy may be inching closer to a recession. Combined with easing inflation, the figures put the Fed on track to further slow the pace of interest-rate hikes. (…)

The two consecutive -1% down bars in the chart above are a spooky rarity in the U.S.. As I show below, -2% in 2 months has only occurred in recessions and were always followed by at least 2 more down months.

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But because of the severe goods deflation underway, the recent nominal retail sales data can be misleading to the unwary.

There is no official retail sales deflator but a weighted sum of CPI-Durables (33%) + CPI-Nondurables (67%) provides a decent approximation of “CPI-Retail”. In December, CPI-Retail prices declined 1.1% after -0.3% in November.

So inflation-adjusted retail sales were actually unchanged in December following -0.7% in November and +0.7% in October.

The very spotty quarter ended with nominal retail sales up 6.8% YoY in Q4 (6.0% in December), down considerably from 9.4% in Q3, 8.4% in Q2 and 12.6% in Q1 but still well above the 4.5-5.0% average growth in retail wages.

Retail profits in Q4 will thus be negatively impacted by heavy markdowns but operating expenses will not make things worse, thanks also to the 3.1% decline in weekly hours worked by retail employees in Q4 (-4.1% in December) and lower energy costs.

Crucially, Christmas was not a disaster economically when considered in real terms, enabling retailers to reduced part of their excess inventories during the biggest retail month of the year.

The National Retail Federation said Wednesday that holiday sales were disappointing with November and December sales up 5.3% YoY. My CPI-Retail data puts inflation at 5.9% during these two months, implying real sales were down 0.6%, right in line with my data.

(…) Industrial production decreased 0.7 percent in December and 1.7 percent at an annual rate in the fourth quarter. In December, manufacturing output fell 1.3 percent amid widespread declines across the sector. (…) total industrial production in December was 1.6 percent above its year-earlier level. Capacity utilization dropped 0.6 percentage point in December to 78.8 percent, a rate that is 0.8 percentage point below its long-run (1972–2021) average. [view full report]

More importantly,

Manufacturing production declined 1.3% in December, well below consensus expectations. The capex-sensitive business equipment category decreased 2.0% and mining production decreased 0.9%, while the utilities component—an input into consumption in the GDP accounts—increased 3.8%, as cold temperatures increased demand for heating.

Total motor vehicle assemblies declined 1.1% to an annual rate of 10.0 million (vs. 10.9 million on average in 2019). The decline in motor vehicle assemblies likely reflects a planned temporary slowdown in production, as Wards production schedules had shown planned declines in auto assemblies for both November and December.

David Rosenberg tweeted yesterday: “Sorry, folks. No soft landing. On track for 3 straight quarters of declines in real retail sales alongside 2 successive negative production numbers. Only happens in recessions.”

Sorry David, not necessarily. In 2015-16, both sales and manufacturing were quite weak and the economy kept growing on a YoY basis.

fredgraph - 2023-01-19T080013.947

N.Y. Fed’s Business Leaders Survey

Yesterday, we got the very weak manufacturing survey. Services are not much better:

Activity continued to decline significantly in the region’s service sector, according to firms responding to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s January 2023 Business Leaders Survey. The survey’s headline business activity index fell four points -21.4, its lowest level in nearly two years.

The business climate index came in at -41.8, suggesting the business climate remains much worse than normal.

Employment growth slowed to a crawl, though wage increases remained widespread. The pace of input price increases continued to trend lower, while the pace of selling price increases moved slightly higher. Looking ahead, firms do not expect conditions to be better in six months.

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Fed’s Beige Book Says Businesses Expect Weak Growth in Months Ahead Inflation showed some signs of easing while labor-market conditions remained tight, Federal Reserve’s business contacts report

Half of the Fed’s 12 regional banks reported no change or slight declines in economic activity in their districts, with several others reporting slight or modest growth and one saying it had a significant decline.

Some retailers “noted that high inflation continued to reduce consumers’ purchasing power, particularly among low and moderate-income households,” according to the central bank’s latest compilation of economic anecdotes from around the country, known as the Beige Book.

The Fed said most regions benefited from a slight increase in consumer spending during the holiday season. Many business contacts said it had become more difficult to pass higher costs to consumers, “suggesting greater price sensitivity on the part of consumers.”

“Selling prices increased at a modest or moderate pace in most districts, though many said that the pace of increases had slowed from that of recent reporting periods,” the Fed report said.

The report included information gathered through Jan. 9. (…)

Labor-market conditions remained tight for many businesses, the report said, and many of them “hesitated to lay off employees even as demand for their goods and services slowed and planned to reduce head count through attrition if needed.” (…)

Wage pressures persisted for several businesses and many in the Richmond Fed’s district “reported being at a breaking point on increasing wages as they cannot pass through costs anymore to consumers.” (…)

In the New York Fed’s district, the only one that reported a significant decline in economic activity, manufacturers “wound up 2022 on a bleak note, reporting the most widespread decline in activity since early in the pandemic.” (…)

Producer Price Increases Decelerated in December Supplier prices rose 6.2% last month from a year earlier, the slowest pace since March 2021

That was down from November’s revised 7.3% increase and well below the 11.7% rise in March 2022, the fastest pace since PPI records began in 2010.

Core PPI, excluding often-volatile food, energy and supplier margin categories, rose 4.6% in December from a year earlier, down from 4.9% in November, the department said.

On a monthly basis, the PPI declined 0.5% in December from November, the first monthly decline since August. Supply-level energy prices fell sharply last month while food prices decreased modestly. Core PPI, excluding often-volatile food, energy and supplier margin categories, rose 0.1% last month compared with 0.3% in November. (…)

It is up 4.6% YoY, down from 4.9% in November.

PPI-Final demand-core goods is up only 1.5% a.r. in the last 4 months but 3.0% a.r. in the last 2 months.

PPI-Services keeps behaving very well, up 0.1% in December in sharp deceleration since the 0.5% print in August.

Two Fed Officials Back Quarter-Point Rate Rise Next Month
  • Fed policy makers are starting to show differing opinions on the path for US interest rates this year. Two voting regional governors have backed moderating the pace of rate rises, while two other Fed officials have stated a preference for additional hikes. Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan and Philadelphia Fed chief Patrick Harker laid out the case for easing the Fed’s hiking campaign in comments on Wednesday, which followed a weak retail sales report. Meanwhile, St. Louis Fed chief James Bullard and Loretta Mester of the Cleveland Fed — also speaking on Wednesday — stressed the need to keep policy restrictive for longer. (Bloomberg)

Lagarde Says Inflation Way Too High, ECB to Stay the Course