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U.S. FLASH MANUFACTURING PMI SLIDES TO 51.3

December data indicated a sharp loss of growth momentum across the U.S. manufacturing sector. This was highlighted by a fall in the seasonally adjusted Markit Flash U.S. Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index™ (PMI™) to 51.3, from 52.8 in November. Although still above the neutral 50.0 threshold, the latest reading pointed to the slowest improvement in manufacturing business conditions since October 2012. A decline in the headline PMI to its lowest for just over three years
largely reflected much weaker rates of output and new business growth at the end of 2015.

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The latest expansion of incoming new work was only marginal and the slowest recorded since September 2009. Survey respondents widely pointed to a cyclical slowdown in client spending patterns, with demand relatively subdued in both domestic and export markets. In addition to a general moderation in new business growth during December, some manufacturers also cited the impact of ongoing cuts to investment spending across the energy sector.

Manufacturing production increased only moderately in December, with the rate of expansion the weakest for just over two years. Softer output growth was widely linked to a weaker-than-expected upturn in new business volumes and a corresponding drop in capacity pressures. Reflecting this, latest data highlighted a decrease in backlogs of work for the second month running, and the pace of decline was the fastest since late-2012.

In contrast to the trends for output and new orders, a solid pace of employment growth was maintained across the manufacturing sector during December. The latest upturn in payroll numbers marked two-and-a-half years of sustained job creation, which survey respondents mainly linked to expectations of improving demand in 2016.

Manufacturers were more cautious about their purchasing activity and inventory volumes in December. Input buying expanded at the slowest pace for just over two years, while pre-production stocks decreased for the first time since June 2014. Finished goods inventories rose marginally in December, but some manufacturers linked the upturn to weaker-than-expected sales at the end of the year.

Slower growth of input buying contributed to a stabilisation in suppliers’ delivery times during December, thereby ending a five-month period of worsening vendor performance. At the same time, average input costs fell again at manufacturing companies, while factory gate price inflation remained only marginal. Survey respondents widely commented that falling commodity prices had led to lower cost burdens at the end of 2015.

NEW$ & VIEW$ (16 DECEMBER 2015): Core Inflation at Target.

U.S. Consumer Prices Flat in November U.S. consumer prices were flat in November, although the broader trend of underlying inflation showed signs of firming, brightening the outlook for Federal Reserve officials as they meet to debate raising short-term interest rates.

The consumer-price index was unchanged in November after rising a seasonally adjusted 0.2% in October, the Labor Department said Tuesday. Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, so-called core prices rose 0.2%, the same pace of growth as in October and September. The reading was in line with economists’ expectations.

Over the year, overall prices rose 0.5%, the largest 12-month increase since December 2014. Core prices were up 2% on the year, the largest 12-month increase since May 2014, driven by rising housing costs. (…)

Paul Ashworth of Capital Economics said core inflation “is almost back to target at a time when the dollar’s surge and the indirect impact of lower commodity prices are probably subtracting 0.5% from the rate.

The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, the index of personal consumption expenditures, hasn’t hit the central bank’s 2% target in 3½ years. Core inflation as measured by that gauge rose 1.3% in October from a year earlier, unchanged for 10 months. PCE inflation tends to run about 0.5 percentage point lower a year than the CPI. (…)

Prices of food also weakened 0.1% on the month, amid weakness in agricultural prices this year. Apparel costs dropped 0.3%, although the cost of housing and medical care increased on the month. Shelter prices have risen 3.2% over the year and the cost of services excluding energy services is up 2.9%.

It is true that since 1960 and 1990, total PCE prices were 0.5% below CPI (also true for core PCE prices vs core CPI). Since 2000, however, the gap has averaged 0.3% (0.25% for core prices).

From the Cleveland Fed:

According to the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, the median Consumer Price Index rose 0.2% (2.1% annualized rate) in November. The 16% trimmed-mean Consumer Price Index rose 0.1% (1.4% annualized rate) during the month. The median CPI and 16% trimmed-mean CPI are measures of core inflation calculated by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland based on data released in the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ (BLS) monthly CPI report.

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Core inflation has clearly reached the 2% level in 2015.

From Bespoke Investment:fed

On the Rule of 20, this latest acceleration in core CPI caps the rising inflation headwind faced throughout 2015 as core CPI rose from +1.5% earlier in the year to 2.0%. This 0.5% increase effectively reduces “fair value” by 2.7% to 2116.

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Empire State Factory Sector Activity Improves

The Empire State Factory Index of General Business Conditions improved from its worst level four months ago, although it remained negative. The reading of -4.59 compared to a low of -14.92 in August. The latest figure was near expectations for -6.5 in the Action Economics Forecast Survey. The data are reported by the Federal Reserve of New York and reflect business conditions in New York, northern New Jersey and southern Connecticut.

Based on these figures, Haver Analytics calculates a seasonally adjusted index that is compatible to the ISM series. The adjusted figure improved to 48.0, just above the six-year low.

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China’s Central Bank Sees Growth Slowing to 6.8 Percent in 2016

Top researchers at China’s central bank said they expect economic growth to come in at 6.8 percent next year as consumer inflation accelerates and real estate sales rebound.

People’s Bank of China economists also cut their 2015 growth forecast to 6.9 percent from a 7 percent projection in June, according to a working paper by the central bank’s research bureau posted to the website Wednesday. Consumer prices will rise 1.7 percent next year versus 1.5 percent this year, staff led by Ma Jun, chief economist at the PBOC’s research bureau, said in the paper. 

The report came hours after a government-backed research institute released a forecast saying growth will slow to between 6.6 percent and 6.8 percent next year.

“We expect that the number of positive factors will gradually increase in 2016,” the central bank researchers wrote in the paper. “These supportive factors include the recovery of real estate sales, the lagged impact of macro and structural policies, as well as some modest improvement in external demand.” (…)

Congressional Leaders Agree to Lift Oil Exports Ban In a move considered unthinkable even a few months ago, congressional leaders have agreed to lift the nation’s 40-year-old ban on oil exports, a move driven by a boom in U.S. oil drilling.

(…) The U.S. is already exporting nearly 400,000 barrels of crude a day to Canada, the biggest exemption under the ban. That is more than nine times as much as in 2008 but still just 3.8% of the U.S. oil produced every day. (…)

The logistics of a new surge of oil exports would be relatively manageable, especially compared to exporting natural gas, which takes years of federal permitting and billions of dollars in technology to liquefy the gas.

Extensive networks of oil pipelines and storage tanks already stretch along the Gulf Coast from Corpus Christi, Texas, to St. James Parish, La. Those oil ports, where nearly a third of U.S. refineries are located, are for now geared toward unloading crude from tankers, not loading them. So initially there would be some constrained capacity that caps energy companies’ ability to ship crude out to foreign buyers.

But retrofitting those facilities—adding more deep-water dock space and equipment to load oil tankers—could happen quickly in a place like Texas, where permitting is easy and such projects face little community opposition. The ports of Corpus Christi and Houston are already undergoing dramatic expansions. (…)

Venezuela on edge of political crisis Socialist government in stand-off with new assembly after defeat