What is Macro Pulse?

Macro Pulse highlights recent activity and events expected to affect the U.S. economy over the next 24 months. While the review is of the entire U.S. economy its particular focus is on developments affecting the Forest Products industry. Everyone with a stake in any level of the sector can benefit from
Macro Pulse's timely yet in-depth coverage.


Tuesday, September 29, 2015

August 2015 Residential Sales, Inventory and Prices

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Sales of new single-family homes increased for a second month in August, rising 30,000 units (+5.7%), to a seasonally adjusted and annualized rate (SAAR) of 552,000 -- well above the 515,000 expected and the fastest rate of sales since February 2008. Sales in August were 25.0% above year-earlier levels; year-to-date (YTD), sales were 19.8% above the same months in 2014. For perspective, however, August sales were roughly 60% below the “bubble” peak and about 13% below the long-term, pre-2000 average.
Meanwhile, the median price of new homes sold rose by a relatively modest $1,600 (+0.6%) to $292,700. The average price of homes sold, on the other hand, jumped by a more robust $8,600 (+2.5%) -- to $353,400 -- implying that a significant proportion of total sales were high-end homes. Because sales increased while single-family starts declined, the three-month average ratio of starts to sales dropped back to 1.42 -- on par with the average (1.41) since January 1995. 
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As mentioned in our post about housing permits, starts and completions in August, single-unit completions rose by 10,000 units (+1.6%). Although completions rose more slowly than sales, new-home inventory expanded in absolute terms (+1,000 units) but declined in months of inventory (-0.2 month). 
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Existing home sales tumbled in August (-270,000 units or 4.8%) to 5.31 million units (SAAR); that result was below expectations of 5.50 million. Because sales of existing homes fell while new homes increased, the share of total sales comprised of new homes rose to 9.4%. The median price of previously owned homes sold in August declined another $3,100 (-1.3%) to $228,700. Inventory of existing homes expanded in both absolute (+30,000 units) and months-of-inventory terms (+0.3 month). 
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Housing affordability worsened in July, even though the median price of existing homes for sale retreated by $2,400 (-1.0%) to $235,500. Concurrently, Standard & Poor’s reported that the U.S. National Index in the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price indices posted a not-seasonally adjusted monthly change of +0.7% (+4.7% compared to a year earlier).
“Prices of existing homes and housing overall are seeing strong growth and contributing to recent solid growth for the economy,” said David Blitzer, Managing Director and Chairman of the Index Committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices. “The S&P/Case Shiller National Home Price Index has risen at a 4% or higher annual rate since September 2012, well ahead of inflation. Most of the strength is focused on states west of the Mississippi. The three cities with the largest cumulative price increases since January 2000 are all in California: Los Angeles (138%), San Francisco (116%) and San Diego (115%). The two smallest gains since January 2000 are Detroit (3%) and Cleveland (10%). The Sunbelt cities -- Miami, Tampa, Phoenix and Las Vegas -- which were the poster children of the housing boom have yet to make new all-time highs.
“The economy grew at a 3.9% real annual rate in 2Q2015 with housing making a major contribution. Residential investment grew at annual real rates of 9-10% in the last three quarters (4Q2014-2Q2015), far faster than total GDP. Further, expenditures on furniture and household equipment, a sector that depends on home sales and housing construction, also surpassed total GDP growth rates. Other positive indicators of current and expected future housing activity include gains in sales of new and existing housing and the National Association of Home Builders sentiment index. An interest rate increase by the Federal Reserve, now expected in December by many analysts, is not likely to derail the strong housing performance.” 
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The foregoing comments represent the general economic views and analysis of Delphi Advisors, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse. They do not constitute a solicitation or recommendation regarding any investment.

Friday, September 25, 2015

2Q2015 Gross Domestic Product: Third (Final) Estimate

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In its third (“final”) estimate of 2Q2015 U.S. gross domestic product (GDP), the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) reported that the economy was growing at a 3.92% annualized rate, up +0.22% from previous 2Q estimate and up +3.28% from 1Q. The consensus among economists was for the growth rate to be left unchanged at 3.7%. A better metric involves comparing growth to the same quarter one year ago. For 2Q2015, the year-over-year growth was 2.7% -- down from 1Q2015's 2.9% YoY growth.
All groupings of GDP components -- personal consumption expenditures (PCE), private domestic investment (PDI), net exports (NetX), and government consumption expenditures (GCE) -- contributed to 2Q growth. 
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The BEA made significant upward revisions to the 2Q growth rate contributions from consumer spending on services (+0.30%) and commercial fixed investment (+0.17%). The contribution from inventory growth, by contrast, was revised downward by 0.20% -- slashing the record $136.2 billion (nominal SAAR) QoQ increase reported last month to a mere $0.2 billion in this month’s report. All other segments of the economy were left essentially unchanged.
“Once again the BEA is reporting solid economic growth for the U.S. economy during 2Q2015,” wrote Consumer Metrics Institute. “Presumably, the Federal Reserve’s Open Market Committee (FOMC) had all of this information available during its latest deliberations on ‘normalizing’ its benchmark interest rates. One might wonder how a nearly 4% official economic growth rate (with unemployment significantly under 6%) merits continued pedal-to-the-metal interest rate stimulus. Which in turn raises the question: What do they know about the economy that isn't reflected in the BEA's report? Or perhaps more to the point: If it is not the U.S. economy or employment that spurs caution within the FOMC, has the Federal Reserve now taken upon itself new global or financial market mandates quite apart from those imposed by Congress?”
The foregoing comments represent the general economic views and analysis of Delphi Advisors, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse. They do not constitute a solicitation or recommendation regarding any investment.

Thursday, September 17, 2015

August 2015 Residential Permits, Starts and Completions

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Total housing starts declined in August to a seasonally adjusted and annualized rate (SAAR) of 1.126 million units (1.168 million expected) -- comparable to activity previously seen in November 2007. August’s level was 35,000 units below (-3.0% ±11.3%*) July’s 1.160 million units (revised from 1.206 million). The decrease in total starts was split as follows -- single-family: -23,000 units (-3.0% ±9.5%*); multi-family: -12,000 units (-3.0%).
* 90% confidence interval (CI) is not statistically different from zero. The Census Bureau does not publish CIs for the entire multi-unit category. 
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Total starts were 15.9% above their not-seasonally adjusted year-earlier level (single-family: +15.3%; multi-family: +17.0%). Year-to-date (YTD) comparisons to 2014 were all in the +11% range. 
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Completions fell by 61,000 units (-6.1% ±12.5%*) in August, to 935,000 units SAAR. The decrease was limited to the multi-family component (-71,000 units or 19.7%); single-family completions rose by 10,000 units (1.6% ±11.0%*). 
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Total permits partially recouped in August ground lost in July in the wake of a New York City apartment construction tax incentive that expired in mid-June. August permits rose by 40,000 units (+3.5% ±1.4%) to 1.170 million SAAR (1.160 million expected). The absolute increase was about evenly split between the components -- single-family: +19,000 units (+2.8% ±1.7%); multi-family: +21,000 units (+4.7%). YTD total permits were 12.2% above the same months in 2014, driven by the multi-family component (+21.1%).
The latest National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI) ticked up to 62 (+1 point) in September -- the highest level since October 2005. (An HMI value above 50 means more builders feel the market is good than feel it is poor.) “The HMI shows that single-family housing is making solid progress,” said NAHB Chairman Tom Woods. “However, our members continue to tell us that they are concerned about the availability of lots and labor.”
“NAHB is projecting about 1.1 million total housing starts this year,” said Chief Economist David Crowe. “Today's report is consistent with our forecast, and barring any unexpected jolts, we expect housing to keep moving forward at a steady, modest rate through the end of the year.” 
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The foregoing comments represent the general economic views and analysis of Delphi Advisors, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse. They do not constitute a solicitation or recommendation regarding any investment.

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

September 2015 Macro Pulse -- Are U.S. Softwood Lumber Producers About to be “SLAin”?

As most forest-products industry watchers are aware, the nine-year-old Softwood Lumber Agreement (SLA) -- which regulates Canadian softwood lumber exported to the United States -- is slated to expire on October 12, 2015. With the SLA’s quotas and taxes going away, is the U.S. market about to be inundated by cheap Canadian wood surging south? If Business Vancouver is to be believed, “a wall of wood, gift-wrapped in devalued Canadian mill wrap...is accumulating at sawmills, transit yards and rail points inside Canada.” So, is the threat real or just hyperbole?
Click here to find out by reading the rest of the September 2015 Macro Pulse recap.

The Macro Pulse blog is a commentary about recent economic developments affecting the forest products industry. The monthly Macro Pulse newsletter summarizes the previous 30 days of commentary available on this website.

August 2015 Consumer and Producer Price Indices (incl. Forest Products)

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The seasonally adjusted Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) decreased 0.1% in August (in line with expectations). The gasoline index declined sharply during August and was the main cause of the seasonally adjusted all-items decrease. Other energy indexes were mixed, with the fuel oil index continuing to decline but the indexes for electricity and natural gas increasing. The food index rose 0.2%, with the indexes for eggs (+7.7% MoM; +35.3% YoY) and for fruits and vegetables rising notably.
The index for all items less food and energy increased 0.1% in August, unchanged from July. The index for shelter rose (rent: +0.3% MoM; owners’ equivalent rent: +0.2% MoM), as did the indexes for apparel, tobacco, and alcoholic beverages. However the index for airline fares declined sharply, and the indexes for household furnishings and operations, recreation, and used cars and trucks also decreased, with the indexes for new vehicles and medical care unchanged.
The all items index increased 0.2% for the 12 months ending August, unchanged from the 12 months ending July. The 12-month change in the index for all items less food and energy also remained the same, at 1.8% for the 12 months ending August. The food index rose 1.6% over the last 12 months, while the energy index declined 15.0%.

The seasonally adjusted Producer Price Index for final demand (PPI) was unchanged in August (-0.2% expected), as a 0.4% increase in the index for final demand services offset a 0.6% decrease in prices for final demand goods. The final demand index moved down 0.8% for the 12 months ended in August, the seventh straight year-over-year decline.
Final demand services: The index for final demand services moved up 0.4% in August, the third consecutive rise. Three-quarters of the advance can be traced to a 0.9% increase in the index for final demand trade services. (Trade indexes measure changes in margins received by wholesalers and retailers.) Almost half of the August advance in the index for final demand services is attributable to margins for apparel, footwear, and accessories retailing (likely related to back-to-school retail staffing), which jumped 7.0%.
Final demand goods: The index for final demand goods fell 0.6%, the largest decline since April’s -0.6%. The decrease is mostly attributable to a 3.3% drop in prices for final demand energy (especially -7.7% in the gasoline index). The index for final demand goods less foods and energy moved down 0.2%. Conversely, prices for final demand foods rose 0.3% (especially a 23.2% surge in the eggs index). 
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The price indexes we track were either unchanged month-over-month in August but all fell on a year-over-year basis. 
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The foregoing comments represent the general economic views and analysis of Delphi Advisors, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse. They do not constitute a solicitation or recommendation regarding any investment.

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

August 2015 Industrial Production, Capacity Utilization and Capacity

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Total industrial production (IP) decreased 0.4% in August (-0.2% expected) after increasing 0.9% (originally +0.6%) in July. Upward revisions to mining and utilities were largely responsible for July’s higher estimate; the revision resulted in total IP dropping in August by the greatest amount since August 2012. Manufacturing output fell 0.5% in August primarily because of a large drop in motor vehicles and parts (by the most since January 2009, and to a four-year low) that reversed a substantial portion of the jump in manufacturing during July; production elsewhere in manufacturing was unchanged. The index for mining fell 0.6% in August, while the index for utilities rose 0.6%.
At 107.1% of its 2012 average, total IP in August was 0.9% above its year-earlier level. Wood Products output fell by 0.1% (-1.7% YoY) while Paper rose 0.1% (-1.4% YoY).  
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Capacity utilization (CU) for the industrial sector fell 0.5% in August to 77.6% (-0.7% YoY), a rate that is 2.5 percentage points below its long-run (1972–2014) average. Wood Products CU decreased by 0.3% (-4.0% YoY) to 69.2%; Paper edged up by 0.1% (-0.7% YoY) to 82.2%. 
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Capacity at the all-industries and manufacturing levels moved higher -- All-industries: +0.1% (+1.6% YoY) to 138.0% of 2012 output; Manufacturing: +0.1% (+1.2% YoY) to 138.6%. Wood Products extended the upward trend that has been ongoing since November 2013 when increasing by 0.2% (+2.5% YoY) to 159.5%. Paper was unchanged (-0.7% YoY) at 116.9%.
The foregoing comments represent the general economic views and analysis of Delphi Advisors, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse. They do not constitute a solicitation or recommendation regarding any investment.

Monday, September 7, 2015

July 2015 International Trade (Softwood Lumber)

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Softwood lumber exports decreased by 7 MMBF (5.1%) in July while imports fell by 166 MMBF (-13.9%). Exports were 16 MMBF (10.9%) below year-earlier levels; imports were 81 MMBF (7.3%) lower. The net export deficit was 66 MMBF (6.8%) smaller YoY. 
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North America (mainly Mexico, but Canada was close behind) was the primary destination for U.S. softwood lumber exports in July (43.2%). Asia (especially China) placed second (33.3%). Mexico was the largest single-country destination (23.8%). Year-to-date (YTD) exports to China were down over 41% relative to the same months in 2014. Meanwhile, Canada was the source of nearly all (96.0%) softwood lumber imports into the United States. Overall, YTD exports were down 13.4% compared to a year earlier, while imports were up 4.8%. 
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U.S. softwood lumber export activity through West Coast customs districts dipped slightly in relation to the other districts during July: 39.7% of the U.S. total; Seattle retained the title of most-active district, with 21.3% of the July total. At the same time, Great Lakes customs districts handled 70.2% of the softwood lumber imports (especially Duluth, MN with 31.6%) coming into the United States. 
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Southern yellow pine comprised 25.2% of all softwood lumber exports in July, followed by Douglas-fir with 17.6%. Southern pine exports were up 4.7% YTD relative to 2014, while Douglas-fir exports were down 33.1%.
The foregoing comments represent the general economic views and analysis of Delphi Advisors, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse. They do not constitute a solicitation or recommendation regarding any investment.

July 2015 International Trade (General)

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The goods and services deficit was $41.9 billion in July, down $3.3 billion from $45.2 billion in June. July exports were $188.5 billion, $0.8 billion more than June exports. July imports were $230.4 billion, $2.5 billion less than June imports. The July decrease in the goods and services deficit reflected a decrease in the goods deficit of $3.4 billion to $61.4 billion and a decrease in the services surplus of less than $0.1 billion to $19.6 billion.
Year-to-date, the goods and services deficit increased $10.6 billion, or 3.6 percent, from the same period in 2014. Exports decreased $47.0 billion or 3.5 percent. Imports decreased $36.4 billion or 2.2 percent.
Year-over-year, the average goods and services deficit increased $1.3 billion from the three months ending in July 2014.
* Average exports of goods and services decreased $8.6 billion from July 2014.
* Average imports of goods and services decreased $7.3 billion from July 2014.
Goods by Selected Countries and Areas: Monthly – Census Basis
The July figures show surpluses, in billions of dollars, with South and Central America ($2.6), OPEC ($0.7), United Kingdom ($0.3), and Brazil ($0.2).  Deficits were recorded, in billions of dollars, with China ($28.8), European Union ($12.4), Germany ($6.0), Japan ($5.4), Mexico ($3.8), Italy ($2.3), South Korea ($2.2), Canada ($2.1), India ($2.0), France ($1.1), and Saudi Arabia ($0.5).
Goods and Services by Selected Countries and Areas: Quarterly – Balance of Payments Basis
The second quarter figures show surpluses, in billions of dollars, with South and Central America ($17.3), Brazil ($7.3), OPEC ($6.8), Canada ($1.8), United Kingdom ($1.3), and Saudi Arabia ($0.8). Deficits were recorded, in billions of dollars, with China ($79.6), European Union ($28.5), Germany ($19.6), Japan ($14.2), Mexico ($13.6), Italy ($7.8), India ($7.2), France ($4.2), and South Korea ($4.1). 
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On a global scale, data compiled by the Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis showed that world trade volume expanded by 2.0% in June (+2.6% year-over-year) while prices rose by 0.6% (-12.7% YoY).
The foregoing comments represent the general economic views and analysis of Delphi Advisors, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse. They do not constitute a solicitation or recommendation regarding any investment.

Friday, September 4, 2015

August 2015 Employment Report

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According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ (BLS) establishment survey, non-farm payroll employment increased by 173,000 jobs in August -- well below expectations of 223,000. However, combined June and July employment gains were boosted by 44,000 (June: +14,000; July: +30,000). Meanwhile, the unemployment rate (based upon the BLS’s household survey) dropped to 5.1% thanks to a combination of workers finding jobs (196,000) and people leaving the labor force (261,000). 
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Observations from the employment report include:
* The disparity in jobs gains between the establishment (+173,000) and household (+196,000) surveys was fairly modest.
* “Manufacturing employment decreased by 17,000 in August, after changing little in July (+12,000),” the BLS reported. “Job losses occurred in a number of component industries, including fabricated metal products and food manufacturing (-7,000 each). These losses more than offset gains in motor vehicles and parts (+6,000) and in miscellaneous durable goods manufacturing (+4,000). Thus far this year, overall employment in manufacturing has shown little net change.”
* Employment in mining fell in August (-9,000), with losses concentrated in support activities for mining (-7,000). Since reaching a peak in December 2014, mining employment has declined by 90,000. Construction gained 3,000 jobs in August (+113,000 YTD 2015).
* Over 99% (139,200) of private-sector (140,000) job growth occurred in the sectors typically associated with the lowest-paid jobs -- Retail Trade: +11,200; Professional & Business Services: +33,000; Education & Health Services: +62,000; and Leisure & Hospitality: +33,000. This is a persistent issue, as we have repeatedly highlighted: There are 1.42 million fewer manufacturing jobs today than at the start of the Great Recession in December 2007. Nearly 1.45 million Food Services & Drinking Places (i.e., wait staff and bartender) jobs have been added during that time period, however. 
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* The employment-population ratio ticked up to 59.4% -- at the top of the range it has occupied during much of the past year; i.e., for every five people added to the population, only three are employed. Meanwhile, the number of employment-age persons not in the labor force rose by 261,000 to a new record over 94.0 million. 
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* The labor force participation rate (LFPR) remained stable at 62.6%; prior to June the LFPR had not been that low since October 1977’s 62.4%. Average hourly earnings of all private employees rose by $0.08 (to $25.09), resulting in a 2.2% year-over-year increase. For all production and nonsupervisory employees (pictured above), hourly wages rose $0.05 (+1.9% YoY). With the CPI running at an official rate of 0.2% YoY, wages are technically rising in real (inflation-adjusted) terms. The average workweek for all employees on private nonfarm payrolls edged up to 34.6 hours in August. 
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* Finally, full-time jobs jumped by 435,000 while part-time jobs fell by 349,000. Full-time jobs have been trending higher since December 2009, and are 149,000 higher than the pre-recession high (even while the non-institutional, working-age civilian population has risen by an estimated 17.9 million). Part-time jobs, by contrast, have been stuck in a channel between roughly 27 and 28 million.
The foregoing comments represent the general economic views and analysis of Delphi Advisors, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse. They do not constitute a solicitation or recommendation regarding any investment.

Thursday, September 3, 2015

August 2015 ISM and Markit Reports

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The Institute for Supply Management’s (ISM) monthly opinion survey showed that growth of economic activity in the U.S. manufacturing sector decelerated again in August, to its slowest rate since May 2013. The PMI registered 51.1%, a decrease of 1.6 percentage points below the July reading of 52.7%. (50% is the breakpoint between contraction and expansion.) ISM’s manufacturing survey represents under 10% of U.S. employment and about 20% of the overall economy. Index values were lower in August except for slow supplier deliveries, customer inventories and order backlogs. 
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Wood Products was unchanged in August. "Business is guarded but steady. Margins are tight. Markets are very competitive. China is lackluster," wrote one Wood Products respondent. Paper Products expanded as usual, with broad-based support among the sub-indexes. "We are oversold," observed one Paper Products respondent, however.
The pace of growth in the non-manufacturing sector -- which accounts for 80% of the economy and 90% of employment -- eased slightly off its July high. The NMI registered 59.0%, 1.3 percentage points lower than the July reading of 60.3%. Here, too, the sub-indexes were mostly lower. 
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Two of the three service industries we track (Real Estate and Construction) reported expansion in August. Ag & Forestry was unchanged.
No relevant commodity was consistently up in price. Some respondents reported paying more for diesel and gasoline, others less. Only crude oil was consistently lower in price. No relevant commodity was in short supply.
ISM’s and Markit’s manufacturing surveys were consistent insofar as both reported a loss of momentum. The services/non-manufacturing reports diverged somewhat, however, as ISM’s NMI decreased while Markit’s Services PMI increased.
Comments on Markit’s reports are presented below:
Manufacturing -- “August’s survey highlights that the U.S. manufacturing sector continues to struggle under the weight of the strong dollar and heightened global economic uncertainty,” said Tim Moore, senior economist, “but resilient domestic spending and subdued cost pressures are keeping the recovery on track. Reflecting this, new orders from abroad have now fallen in four of the past five months, which represents the weakest phase of manufacturing export performance since late-2012.
“In response to softer growth momentum, manufacturers took a more cautious approach to staff hiring and inventories in August. Stocks of finished goods were depleted for the first time in 2015 so far, and job creation was the weakest for over a year, as some firms sought to realign production schedules with expectations of sluggish growth trends ahead.”
Services -- “The US economy is enjoying a solid third quarter,” said Chris Williamson, chief economist, “with robust survey readings so far pointing to 2.5% annualized GDP growth. Employment growth is also holding up well, with PMI surveys signaling another month of non-farm payroll growth in excess of 200,000 in August.
“Although the manufacturing sector has been struggling in the face of weak overseas demand and the stronger dollar, the more domestically-focused service sector clearly continues to fare well amid these headwinds and, due its size, is keeping the economy ticking along at a reasonable, albeit unspectacular, rate. It’s also reassuring to see business expectations about the year ahead rebound from the brief lull seen in July.
“However, while the economy has maintained robust growth momentum, inflationary pressures have abated, which will help the argument that interest rate hikes can be delayed. In fact, with the survey data showing average selling prices for goods and services to have fallen in August for the first time since 2010 and global economic concerns intensifying, the balance could easily tip towards the need for more stimulus.”
The foregoing comments represent the general economic views and analysis of Delphi Advisors, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse. They do not constitute a solicitation or recommendation regarding any investment.

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

August 2015 Monthly Average Crude Oil Price

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The monthly average U.S.-dollar price of West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil retreated in August (-$8.03), to $46.58 per barrel. The price decrease coincided with a stronger U.S. dollar, the lagged impacts of a 474,000 barrel-per-day (BPD) increase in the amount of oil supplied/demanded in June (to 19.6 million BPD), and only a minor retreat in oil stocks. The monthly average price spread between Brent crude (the predominant grade used in Europe) and WTI narrowed by $1.95 in August, to $3.71 per barrel. 
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Despite the turnaround in futures price, additional fallout in spot oil prices cannot be discounted. 
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The foregoing comments represent the general economic views and analysis of Delphi Advisors, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse. They do not constitute a solicitation or recommendation regarding any investment.

July 2015 Manufacturers’ Shipments, Inventories, and New & Unfilled Orders

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According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the value of manufactured-goods shipments decreased $0.8 billion or 0.2% to $483.6 billion in July. Shipments of durable goods increased $2.4 billion or 1.0% to $243.3 billion, led by transportation equipment. Meanwhile, nondurable goods shipments decreased $3.1 billion or 1.3% to $240.3 billion, led by petroleum and coal products. Shipments of both Wood and Paper rose, respectively, 2.0% and 0.9%. 
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Inventories decreased $0.6 billion or 0.1% to $651.2 billion. The inventories-to-shipments ratio was 1.35, unchanged from June. Inventories of durable goods decreased $0.3 billion or 0.1% to $401.8 billion, led by primary metals. Nondurable goods inventories decreased $0.3 billion or 0.1% to $249.4 billion, led by petroleum and coal products. Inventories of Wood and Paper both expanded by 0.1%. 
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New orders increased $2.0 billion or 0.4% to $482.0 billion (+0.9% expected). Excluding transportation, new orders decreased 0.6% (-6.9% YoY -- the ninth consecutive month of year-over-year contraction). Durable goods orders increased $5.1 billion or 2.2% to $241.7 billion, led by transportation equipment. New orders for nondurable goods decreased $3.1 billion or 1.3% to $240.3 billion. New orders for non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft -- a proxy for business investment spending -- rose by 2.1% in July, but was 3.7% below its year-earlier level.
Prior to July 2014, as can be seen in the graph above, real (inflation-adjusted) new orders had been essentially flat since early 2012, recouping roughly 78% of the losses incurred since the beginning of the Great Recession. With July 2014’s transportation-led spike gradually receding in the rearview mirror, new orders are back to nearly 63% of their December 2007 high. 
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Unfilled durable-goods orders increased $2.8 billion or 0.2% to $1,198.0 billion, led by transportation equipment. The unfilled orders-to-shipments ratio was 6.89, down from 6.92 in June. Real unfilled orders, which had been a good litmus test for sector growth, show a much different picture; in real terms, unfilled orders in June 2014 were back to 97% of their December 2008 peak. Real unfilled orders jumped to 122% of the prior peak in July 2014, thanks to the largest-ever batch of aircraft orders, hence, this metric is likely to remain elevated for several years.
The foregoing comments represent the general economic views and analysis of Delphi Advisors, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse. They do not constitute a solicitation or recommendation regarding any investment.