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ShadowStats Newsletter
"John Williams’ Shadow Government Statistics" is an electronic newsletter service that exposes and analyzes flaws in current U.S. government economic data and reporting, as well as in certain private-sector numbers, and provides an assessment of underlying economic and financial conditions, net of financial-market and political hype.
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Latest Commentaries
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Bullet Edition No. 4

March 21st, 2019
• March 20th Federal Open Market Committee Held Interest Rates in Check, Indicating No Rate Hikes in 2019, in Line with Market Expectations
• The Fed Slowed its Pace of Projected Balance Sheet Liquidation
• The FOMC Lowered Its U.S. Economic Projections for 2019 and 2020, Albeit Still With Purportedly Healthy Growth
• The Fed Likely Has an Internal Recession Forecast, But Not One to Be Published, Other Than for an Obvious Coincident or Lagging Circumstance
• Nonetheless the U.S. Economy Is Weakening More Sharply and Quickly Than Acknowledged, Signaling a Formal Recession That was Triggered Directly by Overly Aggressive FOMC Tightening and Rate Hikes of the Last Year or Two
• Latest Indication of an Accelerating Downturn Was In Freight Activity
• Where FOMC Meeting Results Broadly Matched Expectations, Stocks Rallied, Initially, Selling Off by the End of the Day; Gold and Silver Prices Spiked Amidst Heavy U.S. Dollar Selling, Which Also Boosted Oil Prices
• Those Late-Day Market Movements Likely Will Become the Trending Norm, As Evidence of the Deepening, Severe Economic Downturn Mounts Rapidly
More ...
Bullet Edition No. 3

March 16th, 2019
• Consumption/Manufacturing Downturn Driven by Consumer Liquidity Woes
• Weakening Industrial Production, Manufacturing and Capacity Utilization Were Consistent With a Pending Downside Revision to Fourth-Quarter 2018 GDP and Signaled High Odds of a First-Quarter 2019 GDP Contraction
• These Data Reinforced Similar Negative Revisions Seen With Earlier Indicators, Including: Retail Sales, Housing, Construction and Payrolls
• February Housing Starts (March 26th), January Trade Deficit (March 27th) and An Eviscerated Annual Industrial Production Benchmarking (March 27th) Are the Last Major Reports, Prior to the March 28th Final GDP Estimate; There Is Limited Chance of a Reprieve
• The Economy Is Weakening Sharply and Quickly, Due to the Overly Aggressive Federal Reserve Tightening and Rate Hikes
• Where Current U.S. Economic Activity Has Signaled a New Recession, Major Business Sectors, Such as Manufacturing and Construction, Never Recovered Fully from the Last One
• Accordingly, the March 20th FOMC Meeting Is Not Too Early to Address the Intensifying Business Collapse; Yet, the FOMC Is Expected to Sit on Its Hands
More ...
Bullet Edition No. 2

March 11th, 2019
• Latest Retail Sales, Employment and Monetary Base Show Increasingly Negative Economic Trends
• January 2019 Retail Sales Signaled a Downside Revision to Fourth-Quarter 2018 GDP, Along With an Early Indication for a First-Quarter 2019 GDP Contraction
• Annual Growth in February 2019 Payrolls Slowed in a Manner Consistent With a Faltering First-Quarter Economy
• February 2019 Saint Louis Fed Adjusted Monetary Base Declined Year-to-Year by 13.0% (-13.0%), Worst Showing Since 1937 Onset of Great Depression Second Down Leg
• Reporting of Broad U.S. Economic Activity Signals a New Recession, While Major Sectors Such as Manufacturing and Construction Never Recovered from the Last One
• The FOMC Should Be Feeling Increased Pressure to Ease, But Action Still Is Not Likely Next Week
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Bullet Edition No. 1

March 7th, 2019
• Some Observations on a Sharply Deteriorating Trade Deficit
• Real Merchandise Trade Deficit Just Hit Its Worst Level Ever; Annual and Fourth-Quarter 2018 Deficits Were Deepest in History
• Unfolding Trends Have Horrendous Implications for GDP
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No. 983a: Updated ALERT, Advance Economic and Financial-Market 2018-2019 Review and Preview

February 20th, 2019
• U.S. Economy and Markets Are Transitioning, and It Is Not Good News
• Excessive FOMC Rate Hikes and Tightening of the Last Year Have Pushed the Economy to the Brink of a New Recession, Exacerbated by the Shutdown
• Headline Back-to-Back First- and Second-Quarter 2019 GDP Contractions Likely Follow Still-Pending Reporting of Sharply Slowing Fourth-Quarter 2018 GDP; Consider Plunging Retail Sales, Production, Manufacturing and Freight Activity
• Unprecedented in 100 Years of Reported U.S. Manufacturing Activity, December 2018 Marked a Record Eleven Full Years of Economic Non-Expansion
• January 2019 Monetary Base Suffered Its Steepest Annual Decline Since Triggering the Second Down-Leg of the Great Depression
• Income Dispersion Worst Since Before the 1929 Stock Crash and Great Depression
• With a Tanking Economy, the Stock-Market Sell-Off Is Far from Finished; Political Discord in Washington Should Exacerbate and Intensify Market Instabilities
• Does This Concern the FOMC and Government Policy Makers? It Should!
• Driven by Energy Prices, 2018 Annual Inflation Measures Hit Multi-Year Highs, Not Driven by the FOMC Rate-Hike Canard of an Overheating Economy
• Time for Congress to Revisit the Concept of the Federal Reserve?
• U.S. Treasury Fiscal Operations Are Not Sustainable, Threatening Ultimate Financial-Market and U.S. Dollar Turmoil
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No. 982: Stock Market, December 2018 Employment and Unemployment, Monetary Conditions

January 7th, 2019
• One Cannot Fool Main Street, U.S.A., With Media Hype; Average Person Has a Stable, Solid Opinion as to How He or She Is Doing
• Federal Reserve Has Not Eased Its Tightening Policies, and the Economy Continues to Turn to the Downside, Sinking Anew
• Benchmarked Headline December 2018 U.3 Unemployment Jumped by 0.2%, Now Rising Since September 2018, with the Benchmarked Broader U.6 and ShadowStats Unemployment Measures Uptrending
• Intense Labor-Market Stress in December Remained Consistent with Headline Unemployment Near a Record High, Not off a Record Low
• An Effective Reporting Fraud by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, December Payrolls Jumped 312,000, Up by 370,000 Net of November Revisions, Boosted by Inconsistently Published Seasonal-Adjustment Revisions
• FOMC-Driven Consumer Slowdown Signaled Onset of a New Recession, as the December 2018 Nominal Monetary Base Dropped to a Sixty-Six Month Low
• Effects of Ongoing Federal Reserve Tightening Increasingly Have Pummeled Real Retail Sales, Production and Construction Activity
• Government Shutdown Has Squelched Negative Economic News from Trade Deficits, Retail and Auto Sales, Construction and Real Estate Activity and Likely, Also, as to a Weakening Fourth-Quarter 2018 GDP
• Stock-Market Sell-Off Is Far from Finished
More ...
No. 981: Retail Sales, Production, New Orders, Residential Construction, GDP and Stocks

January 3rd, 2019
• FOMC-Driven Consumer Slowdown Signals Onset of a New Recession, as Nominal Monetary Base Drops to a Five-Year Low
• Effects of Ongoing Federal Reserve Tightening Increasingly Have Pummeled Real Retail Sales, Production and Construction Activity
• Intensifying Consumer-Liquidity Squeeze Reflected in Downside Revisions to Previously Estimated Auto Sales, Housing and Third-Quarter GDP
• Third-Quarter 2018 Final Sales (GDP Net of an Increasing Inventory Buildup) Slowed to a Revised 1.03% (Initially 1.43%) from a Second-Quarter 5.33%
• Annual Growth in November Freight Activity Plunged to a Two-Year Low
• November 2018 Residential Construction and Sales Continued in Deepening Downtrends, Well Shy of Ever Recovering Pre-Recession Highs
• November Manufacturing in Record 131st Straight Month of Non-Expansion, Still Shy by 4.7% (-4.7%) of Recovering Its Pre-Recession Peak; Unlike Anything Ever Seen in the 100-Year History of the Production Series
• 2008 Banking-System Insolvency Arose Under the Watchful Eye of the Banking-System-Owned Federal Reserve
• Subsequent FOMC Actions in the Last Decade Centered on Propping the Banks, Not on Restoring a Healthy Economy
• Stock Market Turmoil Has Begun to Respond to the Intensifying Effects of Financial-System Distortions and Instabilities
More ...
980a: Some Thoughts on the Stock Market

December 26th, 2018
• Weakening Economy, Driven by Fed Tightening, and FOMC Promises for Even More in 2019, Likely Were Proximal Triggers for the Recent Stock Market Rout
• Market Turmoil Likely Has Only Just Begun
• Attempts by Fed to Mollify Impact of Recent Tightening Could Trigger Flight from the U.S. Dollar and Even Greater Crises
More ...
No. 979: November Labor Numbers, Consumer and Producer Price Indices, October Trade Deficit, FOMC
December 19th, 2018
• FOMC Fumbled, Boosting Rates and Promising Further Rate Hikes, While Liquidity-Starved Consumer Activity Already Suggests a New Recession
• Pace of November 2018 Payroll Jobs Growth Slowed to 155,000 (143,000 net of revisions), Against a downwardly revised monthly gain of 237,000 (previously 250,000) in October
• November U.3 Unemployment Dropped to a Record Low 3.67%, from 3.74% in October, While Broader U.6 Unemployment Rose to 7.57% from 7.43% and ShadowStats-Alternate Unemployment Notched Higher to 21.3% from 21.2%
• Intense Labor-Market Stress Remained Consistent with Headline Unemployment Near a Record High, Not a Record Low
• November Real Average Weekly Earnings Dropped With a Declining Work Week
• October 2018 U.S. Real Merchandise Trade Deficit Widened, and the Third-Quarter 2018 Worst-Ever Trade Deficit Deepened in Revision, with Negative Implications for the U.S. Dollar and for Fourth-Quarter GDP
• Strength in Recent Economic Headline Activity Commonly Was Boosted by Downside Revisions to Prior Reporting
• Collapsing Oil and Gasoline Prices Slowed November Headline CPI Inflation, Yet They Had the Net Effect of Boosting the Nonsensically Defined PPI Inflation
• Non-Seasonal, Extreme Monthly Swings in Gasoline Prices Have Disrupted any Consistent Trend in Monthly Year-to-Year CPI Inflation
More ...
Hyperinflation Watch No. 4
December 11th, 2018
• Intensifying Risks of Financial-Market and Systemic Instabilities
• November U.S. Monetary Base Declined at an Extreme Annual Pace of 12% (-12%); As Seen Similarly With Federal Reserve Policy Errors of 1936/1937 That Helped Trigger the Second Down Leg of the Great Depression
• Current FOMC Tightening Is Triggering an Unfolding New Recession
• Sell-Off in Equities Likely Has Just Begun
• Watch for Heavy Selling of the U.S. Dollar and Heavy Buying of Gold as Portents of Extreme Political and Financial-Market Turmoil and Systemic Instability
More ...
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DAILY UPDATE (March 22nd to 25th): February Home Sales Jumped 11.8% in the Month, Declined 1.8% (-1.8%) Year-to-Year / FOMC Held Rates in Check as Expected, Yet Stocks and U.S. Dollar Sold Off and Precious Metals and Oil Prices Rallied in Response / Those Early Trends Should Intensify as Economic Data Continue to Weaken / Freight Activity in Deepening Year-to-Year Decline, Signaled Still-Weaker Retail Sales, Industrial Production and GDP; Looks Like the Onset of a New Recession
• Next Postings of the SHADOWSTATS COMMENTARY and BULLET EDITION: Special Commentary No. 983-B the “Review” will follow over this weekend (likely March 25th). Bullet Edition No. 5 should post April 1st, reviewing economic releases (Mar 26 to 29): Housing Starts (Feb), Trade Deficit (Jan), Industrial Production (Annual Benchmark), “Final” 4q2018 GDP and New-Home Sales. Targeted posting dates are subject to change; actual postings are advised to Subscribers by coincident e-mails.
• Next Posting of SHADOWSTATS CONCURRENT ANALYSIS OF NEW ECONOMIC DATA (Tuesday, March 26th): February 2019 Housing Starts (Census Bureau, 8:30 am ET). ShadowStats analysis should be posted by 10:30 am ET. ShadowStats analyses usually post within two-to-three hours of a given headline release.
• LATEST ECONOMIC RELEASES/DEVELOPMENTS. February 2019 Existing-Home Sales Growth Jumped 11.8% in the Month, Declined 1.8% (-1.8%) Year-to-Year, as reported March 22nd by the National Association of Realtors (see details and press release at www.nar.realtor under research/housing statistics). Following a string of sharp declines, and on top of a small downside revision to January activity, February New-Home Sales rebounded by 11.8%, the strongest monthly gain in more than three years. That said, sales were down year-to-year by 1.8% (-1.8%), continuing in a deepening 12-month annual downtrend. This remains the highest-quality indicator available of Home Sales activity.
(Mar 20) FOMC Meeting held the targeted Federal Funds Rate in the 2.25% to 2.50% range (no more rate hikes expected this year), downgraded its near-term economic forecasts and slowed its pace of balance sheet liquidation, generally as expected by the financial markets (see Bullet Edition No. 4, to be expanded upon in pending No. 983-B). The ShadowStats general outlook has not changed: deepening economic downturn, intensifying easing pressures on the Fed, mounting downside pressures on the U.S. stock market and dollar, and upside pressures on oil, gold and silver prices.
(Mar 18) Growth in February 2019 CASS Freight Index™ (www.CassInfo.com) declined year-to-year for the third straight month down at a deepening annual pace of 2.09% (-2.09%). The smoothed 12-month-moving average for the Index, neutralizes seasonality in this unadjusted series, and it also declined for the third month, turning sharply lower in February. Declining/slowing freight activity has not been seen like this since first-quarter 2015, the onset of an unofficial recession for broad economic series such as Industrial Production, Manufacturing and New Orders for Durable Goods (see Bullet Editions No. 3 and No. 4). The index did signal slowing fourth-quarter 2018 activity and a downturn in first-quarter 2019 activity. ShadowStats regularly follows and analyzes the CASS Index as a high-quality coincident/leading indicator of underlying economic reality.
(Mar 15) Growth in February 2019 Industrial Production and Its Dominant Manufacturing Sector (Federal Reserve Board [FRB] Came in Below Expectations, on Top of Downside Revisions. Consistent with ShadowStats expectations of a pending downside revision to Fourth-Quarter 2018 GDP quarterly growth on March 28th, and an outright quarterly contraction in headline First-Quarter 2019 GDP, both Industrial Production (IIP) and Manufacturing (76% of production), showed weaker, revised fourth-quarter growth, and an early (two-month) trend for first-quarter contraction. The monthly February Production gain was 0.1%, following a revised decline of 0.4% (-0.4%) [previously 0.6% (-0.6%)] in January, while Manufacturing declined by 0.4% (-0.4%), versus a revised decline of 0.5% (-0.5%) [previously down by 0.9% (-0.9%) in January. [See extended analysis of Industrial Production and the economy in Bullet Edition No. 3]
The good news in production remained with Oil and Gas in the Mining Sector, which gained 0.3% in the month, versus a revised 0.3% [previously 0.1%] in January, with an uptrending first quarter. The Mining Sector (14% of production) fourth-quarter growth slowed minimally. Utilities (10% of production) pushed aggregate IIP to the plus side, rising by a random, weather-battered 3.7%, versus a downwardly revised 0.9% (-0.9%) [previously a 0.41% gain] in January.
(Mar 14) January 2019 Construction Spending (Census) Continued in Collapse, Despite a Gimmicked Headline Jump in January. As has become an all-too-common circumstance, monthly gains in headline spending are positive only due to major downside revisions to the prior month’s activity. The 1.3% headline January “gain” was a decline of 1.0% (-1.0%) before the downside revision to December, on top of a downside revision to November activity. With annualized real fourth-quarter 2018 sales down now at revised 11.5% (-11.5%) [previously 7.4% (-7.4)], the Mar 14 reporting indicated a likely downside revision to Fourth-Quarter 2018 GDP, along with an early trend for a First-Quarter 2019 contraction. Deteriorating weakness and downside revisions were seen heavily in the Residential Sector, with some January pickup in the Nonresidential Sector, particularly in Public Construction Spending.
(Mar 12) February 2019 Consumer Price Index (BLS) unadjusted annual CPI-U inflation slowed to a 28-month low of 1.5% (1.52% at the second decimal point), versus 1.6% (1.55%) in January 2019. Yet, in tandem with the still-dominant gasoline/energy prices, the seasonally adjusted February CPI rose by 0.2% (0.17%) in the month, its first gain since October 2018. The monthly CPI-U had held “unchanged” at 0.0% November 2018 through January 2019, respectively down by 0.01% (-0.01%) in November and December 2018 and by 0.02% (-0.02%) in January 2019.
The February 2019 ShadowStats Alternate CPI (1980 Base) held steady year-to-year, at 9.2% for the second month, down from 9.6% in December 2018. See the Alternate Data tab.
• Not Updated - RENEWED DOWNTURN IN ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, TROUBLED MARKETS AHEAD: Pending Commentary No. 983-B (the Review) will assess broad economic and financial-market conditions, including the nature and actions of the Federal Reserve and the ultimate sovereign-solvency issues facing the U.S. Treasury. The Outlook Sections here will be updated fully after the posting of the Review. Again, the general outlook has not changed.
The Review estimates that headline 1q2019 GDP is on track for an annualized real quarterly contraction, marking the onset of formal recession. The Federal Reserve’s excessive interest rate hikes and tightening, particularly December 2017 and after, triggered the pending recession, not the government shutdown, which only exacerbated the circumstance. Recent shifting FOMC-policy language suggests something of a GDP downturn also is in the Fed’s internal forecasts [See No. 983-A, and Bullet No. 3].
Markets: Softening Shift in Fed Language Increasingly Should Hit the U.S. Dollar and Boost Precious Metals. The U.S. Stock Market and the U.S. Dollar face further heavy selling, likely in the very near future, reflective of the weakening economy that has triggered softening policy language from Fed officials and the FOMC, with a temporary shelving of further rate hikes. While stocks have had a mixed rally in response, that likely will not continue long-term, against an offsetting and intensifying rally in Gold Prices and flight from the U.S. Dollar. Trends lower in the stock market and the U.S. dollar should become dominant, along with rallying precious metals price, as flight capital (both domestic and foreign) increasingly seeks higher rates and safety outside of dollar and related U.S. assets.
The circumstance is exacerbated by the extraordinary collapse of and deterioration in political civility in Washington.
Commentaries No. 982 (Jan 7), No. 981 (Jan 3) and No. 980a (Dec 26) reviewed some key conditions behind recent heavy selling/buying of U.S. equities and related, underlying economic conditions. See also ShadowStats ALERT (No. 973 of Oct 14), which was updated and reviewed in Hyperinflation Watch No. 4, Special Commentary No. 983-A and remains in play today (see pending No. 983-B. [No. 973 (and earlier) is open to the public, click on “Archives” at the bottom of the left-hand column, then on December 2018 for access.]
• ALTERNATE DATA TAB provides latest ShadowStats Alternate Estimates of Unemployment, Inflation, GDP, Money Supply, including the ShadowStats M3 estimate and the Financial-Weighted U.S. Dollar.
Best Wishes -- John Williams
Have you ever wondered why the CPI, GDP and employment numbers run counter to your personal and business experiences? The problem lies in biased and often-manipulated government reporting.
Primers on Government Economic Reports What you've suspected but were afraid to ask. The story behind unemployment, the Federal Deficit, CPI, GDP.
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Specialized Economic Consulting
Services include customized forecasts and analyses of the general economy, presentations and consultations in-house for clients. Contact us to discuss your needs.
John Williams' "Shadow Government Statistics"johnwilliams@shadowstats.comTel: (707) 763-5786
John Williams
PO Box 2538 Petaluma CA, 94953-2538
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Some Biographical & Additional Background Information
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Walter J. "John" Williams was born in 1949. He received an A.B. in Economics, cum laude, from Dartmouth College in 1971, and was awarded a M.B.A. from Dartmouth's Amos Tuck School of Business Administration in 1972, where he was named an Edward Tuck Scholar. During his career as a consulting economist, John has worked with individuals as well as Fortune 500 companies.
Although I am known formally as Walter J. Williams, my friends call me “John.” For 30 years, I have been a private consulting economist and, out of necessity, had to become a specialist in government economic reporting.
One of my early clients was a large manufacturer of commercial airplanes, who had developed an econometric model for predicting revenue passenger miles. The level of revenue passenger miles was their primary sales forecasting tool, and the model was heavily dependent on the GNP (now GDP) as reported by the Department of Commerce. Suddenly, their model stopped working, and they asked me if I could fix it. I realized the GNP numbers were faulty, corrected them for my client (official reporting was similarly revised a couple of years later) and the model worked again, at least for a while, until GNP methodological changes eventually made the underlying data worthless.
That began a lengthy process of exploring the history and nature of economic reporting and in interviewing key people involved in the process from the early days of government reporting through the present. For a number of years I conducted surveys among business economists as to the quality of government statistics (the vast majority thought it was pretty bad), and my results led to front page stories in 1989 in the New York Times and Investors Daily (now Investors Business Daily), considerable coverage in the broadcast media and a joint meeting with representatives of all the government's statistical agencies.
Nonetheless, the quality of government reporting has deteriorated sharply in the last couple of decades. Reporting problems have included methodological changes to economic reporting that have pushed headline economic and inflation results out of the realm of real-world or common experience.
Over the decades, well in excess of 1,000 presentations have been given on the economic outlook, or on approaches to analyzing economic data, to clients—large and small—including talks with members of the business, banking, government, press, academic, brokerage and investment communities. I also have provided testimony before Congress (details here).
An old friend—the late-Doug Gillespie—asked me some years back to write a series of articles on the quality of government statistics. The response to those writings (the Primer Series available at the top-center of this page) was so strong that we started ShadowStats.com (Shadow Government Statistics) in 2004. The newsletter is published as part of my economic consulting services. — John Williams
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