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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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Bullet Edition No. 8

May 7th, 2019
• PAYROLLS, CONSTRUCTION SPENDING, TRADE, CONSUMER AND THE FOMC
• Even in a Bifurcated Economy, Growth Depends Upon a Financially Healthy Consumer
• Yet, FOMC Policies Still Strangle Consumer Liquidity
• Signs of a Deepening Contraction in the Monetary Base
• New Recession Remains in Play, Still Likely to Force FOMC Easing by September, Irrespective of Federal Reserve Protestations to the Contrary
• Headline Gains in April Payrolls and First-Quarter Gross Domestic Product Were Not As Strong As They Appeared
• GDP Showed Multiple Levels of Contracting Consumer Activity
• Advance March Trade Deficit Reconfirmed Collapsing U.S. Goods Consumption, Not Otherwise Fully Accounted for In the Advance GDP
• Amidst Downside Revisions, Total Nominal U.S. Construction Spending Contracted Year-to-Year and Quarter-to-Quarter; Last Seen Going Into the Great Recession
• April Unemployment Rate Declined to a Record-Low 3.58%, Amidst a Declining Labor Force, Reflecting Mounting Labor-Market Distress
• How Can Full-Time Employment Be In Decline With a Booming Economy?
• Downside Revisions Likely Follow for First-Quarter GDP Growth
More ...
Bullet Edition No. 7

April 27th, 2019
• INITIAL FIRST-QUARTER 2019 GDP ESTIMATE WAS NOT CREDIBLE
• Downturn Has Just Begun; Recession Remains in Play, With FOMC-Generated Financial Stresses Still Diminishing Consumer Activity
• Consumer Controls 72% of GDP, but Generated Only 22% of GDP Growth
• Advance First-Quarter Real GDP Gain of 3.17% Topped Consensus Forecasts, Strengthened Against 2.17% in the Fourth-Quarter, Yet the Numbers Were of Unusually Poor Quality
• Bureau of Economic Analysis Is Hamstrung by Data-Quality Issues Tied to Underlying Government Shutdown Reporting Disruptions and Distortions
• Only Two Months of the First-Quarter Trade Deficit Were Available, Where Initial Quarterly GDP Estimates Usually Are Based on Three Months
• That Two-Month Quarterly Trade Deficit Narrowed Sharply, Signaling a Great Recession Style Collapse in Personal Consumption; That Deficit Guess Was the Largest Single Positive Contribution to First-Quarter GDP Growth
• Positive Impact of the Deficit Narrowing Should Have Been Offset by an Even Greater Decline in Goods Consumption, Which Dropped Sharply, But Not Enough
• Three Months of Likely Downside Revisions to First-Quarter GDP Follow, Into the July 26th GDP Benchmarking
• Broad Money Supply Velocity Slowed in First-Quarter 2019, Suggestive of a Slowing Economy
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No. 983b: Updated ALERT, Economic and Financial Market Review

April 22nd, 2019
• UPDATED ALERT: As U.S. Economic Activity Turns Increasingly Negative, So Too Will the Stock Market and the U.S. Dollar
• February Real Median Household Income and March Real Hourly Earnings Declined; Excessive FOMC Rate Hikes and Tightening Have Pummeled Consumer Liquidity
• Sharply Deteriorating Retail Sales, Housing Starts, Manufacturing and Freight Activity, and a Trade Deficit Narrowed by Collapsing Imports and Consumption, All Signal Pending Contraction in Real Gross Domestic Product
• New Recession Should Be Timed from November/Fourth-Quarter 2018 Peak; Fourth-Quarter 2018 GDP Growth Faces Further Downside Revision; First- and Second-Quarter 2019 Real GDP Quarterly Contractions Loom
• Unusually Wide Range of Forecasts for Initial First-Quarter 2019 GDP, from 1.4% (N.Y. Fed) to 2.8% (Atlanta Fed), Reflect Turmoil in Shutdown Disrupted Data; Headline Estimate Should Come In Below or at the Low-End of Expectations, Ultimately Revising to Outright Contraction by July
• Holding Rates Steady at Present, FOMC Should Be Easing by September
• Income Dispersion Is Worst Since Before the 1929 Stock Crash and Great Depression
• Annual Drop in First-Quarter 2019 Monetary Base Was Greater Than the Inadvertent Plunge That Triggered the 1937 Second Down-Leg of the Great Depression
• Spiking Gasoline and Oil Prices Are Reviving Headline CPI/PPI Inflation, Not the FOMC Canard of an Ever-Strengthening or Overheating Economy
• Time for Congress to Overhaul the Federal Reserve?
• U.S. Treasury Fiscal Operations Are Not Sustainable, Threatening U.S. Financial-Market and Dollar Turmoil, and Ultimately Hyperinflation
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Bullet Edition No. 6

April 9th, 2019
• PENDING DOWNTURN IN ECONOMIC EXPECTATIONS
• New Recession Should Be Timed from November/Fourth-Quarter 2018 Peak; Fourth-Quarter 2018 GDP Faces Still Further Downside Revision; First- and Second-Quarter 2019 Real GDP Quarterly Contractions Loom
• Current, Positive Economic Expectations Should Drop Sharply, Following Heavily Negative Economic Releases, April 16th to 25th, Leading Into the Initial First-Quarter 2019 GDP Estimate on April 26th
• Series Facing Near-Term Negative Catch-Up Reporting and/or Intensifying, Negative First-Quarter Trends Include: Retail Sales, Production, New Orders, Freight Activity, Home Sales, Construction and the Trade Deficit
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Bullet Edition No. 5

March 30th, 2019
• Reporting-Quality Issues Mount With Shutdown Catch-Up Data
• Fourth-Quarter 2018 GDP Growth Slowed Sharply, With Further Downside Adjustments Pending in July 26th Benchmarking
• Industrial Production Benchmark Revision Patterns Suggested Still-Slower Fourth-Quarter and Near-Contraction First-Quarter Activity
• Contracting First- and Second-Quarter 2019 GDP Activity Likely Follows
• Housing Sector Remains In Deep Recession, Despite Government-Shutdown Disrupted Headline Numbers
• U.S. Economy Continues to Weaken More Sharply and Quickly Than Widely Acknowledged, Signaling a Formal Recession Triggered by Overly Aggressive FOMC Tightening and Rate Hikes of the Last Year or So
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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
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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
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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
More ...
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
More ...
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
More ...
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DAILY UPDATE (May 12th to May 13th – Updated Schedule) April 2019 Real Average Hourly Earnings Declined for the Second Straight Month / April CPI-U Gained 0.32% in the Month, a 5-Month High 2.00% Year-to-Year, Along With Rising Gasoline Prices / April Annual PPI Construction Inflation Hit a 10-Year High of 5.40% / March 2019 Trade Deficit Widened Minimally / Narrowing First-Quarter Real Merchandise Trade Deficit Held in Place, Reflecting Declining U.S. Imports of Goods / GDP Issues Continue with Missing Full Consumer Goods Accounting / 49-Year Low in U.3 Unemployment Rate of 3.58% / Yet the Labor Force (Employed and Unemployed) Shrank for the Third Month, With Employment Stress at 7-Month Highs / Strong Payroll Gain on Top of Minimal Upside Revisions Still Reflected Low Annual Growth
• Next Posting of SHADOWSTATS CONCURRENT ANALYSES OF NEW ECONOMIC DATA: April 2019 Retail Sales (Census Bureau) and April Industrial Production (Federal Reserve), both on Wednesday, May 15th released at 8:30 and 9:15 am ET. ShadowStats analyses should post by 12:30 pm ET, usually within two-to-three hours of the headline release.
• Next SHADOWSTATS COMMENTARY and BULLET EDITION (Updated): Bullet Edition No. 9 should post May 13th, reviewing April inflation. The INFORMAL SURVEY OF U.S. ECONOMIC CONDITIONS, likely will post midweek; we still are receiving survey responses. Regular Commentary No. 984 is planned for May 25th; updated Consumer-Liquidity and Hyperinflation Watches follow. Targeted posting dates remain subject to change; actual postings are advised to Subscribers by coincident e-mail.
• LATEST ECONOMIC RELEASES. April 2019 Consumer Price Index (CPI): Annual Inflation Rebound Continued, Driven by a Continued Upswing in Gasoline Prices, Not by a Strong Economy. Real Hourly Earnings Declined for a Second Month (Bureau of Labor Statistics – BLS, May 10th). Moving in tandem with a continuing upswing in dominant gasoline prices, April 2019 unadjusted annual CPI-U inflation rose to 2.00%, from 1.86% in March 2019 and against a 28-month low of 1.52% in February 2019. [Year-to-year change in gasoline prices swung to the upside, with an annual gain of 3.13%, versus annual declines of 0.70% (-0.70%) in March 2019, 9.09% (-9.09%) in February 2019 and a 10.10% (-10.10%) trough in January 2019.] The seasonally adjusted April 2019 CPI rose by 0.32% in the month, versus gains of in 0.41% March and 0.17% in February, the first three monthly gains since October 2018. The monthly CPI-U had held “unchanged” at 0.0% November 2018 through January 2019, down by 0.01% (-0.01%) in November and December 2018 and by 0.02% (-0.02%) in January 2019.
By major CPI-U Sector, monthly Food inflation declined by 0.10% (-0.10%) in April, versus gains of 0.28% in March and 0.41% in February; Energy rose by 2.94% in the month, versus 3.47% in March and 0.44% in February; Core (net of food and energy) rose by 0.14% in April, versus 0.15% in March and 0.11% in February.
The April 2019 ShadowStats Alternate CPI (1980 Base) notched higher to 9.7% year-to-year, from 9.6% in March and 9.2% in February. The detail has been graphed on the Alternate Data tab (also accessible by clicking on the mini-graph below), with the latest numbers and an inflation calculator also available there to subscribers.
Based on the April 2019 CPI-U and last week’s payroll reporting, Real Average Hourly Earnings for all employees on private nonfarm payrolls declined for the second straight month, down by 0.1% (-0.1%) in April, having dropped by 0.3% (-0.3%) in March. Reflecting both hourly earnings and hours worked, Real Average Weekly Earnings declined by 0.4% (-0.4%) in April, having been unchanged at 0.0% in March. Such broadly remained suggestive of weakening economic activity.
(May 9) April 2019 Producer Price Index Gained 0.2% in the Month, 2.2% For the Year, Still Driven by Gasoline Prices (BLS). Aggregate Final Demand PPI (FD-PPI) rose by 0.17% in April, versus 0.60% in March, with unadjusted annual inflation effectively holding at a four-month high of 2.16%, versus 2.17% in March. The FD-PPI is dominated by “Services,” which guestimates profit margins, not prices. Accordingly, rising energy inflation (gasoline prices) tended to prop “Goods” inflation but muted “Services” inflation.
By Major Category: PPI-Goods inflation rose by 0.26% in April, versus 1.05% in March, with annual Goods inflation at 1.49% versus 1.32% in March. The month-to-month gain was dominated by a 1.77% increase in energy prices, not by surging economic activity. PPI-Services inflation rose in the month by 0.08%, muted by surging gasoline prices, down from 0.34% in March, with annual April inflation at 2.41%, versus 2.50% in March. PPI-Construction April year-to-year inflation rose to a record high (for this series as started in November 2009) of 5.40%, from 4.87% in March. The month-to-month Construction numbers never are comparable.
(May 9) March 2019 Trade Deficit Widened Minimally (Census Bureau, Bureau of Economic Analysis - BEA). Reflecting minimal revisions, the March Goods and Services Trade Deficit widened to $50.0 billion from $49.3 billion and against $51.1 billion in January. A pattern of similar minimal revisions in the Real Merchandise Trade Deficit left intact the recessionary pattern in Imports, as seen in 2008, during the Great Recession, where declining domestic consumer demand was reflected in declining real imports of goods. The Net Export account in the first-quarter GDP should see only a minimal first revision (May 30th) as a result, although the GDP still remains shy of fully accounting for the decline in consumer activity.
(May 3) April 2019 Labor Numbers: Unemployment Dropped to a 49-year low of 3.58%, Amidst Mounting Labor-Market Stress Now at a Seven-Month High; Payrolls Rose by a Strong 263,000, With Continued Soft Annual Growth, Amidst Unusually Minimal Revisions (BLS, May 3rd, see discussion and graphs in Bullet Edition No. 8). April 2019 headline U.3 Unemployment dropped to a 49-year low of 3.58% from 3.81% in March, but that continued in the context of a shrinking labor force, discussed shortly. Broader U.6 Unemployment eased to 7.26% in April from 7.34% (it includes those marginally attached to the labor force and those working part-time for economic reasons). On top of U.6, the ShadowStats Alternate Unemployment Estimate, including long-term displaced/discouraged workers not counted by the BLS, held at 21.2% for the third month. An updated graph of the unemployment measures has been posted on the Alternate Data Tab (or mini-graph below), with hard numbers also available there for subscribers.
Labor-Market Stress Increased for Third Month. Although the headline U.3 rate dropped to a new low of 3.58%, the labor force declined at the same time by 490,000 (-490,000), with declines in both the employed and unemployed counts. Accordingly, both the Participation Rate and Employment-Population Ratio dropped to seven-month lows, indicating rapidly mounting labor-market stress. The counts of distressed workers and those working part-time because they could not find full-time employment rose by 215,000 in the month. At the same time, the count of full-time employed fell by 191,000 (-191,000) in April, following a drop of 190,000 (-190,000) in March.
Monthly Payroll Jobs Jumped, While Annual Growth in Payroll Jobs Remained Soft. Monthly payroll jobs growth gained 263,000 in April (counts the number of jobs, including multiple jobs/part-time jobs for the same person), against minimal net revisions to February and March, which left March payrolls 16,000 above the prior estimate. Nonetheless, year-to-year jobs growth held at 1.76%, above the 1.69% of February and March, but otherwise the weakest since November 2018. Near-term labor market trends and conditions were reviewed in Bullet Edition No. 8.
Markets: Weaker Economic Data Should Intensify Market Expectations for Renewed FOMC Easing, Hitting the U.S. Dollar and Boosting Precious Metals Prices. The U.S. Stock Market and the U.S. Dollar face intensified/renewed heavy selling, likely in the very near future, reflective of the weakening economy that already had triggered Fed officials and the FOMC to shelve further rate hikes, at least temporarily. Beyond the initial GDP reporting and strong April Payrolls, the headline economy continues to slow. Look for the FOMC to resume some form of renewed easing, possibly Quantitative Easing, by September 2019, despite Fed protestations to the contrary. As headline economic activity weakens sharply, meaningful downtrends in the stock market and the U.S. dollar should become dominant, along with rallying precious metals prices, as flight capital (domestic and foreign) seeks higher rates and safety outside the dollar and U.S. assets.
The broad economic and financial-market outlook of Special Commentary No. 983-B remains in play, in the context of updated material in Bullet Edition No. 7 (subscription only, at present). No. 982 and earlier missives provide broad background information and are open to the public; click on the links to those missives at the bottom of the left-hand column for access (and on “Archives” for earlier missives back to 2004).
• ALTERNATE DATA TAB provides the latest ShadowStats Alternate Estimates of Inflation, GDP and the Unemployment Rate, as well as exclusive estimates of Money Supply M3 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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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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