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Latest Commentaries Subscription required Subscription

The next regular Commentary, scheduled for Friday, November 11th, will be general in nature, reviewing post-election circumstances.  There are no major economic releases in the week ahead.   Please see the schedule for details.

No 845: October Labor, September Trade and Construction Spending, M3, Dollar and Gold Subscription required November 4th, 2016
• October Annual Payroll Growth Declined to a 42-Month Low • Full-Time Employment Declined by 103,000 (-103,000) in October • October 2016 Unemployment Rates Notched Lower: U.3 at 4.9%, U.6 at 9.5%, ShadowStats-Alternate Rate at 22.9% • Drop in Headline October Unemployment Rate Reflected Unemployed Leaving the Labor Force, Not Getting Jobs • Participation Rate and Employment-to-Population Ratio Declined • With Continuing Contractions in Monthly, Quarterly and Annual Activity, Real Construction Spending Remained Down by 24% (-24%) from Recovering Its Pre-Recession High • Narrowing of Third-Quarter Trade Deficit Due to Short-Lived, Soybean-Export Surge • Collapsing Annual M3 Growth Showed Increasing Flight to Liquidity for Big Money; Growth Soared in the M1 and M2 Subcomponents of M3  More ...
No. 844: Third-Quarter GDP, Consumer-Liquidity and Monetary-System Updates Subscription required October 29th, 2016
• Third-Quarter GDP Growth of 2.9% Was Not Credible • Politically-Massaged Data Traditionally Have Negligible Impact on Voters • Real Annual Growth of 2.3% in Third-Quarter Disposable Income Held Below 2.9%, Indicating Incumbent-Party Loss of the White House • Underlying Economic Reality Remains Far from Recovery and Expansion • Headline GDP Remained Massively Inconsistent with Recession Seen in Freight Traffic, Petroleum Usage, Corporate Revenues, Construction, Industrial Production, Broad Employment Indicators, Etc. • Third-Quarter Velocity of Money Slowed Anew • Monetary Base Tumbled to a Three-Year Low in a Record Year-to-Year Drop, Annual M3 Growth Turned Sharply Lower in October • September Real Median Household Income Continued to Stagnate, While Consumer Attitudes Took a Beating in October  More ...
No. 843: Special Comments, Durable Goods Orders, New- and Existing-Homes Sales, Fed Shenanigans Subscription required October 27th, 2016
• Fedspeak Enters the Realm of the Ridiculous, Suggesting Healthy Payroll Growth at a Recessionary 50,000-to-100,000 Jobs per Month • The Fed Moves to Redefine U.S. Economic Normalcy as Reflecting Non-Recovering, Stagnant Activity and Large Numbers of Labor-Force Non-Participants • An Extraordinarily Volatile and Uncertain Presidential Campaign May Be Constraining Near-Term Economic Activity • Third-Quarter Durable Goods Orders Declined Quarter-to-Quarter and Year-to-Year, Both Before and After Adjustment for Inflation; Ex-Commercial Aircraft, Orders Gained • Home Sales Activity Continued in Broad, Non-Recovering Stagnation • September New-Home Sales Gained in the Month, Only Because of Massive Downside Revisions Back to June • September Existing-Home Sales Gain Boosted by Downside August Revision  More ...
No. 842: September Residential Construction, Housing Starts Subscription required October 19th, 2016
• Housing Starts Turned Negative in Third-Quarter 2016, Quarter-to-Quarter and Year-to-Year, Amidst Collapsing Multiple-Unit Activity • Both Starts and Permits Held in Smoothed, Non-Recovering, Low-Level Stagnation, Still Shy of Respective Pre-Recession Highs by 54% and 46% • Recent Headline Monthly Economic Reporting Has Pressured Third-Quarter GDP Growth Expectations to the Downside  More ...
No. 841: CPI, Real Retail Sales and Earnings, Freight Index, Election, FOMC, Dollar and Gold Subscription required October 18th, 2016
• Main Street U.S.A. Is Not Happy; That Is Bad News for Establishment Political Candidates and for the Financial Markets and the U.S. Dollar • Social Security COLA Shenanigans at the BLS? • Extraordinarily-Unusual Corrections to Unadjusted CPI Data Moved the Unrounded COLA Calculation from 0.351% to 0.348%; The Difference Was a 2017 COLA at 0.3%, Instead of 0.4% • September 2016 Annual Inflation Firmed by 0.4% to 0.5%, with CPI-U at 1.5%, CPI-W at 1.2% and ShadowStats at 9.1% • Versus a Nominal Monthly Rebound of 0.6% in September, Real Retail Sales Gained 0.3%, Failing to Recover July Levels, with a Continuing, Intense Low-Annual-Growth Recession Signal • Down in September, Real Earnings Have Declined in Five of the Last Six Months • September Freight Index Continued in Ongoing Economic Tumble  More ...
No. 840: September Industrial Production Subscription required October 17th, 2016
• Representing 65% of the GDP, Industrial Production Fell Year-to-Year for the Fourth-Straight Quarter • Outside of Formal Recessions, Two-or-More Consecutive Quarters of Annual Decline are Unprecedented in the 98-Year History of the Production Series • September Monthly Production Gains Reflected No More than Downside Revisions to August and Before • Weaker than Initial August Reporting, September Production Was Down by 1.42% (-1.42%) from Its Pre-2007 Recession High; Down by 2.31% (-2.31%) from Its One-Month, November 2014 Recovery • September Manufacturing Was Down 6.28% (-6.28%) from Its Never-Recovered Pre-Recession Peak • Domestic Oil and Gas Exploration Collapse Tentatively Appears to be Bottoming, in the Context of Bottoming of Oil Prices  More ...
No. 839: September Nominal Retail Sales, PPI, Liquidity, Presidential Election Subscription required October 14th, 2016
• Incumbent Party Has Lost the White House in Every Election Since 1932, When Annual Real Disposable Income Growth Has Been Below 2.9% • Second-Quarter 2016 Real Disposable Income Growth Was 1.8% • Results of the Highly Contentious U.S. Presidential Election Should Be Bullish for Gold, Irrespective of the Winner • Nominal September Retail Sales Gain of 0.6% Was Dominated by Rising Prices and Gimmicked Seasonal-Adjustment Revisions • Monthly September PPI Inflation: Goods up 0.65%, Services up 0.09%, Construction up 0.09%, Total up 0.27% • Consumer Liquidity Continues to Constrain Economic Activity  More ...
No. 838: September Employment and Unemployment, ShadowStats Ongoing M3 Subscription required October 7th, 2016
• Political Shenanigans in Reporting of September Labor Conditions Were No Worse than the Standard Monthly Reporting Gimmicks • Below-Consensus Headline Gain in September Payrolls Probably Was a Contraction, Net of Reporting Biases • Headline Annual Payroll Growth Held at a 31-Month Low • With Full-Time Jobs Down in September, All the Household-Survey Employment Gain Was in Part-Time Jobs • September 2016 Unemployment Rate Changes Were Uneven: U.3 Rose to 5.0%, U.6 Held at 9.7%, ShadowStats-Alternate Rate Held at 23.0% • Annual M3 Growth Held Even at 4.3% in September 2016, versus August 2016, While the Annual Decline in the Monetary Base Hit a Record  More ...
No. 837: August Trade Deficit, Construction Spending, Fed Policy Subscription required October 6th, 2016
• With Contracting Monthly, Quarterly and Annual Activity, Real Construction Spending Remained Down by 25% (-25%) from Recovering Its Pre-Recession Peak • Weakest Real Construction Spending Growth since Series Trough in 2011 • Widening of August Trade Deficit Was Due to Shrinking Services Surplus, Reflecting Payments for Importing Rio Olympics Intellectual Property • With Second-Quarter Real Merchandise Trade Deficit Worst Since 2007, Temporary Soybean Export Explosion Has Narrowed Third-Quarter Deficit • Central Bank Intervention Appeared to Drive October 4th Gold Selling. Is a Policy Shift Pending?  More ...
No. 836: Second-Quarter GDP Second Revision, August Household Income Subscription required September 29th, 2016
• Economic Activity Still Remains Far from Recovery • Gross Domestic Income (GDP Equivalent) Declined by 0.2% (-0.2%) in a Quarterly Contraction • Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product Growth Rates Revised Higher as per Market Expectations • Nonsense Reporting: Upside Revision of 0.32% to GDP Growth Was More than Accounted for by the Health Care Contribution to GDP Growth Revising from 0.44% to 0.83% • Headline GDP Growth Patterns Run Counter to the Recession Seen in Freight Traffic, Petroleum Usage, Corporate Revenues and Broad Employment Indicators •Real Median Household Income Continued to Stagnate in August  More ...
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John Williams'
"Shadow Government Statistics"

johnwilliams@shadowstats.com
Tel: (415) 512-7701

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Some Biographical & Additional Background Information

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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