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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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PUBLISHING SCHEDULE. - The next regular Commentary, scheduled for Friday, January 15th, will cover December Retail Sales, Industrial Production and the Producer Price Index (PPI). See Schedule for details.
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No. 779: December Labor Numbers, Shifting Monetary Conditions and Money Supply M3

January 9th, 2016
• Something Afoot in the Banking System?
• Post-FOMC Rate Hike, Excess Reserves in Historic Plunge; Monetary Base Dropped to 28-Month Low in Record Annual Decline
• December Year-to-Year Broad Money Supply Growth Fell to 4.5% from 5.2% in November
• Employment and Unemployment Reality Remained Bleak
• Year-to-Year Payroll Growth Held at 19-Month Low
• Headline Payrolls Heavily Skewed by Unpublished Seasonal Shifts
• Household-Survey Revisions Were Unusually Minimal
• November 2015 Unemployment Levels Unchanged: U.3 held at 5.0%; U.6 at 9.9%, and ShadowStats at 22.9%
• Fourth-Quarter Industrial Production Faces Quarterly and Annual Contractions in Week Ahead
More ...
No. 778: November Trade Deficit and Construction Spending

January 6th, 2016
• Fourth-Quarter Real Trade Deficit Continued on Track for Worst Showing Since Third-Quarter 2007, Indicative of Looming Hit to GDP
• Real Construction Spending Now on Track for Fourth-Quarter 2015 Contraction, Consistent with Other Signals for a Drop in Fourth-Quarter GDP
• Corrected for “Processing Errors” Headline Construction Spending Was Higher, but With Weaker and Declining Growth Across-the-Board
• Reporting Mistakes: A New Era in the Quality of Headline Government Reporting? Next Month We Get to See the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Corrections for “Processing Errors” in Income Estimates
More ...
No. 777: Key Issues in the Past Year and the Year Ahead

December 30th, 2015
• A Heavily-Troubled 2015 Has Set Up 2016 for Disorders in the
Financial Markets, Systemic Stability and the U.S. Political Arena
• Formal “New” Recession Recognition Is Likely Early in the New Year
• Real S&P 500 Sales -- Net of Stock-Buyback Distortions -- Showed No Post-2009 Recovery in the Economy, but Instead Showed Low-Level Stagnation that Shifted Recently to Intensifying Downturn
• Deepening U.S. Contraction Should Hit the U.S. Dollar Hard, Where a Temporarily-Sidelined FOMC Touts an Economic Focus, and Federal-Deficit, Systemic-Solvency and Treasury-Funding Issues Come to the Fore
• Federal Reserve and Other Central Banks Have No Way Out as Dangers from the Panic of 2008 Persist
• Heavy Dollar Selling Should Generate Rallying Gold, Silver and Oil Prices
• U.S. Electorate Likely Will Vote Its Pocketbook More ...
No. 776: November Durable Goods Orders, New-Home Sales

December 23rd, 2015
• Net of Inflation and Commercial Aircraft Orders, November Durable Orders Were Stronger than the Headline “Unchanged”
• Nonetheless, Smoothed Orders in This Volatile Series Still Were Consistent with an Unfolding Recession
• New-Home Sales Continued in a Smoothed Pattern of Deepening Down-Trend, Low-Level Stagnation More ...
No. 775: GDP Revision, November Existing-Home Sales

December 22nd, 2015
• Existing-Homes Sales Collapse Consistent with Deepening Recession, Even Allowing for Special Factors
• Rapidly Mounting Odds for Fourth-Quarter GDP Contraction
• GDP Revisions Were No More than Statistical Noise; Third-Quarter Gain of 1.98% Was Not Statistically Significant; Annual Growth at Six-Quarter Low
• With Rate-Hike Speculation Temporarily Sated, Deteriorating Economy Should Hit U.S. Dollar Hard, Boosting Gold, Silver and Oil Prices, and Domestic Inflation More ...
No. 774: November Industrial Production, Housing Starts, FOMC

December 16th, 2015
• With Recession Deepening, the FOMC Finally Hiked Rates
• November Industrial Production Tumbled, Confirming Recession: Down Month-to-Month by 0.6% (-0.6%), Year-to-Year by 1.2% (-1.2%), Quarterly and Annual Contractions Are Virtual Certainties in Fourth Quarter
• Outside of Formal Recessions, the 1956 Steel Strike Was the Last Time Headline Production Declined Year-to-Year by More than One-Percent
• Fourth-Quarter Housing Starts Also Appear Headed into Quarterly Contraction
• Third-Quarter GDP Faces Downside Revision Pressures; Fourth-Quarter GDP Increasingly Looks Like a Contraction More ...
No. 773: November CPI, Real Retail and Earnings

December 15th, 2015
• Annual Real Retail Sales Growth Slowed to 0.9%, Indicating Recession
• Early Trend in Fourth-Quarter Real Retail Sales Now Is Flat
• Monthly Real Average Weekly Earnings Flattened Out in November
• November Annual Inflation Turned Positive Across the Board: 0.5% (CPI-U), 0.1% (CPI-W), 0.1% (C-CPI-U), 8.1% (ShadowStats)
More ...
No. 772: Retail Sales, Liquidity, PPI, Federal Obligations, SDRs, FOMC

December 11th, 2015
• Consistent, Fiscal-Year-End 2015 Gross Federal Debt Hit a Post-World War II High at 104.4% of GDP, Total Federal Obligations Exceeded $100 Trillion, at 540% of GDP
• IMF Gave ChineseYuan Favorable Consideration and a Strong SDR Weighting
• 0.2% Gain in Nominal Retail Sales Was Not Statistically Significant and Was Not Much Higher than Likely Inflation
• Continued Sharp Slowing of Annual Retail Sales Growth Intensified the Signal for Imminent Recession
• November Industrial Production Set to Turn Negative Year-to-Year for First Time Since the Economic Collapse – An Issue for the FOMC?
• Headline Monthly PPI Inflation of 0.27% Reflected Continuing Nonsense, Services Inflation Spiked by Falling Gasoline Price More ...
No. 771: November Labor Conditions and M3, October Trade Deficit and Construction Spending

December 5th, 2015
• Fourth-Quarter Real Trade Deficit on Track for Worst Showing Since Third-Quarter 2007, Suggestive of Hit to GDP
• Year-to-Year Payroll Growth Dropped to 18-Month Low
• Employment Gain Was All in Part-Time for Economic Reasons; Full-Time Employment Was up by just 3,000
• Broader November 2015 Unemployment Rates Increased: U.3 held at 5.0%; U.6 and ShadowStats Respectively Notched Higher to 9.9% and 22.9%
• Construction Spending “Surge” Was in Rising Inflation, Not in Physical Activity
• Broad Annual Money Supply Growth Fell to 5.2% from 5.5%
• Rate Hike Is Far from Certain: Fed’s Primary Concerns Center on Risks of Severe Systemic Instabilities not on Lack of Economic Recovery More ...
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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: (415) 512-7701
American Business Analytics & Research LLC
The Hearst Building 5 Third Street, Suite 1301 San Francisco, CA 94103
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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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