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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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Flash Update No. 14

November 10th, 2019
• Gold Should Continue to Outperform Stocks, Despite Recent Selling of Precious Metals and Stock-Market Rallies
• Consider that the S&P 500 Record High of Friday, November 8th, Was up by 5.5% from Its Record High of September 20, 2018
• In Contrast, London Gold of November 8th Closed up by 21.8% from September 20, 2018, Despite Recent Heavy Selling of Gold
• Continued Deterioration of Underlying Economic Fundamentals Should Accelerate in the Week Ahead, Dampening Economic Expectations
• An Ongoing Collapse in October Industrial Production, With Retail Sales Growth Running Below Headline Inflation, Should Challenge FOMC Claims of Sustainable Moderate Growth
More ...
Flash Update No. 13

November 4th, 2019
• Explosive Growth in Federal Debt, Against Headline GDP, Is Out of Control, Threatening Domestic Financial Stability and the Survival of the Republic
• Having Triggered the Still-Deepening U.S. Recession, the FOMC Declared That Sustainable, Moderate U.S. Economic Growth Is in Place, Hinting That No Further Easing Was Needed -- Nonsense!
• There Is No Sustainable Moderate Expansion in Place; Aggressive Federal Reserve Easing Still Was and Still Is Needed
• Major Downside Revisions to Economic Growth Loom, Including to the GDP
• The Fed Chair Touted the Third-Quarter GDP as Evidence of Stability, Yet, Just Two Days Later, Construction Spending Suggested the Headline Third-Quarter GDP Growth of 1.9% Should Have Been 1.7%, Possibly 1.4%
• Stronger-than-Expected Third-Quarter Payroll Growth Was Bloated by Inconsistent Seasonal Adjustment Revisions and Was Weak Year-to-Year, While Headline Unemployment Notched Higher Across-the-Board
• Flummoxed FOMC Has Resumed Its Balance Sheet Expansion In an Effort to Stabilize Systemic Liquidity
More ...
Flash Update No. 12

October 21st, 2019
• Dangerous Times for the U.S. Dollar; Intensifying Flight to Precious Metals Likely
• Domestic Systemic Liquidity Issues Appear Serious: Third-Quarter 2019 Velocity of Money (M3) Is on Track for Its Sharpest Quarterly Drop Since the Depths of the Great Recession
• Liquidity Crisis Intensifies, Reflecting Deepening Financial-System Instabilities
• Used by Some at the Fed to Minimize FOMC Accommodation, Overly Optimistic Economic Assumptions Are Falling Apart
• Latest Headline Reporting, Revisions and Corrective Benchmarkings Increasingly Put the Lie to Current Federal Reserve Presumptions of Stable and Positive Economic Growth
• A Deepening Economic Downturn and Flummoxed Fed Suggest Intensified FOMC Accommodation at the October 29/30 Meeting, Reflected Partially in the October 11th Inter-Meeting Liquidity-Infusion Program
More ...
Flash Update No. 11

October 12th, 2019
• Federal Reserve Launches New Round of Quantitative Easing In All But Name
• At Least $60 Billion of Treasury Bill Purchases Per Month into Second-Quarter 2020
• Aimed at Rebuilding the Fed Balance Sheet
• Mounting Economic Weakness and Systemic Instabilities Still Leave Open a Possible 0.50% Rate Cut at October 29/30 FOMC
• Further Expansion of the Informal Quantitative Easing or Renewed Formal Quantitative Easing Is Likely
More ...
Flash Update No. 10

October 5th, 2019
• U.S. Economy Remains in an Intensifying Downturn
• Despite Headline Unemployment at a 50-Year Low of 3.52%, Broader Unemployment Measures and Employment Stress Levels Still Signal Deep Recession
• September Payrolls Gained 136,000 (181,000 Net of Revisions), While Year-to-Year Payroll Growth Held at a Low of 1.4%, Last Seen Going Into and Coming Out of the Great Recession
• August Trade Deficit Widened, With Negligible Impact on Third-Quarter GDP Outlook
• October FOMC Meeting Should See a 50-Basis-Point Rate Cut and Renewed Quantitative Easing
• September Money Supply M3 Annual Growth Jumped to a 10-Year High
More ...
Flash Update No. 9

September 25th, 2019
• Sharply Elevated Risks of a Near-Term Stock-Market Crash Reflects a Confluence of Unusual Risk Factors, Either Developing or Already in Play:
• Market Perceptions of Meaningful Risk for the Removal from Office of the President Would Threaten U.S. Dollar, Financial-Market and Economic Stability, and Trigger Flight to Precious Metals
• Increasingly Unstable Global Political and Economic Conditions, Including Trade and Oil-Market Turmoil, a Still-Deepening and Unfolding U.S. Recession, Unstable Federal Reserve Policies
• The Onset of the 2019 Squirrelly Season
• 2018 Extreme Income Variance Held in Place at Levels That Tend to Lead Financial and Economic Crashes
More ...
Flash Update No. 8

September 18th, 2019
• FOMC Cut Rates by the Expected Quarter Point, Amidst Ongoing, Nonsensical Hype of Near-Perfect Economic Conditions
• Broad U.S. Economic Activity Has Continued in a Deepening Downtrend, Amidst Mounting Downside Risks
• Major Downside Revisions to Headline Economic Activity Are Likely In Looming Benchmarkings
• Major, Disruptive Economic Risks and Financial-Market Turmoil Are at Hand
• More-Aggressive Fed Easing Is Likely at or Before the October 30th FOMC, Including Expanded Quantitative Easing
More ...
Flash Update No. 7

September 7th, 2019
• Weakening and Negatively Benchmarked Annual Payroll Growth Signaled Deepening Recession
• As Has Become Commonplace, Monthly Payroll Gains Continued to Disappoint Expectations, Despite Regular Relative Monthly Boosts from Downwardly Revised Prior-Month Activity
• August Headline Unemployment of 3.7% Held Just a Notch Above Its Historic Low, Yet Broader Unemployment Measures Jumped by 0.2% to 0.3% Amidst Deteriorating Employment Conditions
• Economic and Systemic Conditions Are Worse than Headlined, Where Government-Shutdown Bloated Data Have Been Enshrined, Temporarily
• Pending August Retail Sales and Production Should Disappoint Expectations
• The FOMC Needs to Cut Interest Rates More Aggressively Than the Quarter-Point Being Suggested for September 18th
• Fed Is Boosting Money Supply Growth; M3 Growth Strongest Since 2009
• FOMC Easing Should Intensify Shortly; Renewed Quantitative Easing Remains a Good Bet
More ...
Flash Update No. 6

August 29th, 2019
• Second-Quarter 2019 GDP Revision to 2.04%, from 2.06%, Was Negligible and Ran Counter to Rapid Deterioration in Underlying Series
• Initial 2q2019 Gross Domestic Income Was Estimated at 2.11%, with Initial Gross National Product at 3.18%
• Yet, Manufacturing and Oil and Gas Production Are In Decline, on Top of Meaningful, Second-Quarter Downside Revisions
• Real New Orders Are in Their Worst Contraction Since the Great Recession
• Falling Construction Spending Is Worst Since the Great Recession
• Downturn in Freight Activity Is Worst Since the Great Recession
• Heavy Downside Revisions to Retail Trade Employment Suggest Some Recent Overstatement of Retail Sales Activity
• Continued FOMC Easing Should Intensify Shortly; Renewed Quantitative Easing Remains a Good Bet
More ...
Flash Update No. 5
August 21st, 2019
• Payroll Employment Hit by 501,000 (-501,000) Downside Preliminary Benchmark Revision for Year-Ended March 2019
• Final 2019 Benchmarking Estimate Should Be Even Worse; Publication Due With January 2020 Payrolls
• Previously Estimated Jobs Gain for Full Year Ended March 2019 Was Reduced by 20% (-20%) from 2.496 Million to 1.995 Million
• Year-to-Year Payroll Growth Revised from 1.69% to 1.35%, Weakest Since Great Recession
• Negative Benchmarking Suggested Further FOMC Easing and Weakening GDP in Revision
More ...
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DAILY UPDATE (November 21st to 24th -- October 2019 Home Sales Picked-Up Following a Deeper September Decline / Amidst Usual Nonsense Volatility, the Monthly Gain in October Housing Starts Was Not Meaningful / Housing Starts Remained Down by 42% (-42%) and Building Permits Down by 35% (-35%) from Recovering Pre-Recession Highs / In Response to Weak October Production and Retail Sales, Both the New York Fed and the Atlanta Fed Slashed Their Respective Model Forecasts of Fourth-Quarter Real Annualized GDP Growth to 0.3% (0.4% Post-Housing Starts) and 0.4% / October 30th FOMC’s “Sustainable, Moderate Economic Growth” Is Gone / Expanded FOMC Accommodation Is Needed and Market Expectations Should Shift Accordingly / Deepening Recession, With October 2019 CASS Freight Index Dropping Year-to-Year for the 11th Straight Month / Indications of a Deepening Downturn and Risk of GDP Contraction by Year End / October Industrial Production Continued to Collapse, Down 0.8% (-0.8%) in the Month, Still Down by 0.5% (-0.5%) Separate from the Auto Strike / Both Mining and Manufacturing Were in Sharp Monthly Decline, with Deteriorating Annual Growth / Second Consecutive Real Month-to-Month Decline in October Retail Sales Was First Since the Disastrous 2018 Holiday Season / Boosted by Gasoline Prices, Both October PPI and CPI Monthly Inflation Hit Seven-Month Highs of 0.4%, Exceeding Consensus Expectations
• L A T E S T .. N U M B E R S .. October 2019 Existing-Home Sales Rose 1.9% in the Month (National Association of Realtors - see press release at www.nar.realtor under research/ housing statistics for details). October monthly Existing-Home Sales rose by 1.9%, following a downwardly revised drop of 2.5% (-2.5%) [previously down by 2.2% (-2.2%)] in September. This series is of better quality than the Census Bureau’s nonsensically volatile New-Home Sales estimates.
(November 19) Six-Month Smoothed October 2019 Housing Starts and Building Permits Both Inched Higher, Despite Regular Nonsense Monthly Volatility (Census Bureau and HUD). The headline monthly gain of 3.8% in October Housing Starts, which followed a revised 7.9% (-7.9%) [previously 9.4% (-9.4%)] plunge in September, was not meaningfully different from zero at the 90% confidence interval, as had been the case in September. In contrast, the usually stable monthly change in the dominant Single-Unit category of the Building Permits series was meaningful, up by 3.2% in the month of October, following a revised gain of 0.7% [previously 0.8%] in September. With six-month smoothed Building Permits and Housing Starts both beginning to notch higher, those series remain meaningfully shy of ever having recovered their pre-recession highs, down respectively by 35.4% (-35.4%) and 42.2% (-42.2%) from peak activity.
(November 14) October 2019 CASS Freight Index Showed 11th-Straight Month of Annual Decline and Downtrending 12-Month Moving Average (www.CassInfo.com, see https://www.cassinfo.com/freight-audit-payment/cass-transportation-indexes/cass-freight-index). The October Index declined year-to-year for the eleventh straight month, down by 5.9% (-5.9%), paralleling the pattern of annual declines seen at the onset of the Great Recession. After warning for the fifth straight month that its Index was “signaling an economic contraction,” Cass also noted: “... material increases in the rates of decline, signal... the contraction is getting worse, ” and added “... we see a growing risk that GDP will go negative by year’s end.”
Separately, the Index’s 12-month moving average declined month-to-month for its eleventh straight month. Those year-to-year and 12-month-moving-average metrics neutralize seasonality in this unadjusted series. ShadowStats regularly follows and analyzes the CASS Index as a highest-quality coincident/ leading indicator of underlying economic reality. We thank CASS for their permission to graph and to use their numbers in our Commentaries.
(November 15) October 2019 Industrial Production Activity and Its Key Manufacturing and Mining Sectors Continued to Plunge, Amidst Collapsing Year-to-Year Growth Not Seen Since the 2015-2017 Mini-Recession (Federal Reserve Board). In context of the GM Auto Strike, October Production Dropped by 0.84% (-0.84%) in the month, with Manufacturing down by 0.63% (-0.63%) [FRB estimated ex-strike that Production was down by 0.5% (-0.5%), with Manufacturing down 0.1% (-0.1%)]. In GDP accounting, strikes are included. October Capacity Utilization slowed to 76.7% from an unrevised 77.5% in September. Amidst some upside revisions to recent Oil and Gas Production, October Mining activity continued to collapse, down by 0.68% (-0.68%) in the month, reflecting a deepening annual plunge in Oil and Gas Exploration. Exploration was down by 18.95% (-18.95%) year-to-year in October, versus an unrevised September drop of 13.88% (-13.88%), with respective monthly declines of 5.09% (-5.09%) and 5.49% (-5.49%). Utilities declined by a random 2.57% (-2.57%) in October, having gained a revised 1.87% (previously 1.36%) in September.
Fourth-Quarter 2019 Industrial Production is in early trend for its third quarterly contraction in the last four quarters. The same holds true for the Manufacturing sector, while the Mining sector is on track for its second consecutive quarterly decline. Again, the GM strike will add downside pressure to the Fourth-Quarter 2019 GDP estimate. Separately, October 2019 Manufacturing remained 5.5% (-5.5%) shy of ever having recovered its pre-recession peak activity. In the 101-year history of Industrial Production, that reflects a record 143 consecutive months and counting (one-month shy of a full 12 years) of economic non-expansion, as measured in the Federal Reserve Board’s monthly surveying.
(November 15) Early Signal for a Second Consecutive, Holiday Season with Weak Retail Sales (Census Bureau). Despite small downside revisions to September and August activity, the nominal October 2019 Retail Sales gain of 0.27% was weaker than the headline 0.36% October CPI-U, meaning negative real growth. As usual in the often-nonsensical Retail Sales data, the headline change was not meaningful, with the 90% confidence interval encompassing zero growth.
Before inflation adjustment, nominal October Retail Sales gained 0.3% (0.27% at the second decimal point), having declined by an “unrevised” 0.3% (-0.3%) [0.33% (-0.33%), previously 0.25% (-0.25%)] in September, having gained a revised 0.56% [previously 0.57%, initially 0.36%] in August. As regularly calculated by the Saint Louis Fed, net of 0.36% monthly CPI-U inflation, Real Retail Sales declined by 0.09% (-0.09%) in October, having declined by 0.35% (-0.35%) [previously 0.28% (-0.28%)] in September. Quarterly Real Retail Sales slowed to a revised annualized 4.0% [previously 4.1%] gain in 3q2019, versus 4.6% in 2q2019. If Real Retail Sales hold at the October level in November and December, 4q2019 would show a quarterly decline of 0.64% (-0.64%). Year-to-year real sales slowed to 1.31% in October 2019, versus a revised 2.30% [previously 2.34%] in September, and a revised 2.35% [previously 2.56%] in August.
• S Y S T E M I C .. R I S K S -- (Updated November 20th) FOMC POLICY – Collapsing Economic Numbers Should Drive an “Unexpected” December 11th Easing. As Fourth-Quarter 2019 GDP estimates continue to crash (New York Fed and Atlanta Fed GDP models both show 0.4%), market sentiment increasingly should shift towards a December 11th FOMC easing, with increasingly likely selling pressure on the U.S. Dollar and flight to safety in gold (see Flash Update No. 14 and pending Commentary No. 985).
October Federal Reserve Cut Targeted Fed Funds Rate by the Expected Quarter Point to a Range of 1.50% to 1.75%; Fed’s Balance Sheet Expansion Will Continue into Mid-2020 (FOMC, October 30, see Flash Update No. 13). Everything was just perfect, then, per the FOMC, with “sustained, moderate expansion,” except for crashing Industrial Production, collapsing Freight Activity and the FOMC’s inability to stabilize short-term domestic liquidity. Despite the Fed’s Spiel then of perfect economic balance, again, it should be easing anew by the December 2019 Meeting. The headline FOMC fantasy economy and stable liquidity remains anything but happy and stable.
• IMPEACHMENT RISKS - Impeachment of the President by the House of Representatives Remains Problematic; In the Event of Impeachment, Chances Appear Nil of Conviction in the Senate (Updated November 20th; see discussion in Flash Update No. 9). If financial markets begin to see a credible threat of Presidential impeachment and removal from office, such would exacerbate already-negative market risks, roiling the U.S. Dollar, stocks and the economy, and triggering flight-to-safety in precious metals. In the second week of public hearings by the House, the outlook has not changed. The Democrats always have had enough votes along party lines to Impeach, yet the House is up for re-election in the year ahead. Reflecting the thinking of some of the finest legal minds, and in the context of ongoing political shenanigans, election risks and the “evidence” in hand so far, it remains problematic that the Democrat-controlled House will marshal enough votes to Impeach. If the House does Impeach the President, chances of Conviction in the Republican-controlled Senate appear to be nil. Meaningful developments will be updated.
• A L E R T –- ShadowStats’ Recession Forecast Remains in Place, With U.S. Economic Activity in a Deepening Downturn, Complicated/ Intensified by Deteriorating Political Circumstances; Watch for Accelerating Flight from the Dollar and Stocks into Gold (Updated November 5th). With U.S. stocks indices at all-time highs, consider that gold has outperformed equities since the stock-market highs of a year ago. Beyond intensified near-term financial-market risks from negative economic, liquidity and political issues, the ShadowStats broad outlook in the weeks and months ahead remains for: (1) a rapidly intensifying U.S. economic downturn, reflected in (2) mounting selling pressure on the U.S. dollar, against currencies such as the Swiss Franc, (3) continued flight to safety in precious metals, with upside pressures on gold and silver prices, and (4) increasingly high risk of extraordinarily heavy stock-market selling.
• P O S T I N G .. S C H E D U L E S .. Postings of SHADOWSTATS CONCURRENT ANALYSES OF NEW DATA: New-Home Sales (Census Bureau, HUD) will be released November 26th at 10:00 a.m. ET. ShadowStats analysis should post by 1:00 p.m. ET.
SHADOWSTATS COMMENTARIES: Commentary No. 985 economic review will post in the next day or two. Subscribers receive direct concurrent e-mail advice of Commentary postings, along with related links.
• VIEWING EARLIER COMMENTARIES. ShadowStats postings of July 2019 and before - back to 2004 - are open to all, accessible by clicking on “Archives,” at the bottom of the left-hand column of this ShadowStats homepage.
• ALTERNATE DATA TAB provides the latest headline and exclusive ShadowStats Alternate Estimates of Inflation, GDP, Unemployment, Money Supply (Including the ShadowStats Ongoing M3), and the ShadowStats 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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