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Flash Update No. 23 Subscription required February 18th, 2020
• January 2020 CASS Freight Index Dropped by 9.4% (-9.4%) Year-to-Year • Current, Deepening Annual Declines in Freight Activity Increasingly Resemble the Onset of the Great Recession • Deepening Annual Declines in Freight Activity Are Not Consistent With a Booming Economy • They Also Do Not Support FOMC Claims of Sustainable Moderate Economic Growth in Place • They Are Consistent With Fourth-Quarter Contractions Seen in Industrial Production and Real Retail Sales  More ...
Flash Update No. 22 Subscription required February 18th, 2020
• A Second Straight, Negative Holiday-Shopping Season, as the Revised Fourth-Quarter Real Retail Sales Contraction Deepened to 0.6% (-0.6%), the First Quarterly Downturn Since the 2014 to 2016 Mini-Recession • January 2020 Real Retail Sales gained 0.1% in the Month, but Declined by 0.1% (-0.1%), Net of Revisions, Amidst Slowing Annual Growth • Downside Historical Revisions to Retail Sales Should Surface in the Just-Scheduled April 27th Annual Benchmarking (See Flash Update No. 21) • Collapsing off Peak Levels, Industrial Production Capacity Utilization Timed the Great Recession Onset of December 2007, the 2014-2016 Mini-Recession Onset of December 2014, and November 2018 Onset of the Currently Unfolding Recession • January 2020 Mining Activity Rose, but Weaker Manufacturing and Irregularly, Weather-Depressed Utilities, Knocked Aggregate Production Lower by 0.3% (-0.3%) in the Month • Downside Historical Revisions to Manufacturing (Industrial Production) Loom in Annual Benchmarkings Scheduled for This Summer • On the Upswing for Four Straight Months, January 2020 Unadjusted Year-to-Year Consumer Price Inflation (CPI-U) Jumped to a 15-Month High of 2.5%, from 2.3% in December 2019 • Subject to Revised Seasonally Adjusted CPI and Payroll Revisions, Related January 2020 Year-to-Year Real Earnings Held Flat for All Non-Farm Employees  More ...
Flash Update No. 21 Subscription required February 11th, 2020
• First Major Economic Benchmark Revision for 2019 Signaled Large Downside Revisions Pending for the GDP and Retail Sales • Perfect Storm: Hit by the FOMC Tightening Too Severely in 2018, Liquidity-Strapped Consumers Cut Retail Spending, But Full Reporting Was Masked by 2018/2019 Partial Government Shutdown Data Disruptions • Massive, Corrective Downside Payroll Employment Benchmark Revisions Reduced Previously Reported Annual Jobs Growth by 20% (-20%) • Benchmarked Jobs Count Cut by 514,000 (-514,000) in March 2019, By 422,000 (-422,000) in December 2019 • Retail Employment Revised Sharply Lower, Plunging for 32-Consecutive Months; Year-to-Year Jobs Growth Has Been Negative in Every Month Since June 2017, Except for One, Which Was Flat • Massive, Corrective Downside Benchmark Revisions for 2018/2019 Retail Sales and the GDP Should Follow in June and July 2020 • Separately, Regular Year-End Census Bureau Adjustments Reduced the Estimated U.S. Population by 811,000 (-811,000) in January 2020 • As a Result, December-to-January and Year-to-Year Comparisons of Headline Household Survey Counts Are Not Meaningful, Without Special Adjustment • January 2020 Headline U.3 Unemployment Rate Rose to 3.58%, from Its 50-Year Low of 3.50% in December 2019, Otherwise Still at a 50-Year Low; Broader U.6 and ShadowStats Unemployment Rates Each Jumped by 0.2%  More ...
Flash Update No. 20 Subscription required February 6th, 2020
• 2020: A Year of Deepening Economic, Fiscal and Financial-Market Turmoil, Despite a Currently Booming, Headline Economy and Stock Market • The Fed Continues to Prop the Banks and the Financial Markets, But Not the Consumer, Who Ultimately Drives Sustainable Economic Activity • A Financially Healthy U.S. Consumer Remains Key to Stable Domestic Growth • Despite a 50-Year Low in Headline Unemployment, the FOMC-Impaired Economy Thwarts Consumer Liquidity Growth; December Median Real Household Income Declined for a Second Straight Month • Coincident With the January 2020 Payroll Reporting, 2019 Payroll Benchmark Revisions Still Should Be Negative • Negative December Real Trade-Deficit Revisions Promise Some Downside GDP Adjustments • Annualized Initial Real Fourth-Quarter GDP Growth of 2.08% Appears Overly Optimistic Against Underlying Hard Numbers • 2019 Annual GDP Growth at a Three-Year Low of 2.33%, Faces Downside Revisions from Various Benchmarkings in Coming Months  More ...
Flash Update No. 19 Subscription required January 29th, 2020
• No Changes, Just Continued Pablum Out of the January Federal Open Market Committee Meeting • Sustainable Moderate Economic Growth Purportedly Continues • Targeted Federal Funds Rate Held in Check • Reserve Building, Balance Sheet Expansion to Continue into Second Quarter  More ...
Special Bullet Edition No. 19a Subscription required January 28th, 2020
• 2020: A Year of Deepening Economic, Fiscal and Financial-Market Turmoil, Despite a Headline Booming Economy and Stock Market • The Fed Continues to Prop the Banks and the Financial Markets, But Not the Consumer, Who Ultimately Drives Sustainable Economic Activity • Expected January FOMC: Continued Boosts to Banking-System Liquidity, but No Rate Cut for Liquidity-Strapped Consumers, Who Were Hit by the Overly Aggressive Fed Rate Hikes in 2017-2018 • Fourth-Quarter 2019 Numbers Showed Quarterly Contractions in Real Earnings and Real Retail Sales, Including Full-Year Declines in Real New Orders for Durable Goods, Manufacturing and Freight Activity • There Is a Fair Shot at Weaker Than Expected Fourth-Quarter GDP, Despite FOMC Claims of Sustainable Moderate Economic Growth in Place • The U.S. Economy, Federal Government and the Federal Reserve System Still Have Not Recovered from the 2007-2008 Banking Collapse and Bailout • Harsh Reality Remains That the Fed Stunted U.S. Economic and Fiscal Potential, With Its Handling of the Banking System Collapse and Bailout of 2007-2008 • Extremes of Fiscal and FOMC Imbalances Threaten Massive Systemic Instabilities, Ranging from the Economic and Financial-Market Plunges, to Surging Domestic Inflation • Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) Does Not Work: Headline Inflation Can Be Masked, But the Price of Gold Remains the Canary in the Coal Mine  More ...
Flash Update No. 18 Subscription required January 11th, 2020
• December 2019 Annual Payroll Growth Dropped to a Two-Year Low, Amidst Faltering Production and Retail Sales Employment • Jobs Growth Signaled a Weakening Economy, in Advance of Negative Payroll Benchmark Revisions Due Next Month • Yet, Headline Unemployment Hit a Current Series Low of 3.50%, While Labor-Market Stress Continued Running at Recession Levels • Against Earlier Data Series, December 2019 Unemployment of 3.50% Was the Lowest Since 3.49% in June 1969, 50-Plus Years Ago • Annual Benchmark Revisions to Household Survey Seasonal Adjustments Had Negligible Effect on Headline Reporting of Unemployment and Labor-Market Stress • December 2019 Money Supply M3 Annual Growth Eased Minimally to 8.4%, Just off Its November 2019 Ten-Year High of 8.6% • Annual Growth Rates of 6.9% and 7.2% in December M1 and M2 Notched Lower by 0.2% (-0.2%) from November Levels  More ...
Flash Update No. 17 Subscription required January 6th, 2020
• War Risks Can Shift Underlying Financial and Economic Resources, Some to the Downside, Some to the Plus Side • Current Extremes of Fiscal and FOMC Imbalances and Policies Threaten Massive Systemic Instabilities, Ranging from the Economy and Financial Markets, to Domestic Inflation • Last Time the Federal Debt-to-GDP Ratio Topped 70%, Let Alone the Currently Unsustainable 107%, Was in 1944/1945, at the End of World War II; What Happens Now if the U.S. Goes to War? • FOMC Banking-System Mismanagement and Bailout, and Coincident Federal and Corporate Policies Aimed at Shifting Domestic Production Offshore Have Weakened Potential Domestic Manufacturing of Defense Goods • At the Same Time, War-Time Production Needs Would Tend to Reactivate Some Key Manufacturing in the United States • Congress, the Executive Branch and the Federal Reserve All Are Culpable, in Pursuing Short-Sighted and Negligent Domestic Economic Policies  More ...
Special Bullet Edition No. 18 Subscription required December 31st, 2019
• Before European Markets Shut Down for the Holiday, New Years Eve Flight from the U.S. Dollar and Stocks into Gold Foreshadowed U.S. Market Trends Likely to Unfold in the Year Ahead • Heavily Touted Perfect Economy and Financial Markets Face Deepening Turmoil in 2020, Thanks Largely to Federal Reserve Gross Negligence • Signals of Deteriorating Economic Conditions Have Intensified, With Standardly Happy Headline Numbers, Such as Consumer Income, Faltering Anew • As the Budget Deficit Explodes Amidst Uncontained Federal Spending, the U.S. Government Faces Long-Range Insolvency and/or Hyperinflation • The Congress, the Executive Branch and the Federal Reserve All Are Culpable, Twiddling Their Thumbs in Complacent Silence  More ...
Bullet Edition No. 17 Subscription required December 23rd, 2019
• The Faltering and Not-So-Perfect Economy Can Be Attributed to the Fed • With Stocks Closing Out 2019 at or Near All-Time Highs, Holding Precious Metals in the Same Period Still Outperformed the Major Stock Indices Against Their 2018 Highs • FOMC Manipulation of the Monetary Base and Interest Rates Have Been the Dominant Drivers and Inhibitors of U.S. Economic Activity, Since the 2008 Banking-System Collapse and Federal Reserve Bailout • Unprecedented in 101 years of Reporting, U.S. Manufacturing Just Completed Twelve Years, 144 Straight Months and Counting, of Economic Non-Expansion, Never Recovering Its Pre-Great-Recession or Pre-Banking-Collapse Peak Activity • That Said, Manufacturing, Durable Goods Orders and Freight Activity, All Are in Record Non-Expansion, Showing a Deepening, New Recession • Twelve Months Real New Orders for Durable Goods to November 2019 Was Down Year-to-Year Versus the 12 Months to November 2018, Both Before and After Consideration of Volatile Commercial Aircraft Orders • Still Shy by 20% to 50% of Ever Recovering Pre-Recession Peak Activity, Elements of the Housing Sector Continue to Show Signs of Low-Level Stabilization  More ...
Archives

DAILY UPDATE (February 19th to 24th) – Next Postings: Data Release (Feb 26th*), Commentary (Feb 23rd**) // January 2020 Freight Activity Continued Plunging Year-to-Year, As Last Seen at the Great Recession Onset / Indication There Is for Neither a Booming Economy, Nor “Sustainable Moderate Economic Growth” / January PPI Gained 0.5% in the Month, 2.1% Year-to-Year, Dominated as Usual by the Mal-Defined Services Sector / Quarterly Contraction in Fourth-Quarter 2019 “Holiday Season” Real Retail Sales Deepened in Revision / January Mining Activity Rose, but Weaker Manufacturing and Weather-Depressed Utilities Knocked Aggregate Industrial Production Lower by 0.3% (-0.3%) / Capacity Utilization Dropped to Its Lowest Level Since Coming Out of the 2014-2016 Mini-Recession; Down 2.8 Percentage Points from Its November 2018 Peak / January 2020 Unadjusted Annual Consumer Price Inflation Jumped to a 15-Month High of 2.5%, from 2.3% in December 2019, Unaffected by Five Years of Revisions to the Seasonally Adjusted Data / Recession Signals Continued to Intensify for FOMC-Battered GDP Consumer Spending // ON THE PLUS-SIDE: New Residential Construction Activity, (Housing Starts and Building Permits) Has Pushed to Post-Recession Highs, Despite Extreme and Often Nonsensical Monthly Volatility / Both Series Remain 31% (-31%) Below Pre-Recession Peaks, But Are Gaining.

L A T E S T .. N U M B E R S .. January 2020 CASS Freight Index Plunged Year-to-Year by 9.4% (-9.4%), Following a 7.9% (-7.9%) drop in December 2019, the Steepest Pattern of Annual Downturns Since the Great Recession Onset (February 18th, CASSinfo.com, see the updated reporting at https://www.cassinfo.com/freight-audit-payment/cass-transportation-indexes/january-2020). The deepening annual plunges in the December and January CASS Freight Index activity were the steepest since the early months of the Great Recession.

The collapse in activity here has remained consistent with a “Recession,” not with a purportedly “Booming Economy” and not with the FOMC’s proclaimed “Sustainable Moderate Economic Growth.” The activity here, however, was consistent with the recently reported quarterly declines in Fourth-Quarter 2019 Real Retail Sales and Industrial Production. Separately, the Index’s consecutive monthly year-to-year declines and monthly declines in the 12-month trailing average held in place for the fourteenth 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, see Flash Update No. 23.

(February 19) January 2020 Housing Starts and Building Permits Are in a Broad Upswing (Census Bureau, HUD). Despite ongoing extreme and usually nonsensical monthly volatility, Housing Starts and Building Permits are in a noticeable uptrend, with their six-month smoothed measures hitting post-recession highs. That said, Housing Starts and Building Permits respectively held shy of their pre-recession peaks by 31.1% (-31.1%) and by 31.5% (-31.5%), with those deficits narrowing. The pick-up in activity has been most noticeable in the more-volatile multiple-unit as opposed to single-unit housing structures. This circumstance will be reviewed in Special Commentary Bullet No. 19-B. That said, the headline monthly contraction of 3.6% (-3.6%) in aggregate January Housing Starts was not statistically meaningful, but the annual gain of 21.4% was significant.

(February 19) The January 2020 Final Demand Goods Producer Price Index (PPI) Monthly Inflation Eased to 0.09% from 0.26% in December, Gaining Year-to-Year by 1.84%, versus 1.14% in December (Bureau of Labor Statistics). Yet, including the mal-defined, dominant Services Sector, the aggregate January 2020 headline Producer Price Index Final Demand (PPI-FD) jumped by 0.51% in the month and by 2.06% year-to-year, versus respective December gains of 0.17% and 1.28%. Upside margin distortions spiking January Services Inflation reflected post-Holiday Shopping Season price declines in apparel, jewelry, footwear and accessories. Year-to-year January Services Inflation ran 1.95% (versus in 1.28% December), with Construction Inflation of 3.68% (3.63% December). All the seasonally adjusted monthly data were revised minimally for the last five years.

(February 14) Weakness in Real Retail Sales and Consumer Spending Intensified in January 2020, with Fourth-Quarter 2019 Activity Revising Into a Deeper Quarterly Contraction (Census Bureau). In context of downside revisions to December and November 2019 activity, January’s headline monthly gain of 0.27% in nominal Retail Sales effectively was flat, at 0.03%, net of prior month’s sales revisions. In combination with the just-benchmarked CPI-U inflation, January’s inflation-adjusted real gain of 0.12% was a monthly decline of 0.09% (-0.09%) net of revisions.

The annualized quarterly real contraction in Fourth-Quarter 2019 Retail Sales deepened from initial reporting of 0.40% (-0.40%) to 0.60% (-0.60%), the first quarterly decline since the 2014-2016 Mini-Recession. It also confirmed the second consecutive failed Holiday Shopping Season.

The headline January numbers were in advance of what should be major downside revisions to historical Retail Sales activity, come annual benchmarking to the series on April 27th, as discussed in Flash Update No. 21 and Flash Update No. 22.

(February 14) Industrial Production Capacity Utilization Showed a Deepening Recession (Federal Reserve Board). Updated readings of Industrial Production Capacity, a basic indicator of broad economic health and a traditional tool in timing recessions, fell to 76.78% in January 2020, its lowest reading since its 79.57% November 2018 peak, which likely was the peak in economic activity of the current business cycle.

That said, headline January 2020 Industrial Production suggested that the Mining Sector had begun to bottom. With the decline in Oil and Gas exploration leveling out, and with gains in Oil and Gas Production, the Mining Sector increased by 1.16% in the month, hitting a new monthly high. Yet, a small decline in Manufacturing and a drop in Utility usage, from unseasonably warm weather, still knocked headline January Industrial Production Lower by 0.31% (-0.31%), see Flash Update No. 22.

S Y S T E M I C .. R I S K – January FOMC - No Surprises - No Rate Change, Continued Balance Sheet Expansion. (January 29th) The Fed maintained its existing policies, continuing to provide new and expanded liquidity (at least into 2q2020) to prop a still-unstable Banking System, Stock Market and other Financial Markets, while continuing not to help the struggling U.S. Consumer with a rate cut. It was the Fed’s overly aggressive interest rate hikes in 2018 that helped to strangle Consumer Liquidity and broad economic growth. Where Consumer activity drives and dominates the U.S. economy, the Fed’s rate hikes triggered a still unfolding economic downturn (see extended detail in Flash Update No. 19).

Befuddled FOMC: Deepening Risk of Major Financial Crisis, With the Fed Continuing to Hold Back on an Honest Assessment of Out-of-Control Systemic Liquidity and Economic Woes. The FOMC effectively has lost control of the system. Its Spiel of “Sustainable Moderate Economic Growth” in place remains nonsense, as seen in economic reporting of the last month. A rate cut continues to be needed, to help the Consumer and the broad economy. The more a rate cut is delayed, the less effective it will be than if it had been done earlier.

Separately, the Fed’s continued “Non-Quantitative-Easing” Balance Sheet expansion is beginning to look like a tacit acceptance of “Modern Monetary Theory” (MMT), just printing money as needed “without consequence.” Yet, there is and already has been consequence -- an accelerating loss of actual U.S. dollar purchasing power and movement towards domestic hyperinflation, as discussed and demonstrated in Special Commentary Bullet Edition No. 19-A and pending 19-B.

A L E R T –- (January 27th) ShadowStats’ Recession Forecast Remains in Place, With U.S. Economic Reporting in a Deepening Downturn, Complicated and Intensified by Unusual and Unstable Domestic and Global Political Circumstances: Watch for Accelerating Flight from the Dollar and Stocks into Gold. 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 in place for: (1) a continued intensifying U.S. economic downturn in meaningful underlying series such as production and retail sales, 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 .. *SHADOWSTATS CONCURRENT ANALYSES OF NEW DATA: January 2020 New-Home Sales will be released Wednesday, February 26th at 10:00 a.m. ET. ShadowStats’ initial analysis should post by 1:00 p.m. ET.

**SHADOWSTATS COMMENTARIES (Dates Are Subject to Change) – Special Commentary Bullet No. 19-B should follow over this weekend, reviewing unfolding economic and financial-system conditions and monetary-system instabilities in hand and likely in the year ahead (see earlier Special Commentary Bullet No. 19-A and Flash Updates No. 21 to 23.

ARCHIVES - VIEWING EARLIER COMMENTARIES. ShadowStats postings of October 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

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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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