The monthly summary continues to improve, although PCE ex food and energy inflation numbers continue to be a concern.
Friday, September 27, 2024
Review of August 2024 data, 2Q GDP, PCE and personal income
Friday, August 30, 2024
Review of July 2024 data, 2Q GDP, PCE and personal income
The monthly summary continues to improve, although PPI numbers continue to be a concern... going forward.
Friday, July 26, 2024
Review of June 2024 data, 2Q GDP, PCE and personal income
The monthly summary continues to improve, although PPI numbers continue to be a concern... going forward.
The 2nd quarter GDP came in above expectations at 2.8% annualized. I was puzzled by the slower growth in Services at 2.2% annualized, which helps explain the 2.3% annualized for personal consumption. Durable goods up 4.6% and nondurables at 1.4%, both annualized.
Overall a good report, but I would be a bit concerned if fixed investment can continue its expansion, which is equipment driven, while inventories keep building.
As for the PCE excluding food and energy... not much movement. Granted the market is anticipating a rate cut in September... and it might be warranted. A string of rate cuts might not be so warranted, imho.
We can start the cycle again for next month, with the likelihood of CPI being at or slightly above this past month's reading.
Friday, June 28, 2024
Review of May 2024 data, 1Q GDP revisions, PCE and personal income
The monthly summary continues to improve, although PPI numbers are of concern... going forward.
Friday, May 31, 2024
Review of April 2024 data, 1Q GDP revisions, PCE and personal income
The monthly summary is not so bad, actually.
Friday, April 26, 2024
Review of March 2024 data, 1Q GDP, PCE and personal income
The monthly summary is not so wonderful, incomparison...
Friday, March 29, 2024
Review of February 2024 data, 4Q GDP Revision, PCE and personal income
The monthly summary...
The overall PCE edged upward, on annual basis, with PCE ex food and energy staying flat.
Of course, the official got revised up for January, which indicates a difference from my report...
Thursday, February 29, 2024
Review of January 2024 data, 4Q GDP Revision, PCE and personal income
The monthly summary...
Monday, January 29, 2024
Review of December 2023 data, 4Q GDP, PCE and personal income
Alas, 2023 reports have concluded. The GDP's 4Q advance reading indicates a sterling 3.1% rise. I will make mention of the 5 year Quinquennial revision from 2012 dollars to 2017 dollars. As would be expected the numbers jumped 9.0%. I can't help but notice the big drag on GDP of net exports of good and services, slid a whopping -26.7%.
Even under the revised numbers, that latter component fell another -5.9% from one year ago.
Friday, December 22, 2023
Review of November 2023 data, GDP, PCE and personal income
I'll try not to harp about this too much. The BEA switched from 2012 dollars to 2017 dollars for 3Q23, and adjusted prior data. I download all such reports, so I can easily tell the difference.
Yes, inflation is slowing, not deflating, with the exception of gasoline, which looks to have stopped falling.
All in all, a pretty good monthly report card. I do think the market is making too big a deal on expectations of the FED cutting rates before summer, but what do I know?
Tuesday, December 5, 2023
A Further Review of 3rd Quarter, 2023 GDP... just for fun!!
So yes, the GDP was revised to 5.2% annualized, from 4.9% annualized. That does not mean the economy is robust. It's not bad, but robust is a bit of hype for politicians.
The BEA moved from 2012 dollars to 2017 dollars for the 3rd quarter releases and going forward, until next change in... say 5 years.
In theory, it should have been even across the board, after compensating for 5 years of dollar value adjustments, etc. Such as inflation being about 7.5% during that 5 year period.
If only there was someone, somewhere that downloads those excel spreadsheets from each GDP iteration.
Voila...
Note the column headings for 2012 dollars and 2017 dollars AND the % Change. The changes were clearly not uniform across the various groupings.
While there was a 9% upward adjustment, several groupings failed to match that rise, including some that went negative... while others outpaced the 9% reading.
So in theory, all the numbers going back in time were revised to reflect the current situation. But again, that was very uneven. Just consider the trade deficit, which is a drag on GDP... and those changes.
All in all, it did distort the 3rd quarter readings and possibly provided a misleading annualized number. That would be no big deal... if not for an election year and people willing to make everything political.
While the current 5.2% annualized is being hailed as something significant, I wonder what will be hailed, when the 4th Qtr. 2023 is revealed on January 25th, 2024. My guess is way below that 5.2%. Back to the 2.0% annualized, or even lower!
One can imagine the hysteria over such falling numbers, but the adjustment was improperly attributed to a "robust" economy.
So remember... the trade deficit, which is a drag on GDP was revised dramatically lower, after the BIG change for 2012 to 2017 dollars. That trade deficit adjustment was about 100% of that 5.2% annualized, or ±0.1% annualized without that lone adjustment.
You think I might be off my rocker! The current Real GDP rolls in at 22,506.4B, which is a hefty 281B above the 2nd qtr. figure of 22,225.4B. Now take a look at that downward revision of the trade deficit, -284B.
Remember the trade deficit is a drag on GDP, so a downward revision in the Trade deficit would result in a higher GDP print. IF the GDP had not been revised downward by -284B, then that +281B gain in GDP would evaporate. As in +0.1% annualized.
One group will claim the economy is crashing into a recession, another group will be saying soft landing is working, and another group will be screaming the FED must cut rates rapidly.
I then ask you, if stating the 3Q23 was actually 0.1% and the 4Q24 was +1.7%, would indeed indicate a possible soft landing. Of course, the groups would likely being crying the same thing... just 3 months earlier.
It is fun to watch all the spin!
Thursday, November 30, 2023
Review of October 2023 data, GDP, PCE and personal income
Just some charts with a bit of commentary...
Friday, September 29, 2023
Review of August data and the September PCE Release
Yep, today's report was positive, with an uptick of +0.4%. That being in current dollars and when adjusted for inflation became... -0.2% for the month to month. The good news was the year to year inflation adjusted +0.1%.
I did not denote the various changes from previous month's release, so but can be seen in previous publications.
Thursday, September 28, 2023
Quick Review of The GDP report 2Q-2023, 3rd estimate
First off, the base year for chained dollars is now 2017, instead of the previous 2012.
Secondly, there were revisions in past quarters, or updates. This is done annually.
- 2023 Quarter one GDP was revised upward, from 2.0% annualized, to 2.2% annualized.
- 2023 Quarter one GDI was revised upward from -1.8% annualized to 0.5% annualized.
There are other changes, but that was a sampling.
While the chained dollar report for last month, based on 2012, showed the Real GDP at 20.387T, the new report based on 2017, is now 22.225T.
However, there were significant reductions in the report, with Durable Goods being reduced, both on the personal consumption level and imports.
Clearly there were large adjustments elsewhere to overcome those changes, such as in personal consumption services (quite large), Fixed Investment and Government consumption and Net exports of goods and services.
Nothing really out of line from expectations, although the Personal Consumption Expenditures for Goods was quite a drop from Quarter one. However, it is still positive and the drop was not quite a surprise, as the Monthly PCE report has been screaming a sharp decline.
Thursday, August 31, 2023
Review of July data and the August PCE Release
Some ups and some down in the latest release from the BEA. (red revised down, green revised up).
Chained dollar disposable income was revised down for April and June, with a negative print on July.
However, the chained dollar PCE was revised down for March and May, with upward revisions in April and June.
It seems evident that savings AND debt are currently driving the economy. How long that can last is the big question.
Then there is the matter of PCE Excluding Food & Energy. If the target is 2%, then there is a way to go, given the forecast for August is at 4%. Years ago, when the PCE ex food and energy was failing to achieve even 2%, there was discussion of moving the target to 4%.
That hasn't happened, so how can it be expected for the FED to ease off the interest rates?
https://www.bea.gov/news/2023/personal-income-and-outlays-july-2023 |
Wednesday, August 30, 2023
Quick Review of The GDP report 2Q-2023, 2nd estimate
The BEA released the 2nd estimate of 2Q-2023 GDP...
Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 2.1 percent in the second quarter of 2023 (table 1), according to the "second" estimate released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the first quarter, real GDP increased 2.0 percent.
The GDP estimate released today is based on more complete source data than were available for the "advance" estimate issued last month. In the advance estimate, the increase in real GDP was 2.4 percent (refer to "Updates to GDP"). The updated estimates primarily reflected downward revisions to private inventory investment and nonresidential fixed investment that were partly offset by an upward revision to state and local government spending.
Here is a screenshot of the data page...
Friday, July 28, 2023
Review of June data and the July PCE Report
A story of glass half empty versus a glass half full...
For months on end, the data has contained revisions of prior months being downward, which gave that current report a glass half empty kind of vibe.
For the past two months... the previous months data has been revised upward, which emits a vibe of glass half full for the current month.
That's a positive, imho.
Thursday, July 27, 2023
Quick Review of The Advance GDP report 2Q-2023
First off... a screen shot with some additions.
Friday, June 30, 2023
Review of PCE, GDP, etc., for end of June, 2023
Another month to review (with some comments at the end)...
The updated estimates primarily reflected upward revisions to exports and consumer spending that were partly offset by downward revisions to nonresidential fixed investment and federal government spending.
I highlighted my area of concern. Note the statement of upward revision in consumer spending, then review the PCE expenditures directly above. January was good and presumably the revision upward in February would match up with the quoted statement.
However, April was revised up a mere +0.2 from original flat and May is also flat.
So where is the growth coming from in the 2nd quarter?
Saturday, May 27, 2023
Review of PCE, GDP, etc., for end of May, 2023
PPI November 2024 release with October 2024 Data
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