Saturday, July 26, 2025

Week Ending Report-7-26-2025

A few reports of interest (to me), from this past week.

https://www.census.gov/manufacturing/m3/adv/current/index.html

https://www.eia.gov/petroleum/weekly/crude.php 

Much was made of the -9.3% drop in Durable Goods from May, but the spin doctors overlooked the +16.5% rise for the previous month. Year to date from 2024, is up 7.9%. Probably why the spin didn't last very long. 

As for the petroleum sector, gasoline usage has fallen considerably on a 4 week moving average. Down -5.2% from year ago levels and -2.9% from last week. The inventory of gasoline slipped a bit, but the day's supply is increasing. 


Probably why pump prices are staying stagnant, compared to my last forecast. Not sure why the drop, which could be indicative of a slowing economy, although much of that data is contradictory. 

In any case, the sharp drop off is unexpected, at least to me.

Some meaningless thoughts...

The Late Show... I stopped watching the late show, early on in Colbert's tenure. His brand of humor did not match mine. Why the show is being canceled is beyond my realm of thought. Even if it were, I am not part of that important demographic.

Epstein files... I would have thought any Trump connections would have been exposed during his last term. Certainly during the Biden years. Perhaps the whole darn bunch have their names listed on... some yet to be released "file".

Clinton Saga... I am not a fan, but she is largely irrelevant, imho. It is good to know that most of the political back in forth is now focusing on days gone by. Maybe we will eventually move past all of this.

Or is the political news cycle a couple of decades behind?

Saturday, July 19, 2025

Week Ending Report-7-19-2025

Several reports from the week, including...

CPI- https://www.bls.gov/news.release/cpi.htm

PPI- https://www.bls.gov/news.release/ppi.htm

Real Earnings- https://www.bls.gov/news.release/realer.htm

Advance Retail- https://www.census.gov/retail/sales.html

Petroleum- https://www.eia.gov/petroleum/weekly/crude.php

A brief snapshot of CPI, CPI-W, CPI-E, PPI...

A lot of pink on everything, but the PPI, which seems to have flattened out. The PPI forecast is a bit of upward movement over the next couple of months, but then descending. 

The Cost of Living Adjustment outlook, has edged upward...
The real earnings report, indicated a slippage in real earnings. 

The retail sales remains fairly flat, when factoring in inflation...

On the petroleum side, it would appear diesel prices are set to accelerate higher, while gasoline appears to be edging slightly higher.

In reality, the big story should have been the downward projections of the PPI, in the face of tariffs. 

That's about it, as I have nothing more to say.

Saturday, June 21, 2025

Pump Prices heading up!!

Reviewed this weeks EIA report and observed the current status of inventories. 

Oddly, although domestic consumption is down from last year, the past couple of weeks has shown an increase in that consumption.


Checking the futures market, refinery operating rates, etc., it would certainly appear that prices will continue that upward trend, with gasoline easily rising another 4¢~7¢ and diesel jumping 9¢+.





Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Advance Retail Sales

The numbers came out today... https://tinyurl.com/2tjb5w36

Automotive and Home Improvement stores were almost the entirety of the slippage. 

It does indicate some slippage in inflation adjusted, but still within the range from March, 2021... to present. Very near the median and average for that period of time. 

Of course, the impact of tariffs cannot be ascertained by this report. On the surface... what the impact is, the economy is adjusting, or so it seems. 

Saturday, June 14, 2025

Millions of People

I kept hearing about millions of people protesting something today, but all the pictures seem to show significant less. Of course there are about 3 million people attending college football games on any given Saturday, in the fall.

3 Million is less than 1% of the U.S. population. Then there is the matter of how many millions protested and how many were actually virtue signaling.


There has been a lot of protests in my lifetime, some much bigger than today's. In reality... nothing changed then and you can bet nothing will change this time.

These are the same types claiming no King, while worshipping "Hamilton" as some sort of founder. I mean he was the guy that suggested a president for life, etc. 



So Far No Recession

It's been awhile since last post, as I have been very busy.

First up, the CPI report. My personal CPI was 2.4%, which matched the CPI-U. The CPI-W edged up to 2.2%, and the forecast of COLA jumped up quite a bit. 


Yep the forecast numbers have moved upward. Likely to continue upward movement, as the jump in crude prices, will likely shove the index up +0.05%. 

The PPI edged up and got some publicity, which was lacking the previous 2 down months. In any case, the PPI stands at 148.072, compared to last month's 147.884. It had peaked in February at 148.347.

As alluded to earlier... crude prices are jumping, with the likelihood of soon seeing a 10¢ a gallon rise at the pump. How much higher is dependent upon the Middle East, at this point.


The next report of interest, will be the advance retail sales. Projections have that number slipping a bit, which is not inflation adjusted. Therefore a bit lower than the projection.


Sunday, March 2, 2025

Are We Heading Into A Recession?

Remember back when the 2022 1st and 2nd quarter GDP numbers came in... and those politically motivated types screamed "we are in a recession!"

We are about to undergo another episode of such nonsense, but from the opposite side of the political spectrum.

Hearkening back to that previous period of 2021/22, there were multiple factors that caused the inflation to accelerate into that annual high of 9.2% in June 2022. One of those factors was front loading of imports ahead of an impending West Coast port strike... planned for July 1, 2022. It didn't happen, but that front loading caused the trade deficit to balloon in the first 2 quarters of 2022.

Trade deficits are a drag on GDP. Interestingly enough, the adjustment from 2012 to 2017 dollars, resulted in significant revisions in those first 2 quarter of 2022. Subsequent revisions how has that 1st quarter of 2022 now at -1.0 from original -1.4 and the 2nd quarter now at +0.3, from the original -0.9.

On any given month, the trade deficit subracts about -4.3% from the GDP. During the 1st 2 quarters of 2020, the drag increased -5.2%. Hence the original 1st quarter would have been -0.5% revised to -0.1% and the 2nd quarter would have been flat, to a revised +1.2%. 

All of this to forewarn us the trade deficit has ballooned again. The February report... 

Yes, that is December and the reasoning is front loading to get ahead of possible tariffs. If that is true, which is likely, the January and February numbers could be even higher. 

Now much is made of that Atlanta FED forecast as now being -1.5% for 1st quarter GDP. The sky is falling, but what did the report actually say?

The GDPNow model estimate for real GDP growth (seasonally adjusted annual rate) in the first quarter of 2025 is -1.5 percent on February 28, down from 2.3 percent on February 19. After recent releases from the US Bureau of Economic Analysis and the US Census Bureau, the nowcast of the contribution of net exports to first-quarter real GDP growth fell from -0.41 percentage points to -3.70 percentage points while the nowcast of first-quarter real personal consumption expenditures growth fell from 2.3 percent to 1.3 percent.

That's a -3.29% additional drag, due to extremely high imports. Without this, the GDP forecast would be about +2.2%.

All signs point to the next trade report, which is for January... could be even higher. That release is Thursday, March the 6th.

That Advance 2025 1st Quarter GDP will be released on April 30th.

I would think the data does not suggest we are heading into a recession, however... given the fickle nature of the American consumer and the extraordinary media bias, we will get one, whether we like it or not. 

Week Ending Report-August 16th, 2025

A few reports of interest (to me), from this past week. CPI Real earnings Petroleum Producer Price Index Retail Sales The inflation report ...