by Calculated Risk on 7/30/2012 01:47:00 PM
Monday, July 30, 2012
Lawler on Manufactured Housing
From Tom Lawler:
The Commerce Department estimated that manufactured housing shipments ran at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 54,000 in June, down from 56,000 in May. In the first five months of 2012 manufactured housing shipments ran at a SAAR of 57,000, up from 51,600 in 2011 but just a fraction of the pace prior to last decade’s collapse.
The Commerce Department also estimated that manufactured housing placements ran at a SAAR of 47,000 in May, down from 51,000 in April. In the first five months of 2012 manufactured housing shipments ran at a SAAR of 52,200, up from 47,000 in 2011.
| Manufactured Housing Shipments (Annual Average, 000's) | |
|---|---|
| 1961-1970 | 255.6 |
| 1971-1980 | 348.5 |
| 1981-1990 | 243.7 |
| 1991-2000 | 296.8 |
| 2001-2006 | 154 |
| 2006-2010 | 78.9 |
| 2011 | 51.6 |
| 2012YTD | 57 |
Click on graph for larger image.Here is a graph from Lawler showing the annual manufactured housing shipments since 1959. The column for 2012 is the annual sales rate for the first six months of the year.
Although sales are running at about a 10% increase over last year, shipments in 2012 will still be the fourth lowest on record behind only 2009, 2010, and 2011.
Dallas Fed: "Slower Growth" in July Regional Manufacturing Activity
by Calculated Risk on 7/30/2012 10:30:00 AM
From the Dallas Fed: Texas Manufacturing Activity Posts Slower Growth Amid Weaker View of General Business Activity
Texas factory activity continued to increase in July, according to business executives responding to the Texas Manufacturing Outlook Survey. The production index, a key measure of state manufacturing conditions, fell from 15.5 to 12, suggesting slightly slower output growth.This was below expectations of a 2.5 reading for the general business activity index.
The new orders index was positive for the second month in a row, although it moved down from 7.9 to 1.4. Similarly, the shipments index posted its second consecutive positive reading but edged down from 9.6 to 7.4. ... The general business activity plummeted to -13.2 after climbing into positive territory in June. Nearly 30 percent of manufacturers noted a worsening in the level of business activity in July, pushing the index to its lowest reading in 10 months.
...
Labor market indicators reflected stronger labor demand. Employment growth continued in July, although the index edged down from 13.7 to 11.8. ... The hours worked index was 4.1, up slightly from its June reading.
The regional manufacturing surveys were mostly weak in July. Here is a graph comparing the regional Fed surveys and the ISM manufacturing index:
Click on graph for larger image.The New York and Philly Fed surveys are averaged together (dashed green, through July), and five Fed surveys are averaged (blue, through July) including New York, Philly, Richmond, Dallas and Kansas City. The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) PMI (red) is through June (right axis).
The ISM index for July will be released Wednesday, August 1st, and these surveys suggest another weak reading. The consensus is for an increase to 50.1, up from 49.7 in June. (below 50 is contraction).
Europe Update
by Calculated Risk on 7/30/2012 09:10:00 AM
Spanish 10 year bond yields are down to 6.61% this morning. Italian yields are at 6.03%.
A few articles and comments on Europe, first from Tim Duy: Fed Watch: The Euromess Continues
Excitement is almost guaranteed this week, with both the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank pondering their next moves. At the moment, I am more fascinated with the latter, as it represents the more fast moving policy failure for the moment. In response to that disaster to date, it is now widely expected that the ECB will deliver a significant policy expansion, possibly accepting its responsibility of lender of last resort for sovereign debt in the Eurozone. I think it is widely believed that this will be the turning point in Europe. In some ways, yes, as it would keep the threat of imminent dissolution at bay. But the Eurozone will still be fundamentally hobbled by a devotion to re-balancing via austerity-driven internal devaluation. This does not offer a promising long-run outcome.From Paul Krugman: Crash of the Bumblebee
First of all, Europe’s single currency is a deeply flawed construction. And Mr. Draghi, to his credit, actually acknowledged that. “The euro is like a bumblebee,” he declared. “This is a mystery of nature because it shouldn’t fly but instead it does. So the euro was a bumblebee that flew very well for several years.” But now it has stopped flying. What can be done? The answer, he suggested, is “to graduate to a real bee.”From Reuters: Euro zone crisis heads for September crunch
Never mind the dubious biology, we get the point. In the long run, the euro will be workable only if the European Union becomes much more like a unified country.
...
But the creation of a United States of Europe won’t happen soon, if ever, while the crisis of the euro is now. So what can be done to save the currency?
Over the past couple of years, Europe has muddled through a long series of crunch moments in its debt crisis, but this September is shaping up as a "make-or-break" month as policymakers run desperately short of options to save the common currency.From the WSJ: Greece Seen Facing €30 Billion Shortfall
Crisis or no crisis, many European policymakers will take their summer holidays in August. When they return, a number of crucial events, decisions and deadlines will be waiting.
Greece's chronic recession and the receding hope of an economic recovery in the next two years have blown a hole of at least 30 billion euros ($36.85 billion) in its financial rescue plan, officials familiar with the situation said.
The officials argued that the findings indicate a need for official creditors to write down their claims by at least that amount if they want to keep Greece in the euro zone, as well as finding new money to fund the country for longer. The officials represented two of four parties to the talks: the Greek government and the "troika" of the European Union, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund.
...
"The haircut on private holders has proved not to be enough," said one official involved in the next round of talks.
Sunday, July 29, 2012
Monday: Dallas Fed Manufacturing Survey
by Calculated Risk on 7/29/2012 09:51:00 PM
This will be a busy week with the two day FOMC meeting ending on Wednesday, the ECB meeting in Europe on Thursday, and several key economic releases including the July employment report on Friday.
First from Reuters: Juncker: Euro zone leaders, ECB to act on euro - paper
[Eurogroup head Jean-Claude] Juncker told Germany's Sueddeutsche Zeitung and France's Le Figaro in reports made available on Sunday that leaders would decide in the next few days what measures to take to tackle Spanish bond yields which last week touched euro-era highs. They had "no time to lose," he said.• On Monday, at 10:30 AM ET, the Dallas Fed Manufacturing Survey for July will be released. This is the last of regional surveys for July. The consensus is for 2.5 for the general business activity index, down from 5.8 in June.
The Asian markets are green tonight, with the Nikkei up 0.8% and the Shanghai Composite up 0.1%. Check out the chart for the Shanghai composite - the index has been drifting down for 2+ years and is at the levels of early 2009.
From CNBC: Pre-Market Data and Bloomberg futures: the S&P future are down about 5, and the DOW futures down about 30.
Oil: WTI futures are at $90.04(this is down from $109.77 in February, but up last week) and Brent is at $106.51 per barrel.
Yesterday:
• Summary for Week Ending July 27th
• Schedule for Week of July 29th
And the final question for the July economic contest:
FOMC Preview: QE3 now or later?
by Calculated Risk on 7/29/2012 06:19:00 PM
There is a chance that the FOMC will announce QE3 this week although some analysts expect QE3 in September and others after the election in November.
As an example, from Merrill Lynch last week:
There is quite a bit of uncertainty about the exact timing and shape of forthcoming Fed easing. Although there is a good chance of some QE3 at next week’s FOMC meeting, we still think it is an extension of the forward guidance language through “at least late 2015” is (slightly) more likely This would resemble the policy pattern last year, and would keep the Fed’s options open. It also would allow the Fed to make a compelling case that bad data, not politics, are driving QE3.The "politics" argument cuts both ways - delaying action when projections show unemployment too high for years, and inflation too low - is also giving in to "politics".
Some arguments for waiting until September 13th are:
1) There will be more data available (two more employment reports for July and August, and the 2nd estimate of Q2 GDP on August 29th). Of course "waiting" always allows for "more data" - so people can always use this argument.
2) Housing data has been improving, and residential investment is usually the best leading indicator for the economy.
3) The FOMC members will update projections in September, and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke will hold a news conference to explain the reasons for any action. There is no news conference scheduled following the meeting this week.
4) There are also some arguments that seasonal factors are distorting the recent data.
Probably the most compelling reason for waiting is the housing argument, but even though housing is recovering, the housing market is still very weak.
And the most recent projections are already becoming "untenable" (as Atlanta Fed President Lockhart recently noted). Here were the projections for GDP:
| GDP projections of Federal Reserve Governors and Reserve Bank presidents | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Change in Real GDP1 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 |
| June 2012 Projections | 1.9 to 2.4 | 2.2 to 2.8 | 3.0 to 3.5 |
Based on the Q2 advance GDP report released on Friday, GDP would have to increase at a 2.1% to 3.1% in the 2nd half of 2012 to meet the FOMC projections for 2012. That suggests a further downward revision in FOMC projections in September.
And the June projections were already very low - "shocking" as Tim Duy wrote) The FOMC members see unemployment in the 7% to 7.7% range at the end of 2014, and inflation also below target through 2014.
The data supports QE3 this week, but the data also supported QE3 in June. One of the reasons I thought QE3 was unlikely in June was the lack of foreshadowing from the Fed. There have been plenty of hints since then, so QE3 is very possible this week - but still uncertain.
Yesterday:
• Summary for Week Ending July 27th
• Schedule for Week of July 29th


