Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Capex no longer bullish
Capital goods orders no longer stand out as a bullish indicator for the economy. Orders have been flat for the past six months, although I note that there have been lots of upward revisions along that have turned from what looked at first like a slump into what now looks like simply a flat trend.
Capital goods shipments (above chart) have continued upwards, however, and this matters because this is the measure of capex that counts for GDP. Still, orders are the leading indicator for GDP, so this is not much to be excited about.
On balance, the recent lack of growth in capex subtracts somewhat from my long-held optimism that the economy will continue to grow, albeit at a disappointingly slow pace, but it is not something that points to recession. I take it as simply an indicator that the economy is likely growing a bit less than I thought. The second chart above shows that capex growth has slowed to zero several times in the past without signaling a recession.
Given that the market still remains burdened by fear, uncertainty, and doubt, flat capex is probably better than what the market has been priced for, so I doubt that it creates downward pressure on equity prices. And indeed, the market is up today because the news on corporate profits continues to be better than expected, and that is a very bullish indicator for the economy going forward.
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16 comments:
The 3 month moving average has certainly flattened out which is something to watch. I also look at the year over year change in non defense orders ex aircraft which has
some predictive characteristics. This
number is now 3.8%,last month it was
( based on revision) 10%...when it is
negative...watch out
Plus, Britain is now in a double dip recession.
http://www.cnbc.com/id/47169446
Will we catch the Euro contagion?
The Fed is way too tight.
When the Fed was tight during the Reagan Presidency, Treasury Secretary Regan called Volcker "penurious" and openly stated Fed independence should be "restricted." Inflation CPI then was about five percent.
Reagan himself said interest rates were too high.
http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1499&dat=19841213&id=HsIdAAAAIBAJ&sjid=HSoEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6649,3052061
In re UK: two quarters down @0.3%.
Rounding error stuff. Hardly worth kvetching over. Small price to pay to avoid being Greece.
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