Monday, April 26, 2010

Sunday Night Economic Assessment

The US Industrial economy backtracked a little bit more last week (if pipeline scheduling is correct), while consumer spending turned modestly higher.

The Production Index (In terms of its 28-day moving average of gas-flow scheduling into US industrial facilities) eased for the third straight week, settling at 114.1 (from the prior weeks 114.5). In its dailies the week started soft, firmed midweek, and ended the week strong.

The paperboard-based Consumption Index reversed itself again (it has been waffling back-and-forth lately), gaining to 125.6 (from the previous weeks 125.0), In its dailies the week was soft early, firmed briefly mid-to-late-week, then softened again late into the weekend.

The Inventories measure (the cumulative weekly difference between the Production Index and the Consumption Index) continued its continual descent.

In spite of the softness of the past three weeks, the economy (at least for now) appears firmly underpinned by consumer spending, with the deficit of the Production Index to the Consumption Index, and the deep and continuing decline of the Inventories Measure continuing to lend credence to the economic recovery.

Remaining a concern is the continuing lag in the Production vs Consumption Index, which continues to imply a shallowness in the productive end of the US economy... which is a continuing drag on employment and job-creation.


-Robry825

Monday, April 19, 2010

Sunday Night Economic Assessment

The US Industrial economy gave something back last week (if pipeline scheduling is correct), as did consumer spending.

The Production Index (In terms of its 28-day moving average of gas-flow scheduling into US industrial facilities) slipped for the second straight week, dipping to 114.5 (from the prior weeks 115.0), In its dailies the week defied seasonal patterns and appeared steady & little changed from the prior holiday week.

The paperboard-based Consumption Index reversed its gains from the prior week and edged back to 125.0 (from the previous weeks 127.1), In its dailies the week was soft early, firmed briefly mid-to-late-week, then softened again Friday into the weekend.

The Inventories measure (the cumulative weekly difference between the Production Index and the Consumption Index) for the gazillianth week-in-a-row continued its descent.

Overall, gas-flows suggest the recovery remains intact for the moment, though signs of stain are increasing... leading one to wonder if the recovery could loose its initiative.

One area of increasing concern are imputs to food processing facilities (See the "Food" group on the IV-CWEI "Part-8 Sector Demand" posts). Scheduled gas flows into food plants have been steadily increasing as of late, but this is not a healthy sign for the economy as food tends to be a contra-indicator (probably because as America becomes more nervous, it heads to the fridge).

(Now in the sarcastic corner of my mind, I have been weighing a consumer confidence index derived from Food-Plant imputs... which are predominantly comfort food (junk food produced from dozens of facilities) such as snack-cakes, cookies, chips, pop bottling plants, cattle-feeders, fried chicken plants, etc... I could call it the "Refrigerator index"... Then you all would know that I had lost my mind!)

Overall, the deficit of the Production Index to the Consumption Index, and the deep and continuing decline of the Inventories Measure continue to underpin the economic recovery. Remaining a concern is the continuing lag in the Production vs Consumption Index, which continues to imply a shallowness in the productive end of the US economy... which is a continuing drag on employment and job-creation.




-Robry825

Monday, April 12, 2010

Sunday Night Economic Assessment

The US Industrial economy took a break last week (if pipeline scheduling is correct) while consumer spending turned up.

The Production Index (In terms of its 28-day moving average of gas-flow scheduling into US industrial facilities) eased for the first time in eight weeks, slipping slightly to 115.0 (from the prior weeks 115.1), In its dailies the week appeared close to seasonal trends of the Easter/Spring Break holiday.

The paperboard-based Consumption Index conversely turned up (for the first time in five weeks), rising to 127.1 (from the previous weeks 125.7), In its dailies the week was soft early, firmed briefly midweek, then softened late.

The Inventories measure (the cumulative weekly difference between the Production Index and the Consumption Index) continued its seemingly never-ending descent.

Overall, the deficit of the Production Index to the Consumption Index, and the deep and continuing decline of the Inventories Measure continue to underpin the economic recovery. Remaining a concern is the continuing lag in the Production vs Consumption Index, which continues to imply a shallowness in the productive end of the US economy... which is a continuing drag on employment and job-creation.




-Robry825

Monday, April 5, 2010

Sunday Night Economic Assessment

The US Industrial economy again pushed ahead last week (if pipeline scheduling is correct) while consumer spending eased slightly.

The Production Index (In terms of its 28-day moving average of gas-flow scheduling into US industrial facilities) scored its seventh rise in as many weeks, gaining to 115.1 (from the prior weeks 114.4), and achieved its fourth record high in a row. In its dailies the week followed seasonal trends showing firmness early before settling down into the start of the easter holiday.

For the fourth week in a row the paperboard-based Consumption Index again bucked the trend and dropped to 125.7 (from the previous weeks 126.2), In its dailies the week was soft and choppy.

The Inventories measure (the cumulative weekly difference between the Production Index and the Consumption Index) continued to slow its decline.

Overall, the deficit of the Production Index to the Consumption Index, and the deep and continuing decline of the Inventories Measure continue to underpin the economic recovery. The ongoing drop-off in the consumption index remains the largest concern, and could stunt the forward-momentum of the recovery should it not soon reverse (Though the consumption index is a very volatile index... mirroring the emotional volatility of the consumer).

Also remaining a concern is the continuing lag in the Production vs Consumption Index, which continues to imply a shallowness in the productive end of the US economy... which is a continuing drag on employment and job-creation.




-Robry825