Friday, February 22, 2008

Weekly Economic Calendar

February 25-29, 2008
                                                                                                            Consensus       Prior
Monday, 2/25
            January Existing Home Sales                                            4.81M             4.89M
Expected to decline -1.8% MoM to a new cycle low
                        Pending home sales in December were weak, falling -1.5% MoM
                        Existing home sales have fallen -24% YoY
                        Weakness is evenly distributed among all 4 major geographic regions          

                        Fed Governor Kroszner speaks on Risk Management

                        Fed Governor Mishkin speaks on Stabilizing Inflation

Tuesday, 2/26
            January Producer Price Index                                MoM   +0.3%             -0.1%
                                                                                                YoY     +7.5%             +6.3%
                        Core PPI (Ex- Food and Energy)                 MoM   +0.2%             +0.2%
                                                                                                YoY     +2.2%             +2.0%
                        Headline PPI expected to exceed November’s 25+ year high of 7.2% YoY
Annual Core PPI growth running slightly above 12m average of 1.9%
Food prices expected to rise sharply in January, up +.6-.7% MoM
Seasonal adjustments may cause gasoline prices to fall again (-4.8% MoM in December)
                        Fewer vehicle incentives may push up car and truck prices, and core PPI
                        PPI more impacted by commodity prices than CPI

            December 20-City Case-Shiller Home Price Index  YoY           -9.8%              -7.7%
                        Expected to decline -1.5-2% MoM in December
                       
            4th Qtr National Case-Shiller Home Price                       YoY                             -4.5%
                        Decline expected to accelerate to -6.7% YoY from -4.5% YoY in 3rd qtr

            February Consumer Confidence                                        82                    87.9
                        Expected to plunge to a 4y low as economic growth deteriorates
                        Present situation index has fallen over 5 of last 6 months

February Richmond Fed Manufacturing Index                -7                     -8

4th Qtr OFHEO Home Price Index                         QoQ   -1%                 -0.4%
Expected to show a record quarterly decline and first annual decline since series started in 1975
Actual YoY drop for 2007 expected to be -1.1%
A -1% quarterly decline annualizes to a -4% YoY deterioration in prices

            Fed Vice-Chairman Kohn speaks on U.S. Economy and Monetary Policy

Wednesday, 2/27
            January Durable Goods Orders                             MoM   -4%                 +5%
                        Ex-Transportation                                        MoM   -1.3%              +2.3%
Sharp decline in Boeing aircraft orders (65 vs 287) will reverse December’s headline strength, which was broadbased
Transportation orders likely fell by 10% MoM
Machinery and tech orders also expected to retrench, pulling down
ex-transportation growth (machinery orders grew +7.3% MoM in Dec)
ISM Manufacturing new order growth has been slowing as sentiment becomes more gloomy

            January New Home Sales                                                   600k                604k
                        Only a -0.7% ease expected following December’s -4.7% drop
                        Single-family permits are at lowest level since 1991 recession
New home sales have been falling even faster than existing home sales, and are down -41% YoY
Slight improvement seen in NAHB index past two months (20 vs 18)

Fed Chairman’s Semi-Annual Report to Congress on Economy and Fed Policy       
New FOMC forecast just released which reduced 2008 GDP growth to 1.3-2% range, pushed unemployment higher to 5.2-5.3% by the end of year, and raised inflation expectations (see PCE data below)
Presents to House on Wednesday, Senate on Thursday

            Fed Governor Mishkin speaks on Importance of Financial Literacy

Thursday, 2/28
            Initial Jobless Claims                                                          350k                349k
                        Continuing Claims                                                  2773k              2784k
                        Jobless claims’ 4-week average has risen rapidly over past month to 361k

            Preliminary 4th Qtr GDP                             Annualized    +0.8%             +0.6%
                        Slight improvement expected, mainly due to higher export growth
                        Domestic consumer demand expected to weaken

            Preliminary 4th Qtr Personal Consumption                     +2%                +2%

            Preliminary 4th Qtr GDP Price Index                                +2.6%             +2.6%

            Preliminary 4th Qtr Core PCE QoQ                                  +2.7%             +2.7%

            January Help Wanted Index                                               21                    22
                      

Friday, 2/29
            January Personal Income                                                    +0.2%             +0.5%
                        Sluggish growth expected as labor demand softens
                        Aggregate payroll hours fell -0.3% while hourly wages rose +0.2%

            January Personal Spending                                                            +0.2%             +0.2%
                        Weak vehicle and home improvement sales impeding growth
Real (inflation adjusted) sales are likely to have been flat, as higher prices account for all of increase in nominal sales
           
January PCE Deflator                                             YoY     +3.5%             +3.5%
                        Running well above Fed’s new target of 2.1-2.4% annual growth

            January Core PCE                                                   MoM   +0.2%             +0.2%
                                                                                                YoY     +2.2%             +2.2%
Core growth at upper edge of Fed’s forecast of 2-2.2% annual growth

            February Chicago Purchasing Manager                           49.7                 51.5
                        Large declines seen in Empire and Philly Fed indexes recently

            Final February U of Michigan Consumer Confidence    70                    69.6
Preliminary reading fell a huge -8.8 points from Janaury with current and future expectations falling around 9 points
ABC/Washington Post survey holding steady at lows
1-year inflation expectations popped up to 3.7% from 3.4% last month

U.S. Monetary Policy Forum
Fed Governor Mishkin and Boston Fed President Rosengren speak at panel on “Leveraged Losses:  Lessons from the Mortgage Market Meltdown”

Atlanta Fed President Lockhart speak at panel on “The Subprime Crisis – Is it Contagious?”

Chicago Fed President Evans and St. Louis Fed President Poole speak at panel on “Balancing Financial Stability, Price Stability and Macroeconomic Stability”

           


Wednesday, February 20, 2008

New Home Starts Pause Decline Near Lows

Housing starts held near their 17 year lows in January, rising +.8% MoM, while building permits continued to fall -3% MoM.  Both results were in line with expectations as the inventory overhang in new and existing homes persists, and rising foreclosures continue to add to the glut of homes on the market.  Housing starts have fallen by over 20% in the past few months, so a pause is reasonable.  But, it is too early to declare stabilization.
 
Single-family construction continues to see the brunt of the weakness.  Single-family starts fell -5.2% MoM (-34% YoY), and permits fell -4.1% MoM (-40% YoY).  As expected, multi-family construction rebounded in January after the unusually weak activity in December.  Multi-family starts rose +22% MoM (-4% YoY) and permits only declined by -.8% MoM (-15% YoY).
 
Houses under construction continue to decline, falling -2.4% MoM and -15% YoY.  Completed housing rose +1.8% MoM, but is down -26% YoY.
 
For all of 2007, construction began on 1.355 million homes, the lowest number since 1993, and a 25% decline from 2006.  Housing starts peaked in January 2006 at 2.29 million - a thirty year high.  New home starts are expected to continue falling through most of this year as new home sales are down almost 60% from their peak in July 2005.
 
Regionally, starts rose +19% MoM the Northeast and +12% MoM in the Midwest in January, while they fell -3% MoM in the South and -6% MoM in the West.  In fact single-family new home starts in the West were the lowest last month since records began in 1959!

Consumer Inflation Rising Faster than Expected

Headline CPI inflation rose +.4% MoM (consensus +.3%) and +4.3% YoY (consensus +4.2%), while core, which excludes food and energy price hikes, rose +.3% MoM (consensus +.2%) and+2.5% YoY (consensus +2.4%).  The broad based increase in inflation will be a concern for the Fed. 
 
The annual increase in core CPI is the highest since last March, and has risen steadily over the past four months from 2.1% to the current +2.5% YoY.
 
The +4% annual increase in headline CPI has only occurred 9 times (months) in the past 17 years, and three of those occurrences have been over the past three months.  Prior to this increase, the last time headline inflation rose over 4% YoY was in the summer of 2006.
 
Energy and food prices both rose a strong +.7% MoM in January.  Energy prices have risen +20% YoY while food prices are up +5% YoY.  Food accounts for about 20% of the US CPI index.  Owner's equivalent rent held steady at +.3% MoM growth for the third month in a row.  Tenant rents also rose +.3% MoM in January.  Over the past year, housing costs have risen +3% YoY.  Rental costs represent approx. 40 percent of the core CPI index.. 
 
Personal computers broke their deflationary streak in January, rising +1% MoM, but are still down a substantial -12% YoY.  Gasoline rose +1.2% MoM and is up +35% YoY.  Almost all categories saw rising prices.  Apparel rose +.4% MoM (-.2% YoY), transportation rose +.5% MoM (+9% YoY), medical care increased +.5% MoM (+5%YoY), and education +.4% MoM (+3% YoY).  Commodity and service prices saw the largest gains in a long time.  Lodging away from home rose a strong +1.1% MoM.
 
The only outright pricing decline was in vehicles, which fell -.1% MoM, and are unchanged year-over-year. 
 
The CPI is the government's broadest indicator of prices paid by consumers for goods and services, and uses costs averaged over the entire month.  Higher inflation rates are part of the reason that longer-term interest rates have been rising again recently, and are also keeping the dollar under pressure to devalue.  Today's data indicates that higher import prices, which are at record levels, are impacting the broader economy.  Producer prices will not be released until next week.