Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief

    • Inventories subtract substantially from growth.
    • Consumer spending strengthens; investment slows.
    • Price index remains reduced.
    • Composite Index falls to -10 in April, reflecting drops in production to -21, new orders to -21, and employment to -1.
    • Price indexes increase, w/ both prices paid for raw materials and prices received for finished goods at their seven-month highs.
    • Expectations for future activity remain in positive territory.
    • Sales retrace two monthly increases.
    • Monthly declines are sharp in most regions.
    • Initial claims in tight range still just above pre-pandemic amounts.
    • Continuing weeks claimed edge slightly lower in latest week.
    • Insured unemployment rate steady at 1.3%.
  • The EU Commission indexes that evaluate the European Monetary Union, its members, and sector results for April, show the smallest possible uptick for the overall index to 99.3 from 99.2 in March. This calls for popping the cork on a champaign bottle and then drinking none of it- a sort of dry celebration. The April value of the index has a 46.9 percentile standing, leaving it still below its historic median. The median on these ranked data occurs at a ranking of the 50th percentile. So, a technical ‘improvement here’ but really nothing to celebrate- a waste of the bubbly.

    Monthly changes The overview of sector results shows a setback in April for the industrial sector that fell to a net reading of -3 from -1 in March. The construction sector was unchanged at a rating of plus-one in both March and April. The retailing sector improved to -1 in April from -2 in March; the services sector improved to +11 from +10; and consumer confidence improved to -17.5 from -19.1.

    Standings are firm across sectors for the most part…but NOT overall These monthly changes leave the assessments of sector performance quite mixed. Consumer confidence has the weakest ranking at a 15.4 percentile standing, which is quite weak. The industrial sector has a 57.2 percentile standing, above its median, but not impressive. Services do better with the 65.9 percentile standing, retailing has a quite-firm 78.3 percentile standing, while construction continues to score a relatively strong standing at its 85.4 percentile. But as you can see from the rankings, the sector rankings really scatter quite widely and the extreme depressed state of consumer confidence has a large impact on the overall Monetary Union index since only consumer confidence is below its historic median and that's enough to drag the entire overall index below its historic median for April.

    Countries month-to-month 18 of 19 member countries report in April and of these, eight show month-to-month deterioration while ten show approvement. However, the data are quite mixed on the month as the declining reporters generally show quite severe declines with five of eight declining entries showing monthly drops of 1.6% or worse. Among the countries reporting improvements in the month, 6 show increases of better than 1% and four show increases of 1.6% or better month-to-month. April becomes a month of some considerable divide among the reporting countries with a number of quite good responses and also significant number of quite bad responses. The number of respondents showing month-to-month deterioration has been relatively stable in recent months with seven countries reporting declines in March and eight reporting declines in February; the number in February being the same as the number in April.

    Country standings The percentile standing data for the countries is significantly less upbeat than the percentile standing statistics by sector. Among the five sectors (as we saw above) four of them have standings above their medians with two sectors posting firm to strong queue standings. On a country-by-country overall index basis there was only one strong country entry and that's from Malta with a 94-percentile standing with Greece and Italy having standings we would consider to be on the firm side, above the 70th percentile, but still below the 80th percentile. All-in-all there are only five countries with percentile standings above their medians and 13 countries with standings below their medians. The European Monetary Union evaluates as much stronger when we assess it by looking at sectors rather than looking at country rankings. It's not particularly clear why this is true, because it's not as though the countries assessed positively are the largest economies. The two largest EMU economies have standings well below their historic medians while the 3rd and 4th ranked largest economies have standings above their historic medians and among the remaining 14 countries only three have standings above their historic medians and they aren't particularly large countries.

    • Deficit is smallest in four months.
    • Exports rise but imports decline.
    • Quarterly deficit is shallower than Q4’22.
    • Increase in total orders is first in three months.
    • Orders improve modestly in most categories.
    • Shipments and order backlogs rise, but inventories decline.
    • Mortgage applications rose in the week ended April 21.
    • The effective rates on all loans rose in the latest week.
    • The average loan size dropped in the latest week.