Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief

    • Consumer spending growth is reduced but capital investment is lifted.
    • Inventories & trade deficit improvement add to growth.
    • Q4 price gain is unrevised.
    • Initial claims up 7,000 in March 25 week, continuing claims up 4,000 in March 18 week.
    • Insured unemployment rate at 1.2% for fourth straight week.
    • Highest state rate in New Jersey, lowest in Virginia.
  • The monthly EU Commission Index for the European Monetary Union showed slight slippage back to 99.3 in March from 99.6 in February. This compares to 99.7 in January and 97 in December. Obviously, the sense of rebound here reveals a very shallow and slow-taking rebound. The industrial sector had readings of zero for the past two months, weaker than the January reading. Consumer confidence was at -19.2 in March, not much changed from the -19.1 in February, but it's a slight improvement from -22 in December. Retailing slipped on the month with a March value of -1 compared to zero in February and a slight improvement from -3 in December. Construction eased lower with the reading of +1 in March after +2 in February that compares to a +4 reading in December. The services sector slipped on the month to a reading of +9 from +10 in February; February was unchanged from January, but the March reading of +9 was up from a reading of +8 in December.

    These comparisons show a very tight clustering of values over the last four months or so; the ranking of the overall European Monetary Union index is at its 46.6 percentile, ranked on data back to 1990.

    The industrial sector has a ranking in its 70.5 percentile. Retailing is at its 78th percentile. Construction is at its 85.4 percentile. Services are at their 58.5 percentile. The clear weak reading for the Monetary Union is consumer confidence which has just an 8.6 percentile standing; it has been this weak or weaker only 8.6% of the time back to 1990.

    As the data above suggest, there's not much of a rebound building while the various metrics show some improvement relative to their December levels (except for construction). The clear message is that there's not much change in momentum at all and as we can see the rankings on the various metrics remain moderate with construction fading but still having a strong activity score. Retailing is quite solid, and the industrial sector is still firm with its 70.5 percentile standing. The chart at the top shows that the various sectors are rebounding. The Monetary Union metrics are off their mini-cycle lows; however, this is somewhat curious with the European Central Bank raising interest rates with inflation high, a war still cooking in Europe and what could be a nascent banking crisis waiting in the wings. There's been some concern about the onset of recession, but these data instead show a clear persistence and slow slog recovery underway. This certainly raises questions about what's next.

    • Sales reach six-month high.
    • Monthly changes are mixed amongst regions.
    • Refinancing increase outpaces purchase application gain.
    • Interest rates ease.
  • Germany’s GfK climate measure continued to improve in April, but its improvement was only a gain of about one point on an index that remains severely weak. The climate index in April has been this week or weaker only 3.1% of the time since its inception. Even though there is now a string of six months in which consumer climate has been improving, these improvements are so small as to make the story, still a story about how weak conditions remain rather than about how there's a string of improvement underway.

    The components for the climate index are made available to us with a one-month lag; we are looking at economic expectations, income expectations, and the propensity to buy in terms of values as of March. In March, economic expectations stepped back to 3.7 from a February value of 6; still the 3.7 reading was well above the January reading of -0.6 and the December reading of -10.3. The economic ranking has made a significant improvement and currently has a 44.1 percentile standing. That means that economic expectations have been this weak or weaker only about 44% of the time and they've been higher only about 56% of the time. The economic reading is closing in on a neutral reading which would occur at a rank or count percentile standing of 50%.

    Income expectations improved slightly to -24.3 in March from -27.3 in February. Income expectations have been improving regularly: in December, for example, income expectations had a value of -43.4. Income expectations currently have a 4.3 percentile standing. That rank standing means that the income expectation reading has been this weak or weaker only 4.3% of the time.

    The propensity to buy improved very slightly in March, rising to -17 from February’s -17.3. It improved in February compared to January; however, the current reading level is below December 2022 when the value was -16.3. The count or rank percentile standing for the propensity to buy is still weak at 19.3% indicating that this propensity has been this week or weaker about 19% of the time. That is roughly a bottom one-fifth standing.

    Other Europe The table also presents some comparative readings for Italy, France, and the United Kingdom. The count or rank standing for Italy is at its 68.8 percentile. For France, the standing is at the 1.6 percentile. For the U.K., it's at the 5.9 percentile mark. Italy has a relatively robust ranking for consumer or household confidence at 68.8%. It has been higher only about 32% of the time. As for France and the U.K., the readings there have been lower rarely - on the order of less than 2% of the time for France and about 6% of the time for the U.K. In terms of month-to-month changes, Italy saw another increase in March, France saw a slight decline, and the U.K. saw a slight improvement. Compared March 2023 to December 2022, the Italian reading is at 105.1 compared to 102.5; the French reading is at 81.5, lower than December’s 82.4; the U.K.’s -36 reading in March is an improvement from its -42 reading in December.

    • Expectations rise modestly.
    • Present situation index declines.
    • Inflation expectations edge higher.
    • FHFA HPI +0.2% m/m in Jan. after two straight monthly declines.
    • House prices rise m/m in five of nine census divisions.
    • House prices in the Pacific region post their first y/y drop since Feb. ’12.