Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief: January 2022

  • At today's meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), the Fed indicated it will continue to reduce the stimulus it has been providing to the economy.

    The Fed announced that it will lessen its planned purchases of Treasury securities to $20 billion per month from $40 billion as indicated at the last meeting, and to pare purchases of agency securities to $10 billion per month from $20 billion.

    The meeting statement indicated that the federal funds rate target will remain in a range of 0.0% to 0.25%, where it has been since March 2020, "but the Committee expects it will soon be appropriate to raise the target range for the federal funds rate."

    Specifically addressing inflation, the Fed indicated, "Supply and demand imbalances related to the pandemic and the reopening of the economy have continued to contribute to elevated levels of inflation."

    The Fed went on to state, "Progress on vaccinations and an easing of supply constraints are expected to support continued gains in economic activity and employment as well as a reduction in inflation."

    The statement issued following today's meeting can be found here.

    • Monthly increases have been strong & steady for four months.
    • Regional house price increases vary.
    • Prices surge in South Atlantic & East North Central regions.
    • Gasoline prices rise slightly.
    • Crude oil prices surge.
    • Natural gas prices strengthen again.
    • Expectations fall sharply, present situation improves.
    • Jobs are easier to find.
    • Price inflation expectations slip.
  • Markit PMI flash readings from Markit for January 2022 weakened broadly. The clear exception was Germany where the composite, manufacturing and services readings all bucked the trend to make solid to strong month-to-month gains. Maybe there are additives in the gas in the pipeline from Russia? Or simply catch up since Germany's PMI standings are not standouts. The German gains were strong enough for an improvement in the manufacturing reading to post for all of the EMU due to Germany's large weight in that index. However, the EMU composite and services PMIs weakened.

    France, the U.K., and the U.S. saw broad declines with each of the Markit indexes falling on the month. Japan witnesses a small gain in manufacturing with a sizeable fall in services and a step back in the composite. The U.S. fared the worst of all with a large setback in services to couple with a significant setback in manufacturing that produced a much weaker composite as well. The U.S. services drop is the third largest in the past four years and is exceeded only by the spectacular drops logged when Covid struck.

    The U.S. is not only the weakest on the month; it is also riding three consecutive months of three sector deterioration and is alone among these reports with that distinction (and U.S. manufacturing extends that to weaken month-to-month for six months in a row). France weakened in all sectors for two months running while the U.K., Japan, and the EMU weakened in five of six month-to month-comparisons over the last two months. While Germany made across the board sector gains in January, it weakened across the board in December.

    The monthly data, except for Germany, show a weakening as the color-coded back 'stronger' entries give way to the 'weaker' red entries in recent months. The historic averages which are formed excluding January (e.g., the three-month average is December, November, and October) show (1) predominate weakening over three months, (2) mixed conditions over six months, and (3) those contrast with uniform strength and improvement over 12 months (that is 12-months compared to the 12-month average of 12-months ago).

    There are clear country differences as well, however. The U.S. is the only entry in the table with three- sectors weakening over three months as well as over six months. However, all the other members, except Japan, show three-month and six-month weakening for manufacturing alone.

    The index standings- both the high-low position and the rank or queue standings show less strength than there has been recently as only Japan has ranking for its manufacturing sector in the 90th percentile decile. In the high-low range the EMU, Germany, and France mount 80th percentile decile standings, the U.K. has a low 70s standing, and the U.S. is just below a 70th percentile standing in manufacturing in the high-low column.

    However, the queue percentile standings show less strength indicating that current performance does not stand up well to the standards of the past four years. Manufacturing is an exception with 80th percentile standing in the EMU, Germany, and France with the U.K. in the upper 70th queue percentile range and Japan again in its 90th percentile. The is U.S. alone below its median with a 49-percentile queue standing. The real weakness comes from services where four of the six entries in the table (the EMU, Germany, Japan, and the U.S.) log queue percentile standings for services that are below their respective medians and in most cases below by quite large margin. France and the U.K. are the exceptions here but only with queue rankings in their respective 50th percentile decile range.

    This performance is the clear mark of the virus. As manufacturing, for the most part, has held much of its strength and resilience while the rapid spread of Omicron has taken a large bite out of activity in the service sector globally. The U.S. and Japan have been hit exceptionally hard looking at the queue standing assessments.

    Services have been hit so hard recently that among the six reporters in this table four of them have service sector readings that stand below their pre-Covid readings of January 2020. The two exceptions have little to brag about since the U.K. is higher than its January 2020 level by only 0.4 points in services, while France is higher by 1.4 points. That's not much gain over a 24-month period.

    Average manufacturing standings for this group are at the 79th queue percentile in manufacturing but only at the 36th percentile for services which is the jobs sector. The composite index averages a standing in its 46.6 queue percentile below its median.

    • First negative reading since April 2021.
    • Production & personal consumption again lead downturn.
    • Trend level of total index weakens.
    • Component increases are widespread.
    • Coincident indicators rise, despite dip in production.
    • Lagging indicators increase minimally.
    • Strength of initial claims accompanies spread of Omicron virus.
    • Continued claims rise modestly.
    • Insured unemployment rate edges higher.