- Gasoline prices improve.
- Crude oil prices increase.
- Natural gas prices recover.
- USA| Mar 07 2023
U.S. Energy Prices Rise
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- Germany| Mar 07 2023
German Factory Orders Rise But Still Display Poor Momentum
German factory orders rose by 1% in January following a 3.4% increase in December. Of course, that gain came out the heels of a 4.4% decline in November. As a result, German factory orders are still declining over 12 months, over six months and over three months. The order pattern shows clear deceleration as the 12-month drop is at a -11% pace, the six-month drop is at an -8.9% pace and the 3-month drop is at a pace of less than -1%.
Foreign orders substantially carried the day in January with a 5.5% increase on the heels of a 2% increase in December, but that's after a 6.9% decline in November. Foreign orders show an increasing profile against a -12.3% pace over 12 months, a -8.9% annual rate over 6 months, and a rise at just less than 1% over 3 months.
Domestic order trends are poor German domestic orders on the other hand were weak in January, falling by 5.3% after a 5.3% rise in December; that compares to a 0.5% drop in November. Domestic orders also show an improving profile but not as dramatically improving as for foreign orders; over 12 months domestic orders posts a decline at a -9.2% rate; that pace lets up slightly over 6 months at -8.9%, and that gives way to a -3.3% annual rate over 3 months.
Quarter-to-date In the quarter-to-date with only one month of data in hand, total orders are growing at a 10.6% annual rate led by a 29.1% surge in foreign orders and held back by a -12.6% annual rate drop in domestic orders. This has been a difficult period for German orders. Calculating growth back since COVID struck in January 2020, total orders, foreign orders, and domestic orders all are lower with the declines on the order of 2.5% or so.
Real sales by sector Real sales show more resilience with manufacturing sales off by 0.1% over 12 months, rising at a 4.9% annual rate over 6 months, and holding out a 4.9% annual rate gain over 3 months. Consumer goods categories show declines over 3 months for consumer goods overall, and for consumer durables and consumer nondurable sales. Over 3 months the strength comes from capital goods where there's an increase at a 27.1% annual rate, after a 20.7% annual rate increase over 6 months, a 7.1% annual rate increase over 12 months. Intermediate goods output, however, is still declining and decelerating with the -7.3% rate drop over 12 months, a -10.9% annual rate drop in sales over six months and a -15.7% annual rate drop over three months. For consumer goods, the sequential patterns are mixed.
European industrial performance compared Indicators of industrial confidence for the EU Commission allow us to compare Germany's performance with France, Italy, and Spain. All four countries listed in the table show improvement in January compared to December. France and Spain also show improvement in December relative to November. The queue standings for these metrics, however, are moderate. Germany has the best performance is this EU survey with a 79.3 percentile standing. Italy has a 56-percentile standing, about the same as Spain, while France has a 50.5 percentile standing. Indicators show small improvements since January 2020 for Spain and for Italy against a substantial improvement for Germany; only France shows a net weaker industrial reading of January 2023 compared to January 2020.
- USA| Mar 06 2023
U.S. Factory Orders Decline in January
- New orders reverse December increase.
- Shipments rebound after two months of decline.
- Unfilled orders and inventories hold steady.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- Europe| Mar 06 2023
EMU Retail Sales Expand in January But Remain Weak on Trend
Sales in the European Monetary Union rose by 0.3% in January after falling by 1.7% in December and rising by 0.7% in November. Sequential growth rates, however, still show sales withering at an increasingly weak pace.
Sequential sales show a 12-month decline rate of -2.4% that steps up to -2.6% over six months when annualized and again to -2.8% annualized over three months. On a quarter-to-date basis and calibrating the January sales level as a growth rate over the fourth quarter average, real retail sales in the euro area are falling at a 3.7% annual rate.
It has generally been a period of weakness for retail sales in the euro area. The chart shows separate retail and auto sales trends plotting sales levels rather than growth to highlight actual performance. At one point, auto sales had recovered and began to expand more or less on trend. But that expansion ran out of gas late in 2021. The level of real sales continues to move lower in the euro area. Currently EMU total sales volumes are higher than they were in January 2020 before COVID struck by only 2%. Food & beverage sales, that tend to be more stable, saw declines over 12 months, 6 months, and 3 months, but they are declines of diminishing intensity. Food & beverage sales are even increasing on a quarter-to-date basis in January. However, the volume of food & beverage sales is lower by nearly 1% than it was in January 2020, a testament to the current degree of weakness in sales in the euro area.
Country by country trends in key early reporters At this early date, the large European Monetary Union members have not reported separate figures, but the monetary union reports an aggregate based on whatever early estimates it has been able to make and by other early reporting members.
Among the seven countries that report in the table, only the Netherlands and Portugal report sales increases over 12 months, 6 months, and 3 months. The Netherlands reports accelerating sales on that timeline with sales expanding by 0.3% over 12 months, at a 4.5% annual rate over 6 months, and at a very strong 17.1% annual rate over 3 months. Denmark reports sales accelerating as they dig out of a hole from a decline rate of -5.5% over 12 months, at a -2.6% annual rate over 6 months and finally rising at a 1.5% annual rate over 3 months. Similarly, Sweden shows sequential improvement but doesn't get sales into positive territory with growth at -7.1% over 12 months, at a -3.8% annual rate over 6 months, and then at a -0.4% annual rate over 3 months. Interestingly, none of the reporters in the table show sales on a continuing decelerating path; however, there's still substantial weakness being reported from Belgium, Sweden, Norway, and the U.K.
Quarter-to-date sales show sales increases in Netherlands, Denmark, and Portugal. Their quarter-to-date declines in sales reported from Belgium, Norway, the U.K., and Sweden.
Sales volumes gauged in total from the January 2020 date before COVID struck show sales up by 3.5% in the Netherlands, by 2.9% in Portugal, by 1.4% in Norway, and barely higher gaining 0.2% in Denmark. However, in Belgium, the U.K. and Sweden, sales are lower in January 2023 than they were in January 2020.
The performance of motor vehicle registrations (sales) is a bit of a counterpoint, but it doesn't change the general picture or tone of weakness in consumer spending. Motor vehicle sales fell by 4.4% in January after falling 0.6% in December. The pace for motor vehicle sales for 15 economies in the European Union shows a 12.6% gain over 12 months, a stronger 29.7% gain over 6 months, and then a much weaker 6.1% gain over 3 months. These contrast with overall retail sales that show declines and even declines that are decelerating over that timeline. While auto sales are showing sporadic growth they are certainly not accelerating. And according to date basis, motor vehicle sales are much weaker than retail sales falling at a 15.3% annual rate QTD and vehicle sales are lower by 19.1% compared to what they were in January 2020.
- USA| Mar 03 2023
U.S. ISM Services Index Is Little Changed in February
- Reading remains in expansion territory.
- Business activity & supplier delivery measures decline; new orders & employment rise.
- Prices index falls to a roughly two-year low.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
Global| Mar 03 2023Charts of the Week (Mar 3, 2023)
Having begun 2023 on a more upbeat footing, the mood in financial markets has continued to sour over the past few weeks. Incoming data suggest that labour markets are too tight and that inflation is too high for comfort, especially for central banks. And this combination has added to the case for further policy tightening. Our first chart this week illustrates how financial markets have specifically re-priced the trajectory of Fed policy in response to recent data. But we illustrate too – via charts 2 and 3 – that tighter policy is now choking off domestic demand in the US and Europe which ought to help restrain inflation in the months ahead. As we further illustrate in charts 4 and 5, global sources of inflationary pressure from traded goods sectors (e.g. semiconductors) are also now waning quite sharply, thanks to a recent reconfiguration of supply and demand. Finally, and on a different theme, we look at tourist arrivals in Thailand in chart 6 in order to examine whether China’s re-opening is beginning to exert an impact on domestic activity in South-East Asia.
by:Andrew Cates
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| Mar 02 2023
U.S. Productivity Gain Revised Lower in Q4’22
- Growth remains below 2021.
- Compensation revised higher.
- Unit labor costs rise modestly.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| Mar 02 2023
U.S. Unemployment Insurance Claims Slip
- Initial claims at four-week low.
- Continuing claims slip, also to four-week low.
- Insured unemployment rate steady.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
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