Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief

  • • June +1.0%, slightly higher than expected; May revised up to -0.1%.

    • Ex-auto sales rise for six consecutive months.

    • Auto sales rebound 0.8%; May revised up to -3.0%.

    • Sales gain in most categories except for sales in building materials & garden equipt. stores, clothing & accessory stores, and general merchandise stores.

    • Despite four-decade-high inflation and falling real incomes, consumers continue spending; restaurant & drinking place sales rise for five straight months.

  • • Shipments increase at more companies.

    • New orders have modest net improvement.

    • Share of companies paying higher prices still high but shows some easing.

  • • IP -0.2% in June, 0.0% in May, +0.8% in April.

    • Manufacturing IP declines 0.5% w/ durable goods down 0.3% and nondurable goods down 0.8%, but mining rises for the second straight month.

    • Motor vehicle output falls for the second consecutive month following two straight m/m rises.

    • Consumer goods output decreases while business equipment edges up.

    • Capacity utilization at a three-month low; mfg. capacity utilization at a four-month low.

  • Japan
    | Jul 14 2022

    Japan's IP caves in May

    In May, the finalized industrial production figures for Japan show that IP has fallen by 7%; the decline in manufacturing is 7.5% month-to-month. Yes, these are month-to-month percent changes; they show declines that are extremely severe. Not only that, but Japan has total industrial production falling for three months in a row. Manufacturing industrial production is falling for two of the last three months.

    Over three months industrial production in Japan is declining at a 30.4% annual rate. In manufacturing it's declining at a 30.3% annual rate. Over six months the two series decline at about a 16% annual rate and over 12 months the two series decline by 4% or more. These are severe conditions and very discouraging trends.

    Japan's economy is in a very difficult situation right now, experiencing declines in output and a yen that continues to get weaker.

    Japan's household spending has been weak, having slipped by 0.5% in May on a year-over-year basis. Rising prices are putting Japanese consumers under pressure and making them cautious.

    Japan also continues to suffer the repercussions from the ongoing China COVID-19 curbs. Japan's largest trading partners are China and after that the United States.

    The chart at the top (Japan's IP Sequential Growth Rates) is the usual sort of growth rate chart for industrial production. It looks at sequential annualized growth over three months, six months and 12 months in an attempt to identify changing trends. It shows flatness and some weakness from mid-2020 onward (after the big drop in output) amid some rebounding as well as output has been volatile.

    The table also shows growth rates over these various periods for industrial sectors as well as the quarter-to-date growth rates by sector. The QTD growth rates are nearly all showing declines in progress – mining is the only exception. I have also included the net growth in industrial production and in various sectors since COVID struck, providing a comparison with levels prevailing in January 2020. And that shows declines everywhere except for utilities.

  • • Initial claims increased 9,000 to 244,000 in the July 9 week.

    • But continued claims eased 41,000 in the July 2 week.

    • The insured unemployment rate returned to record low of 0.9%.

  • • Energy prices surge a record 10.0% m/m and a record 54.4% y/y.

    • Core goods prices remain high: +0.5% m/m; +9.1% y/y.

    • Services prices rise for the 17th time in 18 months.

  • Europe
    | Jul 13 2022

    Euro Area IP Advances Again

    Output in the euro area rose by 0.8% in May after rising 0.5% in April. The manufacturing sector logged a gain of 1.4% in May after rising 0.1% in April. However, for both metrics, output is now declining on balance over three months. Overall industrial production is declining at a 1.9% annual rate over three months while manufacturing IP is falling at a 1.1% rate over three months. Both measures show net declines in the current quarter-to-date that has two out of three months' worth of data in hand.

    The manufacturing sector in the EMU shows increases in two of three sectors in May with intermediate goods output being flat, consumer goods output up by 1.6%, and capital goods output up by 2.5%. Consumer goods output rose for two months in a row and in two of the last three months. Capital goods output rose in May after declining in both March and April. Intermediate goods output rose in April but declined in March.

    Over three months, consumer goods output is rising at a 6.1% annual rate, intermediate goods output is falling at a 4.8% annual rate, and capital goods output is falling at a 6.4% annual rate. Intermediate goods output shows ongoing decay: there is a 0.2% decline over 12 months, a flat performance over six months and then a 4.8% decline over three months. Capital goods output shows declines over all three periods: a 1.4% decline over 12 months, a 0.8% decline over six months, and a 6.4% decline over three months. Consumer goods alone show increases over all horizons, rising by 6.5% over 12 months, at a 10% pace over six months and at a 6.1% pace over three months.

    In the quarter-to-date, consumer goods output is rising at the double-digit pace of 12.1% annualized, intermediate goods output is falling at a 1.7% annualized rate, and capital goods output is falling at an 8.8% annual rate. The strength in output clearly is concentrated in the consumer sector.

    Output by nation
    Of the 13 EMU countries listed in the table for May, five show output declining with the rest showing output gains on the month. Six countries show declines in output in April and five show declines in March. Output continues to increase in more countries than it decreases and that has been persistent. Still over the last three months, there is a substantial core of countries that are showing output declines marking the industrial sector as somewhat uneven.

    However, taking the whole three-month period, there are output declines in only four of the 13 EMU members. Looking at output over six months, there are only three countries that have output declining on that horizon; those are Germany, Malta, and Portugal. Over 12 months, four countries show output declines. In the quarter-to-date, there are output declines in five of the 13 reporting EMU members.

    Looking at the recovery in output compared to its pre-COVID level in January 2020, output has increased on balance in 9 of 13 countries; the exceptions are Germany, France, Malta, and Portugal. There are double-digit output increases as well: Ireland, the Netherlands and Belgium log double-digit gains since January 2020 and Austria and Greece log strong increases in output greater than 9%. Manufacturing in the euro area has progressed with firm output trends since COVID struck although the overall gain in the EMU-area manufacturing output on that period is only 1.1%.

    Results for three European countries that are non-EU members, the U.K., Sweden, and Norway, demonstrate somewhat mixed results. Norway shows output declines over 12 months, six months, and three months, but the pace of decline is gradually dissipating over those horizons. Both the U.K. and Sweden show output increasing over all three horizons and accelerating increases.

  • • Headline index jumped up 1.3% m/m, led by surging food and energy prices.

    • Annual headline rate rose to highest since November 1981.

    • Increase in core prices broadly based.