- Tin & copper scrap prices decline sharply.
- Crude oil prices fall.
- Natural rubber prices decline sharply but plywood prices increase.
- USA| Nov 22 2024
FIBER: Industrial Commodity Prices Weaken in Latest Four Weeks
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
Global| Nov 22 2024
S&P Flash PMIs Sag Globally
Manufacturing readings fall by a 'tick' in November, but service sector metrics eased by nearly a full point on average. These calculations are for unweighted averages of the above observations. US trends are opposite, so that the overall averages become worse when the US is excluded.
In November the eight reporters in the table have stronger composite readings reported in only three countries, in Japan, India, and the US. The US is the only reporter in the table to show improvements in manufacturing, services, and for the composite at the same time, in November. The UK, France, and EMU each report increased weakness across the composite, the manufacturing sector and in services in November. Among the 24 readings across eight reporters (…and three sectors for each reporter) in November only nine of these twenty-four are stronger month-to-month. This compares to ten in October and eight in September. Weakness has dominated strength over the past three-months across these readings.
Sequentially we look at 12 month, 6-month, and 3-month averages of finalized data, we see only six of twenty-four stronger over three-months compared to 6-months, after the 6-month averages were broadly stronger showing weakening in only seven of twenty-four cases. Over 12-months there were only nine weakening compared to 12-months ago and they were all confined to three economies: Germany, France and Japan. The unweighted averages of these reporters show little change in the averaging of these sector reading over 3-months, 6-months and 12-months.
The queue rankings underscore the sense of weakness. Assessed among the most industrialized countries, the US is starting to gain separation as its service sector is carrying it to a better overall (composite) standing. The US composite standing is at 69.5% and compares to Japan, the UK, France, Germany and EMU whose highest standing for the composite among these five reporters is a reading of 42.4% -as the group produces an average standing at the 26.1%.
The US is still strongly ‘plugged into’ the global economy as its manufacturing sector is still the third weakest by queue percentile standing in the table. But the vibrant US services sector is the economy’s guiding light – plus manufacturing has improved for two months in a row. The global economy is still floundering while the US shows signs of strengthening.
- USA| Nov 21 2024
U.S. Existing Homes Sales Rebounded in October
- Sales rose 3.4% m/m after declining in each of the previous two months.
- Year-ago sales increased 2.9%, the first positive annual reading since July 2021.
- Monthly sales rose in all four major regions.
- The median price increased 4.0% from a year ago.
by:Sandy Batten
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| Nov 21 2024
U.S. Leading Indicators Continue to Decline in October
- Component movement in leading index is mixed.
- Coincident indicators hold steady again.
- Lagging indicators are little changed.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| Nov 21 2024
U.S. Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Index Weakens in November
- Current General Activity Index retraces two months’ improvement.
- New orders & shipments ease, but employment strengthens.
- Inflation indicators fall sharply.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| Nov 21 2024
U.S. Unemployment Insurance Claims Fell 6,000 in Latest Week
- Jobless claims on very slight downward trend.
- Continuing claims are rising gradually.
- The insured unemployment rate inched up to 1.3%, the first rise since March 2023.
- United Kingdom| Nov 21 2024
UK Industry Strengthens as Outlook Improves, Right Direction/Marginal Moves
UK improvement is shallow - The UK total orders position improved in November, but the reading went up to -19 from -27 in October, remaining deeply in negative territory. Looking ahead over the next three-months, finds volume improved to a +9 reading from -1 in October, while prices expected over the next three-months move sharply higher to a reading a + 11 from a reading of zero in October. The month-to-month movements show changes in the positive direction; however, the readings show that orders are still net negative readings and the broader standings for these assessments are still low.
Orders- Total orders in November that moved to a - 19 reading also represent an improvement from the 12-month average of -25, export orders that were unchanged month-to-month at -27 we're also stuck at the same average value they've had over 12-months at -27. On the export front, orders reveal that nothing has changed at all.
Stocks assessments- Stocks of finished goods rose to a + 21 level from +17 in October and compare to a 12-month average of 13. Rising inventories at a time when orders are not improving may be an ominous indication of what lies ahead. The outlook for volume three-months ahead improved month-to-month but the +9 reading from November compares to a +8 reading over its six-month average and a + 8 reading for its 12-months average. November shows an improvement from October but not much of an improvement from what had been the main conditions over the last 6- and 12-months.
Prices firm- Meanwhile prices are showing some pressure with the reading of +11 that is stronger than the +6 that we've seen over three-months and the average of +9 over 6-months. The November reading is slightly weaker than the +13 reading over 12-months. However, this sequence of readings seems to suggest that the disinflationary forces are abating and inflation at some level once again is going to become an issue.
Broader standing evaluated in November- Backing away from the diffusion levels and the survey levels per se, we can look at the queue standings for these levels to get a better assessment of where this months’ survey responses lie and a broader historic perspective than just month-to-month or over 12-months. Total orders evaluated over data back to 1992 have a standing in their 35th percentile. Export orders occupy their 31st percentile. The stocks reading for finished goods has a very high, 93.9 percentile standing, which, as I noted above, is not good news in an environment where the outlook for sales and orders is not expanding solidly. Output volume for three months ahead has a 46-percentile standing which is below the median value that occurs at a percentile standing of 50%. And while that's slightly below median, it's not dramatically below the median, and it comes closer to putting the UK economy back into some kind of moderate equilibrium even though there's a modest shortfall form the median in November. On the price front, the percentile standing is about at its 65th percentile, which makes it mildly inflationary. Inflation forces are above their median value on data back to 1992, however, a reading in the 65th percentile is only moderately firm. The more pressing issue is that it comes in a period where the UK has been running persistently excessive rates of inflation.
Compared to lagging IP trends- UK industrial production data are up-to-date through September. September showed a decline in industrial production of 1%, the three-month decline in this lagged industrial production reading is at about -4% annualized; over 6-months it's -2 1/2% annualized, and over 12-months it's a little bit less than a 1% decline. These sequential readings are not reassuring because they show that industrial production has been declining at increasingly faster rates of change rather than at diminishing rates of change. Output does not seem to be righting itself, even though in the CBI survey the outlook for volume has been firming back to 12-month average levels.
Summary and assessment- The outlook for volume has been oscillating in a very low range for the last two-years after going through a bust and boom cycle related to COVID and its aftermath. The expected volume series now is making some upward adjustment after a minor downturn that seems to have followed a modest upswing. There's nothing in this report that suggests that there's any kind of lasting improvement in the works, although it's reassuring to see that the recent weakness is dissipating. The order book balance, however, remains in deeply negative territory and while the CBI order readings had been much weaker during the COVID period, apart from the COVID period, we are looking at a string of consistent weakness that otherwise hasn't been seen at least back to 2014. In addition, there is some resurging pressure on inflation. All this makes picture for UK industry less than positive, despite some month-to-month improvement in November.
Global| Nov 21 2024
Charts of the Week: Policy Conflict
The potential policy implications of a new US administration have been driving financial markets over the past two weeks. Global investors have responded with a more optimistic take on the outlook for the US economy but with more pessimistic views about the rest of the world (chart 1). A potential easing of US fiscal policy (e.g. via tax cuts) has also triggered a re-evaluation of Fed policy, causing US yields and the value of the dollar to climb (chart 2). The reverberations for the rest of the world will, in part, be felt via this impact on the US dollar. But trade channels will also be significant not least for economies with large US exposures (chart 3) and/or those that have been heavily reliant on US import demand to fuel economic growth (chart 4). Energy policies have also been under the spotlight over the past few days thanks to the UN Climate Change Conference (COP29) in Azerbaijan. And potential shifts in US energy policy under a new administration could certainly intensify global tensions surrounding the energy transition. For Europe more specifically, such a shift could complicate its transition strategies and sow the seeds for further economic underperformance compared with the US in the period ahead (charts 5 and 6).
by:Andrew Cates
|in:Economy in Brief
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