Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief: 2023

    • Sales move up from 13-year low.
    • Home prices continue to weaken.
    • Purchases are mixed throughout the country.
    • Business, employment & income expectations improve.
    • Current conditions index increases.
    • Inflation expectations continue to decline.
  • The GfK survey for Germany improved to -25.1 from -27.6. It's the largest month to month rise and the climate index since May of 2023. The level of the climate index in January of 2024 at -25.1 is the strongest reading since August of 2023. The reading has a ranking in the 6.8 percentile of its ordered queue of observations, keeping it as a bottom 10 percentile reading to start the new year.

    The components of the climate index, economic and income expectations, and the propensity to buy index, each improved in December. The components lag the headline by one month. The economic index rose to -0.4 in December from -2.3 in November income expectations rose to -6.9 from -16.7 in November. The propensity to buy improved to -8.8 in December from -15.0.

    Economic expectations were at their strongest since July of 2023 and the same is true for expectations. However, the propensity to buy measure was last stronger back in March of 2022.

    The GFK headline as well as its components show improving trends. The chart at the top shows that climate has been engaged in a climb out from a very deep negative reading that bottomed out approximately one-year ago.

    The buying index is making a nice jump after a long period of flatness at lower levels. Income expectations are rising back and the neighborhood of a peak that they had seen back in July; economic expectations are making a slow climb up but are still well short of their best readings from earlier of 2023 that were experience in April. There has been some oscillation in the German economic and income expectations readings.

    Other Europe Confidence measures for other European countries in the table are stronger than for Germany. Italy and France have observations that are up to date only through November. Italy and France show month-to-month improvements in November compared to October. The Italian measure has a 63-percentile standing while the French measure has a 26 percentile standing. In Italy the standing is above its historic median whereas for France the index is well below its median and barely above the lower quartile compared to historical data back to 2002. The UK has a confidence rating up to date through December. The UK reading strengthened in November and in December rising to the level of -22 and December from -24 in November and from -30 in October before that. That is nearly back to the reading of -21 from September of 2023. However, it still has an extremely low percentile ranking in it's 29th percentile stuck between the Borders of the lower quartile and the lower third of its historic range.

    The GfK measure still shows a lot of weakness as the new year begins although there is a dig out in place; we can see the GfK climate measure it is gradually clawing its way to higher levels. Italian consumer confidence is the best of the lot in this table; French confidence is still weak and close to weakness we see in the UK. But in the UK at least is on a strong movement higher over the 12-months; much stronger than the gains being made by confidence in Italy and in France. However, for the most part, I characterize European confidence as weak and still challenged.

    • Deficit more than $16 billion smaller in Q3 due mostly to a narrowing of the goods deficit.
    • Services surplus widened modestly while primary income surplus narrowed.
    • The overall deficit narrowed to 2.9% of GDP, the lowest since Q1 2020, from 3.2% in Q2.
    • Mortgage applications declined by 1.5% in the December 15 week.
    • Mortgage applications for both loans to purchase and to refinance posted small weekly declines.
    • Effective mortgage interest rates dropped in the latest week, with the 30-year fixed rate down 23bps, the eighth consecutive weekly decline.
    • Gasoline prices have fallen for three months.
    • Crude oil costs ease.
    • Natural gas prices decline sharply.
    • Rise in starts is led by surge in single-family.
    • Activity improves across the country.
    • Building permits decline, led by multi-family.
  • Orders in the United Kingdom (UK) log a -23 reading in December, a weak reading that has a 29th percentile standing on data back to 1991. However, it's a significant improvement from November's reading at -35. It also represents a small improvement from October's reading of -26 for total orders. Still, compared to the 12-month average orders are weaker in December than what they averaged over the last 12-months.

    Export orders sketch a similar pattern as they rose to a - 23 reading in December from -31 in November and stand at the same level as in October. December export orders are just a tick weaker than what they have averaged over the past 12-months. Export orders register a 39-percentile standing in their historic queue of data.

    Finished stocks in the UK rose but continue to signal modest overall readings. The December reading of +11 has a 43 percentile standing; it's up from a reading of +3 in November and +4 in October. Inventory-building is only slightly faster than its 12-month average pace.

    The outlook for output volume in the next three months improved to +5 in December from -7 in November but that's still weaker than the +15 value from October. Historically the standing is weak, residing in the 36th percentile of its historic queue of data. However there is no new weakness signaled here; at + 5 the month’s reading is at the same level as its12-month average.

    Average prices in the next three months log a + 7 reading, weaker than November's +11 and identical with the October’s value of +7. The reading is lower than the 12-month average of 20, reflecting that inflation ran higher earlier in the year and it has been coming down. Inflation still has an elevated reading above its historic median; its queue percentile standing on data from 1991 is at a 56.9 percentile, leaving it at a small margin above its historic median on this timeline.

    Summing up The UK industrial report suggests expansion continues. Output volume is looked at as continuing to expand in the future and price pressures are expected to be less than what they've been - inflation will linger. Stocks are being built modestly. Total orders and export orders continue to sag, residing in the lower one-third of their historic range of values. The UK economy is still plodding along, however, it's still growing, and the industrial sector is expected to continue to grow.