Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief: 2022

    • Sales post weakest result since December.

    • Lower auto & gasoline sales hold back total.

    • Nonauto sales generally improve.

    • Gasoline prices continue moving lower.

    • Crude oil prices rise slightly.

    • Natural gas prices are little changed.

    • Starts level is lowest since February 2021.

    • Single-family starts at 916,000, lowest since June 2020.

    • Starts in the Northeast at a 14-year high; starts in the other regions down.

    • Building permits at 1.674 mil., lowest since September 2021.

    • Single-family & multi-family starts and single-family permits decrease, but multi-family permits rise for the second straight month.

    • Consumer product output led by autos.

    • Transit equipment leads business output gain.

    • Capacity utilization rebounds following two months of decline.

  • The overview table shows that the current situation in the eyes of the ZEW experts strengthened in August in the U.S. and the U.K. but weakened in Germany. Expectations for the U.S. firmed, but expectations for Germany weakened. Inflation expectations for the U.S. weakened, but they strengthened for Germany and the euro area. Short-rate expectations strengthened for both the euro area and for the U.S. Long-term rate expectations rose for both Germany and the U.S. ZEW experts, looking at currently weak stock market indices, saw them strengthening in the euro area, Germany, and the U.S. They look for the dollar to continue to strengthen versus the euro. That's the summary of the month-to-month changes in this month’s survey.

    Economic conditions and expectations The ZEW experts see the economic situation as weak in the euro area, Germany, and the U.S. All these jurisdictions have economic situations that rank below their 40th percentile marking them as weaker than their respective medians (since the median occurs at the 50th percentile). Economic expectations for Germany are this week or weaker 1.4% of the time- very rarely. In the U.S., economic expectations are this weak or weaker less than 10% of the time- also rarely.

  • Japan
    | Aug 15 2022

    Japan's GDP Accelerates

    Real GDP in Japan rose by 2.2% at an annual rate in the second quarter of 2022. This is a marked acceleration from the 0.1% rise in the first quarter of 2022 but slower than the 4% recovery pace in the fourth quarter of 2021 after GDP declined in the third quarter of 2021.

    Quarter-to-quarter trends in real GDP components Private sector consumption was up at a sharp 4.6% in Q2 2022 while public consumption accelerated to a 2.2% annualized rate from 1.7% the quarter before.

    Gross fixed investment posted positive growth gaining at a 3.4% annualized rate in Q2, the first quarterly increase since the second quarter of 2021.

    Housing extends a string of quarterly declines as residential investment posted a -7.2% annual rate in Q2, an accelerated pace from a -5.6% rate in Q1 and -5.2% in Q4 2021.

    Exports continue to show increases, rising at a 3.7% rate in the second quarter, up at about the same pace (3.6%) in the first quarter. Imports slowed with 2.7% pace after a 14.8% pace in the first quarter.

    Year-over-year trends in real GDP Year-over-year trends show slight change in the pace of GDP as it grew by 1% over four quarters compared to 0.9% on that same basis in the first quarter. Private consumption has accelerated steadily from a year-over-year rate of 0.4% in the third quarter of 2021 to 1.3% pace in the fourth quarter of 2021 to 2.2% pace in the first quarter of this year and 3% over four quarters in the second quarter. By comparison, public consumption continues to be expansionary but growing only by 1.7% year-over-year and without any clear trend.

    Gross capital formation continues to be under pressure showing a 3.5% drop over four quarters in Q2 2022 compared with a 3.9% drop logged in Q1. Capital spending shows declines over four quarters for each of the last four quarters with the last gain being a 1% rise in the second quarter of 2021. Spending on plant & equipment dropped in Q2 logging a 0.8% decline over four quarters; its last increase was a gain of 1.1% over 4 quarters in Q3 2021.

    Domestic demand in Japan has grown by 1.2% over four quarters in Q2 2022 and had advanced by 1.4% over four quarters in the first quarter of the year. Both of those represent steps up from the previous two quarters; i.e., Q3 2021 and Q4 2021.

    Japan indicators in 2022 Japan's economy continues to struggle. In June, retail sales fell by 1.1% month-to-month while rising by only 1.5% over 12 months. Employment in Japan rose by 0.2% in June and had gained only 0.3% over 12 months. Japan's leading economic index in June fell for the second month in a row; that indicator is down by 1.4% over 12 months. The year-over-year drop in the LEI sits in the 43rd percentile of its historic queue of data; evaluated on its level, instead of its growth rate, it has a 68-percentile standing. That's better but still not very good. However, one of the brighter notes on Japan's economy is its economy watchers index with the current index in June at a 91-percentile standing and looking solid.

    The yen The yen and has been weakening, improving Japan competitiveness in international trade while raising costs to consumers for imported goods- especially energy. Yet, Japan's exports still appear to be engulfed in a protracted slowdown: they have slowed down from a 27.2% pace over four quarters in the second quarter of 2021, to 15.7% pace in the third quarter of that year, and to a 6% pace in the fourth quarter of that year. In the first quarter of 2022 exports grew by 4.6% over four quarters while in the second quarter they were up by only 2.5% over four quarters. Exports have not responded to the weakness in the yen at least not on a year-over-year basis.

    Year-over-year trend in imports show some general slowing from an 11.4% gain over four quarters in the third quarter of 2021 to 5.6% gain in the fourth quarter that improved with 7.3% gain in the first quarter of 2022, but they have slipped back to 3.5% gain in the second quarter of 2022.

    • Builder confidence falls sharply from December peak.

    • Component weakness is widespread.

    • Regional weakness also is all-inclusive.

    • Business activity falls in New York State, w/ the General Business Conditions Index down 42.4 pts. to -31.3.

    • Widespread declines: new orders, shipments, unfilled orders, inventories, and employment.

    • Inflation pressures ease somewhat, w/ prices paid down 8.8 pts. to 55.5.

    • Following two straight m/m drops, the Future Business Conditions Index improves 8.3 pts. to a still-low 2.1.