Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief: 2022

    • Headline index was unchanged, lowest monthly reading since May 2020, due mostly to 4.6% m/m decline in energy prices.

    • Food prices posted another sharp increase, the seventh consecutive monthly increase of 0.9% or more.

    • Increase in core prices still relatively broadly based, led by shelter.

    • Receipts strengthen y/y as outlays fall sharply.

    • Personal income tax receipts surge.

    • Income security payments decline.

    • Gasoline prices fall sharply.

    • The cost of crude oil falls again.

    • Natural gas prices weaken.

    • This was the first monthly increase in 2022, but optimism still remains quite low.

    • Index of expectations for the next six months rebounded from series low in June.

    • Six of the 10 index components fell in July.

    • Inflation is the biggest major concern, highest since 1979.

    • Annual decline in nonfarm productivity posts record.
    • Compensation growth remains strong.
    • Unit labor cost growth is highest since 1982.
  • The OECD metrics this month show a broad tendency for growth to slow down. In July, the overall OECD measure saw month-to-month declines of 0.2%. It also saw the seven-economies measure fall by 0.2%, the euro area metric fall by 0.2%, and the U.S. measure fall by 0.2%. However, the LEI reading for Japan is flat on the month, the same as it was in June.

    Over three months, the LEI growth progression shows declines between 2.4% for the euro area and 2.1% for the OECD overall while Japan logs a number that is the strongest in this group at minus 0.2%. These are annualized growth rates over three months.

    Over six months, the metrics range from annual growth is weakest in the euro area at minus 2.5% but for all the OECD the figure is as strong as minus 2%. Japan's reading comes out flat over six months.

    Over 12 months, all these areas show growth in the LEIs that range from a low of 2.3% in Japan to a high of 3% in the euro area and in the U.S. So, what we see is a pattern a year ago where the OECD leading economic indicators were growing nicely and then six months pass and there is widespread weakness in the OECD area and over three months that weakness sustains itself.

    The percentile standing of the OECD indexes in their level form for all the OECD areas we've just mentioned are in the lower 20th percentile of their respective ranges apart from Japan that has a 62nd percentile standing.

  • The chart for Japan's economy watchers index and components underlines the volatility in the underlying economy and in the outlook since the Covid virus struck. Looking at that chart before Covid, the moves in the current index and in the future index appear calm and trend-related compared to what we have been seeing since early-2020. Just the shortest bit of time and looking at this chart of these time series makes it quite clear that something very different happened and continues to be an operation. From June 2020 to July 2002, volatility in the current index rose by 90% compared to the earlier period from Jan 2014 to Jan 2020 before Covid.

    Japan's current economy watchers index has dropped to 43.8 in July from 52.9 in June. The three-month changes is a decline of 6.6-points, the six-month change is a 5.9-point rise, while the 12-month change is a 4.2-point drop. The standing for the current index is at its 34.8 percentile, just outside of the lower 1/3 of its historic queue of values. This is a very low reading. Among the surveyed sectors, retailing with the standing in its 40.9 percentile is the relative strongest with the reading on the job market at its 39.7 percentile mark close behind. The weakest sector right now is eating and drinking indicating the lingering impact that Covid fears have had on Japan’s economy in addition to concerns about growth. The reading for eating and drinking establishments, fell from 62 in June to 30.8 in July.

    Japan's economy watchers future index also is weak; it fell in July to 42.8 from 47.6 in June. That index has a 21.5 percentile standing, a standing near the boundary of the lower one fifth of its historic queue of data. The future index is down by 7.5 points over three months, up by 0.3 points over six months and lower by 4.5-points over 12 months.

    The strongest reading in the future index is for employment at a 35.2 percentile standing, followed by a 34.4 percentile standing for eating and drinking places. This seems to underscore that the current ranking for eating and drinking places is so weak it is viewed as temporary so that a future rebound is expected. The weakest readings in the future index are for housing in its lower 10-percentile followed by services in its 13.4 percentile.

    The economy watchers index is clearly emanating weak signals and signals that have weakened sharply over the last three months.

    The July reading of the economy watchers survey both current conditions and for the future index underscore difficulties in the Japanese economy. However, because of the choppy nature of both the current and the future indexes, we can't be particularly sure that this is a reliable reading. These readings seem to chop up and down over very short periods; we will be open the possibility that there could be a rebound next month. That's not a forecast; it's just an interpretation of the time series and its recent behavior. If there is another weak reading in a month, that will start thinking that it's more of an authentic sign of weakening in the economy. For now, we simply can't be sure. However, in the context of the global environment, in the context of what's going on with Japan's main trading partners, and in the context of the heightened geopolitical risk, there's every reason to think that these weak readings for the current index and for the future index may in fact be real.

    • Oil prices reach lowest level since February.

    • Steel scrap & framing lumber prices remain notably weak.