Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief

  • The U.S. CPI outdistances Canada's CPI. And the U.S. CPI core expansion is much faster than the Canadian core. Canada's CPIx has been decelerating in the past few months and runs at a 3.6% annual rate in November.

    However, even with favorable comparisons, the Bank of Canada that seeks to keep its inflation in a range of 1% to 3% is experiencing an overshoot. Still, the overshot is much milder than what the U.S. is experiencing – especially with regard to some of the special gauges Canada uses to vet inflation.

    Canada looks at a variety of inflation measures to get a sense of what inflation is doing. The CPI Trim has been running just above the 3% band. The CPI median has stayed just within the CPI band while the CPI Common has been below the band's midpoint, below a 2% pace- just moving up to the 2% mark this month.

    The Bank of Canada has just announced a new 5-year inflation review. It will keep its approach that will continue to embrace policy of flexibility. The BOC will continue to shoot at a 2% midpoint of a 1-3 percentage point range. The mandate is still price stability, but the BOC will continue to aim at price stability and maximum sustainable employment. So, it is not quite a dual mandate.

    About the various price metrics CPI trim filters out extreme measures in the 'tail of the distribution' so that unusual spiking prices or plunging prices do not shed an undue influence on the inflation gauge. A number of these measures are also present for inflation in the U.S. I am not fond of them because there is no guarantee that they filter out pressures equally. If inflation is accelerating, there will be more excessive and high price increases; to remove them is to change reality, not to get a better picture of the economy. Advocates of trimmed inflation measures often refer to distortions caused by natural disasters which are one more like a flare that would emerge then recede. But what if inflation produces a one-month flare followed by another and even more pressure? Should all such pressures be removed, or damped?

    The median inflation rate is calculated off weighted data in the CPI. Medians have the advantage of including all data and not being distorted by outliers on either end (either too high or too low. I like median measures better than trimmed measures.

    Canada also employs something called the CPI Common which at the moment is giving the most benign inflation results. This is achieved using a statistical process that identifies common price changes across categories.

    Canada certainly has the most varied and taxonomic approach to inflation of any G7 central bank. The problem with having in such a stable of inflation measures is that there will be several inconsistent stories told about inflation each month.

    The CPIx is an older measure no longer leaned upon by the central bank that excludes eight of the most volatile CPI components. It may not be in the policy focus of the central bank as much, but it is still closely watched.

    Other countries have less formal inflation diversity The ECB targets its HICP. The U.S. targets the PCE deflator and leans on the core when energy prices flare. There are fewer ways to be misled with so few gauges and perhaps nothing is lost by having only and indicator or two if they are good ones.

    For Canada, we can see a number of possibilities. But it seems unlikely that the central bank in this environment would think inflation really was remaining below target. In fact, two of the oldest gauges, the headline and the core probably provide about as much mix as you need with the headline still flaring under the strain of energy prices and the core having stopped rising and settled back off peak.

    Canadian inflation this month is driven by the cost of gasoline which is a common global theme. November is the eighth straight month that inflation has been above the top of the BOC's preferred range.

    • Small Business Optimism edged up 0.2 point in November.
    • Four of the 10 index's components rose, four declined and two were unchanged.
    • A net 59% of small business owners increased prices, the highest level since 1979.
    • Gasoline prices weaken.
    • Crude oil prices rebound.
    • Natural gas prices fall again.
    • Yearly increase hits record for headline series.
    • Core goods prices also accelerate.
    • Energy & food prices strengthen.
    • Monthly receipts fall and outlays rise.
    • Growth in Federal government receipts strengthen so far in FY'22.
    • Defense, Medicare & interest outlays decline this year.
    • Annual gain in core prices stays strong.
    • Core goods prices approach double-digit increase y/y, while services prices accelerate.
    • Energy prices surge again; food prices are strong.
  • This chart includes a dozen early reporting mostly long-standing EMU members and three others for a total of fifteen. Four of the EMU 12 members show IP declines in October with one at a dead-flat reading; two of the three non-EMU member show IP declined in October. Overall, there are six declines among these fifteen early reports – 40% show output declines and 53% show output increases. It's a mixed pattern tilted to advance in the month of October. September has six output declines and one flat result. August had eight output declines and two flat output results. The recent (three-month) run of data have been mixed with a tilt to expansion at least by the number of countries. Among the four largest EMU economies (Germany, France, Italy, and Spain), there are six declines in output in the most recent 12 monthly IP changes for this group and one flat result. That leaves the large economy group with just slightly more output declines than increases (6 vs. 5).

    The sequential growth rates tell a less upbeat story. There are 10 IP declines out of 15 changes over three months. Over six months, there also are ten declines. Over 12 months, there are only four declines against eleven increases.

    Still, there are seven among these fifteen countries that show IP growth rates deteriorate steadily moving from 12-months to six-months to three-months. Only Finland shows IP growth rates accelerating on this sequence of dates. Looking only at period-to-period trends, output accelerated over three-months (compared to six-months) in about one third of the countries while over six-months (compared to 12-months) there is acceleration in 30.8%. However, over 12-months compared to 12-months ago, there is acceleration in 83.3% of the countries.

    These many ways of tracking and slicing the data to revel trends shows that strength is beginning to ebb. The year-on-year gains are solid, widespread, and confirmed by PMI results, but that strength does not carry through over shorter periods or in the various monthly habitats.

    In the very young quarter-to-date period (October's result compounded over the Q3 average), the incipient trend registers declines in seven of the fifteen countries. The two largest EMU economies show output increases while the next two largest EMU economies show declines. The median increase is an annualized 1.7% gain.

    We can also look at manufacturing PMI trends on these periods. For the EMU, over the each of the last two months, PMI weakened; but the PMI had increased in August. Over three months and six months, the EMU manufacturing has been weakening. But over 12 months, manufacturing IP is higher than it was 12-months ago. Compared to January 2020, the Markit manufacturing metric is higher in 74% in the EMU – and that looks a lot stronger than the results gleaned from actual output changes.

    In addition, we can take a longer look back to January 2020 levels of output before Covid struck. On this timeline, there are ten countries with output level that are still below their levels of January 2020. All four of the largest EMU economics have output below their respective January 2020 levels. The U.K., the second largest economy in Europe (but not an EMU or EU member), also has output lower than it was in January 2020.

    On balance, we see output trends slowing and tracing their weakness back to January 2020. We must mark this as a rather extended period with output having been broadly listless. And the sense we get of momentum trend is muted or negative. Of course, such trend assessments are less valuable with Covid circulating since it has such trend wreaking capabilities. For now, there is another wave of infections rising in Europe and in various places in the U.S. Clearly, we have poor trends in the works a rising threat to the prospect of improvement to boot.

    • Federal government pays down some debt in Q3.
    • Household mortgages and consumer credit both expand less in Q3.
    • Business corporations borrowed more in bonds and loans.