China and Russia buying gold

Seems it’s always a central bank story.

Goes up when they buy, down when they sell.

Furthermore gold buying is supported by how it’s accounted for. That is, it doesn’t count as deficit spending or part of the pubic debt, even though the ‘taxpayer’ has to pay interest on the funds spent, just like any other deficit spending. Gold purchases are accounted for not as an ‘expense’ as ‘normal’ govt spending, but as purchases of an asset that remains on the balance sheet at ‘cost’. And yes, the funds spent provide the economy with ‘that which is needed to pay taxes’ just like any other govt spending, and thereby ‘use up’ aggregate demand (‘fiscal space’) created by taxation and residual savings desires just like any other govt spending.

So it’s a political choice promoted by institutional structure that allows central bankers to buy all the gold they want without the political restrictions of other spending.

China, Russia lead central banks gold buying spree

By Cecilia Jamasmie

Jan 13 — China and Russia added more gold to its reserves in November, leading the latest global central banks buying spree that saw them adding 55 tonnes of the yellow metal to their coffers, up almost 90% from the prior month.

According to the latest World Gold Council’s gold reserve data, released Wednesday, China and Russia were once again the biggest buyers, with 21 tonnes and 22 tonnes added to their respective reserves.

The People’s Bank of China (PBoC) released data last week that showed 19 tonnes were added in December as well. But based on official figures, released last June for the first time since April 2009 and updated monthly ever since, the amount of gold held by the PBOC still only accounts for around 1.7% of its total reserves.

The increased purchases by the world’s sixth largest official sector gold holder could lend support to international prices of the precious metal, say analysts.

China, Russia lead central banks gold buying spree

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Despite a jump in prices at the start of the year, gold is still trading close to historic lows. February gold was last up $3.00 at $1,088.50 an ounce, well down from last week’s two-month high of $1,113.10 an ounce, basis February Comex futures.

Productivity, Factory orders,Truck orders

As previously discussed, the numbers are showing that business is hiring more than output is increasing, which doesn’t seem to make sense to me.

That is, it wouldn’t surprise me to see this reconciled by a drop in hiring, or a downward revision to employment in general.

Productivity and Costs
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Highlights
Flat output and a rise in hours worked combined to sink fourth-quarter productivity to an annualized rate of minus 3.0 percent. The Econoday consensus was minus 1.8 percent with the low estimate at minus 2.6 percent. Weak output together with a moderate 1.3 percent rise in compensation lifted unit labor costs to a plus 4.5 percent rate which is just at the consensus for 4.4 percent.

Lack of output, at only a plus 0.1 percent rate, is the weak baseline in this report. The rise in hours worked, at a sharp 3.3 percent rate, is the highest since fourth-quarter 2014 while, in a plus for profits but less for the inflation outlook, the rise in compensation is the lowest result since second-quarter 2014.

Year-on-year data are more favorable with productivity at plus 0.3 percent, still very weak, and labor costs at a less severe plus 2.8 percent.

The nation’s productivity has been soft for the last three years, posing questions for policy makers and underscoring the effects of full employment and limited investment in new technologies.

More bad:

Factory Orders
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U.S. January Class 8 truck orders fell 48 percent on the year, preliminary data from freight transportation forecaster FTR showed, indicating that 2016 could be another weak year for truck makers.

FTR estimated that orders for the heavy trucks that move goods around America’s highways totaled 18,062 units in January. This follows on from a full-year decline in 2015 of nearly 25 percent to 284,000 units from 276,000.

“It is not looking to be a strong year,” for the market, FTR chief operating officer Jonathan Starks said in a statement.

Amid uncertainty over U.S. economic growth and a lackluster performance for retailers in the fourth quarter, trucking companies have been holding back on buying new models

Mtg purchase apps, Car sales comments, ADP, ISM services, Exxon capex, BOJ comment

Up last week now back down as this sector remains in prolonged depression:

MBA Mortgage Applications
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Highlights
The purchase index has been posting outsized gains this year but not in the January 29 week, falling 7.0 percent. The refinance index, however, did post a gain in the week, up 0.3 percent. Low interest rates have triggered strong demand for mortgage applications. The average 30-year fixed loan for conforming mortgages ($417,000 or less) fell 5 basis points and is back under 4.00 percent for the first time since October, at 3.97 percent.
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Winter Weather Dings U.S. Auto Sales

Feb 2 (WSJ) — Overall, auto sales were flat for the month, declining less than 1% to 1.15 million vehicles, according to researcher Autodata Corp. January’s selling pace was an annualized 17.58 million compared with 17.34 million in December. Incentive spending jumped 13% last month to $2,932 a vehicle, according to TrueCar Inc.WardsAuto, which the U.S. government uses for economic analysis, said the annualized rate was 17.46 million and that monthly sales fell 0.4 percent from a year ago. WardsAuto said U.S. sales hit a record 17.39 million vehicles in 2015.

This is a forecast for Friday’s payroll number:

ADP Employment Report
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So with manufacturing having gone negative, which is about 15% of the economy, stands to reason some of those people are probably customers of the service sector? Skip to the charts which clearly indicate the direction it’s all going.

ISM Non-Mfg Index
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Highlights
Monthly growth is slowing noticeably in ISM’s non-manufacturing sample. The composite index for January fell a sharp 2.3 points to 53.5 from December’s revised 55.8 which is 2 points below the Econoday consensus. Slowing is most apparent in output (as measured by the business activity component) with employment growth also slowing sharply, to 52.1 for a 4.2 point dip. However new orders, at 56.5, remain solidly above breakeven 50 though here to there is slowing, from December’s 58.9. Supplier deliveries, the fourth component of the composite, slowed in the month in a sign of congestion in the supply chain in what is an offsetting positive for the month.

Other readings include a solid 52.0 for backlog orders which are extending a long string of monthly expansion that contrasts sharply with a long string of contraction in the rival PMI services report. Inventories in ISM’s sample continue to rise but at only a marginal pace. Weakness is signaled by both contraction in import orders, which points to business caution among U.S. businesses, and also for export orders, the result of weak foreign markets and the negative effects of the strong dollar. Input prices, which have been subdued, fell in the month.

A negative in the report is narrow breadth among industries with 10 reporting composite growth in the month vs 8 reporting contraction, with the latter led by continued weakness for mining. Strength is led by both finance and real estate and includes construction.

Through much of last year, this report was among the most resilient, consistently pointing to steady strength that for the most part proved correct. Today’s declines, along with the dip in the PMI services report released earlier this morning, unfortunately hint at soft growth for the first quarter while this report’s employment index, hitting its lowest point since January last year, points to modest disappointment for Friday’s employment report.

Still looks to me like it’s been falling back ever since the July spike:
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This is the ISM non manufacturing employment index for the last year:
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Exxon slashes spending after smallest profit in years

Feb 2 (Reuters) — Exxon said it will cut 2016 spending by one-quarter and suspend share repurchases. Exxon forecast capital spending at around $23.2 billion this year, a 25 percent drop from 2015. Exxon suspended its share buyback plan meant to return cash to investors in the first quarter. Exxon reported that fourth-quarter profit tumbled to $2.78 billion, or 67 cents per share, from $6.57 billion, or $1.56 per share, in the same period a year earlier. Exxon said its oil and gas output rose 4.8 percent in the fourth quarter as it pumped more crude oil.

To again quote the carpenter with his piece of wood- “no matter how much I cut off it’s still too short”:

BOJ Kuroda says ready to use more policy options to boost inflation

Feb 2 (Reuters) — “If we judge that existing measures in the toolkit are not enough to achieve (our) goal, what we have to do is to devise new tools,” BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said in a speech. “I am convinced that there is no limit to measures for monetary easing,” he said. Kuroda countered criticism that the BOJ was running out of ammunition to accelerate inflation, saying negative rates won’t hamper the bank’s efforts to gobble up government bonds. “If judged necessary, it is possible to further cut the interest rate from the current level of minus 0.1 percent,” he said.

Car sales, Redbook retail sales, Bank loans

This is being spun as a positive, when all I see is a chart showing the seasonally adjusted annual rate of sales peaked several months ago and is going down:

U.S. Light Vehicle Sales at 17.46 million annual rate in January

Based on an estimate from WardsAuto, light vehicle sales were at a 17.46 million SAAR in January.

That is up about 5% from January 2015, and up about 1.4% from the 17.2 million annual sales rate last month.
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This graph shows the historical light vehicle sales from the BEA (blue) and an estimate for December (red, light vehicle sales of 17.46 million SAAR from WardsAuto).

This close to the consensus forecast of 17.5 million SAAR (seasonally adjusted annual rate).

The second graph shows light vehicle sales since the BEA started keeping data in 1967.
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Vehicle SalesNote: dashed line is current estimated sales rate.

This was at expectations, and vehicle sales in 2016 are off to a solid start.

Highlights
Unit vehicle sales slowed going into year-end but moved higher in January, to a 17.6 million annual pace vs expectations for 17.4 and against December’s 17.3 million. Strength was centered in North American-made vehicles where the annual sales rate rose to 14.2 million vs expectations for only 13.6 million and vs 13.9 million in December. Sales of imports slowed to 3.4 million from 3.5 million. Strength on the domestic side of this report not only points to strength for vehicle manufacturing but also to strength for the motor vehicle component of the monthly retail sales report where results have been uneven. This report is another positive indication for the U.S. consumer.
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Another bad report being spun as good:

Redbook
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Highlights
The severe snowstorm that hit the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast held down same-store sales growth in the January 30 week, to plus a year-on-year 0.8 percent. This is the lowest weekly reading since October and, together with the 1.2 percent rate for the whole month, hints at another month of trouble for the government’s retail sales report. But the report focuses not on January but on February where it sees year-on-year sales finishing at a more respectable 1.4 percent. The major events for February are the Super Bowl, Valentine’s Day, and President’s Day.
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Investors aren’t the only ones running for safety as the market tumbles and the economy wobbles.

Businesses, too, are indicating an unwillingness to take on risk as loan demand declined for the first time in about four years, according to the Federal Reserve’s Senior Loan Officer Survey released this week.

Demand for commercial and industrial loans has plunged in 2016, with declines happening across business sizes. Large- and medium-sized businesses had an 11.1 percent decline, while demand from small businesses fell 12.7 percent.

Maybe stocks aren’t buying the spin any more?
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Personal income and spending, ISM manufacturing, construction spending

Spending still not good, and GDP *is* spending. Personal income growth remains low, but is higher than spending. I suspect this gets reconciled with downward revisions to income over time, perhaps due to downward revisions to employment.

With GDP growth near flat employment growth implies more employees are being hired to produce the same levels of output, which sends up a red flag for downward revisions to employment.

Personal Income and Outlays
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Highlights
Consumers had a healthy December but kept the money to themselves. Personal income rose a solid 0.3 percent with the savings rate moving 2 tenths higher to 5.5 percent, its strongest level since December 2012. Wages & salaries, however, slowed to only plus 0.2 percent in the month but follow outsized gains of 0.5 and 0.6 percent in the prior two months. Service industries lead the pay data with manufacturing pay in contraction. Proprietors’ income rose in the month along with rental income while income receipts were down on lower interest income, the latter reflecting, despite the Fed’s rate hike, the downdraft in rates.

Spending, as retailers already know, was very soft, unchanged with only services showing a gain. December spending on both durable and non-durable goods fell 0.9 percent each, the former reflecting weak spending on holiday gifts and also vehicles and the latter reflecting lower hitting bills. A partial offset is a 2 tenths upward revision to November’s spending to plus 0.5 percent.

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More bad, and downward revisions as well:

ISM Mfg Index
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Highlights
Employment sank the ISM index in January which could muster no better than a 48.2 for what, following annual revisions to 2015, is the fourth sub-50 reading in a row. This is by far the worst run for this closely watched indicator since the Great Recession days of 2009.

Employment fell a very steep 2.1 points to 45.9 to signal significant contraction for manufacturing payrolls in Friday’s employment report, which however would not be much of a surprise given the sector’s prior payroll contraction. This is the third sub-50 reading for employment of the last four months and the lowest reading since, once again, 2009.

There is good news in the report and that’s a snapback for new orders, to 51.5 for only the second plus 50 reading of the last five months and which points to overall improvement in the coming reports. But backlog orders, at only 43.0, remain in deep contraction, and what strength there is in orders isn’t coming from exports which are in contraction for the seventh of the last eight months. Manufacturers have been working down backlogs to keep production up, which came in at 50.2 to signal fractional monthly growth. Inventories remain steady and low but the sample still say they are too high, sentiment that points to lack of confidence in the business outlook.

Confirming the weakness is breadth among industries with 10 reporting composite contraction against eight reporting monthly growth. If it wasn’t for strength in new orders, January’s data would be almost entirely negative. This report is a downbeat opening to 2016 which follows a definitively downbeat year for the factory sector in 2015.

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No mention of the NY tax breaks that expired in June:

Construction Spending
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Highlights
Held down by weakness in the nonresidential component, construction spending didn’t get a lift at all from the mild weather late last year, rising only 0.1 percent in December following a downwardly revised 0.6 percent decline in November and a 0.1 percent contraction in October. Year-on-year, spending was up 8.2 percent, a respectable rate but still the slowest since March last year.

But there is very good news in the report and that’s a very strong 0.9 percent rise in residential construction where the year-on-year rate came in at plus 8.1 percent. Spending on multi-family units continues to lead the residential component, up 2.7 percent in the month for a 12.0 percent year-on-year gain. Single-family homes rose 1.0 percent in the month for an 8.7 percent year-on-year gain.

Now the bad news. Non-residential spending fell 2.1 percent following a 0.2 percent decline in November. Steep declines hit manufacturing for a second month with the office and transportation components also showing weakness. Still year-on-year, non-residential construction rose 11.8 percent.

Rates of growth in the public readings are led by highway & streets, at a 9.4 percent surge for December and a year-on-year rate of plus 12.0 percent. Educational growth ended 2015 at 9.4 percent with state & local at plus 4.4 percent. The Federal subcomponent brings up the rear at minus 1.4.

Lack of business confidence and cutbacks for business spending are evident in this report but not troubles on the consumer side, where residential spending remains very solid and a reminder that the housing sector is poised to be a leading driver for the 2016 economy. Still, the weak December and revised November headlines are likely to pull down, at least slightly, estimates for revised fourth-quarter GDP which came in at plus 0.7 percent in last week’s advance report.

A blind man can see this chart has been decelerating for a long time now:
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Looks to me like it was growing but then flattened out not long after oil capex spending collapsed?
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This is the ‘driver’ for 2016?
It’s only now just back to 2004 levels, and not growing nearly as fast as the prior cycle, and this chart isn’t adjusted for inflation, which brings it’s influence down that much more:
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Japan, China, Fed comment, Capex cutbacks, South Korea

This is the yen yield curve after over 20 years of a 0 rate policy, massive QE, and now negative overnight rates. Maybe now the economy will finally respond.
:(

(And how good can the BOJ think the economy is?)
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The western educated kids/monetarists who’ve taken control don’t seem to be doing all that well, as China begins to look like the other countries they’ve taken over, like the EU, US, etc. etc. etc. What they learned is that it’s about balancing the federal budget and using monetary policy to support growth and employment as needed, allowing ‘free markets’ to ‘clear’ as per their general equilibrium models that earned them advanced degrees. Unfortunately they fail to recognize the currency itself is a (simple) public monopoly which obviates all those ‘market clearing’ assumptions in their models:

China official PMI misses in January, Caixin PMI shows contraction

Jan 31 (CNBC) — China’s factory activity skidded to a three-year low point in January, adding to further gloom about the state of the world’s second-largest economy.

The government-compiled January manufacturing purchasing manager’s index (PMI) came in at 49.4, slightly missing Reuters consensus estimates for a 49.6 reading and ticking down from December’s 49.7 figure. It was the weakest result since 2012 and marked the sixth straight month in contraction territory.

The mood was worsened by a private survey by Caixin and Markit that showed January manufacturing activity shrinking for the eleventh straight month. Caixin’s survey, which tracks smaller firms than the official indicator, came in at 48.4, compared to December’s reading of 48.2.

Does this read like an executive who’s organization has a $200 million per year research budget?

They just hiked rates in December with every chart I’ve seen having been heading south for a year or so?

And GDP was right on forecast.

Seems to me this ‘kind of tells him’ the fundamental assumptions behind his models needs a rethink?

Fed’s Williams says sees ‘smidgen’ slower rate hikes

Jan 29 (Reuters) — “Standard monetary policy strategy says a little less inflation, maybe a little less growth … argue for just a smidgen slower process of normalizing rates,” San Francisco Fed President John Williams said. “We got a little stronger dollar, some mixed data on the economy, some weakness in Q4 GDP, all of those coming together kind of tell me that we probably need a little bit more monetary accommodation this year than I was thinking in the middle of December.” Williams said his “modal” forecast, remains fundamentally unchanged for 2016 and 2017. “The thing that has changed is that commodity prices keep coming down,” he said.

The hits keep on coming with no replacement spending in sight:

Chevron Posts Loss, Readies More Layoffs

Jan 29 (WSJ) — Chevron is slashing its capital spending by more than $9 billion this year. Chevron plans to sell up to $10 billion in oil fields and other assets through 2017. A $26.6 billion spending plan detailed in December will have to be reduced given how much oil-market conditions have since deteriorated, he company said. Chevron reported a loss of $588 million, or 31 cents a share, in the fourth quarter, down from a profit of $3.47 billion, or $1.85 a share, in the year-earlier period. Revenue tumbled 37% to $29.25 billion. In Chevron’s refining division profits were cut nearly in half, falling to $496 million.

For Mining Chiefs, Doomsday Scenarios Could Become Reality

Jan 29 (WSJ) — Refined-copper supply jumped 36% to 22.5 million tons from 2005 to 2014, according to ICSG data. Over that same period, annual copper consumption increased 38% to 22.9 million tons. Total Chinese copper imports fell to 8.6 million tons in 2015, down 2.2% from the year before. Global refined supply rose 1.8% over the same period, largely because of a 4% increase in refined production from China. China imports of unfinished copper and products in December rose 26% in annual terms to 530,000 tons. More than 600,000 tons of copper supply have been taken out of the market over the past 12 months, according to Morgan Stanley.

Not the worst indicator for global growth:

South Korean Exports Fall at Fastest Pace Since Financial Crisis

Jan 31 (WSJ) — Korean exports, the first shipments data released each month in Asia, slid 18.5% to $36.74 billion in January, the steepest fall since August 2009. The decline extended a run of monthly falls into a 13th month. Imports plunged 20.1% from a year earlier to $31.42 billion in January. For all of 2015, Korean shipments overseas contracted 8%—the steepest fall in six years and the first 12-month contraction in three years, the government said. The Nikkei PMI reading for January came in at 49.5, down from 50.7 in December.

GDP, Saudi oil production, KC Fed, Chicago PMI, Shale Italy and Japan comments

As expected, the deceleration continues, and over the next couple of years it wouldn’t surprise me if the entire year gets revised down substantially:

GDP
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Highlights
Consumer spending is the central driver of the economy but is slowing, at least it was during the fourth quarter when GDP rose only at a 0.7 percent annualized rate. Final demand rose 1.2 percent, which is the weakest since first quarter last year but is still 5 tenths above GDP.

Spending on services, adding 0.9 percentage points, was a leading contributor to the quarter as was spending on goods, at plus 0.5. Residential investment, another measure of consumer health, rose very solidly once again, contributing 0.3 percentage points. Government purchases added modestly to growth.

The negatives are on the business side especially those facing foreign markets. Net exports pulled down GDP by 0.5 percentage points. Non-residential investment pulled down GDP by more than 0.2 percentage points. Reduction in inventory investment, which the FOMC warned about on Wednesday, pulled the quarter down by 0.5 percentage points.

Price data are not accelerating, at plus 0.8 percent for the GDP price index which is the lowest reading since plus 0.1 in the first quarter last year. The core price reading is only slightly higher, at plus 1.1 percent which is also the weakest reading in a year.

There are definitely points of concern in this report, especially the weakness in exports and business investment, but it’s the resilience in the consumer, despite a soft holiday season, that headlines this report and should help confirm faith in the domestic strength of the economy.

And this from JPM:

Consumer spending slowed to a 2.2% pace of advance, while business fixed investment spending contracted at a 1.8% rate, the first decline since 2012. A slowing in inventory investment subtracted 0.5%-point from growth last quarter. Even so, the pace of stockbuilding—a $69 billion annual rate—is still faster than is sustainable and poses an ongoing headwind to producers early in 2016. As such, after today’s report we see some more downside risk to our 2.0% projection for Q1 GDP growth.

The consumer looks to be going down hill to me, and this includes increases in total health care premiums due to the newly insured under Obamacare. This chart is not adjusted for inflation, which shows the growth of nominal spending has slowed dramatically. Fortunately the ‘deflator’ indicates that with prices down real purchases have been sustained. But consumers on average tend to spend most all of their incomes, which means fortunately for them prices didn’t rise as fast or they would have bought fewer real goods and services.

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Here’s the last year of GDP year over year growth, after oil capex collapsed:
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This is nominal GDP, not adjusted for inflation:
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Note the relation between export collapses and recessions:
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The increase in premium expenditures for the newly insured is a ‘one time’ event that offered support last year and won’t be repeated this year.
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Interesting how even at the dramatically lowered prices due to increased discounts the Saudis appear to be selling less oil. Patiently waiting for March pricing to be released:
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Yet another bad one:

Kansas City Fed Manufacturing Index
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Highlights
Kansas City manufacturing, along with that of Dallas, are suffering the worst of any regions in the nation’s factory contraction. Kansas City came in at minus 9 for the ninth contraction in 10 months.

Minus signs sweep nearly all readings including new orders and backlogs which are in extremely deep contraction, at minus 27 and minus 36 respectively. Production is at minus 8 with shipments at minus 7. Employment is at minus 7 with price readings moving deeper into contraction, at minus 14 for raw materials and, ominously for inflation expectations, at minus 15 for finished products.

One of the few pluses in the report, ironically, is the index for new export orders which came in at a very modest plus 1. But it’s not only exports that have been pulling down the factory sector but also energy equipment, the latter which is especially sinking the nation’s energy patch.

Chicago PMI: Jan Chicago Business Barometer Jumps 12.7 Points to 55.6

The Chicago Business Barometer bounced back sharply in January, increasing 12.7 points to 55.6 from 42.9 in December, the highest pace of growth in a year.

Chief Economist of MNI Indicators Philip Uglow said, “While the surge in activity in January marks a positive start to the year, it follows significant weakness in the previous two months, with the latest rise not sufficient to offset the previous falls in output and orders. Previously, surges of such magnitude have not been maintained so we would expect to see some easing in February. Still, even if activity does moderate somewhat next month, the latest increase supports the view that GDP will bounce back in Q1 following the expected slowdown in Q4.”

“At current prices U.S. shale producers are losing more than $2 billion a week, according to consulting firm AlixPartners LLP.”

” Italian gross domestic product per capita has hardly changed in 20 years.”

And all they needed was a fiscal adjustment sufficient to get aggregate demand to appropriate levels:

Amari’s fall leaves Abenomics in lurch

Jan 29 (Nikkei) — “I bear responsibility for appointing him,” a visibly pained Abe told reporters Thursday following the resignation of Akira Amari, who also served as his right-hand man in the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade negotiations. Amari devised the basis for Abenomics. He helped alter LDP economic policy’s traditional bias toward public works, shifting the emphasis to a pro-growth strategy of making Japanese companies more competitive and innovative. After Abe led the LDP back to power in 2012, he put Amari in charge of the government’s new industrial competitiveness council and the reconstituted Council on Economic and Fiscal Policy.

Nor will this work, negative rates are just another tax:

BOJ adopts negative interest rates

Jan 29 (Nikkei) — The Bank of Japan decided to adopt negative interest rates at its policy meeting on Friday, voting 5-4 to apply an interest rate of -0.1 percent on current accounts that financial institutions hold at the central bank. At the same time, the BOJ revised its inflation forecast for fiscal 2016 down to 0.8% from a previous level of 1.4%. In a statement, the BOJ said it adopted the negative interest rate policy in order to achieve its price stability target of 2% at the earliest possible time, and signalled that it will “cut the interest rate further into negative territory if judged necessary.”

This might have had something to do with their decision:

Japan’s industrial output falls 1.4% in December, down for 2nd month

Jan 29 (Kyodo) — Japan’s industrial output in December fell a seasonally adjusted 1.4 percent from the previous month, in sharp contrast with a rise of 0.9 percent the government had projected based on hearings with manufacturers last month. The government said the trend of output is fluctuating without clear direction, maintaining its basic assessment of production from the previous month. For 2015, the industrial output index fell 0.8 percent from the previous year. The production index increased 2.1 percent in 2014. Polled manufacturers said they expect output to rise 7.6 percent in January and then fall by 4.1 percent in February.

Economic Index, Storefronts, Fed statement, Pending home sales, Durable goods orders

Also tracing the weakness back to the oil capex collapse:

Econintersect’s Economic Index declined and is barely positive – and still remains at the lowest value since the end of the Great Recession. The tracked sectors of the economy which showed growth were mostly offset by the sectors in contraction. Our economic index remains in a long term decline since late 2014.

The Fed got this highlighted first part right:

Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in OctoberDecember suggests that labor market conditions improved further even as growth slowed late last year.

No growth here:

Pending Home Sales Index
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Highlights
Sales of existing homes popped higher in December but a further gain for January is uncertain given only a 0.1 percent rise in pending home sales which follows a downward revised 1.1 percent decline in November. It usually takes one to two months for contract signings to close with greater delays possible given new mortgage documentation rules that were implemented in November. Also raising doubts whether January will prove to be a solid month is this report’s narrow breakdown with the Northeast, the smallest of the housing regions, the only one in the positive column in the month, at 6.1 percent. The other three regions show declines with the sharpest in the West at minus 2.1 percent. Despite this report, recent news on the housing sector has been positive including gains for sales and also respectable appreciation for prices.

Negative and decelerating:

Durable Goods Orders
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Highlights
The factory sector ended 2015 with a giant thud. Durable goods orders fell 5.1 percent in December vs expectations for a 0.2 percent gain and a low-end estimate of minus 3.0 percent. Aircraft orders didn’t help but they weren’t the whole cause of the problem as ex-transportation orders fell 1.2 percent vs expectations for no change and a low-end estimate of minus 0.4 percent. Core capital goods, which exclude defense equipment and also aircraft, are especially weak, down 4.3 percent following a 1.1 percent decline in November. Shipments for core capital goods, which are an input into GDP, slipped 0.2 percent following a downward revised 1.1 percent decline in November (initially minus 0.4 percent).

Orders for civilian aircraft lead the dismal list, down 29 percent in December. The other main subcomponent for transportation, motor vehicles, also fell, down 0.4 percent in a reminder that vehicle sales were slowing at year end. Capital goods industries show deep declines: machinery down 5.6 percent, computers down 8.7 percent, communications equipment down 21 percent, and fabricated metals down 0.5 percent.

Other readings include a surprising 2.2 percent monthly drop in total shipments and a 0.5 percent drop in total unfilled orders. All this weakness isn’t a plus for inventories which rose 0.5 percent to lift the inventory-to-shipments ratio sharply, to 1.69 from 1.64. The rise in inventories poses a headwind to the sector and will dampen future shipments as well as employment and is a reminder of the inventory warning in yesterday’s FOMC statement.

There’s been trouble brewing in the factory sector, recently indicated by the Empire State and Dallas Fed reports and also by the ISM index which has fallen below breakeven 50. Weak export markets, made weaker for U.S. manufacturers by the strength of the dollar, together with contraction in the energy sector may now be pushing the factory into an accelerated breakdown, at least that’s the concern.

Mtg purchase apps, Vehicle sales, Oil capex, Business equipment borrowing, Equipment sales, New home sales

Inching up a bit but still seriously depressed:

MBA Mortgage Applications
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Highlights
Weekly mortgage applications have been very volatile so far this year but mostly to the upside. Purchase applications jumped 5.0 percent in the January 22 week with refinancing applications up 11.0 percent. Low mortgage rates are driving the activity, down 4 basis points in the week to an average 4.02 percent for 30-year conforming loans ($417,000 or less).
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Looks like Wards is forecasting no improvement in the annual selling rate that has been decelerating from over 18 million per year for the last several months:

Forecast: January SAAR Set to Reach 10-Year High

A WardsAuto forecast calls for U.S. automakers to deliver 1.13 million light vehicles in January.

The resulting daily sales rate (DSR) of 47,126 units, a 10-year high for the month, over 24 days represents a 6.8% improvement from like-2015 (26 days) and a 19.2% month-to-month decline from December (28 days).

The 5-year average December-to-January decline is 26%, but the traditional pull-ahead of sales in December was not as strong as expected this time. Lighter deliveries allowed dealers to remain well-stocked with vehicles highest in demand going into January.

The report puts the seasonally adjusted annual rate of sales for the month at 17.3 million units, compared with a year-ago’s 16.6 million and December’s 17.2 million.

US shale firms, struggling to profit with US$30 oil, slash spending more

Three major U.S. shale oil companies have slashed their 2016 capital spending plans more than expected in a bid to survive $30 a barrel oil prices, with one of them saying prices would need to rise more than 20 percent just to turn a profit.

The cuts on Monday from Hess Corp, Continental Resources and Noble Energy ranged from 40 percent to 66 percent. This marks the second straight year of pullbacks by a trio of companies normally seen as among the most resilient shale oil producers.

The cuts were steeper than expected. Analysts at Bernstein Energy had forecast an average 2016 spending cut for the sector of 38 percent.

The reductions show budgets may shrink more this year than they did last year, when spending fell between 20 percent and 50 percent. Output at some companies may fall for the first time ever.

“It’s very rare to have spending decline two years in a row,” said Mike Breard, oil company analyst with Hodges Capital Management in Dallas. “Any budget you see published now is going to be much lower than last year.”

But last year many operators managed to lift output as they devised new ways to coax more oil from rock, a feat that seems unlikely to be repeated.

In a sign that a reckoning has come, Continental admitted it will pump about 10 percent less oil this year as it can no longer afford or innovate and sell more oil at depressed prices.

The U.S. government projects domestic crude output to fall by about 700,000 barrels per day (bpd) by the end of this year to around 8.5 million bpd.

Depressed spending typically means fewer drilling rigs. All three companies said they would cut the number of rigs boring new wells in U.S. shale oil fields across Texas, North Dakota and elsewhere.

“If you cut your budget 60 percent, you may drill 40 percent fewer wells and your production is going to drop a considerable amount,” said Breard.

Continental, North Dakota’s second-largest oil producer, said it would slash its 2016 capital budget by 66 percent. The company made the risky move of getting rid of hedges in the fall of 2014. [L2N15A2MB] Led by billionaire wildcatter Harold Hamm, Continental plans to spend $920 million this year, down from $2.7 billion in 2015.

Oklahoma City-based Continental said it will not become profitable until oil prices return to $37 per barrel. U.S. oil prices closed Tuesday at $31.45 per barrel.

Meanwhile, New York-based Hess plans to spend $2.4 billion in 2016, down 40 percent from $4 billion last year.

Noble cut its quarterly dividend 44 percent and said it will cut spending about 50 percent this year.

On the other end of the spectrum, Pioneer Natural Resources, known for its aggressive hedging program, said this month it would spend between $2.4 billion and $2.6 billion this year.

Though Pioneer will fund its 2016 budget in part from a $500 million asset sale, the modest increase from $2.2 billion in 2015 makes the company a relative outlier at a time when most companies are trimming capex by amounts similar to last year’s drastic cutbacks.

U.S. business borrowing for equipment falls in December: ELFA

Borrowing by U.S. companies to spend on capital investment declined 5 percent in December, trade association Equipment Leasing and Finance Association (ELFA) said.

Companies signed up for $12.5 billion in new loans, leases and lines of credit last month, less than a year earlier, but more than double from November, ELFA said.

Cumulative new business volume inched up 0.4 percent for 2015, relatively flat with 2014, ELFA said

Caterpillar warns equipment sales still falling

Caterpillar saw retail sales of machinery fall 16 percent worldwide for the three-month period ended in December, the construction and mining equipment company said on Wednesday.

Caterpillar, which is due to report earnings on Thursday, has been pressured by the global slowdown in the energy and mining industries.

The company said retail sales to resource industries worldwide fell 38 percent over the three-month period, while retail sales to the energy industries fell 32 percent.

The pace of declines is also increasing, the company noted in an SEC filing. The worldwide decline in retail sales of machines had been 11 percent for the three months ended in November.

New home sales better than expected, but still near the lows of prior recessions all the way back to the 1960’s when the population was about 60% of what it is now:

New Home Sales
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This is just the last 10 years:
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Recession warnings, Dallas Fed

Reads like we are already in recession…

Recession Warnings May Not Come to Pass

Jan 24 (WSJ) — Every U.S. recession since World War II has been foretold by sharp declines in industrial production, corporate profits and the stock market. Industrial production has declined in 10 of the past 12 months, and is now off nearly 2% from its peak in December 2014. Corporate profits peaked around the summer of 2014 and were off by nearly 5% as of the third quarter of last year. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is down 7.6% so far this year. A Goldman Sachs analysis found that profit margins among the companies in the S&P 500 stock index—if energy companies are excluded—have been little changed over the past year.

So does this:

Dallas Fed Mfg Survey
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Highlights
Manufacturing data from the Dallas Fed, along with that of the Kansas City Fed, have been offering the most striking evidence of oil-related contraction. Dallas’ general activity index came in at an extremely negative score of minus 34.6 for the January report which is the lowest reading since the beginning of the recovery in 2009.

New orders are falling deeper into contraction as are unfilled orders. Hours worked are now in the negative column as is employment. And finally falling into contraction — and in a big way — is the production index which had through last year, despite long weakness in orders, held in positive ground, but not anymore with the reading at minus 10.2 for a nearly 23 point monthly plunge. Price data in this report remain well into the minus column, at nearly double-digit monthly declines.

Manufacturing reports this month have been mixed, with this and Empire State pointing to another buckling but not the most closely followed report, the Philly Fed which is pointing to stability for the sector. Watch for the Richmond Fed report tomorrow and the Kansas City report on Thursday.

Recent History Of This Indicator
The Dallas Fed general activity index has been buried in deep contraction and, along with the Kansas City Fed report, have been suffering the greatest effects from the collapse in oil. The Econoday median is calling for a 13th straight month of contraction, at a steep minus 14.0 for January vs December’s minus 20.1. Production has held in the plus column for this report but the outlook for continued strength is not supported by new orders which have been in contraction for 14 months.

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