Fading back to trend:

Falling back:



And federal unemployment benefits expire in 2 weeks:



Back to about where it was heading pre covid, way below last cycle and not
where it was expected to be with record low mortgage rates:

Still weak:

Coming back slowly, but now oil prices are lower:

Lots of spiky commodities like iron ore:


Retail sales jumped up with the Federal transfer payments and have more recently
started to decline as transfer payments subsided. And the remaining Federal unemployment comp
of $300/week expires Labor day for approximately 7 million beneficiaries:

More evidence of a housing decline, even with the lowest rates ever:

Lumber and housing often move together:

This number is seasonally adjusted, and was higher in July because auto plants typically shut down in July didn’t this year due to prior production issues:
Industrial production in the United States increased 0.9 percent in July 2021, following a downwardly revised 0.2 percent growth in June and beating market expectations of 0.5 percent. Manufacturing output rose 1.4 percent, mainly due to a jump of 11.2 percent for motor vehicles and parts, as a number of vehicle manufacturers trimmed or canceled their typical July shutdowns. Despite the large increase last month, vehicle assemblies continued to be constrained by a persistent shortage of semiconductors. The output of utilities decreased 2.1 percent in July, while the index for mining rose 1.2 percent. source: Federal Reserve

Steel and industrial production are also somewhat related:

Working its way lower:

Inflation fears may be fading?

Getting worse. I guess low rates aren’t the end all for housing…
;)

Steady improvement but still a ways to go:

And this doesn’t look good:


We’re spending more on net imports which is fundamentally a direct benefit for us, if only our govt. knew the appropriate policy response:


Consumer credit growth has picked up as jobs are added and as Federal unemployment benefits expire:


These charts have turned down:

Not good. Analysts/politicians/voters expected more gains as Federal benefits expired:


Not good:


Not good:


Typical bounce after the covid dip that followed the tariff decline, but so far only back to prior levels, and less when adjusted for inflation:

Same pattern:

Also same pattern of covid dip, recovery, then weakness most recently:

US Factory Growth Slows in July
The ISM Manufacturing PMI fell to 59.5 in July of 2021, the weakest in 6 months, compared to 60.6 in June and below forecasts of 60.9. New orders, production, and supplier deliveries increased less and inventories contracted. Meanwhile, employment rebounded and price pressures eased.
Looks like price hike mode?
