Jobless claims, Retail sales

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Maybe it’s because lower oil prices merely shift income from sellers to buyers, with capex reductions a net loss to all etc. as previously discussed?

Retail Sales
retail-sales-jan-table
Highlights
Lower gasoline prices continue to tug down on retail sales. And consumers are not yet putting higher discretionary income into spending on non-gasoline categories of retail sales even as confidence has improved. Retail sales in January fell 0.8 percent after declining an unrevised 0.9 percent in December. Excluding autos, sales decreased 0.9 percent-the same pace of decline as in December. Analysts expected a 0.5 percent decrease. Excluding both autos and gasoline sales rose 0.2 percent after no change in December. Expectations were for a 0.4 percent increase.

The latest retail sales numbers are not consistent with increased discretionary income and higher confidence. One explanation may be that consumers are spending more on services than on “hard” items found in the retail sales report.
retail-sales-jan

mtg purchase apps down again, Earnings, Greece chart, gasoline demand

Not good. Purchase apps back down to depressed levels after a dip in front of govt mortgage fee cuts followed by a small blip up after the cuts, and up only 1% from last year’s cold winter depressed levels:

MBA Purchase Applications
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Highlights
The purchase index fell 7.0 percent in the February 6 week for the 4th straight fall but still remains in the plus column on a year-on-year basis, but only by plus 1.0 percent. The refinance index, which unlike the purchase index has been showing life, fell back 10.0 percent in the week. Rates have been very low but did move higher in the week, up 5 basis points to an average 3.84 percent for conforming loans ($417,000 or less).

mba-purch-2-6-graph
Earnings note:

4Q14 earnings season is winding down and growth is slowing. After running close to +5% on a YoY basis, S&P operating earnings growth is now down to 3.5% and revenue growth is down to 1.3%
greece-gdp

Gasoline demand down this week but may be moving up slightly vs last year but hard to say underlying demand is higher given last year’s extra cold winter
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Wholesale trade, BOE on Greece, Redbook sales, Jolts

Inventories looking excessive:

Wholesale Trade
wholesale-trade-dec
Highlights
The economy may be solid right now but inventories at the wholesale level look heavy, rising 0.1 percent in December vs a noticeable 0.4 percent decline in sales at the wholesale level. The mismatch drives up the stock-to-sales ratio by 1 tenth to 1.22 which is the heaviest reading since way back in the troubled days of late 2009. This ratio was at 1.17 through the middle of last year but has since been moving higher.

December’s unwanted wholesale build is centered in the non-durable component where sales, in contrast to durable goods which rose 1.1 percent, fell 1.7 percent in the month. Here the culprit is petroleum where sales, reflecting both price effects and lower demand, fell 13.7 percent in the month. And the supply overhang, based on weekly petroleum inventory data, has continued to build into the new year. Showing a big draw in the month are lumber and electrical goods, two products that may be signaling rising demand out of the construction sector.

The nation’s inventories have been moving higher but the imbalance has been centered in the wholesale sector, though inventories at the factory level are showing a little pressure. Watch Thursday for the business inventories inventory report which will round out December’s data with data on the retail sector.

Wholesale inventories up 0.1% in December, versus expectations for 0.2% gain

Feb 10 (Reuters) — U.S. wholesale inventories barely rose in December, the latest suggestion that fourth-quarter growth could be revised lower.

The Commerce Department said on Tuesday wholesale inventories edged up 0.1 percent as lower crude oil prices weighed on the value of petroleum stocks. Stocks at wholesalers had increased by an unrevised 0.8 percent in November.

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast wholesale inventories rising 0.2 percent in December.

Inventories are a key component of gross domestic product changes. The component that goes into the calculation of GDP – wholesale stocks excluding autos—nudged up 0.1 percent.

The report, together with last week’s data showing a 0.3 percent fall in manufacturing inventories in December, suggested the boost to GDP growth from restocking in the fourth quarter was probably not as large as initially thought.

The government estimated last month that inventories added 0.8 percentage point to the economy’s annualized 2.6 percent growth pace in the fourth quarter.

Sales at wholesalers fell 0.4 percent in December after a similar decline in November. At December’s sales pace it would take 1.22 months to clear shelves, down from 1.21 months in November.

The last thing Greece needs are collaborators. First Italy and now the BOE:

BOE’s Carney Applauds ECB Policy (WSJ) “There are many reasons why the ECB’s actions are important, one of them is it shows the ECB has the full tool kit to support the underlying economy as necessary…the ECB is taking bold action,” BOE Governor Mark Carney said. While the ECB move is constructive, it won’t deliver medium-term prosperity to the eurozone economy, Mr. Carney said.

This isn’t supposed to be declining with the presumed boost to the consumer from low oil prices:

Redbook
redbook-2-7
Highlights
Retail sales slowed substantially in the February 7 week, to a year-on-year plus 2.1 percent from 3.8 percent in the prior week. The 2.1 percent rate is very low which the report attributes to the Super Bowl which diverted consumer attention. Redbook sees sales picking up in the next report due to Valentine’s Day. The government’s retail sales report this Thursday is the week’s big event on the calendar and is expected to show a bounce-back rise in core sales for January (ex-auto ex-gas).

JOLTS
jolts-dec
Highlights
There were 5.028 million job openings on the last business day of December, slightly improved from 4.847 million in November. Hires (5.148 million) and separations (4.886 million) were little changed in December. Within separations, the quits rate (1.9 percent) and the layoffs and discharges rate (1.2 percent) were unchanged. This release includes estimates of the number and rate of job openings, hires, and separations for the nonfarm sector by industry and by four geographic regions.

There were 5.148 million hires in December, slightly higher than November’s 5.054 million. This was the highest level of hires since November 2007. The hires rate in December was 3.7 percent. The number of hires was little changed for total private and government. Hires increased over the month in construction.

Total separations include quits, layoffs and discharges, and other separations. Total separations are referred to as turnover. Quits are generally voluntary separations initiated by the employee. Therefore,
the quits rate can serve as a measure of workers’ willingness or ability to leave jobs. Layoffs and discharges are involuntary separations initiated by the employer. Other separations include separations
due to retirement, death, and disability, as well as transfers to other locations of the same firm.
There were 4.9 million total separations in December, little changed from November. This was the highest level of separations since October 2008. The separations rate was 3.5 percent. The number of total separations was little changed for total private and government.

There were 2.717 million quits in December, little changed from November. The quits rate in December was 1.9 percent. The number of quits was little changed for total private and government. Quits increased in construction and durable goods manufacturing. The number of quits was little changed in all four regions.

Overall, the JOLTS numbers portray a slowly improving jobs market with job openings rising along with hires.

labor market index, consumer credit, China trade, BIS on oil and debt

This is the Fed’s new indicator:

Labor Market Conditions Index
lm-conditions
Definition
The U.S. labor market is large and multifaceted. Often-cited indicators such as the unemployment rate or payroll employment, measure a particular dimension of labor market activity. It is not uncommon for different indicators to send conflicting signals about labor market conditions. The Fed’s research department has created a labor market conditions index (LMCI) based on 19 labor market indicators. It is not an official report. However, the monthly publication is carefully noted by Fed Chair Janet Yellen and has gained market attention.

Misleading at best as the two month average was just that, average:

Consumers swipe way to largest increase in revolving credit since March (WSJ) Total outstanding consumer credit expanded at a 5.37% seasonally adjusted annual rate to $3.31 trillion in December. That was a slight acceleration from November’s 4.92% gain. Revolving credit grew at a 7.85% pace in December, a turnaround from November’s 1.28% decline. December’s expansion in revolving credit was the largest since March. Nonrevolving credit, such as auto and student loans, grew at a 4.46% pace during the month, the smallest monthly increase since October 2011. November’s nonrevolving balances grew 7.21%. Revolving credit tends to be volatile, but nonrevolving credit has consistently expanded since August 2011.

No acceleration in growth whatsoever:
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The revolving is volatile but doesn’t look to be going anywhere:
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January data always suspect but sometimes indicative:

China’s imports slump, capping dismal January trade performance (Reuters) China exports fell 3.3 percent in January from year-ago levels while imports tumbled 19.9 percent. Last year the new year holiday idled factories and financial markets for a week in January, but this year the holiday comes in late February and January was a full month of business as usual. Coal imports dropped nearly 40 percent to 16.78 million tonnes, down from December’s 27.22 million tones. Crude oil imports slid by 7.9 percent in volume terms. While exports to the United States rose by 4.8 percent year-on-year to $35 billion, exports to the European Union slid 4.6 percent to $33 billion in the same period. Exports to Hong Kong, South Korea and Japan were also down, with exports to Japan slumping over 20 percent.

China’s Exports Post Surprise Drop in January (WSJ) Exports fell 3.3% in January from a year earlier, a sharp deterioration from December’s 9.7% rise. In January, exports to Southeast Asia and the U.S. were stronger, while shipments to the European Union, Japan and Hong Kong were all weaker in dollar terms. In a statement accompanying the trade data, China’s customs authorities said that a survey showed weaker confidence among exporters for the fourth consecutive month. “This shows that exports will be facing downward pressure in the first quarter as well as the beginning of the second quarter,” the statement said. Year-ago data for January may have been inflated by over-invoicing by exporters. Exports climbed nearly 11% year over year in January last year.

This is a lot more threatening than I had been led to believe:

Box: Oil and debt

Note the rate of energy debt growth over the last few years, and that these charts don’t include all energy related debt. Looks to have been about 1% of GDP and added about that much plus ‘multipliers’, filling in for the tax hikes and sequesters of 2013.

And now it’s over.

Two things as price fell in half from $100/barrel.

1. Credit expansion slows and maybe reverses.

2. The value of the collateral behind the loans has been halved, which is highly problematic for the lenders.
cc-2-9-4
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These are just initial BIS findings. The full report comes out in March.

And not to forget there’s now a new King of Saudia Arabia who decides what the price will be.

Saudi discounts altered

Remember when they reduced some of their discounts I suggested they may be stabilizing prices?

Now they are increasing a discount, indicating they are trying to soften prices?

Saudis Deepen Asia Light-Oil Discount to Low in Market Fight

By Anthony DiPaola and Mark Shenk

Feb 6 — State-owned Saudi Arabian Oil Co. lowered its official selling price for Arab Light crude by 90 cents to $2.30 a barrel less than Middle East benchmarks, the company said in an e- mailed statement Thursday. That’s the lowest in at least the 14 years since Bloomberg began gathering data.

“This is further evidence that they are hellbent on protecting their market share in China,” Bill O’Grady, chief market strategist at Confluence Investment Management in St. Louis, which oversees $2.4 billion, said by phone Thursday. “They are trying to stay competitive in what is the biggest area of growth.”

Middle Eastern producers are increasingly competing with cargoes from Latin America, Africa and Russia for buyers in Asia. China was the world’s second-biggest crude consumer after the U.S. in 2014, according to International Energy Agency data.

Oil prices have collapsed since the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries decided to maintain its output target on Nov. 27, fanning speculation that Saudi Arabia and other members were determined to let North American shale drillers and other producers share the burden of reducing an oversupply.

Raised Premium

Brent crude, the benchmark for more than half of the world’s oil, rose as much as $2.31 a barrel, or 4.1 percent, to $58.88 on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange and traded at $58.47 at 10:53 a.m. local time. West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. benchmark, rose $1.78 to $52.26 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Saudi Aramco, as the producer is known, cut differentials on each of the four other grades it sells to Asia, its largest market, and raised them to the U.S., northwest Europe and the Mediterranean region, according to Thursday’s statement. The discount on Extra Light crude to Asia also dropped to a low of at least 14 years and Arab Medium was cut to within 10 cents of its record discount for buyers in Asia.

“Asia is still the market that they want to keep, so they are pricing to keep the crude attractive,” Olivier Jakob, managing director of Zug, Switzerland-based researcher Petromatrix GmbH, said by phone Friday. Saudi Aramco increased pricing to the Mediterranean region where “demand has been good because refining margins are good,” he said.

Refiners and traders in Asia had expected Saudi Aramco to cut Arab Light crude by $1 a barrel, according to the median estimate of eight buyers in a Bloomberg survey this week.

Persian Gulf oil producers sell most of their crude under long-term contracts to refiners. Most of the region’s state oil companies price their oil at a premium or discount, also known as the differential, to a benchmark. For Asia the benchmark is the average of Oman and Dubai oil grades.

China Market

Saudi Arabia’s share among the top three suppliers to China fell to 37 percent in December, from 44 percent in October, as the country lost ground to Angola and Russia, according to Julian Lee, an oil strategist for Bloomberg First Word. In the U.S., Saudi Aramco is in contention with Mexico to be the second-largest supplier behind Canada, Lee said.

The kingdom’s state oil producer raised the differentials on all crude it will ship to the U.S. next month by 15 cents a barrel, pushing the premium for Arab Light to 45 cents more than the U.S. Gulf Coast benchmark.

Saudi Aramco took the oil market by surprise when it trimmed its November crude pricing to five-year lows for Asia, signaling the biggest producer in OPEC would defend its market share rather than seek to prop up prices.

“The U.S. used to be the market the Saudis were most concerned about preserving market share in, but that’s no longer the case,” O’Grady said. “China is where they see growth coming from in the decades ahead and the U.S. is also producing a greater share of the oil it needs.”

Jobs, Currency wars, etc.

Heaps stronger than expected:

Employment Situation
payrolls-jan
Highlights
Today’s employment situation was heavily positive even though the unemployment rate edged up. Payroll jobs gained 257,000 in January after strong increases of 329,000 in December and 423,000 in November. December and November were revised up a net 86,000. With the revision, November is the strongest month since May 2010. Today’s report may tip the balance for the Fed to think about a first increase in policy rates this year rather than next-although still at a slow pace.

The unemployment rate nudged up to 5.7 percent from 5.6 percent in December. The rise was due to a sharp rebound in the labor force. The labor force participation rate rose to 62.9 percent from 62.7 percent in December. It appears that some discouraged workers are returning to the labor force—a positive sign for how workers view the economy.

Turning back to the establishment survey, private payrolls increased 267,000 in January after a 329,000 boost the month before.

Goods-producing jobs increased 58,000 after a 73,000 boost in December. Manufacturing increased 22,000 after rising 26,000 in December. Construction jumped 39,000 in January after gaining 44,000 the month before. Mining slipped 4,000 after rising 3,000 in December. These numbers offer hope that the manufacturing and construction sectors are improving. In recent months, they have been sluggish.

Private service-providing industries posted a 209,000 increase after a gain of 247,000 in December. Government jobs declined by 10,000 in January after a rise of 9,000 the month before.

The labor force may be tightening a bit as average hourly earnings rebounded 0.5 percent, following a 0.2 percent dip in December. However, part of the boost in wages was due to increases in some states’ minimum wage. The average workweek held steady at 34.6 hours.

Overall, the latest employment situation suggests that the consumer sector is still the current backbone of the recovery. Also, the labor market has been given an upgrade with upward revisions to November and December. A caveat for the latest report is that seasonal factors for cold weather months can be volatile.

So anyone remember what that big spike in November was all about?

I don’t recall anything at the time in the news, etc. that would have indicated any kind of hiring surge was happening?

Anyway, whatever it was seems to be unwinding?
payrolls-jan-2

payrolls-jan-3

payrolls-jan-4

Currency wars, deflation fights, and with all the guns shooting backwards. As the carpenter said, ‘no matter how much I cut off it’s still too short.’

History will not be kind to these people…

Currency war a worry ahead of G-20 finance gathering (Nikkei) With a number of countries loosening monetary policy, avoiding competitive currency devaluation has emerged as a key issue for the meeting of Group of 20 finance ministers and central bankers that kicks off Monday in Istanbul. The communique released after the September G-20 meeting in Cairns, Australia, included language that in effect tacitly condoned monetary easing aimed at economic improvement. “Monetary policy in advanced economies … should address, in a timely manner, deflationary pressures where needed,” it read in part. The IMF, in January, projected growth of 1.2% in the eurozone, down 0.2 point from the October 2014 edition. The IMF cut its outlook for emerging markets by 0.6 point as well.

Fed’s Rosengren: Weak inflation is key challenge for central banks (WSJ) “The problem of significantly undershooting inflation—a dynamic which could well keep interest rates at the zero lower bound—is likely to be a key challenge to central bankers in the first two decades of the 21st century,” Federal Reserve Bank of Boston President Eric Rosengren said. “As with the oil shock in the 1970s, the current shock has served to accentuate a potential monetary policy pitfall—in this case, the failure to quickly and vigorously address a significant undershooting of inflation targets,” the central banker said. “We still are a long way from normalizing either short-term interest rates or our balance sheet,” the official said.

Benefits of aggressive Fed policy still to peak (WSJ) “The net stimulus to real activity and inflation was limited by the gradual nature of the changes in policy expectations and term premium effects, as well as by a persistent belief on the part of the public that the pace of recovery would be much faster than proved to be the case,” according to a new Fed board paper. “The peak unemployment effect—subtracting 1¼ percentage points from the unemployment rate relative to what would have occurred in the absence of the unconventional policy actions—does not occur until early 2015, while the peak inflation effect—adding ½ percentage point to the inflation rate—is not anticipated until early 2016,” write the authors.

Denmark Cuts Rates Again to Protect Currency Peg (WSJ) Denmark’s central bank scrambled to defend its under-pressure currency peg Thursday, cutting its benchmark interest rate for the fourth time in less than three weeks. The decision to cut the interest rate on deposits—to -0.75% from -0.5%–marks the latest effort to maintain the peg. Last week, the central bank, known as Nationalbanken, announced the surprise suspension of government bond auctions, and the bank said Tuesday it sold record amounts of kroner in January to weaken its currency. Nationalbanken Governor Lars Rohde tried to calm any fears about the future of the policy cornerstone. The central bank “has the necessary instruments to defend the fixed exchange rate policy for as long as it takes,” he said in a statement.

China cuts bank reserve requirement to spur growth (Reuters) China’s central bank made a system-wide cut to bank reserve requirements on Wednesday, the first time it has done so in over two years, to unleash a fresh flood of liquidity to fight off economic slowdown and looming deflation.

Greek leadership assures policy is good for its banks, while real economy and real people are devastated:

Greek central bank says ‘absolutely no problem’ with banks (Reuters) Greek central bank governor Yannis Stournaras said on Thursday that Greek banks were solid and under control. “Deposits and liquidity are absolutely safe,” Stournaras, who is also a member of the European Central Bank’s Governing Council, told reporters. “There is absolutely no problem with the banks. We are under control. It was a calm day today,” he said referring to bank deposits. Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis have been seeking support for a new deal with Greece’s international lenders that would allow an end to years of imposed austerity. “The ECB’s decision can be taken back if there is a deal from the Greek government (and its EU partners),” he said.

Not a good sign:

Baltic Dry Freight Index Plummets Amid Commodities Slump (WSJ) The Baltic Dry Index fell to 577 this week, a far cry from its peak of 11,793 in 2008. The size of the world’s fleet of dry-bulk ships far exceeds demand for the vessels which carry commodities, with over capacity estimated at around 20% above demand over the past few years. Many ships ordered at a time of booming global trade before the 2008 financial crisis have come into service as economic growth has spluttered in the years since. Rui Guo, a freight analyst at ICAP Shipping, said the tonnage in the water of dry-bulk vessels has gone up 85% since 2008, even as demand has fallen. Mr. Guo said daily freight rates for a 150,000-ton freight vessel are now around $5,500, with the break-even point around $7,500.

The Korea International Trade Association reported that exports of general machinery to China declined 7.1% in the January-November period of 2014, in contrast to a 2.0% increase in 2013.

payrolls-jan-5

Layoffs, Claims, Trade

Challenger Job-Cut Report
eco-release-2-5-1
Highlights
In perhaps the first warning of serious trouble from the oil patch, Challenger’s layoff count starts off the year with an elevated reading, at 53,041 for the highest reading since February 2013 and the highest January reading since 2012. Readings in December and November were much lower, at 32,640 and 35,940.

The energy sector represented roughly 40 percent of January’s cuts, at 20,193. Cuts in the energy sector were minimal in the fourth-quarter, averaging only 1,330 per month. The sector seeing the second largest number of cuts in January is retail, at 6,699 in downsizing following the holidays.

Jobless Claims
eco-release-2-5-2
Highlights
The jobs market is healthy based on jobless claims where initial claims, though up 11,000, came in at a much lower-than-expected 278,000 in the January 31 week, keeping the bulk of the improvement from the prior week’s revised 42,000 fall. The 4-week week average, down a sizable 6,500 in the week to 292,750, is trending right at the month-ago level in a comparison that points to another healthy monthly employment report for tomorrow.

Continuing claims, reported with a 1-week lag, are also at healthy levels though the month-ago comparison is less favorable. Continuing claims in the January 24 week rose 6,000 to 2.400 million while the 4-week average, though down 22,000, is at a 2.421 million level that is slightly above the month-ago trend. The unemployment rate for insured workers is holding at a recovery low of 1.8 percent.
eco-release-2-5-3

Negative productivity/jump in unit labor costs = over hiring given actual output?

Productivity and Costs
eco-release-2-5-4
Highlights
Nonfarm productivity growth for the fourth quarter declined an annualized 1.8 percent, following a 3.7 percent jump in the third quarter. Expectations were for a 0.2 percent rise. Unit labor costs increased 2.7 percent after falling an annualized 2.3 percent in the third quarter. Analysts projected a 1.2 percent gain.

Output growth softened to 3.2 percent in the fourth quarter, following a 6.3 percent jump the prior quarter. Compensation growth posted at 0.9 percent annualized after 1.3 percent the quarter before.

Year-on-year, productivity was unchanged in the fourth quarter, down from 1.3 percent in the third quarter. Year-ago unit labor costs were up 1.9 percent, compared to up 0.9 percent in the third quarter.

International Trade
eco-release-2-5-5
Highlights
The U.S. trade balance for December widened instead of narrowing as expected. Lower oil prices actually cut into petroleum exports.

In December, the U.S. trade gap grew to $46.6 billion from a revised $39.8 billion in November. Analysts forecast the deficit to narrow to $37.9 billion. Exports were down 0.8 percent after declining 1.1 percent the month before. Imports rebounded 2.2 percent after falling 1.8 percent in November.

Expansion in the overall gap was led by the goods excluding petroleum gap which increased to $49.7 billion from $46.3 billion in November.

The petroleum goods trade gap posted at $14.7 billion from $11.6 billion in November. Petroleum imports were up 7.7 percent while exports decreased 11.6 percent.

The services surplus was essentially unchanged at $19.5 billion.

On a seasonally adjusted basis, the December figures show surpluses, in billions of dollars, with
with South and Central America ($2.6), Brazil ($0.4), and United Kingdom ($0.1). Deficits were recorded, in billions of dollars, with China ($30.4), European Union ($12.7), Germany ($5.6), Mexico ($5.6), Japan ($5.4), Canada ($3.3), South Korea ($2.7), OPEC ($2.3), India ($2.1), Italy ($2.1), France ($1.1), and Saudi Arabia ($1.0).

Overall, the December number will likely lower estimates for fourth quarter GDP growth. But the good news is that the import numbers suggest that demand is moderately healthy.

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municipal refi up, new borrowing down in Jan

No credit expansion here. With the loss of energy related capex credit expansion something needs to rise to the occasion for GDP growth to continue:

Rates for 10-year AAA muni debt fell 0.29 percentage points while 30-year debt saw a decline of 0.33 percentage points. That corresponded with sharp declines in U.S. government debt, with the benchmark 10-year Treasury sliding from 2.12 percent to 1.68 percent by the end of January, and the 30-year bond from 2.69 percent to 2.25 percent.

That sent governments into the refunding process, where they were able to cut the financing costs for their debt substantially.

However, the move-in rates did not translate into an avalanche of new debt. New money issuance, in fact, fell 30 percent to 8.4 percent, perhaps reflecting a low level of confidence about the future trajectory of rates.

Turkey’s President has it right!

Maybe they’ll invite me there for Thanksgiving- see where it all started!
;)

Erdogan: You Can’t Decide Interest Rates According to Inflation

By Ali Berat Meric

Feb 4 (Bloomberg) — Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan says making interest-rate cuts dependent on slowing inflation is the result of a “wrong mentality.”

Erdogan, speaking to small business federation in Ankara:

* Says interest rates cause inflation

* “There are still those who don’t understand that if you cut interest rates you’ll cut inflation’’

* Some are trying to hold Turkey back with high interest rates

* Referring to Turkish central bank’s decision not to cut rates: “Unfortunately, this is the point we come to when the institution is independent”

Mtg purchase apps, ADP, ISM

Looks like a dip anticipating lower gov fees a few weeks ago, followed by a blip up after, then returning to ‘trend’

Still very low:
mba-purch-apps
A bit lower than expected, but last month revised up a bit. Remember, this is a forecast of Friday’s release, not actual hard numbers:

ADP Employment Report
adp-jan-table
Highlights
ADP sees slowing in job growth for January, to a lower-than-expected 213,000 for private payrolls vs the Econoday consensus for 220,000 and against ADP’s upwardly revised 253,000 for December (initial estimate 241,000). Turning to government data, the corresponding Econoday consensus for Friday’s jobs report is 229,000 vs December’s 240,000.

The 213,000 increase for January is the lowest since September which was also 213,000. Increases in ADP’s data from October to December averaged 257,000. By industries, the largest percentage gain for January comes from construction, up 0.3 percent or 18,000 jobs, and the lowest from manufacturing, up 0.1 percent or 14,000 jobs, and financial activities, also up 0.1 percent or 10,000 jobs.
adp-jan

Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, said, “Employment posted another solid gain in January, although the pace of growth is slower than in recent months. Businesses in the energy and supplying industries are already scaling back payrolls in reaction to the collapse in oil prices, while industries benefiting from the lower prices have been slower to increase their hiring. All indications are that the job market will continue to improve in 2015.”

ISM Non-Mfg Index
ism-non-man-jan
Recent History Of This Indicator
The composite index from the ISM non-manufacturing survey at 56.2 for December slowed substantially from November’s unusually strong 59.3. Details showed particular slowing in business activity, down 7.2 points to 57.2, followed by slowing in new orders, down 2.5 points to 58.9. A plus was respectable strength for employment, down only 7 tenths to 56.0. Prices paid, reflecting lower fuel costs, fell 4.9 points to 49.5 for the first sub-50 reading since September 2009.
ism-non-man-jan-graph