ISM


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Karim writes:

Modest improvement from all-time lows

Anecdotals quite weak:

  • “Difficulties with consumer and equity loans resulting from economic slowing.” (Finance & Insurance)
  • “Business is holding steady in the economic downturn.” (Information)
  • “Sales are okay. Credit from suppliers is becoming an issue even with a perfect payment history. Everyone is scared. Prices for most materials declining rapidly.” (Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing & Hunting)
  • “State budgets being reduced, corporate clients cancelling training, and clients not acting swiftly on proposals have brought down the backlog and lowered expectations.” (Professional, Scientific & Technical Services)
  • “Efforts continue to ramp up to control/reduce spending.” (Management of Companies & Support Services)
  • “There has been an overall decline in business. There have been some price decreases as well. Overall capital spend is significantly lower.” (Accommodation & Food Services)

ISM

Dec. 2008. Nov. 2008
Index 40.6 37.3
Prices Paid 36.0 36.6
New Orders 39.9 35.4
Employment 34.7 31.3
Export Orders 39.5 34.5
Imports 32.5 40.0


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2009-01-02 USER


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ISM Manufacturing (Dec)

Survey 35.4
Actual 32.4
Prior 36.2
Revised n/a

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ISM Prices Paid (Dec)

Survey 20.0
Actual 18.0
Prior 25.5
Revised n/a

 
Karim writes:

  • Weaker than expected across the board. Prices paid and production data imply further sharp falls in CPI and GDP in period ahead.
  • Export orders data and anecdotals on Europe and Asia imply the same for rest of G3.

Pretty much sums up what happened in December in general.


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2008-10-01 USER


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MBA Mortgage Applications (Sep 26)

Survey n/a
Actual -23.0%
Prior -10.6%
Revised n/a

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MBA Purchasing Applications (Sep 26)

Survey n/a
Actual 304.80
Prior 342.20
Revised n/a

 
Back towards 300, the bottom of the range. Falling like most other indicators. A weak September due to the fears of the financial crisis looks to have pushed q3 into negative numbers.

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MBA Refinancing Applications (Sep 26)

Survey n/a
Actual 1333.90
Prior 2043.40
Revised n/a

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MBA TABLE 1 (Sep 26)

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MBA TABLE 2 (Sep 26)

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MBA TABLE 3 (Sep 26)

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MBA TABLE 4 (Sep 26)

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Challenger Job Cuts YoY (Sep)

Survey n/a
Actual 32.6%
Prior 11.7%
Revised n/a

 
Not normally considered reliable, but this time in sync with other indicators of weakness.

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Challenger Job Cuts TABLE 1 (Sep)

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Challenger Job Cuts TABLE 2 (Sep)

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Challenger Job Cuts TABLE 3 (Sep)

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Challenger Job Cuts TABLE 4 (Sep)

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ADP Employment Change (Sep)

Survey -50K
Actual -8K
Prior -33K
Revised -37K

 
The long gradual decline continues. This number is higher by about 50,000 than the same numbers will be as measured Friday due to the Boeing strike and the hurricane. ADP counts the strikers as still employed while the government doesn’t for Friday’s number.

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ADP ALLX (Sep)

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ISM Manufacturing (Sep)

Survey 49.5
Actual 43.5
Prior 49.9
Revised n/a

 
Serious nose dive here. Talk of buyers waiting for price reductions due to commodity price drops.

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ISM Prices Paid (Sep)

Survey 73.0
Actual 53.5
Prior 77.0
Revised n/a

 
Down, lower than expected, but more than half still paying higher prices. No deflation yet.

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ISM TABLE 1 (Sep)

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ISM TABLE 2 (Sep)

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Construction Spending MoM (Aug)

Survey -0.5%
Actual 0.0%
Prior -0.6%
Revised -1.4%

 
Flat, better than expected, but prior month revised down by .8%.

Residential rose .3% for the first increase in a long time.

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Construction Spending YoY (Sep)

Survey n/a
Actual -5.9%
Prior -5.9%
Revised n/a

 
The rate of decline has stabilized, and there will soon be easier comps.

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Construction Spending Residential (Sep)

Survey n/a
Actual 351662.0
Prior 350563.0
Revised n/a

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Construction Spending TABLE 1 (Sep)

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Construction Spending TABLE 2 (Sep)


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ISM- Weak!


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From Karim:

Very weak both in levels and rate of change across most key components.

Production, orders, employment and export orders all down 5-12 points on the month.
Prices paid down 23.5 points.

  • “We have experienced a larger-than-expected slowdown in orders during the last month.” (Electrical Equipment, Appliances & Components)
  • “Steel, a main raw good for our business, has finally started showing some signs of softening a bit.” (Machinery)
  • “Business continues to slow down. Fourth quarter 2008 is going to be down 15 percent from third quarter.” (Fabricated Metal Products)
  • “Customers waiting for material price reductions in the face of falling oil prices.” (Plastics & Rubber Products)
  • “Continued strong export demand across several product lines.” (Chemical Products)

Agreed, looks like a negative 4th quarter if this continues and Congress keeps buyers of everything in fear and on the sidelines.

This line is interesting as well:

  • “Customers waiting for material price reductions in the face of falling oil prices.” (Plastics & Rubber Products)

Manufacturing at a Glance
September 2008

Index Series Index September Series Index August Percentage Point Change Direction Rate of Change Trend (Months)
PMI 43.5 49.9 -6.4 Contracting Faster 2
New Orders 38.8 48.3 -9.5 Contracting Faster 10
Production 40.8 52.1 -11.3 Contracting From Growing 1
Employment 41.8 49.7 -7.9 Contracting Faster 2
Supplier Deliveries 52.5 50.3 +2.2 Slowing Faster 15
Inventories 43.4 49.3 -5.9 Contracting Faster 3
Customers’ Inventories 53.5 54.5 -1.0 Too High Slower 2
Prices 53.5 77.0 -23.5 Increasing Slower 21
Backlog of Orders 35.0 43.5 -8.5 Contracting Faster 5
Exports 52.0 57.0 -5.0 Growing Slower 70
Imports 44.0 48.5 -4.5 Contracting Faster 8


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2008-05-30 Data Recap


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Karim writes:

     

  • Core pce up 0.1% m/m and unch at 2.1% y/y (recent high 2.5% in 2/07; recent low 1.9% in 9/07); 3mth annualized rate back to 1.9%

Yes, the Fed welcomes this but is concerned about its forecasts given food/energy/import/export prices and pipeline pressures.

     

  • Headline rises from 3.1% to 3.2%

And likely to go up from here.

     

  • Personal income up 0.2% m/m; wage and salary component posts decline of 0.2%; likely reflecting end of seasonal bonuses in Q1

Yes, but sufficient to keep consumption muddling through and not collapse as the Fed had feared.

     

  • Chicago PMI rebounds from 48.3 to 49.1

Still weak, but yet another sign the worst may be over.

     

  • Final Michigan reading largely unch but 5-10yr infl expex up a tick from 3.3% to 3.4%

Yes, and very troubling for the FOMC. There have been numerous strong statements regarding the imperative of not letting inflation expectations elevate.

     

  • All add up to ISM likely holding below 50 next week; payrolls down another 50-75k and ue rate back up to 5.1% or 5.2% for May

Yes, weak, but not recession, and strong enough to support the stock markets and ever higher consumer prices.


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Re: GDP/claims

(an interoffice email)

On Thu, Feb 28, 2008 at 9:38 AM, Karim wrote:

 

  • Housing and business capex weaker than originally estimated; exports stronger
  • All above offset to leave gwth at 0.6% annualized in Q4

Yes, nominal growth falls to 3.3% from 6.0% in Q3 as well.

 

  • More important news is claims, which corroborate recent weak survey data (Conf Board, ISM)
    • Initial now at 373k (prior revised from 349k to 354k)
    • Continuing up 21k on week to a new cycle high of 2807k
    • Higher continuing claims reflect lack of hiring, higher initial claims reflect new layoffs

Yes, up in a new range. Q1 looking near zero as widely anticipated. Exports may be strong enough to keep the economy out of recession, but not much more without a March recovery.

Crude back over $100, $ down some, commodities up some, etc.

Weakness and inflation continue.

ABC Buying Climate Index

Yes, one more data point indicating we hit the wall right around year end.

(ISM, car sales, payrolls, redbook sales)

Maybe the stock market scared consumers? Cliff is convinced stock market drops cause consumer retrenchment and recessions. Can’t say I disagree with something like 75% of Americans now holding shares.

But something did change and very quickly. .

comments welcome!

2008-02-05 ABC Buying Climate Index


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