Economic growth has been winding lower lately and the deceleration trend is on track to continue in April, based on The Capital Spectator’s analysis of the three-month average of the Chicago Fed’s National Activity Index (CFNAI-MA3). Tomorrow’s report for the first month of the second quarter is expected to show that the Fed bank’s business cycle benchmark will tick lower. The Capital Spectator’s average forecast of CFNAI-MA3 by way of several econometric estimates calls for a mild decline to -0.25, which is slightly below the -0.18 reading for March. The -0.25 projection is still well above the tipping point that marks the start of recessions, but the negative print continues to point to below-trend growth for the US.
Continue reading
Daily Archives: May 18, 2016
US Business Cycle Risk Report | 18 May 2016
US economic growth remains sluggish, hinting at the possibility that a new recession may be near. But the numbers don’t align with a pessimistic intuition. The probability is extremely low that April marked the start of an NBER-defined downturn, based on published reports to date. Projecting a broad set of indicators into the near-term future suggests that the US will continue to sidestep a macro slump. Yes, the outlook could deteriorate if the incoming numbers stumble. But for the moment, recession risk remains low.
Continue reading
Initial Guidance | 18 May 2016
● US home construction rebounds in April | MarketWatch
● US Industrial Output Up in April On Higher Utility Demand | CFO
● Inflation in US rises in April at fastest rate in 3 years | MarketWatch
● Strong US data bolsters second-quarter growth prospects | Reuters
● GDPNow Q2 GDP estimate for US ticks down to +2.5% | Atlanta Fed
● Redbook: US retail sales +0.5% YoY midway through May | TradingEcon
● Fed officials say several rate hikes are possible in 2016 | Reuters
● Rate Hike Fear In US Drags Down Stocks | Fox Business