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Afternoon Note

Better Economic Data but None Moving the Needle

By Jennifer Coombs, Research Analyst
9/12/2014 1:52 PM

It’s a wild day in terms of economic data, but collectively, the reports have done little to revive the market rally – all three of the major indices are trending lower by roughly 0.5%. Retail sales, which we discussed this morning, should have been able to substantially move the market to the upside as they jumped 0.6% in August, after a rise of 0.3% in July; this was in-line with analyst expectations. When auto sales are excluded, sales gained 0.3% in both August and July, also matching expectations. Excluding both autos and gasoline, sales were still quite healthy as they increased 0.5%, following a rise of 0.3% in July. Overall, August retail sales were healthy and this may help to boost estimates for third quarter GDP growth. In addition to this positive data point, there were three more economic releases today which should contribute to a more optimistic economic outlook this fall.

Firstly, the University of Michigan’s Consumer Sentiment Index showed a pretty nice preliminary reading for the month of September. Consumer sentiment climbed to 84.6, compared to August’s final reading of 82.5 and August’s mid-month reading of 79.2. However, we note that the gain in sentiment is honed in on the expectations component, not the current conditions component which unfortunately declined to 98.5 from 99.8 in the final reading for August. This decline in current conditions means that consumer activity is not likely rising in September (however, this may turn out to be false if you consider our inventory comments later in this note). Expectations rose to 75.6 in September versus a 71.3 final reading in August and a 66.2 mid-month reading in August. The gain is likely tied to the decline in gasoline prices and less concern about inflation. On its face, the report looks great, but the softness in the current conditions component gives us pause. Still, when coupled with this morning's strong retail sales report, the consumer sector looks to be on the rise and contributing to at least some economic growth. Sentiment continues to float along while the markets continue to rise steeply (see chart below).

Next, trade inflationary pressures are soft and are certainly not pointing to trouble for the CPI/PCE report next week. Import prices in the US fell by 0.9% in the month of August, but were skewed primarily due to a 4.4% decline in oil and petroleum. With petroleum products excluded, imports were only 0.1% lower versus last month. The year-over-year rate is back to being negative, after edging higher in the past few months, to -0.4%. Once again, excluding petroleum the number would be much better at +0.8% year-over-year. On the export side, prices fell by 0.5% in August for a year-over-year rate of +0.4%. When agricultural related products are excluded, export prices fell 0.3% for the month, but rose 0.5% compared to last year. There were no major red flags in the price finished goods for imports or exports. The largest year-over-year increase was in consumer goods at 1.0% - this also makes sense given this morning’s report on retail sales.

Lastly, the Census Bureau reported that inventory growth is steady and in-line with underlining sales growth – both are a solid positive for US economic outlook. In July, business inventories increased 0.4% compared to a 0.8% increase in business sales which keeps the stock-to-sales ratio unchanged at a healthy and lean 1.29. Retail inventories increased huge at 1.0% which particular strength in autos. However, this is a desired inventory build give the acceleration underway in vehicle sales. Inventories with manufacturers and wholesalers only slightly increased by 0.1% and are likely to be restocked given how strong retail sales were in August (noted this morning). We note that restocking of inventories will be a plus both for future production and employment.


 

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