Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Another US Foreign Policy Success: Isis Controls Half of Syria after Palmyra Seizure
- Existing Home Sales Lower Than Any Economist's Estimate; Rising Supply a Good Thing?
- Philly Fed Region "Weak but Stable"; Kansas City Region "Declines More Sharply"
- China Manufacturing PMI Contracts Third Month, Output Index at 13 Month Low
Another US Foreign Policy Success: Isis Controls Half of Syria after Palmyra Seizure Posted: 21 May 2015 08:32 PM PDT Congratulations are in order for team Bush and team Obama for another stunning US foreign policy success: Isis Controls Half of Syria after Palmyra Seizure. Fighters from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isis) have seized the Syrian city of Palmyra, home to a Unesco world heritage site, putting nearly half of Syrian territory in the jihadi group's hands and sparking fears that treasured antiquities may be destroyed.Moderate Rebels Defect In case you are wondering how this happened, please consider this IBTimes report from March 7, 2015: US-Backed Moderate Syrian Rebels In North Defect; Obama Strategy Set Back. It was supposed to be a crucial instrument of the Obama administration's aims in Syria, an ostensibly moderate rebel fighting force that would keep the pressure on the authoritarian regime in Damascus without aiding the ruthless jihadist forces that have captured much of the country. But the soldiers of Harakat Hazzm -- the first Syrian rebel group to receive arms from the CIA -- disbanded this week.Hillary Backs Moderates Please recall that Hillary was in favor of backing "moderate" rebels. But it is not just Democrats who want to back "moderates". Chief warmonger, Republican Senator John McCain, does as well. Has anyone bothered to question if we are even backing the right person? Iran is actually our ally here. Iran wants to help the US fight ISIS. The only problem is Iran backs Syrian president Assad, while the goal of the US is to overthrow Assad to alleged "moderates". Roots of Crisis This is exactly the kind of idiocy one can expect when you think you can "nation build". Without a doubt the roots of this crisis date back to the inane decision by George Bush to invade Iraq. But please recall that Hillary was in favor of invading Iraq as well. The non-amusing fact in this mess is the policies of George Bush, Obama, and Hillary Clinton are similar if not identical. Yet, Republicans blame Obama and Democrats blame Republicans. The only candidate who has an alternative plan to this mess is Senator Rand Paul. Contemplating Success Some may ask "Mish, how the hell can you call this disaster a success?" The answer is simple: In spite of what they may say, the goal of mainstream Republicans and Democrats is obviously perpetual war. A destruction of a major historic site in Palmyra will have even some peacemongers clamoring for retaliation. Make no bones about it, the takeover of Palmyra was a major US foreign policy success, provided you understand the goal. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Existing Home Sales Lower Than Any Economist's Estimate; Rising Supply a Good Thing? Posted: 21 May 2015 12:26 PM PDT Existing Home Sales Disappoint Economists overestimated existing home sales today, rounding out another impressive day of overoptimism. New home sales came in at a seasonally adjusted 5.04 million annualized rate. The Bloomberg Consensus Estimate was 5.22 million. 5.04 million was below the lower end of the consensus range of 5.10 M to 5.32 M. Existing homes sales are not living up to springtime expectations, down 3.3 percent in April to a 5.04 million annual rate which is just below the low-end Econoday forecast. Three of 4 regions show contraction in April with the sharpest decline, minus 6.8 percent, in the South, which is by far the largest housing region. Year-on-year, total sales are still up a respectable 6.1 percent.Existing Home Sales Existing Home Sales Month's Supply Rising Supply a Good Thing? Bloomberg says "Another positive is a rise in supply with 2.21 million used homes on the market vs 2.01 million in March. This rise, together with the drop in sales, raises supply relative to sales to 5.3 months from 4.6 months." That strikes me as circular reasoning, if not completely ridiculous. Month's supply will automatically rise when sales decline. Supply rising in 2005 was a sign of a major problem coming up. Apparently it's different this time. The Goldilocks' theory, which I find absurd, is that low supply is what's holding back buyers. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Philly Fed Region "Weak but Stable"; Kansas City Region "Declines More Sharply" Posted: 21 May 2015 10:46 AM PDT More weak economic reports came out today. Let's take a look at two regional manufacturing reports. Philly Fed Region "Weak but Stable" The Bloomberg Economic Consensus for the Philadelphia Fed Business Outlook Survey was 8.0. Economists got the leading sign correct, but the consensus estimate was a tad high with the index posting 6.7. Activity in the Mid-Atlantic manufacturing sector is slow but stabilizing, based on the Philly Fed's general conditions index which came in at 6.7 for May, down slightly from 7.5 in April and against Econoday expectations for 8.0.Weak Demand In light of rising energy prices, price contraction especially in finished goods tells the real story: very weak demand. The six-month outlook is meaningless. Such readings are perpetually overoptimistic except at the bottom of recessions. Industrial production will go nowhere with readings like these. I suggest things appear to be "stabilizing" before the next decline. Philly Fed vs. Industrial Production Kansas City Fed Consensus Way Too Optimistic The range of economists' estimates for the Kansas City Fed Business Outlook Survey was -1 to +1. Economists were not even close on this one. The early indications on May's manufacturing activity have been slightly positive, that is until the Kansas City Fed report where the composite index is in deeply negative ground at minus 13. This is the weakest of the recovery for this reading and follows an already weak minus 7 in April.Kansas City Region "Declines More Sharply" The Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City reports Tenth District Manufacturing Declines More Sharply. According to Chad Wilkerson, vice president and economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, the survey revealed that Tenth District manufacturing activity declined more sharply in May and producers' expectations also fell, with both reaching their lowest levels since mid - 2009.Recession in KC Region If it appears the KC region is in recession, it's because it probably is. Nonetheless, favorable expectations six months out refuse to die. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
China Manufacturing PMI Contracts Third Month, Output Index at 13 Month Low Posted: 21 May 2015 02:20 AM PDT The slowdown in China continues as the HBSC Flash PMI shows Output contracts at strongest rate in just over a year. Key Points
Commenting on the Flash China Manufacturing PMI survey, Annabel Fiddes , Economist at Markit said: "The Flash China Manufacturing PMI pointed to a further deterioration in operating conditions in May , with production declining for the first time in 2015 so far. "Moreover, softer client demand, both at home and abroad, along with further job cuts indicate that the sector may find it difficult to expand, at least in the near - term, as companies tempered production plans in line with weaker demand conditions. "On a positive note, deflationary pressures remained relatively strong, with both input and output prices continuing to decline, leaving plenty of scope for the authorities to implement further stimulus measures if required." The positive note is "deflationary pressures are strong so that leaves scope for stimulus." Isn't that a hoot? And if there was strength, that would be a positive as well. I guess it's simply impossible for things not to be bullish. Two Point Summary
Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
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