Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Terror in Paris: "Several Dozen" Dead, Hostages Taken, France Closes Borders; Hey Chancellor Merkel
- Business Inventories Rise More Than Expected; Inventory to Sales Ratio Highest in Recovery; Retailers Overestimating Demand?
- Retail Sales Weaker Than Expected, Led by Autos; Car Boom Ending?
- PPI Unexpectedly Declines Second Month; Another Big Decline Likely Next Month
Terror in Paris: "Several Dozen" Dead, Hostages Taken, France Closes Borders; Hey Chancellor Merkel Posted: 13 Nov 2015 04:49 PM PST France is having second thoughts about open borders. The unfortunate thing is it took a terrorist attack to come to the proper conclusion. I am saddened to report Paris attacked: Dozens Dead, Hostages Taken. Paris was struck by co-ordinated attacks on Friday night, causing chaos in the French capital in one of the deadliest terrorist atrocities on a western city since September 11, 2001.Night of Terror The New York Times reports Paris Attacks Kill Dozens in Night of Deadly Terror The Paris area reeled Friday night from a shooting rampage, explosions and mass hostage-taking that President François Hollande called an unprecedented terrorist attack on France. He closed the borders and mobilized the military in a national emergency.Many Warned None Listened On September 4, Nigel Farage warned Thousands of Isil fighters could use migrant crisis to 'flood' into Europe. Discussing the threat of extremists targeting the crisis, Mr Farage said: "When Isil say they will use the migrant tide to flood Europe with 500,000 of their own jihadists, I think we better listen.Hey Chancellor Merkel Whether or not the people involved were refugees, this is precisely what many warned would happen. The risk is for more of the same, by smuggled terrorists. What a sorry, sorry way to be right. Hey chancellor Merkel, are your arms still wide open for millions more refugees? Is it too late to matter? I offer my plan once again, for the fourth time. Mish Proposed Strategy
Reckless, Not Careless Earlier this week Wolfgang Schäuble, Germany's finance minister called Merkel "careless". I responded Schäuble Accuses Merkel of "Careless Actions" Warns Germany Faces "Avalanche" of Refugees; Reckless not Careless. "Reckless" is clearly the word, as the whole world can now see. One cannot stop every terrorist attack of course. However, inviting terrorists with open arms is another thing indeed. And that's precisely what Merkel's absurd policy of welcoming Syrian refugees did. Peak Merkel should now be obvious to everyone. Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
Posted: 13 Nov 2015 11:48 AM PST Business expectations are high and rising as measured by a new high in the inventory-to-sales ratio. The Econoday Consensus Expectation was for no growth in inventories, but the actual result was +0.3 percent. That rise sent the inventory-to-sales ratio to the highest point in the recovery. Business inventories rose a higher-than-expected 0.3 percent in September on a back-up of inventories in the retail sector. The build is a plus for third-quarter GDP revisions but may not be a plus for future production and employment.Inventory to Sales Ratio Retailers Overestimating Demand? I certainly concur with the idea there is a huge risk retailers are overestimating demand. And I also concur with Bloomberg that October retail sales are "soft". In fact, retail sales have been soft for three months. Curiously, this is what Bloomberg had to say in its Econoday Report just this morning regarding retail sales: "This report is better than it looks, showing underlying strength that shouldn't scale down expectations for a December FOMC rate hike." I contend the retail sales report is worse than it looks, perhaps far worse than it looks. For my take, please see Retail Sales Weaker Than Expected, Led by Autos; Car Boom Ending? Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
Retail Sales Weaker Than Expected, Led by Autos; Car Boom Ending? Posted: 13 Nov 2015 11:13 AM PST This month the retail sales consensus expectation was for a 0.3% rise. The actual reading was a gain of just 0.1% for the month. In addition, last month's retail sales were revised lower to +0.0% from an initial reading of +0.1%. This was the third consecutive weak report. Nonetheless Bloomberg managed to put an amazing amount of lipstick on today's report. Let's take a look. Retail sales slowed in October but fundamentally remain solid. Sales rose only 0.1 percent, 2 tenths under the Econoday consensus. But when excluding vehicles, which slipped back after surging in prior months, and when also excluding gasoline stations, where sales once again fell on price weakness, core sales rose a respectable 0.3 percent which hits the consensus.Retail Sales Year-Over-Year Note that year-over-year retail sales were positive at the start of the last two recessions. Retail Sales Components Car Boom Ending? The closer one looks at the data, the more obvious it is that Bloomberg put a huge amount of lipstick on its synopsis. For the last three months combined, ex-auto retail sales are down, on average. Auto sales is one component that has propped up retail sales. Is the decline in auto sales this month just a snap-back from the massive auto surge in September, or is it the end of the boom? No one can answer this question now, but it should be obvious that car sales cannot boom forever. And when auto sales do turn, retail sales will no longer prop up the economy. Today's Producer Price Index report may provide a clue in regards to weakening demand. For details, please see PPI Unexpectedly Declines Second Month; Another Big Decline Likely Next Month. Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
PPI Unexpectedly Declines Second Month; Another Big Decline Likely Next Month Posted: 13 Nov 2015 09:56 AM PST Economists expected US strength would hold up producer prices but they have been way off the mark for two consecutive months. Following last month's 0.5% decline the Bloomberg Economists' Consensus was for a bounce to +0.2%. Instead, the PPI declined by 0.4%, well below the lowest economist's estimate of -0.1%. Demand for services had been holding up producer prices but not for the last two reports. PPI-FD fell an unexpected 0.4 percent in October vs Econoday expectations for a 0.2 percent gain and vs a low estimate of minus 0.1 percent. Year-on-year, prices are down a very sizable 1.6 percent. Services prices fell 0.3 percent in October following what was then an unexpected 0.4 percent decline in September. Year-on-year, services prices are up only 0.1 percent. Services are supposed to be insulated from global effects including price effects, and the downturn for this reading does not point to 2 percent target inflation anytime soon.$CRB - Commodities Index Daily $CRB Commodities Detail West Texas Crude Crude started the month at $46.43. It is now at $40.50,down all but two days this month. Expect Another Big Decline Next Month The PPI sank in October despite commodities posting average increases for the month. Given commodity prices have been hammered so far in November, expect another big PPI decline next month unless commodity prices rise, especially oil, rise sharply. Petroleum products constitute 33% of the CRB. By the way, it's important to note that producer prices declining in the face of steady or slightly up commodities is a reflection on final demand. I suggest demand is dropping more than most economists realize. Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
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