Expectations
and current conditions rise sharply
The U of M
Survey’s expectations component is make the sharpest rise in all of this recovery
period. The five month rise in the expectations reading is the greatest five
month rise since the period ending in December 1992. Still, with this gain sentiment
is not at a new cycle high. The cycle high stand s at 76.
Current
conditions have improved sharply as well. The five month gain was previously larger
in the five month period ended in January 2010. At a level of 82.6 the current index
is also shot of the cycle high reading which is at 86.9.
But the charts
tell the story of momentum. And there are aided by stories of corporate leaders
finally getting ready to hire.
CEOS apparently
are undeterred by the risk in Europe. US consumers not surprisingly are not
being affected by talk of a Euro collapse. See story (http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-01-13/hiring-logjam-breaks-as-ceos-plan-fastest-u-s-growth-since-2006.html).
Indeed even Europe is not much affected as its bond auctions have picked up the
wake of the ECB giving banks three-year credit lines. Even the recent LEIs (Leading
Economic Indices) from the OECD did not find a whiff of recession. To be sure
the OECD gauges see many slowdowns but they were not projecting recessions as
of November data.
Trade data
from Europe tell a story of an export bulge that is hard to understand. Meanwhile
US trade data show exports are losing momentum. US imports are holding up better but hardly are
they surging, with the exception of oil.
To be sure
the global markets are a series of cross currents. But the US consumer data is
some of the best stuff we have seen so far. Since December 2006 there have only
been two times when the Bloomberg weekly consumer comfort index which has risen
in 10weeks by 8points has exceeded such a gain. We can be pretty sure when
various measures of confidence using different survey questions and horizons begin
to tell a similar story. We know have not really good eye witness news and come
corroborating evidence.
2 comments:
The problem is a lack of consumer spending. The Money is very concentrated in the hamds of a few not in the hands of the many.
Consume consume consume
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