Home   Logon   Mobile Site   Research and Commentary   About Us   Call 1.800.621.1675 or Email Us       Follow Us: 

Search by Ticker, Keyword or CUSIP       
 
 

Blog Home
   Brian Wesbury
Chief Economist
 
Click for Bio
Follow Brian on Twitter Follow Brian on LinkedIn View Videos on YouTube
   Bob Stein
Deputy Chief Economist
Click for Bio
Follow Bob on Twitter Follow Bob on LinkedIn View Videos on YouTube
 
  COVID-19 Tracker 11/19/2020
Posted Under: COVID-19

The narrative around COVID-19 is constantly changing, so we thought we would put a one-pager out once a week with some of the charts and data that we think are important to keep an eye on to help gain some perspective.

Click here to view the one page report.

Posted on Thursday, November 19, 2020 @ 2:51 PM • Post Link Share: 
Print this post Printer Friendly
  Existing Home Sales Increased 4.3% in October
Posted Under: Data Watch • Employment • Home Sales • Housing

 
Implications: Existing home sales continued to impress in October, beating even the most optimistic forecast by any economics group and hitting the fastest pace since 2005.  From February (pre-pandemic) to the bottom in May, sales collapsed 32.1%, as lockdown measures and widespread economic uncertainty took hold across the country.  Since then sales have risen five months in a row, blown past the previous February high, and are now up 18.9% from pre-pandemic levels.  One major contributor to the recent recovery has been the Fed's liquidity policies, which have helped push 30-year fixed mortgage rates to record lows, boosting affordability.  It also looks like the pandemic and the resulting public health measures have given potential buyers a new sense of urgency, with demand for existing homes so strong in October that 72% of the homes sold were on the market for less than a month.  That said, sales face a continued headwind from the low inventory of existing homes.  Today's report showed that inventories were lower than any other October on record and down 19.8% versus a year ago (the best measure for inventories given the seasonality of the data).  This is reflected in the months' supply (how long it would take to sell today's inventory at the current sales pace) of existing homes for sale, which is now 2.5, the lowest reading on record back to 1999.  While lower priced homes are in short supply, inventories have increased in the past year at the upper end of the spectrum.  Meanwhile, sales of properties worth $1 million and over are up 102.2% in the past year, as wealthy urban dwellers purchase properties elsewhere to escape pandemic-related restrictions and social unrest.  The shift in the mix of homes sold toward more expensive properties has put considerable upward pressure on median prices, which are now up 15.5% in the past year versus a year-over-year gain of 6.7% in January.  Look for continued robust sales in the months ahead, although sales will eventually settle down due to a lack of supply.  In other news this morning on the employment front, initial jobless claims rose 31,000 last week to 742,000.  Meanwhile, continuing claims for regular benefits fell 429,000 to 6.372 million.  Finally, on the manufacturing front, the Philly Fed index fell to a still very high 26.3 in October from 32.3 in September, signaling ongoing improvement in the factory sector but at a less breakneck pace.

Click here for a PDF version. 
Posted on Thursday, November 19, 2020 @ 2:14 PM • Post Link Share: 
Print this post Printer Friendly
  Coronavirus High Frequency Data 11/19/2020
Posted Under: COVID-19

 

Sources: First Trust Advisors, Department of Labor, Redbook Research, Box Office Mojo,  Association of American Railroads, American Iron and Steel Institute,  Hotel News Now, Opentable, Transportation Security Administration, Energy Information Administration

1 Data for level and year ago level are YOY % changes.

2 Data is provided daily instead of weekly.

3 Data shows year-over-year seated diners at restaurants on the OpenTable network across all channels: online reservations, phone reservations, and walk-ins. % change month over month is the current reading minus the month ago reading.

Posted on Thursday, November 19, 2020 @ 2:00 PM • Post Link Share: 
Print this post Printer Friendly
  Housing Starts Increased 4.9% in October
Posted Under: Data Watch • Home Starts • Housing

 
Implications: New home construction continued to impress in October as single-family construction rose for the sixth month in a row, hitting the highest level since 2007.  Recent reports continue to illustrate the ongoing divergence between single-family and multi-unit construction, as the pandemic continues to shift buyer preferences away from dense cities and toward the more spacious suburbs.  Single-family construction has now made more than a full V-shaped recovery and sits 14.0% above its February pre-pandemic high.  Meanwhile, new multi-unit construction is down 34.1% over the same period.  The ongoing rebound in single-family construction is doubly important because each single-family unit adds much more to economic activity than each multi-family unit.  The recent rebound in starts is even more impressive considering that builders are dealing with multiple headwinds to construction.  While home builders have been classified as "essential workers" in most areas of the country, regulations still require fewer people per crew, dragging out project times. The good news is that the ongoing labor shortage in the construction industry seems to be slowly abating, with the 3-month average of job openings in that sector (the best measure given the volatility of the data) having peaked in July after rising consistently during the early stages of the pandemic.  It also looks like supply chains are healing, with prices for housing-related commodities like lumber well off the highs from earlier this year. Looking to the future, overall permits were unchanged in October.  However, the details show that single-family permits eked out a small gain, rising 0.6%. That marks the sixth consecutive gain for single-family permits, which are now 12.7% above the February pre-pandemic high.  As we head into the end of 2020, look for both overall and single-family starts to post the highest annual readings for any year since the crash in housing more than a decade ago.  We expect even higher highs in 2021.

Click here for a PDF Version.
Posted on Wednesday, November 18, 2020 @ 11:36 AM • Post Link Share: 
Print this post Printer Friendly
  Industrial Production Increased 1.1% in October
Posted Under: Data Watch • Industrial Production - Cap Utilization

 

Implications:  After briefly hitting a snag in September, industrial production regained its upward momentum in October, rising 1.1%.  Moreover, the readings in prior months were revised higher, and when included with the headline number boosted October's gain to 1.7%.  Industrial production has now made up 66.1% of the decline in activity seen during the height of COVID-19 lockdowns back in March and April, but still has a way to go.  We expect a continuing rebound in the factory-sector in the months ahead, and here is why. This morning's report on retail sales showed consumer spending up 4.9% from its February pre-pandemic level, and personal consumption spending on goods is up 7.7% from February to September. The pandemic has clearly shifted consumer preferences from services (like travel or attending sporting events) toward goods, and that represents a strong source of demand for US factory output going forward. Looking at the details, the biggest source of strength in October came from non-auto manufacturing, which rose 1.0%. Meanwhile, auto manufacturing slipped 0.1% in October.  Keep in mind that auto manufacturing has already made a full V-shaped recovery and is now up 6.9% from a year ago while non-auto production is still down 4.7% over the same period.  Look for monthly gains in non-auto manufacturing to continue to outstrip readings from the auto sector as the former series continues to make up ground.  The biggest drag on activity in October was mining, which fell 0.6% as declines in oil and gas extraction more than offset gains in ore and mineral extraction.  In other recent factory-related news, the Empire State Index, a measure of New York factory sentiment, fell to +6.3 in November from +10.5 in October. On the housing front this morning, the NAHB index, a gauge of homebuilder sentiment, rose to a new record high of 90 in November from 85 in October.  Look for housing starts in 2020 to post the highest annual reading for any year since the crash in housing more than a decade ago.

Click here  for PDF version


Posted on Tuesday, November 17, 2020 @ 12:07 PM • Post Link Share: 
Print this post Printer Friendly
  Retail Sales Rose 0.3% in October
Posted Under: Data Watch • Retail Sales

 

Implications: A solid report today on the US consumer. Retail sales rose 0.3% in October, coming in short of the consensus expected gain of 0.5%.  However, including upward revisions to prior months, retail sales grew 0.7%.  It's important to keep in mind how much progress has been made.  Back in April, retail sales were down 19.9% from a year ago; now, in October, retail sales are up 5.7% from October 2019.  For some more perspective: from February (before the COVID shutdowns started) to the bottom in April, retail sales fell 21.7%.  Now, with the increase in October, we are 4.9% higher than the February pre-COVID high-water mark, meaning retail sales have had a full V-shaped recovery and are now starting to trace out a checkmark. The gains in sales this month were not as broad-based as previous months with only five of thirteen major categories increasing in October. However, this shouldn't be surprising as its unrealistic to expect the rapid growth rates from early on when the economy began to reopen to be sustained indefinitely.  Non-store retailers led the way higher, up 3.1% on the month and now up 29.1% in the past year.  It was less than two years ago that non-store retailers surpassed general merchandise stores for share of consumer spending, and the pandemic – which brought us inside and online – has continued to accelerate the shift toward digital shopping.  Expect further gains in the months to come for non-store retailers as some states start to add back restrictions as COVID-19 cases continue to rise. "Core" sales, which exclude the most volatile categories of autos, building materials, and gas station sales, rose 0.1% in October, and are now up 5.3% from a year ago.  After a massive rebound in real GDP in the third quarter, Q4 real GDP so far looks like it is growing around 5%.  Also today on the inflation front, import prices declined 0.1% in October, with a 1.9% drop in fuel prices, which more than offset higher nonfuel prices.  Meanwhile, export prices increased 0.2%, led by agricultural exports, which rose 3.4%.  In the past year, import prices are down 1.0%, while export prices are down 1.6%.

Click here  for PDF version

Posted on Tuesday, November 17, 2020 @ 12:01 PM • Post Link Share: 
Print this post Printer Friendly
  Giving Thanks, Double Dip Unlikely
Posted Under: Double Dip • Employment • GDP • Markets • Monday Morning Outlook • Stocks • COVID-19

Give Thanks!  The US economy continues to heal.  Payrolls keep growing, unemployment claims - though still elevated - are shrinking, key measures of the manufacturing and service sectors remain well into positive territory, and, as this week should show, both retail sales and industrial production remain on an upward trajectory.

While some investors are concerned about the near-term outlook for the economy given the recent increase in cases of COVID-19, we have yet to see signs of a double-dip recession.  Yes, some locations have begun imposing new limits on economic activity, and others may follow.  But businesses have come a long way, learning how to adapt and move forward from the mid-March environment, back when dealing with COVID-19 was brand new.

Think about businesses built around people commuting to work or leaving the office and going out to lunch; those operations have already shrunk substantially, putting another decline of that magnitude virtually out of the picture.  Meanwhile, consumers have shifted their spending, generating jobs elsewhere.  For example, home improvements are on track to hit a calendar-year record high in 2020.  Housing starts will be the highest for any year since the crash in housing more than a decade ago. Warehousing & storage jobs are at a record high, as are courier & messenger jobs.

We don't have the data yet, but migration between states and cities appears to have picked up substantially in 2020, as people leave areas that have experienced either excessive violence or draconian pandemic-related lockdowns.  This is just another piece of evidence that businesses and individuals have found ways to continue being productive in the face of unprecedented events.  For this, and other reasons, we don't see a double-dip recession.

Imagine being told back at the beginning of 2020 that the world was about to be hit by a global pandemic that would lead to massive government-imposed shutdowns of business activity around the country.  Imagine being told that we were going into a sudden (and sharp) recession which would see the largest single-quarter decline in economic activity since the Great Depression.          

As an investor with that knowledge, what would you have done?  Would you bail out of the stock market completely, or go all-in?  We watched many run for cover as stocks fell sharply.

And yet, as of the close on Friday, the S&P 500 was up 11.0% year-to-date, and that doesn't include reinvested dividends.  The market is up for a number of reasons. 1) The S&P 500 includes many large tech companies that we could not have lived without, and many companies considered "essential." 2) The Federal Reserve pushed the discount rate down significantly.  3) Government stimulus helped support consumer spending.  4) Companies adapted and lowered expenses, and 5) Many people accepted the risk of behaving somewhat normally as they looked at the data surrounding the virus.

The resilience of the economy and corporations has rarely been tested as it was this year.  This experience, combined with recent announcements about vaccines and therapies, will lead to further economic growth.  When a business had no idea how long it would be before a vaccine for COVID-19 was available, it made sense to postpone some investments indefinitely.  But when the distribution of an effective vaccine looks like it's around the corner, they can begin to take action on long-term plans even before the economy is fully healed.  Much of the uncertainty – be it about vaccines, the Supreme Court, or the elections - has now more or less passed.

Some uncertainty remains, it's never fully gone, but when we compare the unknowns of today to that of just seven months ago, the risk to remaining invested in great companies has substantially declined.  Give thanks for progress. A double-dip, while always possible, is unlikely. 

Brian S. Wesbury - Chief Economist
Robert Stein, CFA – Deputy Chief Economist

Click here  for PDF version

Posted on Monday, November 16, 2020 @ 11:23 AM • Post Link Share: 
Print this post Printer Friendly
  M2 and C&I Loan Growth
Posted Under: Government • Fed Reserve

 

Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve FRED Database

Posted on Monday, November 16, 2020 @ 8:48 AM • Post Link Share: 
Print this post Printer Friendly
  The Producer Price Index Rose 0.3% in October
Posted Under: Data Watch • Inflation • PPI

 

Implications:  Producer prices continued to rise in October, and are up at the fastest six-month annualized pace in nearly a decade at 4.7%, a sharp rebound from the steep price declines earlier this year.  Prices for both goods and services pushed the index higher, continuing the relatively broad-based movement in inflation over recent months.  Digging into the details shows that a key contributor to the October rise came from final demand goods, up 0.5%.  In particular, food prices had an outsized impact, as rising costs for vegetables, meat, and eggs pushed the food index up 2.4% on the month.   Energy prices rose 0.8% in October, led higher by rising costs for gasoline, which were partially offset by declining electricity prices.  Strip out the typically volatile food and energy categories, and "core" producer prices rose 0.1% in October.   Within core prices, transportation and warehousing were key movers in October, with long-distance motor carrying costs increasing 1.9% as a continued shortage of delivery drivers put upward price pressure on rates.  With the lumber shortage continuing, as well, the index for hardware, building materials, and supplies retailing also remains a standout, rising 7.3% in October and up at a staggering 174.5% annualized rate in the past three months.  Core producer prices are up a modest 1.1% over the past twelve months, but expect that to move higher in the months ahead.  Supply constraints, limitations on activity, and the general economic disruptions related to COVID-19 will continue to muddy the data for the foreseeable future, but what is clear is the massive increase in the M2 money supply, up 24.2% in the past year.  Once the dust finally settles – and it eventually will – we expect inflation to trend back to 2% and then higher.  The Federal Reserve is loose and, as it has made abundantly clear, plans to stay that way for the foreseeable future. Meanwhile, businesses operating at limited capacity will remain a headwind for economic activity.  The result will eventually be too much money chasing too few goods (and services), meaning higher – but not hyper – inflation.  Further down the pipeline, prices for intermediate demand processed goods rose 0.3% in October, while intermediate demand unprocessed goods rose 2.6%.  Both intermediate demand categories continue to show prices broadly lower compared to year-ago levels.  The data are starting to shift higher, though, tracking the emergence of the economy from what was a severe – but short – recession. We still have a long way to go to get back to where we were at the start of 2020, but the initial steps of recovery are under way, and we expect growth will march onward through the close of this year and beyond.

Click here  for PDF version

Posted on Friday, November 13, 2020 @ 2:46 PM • Post Link Share: 
Print this post Printer Friendly
  COVID-19 Tracker 11/12/2020
Posted Under: COVID-19

The narrative around COVID-19 is constantly changing, so we thought we would put a one-pager out once a week with some of the charts and data that we think are important to keep an eye on to help gain some perspective.

Click here to view the one page report.

Posted on Thursday, November 12, 2020 @ 3:40 PM • Post Link Share: 
Print this post Printer Friendly

These posts were prepared by First Trust Advisors L.P., and reflect the current opinion of the authors. They are based upon sources and data believed to be accurate and reliable. Opinions and forward looking statements expressed are subject to change without notice. This information does not constitute a solicitation or an offer to buy or sell any security.
Search Posts
 COVID-19 Tracking Information:
 PREVIOUS POSTS
Coronavirus High Frequency Data 11/12/20
The Consumer Price Index was Unchanged in October
Coronavirus High Frequency Data 11/10/20
No Wave is Good News For Stocks
M2 and C&I Loan Growth
Nonfarm Payrolls Rose 638,000 in October
COVID-19 Tracker 11/05/2020
Not Much to Miss
Coronavirus High Frequency Data 11/05/20
2020: A Vote for Peace and Quiet
Archive
Skip Navigation Links.
Expand 20202020
Expand 20192019
Expand 20182018
Expand 20172017
Expand 20162016
Expand 20152015
Expand 20142014
Expand 20132013
Expand 20122012
Expand 20112011
Expand 20102010

Search by Topic
Skip Navigation Links.

 
The information presented is not intended to constitute an investment recommendation for, or advice to, any specific person. By providing this information, First Trust is not undertaking to give advice in any fiduciary capacity within the meaning of ERISA, the Internal Revenue Code or any other regulatory framework. Financial professionals are responsible for evaluating investment risks independently and for exercising independent judgment in determining whether investments are appropriate for their clients.
First Trust Portfolios L.P.  Member SIPC and FINRA. (Form CRS)   •  First Trust Advisors L.P. (Form CRS)
Home |  Important Legal Information |  Privacy Policy |  California Privacy Policy |  Business Continuity Plan |  FINRA BrokerCheck
Copyright © 2020 All rights reserved.