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   Brian Wesbury
Chief Economist
 
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   Bob Stein
Deputy Chief Economist
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  The ISM Manufacturing Index Declined to 48.2 in November
Posted Under: Inflation • ISM
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Implications:  Manufacturing activity weakened again in November, as the ISM Manufacturing index missed consensus expectations and declined to a four-month low of 48.2.  This makes nine consecutive months the index has been below 50, continuing a pattern that stretched all of 2023 and 2024.  Though many believed the downturn was over when the index briefly rose above 50 in January and February, the subsequent streak of contractionary readings indicates the sector continues to face headwinds.  Looking at the details, just four of the eighteen major manufacturing categories reported growth in October, while nearly triple (eleven) reported contraction.  The overall decline was driven by weakening demand, softer employment conditions, and faster supplier deliveries.  The new orders index – which returned to expansion territory briefly back in August – continues to struggle for traction, as the index fell to a four-month low of 47.4.  Order books were already weak heading into this year, and now survey comments blame trade uncertainty for the weakness as many customer orders have been placed on pause until stability returns.  This has caused companies to look for ways to reduce overhead, most notably through their hiring efforts.  The employment index fell deeper into contraction at 44.0, with only two major manufacturing categories (Computer & Electronic Products and Machinery) reporting an increase in employment in November versus twelve reporting a decline.  One component that weighed on the headline index – but is not necessarily negative – was a sharp drop in the supplier deliveries index, from 54.2 to 49.3. Faster deliveries typically signal fewer supply chain bottlenecks, even though they mechanically reduce the headline reading.  Meanwhile, it appears that inflation pressures have begun to stabilize, with the price index ticking up to 58.5 from 58.0 after declining for four consecutive months.  The 58.5 reading is below the recent peak of 69.8 in April, and well below the levels during the post-COVID inflation surge.  Given the slow growth in the M2 measure of the money supply over the last 3+ years, we expect inflation to trend lower in the coming year. 

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Posted on Monday, December 1, 2025 @ 1:33 PM • Post Link Print this post Printer Friendly
  Inflation Does Not Fix Anything, Especially Debt
Posted Under: CPI • GDP • Government • Inflation • Monday Morning Outlook • Fed Reserve • Interest Rates • Spending • Taxes • COVID-19

In the ten years prior to the onset of COVID, the consumer prices index rose at an average annual rate of 1.7%. Since the onset of COVID the overall CPI has risen at a 4.2% annual rate. Inflation peaked at about 9.0% back in 2022 but is still hovering between 2.5 and 3.0%, which is above the Federal Reserve’s official target of 2.0%.

There are reasons to believe inflation may decline in the year ahead. These include slower growth in the M2 measure of the money supply. While most ignore it, M2 surged 2020-21 signaling the high inflation to come. Since April 2022, it has only grown 2%, signaling the moderation of inflation that the US has seen.

Inflation pushed home prices higher, but the rate of increase has slowed sharply. This could possibly be related to the strict enforcement of immigration laws. Some focus on the fact that fewer workers in construction trades could push up labor costs but forget that it also reduces demand for the existing stock of rental units.

However, there are also some reasons to be concerned about inflation over the medium-term and beyond. It appears that the political consensus in favor of keeping inflation low has eroded. Some economists believe targeting a higher inflation rate (either explicitly or quietly) would give more room for potential growth to expand, while others look back on the pre-COVID trend as risky. With low inflation, interest rates are also lower, meaning the Fed has less room to cut rates in an economic emergency.

If inflation and rates were generally higher, they would have more room to cut rates in another crisis. Perhaps this is why the Fed is considering relaxing capital rules on banks that could free them to lend more aggressively, which would boost the money supply. We have long said that “abundant reserves” are like storing gasoline near your water heater. Cutting capital and liquidity ratios would release some of those reserves.

And this brings us to the most dangerous reason to support inflation. Some think with the national debt at $38 trillion, higher inflation would reduce the real value of that debt and make it easier to pay off with inflated dollars.

But we think policymakers would be making a big mistake if they don’t wrestle inflation back down and keep it there. Higher interest rates increase the cost of capital, while inflation erodes growth. The Reagan boom happened, in part, because Paul Volcker ran a tight monetary ship which brought inflation down after the high-inflation, and slow growth, 1970s.

Moreover, even though the national debt is officially $38 trillion, the unfunded liabilities in Social Security and Medicare – the present value of benefit promises to future retirees over and above the expected revenue in these programs – are roughly $76 trillion. And this form of debt is inflation indexed, in the sense that Social Security benefits are directly indexed to inflation and Medicare spending rises if overall inflation is higher.

So even if higher inflation can temporarily surprise Treasury bondholders, diluting their bonds’ value, as shorter-term debt is rolled over, the US will have to pay higher rates on new debt, while not fixing the long-term entitlement problem.

Here's a better idea and one that has proven successful in the past: have the Fed focused on price stability while Congress and the President take measures (together or separately) to get our fiscal house in order. On the latter front, there are some tentative green shoots. In the past twelve months the federal deficit has been $1.8 trillion versus $2.0 trillion in the twelve months ending in October 2024.

That’s why the next few months of budget battles are important. Will we continue to make (gradual) progress against the deficit? Let’s hope so. In the meantime, President Trump is contemplating who he will pick as the next Fed chief. If the next leader is willing to risk higher long-term inflation to try to use monetary policy to fix our long-term fiscal issues, that would be a negative sign.

The US is at a serious inflection point. While many seem to think inflation can help fix it, we don’t see how.

Brian S. Wesbury – Chief Economist

Robert Stein, CFA – Deputy Chief Economist

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Posted on Monday, December 1, 2025 @ 11:58 AM • Post Link Print this post Printer Friendly
  New Orders for Durable Goods Rose 0.5% in September
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Implications:  Durable goods orders ended the third quarter on a strong note, rising 0.5% in September, with nearly every major category showing gains.  Yes, orders for defense aircraft soared 30.9% for the month, but orders excluding transportation rose a very healthy 0.6% on the month and every major category increased.  The rise in non-transportation orders in September was led by electrical equipment (+1.5%), primary metals (+1.4%), and fabricated metal products (+0.5%), while computers & electronic products (+0.5%) and machinery (+0.1%) also increased.  The most important number in today’s release, core shipments – a key input for business investment in the calculation of GDP – rose 0.9% in September, the largest monthly increase since January of 2023.  For the third quarter as a whole, they were up at a 5.0% annualized rate versus the Q2 average, the strongest quarterly growth since mid-2022.  While employment and inflation remain under the spotlight as the Federal Reserve looks very likely to continue the rate cut process at the next meeting in December, we will also be paying close attention to how businesses – and consumers – continue to respond to the certainty now in place from the passage of the tax bill earlier this year, which should enhance the competitiveness of US companies.  In other recent news, the Richmond Fed Index – a measure of factory sentiment in that region - fell to -15.0 in November from -4.0 in October, while the Chicago Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) – where readings above 50 signal growth – declined to 36.3 in November from 43.8 in October, signaling activity in that region continues to contract. On the housing front, pending home sales (which are contracts on existing homes) jumped 1.9% in October following a 0.1% rise in September, suggesting existing home sales (counted at closing) will modestly rise in November.  Finally, initial jobless claims declined 4,000 last week to 216,000; continuing claims rose 7,000 to 1.960 million. Pairing these figures with other data on employment suggests modest continued job growth in November. 

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Posted on Wednesday, November 26, 2025 @ 10:55 AM • Post Link Print this post Printer Friendly
  Retail Sales Rose 0.2% in September
Posted Under: Data Watch • Retail Sales
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Implications:  Growth in retail sales lost some momentum in September, capping off what had otherwise been a solid quarter of spending for US consumers.  Looking at the headline, overall sales rose 0.2% in September – the fourth consecutive monthly increase – but lagged the consensus expected gain of 0.4%.  Sales rose in eight out of the thirteen major categories for the month, led by a 2.0% jump at gasoline stations.  The biggest drag came from nonstore retailers (think internet and mail-order), where sales declined 0.7% in September after a strong 1.6% increase in August. Combined with declines at clothing stores (-0.7%) and sporting goods retailers (-2.5%), the pullback likely reflects a return to more typical spending levels after back-to-school shopping boosted the prior month.  “Core” sales, which exclude volatile categories such as autos, building materials, and gas stations, increased by 0.1% in September but were revised slightly downward for previous months.  The core number is crucial for estimating GDP, because when it calculates GDP the government uses other sources for autos, building materials, and gas, not the retail report.  Despite the weakness in September, these sales were up at a 6.3% annual rate in Q3 compared to the Q2 average, the fastest quarterly pace since 2023.  In turn, it looks like Real GDP grew at a nearly 3.5% annualized pace in the third quarter.  Keep in mind, however, that a monetary policy tight enough to bring inflation down is also tight enough to bring economic growth down.  One category we will be watching closely for this is at restaurants & bars – the only glimpse we get at services in the report, which make up the bulk of consumer spending.  That category rose a solid 0.7% in September following a 1.0% jump in August.  Through the first nine months of the year, these sales are up at a 7.7% annualized rate, above the 2.9% annualized increase for overall sales.  While this report appears out of step with some other signs of a slowing economy, we remain cautious given the potential delayed effects of tighter monetary policy.

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Posted on Tuesday, November 25, 2025 @ 11:21 AM • Post Link Print this post Printer Friendly
  The Producer Price Index (PPI) Rose 0.3% in September
Posted Under: Data Watch • Inflation • PPI
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Implications:  Producer prices rose 0.3% in September, matching consensus expectations, and the underlying details continue to show a large degree of volatility.  Among the typically volatile food and energy categories, energy prices jumped 3.5% in September – the largest one-month increase in two years – while food prices rose 1.1%.  Excluding these categories, “core” producer prices rose a much more modest 0.1% in September and are up 2.6% versus a year ago, the smallest twelve-month increase in more than a year.  While the Federal Reserve has a few more data points to be delivered before the next FOMC meeting on December 9th-10th, we expect they will cut for a third consecutive meeting.  The Fed remains concerned that tariffs will push prices higher at some point, but the data have not fully cooperated.  In the past six months, goods prices – which are most exposed to higher import costs – are up at a notable 4.4% annual rate, but that rise has been largely offset by a moderation in services prices, up at a 1.5% rate over the same time period.  Taken together, producer prices are up at a 2.3% annual rate over the past six months, not far above the 2% inflation target.  As we noted in prior reports, tariffs can raise prices for tariffed items, but they leave less money for consumers left over for other goods and services. They shuffle the deckchairs on the inflation ship, not how high or low the ship sits in the water.  That’s up to the money supply, which is up only 2.1% since April 2022.  While volatility may continue month-to-month, we believe monetary tightness will keep inflation relatively subdued and that there is room for modest rate cuts to continue into 2026.  In other news this morning on the housing front, the national Case-Shiller index rose 0.2% in September while the FHFA measure of home prices was unchanged.  Compared to a year ago, Case-Shiller home prices are up 1.3% while FHFA prices are up 1.7%.  While strict immigration enforcement may raise construction costs, by making more older rentals available at lower cost it puts downward pressure on prices for the existing stock of homes.

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Posted on Tuesday, November 25, 2025 @ 10:42 AM • Post Link Print this post Printer Friendly
  No Home Price "Collapse"
Posted Under: CPI • GDP • Government • Home Sales • Home Starts • Housing • Inflation • Monday Morning Outlook • Interest Rates • Spending • Taxes

Many of you may have recently seen a chart circulating on the internet suggesting a nationwide collapse in home prices is on the way, that we are in the “biggest bubble in history,” the collapse is “inevitable and nothing can stop it.”  The claim is that since home prices adjusted for general price inflation are even higher than they were in the previous bubble that peaked nearly twenty years ago, the coming crash “will be even worse.”

Just to refresh our recollections, the bursting of the last bubble led to a massive decline in home prices, with the national Case-Shiller home price index down 27% in the five years ending in early 2012.  An even larger decline today could be devasting for the US economy.

But we don’t think this is going to happen.

First, it’s important to recognize that one of the reasons housing is so unaffordable is that we have a set of government policies that boost home prices while reducing after-tax incomes.  These include state and local regulations that stifle home construction, government-sponsored enterprises that artificially boost mortgage lending while not boosting housing supply, and a fiscal spending and tax system that leaves potential homeowners with less ability to accumulate a down-payment or meet monthly income requirements.  When government at all levels spends more than 35% of GDP and the overall cost of government – including regulations, for example – is roughly 50% of GDP, there is less left over for what workers actually want versus what the government wants us to have.

Second, the same analyst now making apocalyptic warnings about the housing market did so in June 2019, since which home prices are up 57% overall or 7.6% per year, while the overall consumer price index was up 3.9% per year.

Third, there is a key difference between the bubble twenty years ago and the current environment.  We had massive over-building in the prior bubble, with housing starts averaging 1.9 million per year in 2002-06, versus an average of 1.5 million in the past five years.

To see the importance of housing supply, imagine a hypothetical world in which the government decided to ban all new housing construction.  What would we expect to happen to home prices relative to the general consumer price index?  Obviously, home prices would go way up due to limited supply.  Home prices would also be higher relative to wages.

Clearly, this would be bad policy; we would never want the government to ban home building.  But if it did so the rise in home prices relative to overall prices and wages would not be a “bubble,” it’s what the remaining market forces would require: higher home prices to reflect housing scarcity unless and until the government ended the idiotic ban on home building.  

In a way, that’s what has happened, but not as extreme.  Government has limited homebuilding through environmental rules, zoning, and “affordability” concerns (the latter of which end up making home less affordable!).  And so homes are scarcer than they should be and home prices have gone up relative to the price of other goods and services.  In addition, with so much land unavailable for development, a larger population means higher prices, as well.   

One issue to take note of in the housing market is that strict immigration enforcement so far this year is probably putting modest downward pressure on prices. Case-Shiller home prices were down 0.7% in August versus January.  Yes, strict enforcement should lift the cost of building new homes as the labor supply gets tighter.  But it also makes more rental units available for natives and legal immigrants, which should put downward pressure on rents and let potential home buyers wait longer before they buy.  In turn, that means downward pressure on the price of existing homes. 

None of this is to say all is well with the US economy.  The stock market looks priced for perfection and is underestimating recession risk.  But a housing collapse is highly unlikely and a collapse even greater than the last one even more so.

Brian S. Wesbury – Chief Economist

Robert Stein, CFA – Deputy Chief Economist

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Posted on Monday, November 24, 2025 @ 11:27 AM • Post Link Print this post Printer Friendly
  Three On Thursday - U.S. Natural Gas Exports Keep Hitting Records
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In this week’s “Three on Thursday,” we examine the rapid growth of U.S. natural gas exports. Natural gas has become a cornerstone of America’s energy landscape—reliable, flexible, and far cleaner than coal or oil, emitting up to 50% less CO₂ when used for electricity generation. For further insight, click the link below.

Click here to view the report

Posted on Thursday, November 20, 2025 @ 1:42 PM • Post Link Print this post Printer Friendly
  Existing Home Sales Increased 1.2% in October
Posted Under: Data Watch • Government • Home Sales • Housing • Interest Rates
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Implications:  Existing home sales posted a modest gain in October to hit an eight-month high, though activity continues to trudge along at a disappointing pace. The current rate of 4.100 million remains near the lowest since the aftermath of the Great Financial Crisis, and well below the roughly 5.250 million annual pace that existed pre-COVID (let alone the 6.500 million pace during COVID).  That said, affordability has been improving in several notable ways. First, 30-year mortgage rates have been trending lower since May and now sit around 6.3%, near the lowest rate since 2023. Meanwhile, the median price of an existing home is up just 2.1% versus a year ago. It looks like the inventory of existing homes rising 10.9% in the past year has helped put a lid on prices as more options become available for buyers.  That has helped push up the months’ supply of homes (how long it would take to sell existing inventory at the current very slow sales pace) to 4.4 in October, a considerable improvement versus the past few years, though still below the benchmark of 5.0 that the National Association of Realtors uses to denote a normal market. One last positive to note is that aggregate wage growth (hourly earnings plus hours worked) has begun to consistently outpace median home price gains over the past year for the first time since 2023, which improves affordability. That said, some challenges remain. Many existing homeowners remain reluctant to sell due to a “mortgage lock-in” phenomenon, after buying or refinancing at much lower rates before 2022.  This remains an impediment to activity by limiting future existing sales (and inventories). Existing home sales also face significant competition from new homes, where in many cases developers are buying down mortgage rates to compete and move inventory (when interest rates are higher, firms, including homebuilders, forego more potential earnings by holding onto inventories). Despite these cross currents, underlying fundamentals have improved recently, which should contribute to a modest rebound in sales. In other recent housing news, the NAHB Index (a measure of homebuilder sentiment) rose to 38 in November from 37 in October.  Keep in mind a reading below 50 signals a greater number of builders view conditions as poor versus good, now the nineteenth consecutive month that has been the case. On the manufacturing front, the Empire State Index – a measure of factory sentiment in the New York region – rose to a stronger than expected +18.7 in November from +10.7 in October. Meanwhile, its counterpart the Philadelphia Fed Index also rebounded to -1.7 in November from -12.8 in October.

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Posted on Thursday, November 20, 2025 @ 12:11 PM • Post Link Print this post Printer Friendly
  Nonfarm Payrolls Increased 119,000 in September
Posted Under: Data Watch • Employment • Government • Housing • Fed Reserve • Interest Rates
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Implications:  The first official employment report released since the federal government shutdown showed the labor market was largely on firm footing in September.  However, it’s important to recognize that this information is now a little stale and new reports on jobless claims in October and early November suggest a slowdown in job growth. Initial jobless claims came in at 220,000 last week, roughly unchanged from where they were in late September before the shutdown; however, continuing claims came in at 1.974 million, about 50,000 higher than before the shutdown.  Regarding September itself, nonfarm payrolls rose 119,000 in September, beating the consensus expected 51,000 and coming in higher than the prediction of any economics group filing a forecast with Bloomberg.  Notably, even with a downward revision of 33,000 to prior months, the net gain of 87,000 still beat the consensus forecast.  These figures are impressive in light of strict enforcement of immigration laws, as well as uncertainty around trade policy and tariffs.  Meanwhile, civilian employment, an alternative measure of jobs that includes small-business start-ups, increased 251,000, while the labor force (people who are either working or looking for work) grew 470,000.  This report also shows signs of strict immigration enforcement, with native-born employment up 2.6 million compared to January while foreign-born employment is down 1.0 million.  However, not all the news on the job market in September was good.  We like to follow payrolls excluding three sectors: government, education & health services, and leisure & hospitality, all of which are heavily influenced by government spending and regulation (including COVID lockdowns and re-openings).  This measure of “core payrolls” declined 9,000 in September.  The unemployment rate ticked up to 4.4%, but that was the result of more people willing to look for work, so it’s not a negative sign.  On the inflation front, average hourly earnings grew a modest 0.2% in September and are up only an annualized 3.6% in the past six months, which may give the Federal Reserve an additional reason to cut rates again at the meeting in December.  Finally, the Trump Administration continued to make progress reducing federal payrolls, which when we exclude the Post Office and Census workers are down 85,000 versus January, the largest eight-month drop on record going back to at least 1990.  In time, we think a smaller government should pay dividends in the form of faster economic growth.

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Posted on Thursday, November 20, 2025 @ 11:28 AM • Post Link Print this post Printer Friendly
  The Trade Deficit in Goods and Services Came in at $59.6 Billion in August
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Implications: With the government finally reopened, economic data is beginning to flow again—and today brought August’s trade numbers. The U.S. trade deficit narrowed to $59.6 billion, driven almost entirely by a sharp pullback in imports, which fell $18.4 billion, while exports edged up a modest $0.2 billion. The President may see this as a win. After all, the core aim of Trump’s trade agenda has been straightforward: fewer imports and more domestic production. But whether that’s what we’re actually seeing is far less certain. The decline in trade volumes could signal a real shift in global supply chains—reshoring, decoupling, and rising U.S. output. Or it could be pointing to something less encouraging: softer demand both at home and abroad. At this point, the data don’t offer a clean answer. Employment growth has slowed, particularly in goods-producing industries. For a drop in imports to translate into a lasting economic win, it needs to be accompanied by a clear rebound in U.S. manufacturing and investment—and so far, that resurgence remains tentative. Meanwhile, the GDP math has flipped. Imports subtract from GDP, and their surge in Q1 weighed heavily on overall growth. Net exports alone shaved roughly five percentage points off the growth rate, leaving real GDP contracting at a 0.7% annualized pace. But as those front-loaded imports peaked in March and receded in Q2, trade became a tailwind, helping lift growth in the second quarter.  It now looks like it net exports will not have nearly as large an impact on GDP as it did in the first half of the year.  At the same time, the landscape of global trade continues to evolve. China, once the dominant exporter to the U.S., has slipped to a distant third behind Mexico and Canada. And in today’s report, the dollar value of U.S. petroleum exports once again exceeded imports, marking the 42nd consecutive month of America being a net exporter of petroleum products. In other recent news, construction spending rose 0.2% in August, as a large increase in homebuilding fully offset a decline in manufacturing projects.

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Posted on Wednesday, November 19, 2025 @ 1:36 PM • Post Link 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.
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