A quick survey of key economic indicators for the U.S. Economy may indicate that some of the downward drivers may be paring back more than expected, which could either indicate a reversal may be in the offing or we are on the brink of a double dip recession.
Durable Goods Orders: Durable Goods orders are to be released on June 24th and the consensus average is a -0.5% change. Durable Goods orders for April released on 5/28 was an upside surprise (new Orders expected 0.0% change vs. Actual 1.9%), and in April released for March were an upside surprise too (declined less than expected). If the underlying trend in Durable Goods is less negative than what economists are expecting, it may suggest that industrial production and capital spending situation may be a little bit better than expected coming up into the close of the second quarter of 2009.
Consumer Confidence & Consumer Sentiment: Both Consumer Confidence (Conference Board) and Consumer Sentiment (University of Michigan) where upside surprises (upside surprise in April too). Consumer spending is the heart of the U.S. Economy, representing 2/3rd of the economy.
Retail Sales: Although overall Retail sales were slightly below consensus, Retail Sales ex-Auto was slightly better than expected.
Inflation: May Headline Inflation rate was lower than expected, while Core Inflation came in right on the mark.
Employment: May Non Farm Employment was less negative than expected, while the Unemployment rate was slightly higher than expected. Numbers released in May for April also showed a better than expected Non-Farm Payroll situation.
Given the fact that First Quarter GDP was a little worse than Consensus expectation, the overall economic scenario painted by these indicators may suggest that a bottom could be in sight. It is too early to call a turnaround since GDP still has a negative trend, although the trend seems to be decelerating. At the very least we can expect overall 2Q to perform better than 1Q. This seems to align with Prof. Nouriel Roubini’s January prediction (first quarter 2009: -5%; second quarter 2009: -4%; third quarter 2009: -2.5%; fourth quarter 2009: -1%--adding up to a yearly real GDP growth of -3.4% for the U.S. in 2009). Although now "Dr. Doom" Roubini is raising the prospect of a Double-Dip recession, as he thinks that not everything is in alignment for a significant reversal of the recovery trend. Hopefully he is underestimating the impact of all that stimulus money or overestimating the fallout of the public debt burden, because if we are indeed looking at a Double-Dip recession, it will get a lot worse before it gets better.
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