Updated March 11, 2014
There are thousands of statistical methods that are used to measure the health of the economy but one that I find eye-catching is the interestingly named Citi Economic Surprise Index (CESI). This metric is calculated daily on a three month rolling basis and measures a combination of both qualitative and quantitative macroeconomic indicators of economic news using weighted historical standard deviations of economic data surprises (i.e. when economists project that a metric will change by a certain amount and the metric changes by far more in a positive or negative direction with respect to the anticipated consensus level). A positive Surprise Index suggests that economic data releases have been generally better than the consensus of economists and a negative Surprise Index suggests the opposite, that economic data releases have been generally worse than consensus. As many of us observe, markets frequently move most substantially when macroeconomic data surprises to the upside or downside. One recent example was the Philadelphia Fed's manufacturing survey for February; economists polled expected a 7.3 reading however, the actual reading was negative 6.3 showing that conditions were far worse than expected. This would result in a negative Surprise Index number. Please keep in mind that a positive or negative index value has nothing to do with the actual health of the economy, rather it reflects the relationship between expectations and reality.
There are thousands of statistical methods that are used to measure the health of the economy but one that I find eye-catching is the interestingly named Citi Economic Surprise Index (CESI). This metric is calculated daily on a three month rolling basis and measures a combination of both qualitative and quantitative macroeconomic indicators of economic news using weighted historical standard deviations of economic data surprises (i.e. when economists project that a metric will change by a certain amount and the metric changes by far more in a positive or negative direction with respect to the anticipated consensus level). A positive Surprise Index suggests that economic data releases have been generally better than the consensus of economists and a negative Surprise Index suggests the opposite, that economic data releases have been generally worse than consensus. As many of us observe, markets frequently move most substantially when macroeconomic data surprises to the upside or downside. One recent example was the Philadelphia Fed's manufacturing survey for February; economists polled expected a 7.3 reading however, the actual reading was negative 6.3 showing that conditions were far worse than expected. This would result in a negative Surprise Index number. Please keep in mind that a positive or negative index value has nothing to do with the actual health of the economy, rather it reflects the relationship between expectations and reality.
Citi is not the only promoter of
this metric. A 2012 paper
by Chiara Scotti at the Federal Reserve Board examines the construction and use
of a surprise index which is calculated using this equation:
The indicators used by the author to
construct the Surprise Index for each nation in the study are as follows:
1.) First GDP release for each
quarter.
2.) Monthly industrial production.
3.) Number of employees on
non-agricultural payrolls or unemployment.
4.) Retail sales.
5.) Measure of the manufacturing
sector (i.e. ISM (U.S.), Composite PMI (Europe), PMI (United Kingdom and
Canada) and the Tankan Survey (Japan).
6.) BEA personal income for the
United States.
Announcement surprises are
calculated as the difference between the actual announcement data and the
Bloomberg expectations divided by their sample standard deviation.
Now, let's look at the Surprise
Index calculated by the author for all five economies individually plus an
aggregate of all five economies (solid lines), comparing it to the CESI (dashed
lines) for the time period between 2003 and 2012:
Notice that in every case but Japan,
the Surprise Index was strongly negative by the middle of the Great Recession
as a result of the fact that economists were far less pessimistic about the
outcome of the crisis than the actual data showed. In the case of Japan,
you'll even notice that the index dropped sharply in April 27, 2011 as the
actual number for industrial production was far lower than expected following
the March 2011 earthquake. That shows us the power of this index.
Generally, economists lag the market. As the economy enters the
growth portion of a cycle, economists tend to be overly pessimistic from their
recent experience, expecting that many measures of the economy will not perform
as well as they do in reality. This results in a positive Surprise Index
reading. On the other end of the cycle, as the economy enters the
contraction portion of a cycle, economists maintain the optimism that was built
up during the "good times" and the real world decline in economic
metrics results in a negative Surprise Index reading. That is why the
Surprise metric can be an interesting and powerful tool for predicting where
the economy is headed.
Now, let's look at Citi's recent
Surprise Index data starting with the United States:
Notice that the Surprise Index has
fallen sharply over the past few weeks. This shows us that economists are
tending to be overly optimistic when compared to economic metrics that have not
met consensus. This could be giving us a hint that an economic
slowdown is in the works. Interestingly, Citi economists have ramped down
their economic growth prospects from 1.5 to 2 percent to 1 percent.
Here's Citi's recent Surprise Index
for Europe:
The Surprise
Index for the period throughout the month of November was frequently negative,
showing that economic data releases were worse than consensus. The
Surprise Index rose during December and January with signs of an economy that
was improving more rapidly than economists expected, however, the index has fallen considerably from highs seen in early 2014 as was the case for the United States.
Lastly, here's Citi's Surprise Index
for China:
China's index has been very volatile
over the past three months, dropping sharply in November as economic data was
worse than economists projected. During December and January, the
Surprise Index was in positive territory as the economy outperformed
expectations, however it fell sharply in mid-January and then rose very sharply
in February as data showed stronger than expected growth in exports and a
rising trade surplus with the United States. As March has rolled on, the Surprise Index for China has fallen as the Chinese economy, once again, is under performing expectations.
It certainly appears that the economy could be in for a bit of a rough ride over the coming months if we include the indices for Europe and Japan. While the market sages like to finger the recent winter weather for the recent poor economic showing, the problems may be more structural than anticipated at this point.
The aptly named Surprise Index is a
fascinating measure of the economy and by using trends established over the
past decade, can provide us with some sense of where the economy may be headed. In any case, it's a measure of the economy that bears watching.
I would like to throw in a thought about the UK. The economic news flowing from the UK has been spun to give the impression of robust growth. In general the UK economy is not particularly competitive, over-weighted in the service sector and global finance it is vulnerable to problems that surface throughout the world. As usual we must look deeper into the facts to see what is really happening. It now appears much of the recent strength comes from the fact that thousands of Britons are receiving compensation for Payment Protection Insurance (PPI). Most people reading about the pickup in Britain's economy have never even heard of the PPI. The total paid out so far, £13.3bn or about 22 billion American dollars has been a huge economic boost to the 63 million people in Britain. More about how this "helicopter money" has created the recent bump in growth in the article below,
ReplyDeletehttp://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2014/02/uk-economy-flood-of-questions.html