Updated July 2014
While the market focuses on the ISM Manufacturing monthly data, the Insittute for Supply Management also tracks another interesting statistic that is less followed by the mainstream media that provides business sentiment about the expected direction of price changes in the economy.
While the market focuses on the ISM Manufacturing monthly data, the Insittute for Supply Management also tracks another interesting statistic that is less followed by the mainstream media that provides business sentiment about the expected direction of price changes in the economy.
From FRED, here is a graph showing the ISM Manufacturing
Prices Index from 1980 to the present:
Notice how whenever there is a
recession (or shortly thereafter), the manufacturing sector anticipates very
low inflationary pressures? It's all in the supply - demand mantra that
determines prices in the marketplace.
Now, let's focus in on the period
from 2002 to the present:
In general, the ISM Prices Index
since 2012 shows that manufacturing executives surveyed generally do not expect
high levels of inflation with the prices index being at its lowest levels since
the depths of the Great Recession. Inflationary pressures are also
expected to be very low compared to most of the period between 2002 and 2008.
Why is this the case, particularly
given the substantial expansion of the monetary supply by the Federal Reserve
since 2008? This graph might give us a clue:
In May 2014, manufacturers'
sales reached $498 million. At its peak in July 2008 just as the Great
Depression took hold, manufacturers' sales hit $487.114 million. Over the
four and a half year period since the pre-Great Recession peak, American
manufacturers have seen sales rise by a paltry $11 million or 2.25 percent.
You will also notice that since May 2012 manufacturing sales have
been in a nearly no-growth situation, rising by only $21 million over 24 months.
This is exactly the point in time when America's manufacturers dropped
their expectations for inflationary pressures.
While the American manufacturing
sector plays a less important role in economic growth than it did in the past,
it is often provides us clues of what is to come for the economy. In general,
economists note that trends in manufacturing foretell trends in the overall
economy. As we can see from the ISM Manufacturing data, inflationary
pressures are low, likely because the growth rate in the manufacturing sector
has been so modest for so long. This suggests that economic growth is
likely to be modest at best as this "recovery" grinds on.
The whole concept of economic growth is based on an ever growing trend of year over year increased production. At times we see a sector rotation such as computer sales increase when clothing falls, but overall we seek numbers that reflect an upward and onward slope. History shows that such trends falter when they become overdone and unsustainable. Much of what has been done in recent years has acted as a "artificial tailwind" but this is not a normal state and cannot be sustained. The post below ask what happens when this momentum ends.
ReplyDeletehttp://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2013/01/what-happens-after-momentum-ends_6.html