Ummm….This is not a day for pleasant economic news.
First, the Leading Economic Indicators indicate a bigger slowdown than anticipated, dropping 3x more than expectations, and then the Philly Fed index fell for the 9th straight month.
Employment isn’t good either. While new unemployment claims fell, the 4 week rolling average rose, and in any case at 432,000 claims (seasonally adjusted, which is the elephant in the room), it’s still too damn high.
If you are a monetarist, then we have more bad news, because the growth rate for M3 has dropped off a cliff (chart pr0n below):
Note that this is a graph or the rate of growth, not the money supply, so the effect on the overall money supply is less than it appears, but, “As a rule of thumb, the data gives a one-year advance signal on economic growth, and a two-year signal on future inflation.”
The chart is a rolling 3 month average of the annual rate, and the rate for May-July is 2.1%, indicating a contraction of the M3 money supply in real terms, which would suggest downward pressure in housing and financial markets.
We also have the Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of commodities making the biggest weekly jump in over 30 years and oil up by 6 bucks, along with the dollar falling which seems to indicate that the past few weeks might just have been profit taking…a breather before an ascent to the summit, though
gasoline is down over a dollar today.