Summary:
The macro data from the past month continues to mostly point to positive (but sluggish) growth
. On balance, the evidence suggests the imminent onset of a recession is unlikely.
A month ago, we highlighted creeping weakness in employment growth, some measures of consumption like retail sales and new home sales data. This was a watch out for future months.
The good news is that consumption rebounded in April: real retail sales grew 1.8% yoy (to a new all-time high) and personal consumption grew 3%. Better still, new home sales made a new 8 year high.
The bad news is that employment continued to weaken: employment growth had been 2% yoy during most of 2015. In May, that fell to 1.7% growth. As employment and wages drive future consumption, upcoming employment data will remain the key watch out.
Overall, the main positives from the recent data are in employment, consumption growth and housing:
- Although employment growth has slipped, monthly gains have averaged 200,000 during the past year. Full-time employment is leading.
- Recent compensation growth is the highest in more than 6 years: 2.5% yoy in May.
- Most measures of demand show 3-4% nominal growth. Real personal consumption growth in April was 3.0%. Retail sales reached a new all-time high.
- Housing sales in April reached a new 8 year high. Housing starts are near an 8 year high but growth is flat over the past year.
- The core inflation rate ticked up above 2%, among the highest rates since 2008.
The main negatives are concentrated in the manufacturing sector (which accounts for just 10% of GDP):
- Core durable goods growth fell -4.7% yoy in April. It was weak during the winter of 2015 and it has not rebounded since.
- Industrial production has also been weak, falling -1.1% yoy due to weakness in mining (oil and coal). The manufacturing component grew 0.5% yoy.
Prior macro posts from the past year are
here.
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Our key message over the past 2 years has been that (a) growth is positive but slow, in the range of ~3-4% (nominal), and; (b) current growth is lower than in prior periods of economic expansion and a return to 1980s or 1990s style growth does not appear likely.
Modest growth should not be a surprise. This is the typical pattern in the years following a financial crisis like the one experienced in 2008-09.
This is germane to equity markets in that macro growth drives corporate revenue, profit expansion and valuation levels. The saying that "the stock market is not the economy" is true on a day to day or even month to month basis, but over time these two move together. When they diverge, it is normally a function of emotion, whether measured in valuation premiums/discounts or sentiment extremes.
A valuable post on using macro data to improve trend following investment strategies can be found
here.
Let's review each of these points in turn. We'll focus on four macro categories: labor market, inflation, end-demand and housing.
Employment and Wages
The May non-farm payroll was 38,000 new employees minus 59,000 in revisions. This was the weakest monthly report since September 2010.
In the past 12 months, the average gain in employment was 200,000.
Monthly NFP prints are normally volatile. Since 2004, NFP prints near 300,000 have been followed by ones near or under 100,000. That has been a pattern during every bull market; NFP was negative in 1993, 1995, 1996 and 1997. The low print of 84,000 in March 2015, as well as today's print, fit the historical pattern. This is normal, not unusual or unexpected.