Economic Updates for February 2024

Summary

Current Economic Dynamics: An Optimism for Growth

2024 has ushered in a new and robust sense of optimism.

The economy seems to be firing on all cylinders. The Manufacturing PMI has turned the corner and is expanding first time since September 2022. The non-farm payroll numbers were double the expectation. We are seeing moderate pickup in 10 year yields, perhaps a sign of real growth in the economy.

FED is likely to keep rates higher for longer than what the market anticipates. The inflation print for January came a bit above expectation making it hard for the FED to start easing in March.

The markets have run up quite a bit. Since end of October 2023, S&P 500 is up about 16%. Perhaps this a good time to take a breather, consolidate and aim higher for the rest of the year.

However, recession is not completely out of the picture. The inverted yield curve has a record of predicting 8 out of 8 previous recessions. The inventor of this signal, Prof Campbell Harvey has renewed optimism that his signal will work again this time. Perhaps it is just a matter of time, but the duration is very uncertain.

Broad Indicators

Atlanta GDP NowCast

Atlanta FED GDPNow estimate is 3+% for Q1 2024. It appears we are off to a great start in the new year.

Conference Board's Leading Economic Indicator

The LEI after giving a recession signal for almost a year is now firmly reverting back! The LEI's reading may be misleading in the post COVID era. Tom Lee of Fundstrats opines that LEIs may be signaling a recession incorrectly because we are fighting an inflation cycle and not a business cycle.

US Dollar Index

The 10 year has steadily climbed right after the New Year. The Dollar has kept pace with this and creeping higher.

Commodities

Energy prices are marginally higher since the New Year. The tension in the Red Sea does not seem to have had a major impact.

Gold

The divergence in Gold and Bitcoin is continuing this month! The flows into spot ETFs in BitCoin has pushed BitCoin parabolically higher while gold has been languishing as the real yields have climbed.

Bitcoin

Same comment as above in Gold.

Inflation

CPI Month over Month

The CPI reading for the month of January 2024 came at 0.5% surprising the consensus expectation of 0.3%. While it is higher than expected, it by itself does not derail the glide path of inflation downward.

PPI Month over Month

PPI is projected to be -0.2% in December 2023.

Reported Year over Year Inflation Rate

This is the headline inflation number that everyone talks about. For January 2024 we are at 3.1%. We are still in the right neighborhood. In the coming months, we hope the inflation remains contained. Historically, inflation is known to bounce back a few times before it finally subsides.

CPI Components

CPI Components Last Month
Source BLS.gov Consumer Price Index
CPI Components This Month
The contributors to inflation have remained fairly consistent. (Please note that the y-axis in both the graphs have different scales).

One Year Inflation Expectations

This survey data shows that inflation one year from now is expected to be 2.9%. It has come down from the estimate last month.

Sentiments

Consumer Sentiments

University of Michigan's consumer sentiment surged to 79 this month in sharpe contrast to the last year. The renewed optimism is perhaps reflecting the drop in inflation and inflation expectation.

Investor Sentiments

The AAII sentiment has remained consistently bullish even after three months of run up in the S&P 500.

GDP Factors

Manufacturing PMI

First time since September 2022, we are seeing an expansion in Manufacturing. This is a very welcome reading at 50.7!

Services PMI

Services PMI reading has been steadily above 50 over the last few months and the activity appears to be gradually increasing.

Industrial Production

Industrial Production has turned positive this month with a reading of close to 1%!

Retail Sales

Retail Sales have soared 0.6% last month following an increase of 0.3% in the month previous to that.

Non-farm Payrolls

Non-farm payrolls have stubbornly been too good indicating economy is still adding jobs. This month the jobs number came in around double the expectation. This robust job market indicates labor is fairly tight.

Total Vehicle Sales

Total Vehicle sales fell by 6.9% in the last month after reaching the highest level for the past two years.

Manheim Used Car Index

Used car prices have been consistently failling for the past few months. This has been a tailwind for core inflation in its downward trend.

US New Home Sales

New home sales soared by 8% compared to the previous month.

30 Year Fixed Mortgage Rates

The mortgage rates have followed the 10-year Treasury yield higher over the last few months. Recently as the inflation is contained and 10-year Treasury yield has rolled over, the mortgage rates has come down a tad bit.

Employment Indicators

Historical Unemployment Rate

The unemployment rate has remained low despite the FED's attempt to induce a slowdown. This indicator is a lagging indicator and we do expect to see this number creep up if recession becomes imminent.

US Jobless Claims

This chart will be the first indicator of a telltale sign that unemployment is increasing. As you see the continuing jobless claims number rise, it implies the people who lost their jobs are not going back to labor force fast enough and the unemployment rate is starting to creep higher. Over the last couple of weeks, it has trended lower, indicating a strong job market. It could turn out to be seasonal and it needs to be watched over the next few months if the continuing claims build up.
Source Continuing Jobless Claims

Wage Growth Tracker

This month again, the wage inflation continues to exceed the headline inflation as it recorded a reading of 5.0% compared to the headline inflation of 3.1%. This is an indication that inflation may become entrenched in the labor market and may lead to wage/price spiral. Something that the FED does not want to see and makes it likely to keep rates higher for longer.

Market Indicators

Yield Curve Inversion

The yield curve has been flattening over the last month and is reading -0.29% or 29 basis points from being fully flat.

Yield Curve - then and now

Yield curve - Then
Yield curve - Now
Notice how both the 2 year part of the curve as well as the long end has shifted upwards.

Market Sectors

Year to date, healthcare, technology and communications sectors have been the out performing the rest of the sectors. Notice how the laggard of 2023, real estate is lagging behind again this year.

High Yield Index Options-Adjusted Spread

If the economy were to enter a recession, it is likely that some of the companies will struggle to keep up with their debt payments causing their credit spread to widen. This indicator shows how the credit spreads have been behaving so far.

The tight spread indicate that the soft landing narrative is actually playing out.

Put Call Ratio

A spike in put / call ratio indicates that investors are very apprehensive about a sudden fall in the equity markets. In January/February, we have not seen any interesting activities.

S&P 500 Current Valuations

The current earnings forecast by equity analysts estimate the earnings potential for S&P 500 companies to be around $245 which translates to a price to earnings ratio of 20.3 at the current S&P 500 price level. This is above the 5 year and the 10 year averages. The market is becoming pricier by the day.

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