Hunt: Economic Review and Outlook August 2024

In this episode, Dr. Hunt explains that non-farm payrolls overshot by five standard errors, making it the worst miss since a 9 standard one for 2009, during the GFC recession, and marking another bureaucratic failure. According to Dr. Hunt, the reported overshoot of 818,000 was based on an internal seasonally adjusted series, but based on the nonseasonal adjusted data, the overshoot was actually 915,000. Dr. Hunt explains that the non-farm job miss means that productivity will be revised up while unit labor costs will be revised down. Personal income and Gross Domestic Income will be revised downward, and the personal saving rate will be reduced from its already very depressed level of 3.5%. Here is a direct video link.

Posted in Main Page | Comments Off on Hunt: Economic Review and Outlook August 2024

China ramps up exports to offset weakness at home

As China’s real estate bubble continues to implode, the government has directed Chinese banks to shift lending from real estate to Chinese industry, including manufacturing firms.

At the same time, 99% of publicly listed Chinese companies now disclose some form of government subsidy, according to the Kiel Institute, a German think tank.

China is spending an estimated 4.9% of its gross domestic product on nurturing industries—several times higher than the U.S., Germany and Japan.

Excess production is deflationary while threatening the viability of competitors as well as employment in other economies.  A few examples:

  • China has added capacity to produce some 40 million vehicles a year, even though it sells only around 22 million at home.
  • It’s on track to make around 750 gigawatts of solar cells this year, despite only needing 220 gigawatts domestically in 2023.
  • It’s expected to account for 80% of the world’s new supply this year in basic chemicals such as ethylene and propylene, used to make garbage bags, toys and cosmetics—even though prices in China have been falling for 19 months, a sign of oversupply.
  • Output of steel, one of China’s “old” industries, increased last year despite waning domestic demand due to the continuing property crisis. See Why China is Starting a New Trade War:

Two principles have guided Xi’s thinking, Chinese policy advisers say. The first is that China must build an all-encompassing industrial supply chain that can keep the domestic economy running in the event of severe sanctions by the U.S. and other Western countries. In the top leader’s views, advisers say, industrial security sits at the core of China’s stability as tensions with the developed world rise.

The second is a deep-rooted philosophical objection to U.S.-style consumption, which Xi sees as wasteful.

That leaves China with few options other than investing in exports to stabilize its weakened economy and create jobs to make up for losses in domestic construction.

The upshot: Rather than Chinese workers losing their jobs, steelworkers in Brazil, chemical engineers in Europe, and solar panel makers in the U.S. may lose theirs.

Posted in Main Page | Comments Off on China ramps up exports to offset weakness at home

Fed cuts in response to weakening employment

Rosenberg Research President David Rosenberg joins ‘Squawk on the Street’ to discuss his economic models, what’s happening in today’s economy, and much more. Here is a direct video link.
 

The 21.3% increase in US unemployment since 2022 is a degree of change only seen during the past 12 recessions since 1948. But, sure, maybe this time is different.

Posted in Main Page | Comments Off on Fed cuts in response to weakening employment