Submitted by Lance Roberts of STA Wealth
Management,
I have written extensively about the data behind
the headline media reports. I have also discussed the importance of the
relationship between the underlying data trends relative to broader
macroeconomic perspectives. However, it is sometimes helpful just to view the
various economic indicators and draw your own conclusions outside of someone
else's opinion.
With the economy now more than 5 years into an
expansion, which is long by historical standards, the question for you to answer
by looking at the charts below is:
"Are we closer to an economic recession or a continued expansion?"
How you answer that question should have a
significant impact on your investment outlook as financial markets tend to lose
roughly 30% on average during recessionary periods. However, with margin
debt at record levels, earnings deteriorating and junk bond yields near
all-time lows, this is hardly a normal market environment within which we are
currently invested.
Therefore, I present a series of charts which
view the overall economy from the same perspective utilizing an annualized rate
of change. In some cases, where the data is extremely volatile, I have used a
3-month average to expose the underlying data trend. Any other special data
adjustments are noted below.
Leading Economic Indicators
Durable Goods
Investment
ISM Composite Index
Employment & Industrial Production
Retail Sales
Social Welfare
The Broad View
Economic Composite
(Note: The Economic Composite is a weighted index of multiple economic survey and indicators - read more about this indicator)
If you are expecting an economic recovery, and a
continuation of the bull market, then the economic data must begin to improve
markedly in the months ahead. The problem has been that each bounce in the
economic data has failed within the context of a declining trend. This is not a
good thing and is why we continue to witness an erosion in the growth rates of
corporate earnings and profitability. Eventually, that erosion combined, with
excessive valuations, will weigh on the financial markets.
For the Federal Reserve, these charts make the
case that continued monetary interventions are not healing the economy, but
rather just keeping it afloat by dragging forward future consumption. The
problem is that it leaves a void in the future that must be continually
filled.
In my opinion, the economy is far too weak to
stand on its own two feet. With the Fed easing off the current rate of bond
purchases, it will be interesting to see what happens in the months to come.
While there will certainly be positive bumps in the data, as pent up demand is
released back into the economy, the inability to sustain growth is most
concerning. From this perspective, it could become increasingly difficult for
the Federal Reserve to remove their "highly accommodative stance"
anytime soon.
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