Brian S. Wesbury - Chief Economist
Robert Stein, CFA - Senior Economist
Date: 8/1/2011
The ISM Manufacturing index fell to 50.9 in July from 55.3 in June, coming in well below the consensus expected decline to 54.5. (Levels higher than 50 signal expansion; levels below 50 signal contraction.)
The major measures of activity all fell in July, but most remained above 50.0, signaling growth. The supplier deliveries index slipped to 50.4 from 56.3 and the production index fell to 52.3 from 54.5. The new orders index declined to 49.2 from 51.6 and the employment index fell to 53.5 from 59.9.
The prices paid index declined to a still elevated 59.0 in July from 68.0 in June.
Implications: From time to time, the ISM index is a better measurement of sentiment among manufacturers than actual levels of activity. We think July – a month dominated by (misleading) headlines about a potential default on US Treasury securities – was one of those months. As a result, we do not read much into the ISM index coming in well below consensus expectations and anticipate a large rebound next month. Taken at face value, the 50.9 reading on the ISM may be disappointing, but it still correlates with 2.9% real growth according to officials at the ISM. News from the auto sector suggests the supply-chain disruptions due to Japan are dissipating. That was also the message from last week’s large drop in initial unemployment claims. Auto production will keep rebounding as inventories are low and getting more cars on lots will generate more sales. In other news this morning, construction increased 0.2% in June and rose 2.5% including large upward revisions for prior months. The revisions were widespread, including home building, commercial construction, and government projects. The rise in June was due to commercial construction, primarily manufacturing facilities, retail shops, and communications structures. We did not go into a double-dip at the start of the year, we are not entering one now, and there is no need for the third round of quantitative easing.
________________________________________
America's the Largest Debtor Nation in the History of the World
Jim Rogers: America's the Largest Debtor Nation in the History of the World and It's Just Getting WorseDaily Bell
Russia Today (RT) interviews Jim Rogers about the pending US debt ceiling issue and what all this really means for the future of the US economy and for the average American in general.
RT's Lucy Kafanov asks Rogers, "When you say that even if we do reach this deal everthing looks good for a little while but six months to a year it gets worse. What do you mean when you say it gets worse? I mean it's easy to talk about these abstract terms but if you look at the facts, 14.1 million Americans unemployed, over half of all American families live from paycheck to paycheck, more than 44 million are on food stamps. What is it going to look like for those of us who can't afford to move to Singapore?"
To which Rogers replies, "We are all going to continue to get deeper and deeper into debt. ... The overall situation is getting more and more serious. America is now the largest debtor nation in the history of the world. This cannot go on forever. ... You think the problems are bad now? You wait until we don't have any more credit. You wait until the currency is collapsing. You wait until interest rates are going through the roof and inflation is going through the roof. It's not going to be a pretty picture. There will be social unrest. It's going to be a mess. But the sooner we deal with it the better."
No hay comentarios.:
Publicar un comentario