COMMENTARY NUMBER 386 GDP Revision, July Durable Goods Orders and New Home Sales. August 26, 2011

Similar documents
COMMENTARY NUMBER 415 Fourth-Quarter GDP, December Durable Goods and Home Sales. January 27, 2012

COMMENTARY NUMBER 392 Benchmark Payroll and GDP Revisions, August Durable Goods and Home Sales. September 29, 2011

COMMENTARY NUMBER 331 Third-Quarter GDP, Quantitative-Easing Games, Homes Sales, New Orders. October 29, 2010

COMMENTARY NUMBER 354 GDP Revision, Durable Goods Orders, Home Sales, Tax Receipts, Political Crises. February 25, 2011

COMMENTARY NUMBER 451 GDP Revision, Unemployment Reporting Inconsistencies. June 28, 2012

COMMENTARY NUMBER 391 August Housing Starts. September 20, 2011

COMMENTARY NUMBER 353 January Inflation. February 17, January Annual Inflation Rose to 1.6% (CPI-U), 1.8% (CPI-W), 9.

COMMENTARY NUMBER 622 March Durable Goods Orders, New- and Existing-Home Sales April 24, 2014

COMMENTARY NUMBER 603 January Durable Goods Orders and Home Sales February 27, Durable Goods Orders in Downturn

COMMENTARY NUMBER 395 September CPI, PPI, Real Retail Sales, Housing Starts, Industrial Production. October 19, 2011

COMMENTARY NUMBER 405 October Trade Balance. December 9, October Trade Deficit Suggests Positive Contribution to Fourth-Quarter GDP

COMMENTARY NUMBER 623 First-Quarter 2014 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) April 30, Not Annualized, First-Quarter GDP Gained Just 0.

COMMENTARY NUMBER 459 Second-Quarter GDP, Annual GDP Revisions. July 28, GDP Revisions Showed a Later Full Recovery with Shifted Growth Patterns

COMMENTARY NUMBER 462 June Trade Balance, Consumer Credit. August 9, Bernanke Bemoans GDP Not Reflecting Common Experience

COMMENTARY NUMBER 460 FOMC, June Construction, Disposable Income, PCE Deflator. August 1, 2012

COMMENTARY NUMBER 358 February CPI, PPI, Production, Housing Starts, Real Retail Sales, Real M3. March 17, 2011

COMMENTARY NUMBER 372 April Trade Deficit, Bernanke Shift. June 9, Earthquake-Diminished Imports of Auto Parts Narrowed April Deficit

COMMENTARY NUMBER 436 March Trade Balance, Consumer Credit, April PPI May 11, 2012

COMMENTARY NUMBER 385 July CPI, PPI, Industrial Production and Housing Starts. August 18, 2011

COMMENTARY NUMBER 363 Inflation, Retail Sales, Production. April 15, Real Monthly Retail Sales Fell by 0.2% in March

COMMENTARY NUMBER 601 January Housing Starts, PPI February 19, Unstable Housing Starts Showed a Corrective Plunge in January

SPECIAL COMMENTARY NUMBER 429 Consumer Liquidity Update, March Retail Sales April 16, 2012

COMMENTARY NUMBER 378 June Retail Sales, PPI, May Trade Deficit. July 14, 2011

COMMENTARY NUMBER 349 Crisis in Economic Reporting, Systemic Liquidity. February 7, 2011

COMMENTARY NUMBER 467 GDP Revision, Gold Standard. August 29, GDI at 0.6%, GDP at 1.7%, GNP at 2.2%, All Plus-or-Minus Three Percentage Points

COMMENTARY NUMBER 632 April Trade Deficit and Benchmark, Construction Spending, Liquidity June 4, New Trade Data Indicate Weaker Recent Economy

COMMENTARY NUMBER 776 November Durable Goods Orders, New-Home Sales December 23, 2015

COMMENTARY NUMBER 594 December Existing-Home Sales January 23, 2014

COMMENTARY NUMBER 599 January Retail Sales, Liquidity, Late Detail from Jobs Revision February 13, 2014

COMMENTARY NUMBER 794 New Orders for Durable Good, New- and Existing-Home Sales March 24, 2016

COMMENTARY NUMBER 724 April Trade Deficit and Benchmark Revision, Construction Spending June 3, 2015

COMMENTARY NUMBER 493 November Trade Deficit. January 11, Official Inflation-Adjusted Merchandise Trade Deficit Hit 4-1/2 Year High

COMMENTARY NUMBER 400 Budget Deficit Reality, October CPI, Industrial Production. November 16, 2011

COMMENTARY NUMBER 637 GDP Revision, Durable Goods Orders, New- and Existing-Home Sales June 25, 2014

COMMENTARY NUMBER 345 December Inflation, Retail Sales, Production. January 14, 2011

DEPRESSION SPECIAL REPORT. Number 52. August 1, Current Economic Downturn Is Worst Since Great Depression

COMMENTARY NUMBER 329 Inflation, Retail Sales, Trade Deficit and Debased Money. October 15, Dollar Debasement Fears Mount

COMMENTARY NUMBER 417 December 2011 and Annual Trade Deficit. February 10, Trade Could Pressure GDP Revision to Downside

COMMENTARY NUMBER 650 July 2014 Industrial Production, Producer Price Index (PPI) August 18, 2014

COMMENTARY NUMBER 685 November Trade Deficit, Construction Spending January 7, 2015

COMMENTARY NUMBER 528 First Revision to First-Quarter 2013 GDP May 30, 2013

COMMENTARY NUMBER 410 Special Commentary, GAAP-Based 2011 U.S. Financial Data. December 28, Actual 2011 Federal Deficit Topped $5.

COMMENTARY NUMBER 456 June CPI and Industrial Production. July 17, Headline Inflation Should Increase in Next Several Months

ADVANCE COMMENTARY NUMBER 930-A. December Labor, Private Surveying and M3, November Trade Deficit and Construction Spending January 5, 2018

COMMENTARY NUMBER 411 December Employment and Unemployment. January 6, 2012

COMMENTARY NUMBER 529 Retail Sales Benchmark Revision May 31, Annual Retail Sales Revised Lower by 0.43% in 2011 and 0.

COMMENTARY NUMBER 652 July 2014 Durable Goods Orders, New- and Existing-Home Sales August 26, 2014

COMMENTARY NUMBER 651 July 2014 CPI, Housing Starts, Real Retail Sales and Earnings, Monetary Base August 19, 2014

COMMENTARY NUMBER 610 February CPI, Real Retail Sales and Earnings, Housing Starts March 18, 2014

COMMENTARY NUMBER 654 July Median Household Income, Trade Deficit, Construction Spending September 4, 2014

COMMENTARY NUMBER 519 First-Quarter 2013 GDP, Median Household Income. April 26, 2013

COMMENTARY NUMBER 659 August CPI, Real Retail Sales and Earnings September 17, 2014

COMMENTARY NUMBER 592 December CPI, Real Retail Sales and Earnings January 16, Inflation Picks Up as the Economy Slows Down

COMMENTARY NUMBER Household Income, August Housing Starts September 18, 2013

COMMENTARY NUMBER 738 June Durable Goods Orders, New-Home Sales, Household Income July 27, 2015

COMMENTARY NUMBER 482 October CPI, PPI, Retail Sales, Real Earnings. November 15, Official Real Retail Sales Signal Recession

COMMENTARY NUMBER 689 December Housing Starts, Special Comments on the Economy January 21, 2015

COMMENTARY NUMBER 473 September Employment and Unemployment, August Construction Spending, PCE Deflator. October 5, 2012

COMMENTARY NUMBER 501 December 2012 and Annual Trade Balance, Consumer Credit. February 8, 2013

COMMENTARY NUMBER 627 April CPI, PPI, Industrial Production, Real Retail Sales and Earnings May 15, 2014

COMMENTARY NUMBER 578 Trade Deficit, Construction Spending, New Home Sales December 4, No Signs of a Growing Economy

Number 50. April 20, Section Two of Four MARKETS PERSPECTIVE

ADVANCE SPECIAL COMMENTARY No. 858 Economic and Financial Review and Preview December 30, 2016

COMMENTARY NUMBER 524 April Industrial Production, PPI. May 15, April Production Sinks Below First-Quarter 2013 Average

COMMENTARY NUMBER 702 Trade, Labor, Construction-Spending, Household Income, M3, U.S. GAAP-Accounting March 6, 2015

COMMENTARY NUMBER 716 March Trade Deficit, Construction Spending, Retail Sales Benchmark Revision May 5, 2015

COMMENTARY NUMBER 533 May Industrial Production and PPI. June 14, Weakening Economy and Rising Inflation Should Become the Trend

COMMENTARY NUMBER 736 June CPI, Housing Starts, Real Retail Sales and Earnings July 17, 2015

COMMENTARY NUMBER 569 Consumer Liquidity, September Retail Sales, PPI October 29, 2013

COMMENTARY NUMBER Federal Deficit Cash versus GAAP, Durable Goods Orders November 27, 2013

COMMENTARY NUMBER 494 December Retail Sales, PPI. January 15, Merrily We Roll Along, Towards Hyperinflation

COMMENTARY NUMBER 505 January CPI, Real Retail Sales and Earnings, Existing Home Sales, Fed Easing, Gold and U.S. Dollar.

COMMENTARY NUMBER 699 January CPI, Real-Retail Sales and Earnings, Durable Goods, Home Sales February 26, 2015

COMMENTARY NUMBER 551 July New Orders for Durable Goods, New- and Existing-Home Sales August 26, 2013

COMMENTARY NUMBER 793 CPI, Real Retail Sales, Production, Housing Starts, GDP and U.S. Dollar March 17, 2016

COMMENTARY NUMBER 548 June Trade Balance August 6, Unusually Large Reduction in June Trade Deficit Likely Reflected Port of New York Disruptions

COMMENTARY NUMBER 508 Employment and Unemployment, Money Supply, Consumer Credit. March 8, 2013

COMMENTARY NUMBER 535 Fed Jawboning, May Durable Goods, New- and Existing-Home Sales. June 25, 2013

COMMENTARY NUMBER 782 December Durable Goods Orders, New- and Existing-Home Sales January 28, 2016

COMMENTARY NUMBER 547 July Employment and Unemployment, M3, June Construction August 2, 2013

COMMENTARY NUMBER 546 GDP and Revisions, Mounting Consumer- and Systemic-Liquidity Issues August 1, 2013

COMMENTARY NUMBER 735 June Industrial Production, Producer Price Index (PPI) July 15, 2015

COMMENTARY NUMBER Consumer Expenditures, August Retail Sales, Gold September 12, 2014

COMMENTARY NUMBER 549 July CPI, PPI, Nominal and Real Retail Sales, Industrial Production, Real Earnings August 15, No Economic Recovery Here

Number 51. July 20, Section Two of Four MARKETS PERSPECTIVE

COMMENTARY NUMBER 583 November Consumer Price Index, Real Retail Sales and Earnings December 17, 2013

COMMENTARY NUMBER 573 October Industrial Production and Money Supply, September Trade Balance November 15, 2013

COMMENTARY NUMBER 510 February 2013 CPI, PPI, Real Retail Sales and Earnings, Production. March 15, 2013

Gauging Current Conditions:

Issue Number 45. August 13, 2008

COMMENTARY NUMBER 553 July Trade Deficit, Construction Spending September 4, July Trade Data Remain in State of Flux

COMMENTARY NUMBER 580 November Labor Data and M3, October Household Income December 6, 2013

COMMENTARY NUMBER 686 December Employment and Unemployment, Money Supply M3 January 9, 2015

COMMENTARY NUMBER 557 August CPI, Real Retail Sales and Earnings September 17, Liquidity Constraints Impair Consumption, Prevent Recovery

COMMENTARY NUMBER 570 Economic Review, September CPI, Real Retail Sales and Earnings October 30, 2013

COMMENTARY NUMBER 574 October CPI, Retail Sales, Real Retail Sales and Earnings, Existing Home Sales November 20, Watch Out for the Dollar

COMMENTARY NUMBER 562 Shutdown of the Federal Government October 1, Renewed Battle Over U.S. Sovereign Solvency

COMMENTARY NUMBER 554 August Employment and Unemployment, M3 September 6, August Labor Conditions Showed a Deteriorating Economy

COMMENTARY NUMBER 694 January Payrolls, Employment and Revisions February 6, 2015

COMMENTARY NUMBER 572 October Employment and Unemployment November 8, 2013

Transcription:

COMMENTARY NUMBER 386 GDP Revision, July Durable Goods Orders and New Home Sales August 26, 2011 Revised Second-Quarter GDP Change Remained Statistically Insignificant Could Have Been a Contraction as Easily as a Gain Money Supply M2 Surge Reflects Shift from Large M3 Accounts PLEASE NOTE: The next regular Commentary is scheduled for Friday, September 2nd. It will cover the release of employment and unemployment data for August 2011. A Special Commentary would be published, as appropriate, in response to any unusual market or economic developments. Best to all, John Williams Opening Comments and Executive Summary. The economic data of the last week held no real surprises, although the smallest variation against the consensus outlook often is hyped to move the broadly irrational U.S. stock market. The small decline in July new home sales and the gain in July new orders for durable goods were within the normal volatility of those series, and did not signal any change in the general economic outlook. The downside revision to the estimate of second-quarter GDP growth was no more than statistical noise in a generally worthless series. There has been a pattern developing in the Federal Reserve s weekly money supply reporting, however, that is worthy of note, with surging M2 growth being reported in the Fed s now-broadest money measure. Copyright 2011 American Business Analytics & Research, LLC, www.shadowstats.com 1

The growth largely can be accounted for by an apparent flight from large time deposits and institutional money funds (officially ignored components of the Fed s once-broadest money measure, M3). The cash flows here are suggestive of concerns over banking-system solvency (see Hyperinflation Watch). Indeed, the U.S. systemic-solvency and economic crises remain in broad deterioration, with bankingsystem solvency issues likely to drive the Federal Reserve into some form of QE3, soon, despite Fed Chairman Bernanke s qualified protestations to the contrary in today s (August 26th) speech. Any further liquefaction of the system, though, likely will be under the guise of propping a weakening economy. The global financial markets remain unstable and highly volatile. The cautions of recent Commentaries remain in place, as do the general outlooks for the U.S. economy, inflation, systemic-solvency and dollar. GDP Revision. The reported growth in the revised second-quarter 2011 GDP was statistically meaningless, as usual, with the 95% confidence interval around the reported growth easily encompassing a possible quarterly contraction. The revision itself was little more than statistical noise. Annualized real (inflation-adjusted) quarterly growth in second-quarter GDP was lowered to 0.99% from 1.28%, versus an annualized growth rate of 0.36% in the first-quarter. Year-to-year growth slowed further to 1.55% (previously 1.62%), versus 2.24% reported for the first-quarter. The downside revision reflected a weakening trade picture (see Commentary No. 384) and a downward revision to inventories, offset by an upside revision to healthcare and commercial construction. None of those components are measured meaningfully by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), in this most heavily followed, most heavily massaged and most worthless of government economic series. Initial reporting of second-quarter gross national product (GNP) and gross domestic income (GDI) showed stronger annualized real quarterly growth rates than reported for the GDP. Neither alternate measure was statistically meaningful. Money flow distortions from the ongoing systemic-solvency crisis have boosted GNP, with revamped income estimates impacting GDI. Hyperinflation Watch Unusual Money Supply Activity. Just a month ago, the markets recoiled in revulsion and disbelief to the U.S. government s unwillingness and inability to address its long-term fiscal insolvency. In response, rapid flight was seen from the U.S. dollar into gold and the Swiss franc, although the Swiss National Bank moved fairly quickly to discourage the franc s safe-haven status, with jawboning and direct policy action. Such discouragement should prove to be short-lived. At the same time, M2 the broadest money supply measure currently published by the Fed exploded, with the average for the week-ended August 1st rising by $159 billion from the week before, as the debt crisis was in its final resolution. Not seasonally adjusted, the gain was $176 billion. The two-week gain (week-ended August 8th) was $201 billion ($252 billion unadjusted). One advantage to looking at the broadest money measure available (formerly M3) is that it encompasses a broader view of the flows in the financial system than do narrower measures. The SGS-Ongoing M3 Estimate includes as components M2 (which includes M1), plus large time deposits and institutional money funds, which are published by the Fed on a weekly basis. Some monthly adjustment to the large time deposit numbers and estimates of also-included Eurodollar deposits and repos are modeled by SGS. Copyright 2011 American Business Analytics & Research, LLC, www.shadowstats.com 2

The surge in M2 did not reflect a sudden increase in the money supply; it largely reflected a shift out of M3 accounts to checking and savings accounts in M2 (and the included M1), which bloated the M2 reporting. Of the unusually large $201 billion gain reported for two weeks of seasonally adjusted M2, roughly $200 billion was accounted for in Fed reporting by declining former-m3 components, large time deposits (down about $90 billion) and institutional money funds (down $110 billion). The big move out of the M3 accounts likely was due to nervousness about banking-system solvency. For the week-ended August 15th, the pace of weekly increase in M2 slowed to more-normal volatility (up $5 billion for the week, adjusted, up $20 billion unadjusted). Unless there is something startling in today s (August 26th) after-market release on bank assets and liabilities, the preceding data will be updated in the next regular Commentary. The broad inflation and economic outlooks discussed in the Hyperinflation Special Report (2011) continue to unfold and are unchanged. As noted in recent Commentaries, the financial markets remain unstable and extremely volatile, roiled by crises of confidence in the U.S. dollar and in the long-term outlook for U.S. financial, economic, systemic and political stability. For those living in a U.S. dollardenominated world, regardless of further near-term extreme volatility in the U.S. dollar in either direction versus the stronger major currencies and gold, the stronger currencies and precious metals remain the fundamental hedges against what lies ahead. Massive, fundamental dollar dumping and dumping of dollar-denominated assets could start at anytime, with little or no further warning. With a U.S. government unwilling to balance or even address its uncontainable fiscal condition; with the federal government and Federal Reserve standing ready to prevent a systemic collapse, so long as it is possible to print and spend whatever money is needed; and with the U.S. dollar at risk of losing its global reserve currency status; much higher inflation lies ahead, in a circumstance that rapidly could evolve into hyperinflation. REPORTING DETAIL GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GDP (Second-Quarter 2011, Second Estimate, First Revision) Notes on GDP-Related Nomenclature and Definitions For purposes of clarity and the use of simplified language in the text of the GDP analysis, here are definitions of several key terms used related to GDP reporting: Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is the headline number and the most widely followed broad measure of U.S. economic activity. It is published quarterly by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), with two successive monthly revisions, and with an annual revision in the following July. Copyright 2011 American Business Analytics & Research, LLC, www.shadowstats.com 3

Gross Domestic Income (GDI) is the theoretical equivalent to the GDP, but it generally is not followed by the popular press. Where GDP reflects the consumption side of the economy and GDI reflects the offsetting income side. When the series estimates do not equal each other, which almost always is the case, since the series are surveyed separately, the difference is added to or subtracted from the GDI as a statistical discrepancy. Although the BEA touts the GDP as the more accurate measure, the GDI is relatively free of the monthly political targeting the GDP goes through. Gross National Product (GNP) is the broadest measure of the U.S. economy published by the BEA. Once the headline number, now it rarely is followed by the popular media. GDP is the GNP net of trade in factor income (interest and dividend payments). GNP growth usually is weaker than GDP growth for net-debtor nations. Games played with money flows between the United States and the rest of the world tend to mute that impact on the reporting of U.S. GDP growth. Real (or Constant Dollars) means the data have been adjusted, or deflated, to reflect the effects of inflation. Nominal (or Current Dollars) means growth or level has not been adjusted for inflation. This is the way a business normally records revenues or an individual views day-to-day income and expenses. GDP Implicit Price Deflator (IPD) is the inflation measure used to convert GDP data from nominal to real. The adjusted numbers are based on Chained 2005 Dollars, at present, where the 2005 is the base year for inflation, and chained refers to the methodology which gimmicks the reported numbers so much that the total of the deflated GDP sub-series misses the total of the deflated total GDP series by nearly $40 billion in residual as of second-quarter 2010. Quarterly growth, unless otherwise stated, is in terms of seasonally-adjusted, annualized quarter-to-quarter growth, i.e., the growth rate of one quarter over the prior quarter, raised to the fourth power, a compounded annual rate of growth. While some might annualize a quarterly growth rate by multiplying it by four, the BEA uses the compounding method, raising the quarterly growth rate to the fourth power. So a one percent quarterly growth rate annualizes to 1.01 x 1.01 x 1.01 x 1.01 = 1.0406 or 4.1%, instead of 4 x 1% = 4%. Annual growth refers to the year-to-year change of the referenced period versus the same period the year before. Reported GDP Growth Remained Statistically Indistinguishable from Contraction. As discussed in the Opening Comments and Executive Summary, the revised second-quarter GDP growth estimate remained statistically insignificant, while the revision itself was little more than statistical noise. The sharp deterioration in the reported June trade deficit was a major contributor to the downside revisions, as was a downside revision to inventories. Offsets from upside revisions to healthcare spending and commercial construction rounded out the revisions, but the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) tracks none of these series accurately, at least in the first or second year following the initial estimates. GDP. Published today, August 26th, by the BEA, the second-estimate or first-revision of second-quarter 2011 gross domestic product (GDP) showed annualized real quarterly growth of 0.99% (initially estimated at 1.28%) +/- 3% (95% confidence interval), versus an estimated annualized gain of 0.36% for first-quarter 2011. Not annualized, second-quarter GDP growth revised to 0.25% from 0.32%, up from 0.09% in the first-quarter. In this most worthless of major economic series, the reported annualized growth rates for the last two quarters are little more than statistical noise around the unchanged level. They possibly have been massaged to keep the quarterly growth rates in minimally-positive as opposed to minimally-negative territory. Copyright 2011 American Business Analytics & Research, LLC, www.shadowstats.com 4

Year-to-year real change in second-quarter 2011 GDP continued its slowing trend, up by a revised 1.55% (that rounds to 1.5%) versus initial reporting of 1.62%, and against 2.24% in the first-quarter. Such remained well off the near-term peak in reported growth of 3.51% in third-quarter 2010. The estimate of the second-quarter GDP implicit price deflator was revised to 2.50% (initially at 2.39%), versus 2.73% in the first-quarter. In contrast, annualized seasonally-adjusted quarterly inflation for the CPI-U in the second-quarter eased to 4.09% from a seasonally-adjusted 5.22% in the first-quarter. The lower the inflation rate that is used in deflating the GDP, the stronger is the resulting inflation-adjusted number and vice versa. A slightly more realistic inflation number would have pushed the second-quarter GDP quarterly growth rate into negative territory. The SGS Alternate-GDP estimate for second-quarter 2011 remains an approximate annual contraction of 2.8% versus the official revised estimate of a 1.5% gain. Such is more negative than the alternate 2.6% annual contraction (2.2% official gain) in the first-quarter (see the Alternate Data tab). While annualized real quarterly growth is not estimated formally on an alternative basis, a meaningful quarter-to-quarter contraction appears to have been realistic for the second-quarter, in what generally has been a protracted period of business bottom-bouncing. GNP. GDP is Gross national product (GNP) net of international flows in factor income (dividend and interest payments). Although boosted by money flow distortions from the ongoing systemic-solvency Copyright 2011 American Business Analytics & Research, LLC, www.shadowstats.com 5

crisis, GNP growth still is statistically insignificant, with annualized real quarterly growth reported at 1.70% in the second-quarter, versus 1.45% in the first (0.42% versus 0.36%, not annualized). GDI. Gross domestic income (GDI) is the theoretical income-side equivalent to the GDP s consumptionside. Reflecting revamped income reporting, the statistically-insignificant, annualized real quarterly growth in GDI was 1.55% in the second-quarter, versus 2.45% in the first (0.38% versus 0.61%, not annualized). NEW ORDERS FOR DURABLE GOODS (JULY 2011) Jump in July Durable Goods Orders Reflected Regular Volatility and Likely Ongoing Impact of Bad Seasonals. The Census Bureau reported August 24th that the regularly-volatile, seasonally-adjusted new orders for durable goods rose by 4.0% (up by 4.9% before prior-period revisions) month-to-month in July 2011, following a revised 1.3% (previously 2.1%) decline reported for June. July s monthly gain included a 43.4% surge in irregular, long-term nondefense aircraft orders, a category that showed a revised 24.0% (previously 28.9%) plunge in June. Airplane orders usually are placed years in advance of delivery and rarely impact near-term economic activity. Unadjusted, year-to-year growth in total July 2011 new orders was 9.2%, versus a revised 7.9% (previously 7.4%) annual gain in June. Current durable goods reporting remains subject to many of the same sampling and seasonal-adjustment problems that are seen with retail sales and payroll reporting. The widely followed nondefense capital goods orders increased by 2.4% (up by 4.2% before prior-period revisions) in July, versus a revised monthly 2.6% (previously 4.1%) decline in June. For July, the unadjusted year-to-year growth in the series was 12.5%, up from the revised 7.6% (previously 6.3%) annual growth estimated for June. NEW HOME SALES (JULY 2011) July New Home Sales Showed an Ongoing, Downtrending Bottom-Bounce. Consistent with the longterm negative trends in housing starts and existing home sales (See the prior Commentary No. 385 for July details), the August 23rd release of July new-home sales (counted based on contract signings, Census Bureau) showed an ongoing pattern of bottom-bouncing near historic lows, with a statisticallyinsignificant monthly decline of 0.7% (down 4.5% before prior-period revisions) +/- 15.1% (95% confidence interval) from June. In turn, June s decline was revised to a 2.9% drop (previously down by 1.0%) versus May. The year-to-year gain in July 2011 new-home sales was a statistically-insignificant 6.8% +/- 14.7% (95% confidence interval). What previously had been reported as a 1.6% annual gain in June revised to a 2.3% annual contraction. The high volatility in annual change remains due to the lapsing of stimulus effects a year ago. As with existing home sales, part of the new sales volume is due to foreclosure activity, but the Census Bureau does not provide an estimate of foreclosure volume. Copyright 2011 American Business Analytics & Research, LLC, www.shadowstats.com 6

Week Ahead. Though still not widely acknowledged, there is both an intensifying double-dip recession and a rapidly escalating inflation problem. Until such time as financial-market expectations fully catch up with underlying reality, reporting generally will continue to show higher-than-expected inflation and weaker-than-expected economic results in the month and months ahead. Generally, previously unreported economic weakness should show up in prior-period revisions. Unemployment Rate and Payroll Employment (August 2011). Nonfarm payrolls and the unemployment rates for August 2011 are due for release on Friday, September 2nd, and this first major indicator of August economic activity likely will confirm deteriorating economic conditions. Data published in recent months have indicated slowing economic activity and generally have disappointed overly-optimistic consensus forecasts, except for July s numbers, where the surprises were slightly in a more-positive direction. That pattern of disappointed expectations likely will renew itself in August s reporting. Payrolls remain at risk of showing an outright monthly contraction, with the unemployment rate notching higher. Also, as seen with last month s July numbers, any reporting in a more-positive direction likely would include a payroll contraction and higher unemployment rate within the 95% statistical reporting confidence intervals (+/- 129,000 for payroll change, +/- 0.2% for the unemployment rate). As has been the case for some time, unstable seasonal adjustments can distort the reported monthly changes in these series meaningfully. Copyright 2011 American Business Analytics & Research, LLC, www.shadowstats.com 7