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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

COMMENTARY NUMBER 391 August Housing Starts. September 20, 2011

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

COMMENTARY NUMBER 772 Retail Sales, Liquidity, PPI, Federal Obligations, SDRs, FOMC December 11, 2015

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

COMMENTARY NUMBER 743 Global Currency Instabilities, Oil Industry, July Retail Sales, Production and PPI August 17, 2015

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

COMMENTARY NUMBER 479 Presidential Election, Hurricane Sandy, October Employment and Unemployment, September M3, Construction and PCE Deflator

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

COMMENTARY NUMBER 572 October Employment and Unemployment November 8, 2013

COMMENTARY NUMBER 756 September Labor Conditions, Money Supply M3, August Construction Spending October 2, Expectations Shift Towards Recession

Transcription:

COMMENTARY NUMBER 493 November Trade Deficit January 11, 2013 Official Inflation-Adjusted Merchandise Trade Deficit Hit 4-1/2 Year High Implications for Weaker Advance-Estimate of 4th-Quarter GDP Consumer Structural-Liquidity Issues Continue PLEASE NOTE: The next regular Commentary is scheduled for Tuesday, January 15th, covering December retail sales and PPI, followed by commentaries on January 16th covering the December CPI and related inflation-adjusted retail sales and earnings, as well as industrial production, and on January 17th covering December housing starts. Best wishes to all John Williams Opening Comments and Executive Summary. Although this week s economic calendar has been light, the latest releases still have contributed to dampening the outlook for broad economic activity. A sharp deterioration the November U.S. trade deficit suggested a downgrade of market expectations for upcoming fourth-quarter GDP reporting (due January 30th), while November consumer credit outstanding continued a string of consumer-related releases that showed severe, ongoing structural impairment of U.S. consumer liquidity. The January 17th Commentary will include a review of the current economic and inflation outlooks, following next week s key Decembers releases, including the CPI and PPI, and retail sales, production Copyright 2012 American Business Analytics & Research, LLC, www.shadowstats.com 1

and housing starts. Beyond any temporary effects from Hurricane Sandy, there have been no changes in underlying economic fundamentals that would suggest anything other than continued downturn and/or stagnation in business activity. There has been no economic recovery and none is pending. Latest Trade Numbers Suggested Weaker Fourth-Quarter GDP. The November 2012 trade deficit in goods and services widened sharply, month-to-month, to $48.7 billion, from a revised $42.1 billion. Surging import growth, despite declining oil purchases, dominated the much smaller gain in exports. Well beyond consensus expectations, the headline November deficit was the largest since April 2012, and the headline merchandise trade shortfall was the worst since March 2012. More importantly, net of official inflation adjustment, and consistent with official GDP reporting, the November 2012 merchandise deficit was the worst in 55 months, since April of 2008. Where combined inflation-adjusted October and November 2012 reporting will be the basis for the initial guess at the netexport account in fourth-quarter 2012 GDP, the in fourth-quarter numbers annualize out to a wider deficit than was seen in third-quarter 2012, suggesting negative impact on net exports and, in tandem, on that advance-estimate of fourth-quarter GDP. Accordingly, there should be a reduction in market expectations for the first cut on fourth-quarter GDP growth. The October and November trade numbers likely included some distorting impact from Hurricane Sandy on the flow of goods and paperwork through the ports in the affected region around New York City. Where those problems might be partially balanced out some in December s reporting, that would be reflected only in the first revision to the fourth-quarter GDP, due for release on February 28th. The initial January 30th GDP estimate will be based on just the October and November numbers. [More complete details on the November trade deficit are found in the Reporting Detail section.] Consumer Structural Liquidity Problems Continue. Suggestive of the ongoing liquidity crisis besetting the U.S. consumer, the Federal Reserve s January 8th release of November 2012 consumer credit outstanding continued to show negligible credit growth, outside of student loans held by the federal government. The problem there is seen in the accompanying graph, where the discontinuity reflects the use of a recent new-survey base by the Federal Reserve, with there having been no attempt to publish revised or consistent earlier reporting. When the lack of growth in consumer credit is viewed in conjunction with continued bottom-bouncing in real (inflation-adjusted) median household income for November (see graph in Commentary No. 492), and with continued bottoming-bouncing in December consumer confidence and consumer sentiment (see graphs in Commentary No. 491), the consumer has been and remains unable to fuel sustainable real growth in retail sales, which will be reported for December on January 15th (see the Week Ahead section). There cannot have been a post-2009 economic recovery, and there is no foreseeable recovery in the works, despite wishful thinking in Washington, D.C. and on Wall Street. The so-called recovery has been nothing more than a statistical illusion, created by the use of too-low inflation rate in deflating the popular economic series. See Special Commentary (No. 485) for further details. Copyright 2013 American Business Analytics & Research, LLC, www.shadowstats.com 2

HYPERINFLATION WATCH Hyperinflation Outlook: Background. The following text is largely as written for recent, prior Commentaries. It is intended for new subscribers, as well as for those who otherwise are not familiar with the hyperinflation report or the recent special commentary, linked below. Those documents are suggested as background reading on the financial turmoil and currency upheaval facing the United States in the next year or two. This section will be revised fully, following the major December economic and inflation releases during the week of January 14th. The November 27th Special Commentary (No. 485) updated Hyperinflation 2012 and the broad outlooks for the economy and inflation, as well as for systemic stability and the U.S. dollar. These remain the two primary articles outlining current conditions and the background to the hyperinflation forecast. Subsequent to the Special Commentary, neither new economic data nor fiscal developments have altered the outlooks. The expansion of QE3 by the Fed, on December 12th, and the ongoing unwillingness and political inability of the current government to address the longer-range U.S. sovereign-solvency issues only have continued the regular unfolding of events that eventually will trigger a hyperinflation, as discussed in Commentary No. 491. The Fed s latest actions can be viewed as a signal of deepening problems in the banking system. As discussed by Mr. Bernanke, the Fed can do little to stimulate the economy, but it can create inflation. Copyright 2013 American Business Analytics & Research, LLC, www.shadowstats.com 3

Nonetheless, the Fed s move here was to prop-up the banking system and to provide back-up liquidity to the U.S. Treasury in the months ahead. Direct monetization of Treasury debt will tend to savage the U.S. dollar s exchange rate, boost oil and gasoline prices, boost money supply growth and domestic U.S. inflation. Complicating and exacerbating those issues is the failure of the government to make any serious effort at bringing the nation s extreme and dangerous fiscal conditions into balance, or to move to address the Treasury s debt ceiling on a timely basis. Despite a two-month sequestration delay, the temporary fiscal-cliff avoidance may buy the politicians in Washington only a week or two. Market tranquility likely will not last much longer than that, against what should be increasingly evident as disgruntled global markets beginning to move against the U.S. dollar. REPORTING DETAIL U.S. TRADE BALANCE (November 2012) Jump in November Trade Deficit Should Hit GDP Reporting, But Could Reflect Hurricane Distortions. The November 2012 trade deficit widened sharply, month-to-month, beyond market expectations. Where the headline November deficit in goods and services was the largest since April 2012, the headline merchandise trade shortfall was the worst since March 2012. More importantly, net of official inflation adjustment, and consistent with official GDP reporting, the November 2012 merchandise deficit was the largest since April of 2008. Where inflation-adjusted October and November 2012 reporting is the basis for the initial reporting of the net-export account in the fourth-quarter 2012 GDP (January 30th release), the implications here are for negative impact on the advance-gdp estimate. Accordingly there should be a reduction in market expectations for the first cut at fourth-quarter GDP growth. The October and November trade numbers likely included some distortions from the effects of Hurricane Sandy. Where those distortions might balance out some in December reporting, that will be reflected only in the first-revision to the fourth-quarter GDP on February 28th. The initial January 30th GDP estimate will be based on just the October and November numbers. Nominal (Not-Adjusted-for-Inflation) Trade Deficit. The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) and the Census Bureau reported today, January 11th that the nominal, seasonally-adjusted monthly trade deficit in goods and services for November 2012, on a balance-of-payments basis, widened to $48.7 billion from a Copyright 2013 American Business Analytics & Research, LLC, www.shadowstats.com 4

revised $42.1 (previously $42.2) billion in October. The November 2012 deficit narrowed slightly, though, from $48.8 billion in in November 2011. The monthly trade deterioration reflected imports increasing at four times the pace of exports, which might have been affected by hurricane-related disruptions to the flow of goods and trade paperwork in both October and November. December data likely will show activity back at something of a normal pattern. The surge in imports was despite a decline in seasonally-adjusted oil imports. Crude Oil and Energy-Related Petroleum Products. For the month of November 2012, the notseasonally-adjusted average price of imported oil eased to $97.45 per barrel, from $99.75 in October 2012, and it was down from an average of $102.48 in November 2011. In terms of not-seasonally-adjusted physical oil imports, November 2012 volume averaged 8.100 million barrels per day, down from 8.376 million in October 2012, and it was down from 8.826 million barrels per day in October 2011. Other Cautions on Data Quality. Beyond possible short-lived disruptions from weather impact, the standard caution here for the monthly detail is that heavy distortions likely also continue in the seasonal adjustments, much as has been seen in other economic releases, such as retail sales and payrolls, where the headline number reflects month-to-month change. As has been discussed frequently (see Hyperinflation 2012 for example), the extraordinary length and depth of the current business downturn have disrupted regular seasonality patterns. Accordingly, the markets should not rely heavily on the accuracy of the monthly headline data. Real (Inflation-Adjusted) Trade Deficit. Adjusted for seasonal factors and net of oil-price swings and other inflation (2005 chain-weighted dollars as used in reporting real GDP), the November 2012 merchandise trade deficit (no services) came in at $51.9 billion, versus a revised $46.0 (previously $46.2) in October, and against $48.5 billion in November 2011. The November 2012 real deficit was the worst monthly reading in 55 months, since April 2008. With the two months of fourth-quarter reporting in place that are used for the advance estimate of fourth-quarter 2012 GDP (due for release on January 30th), the fourth-quarter real merchandise trade deficit annualizes out to $587.5 billion, widened from an unrevised third-quarter deficit $567.2 billion. With fourth-quarter initially annualizing out to $544.0 billion, the new data should be reflected in the net-export account, subtracting from the fourth-quarter GDP growth, not adding to it, and in market expectations being lowered a notch or so for the initial reporting of fourth-quarter GDP growth. Any unusual storm-related catch-up in December trade reporting should be reflected in the first revision to fourth-quarter GDP, due for release on February 28th. WEEK AHEAD Weaker Economic and Stronger Inflation Data Ahead. Beyond what will be the dissipating effects of the repair, replacement and reconstruction activity generated by Hurricane Sandy, and in anticipation of the likely negative impact of expanded QE3 and the ongoing fiscal crisis/debt-ceiling negotiations on the currency markets, reporting in the months and year ahead generally should reflect higher-than-expected Copyright 2013 American Business Analytics & Research, LLC, www.shadowstats.com 5

inflation and indicate weaker-than-expected economic results. Increasingly, previously unreported economic weakness should continue to show up in prior-period revisions. Significant reporting-quality problems continue with most major economic series. Headline reporting issues remain tied largely to systemic distortions of seasonal adjustments, distortions that have been induced by the still-ongoing economic turmoil of the last five years. The recent economic collapse has been without precedent in the post-world War II era of modern economic reporting. These distortions have thrown into question the statistical-significance of the headline month-to-month reporting for many popular economic series. In any event, where numbers are too far removed from common experience, they tend to be viewed by the public with extreme skepticism. Still, recognition of an intensifying double-dip recession continues to gain, while recognition of a mounting inflation threat has been rekindled by the Fed s monetary policies. The political system would like to see the issues disappear, and still appears to be trying to work numerical slight-of-hand with series such as the GDP; the media does its best to avoid publicizing unhappy economic news or, otherwise, it puts a happy spin on the numbers; and the financial markets do their best to avoid recognition of the problems for as long as possible, problems that have horrendous implications for the markets and for systemic stability, as discussed in Hyperinflation 2012 and No. 485: Special Commentary. Retail Sales (December 2012). Scheduled for release on Tuesday, January 15th, by the Census Bureau, the headline December 2012 retail sales number likely will disappoint financial markets looking for a monthly gain in December that would be stronger than the 0.3% monthly increase reported initially for November. Beyond any lingering effects from the repair-and-replacement consumption generated by Hurricane Sandy at least partially funded by insurance payments the consumer remains in a severe liquidity bind, unable to sustain positive, inflation-adjusted consumption growth, as discussed in the Opening Comments. Weakening consumption already was in play before the superstorm, and that pattern should renew shortly, particularly net of inflation s impact on sales. A fair bet here is that revisions to prior reporting will be unusually volatile and likely to the downside, as details from actual storm impact begin to replace the happy guesstimates that previously had been worked into official reporting. Producer Price Index PPI (December 2012). The December 2012 PPI is scheduled for release on Tuesday, January 15th, by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). The headline December PPI has a good chance of showing a small monthly gain, despite what appears to be developing negative market expectations. Depending on the oil contract followed, oil prices on average were up month-to-month in December by 0.4-to-1.5 percentage points. With supportive seasonal adjustments for oil prices in the month, higher food prices and still relatively strong core inflation, the monthly change in wholesales prices should be in positive territory. Consumer Price Index CPI (December 2012). The release by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) of the December 2012 CPI numbers is scheduled for Wednesday, January 16th. The headline CPI-U inflation rate should be flat-to-positive on a monthly basis, with some pick-up possible in terms of annual inflation. Copyright 2013 American Business Analytics & Research, LLC, www.shadowstats.com 6

Seasonally-unadjusted, monthly-average gasoline prices declined by 4.0% in December 2012, per the Department of Energy, but that monthly decline should be offset somewhat in BLS calculations by upside seasonal adjustments. In December 2011, a similar 4.0% unadjusted monthly decline revised to a 2.0% drop after seasonal adjustment. With continued upside pressures from both food and core inflation, there is some chance of the December 2012 headline number topping market expectations, which appear to be developing around unchanged. Year-to-year, CPI-U inflation would increase or decrease in December 2012 reporting, dependent on the seasonally-adjusted monthly change, versus an unchanged level in the adjusted monthly reporting for December 2011. I use the adjusted change here, since that is how consensus expectations are expressed. To approximate the annual unadjusted inflation rate for December 2012, the difference in December s headline monthly change (or forecast of same), versus the year-ago monthly change, should be added to or subtracted directly from the November 2012 annual inflation rate of 1.76%. A headline unchanged number would leave annual CPI-U inflation at about 1.8% for December 2012 (year-to-year). Industrial Production (December 2012). Due for release on Thursday, January 16th, by the Federal Reserve, the headline December 2012 industrial production number likely will continue to gyrate, both in hard reporting and in the context of prior-period revisions, as the Fed begins to get hard numbers against its recent guesses and estimations of the effects from Hurricane Sandy. To the extent there is any gain in December reporting, it likely will be tied to meeting demand for temporary repair-and-replacement storm effects, as seen for example in the replacement of damaged automobiles. Liquidation opportunities given already excessive inventory levels could mute expected production gains, with reporting likely to disappoint minimally-positive market expectations. Again, keep in mind that this series is subject to frequent and significant downside revisions. Residential Construction (December 2012). Detail on December housing starts is due for release on Thursday, January 17th, by the Census Bureau. In tandem with a temporary uptick in December 2012 construction employment and with November s gain in building permits, December reporting on housing starts should begin to see some temporary boost from post-hurricane Sandy reconstruction efforts. The biggest such effects likely still will be seen in later months. In the continuing wake of the 75% collapse in activity from 2006 through 2008, and given the ensuing four-year pattern of housing starts stagnation at an historically low level of activity continues, there is no chance of a sustainable turnaround in the housing construction market, unless the circumstance is affected by a fundamental upturn in consumer and banking liquidity conditions. Chances are fair that any reported monthly gain for December still will not be statistically significant. Copyright 2013 American Business Analytics & Research, LLC, www.shadowstats.com 7