Posted on 02/17/2017 12:23:12 PM PST by Lorianne
Economists were surprised again today, this time over industrial production.
The Econoday Consensus Estimate was for a flat reading of 0.0 percent but production fell 0.3 percent.
Moreover, the Fed revised December production lower, to +0.6 percent from +0.8 percent. Effectively, the consensus was off by 0.5 percent.
Blame the Weather
A swing in utility output skewed what is, however, no better than a modest industrial production report for January. Industrial production, reflecting a 5.7 percent weather-related drop for utilities, fell 0.3 percent which is below Econodays no-change consensus.
But the real disappointment in the report is the manufacturing component which could muster no better than a consensus gain of 0.2 percent. This reading hasnt been able to build any momentum to speak of and was held down in January by a sharp 2.9 percent monthly downswing in vehicles. Excluding motor vehicles, manufacturing volumes rose 0.5 percent which is really the highlight of todays report. Also a highlight though is mining which is the reports third and smallest component. Mining continues to show new life with a very sharp 2.8 percent jump in January.
Overall capacity utilization reflects the general softness of the industrial sector, at 75.3 percent for a 3 tenths decline in the month and 4.6 percentage points below its long run average. Manufacturing utilization is likewise soft at 75.1 percent.
The industrial economy, held down by weak global demand, has been running below average the past 2-1/2 years, when energy prices first collapsed in mid-2014. But advance indicators, including this mornings Empire State report, are almost uniformly pointing to a rebound ahead, a rebound however that has yet to appear in the governments definitive data.
Easy to Predict
This was too easy to predict. On January 18, 2017 I noted Industrial Production Jumps Due to Weather: Good News Stops There.
Due to the jump in December industrial production, The FRBNY upped its first quarter GDP Nowcast estimate up from 2.1% to 2.7% on January 20.
On January 24, in Formulas Dont Think: Investigating Weather-Related GDP, I commented: Temperatures have been warmer than normal for most of January. Temperatures in Chicago hit a remarkable 60 degrees last Saturday.
Here are the weather-related charts I posted.
chart
SNIP
Unexpectedly........
The debate is over. They had ‘consensus’ ...................
Wow - mother Gaia and her fantastic global-warming weather making machine have supreme power of man
It is literally responsible for EVERYTHING!
This is the problem with economists. They have to stick with their models, or else they cannot claim to be objective. So when obvious factors that are outside their models come into play, they willfully ignore them. And THOSE are the ones with INTEGRITY! (I’m commenting on the necessities of the so-called science, not the character or intelligence of the economists!)
If a nuclear war destroyed the entire nation, knocking us back to the stone age, economists would release their reports — in pencil, sent by horseback carrier, if they had to — without forecasting any decline in industrial production.
This is no mere academic problem! The federal reserve failed to respond to war in the Persian Gulf in 1990, the terrorist attacks in 2001, or the oil shocks of 2006. As a result, interest rates inverted, and widespread bank failures abounded, destroying the economy. The models simply said, “Oh, look: inflation! Time to raise the interest rates!” even as the long-term bond rates were collapsing as investors clamored for shelter.
jan. 6th math is wrong on his map.
how is anything else reliable ?
Get used to surprise and unexpected results during the Trump administration that are BETTER than expected.
So much WINNING!!!
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