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The Conference Board's Leading Index Rises for Fourth Straight Month, But Coincident Index Stalls
Finance.Yahoo/PRnewswire ^ | September 18, 2003

Posted on 09/18/2003 7:25:48 AM PDT by Starwind

The Conference Board's Leading Index Rises for Fourth Straight Month, But Coincident Index Stalls
Thursday September 18, 10:01 am ET

NEW YORK, Sept. 18 /PRNewswire/ -- The Conference Board reports today that the Composite Index of Leading Economic Indicators increased by 0.4% in August, after an upwardly revised 0.6% gain in July, a 0.4% increase in June and a 1.1% rise in May.

With this rise, the level now stands at 1.4% above the previous peak reached in May 2002.

"The economy is improving, although the road will likely remain bumpy," says Conference Board Economist Ken Goldstein. "While the Coincident Index was flat in August, after three straight monthly increases, the continuing rise in the Leading Index suggests the Coincident Index should advance in the next few months. With export growth still months away, the growth burden remains on consumer spending and business investment."

The Lagging Index was also unchanged in August, after an increase of 0.1% in July.

          The Conference Board(R) U.S. Business Cycle Indicators(SM)

U.S. Leading Economic Indicators And Related Composite Indexes for August 2003

The Conference Board announced today that the U.S. leading index increased 0.4 percent, and the coincident and lagging indexes held steady in August.

     -- The leading index increased again in August, and is now up by 2.5
        percent from its low in March (more than a 6.0 percent annual rate).
     -- In addition, the strength in the leading index has been widespread
        over this period.
     -- The coincident index was unchanged in August, but has been rising
        gradually from its recent low in April.  The growth rate of the
        coincident index has picked up to about 1.2 percent (annual rate) over
        the last four months, and this growth has also been widespread -- only
        employment has continued declining.
     -- The upturn in the leading index since March has already been followed
        by stronger real GDP growth in the second quarter and by the recent
        increases in the coincident index.  In addition, the recent strength
        in the leading index suggests a further strengthening of economic
        growth in the second half of the year.

LEADING INDICATORS. Four of the ten indicators that make up the leading index increased in August. The positive contributors -- beginning with the largest positive contributor -- were interest rate spread, vendor performance, real money supply*, and building permits. The negative contributors -- beginning with the largest negative contributor -- were average weekly initial claims for unemployment insurance (inverted), index of consumer expectations, manufacturers' new orders for consumer goods and materials*, manufacturers' new orders for nondefense capital goods*, and stock prices. Average weekly manufacturing hours held steady in August.

The leading index now stands at 113.3 (1996=100). Based on revised data, this index increased 0.6 percent in July and 0.4 percent in June. During the six-month span through August, the leading index increased 2.4 percent, with eight of the ten components advancing (diffusion index, six-month span equals 85 percent).

COINCIDENT INDICATORS. Three of the four indicators that make up the coincident index increased in August. The positive contributors to the index -- beginning with the largest positive contributor -- were personal income less transfer payments*, manufacturing and trade sales*, and industrial production. Employees on nonagricultural payrolls declined in August.

The coincident index now stands at 115.4 (1996=100). This index increased 0.2 percent in July and 0.1 percent in June. During the six-month period through August, the coincident index increased 0.3 percent.

The next release is scheduled for October 20, 2003 at 10 A.M. ET.

LAGGING INDICATORS. The lagging index held steady at 98.1 (1996=100) in August, with four of the seven components advancing. The positive contributors to the index -- beginning with the largest positive contributor -- were average duration of unemployment (inverted), change in labor cost per unit of output*, ratio of consumer installment credit to personal income*, and ratio of manufacturing and trade inventories to sales*. The two negative contributors were commercial and industrial loans outstanding* and change in CPI for services. Average prime rate charged by banks held steady in August. The lagging index increased 0.1 percent in July and decreased 0.9 percent in June.

DATA AVAILABILITY. The data series used by The Conference Board to compute the three composite indexes and reported in the tables in this release are those available "as of" 12 Noon on September 17, 2003. Some series are estimated as noted below. * Series in the leading index that are based on The Conference Board estimates are manufacturers' new orders for consumer goods and materials, manufacturers' new orders for nondefense capital goods, and the personal consumption expenditure deflator for money supply. Series in the coincident index that are based on The Conference Board estimates are personal income less transfer payments and manufacturing and trade sales. Series in the lagging index that are based on The Conference Board estimates are inventories to sales ratio, consumer installment credit to income ratio, change in labor cost per unit of output, and the personal consumption expenditure deflator for commercial and industrial loans outstanding.

The procedure used to estimate the current month's personal consumption expenditure deflator (used in the calculation of real money supply and commercial and industrial loans outstanding) now incorporates the current month's consumer price index when it is available before the release of the U.S. Leading Economic Indicators.

Effective with the September 18, 2003 release, the method for calculating manufacturers' new orders for consumer goods and materials (A0M008) and manufacturers' new orders for nondefense capital goods (A0M027) has been revised. Both series are now constructed by deflating nominal aggregate new orders data instead of aggregating deflated industry level new orders data. Both the new and the old methods utilize appropriate producer price indices. This simplification remedies several issues raised by the recent conversion of industry data to the North American Classification System (NAICS), as well as several other issues, e.g. the treatment of semiconductor orders. While this simplification caused a slight shift in the levels of both new orders series, the growth rates were essentially the same. As a result, this simplification had no significant effect on the leading index.

.                      Summary Table of Composite Indexes

. 2003 6-month . Jun Jul Aug Feb to Aug

. Leading index 112.1r 112.8r 113.3p . Percent Change .4r .6r .4p 2.4 . Diffusion 70.0 70.0 45.0 85.0

. Coincident Index 115.2r 115.4r 115.4p . Percent Change .1r .2r .0p 0.3 . Diffusion 50.0 75.0 75.0 50.0

. Lagging Index 98.0r 98.1r 98.1p . Percent Change -.9r .1r .0p -1.4 . Diffusion 7.1 57.1 64.3 14.3

. n.a. Not available p Preliminary r Revised . Indexes equal 100 in 1996 . Source: The Conference Board




TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: bushrecovery; conferenceboard; economicindicators
I'm afraid the HTML in this report doesn't pass the FR filters too well. Go to the link for a proper view.
1 posted on 09/18/2003 7:25:49 AM PDT by Starwind
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To: AntiGuv; arete; sourcery; Soren; Tauzero; imawit; David; AdamSelene235; Black Agnes; Cicero; ...
Fyi...
2 posted on 09/18/2003 7:26:29 AM PDT by Starwind (The Gospel of Jesus Christ is the only true good news)
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