Monday, October 22, 2007

Monthly Building Materials Sales Per Capita



The shaded area represents our last economic contraction. Our last consumer recession was July, 1990 to March, 1991. This data doesn't go back that far.

Here is some data covering our last consumer recession. Please note the large drop off in per capita sales of building materials during that period (the numbers are not adjusted for inflation, or they'd look even worse).




So here's the question of the day. Just how bad is the aftermath of our current housing bubble going to be? Are we going to slowly slide down and muddle our way through this or are we going to panic at some point?

Economic panic is uncalled for
There are a number of things that could keep us awake at night, and several of these are in the realm of economics.

These include the dismal housing market, the subprime-mortgage-lending crisis, rising delinquencies and foreclosures, and the recent nerve-shattering roller coaster ride in the stock market

Obviously not all is well in the economy.

Despite all the bad news, let me assure you that the American economy is not going down the tubes. It remains the largest and most important economy in the world, ahead of Japan, Germany and China. The economy will continue to expand modestly in 2007, and most analysts say they believe that it will not go into a recession despite the serious challenges it faces.


I don't know about you, but when I'm told not to panic I tend to calmly move towards the exits.

Further, you've got to love the wording on what the analysts are saying. He had a choice. He could have said most analysts believe. Instead, he chose to say most analysts say they believe. Why do you suppose that is? The distinction is rather subtle. As one who believes that most analysts have a vested interest in saying one thing while thinking another, I'm rather skeptical of what analysts have to say. However, I'd love to know what they really think. What were most analysts saying at the height of the dotcom bubble? What were they actually thinking?

Here's a look. Note the difference between the "public assessment" and the "internal assessment." So please forgive me if I don't jump up and down with excitement over what the analysts have to say.

Source Data:
U.S. Census Bureau: Monthly Retail Sales
BLS: Consumer Price Indexes (CPI)
St. Louis Fed: Population Data
National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
Annual Benchmark Report for Retail Trade: A detailed summary of Retail Sales, Purchases, Accounts Receivable, and Inventories January 1987 Through December 1996

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said the dollar's depreciation may reflect growing unwillingness among foreigners to buy U.S. debt.

``Obviously there is a limit to the extent that obligations to foreigners can reach,'' Greenspan said in a speech in Washington today. The dollar's decline to its lowest since 1997 may be ``an indication America is approaching this limit.''

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=aG3NEynW7ik8&refer=bondheads

Mark it may be a case that you can run but you can't hide.

Kevin

Stagflationary Mark said...

We buy goods from them. They end up with dollars. Then they have to figure out what to do with those dollars. They clearly don't like them all that much lately so they try handing them off to the next foreigner. At some point some foreigner must eventually spend them on something of ours.

1. Our stock market (CPI says not inflationary)
2. Our bond market (CPI says not inflationary)
3. Our real estate market (CPI says that's eventually inflationary)
4. Our raw materials (CPI says that's eventually very inflationary)
5. Our food (CPI says that's eventually very inflationary)

Eventually, it has to come back to us. Somehow.

As seen in the August trade deficit details, it seems they are starting to build up a preference for our nonmonetary gold and food.

It was only a matter of time. Personally, I'd prefer foreigners to just bury the dollars in a secret chest/time capsule not to be opened until 2107.

But hey, that's just me being selfish. I'm quite confident that the foreigners would prefer me to do the same with my dollars. I'm driving down the yield on THEIR investments too I suppose, lol.

Anonymous said...

Eventually, it has to come back to us. Somehow.

How about if their invested dollars just vanish into thin air by the implosion of a ABS:-) Poof

Of course Bush just asked congress for another 48Bil for Iraq so they always have something to buy:-(

Kevin

Stagflationary Mark said...

Kevin,

Implosion (ABS) vs. Explosion (Iraq)

Once again the powers that be balance themselves on the tightrope, lol. :(