The Conference board has released their LEIs for August 2009. Their leading economic indicator index (LEI) is up 0.6% for August. July was 0.9% and June was 0.8% respectively.
"Since reaching a peak in July 2007, the LEI fell for twenty months – the longest downtrend since the mid 1970s – but it has been rising since April and its gains have become very widespread," says Ataman Ozyildirim, Economist at The Conference Board. "The six-month growth rate of the LEI continues to accelerate. At the same time, the downtrend in the coincident economic index, measuring current economic activity, seems to be stabilizing, with the index flat so far this quarter."
Says Ken Goldstein, Economist at The Conference Board: "The LEI has risen for five consecutive months and the coincident economic index has stopped falling. Taken together, this suggests that the recession is bottoming out. These numbers are consistent with the view that after a very severe downturn, a recovery is very near. But, the intensity and pattern of that recovery is more uncertain."
Src: Conference board, click on graph to enlarge
Note the slope or trend line, which is a dramatic increase, yet by absolutes, the numbers are still in recession territory (compare to December 2007).
The Conference board details their LEIs:
Five of the ten indicators that make up The Conference Board LEI for the U.S. increased in August.
The positive contributors – beginning with the largest positive contributor – were index of supplier deliveries (vendor performance), the interest rate spread, stock prices, building permits, and the index of consumer expectations.
The negative contributors – beginning with the largest negative contributor – were real money supply*, average weekly initial claims for unemployment insurance (inverted), and manufacturers’ new orders for nondefense capital goods*. Average weekly manufacturing hours and manufacturers’ new orders for consumer goods and materials* held steady in August.
and are outlined in this aptly named document Oh What.
They also give a few additional metrics on their front page, as follows:
- Consumer Confidence Index® +6.7 pts
- Help-Wanted Online +169,000
- Employment Trends Index -0.1%
- CEO Confidence +25.0 pts
On CEO confidence, one must wonder if they have bonus bias with such an increase, otherwise known as do you get out much?
Notice the LEIs which we call the real economy are still negative, particularly unemployment and new orders for manufacturing.
The Conference Board Coincident Economic Index™ (CEI) for the U.S. was unchanged in August, following a 0.1 percent increase in July, and a 0.4 percent decline in June. The Conference Board Lagging Economic Index™ (LAG) declined 0.1 percent in August, following a 0.5 percent decline in July, and a 0.9 percent decline in June.
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I wonder how much stock price, consumer confidence and
to a certain extent builder permits are reflecting back at one another. For example, if stock prices go up, consumer confidence goes up and then stock price goes up again. But there is nothing really underlying the increases such as fundamentals (corporate earnings).
RebelCapitalist.com - Financial Information for the Rest of Us.
RebelCapitalist.com - Financial Information for the Rest of Us.
good question
I was looking at that too and noted a lot of it is perception...I haven't been tracking on earnings and 10-ks so I don't know if the fundamentals are really in alignment here.
I just saw some drip on CNBC about how awesome it was that Dell is getting into the outsourcing business, along with all of our other now destroyed tech corporations (IBM, HP) by buying Perot Systems.
Hey, great, lovely, more labor/wage arbitrage under the guise of "services".
Philly Fed Coincident Index Map
The above maps is the coincident indicators, or how things are doing right at the moment. Green is good, red is bad.
Notice how most of the states are red.