Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
Treasury Rally Continues in Normal Fashion; No Reason to be Short Treasuries Posted: 13 Aug 2010 12:28 PM PDT In the wake of anemic retail sales in July, treasuries could have been expected to rally and they did. Yield Curve as of 2008-08-13 Curve Watchers Anonymous notes that the biggest treasury gains (drops in yield), occurred on the longest durations. This is a normal yield curve reaction. This is in contrast to the pattern we have been seeing for weeks, with the middle of the curve reacting the strongest. Here is a chart over time from Front Running the Fed - Who Knew? Once again the 7-year treasury is in the sweet spot.Yield Curve May 2009 Thru Present click on chart for sharper image The 30-year long bond has finally broken through that shelf at the 4% mark. There is plenty of room for further rallies is the economic data remains weak. There is no reason to expect anything other than weakness, thus no reason to be short treasuries here. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Retail Sales Rise Less than Expected in July Posted: 13 Aug 2010 11:30 AM PDT Once gain ever optimistic economists were off on the high side as Retail Sales Rise Less Than Forecast Sales at U.S. retailers rose less than forecast and consumer confidence held near an eight-month low, indicating the economic slowdown will persist into the second half of 2010.For more on back-to-school sales from a Gallup poll, please see Consumer Spending Slumps Even With Back-to-School Underway; Cisco, IBM Sales Suggest Corporate Spending Slowdown Census Bureau Retail Sales Report Inquiring minds are digging into the July Advance Monthly Retail Sales Report for further economic clues. The U.S. Census Bureau announced today that advance estimates of U.S. retail and food services sales for July, adjusted for seasonal variation and holiday and trading-day differences, but not for price changes, were $362.7 billion, an increase of 0.4 percent from the previous month, and 5.5 percent above July 2009. Total sales for the May through July 2010 period were up 5.9 percent from the same period a year ago. The May to June 2010 percent change was revised from -0.5 percent to -0.3 percent.Retail Sales Up How Much? Retail sales are highly likely to be up from the early 2009 bottom, but the pertinent questions are 1. By How Much? 2. From What Bottom? The problem is the Census bureau methodology is fatally flawed. Survey Description Methodology Each month, questionnaires are mailed to a probability sample of approximately 5,000 employer firms selected from the larger Monthly Retail Trade Survey (MRTS). Firms responding to MARTS account for approximately 65% of the total national sales estimate. Advance sales estimates are computed using a link relative estimator. The change in sales from the previous month is estimated using only units that have reported data for both the current and previous month. There is no imputation or adjustment for nonrespondents in MARTS. The total sales estimate is derived by multiplying this ratio by the preliminary sales estimate for the previous month (derived from the larger MRTS sample).Sales Tax Collections The accurate way to judge retail sales is by state sales tax collections, adjusted for increases in sales tax rate. The Census survey misses the effect of companies that have gone out of business such as Circuit City and all kinds of small stores in vacant strip malls everywhere. Moreover, some of that Circuit City business went to places like Best Buy and Walmart, increasing same store sales at those stores. Some of those sales also vanished. I discussed this last month in
In case you missed those articles, please take a look. Retail sales, as poor as the the government reports are, are even worse if you look at things from a sales tax collection standpoint. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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