Showing posts with label Wholesale Trade Sales Durable vs non durable graph. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wholesale Trade Sales Durable vs non durable graph. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

That was the biggest decline since the data series began in January 1943

From EconomPic Data:

"Wholesale Trade: Sales Cliff Dive

I'll file this as a "better late than never post". Reuters reported last Thursday:

U.S. wholesale inventories fell in November( THIS IS WHEN THE PROACTIVITY RUN BEGAN ) while sales posted a record decline, a government report said on Friday.

The Commerce Department said U.S. November wholesale inventories fell 0.6 percent after a revised 1.2 percent decline in October. November wholesale sales plunged a record 7.1 percent after falling a revised 4.5 percent in October( YOU CAN SEE THE DIFFERENCE. AGAIN, IN OCTOBER, WE HAD PRUDENT CUTS. IN NOVEMBER, A PROACTIVITY RUN BEGAN. ).

Wall Street economists surveyed by Reuters expected wholesale inventories to fall 0.8 percent in November. A month earlier, the department reported October inventories were down 1.1 percent while sales fell 4.1 percent.
Looking at the rolling 3-month change in wholesale trade sales, we see levels down almost 50% on an annualized basis.



Breaking out the sales by sector, we see there was "nowhere to hide"( THIS BREADTH IS EVIDENCE OF A PROACTIVITY RUN. IN OTHER WORDS, A REACTION BASED UPON A GENERAL FEAR AND AVERSION TO RISK. ) with petroleum and autos leading the way.



The drop appears to have surprised businesses, as inventory spiked( THIS TAKES LONGER TO CHANGE ) which will add to the deflationary pressures we've seen over the past few months (PPI should verify this with Thursday's release) as businesses attempt to shed these excess inventories as a discount.



Why the huge drop in sales? Consumers are less willing (or able) to borrow to make purchases. MSNBC reports:
Consumer borrowing dropped by a record $7.94 billion in November( AGAIN, NOVEMBER ), a Federal Reserve report showed on Thursday, the latest evidence that households were unwilling or unable to take on more credit.

That was the biggest decline( A PROACTIVITY RUN ) since the data series began in January 1943, and was far steeper than the $0.5 billion dip that economists polled by Reuters had expected.

The November decline represented a drop of 3.7 percent, the largest percentage fall since January 1998, when it was down 4.3 percent.


Source: Federal Reserve, Census

November is when the Proactivity Run began. Period.