Showing posts with label Inventory Correction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inventory Correction. Show all posts

Thursday, May 14, 2009

There has been a race between declining sales and declining inventory.

TO BE NOTED: From Calculated Risk:

"Update on Inventory Correction

by CalculatedRisk on 5/13/2009 11:05:00 AM

The Q1 GDP report showed a strong inventory correction is under way, with the BEA reporting inventories declined -136.8 billion (SAAR) in Q1. The Manufacturing and Trade Inventories and Sales report from the Census Bureau today showed more evidence of declining inventories.

Inventory Correction Click on graph for larger image in new window.

The Census Bureau reported:

Manufacturers' and trade inventories, adjusted for seasonal variations but not for price changes, were estimated at an end-of-month level of $1,404.1 billion, down 1.0 percent (±0.1%) from February 2009 and down 4.8 percent (±0.3%) from March 2008.
The above graph shows the 3 month change (annualized) in manufacturers’ and trade inventories. The inventory correction was slow to start in this recession, but inventories are now declining sharply.

Inventory Correction However, even with the sharp decline in inventories, the inventory to sales ratio was flat in March at 1.44.

There has been a race between declining sales and declining inventory. And even if sales start to stabilize, inventory levels are still too high, and further inventory reductions are coming.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

The recent data suggests there is a significant inventory correction in progress.

TO BE NOTED: From Calcluated Risk:
From my perspective, the timing shows the Proactivity Run beginning in mid-November:


Inventory Correction

by CalculatedRisk on 3/14/2009 05:35:00 PM

The recent data suggests there is a significant inventory correction in progress.

Inventory Correction Click on graph for larger image in new window.

This graph is based on the Manufacturing and Trade Inventories and Sales report from the Census Bureau.

This shows the 3 month change (annualized) in manufacturers’ and trade inventories. The inventory correction was slow to start in this recession, but inventories are now declining sharply.

This change in inventories will probably have a significant impact on GDP for the next few quarters. This is common in a recession. The contribution of changes in inventory to GDP have been pretty wild at times - in the early '80s there were a few quarters where the change in inventory subtracted more than 5% from GDP (annualized) in just one quarter! Something like that could happen in Q1 or Q2 too - and this is difficult to predict - and that could contribute to a horrible GDP number in Q1.

This inventory correction is probably also impacting imports and could be part of the reason import traffic has fallen off a cliff (see LA Port Import Traffic Collapses in February)

The good news is a significant inventory correction will help with GDP later in the year. Even with some evidence of stabilization in personal consumption, I expect a horrible GDP number for Q1 due to this inventory correction and also because of the sharp decline in all categories of investment (especially non-residential investment).

"