Top 5 Graphs of the Week - 29 May 2010
This week we look at the 2nd estimate of US GDP, US house prices and consumer
confidence, the Japanese unemployment and deflation picture, Japan's
international trade, and New Zealand's international trade. In the analysis we
arrive at a one line summary that says things are still chugging along in this
post-great-recession environment, but risks are rising.
1. US GDP
The 2nd estimate of US GDP came in slightly lower than the first estimate. The
figure (SAAR) was 3.0% (or 0.8% q/q) against initial 3.2%, and consensus 3.5%.
The year on year figure now sits at 2.5%, which considering the depth of the
recession is not really all that impressive. The overall result is symptomatic
of a gradual and fragile recovery, and though the risks have been repeatedly
highlighted, they've only really taken on a real consideration as things like
the Euro crisis, housing market weakness, and geopolitical situations (e.g.
Korea), have surfaced. On that note, time to review the consumer confidence and
housing market situation (below).

2. US House Prices and Confidence
US Consumer Confidence picked up strongly in May to 63.3 from 57.9 in April
(beating consensus 59.0). On the components, present conditions picked up from
28.2 to 30.2, while future expectations jumped to 85.3 from 77.4 which is
positive from an outlook perspective. On the housing market, the S&P Case
Shiller index (20-City Composite) was basically flat in March. Consumer
Confidence has increasingly become a proxy for unemployment and house prices.
Particularly on the jobs side, Consumer confidence is now basically a second
order metric of the unemployment rate, and it will probably only meaningfully
recover once the jobs (and housing) market picks up.

3. Japan Inflation and Unemployment
Japan saw worse figures on both fronts in April, with the jobless rate ticking
up slightly to 5.1% from 5.0% in March (having gone as low as 4.9% after peaking
initially at 5.6%). On the inflation (deflation) side Japan's consumer price
index fell by -1.5% year on year; accelerating declines since the -1.2% decline
in March (driven in part by high school fees), and showing no sign of respite in
the deflation trap. Japan's economy has been recovering
pretty sharply on a GDP basis since the height of the crisis, but it still
faces significant problems, such as those highlighted in the chart below (as
well as fiscal issues). Indeed the main strength in the Japanese economy is the
export sector (see below).

4. Japan International Trade
Japan recorded stronger trade numbers in April, with exports growing 40.4% year
on year to 5.89 trillion yen (beating consensus 38.9%). Imports also grew,
rising 24.2% year on year to 5.15 trillion yen. This left the trade surplus at
742 billion yen (consensus 709), down from 949 billion in March. As noted above
(and last week),
this is the bright spot in the Japanese economy. Boosted by a strong economy (in
part helped by strong stimulus spending) in China, and the global pick up in
trade, boosted in part by the inventory cycle (of which Japan benefits from due
to its large manufacturing base, particularly in electronics goods). So
basically this is a bright spot, but also a vulnerability for Japan - any global
double dip in international trade will stymie the Japanese economy.

5. New Zealand International Trade
New Zealand recorded a higher surplus in April (NZ$656m vs NZ$590m in March, and
consensus NZ$445m), due to decline in imports (e.g. crude oil and machinery),
while commodity prices and seasonal factors boosted soft commodity exports
(dairy, agriculture, logs). Exports fell 2.2% from March to NZ$3.97 billion,
lead by the dairy sector. Exports to China increased 44% to NZ$460 million, with
China now New Zealand's second biggest customer (after Australia), as the free
trade agreement signed in 2008 boosted trade ties between the two countries.
The improvement is likely to be temporary however, because as the New Zealand
economy recovers, demand for imports will grow, and interest rates will go up
which will strengthen the NZD (making exports less competitive).

Summary
So this week we saw the US economy slowly climbing out of recession, and US
house prices stagnating; while consumer confidence saw some respite. In Japan,
the deflation situation worsened slightly, as did unemployment, but
international trade (the main stay of Japan's economy) is still going strong.
The global trade recovery picture was also somewhat echoed in New Zealand's
trade results, with China also playing a key part, but owing much of the
improvement to cyclical factors.
Together the data supports a view of a fragile recovery from a deep recession.
It also affirms the view of recovering global trade, driven primarily by
cyclical factors such as inventory cycles, commodity cycles, and some residual
impact from stimulus spending. International trade still remains a vulnerable
point in the global recovery, as a worsening of the Euro crisis or geopolitical
events have the potential to scuttle the recovery in trade - which in turn would
scuttle the still relatively nascent and fragile economic recovery. So in one
line, things are still chugging along in this post-great-recession environment,
but risks are rising.
Sources
1. US Bureau of Economic Analysis www.bea.gov
2. Conference Board www.conference-board.org
Standard & Poors www.standardandpoors.com
3. Japan External Trade Organization www.jetro.go.jp
4. Trading Economics www.tradingeconomics.com
5. Statistics New Zealand www.stats.govt.nz
Article Source: http://www.econgrapher.com/top5graphs29may.html
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