Top 5 Economic Graphs of the Week - 2 October 2010
This week we review the apparent rebound in the Chinese manufacturing sector,
followed by a look at the quarterly Tankan survey results from Japan. Then we
look at the US PMI results which show grim signs; as do the housing and
confidence figures. Finally we wrap up with a look at some other statistics from
Japan in this top 3 economies of the world version of the top 5 graphs of the
week.
1. China PMI: Continued Rebound
China saw a
continued rebound in its manufacturing sector, as indicated by the PMI results
which had the official index rising to 53.8 from 51.7 in August, and the HSBC
index also rising from 51.9 to 52.9. The rebound in the main index is a
promising sign, indeed the new orders index rose to 56.3 from 53.1 while the
export-order index rose only to 52.8 from 52.2. Also of note in the data was the
rise in the input price index component, which rose to 65.3 from 60.5. Seasonal
factors aside (it is supposed to be seasonally adjusted), i.e. filling orders
for Christmas, the results show an end to the drop in the index, and possibly a
new revival as the Chinese economy continues to expand and personal incomes
rise.

2. Japan Tankan: Gradual Recovery
Another positive, but somewhat less so, was the Tankan September quarter survey
results from Japan. The overall index improved to -10 from -15 in the 2nd
quarter this year. Into the detail, the standout was medium-sized manufacturers,
who saw a 10 point rise from -6 to positive 4, similarly, large manufacturers
solidified their recovery, adding 7 points to positive 8. So in that negatives
were getting less negative, and prospects were improving for the 3rd quarter, it
was a good result. However the December 2010 forecast figures were much less
optimistic, with most firms expecting a reasonably deterioration in conditions.
So the story is basically, small improvement, outlook not great.

3. US PMI: Grim Signs
The US also released its PMI
results this week, showing what appears to be a continued turn in prospects. If
you recall, there was a time when people were asking "what will happen when
the inventory cycle and stimulus runs out?" and here's your answer, not a
whole lot really for the US. The PMI index fell from 56.3 to 54.4 with the only
real strength coming from an increase in the prices sub-index from 61.5 to 70.5,
a significant increase - stagflation anyone? All the other indexes that you
usually want to see rise didn't, so not a great result from the US.

4. US Housing and Confidence
Staying with the US, and thinking about gloomy economic prospects, there's the
US housing market and consumer confidence data details that came out this week.
The US housing market continued to flat-line (no surprises there), and will
likely do so for an extended period. Meanwhile the US consumer also basically
flat-lined, if not deteriorated a little. The Conference Board Consumer
Confidence index came out much worse than expected at 48.5 vs 53.5 in August,
the present situation index decreased to 23.1 from 24.9 and the expectations
index fell to 65.4 from 72 in August. So overall, while it's still not panic
time, things are just not good, and they will continue to muddle along because
of the damage caused by the excesses everyone got into that caused the financial
crisis.

5. Japan Inflation and Unemployment
Back to Japan, there was some slight improvements in the inflation and
employment situation with the unemployment rate dipping to 5.1% from 5.2%, and
the deflation rate improving slightly to -1.0% from -1.1% in July. So onward
with the gradual export driven recovery in Japan - "Yentervention"
or not. So it seems that some progress might be getting through from the Bank of
Japan in its desperate struggle to stem deflation and stimulate the economy, but
there are still serious challenges for the Japanese economy, at least it has
China as its neighbor and trade partner, otherwise, muddle along too.

Summary
This week we looked at the 3 largest economies as they release indicators on the
prospects of their manufacturing and business sectors. China showed pretty good
results all round, Japan showed slight improvement, and the US did not impress
with its PMI results. The story of continued economic growth (catch up) and
expansion in China remains intact, and the story of a long hard slog in the US
and Japan also remains intact.
Japan and the US are the real spots to watch as the global recovery unfolds,
though emerging markets are coming up fast and strong, it is these two pillars
of stability that will drive or fail to drive much of the growth in the near
term. Unfortunately things are still subdued in the US as it goes through the muddle
ages of the recovery, and even Japan is showing potential warning signs of a
double-dip.
Go emerging markets, hang in there developed markets...
Sources
1. CFLP www.chinawuliu.com.cn
& Markit/HSBC
www.markiteconomics.com & Yahoo Finance finance.yahoo.com
2. Bank of Japan www.boj.or.jp
3. Institute for Supply Management www.ism.ws
4. Standard & Poors www.standardandpoors.com
& Conference Board
www.conference-board.org
5. Trading Economics www.tradingeconomics.com
Article Source: http://www.econgrapher.com/top5graphs2oct.html
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