Top 5 Economic Graphs of the Week - 9 October 2010
This week we look at some of the monetary policy decisions during the past
week (Australia, Indonesia, Japan, Europe, UK, Philippines). Then we review some
interesting data points from the US; non-manufacturing PMI, consumer credit, and
the nonfarm payrolls report. Then we finish up with a look at the strong
employment numbers in Australia.
1. Monetary Policy Review
Among the central banks announcing monetary
policy decisions last week, the Reserve Bank of Australia held its rate at
4.50%, the Central bank of Indonesia held at 6.50%, the Bank of Japan decreased
from 0.10% to between 0 and 0.10%, Bangko Sentral Ng Pilipinas held at 4.00%,
the European Central Bank held at 1.00%, and the Bank of England held at 0.50%.
So all quiet really except for japan who also announced a 5 trillion yen
quantitative easing program where it would buy bonds, REITs, and even shares in
an attempt to ease further and stimulate the economy. The close call was
Australia, which is likely to raise at their next meeting as the Australian
economy goes from strength to strength (more on this later).

2. US Non-manufacturing PMI
The US non-manufacturing index rebounded in September on the back of a surge in
new export orders. The index rose to 53.2 from 51.5 in August, and up against
consensus estimates for 52.0. The other standouts in the report were inventories
(falling from 53.5 to 47), supplier deliveries (improving to 55.0 from 51.0),
employment (improving to 50.2 from 48.2). Overall the non-manufacturing PMI
report showed relatively broad strength (especially as compared to the manufacturing
PMI report released last week). Thus the result is relatively positive in
the scheme of things.

3. US Consumer Credit
US Consumer
Credit continued to contract in August as the deleveraging cycle continues
to run its course. In total consumer credit contracted by $3.3 billion in
August, vs -$3.6 billion in July, and slightly below an expected contraction of
-$4.0 billion. Breaking it down to revolving vs non-revolving, non-revolving is
experiencing continued positive numbers due largely to car loans. But overall it
reflects the trend of consumer deleveraging, and fits with the data we're seeing
in terms of savings rates and retail sales. So basically it's the same old story
of the long hard recovery.

4. US Nonfarm Payrolls
So it should be no surprise that we're still seeing subdued results in the
non-farm payrolls data. in September payrolls fell by -95k vs consensus for -8k
and previous -54k, but stripping out the government cuts and census worker
cycle; private payrolls expanded by 64k, which was slightly down against August
67k and consensus 85k. Average earnings were flat against August, and the
average work week was also flat. So really just another subdued result as the
subdued economic recovery continues to unfold. But of course the positive
numbers in the private payrolls can't be ignored, it says that there is at least
a pulse - albeit a weak one.

5. Australian Employment
Looking at Australia, the jobs story is a much different one with jobs expanding
again, the Australian economy added 49.5k jobs on a seasonally adjusted basis,
with all of the strength again coming from full-time jobs, with part time jobs
actually contracting as part-timers converted to full-timers and new employees
entered the market. The unemployment rate remained at 5.1%. So again the lucky
country rides strong as it continues to expand its resource sector and reaps the
residual benefits of the stimulus spending last year. With continued strength in
the employment data its almost a given (unless anything external happens) that
the RBA will need to start lifting rates again in November.

Summary
So we saw continued inaction by the central banks around the world this week as
the various monetary policy decisions were announced. Much of the inaction is
simply due to a relative comfort of the risks of greater inflation vs the risk
of slowing or halting the economic recovery. But in some cases perhaps the more
probable or helpful move would even be continued expansion e.g. in the UK, and
as Japan acted in its apparently desperate moves. One thing is sure - it will
pay to closely watch the central bankers around the world as the recovery
unfolds.
Over to the US, we saw signs of strength in the non-manufacturing sectors, just
as last week we saw rather ominous signs from the manufacturing sector - which
is consistent with a confuse and muddling recovery. We also saw no surprises in
the direction of the results in the consumer credit data as deleveraging plays
through and in employment as the recovery remains subdued. But in Australia the
employment situation is coming along strong - just as the economy is there. So
in terms of what I've previously
said - nothing much has changed and things are evolving much as expected.
Sources
1. Trading Economics www.tradingeconomics.com
2. Institute for Supply Management www.ism.ws
3. US Federal Reserve www.federalreserve.gov
4. Bureau of Labour Statistics www.bls.gov
5. Australian Bureau of Statistics www.abs.gov.au
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