Revisiting GDP

When the Q4 2006 GDP data was initially released at 3.5%, we noted that it did not comport with the data we were seeing elsewhere. And in January, we approvingly referenced Caroline Baum’s analysis (Q4 Data Doesn’t Add Up).

Then last week, the Commerce Department released their data on Inventory levels. Based on that, it turns out that our prior criticisms of GDP were dead on:

"U.S. wholesalers’ inventories took the biggest tumble in more than
three years during December as overall demand for their goods raced
forward.

Wholesale inventories decreased by 0.5% to a
seasonally adjusted $393.76 billion, the Commerce Department said
Thursday. November inventories rose by 1.1%, adjusted from a previously
reported 1.3% climb.


The 0.5% decrease in December wholesale inventories surprised Wall
Street, which expected a 0.5% gain. It was the sharpest drop since 0.6%
in May 2003."

Inventories being drawn down are different than actual production of goods. Hence, this is why the Commerce data overstated Q4 GDP by as much as 75 basis points (my estimate) to 100 basis points (JPMorgan’s est.).

That’s prior to the release of the Import /Export data, which as the WSJ noted,  was huge: 

"The chasm between what America buys from overseas and what it ships abroad got wider during December for the first time in four months, due mostly to a resurgence in oil prices. The Commerce Department said the trade shortfall increased 5.3% to $61.18 billion from $58.12 billion in November. That capped a year which saw the deficit swell to $763.6 billion, a 6.5% increase from 2005, and it was the fifth straight year in which the trade shortfall trampled a previous annual record."

Have a look at these two charts. The first is the official Commerce Department data, based only on the prelim GDP. The second chart reflects our new estimates based on the latest inventory data — but not the increase in Imports:

Original Release:

Gdp_incl_q4_prerev_1

The original release (above) gives the impression of an economy moving sideways, growing at a consistent rate between 3 and 3.5%. This is consistent with the soft landing thesis many of the strong Bulls believe in.

Reality check.  With the new Inventory data from Commerce, however, that rosy scenario fades away. First, most of the big GDP pop came when rates were at generational lows and were that way for a year. This artificial stimulation is what gave the economy its pop: 

GDP (expected revision)
Gdp_q4_rev

 

Using the most recent J.P. Morgan estimates (chart 2), we see that GDP has actually been on the downslide since peaking in late 2003/early 2004.

If we were to add the Import/Export data to this, that dings this even further downwards — We are looking at a GDP of potentially 2-2.5%.

If the economic deceleration continues on (as I suspect it will), there is a very real possibility we will see GDP slip to 1-2% by mid 2007.

Goldilocks has left the building . . .

>

Sources:
MONTHLY WHOLESALE TRADE: SALES AND INVENTORIES
U.S. Census Bureau News, DECEMBER 2006
http://www.census.gov/mwts/www/currentwhl.html

Trade Winds
TIM ANNETT    
WSJ, February 13, 2007 12:45 p.m.
THE AFTERNOON REPORT
http://online.wsj.com/article_print/SB117137119901207152.html

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What's been said:

Discussions found on the web:
  1. Mike M commented on Feb 14

    Excellent analysis. I couldn’t agree more. I have been very surprised to see the market continue to climb. It seems like a lot of wishful thinking.

  2. Steve commented on Feb 14

    I noticed that retail sales for December was bumped up. Would that cause an upward revision to Q4 GDP or does that revision not typically move things that much?

  3. VJ commented on Feb 14

    “Goldilocks has left the building…”

    Thank ya, thank ya very much.
    .

  4. vader commented on Feb 14

    What is the link to the JP Morgan data?

  5. Mr. Beach commented on Feb 14

    Barry:

    Need another inflation post! Bernanke is saying all sorts of truly intelligent stuff.

  6. anon commented on Feb 14

    Gotta say, this is pretty ominous coming from Bernanke today. Sounds like he’s warning of the possiblity of a hard landing:

    The risks to this outlook are significant. To the downside, the ultimate extent of the housing market correction is difficult to forecast and may prove greater than we anticipate. Similarly, spillover effects from developments in the housing market onto consumer spending and employment in housing-related industries may be more pronounced than expected.

  7. MarkTX commented on Feb 14

    Goldilocks may have left the building,

    However, it looks like she is now on Wall St. bidding up stocks.

    DJIA= all time high
    Transports= all time high

    and yada, yada, yada…

    Good thing I burned all my old college finance/economic books last fall….they are worthless to describe our current economy or the stock market.

    And one last thought…

    I think we have a “jack in the beanstalk economy”

    1)buy “magic” beans

    2)steal golden goose

    3)become rich

    4)happy ending (or at least for JACK)

  8. SF commented on Feb 14

    You say Goldilocks has left the building?

    What I see when I look around is that maybe, finally, the long, grinding bear market that started last Thursday is over. God, it was devastating—seemed like it would never end. The wealth that must have been destroyed!

  9. lurker commented on Feb 14

    and thank goodness that magic beanstalks CAN grow to the sky, and BEYOND!

  10. emd commented on Feb 14

    “Goldilocks has left the building . . .”

    Not according the the only thing that matters this instant…… market prices. Equities are screaming once again.

  11. Aaron commented on Feb 14

    Was it just me or did Mr. B sound very nervous today, while delivering his speech?

  12. km4 commented on Feb 14

    > Good thing I burned all my old college finance/economic books last fall….they are worthless to describe our current economy or the stock market.

    MarkTX funny yet so true.

    Bush economic policy can be summed up in one phrase i.e. “screw middle class Americans for at least 1 generation and loot the US treasury as much as possible while giving away huge tax breaks to the super rich and huge no bid contracts to their GOP cronies”.

  13. Cherry commented on Feb 14

    Bernanke is probably upset at the current weakening going on the last 4 weeks with the housing market. It is clear and evident. Whether it continues on into March means alot to the mind of the Real Estate business. We all know they are overstaffed compared to demand. They still are at 2005 levels with labor and have taken a hit hoping the market would rebound by spring. Bad pysch in March would mean a reversal.

    If business keeps getting worse by March, the entire industry and its labor force may be having a nice parting of ways(alot of old friends saying goodbye) and different outlook for the US economy.

  14. Short seller commented on Feb 14

    Something happened today that hasn’t happened since March 17, 1998

    new closing highs for the Dow industrials, Dow transports, and Dow utilities all at once

  15. ac commented on Feb 14

    Something happened today that hasn’t happened since March 17, 1998

    new closing highs for the Dow industrials, Dow transports, and Dow utilities all at once

    Which means Barry will probably finally get his 2% correction considering this “current” rally is based on nothing essentially and much like the suckers rally that busted 2 weeks ago, the pain down will be sharp as the pain up for a day or two.

  16. Eclectic commented on Feb 14

    Well, all I can say is, BR, the stock market is saying “You can revisit my mofo’ing ass.”

    …and those are some “Eclectic comments, well worth it.”

    Good nite, one and all.

  17. jagmohan swain commented on Feb 14

    Barry how about the ECRI indicators doing.Are they accelerating or pointing towards a weak economy?

  18. Gary commented on Feb 14

    The stock market has nothing at all to do with the economy. It is simply going up on momentum and the fact that this has been a very long bull market that has erased all fear. The market did the same thing in 99 and early 2000. Did that have anything at all to do with the economy or corp earnings (sorry I meant lack of corp earnings)? I still find it hard to believe the fed can print our way out of facing the consequences of 2 giangatic bubbles. The world I live in you just can’t get something for nothing. Sooner or later the house of cards will collapse.

  19. lurker commented on Feb 14

    I think you mean the house of “credit” cards….. right?

  20. bizzXceleration: Performance, Value and Profit commented on Feb 14

    Will the Real GDP Please Stand Up ?

    BigPicture (Barry Ritholz’s outstanding blog on the economy, markets, et.al.) has mentioned some serious difficulties with 4th quarter GDP numbers that are really worth drawing your attention to. Because of problems with inventory estimates Q4 GDP is l…

  21. seamus commented on Feb 14

    >Bush economic policy can be summed up in one phrase i.e. “screw middle class Americans for at least 1 generation and loot the US treasury as much as possible while giving away huge tax breaks to the super rich and huge no bid contracts to their GOP cronies”.< What really galls me are the conservatives trumping this economy and the "good" news about a $200B federal deficit as proof that "the tax cuts work." But somehow the economy of the mid-to-late '90s wasn't evidence that "tax increases work, too."

  22. Leisa commented on Feb 14

    Aaron re Bernanke sounding nervous….I try to listen to him when I can. He always sounds nervous. I remember his first testimony and he sounded really nervous. I cannot imagine what it must be like to be in his seat. I don’t think that it was the content of what he was speaking but rather the venue. I’d be shaking and a stuttering

    I must say I have alot of respect and admiration for Ben.I think that he is trying to sound the alarm in an articulate and thoughtful way. I appreciate his tackling some of the tough issues. I have confidence in his leadership–even though he may be of Guttenberg descent.

  23. Eclectic commented on Feb 14

    Leisa,

    When he talks of (paraphrz) “not wishing to regulate the derivatives-trading hedge funds,” there’s a good reason he’s nervous… as nervous as a dog crappin’ on a rattlesnake.

  24. MarkTX commented on Feb 14

    >Bush economic policy can be summed up in one phrase i.e. “screw middle class Americans for at least 1 generation and loot the US treasury as much as possible while giving away huge tax breaks to the super rich and huge no bid contracts to their GOP cronies”.< Just Like my burned books...ALL SMOKE!!!!

  25. Winston Munn commented on Feb 14

    I heard the Federal Reserve is considering a new commercial paraphrasing the old E.F. Hutton commercial: When Ben Bernanke talks, people buy.

    I’m still trying to understand the new Wall Street math: as I understand it:
    1 Bernanke Delusion > 13,000 lost jobs + 0% retail growth.

  26. Winston Munn commented on Feb 14

    Speaking of inflation, I just happened to check the contents of the substitutional basket of goods and found it contains:
    4 retread Firestone tires, a 1974 Ford Pinto stuck in reverse, a “like-new” 8-track tape player with a slightly stretched tape of Barry Manilow’s greatest hits, a “Pong” game, 8 buy one get one free coupons for Denny’s grand slam breakfast, and a Nehru jacket.

    It was quite a relief to know that inflation is contained – I was afraid I wouldn’t be able to send my son to Junior College next year.

  27. dblwyo commented on Feb 15

    FWIW – the revisions to GDP could be more interesting than we think. Granted data problems, noisiness, etc. etc. And if you look at the period-to-period numbers it’s almost impossible to see trends and turning points. But if you look at year-over-year that washes much of the noise, inflation, etc. and let’s you see trends very nicely as well as inflections. Which are notoriously difficult.

    The reason this is important – thanks to Barry, Roubini, Rex Nutting, et.al. for focusing on this – is that the initial GDP prelim. number would have continued the slight downtrend we’ve had since early ’04.

    The revision to GDP to, say, 2.5% busts the trend on the downside. Think of it as a fast, flashing yellow with shades of red.

    In case anybody wants to see the graphs threw ’em up on my homepage.

  28. crack commented on Feb 15

    Barry,

    Mish @ the global economic analysis blog says he sees GDP growth of 2% as the stall rate. He thinks hedonics and imputations account for at least that much.

    What level of GDP growth do you think is hedonics and imputations?

  29. VJ commented on Feb 15

    “Equities are screaming once again.”

    In inflation-adjusted dollars, the DJIA would need to be over 13,500 just to get back to where it was in 2000. If equities are screaming, it’s from the pain of being down for the sixth year in a row.
    .

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