Month: December 2020

Tempering Trade

12/16/2020

While the amount of global trade depends heavily on tariffs, it also depends mightily on the cost of transporting goods, and specifically that those costs fall faster than domestic production costs do. If both decline by, say 10%, trade levels…

Read More

Missing Manufacturing

12/15/2020

The most cited manufacturing index, the ISM Manufacturing index, is at 57.5, just slightly below its two year high of 59.3, and consumer spending on goods is 8.4% above its pre-pandemic high. Yet industrial production is 4.9% below its 2/20…

Read More

Swing Success

12/14/2020

In 2016, Trump/Pence received 62.98 million votes, 46.1% of the total; Clinton/Kaine received 65.85 million, 48.2% of all votes, a 2.1 percentage point differential. This time, Biden/Harris received 81.23 million, Trump/Pence received 74.22 million, a 4.5-point difference. Had Trump/Pence gained…

Read More

Pension Payments

12/11/2020

The Friday File: The last Civil War veteran to die was Albert Woolson (1850-1956). The last Civil War bride to die was Maude Hopkins (1914-2008), who at 19 married William Cantrell, age 86. The last person to receive a Civil…

Read More

Facing Facebook

12/10/2020

Yesterday the Federal Trade Commission and 46 states filed two separate lawsuits against Facebook, and earlier this year the Department of Justice sued Google. It’s about time! While these firms seemingly offer free services, they are anything but. By chocking…

Read More

Productivity Predicament

12/09/2020

Through 20Q3, GDP is down 3.5% from 19Q4. Assuming GDP grows at a seasonally-adjusted annualized rate of 3.3% in 20Q4, which shouldn’t be tough, GDP will be just 2.7% shy of where it was pre-pandemic. But, by 12/31/20, total nonfarm…

Read More

Rental Returns

12/08/2020

Through November, 93.6% of renters living in large, professionally managed market-rate apartment buildings paid their November rent. Last year, the percentage was 95.2%, a 1.6 percentage point decline. In October, the decline was 1.8 percentage points, in September 0.9 points,…

Read More

Weak Work

12/07/2020

While November net employment grew for the seventh straight month, it’s been declining for six straight, and from a peak of 3.6 million. Employment grew by 245,000, a number that normally would be lovely. While the unemployment rate fell, it…

Read More

Booming Butter

12/04/2020

The Friday File: For the first time since 1943, US butter production will top two billion pounds. From 1910-1940 per-capita butter consumption was 18 lbs/year. It then steadily fell to a low of 4.5 lbs/year between 1975-2005. Butter sales collapsed…

Read More

Tempered Treasuries

12/03/2020

In the weeks since the first vaccine announcement, the stock market has rallied, but not Treasuries; the 30-year is lower today than a month ago. Why? With limited fiscal stimulus, if any, coming from D.C., the need is for more…

Read More

Recent Posts

Categories

Archives