ECRI Weekly Leading Index indicator rises moderately but still suggests a sluggish outlook
The Weekly Leading Index (WLI) from the Economic Cycle Research Institute (ECRI) rose moderately (+0.55% vs. -0.22% last week) but the six-month smoothed growth rate fell modestly (from -0.7 to -0.9), modestly below the flat line, suggesting that the economy will be somewhat lackluster and rather sluggish in the months ahead, neither booming nor busting.
According to ECRI, "With WLI growth slightly negative, and remaining in a narrow band for the past two months, U.S. economic growth is set to slow through the New Year."
A WLI growth rate of zero (0.0) would indicate an economy that is likely to run at a steady growth rate, neither accelerating nor decelerating. A WLI fluctuating in a range from +1.5% to -1.5% would seem to forecast a relatively stable "Goldilocks" economy.
The current reading for the smoothed growth rate is still too close to zero to discern with any great confidence whether the economy is really trending downwards or upwards. We may need another month or even two before the trend becomes clear.
If I were looking at this one indicator alone, I would say that the Fed is succeeding at its goal of moderating the economy to a sustainable growth rate.
I will offer the caveat that the Weekly Leading Index and its smoothed growth rate do not tell us how strong the economy will be six or nine months from now, but do tell us whether whether weakness or strength is more likely a few months from now. It works best to tell us whether a "gathering storm" might be lurking just around the corner, but presently indicates relatively "clear weather" for the next few months, even if the interval is occasionally punctuated with financial market "gyrations."
1 Comments:
I see your last post is getting a bit stale and I know you have other obligations .... can we expect an update soon?
A concern I have is with respect to the time-sensitivity of the ECRI WLI indicator.
As we just saw today (11/28) the durable goods index fell for the 3rd straight month. While many components in this measure are present, it has been said the ripple effect of the collapse of the housing market will be more acutely felt when the housing completion rate drops (and I think it now is dropping) and folks don't have to furnish homes (buying appliances, etc.). Thus the impact is more a matter of the after effect rather than builders pulling fewer building permits.
How quickly will the WLI pick these types of changes up? "Weekly" implies rather instantaneously.
Regards,
a fan
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