Friday, February 29, 2008

ECRI Weekly Leading Index indicator rises slightly but still suggests high risk of recession

The Weekly Leading Index (WLI) from the Economic Cycle Research Institute (ECRI) rose slightly (+0.18% vs. -0.69% last week) and the six-month smoothed growth rate rose moderately (to -9.6 from -10.2 last week), but is well below the flat line, suggesting that the economy will be struggling in the months ahead.

The bottom line is that the ECRI WLI remains "flashing red." Alas, even the ECRI WLI is not a guaranteed, fool-proof economic indicator, especially when the data is mixed.

I will keep my personal assessment of the chance of recession at 60% based on the magnitude of the negative level of the WLI smoothed growth index and the mixed nature of the data. The economy still has a fair chance of avoiding an outright recession, but only if we can repeat the improvement we saw this week.

According to ECRI, "Despite this latest uptick, WLI growth remains deep in negative territory, underscoring the continued danger of a recession."

To be clear, there is no certainty as to whether we are currently in a recession. It will take another four months to confirm, if we are in fact in a recession.

Give the economy another month or so to see if the the weakness starts to "snowball." Without "snowballing" we will simply have a slowdown and not a true recession.

-- Jack Krupansky

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