Friday, November 21, 2008

ECRI Weekly Leading Index indicator falls very sharply and remains deep in recession territory

The economic outlook continues to worsen and there is still no economic data pointing to an emerging recovery from the recession.

The Weekly Leading Index (WLI) from the Economic Cycle Research Institute (ECRI) fell very sharply  to -1.97% from +0.44% last week, its worst level in 13 years, and its annualized growth rate fell sharply to -28.2, a record low for its 60-year history of data, from -27.1 last week, which is well below the flat line, suggesting that the economy will be struggling in the months ahead.

According to ECRI, "With WLI growth nose-diving to yet another historical low, the outlook for the economy is worsening at the fastest pace on record."

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 and there some amount of stimulus as well as potential problems in the pipeline.

My personal outlook is that: The U.S. economy is currently in a recession that started somewhere between December 2007 and June 2008, sharply accelerated in August, and currently shows no sign of an imminent end.

Some believe that the recession started in January or even last November, but there were pockets of strength even as recently as June GDP. By the same token, there were roots of weakness popping up in June 2007 and a financial mini-crisis in August 2007 related to housing clearly indicated that at least significant portions of the economy had already begun to crumble.

Although the current economic reports show significant weakness, there is also a vast amount of potential stimulus in the pipeline that could kick-start the economy within the next couple of months. The big bank bailout may start showing some fruit within a month.

-- Jack Krupansky

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home