recovery

US Labor market update

Posted in Employment, labor market, recovery on January 7th, 2013 by Paul Deng – Be the first to comment

At tepid pace in monthly employment gains, this labor market recovery has been similar to the recovery after 2001 recession, if not much worse. Two charts to put the current labor market condition in comparative perspective – another “jobless recovery”.

jobless recovery 2 450x336 US Labor market update

(graph courtesy of Wells Fargo Economics)

 

another jobless recovery 450x339 US Labor market update

(graph courtesy of Northern Trust)

What is Corporate America waiting for?

Posted in debt deleveraging, recovery on August 15th, 2012 by Paul Deng – Be the first to comment

Interview of former HP CEO Carly Fiorina. This is a nice illustration of how uncertainties hinder business investment.


With household demand severely crippled by the burst of the biggest housing bubble in US history, I don’t see how that demand could be quickly revived. Now it seems that China’s also slowing down, so the profit channel from overseas could also be in question. Oh, dear…

US 10-year Treasury Yield at 220-year Low

Posted in debt deleveraging, Investing, recovery on July 23rd, 2012 by Paul Deng – Be the first to comment

The 10-year Treasury yield is one of the most watched market and macro indicators. For example, former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan watched the yield regularly. Once he sees the yield, he immediately knows what’s going on with the US economy.

Today (July 23, 2012), the yield reads 1.43%. In the last couple of months, with European situation not getting better, and the US recovery seeming to falter again (for the consecutive three years), the yield has remained at historical low level around lower 140 bps.

To put this into historical perspective, according to the research by Bank of America /Merrill Lynch, this is the lowest level since 1790, lower than the yields after the WWII, more than ten years after the Great Depression. See the chart below.

US 10y treasury yield since 17901 450x293 US 10 year Treasury Yield at 220 year Low

At this depressed level, it seems to indicate the US economy will remain subpar for many years to come – another Japan?

What’s wrong with America’s job engine?

Posted in recovery, Unemployment on November 8th, 2011 by Paul Deng – Be the first to comment

A nice video/graphical analysis from WSJ:

Digest latest GDP number

Posted in Economy, recovery on July 30th, 2011 by Paul Deng – Be the first to comment

Real GDP in Q2 2011 is estimated to grow at only 1.3% annualized rate, while Q1 GDP growth was significantly revised down from 1.9% to mere 0.4%. This was achieved despite the Fed’s two rounds of quantitative easing.

The recovery of the US economy seems having lost its momentum. Here is a chart from Nothern Trust’s research team.

 

bkh1 29161300 35159 Digest latest GDP number

 

So far, the recovery since summer 2009 has failed to pull the US economy back to its pre-peak level achieved in late 2007 (see this nice graph from calculatedrisk, click to enlarge).

GDPRevisionsQ22011 300x212 Digest latest GDP number

 

John Silvia, chief economist at Wells Fargo, describes the latest growth number as the “worst of all worlds”. And he is worried that the inflation in the US is creeping up in the face of high unemployment – you know where we are heading, do you?