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There's a reason economics is called the dismal
science, and weeks like this just give it further meaning. In economics, there
is what you see and what you don't. This week we are going to examine the
headline data we all see and then take a look for what most observers do not
see. Then we'll try to think about what it all really means. With employment,
housing, and the ISM numbers, there is a lot to cover. And this letter will
print out longer than usual, as there are a lot of charts.
Warning: remove sharp objects from the vicinity and pour yourself your favorite adult beverage. This does not make for fun reading. But first, a very quick
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minimums, then you should work with CMG. And if you have any feedback or
comments, feel free to write me. Now, on to the letter. Some Really Dismal Numbers The unemployment numbers this morning were just bad,
even though the spin doctors were out in force. Of course we knew that because
of census workers being laid off the number would be negative, and it was, down
125,000. But the "bright spot" we were told about was that private payrolls
came in at 83,000 new jobs. Let's look at what you did not see or hear. First, last month's dismal (there's that word
again) private job-creation number was revised down from 41,000 to 33,000. So
in two months, total private job creation is 116,000 jobs. We need 125,000 jobs
per month just to keep up with
population growth. But it is worse than that. The headline number
we look at is from the Establishment Survey. That means they call up existing
businesses they know about and ask them how many people are working for them,
etc. One of the first things I do when the employment numbers come out is look
at the birth/death assessment on the BLS (Bureau of Labor Statistics) web site.
For new readers, the birth/death
assessment has nothing to do with people dying, but rather is the BLS's attempt
to estimate the number of new businesses that have been created or have "died"
within the last month, and they use these numbers to adjust the employment total.
They use historical, seasonal numbers to create a model from which they make
these estimates. There is nothing conspiratorial about the numbers - they have to make an attempt at such an estimate,
otherwise the employment number would be badly off. But the birth/death number
can skew the totals a lot more than is typically realized. Take the last two months. Using the
birth/death model, the BLS assumes that 362,000 jobs were created somewhere.
That is three times the number of jobs in the headlines we read. Those extra
jobs were added into the total because that is what the model told them to do.
And over a complete business and employment cycle, those numbers will average out to be pretty close to right. But
as I said, they can also be misleading in the short term. Let's look closer at
some of the details. 
The B/D adjustments say that we
added 65,000 construction jobs in the last two months, over half the total
number of jobs created. Really? US single-family homes set an all-time low
sales number this week. Mortgage applications are way down. Home construction
is off. Commercial real estate construction is down. Where are those
construction jobs? 158,000 new jobs have supposedly
been created in the hospitality and leisure industry in the last two months.
And that is consistent with what normally happens in summer time. Typically,
these are lower-paying jobs. (I worked a few myself while in college.) In the
actual numbers, as surveyed, they estimated only 33,000 new jobs in L&H, so
the B/D adjustment accounted for nearly all the positive number. But what happens is that most of those
L&H jobs go away in the fall, so then the B/D adjustment goes negative.
Further, I am not sure we can assume a typical cycle here, to base the B/D
number on. (One more thing to complicate all
this. The headline number we see is seasonally adjusted, but the B/D assessment
isn't. And we just won't go there. That's way too much "inside baseball" sort of
trivia.) But look at this chart from my
favorite data maven, Greg Weldon (www.weldononline.com).
It shows that the number of people planning vacations is way down, dropping by
over 35% in the last three years, for the second lowest number ever. Ever. 
That is not consistent with a typical
hospitality and leisure job-growth pattern. I have three kids working in that
field, and the talk is not of robust job creation or lots of overtime. (By the
way, my Tulsa readers should go to Los Cabos for some good Mexican food and
leave my daughters Abigail and Amanda some really big tips! And make sure they
get your name and address.) Unemployment Went Down? We were told that the unemployment
number dropped from 9.7% to 9.5%. That's a good thing, right? Well, no, not
really. The number dropped because the number of people counted as being in the
labor force dropped. If you haven't looked for work for four weeks, you are not
counted as unemployed. If you add those who were taken off the rolls back in,
the unemployment number would have risen to 9.9%. In the past two months nearly
one million people have dropped out of the labor market. If you counted all the people who
would take a job if they could find one as unemployed, the unemployment number
would be closer to 11%. As an aside, if I have any real beef with the BLS over
how they create their data, it is this last point. If you would take a job if
you could get one, you should be counted as unemployed. Period. The Household Survey was rather dismal. (This is
where they call households and ask about their employment situation.) The survey
showed a loss of 301,000 jobs, or 363,000 jobs if you adjust it
to match the Establishment Survey. Not pretty. Maybe a better way to look at
unemployment is to look at the percentage of the total population that has a
job. That number has been rising off and on for almost 50 years as more and
more women have moved into the labor force. But notice the large drop over the
last year - almost 5% of working people in the US have lost their jobs. 
The initial unemployment claims 4-week moving
average stubbornly refuses to go down any further. It has essentially gone sideways
for over 6 months. 
If you go back and look at the data from the
last 45 years, the current level is typical of recessions. 
Earnings Take a Hit No, not business earnings, which seem to be
holding up, but personal earnings. Average hourly earnings dropped 0.1% in
June, something that David Rosenberg notes is a 1-in-50 event. The trend is downward,
with annual growth of less than 1.7%. Average hours worked were also slightly
down. My friend and Maine fishing buddy Bill
Dunkelberg, chief economist at the National Federation of Independent
Businesses, has produced his monthly survey, and there was not much to cheer
about from a future employment perspective. Over the
next 3 months, 8 percent of the businesses surveyed plan to reduce employment
(up 1 point), and 10 percent plan to create new jobs (down 4 points), yielding
a seasonally adjustednet 1 percent of owners planning to create
new jobs, unchanged from May and only the second positive reading in 20 months
- but barely so. 
From Dunk's email: "Since January,
2008, the seasonally adjusted average change in employment per firm has been
negative in every month, with a seasonally adjusted loss of 0.3 workers per
firm reported in June for the prior three month period. Most firms did not
change employment, 5% (down 3 points from May) increased average employment by
3.4 employees, but 15% (down 5 points) reduced their workforces by an average
of 3.3. "Job creation" still hasn't crossed the 0 line in the small business
sector. Government (including health care and education) and manufacturing (a
large firm activity) has been providing what few jobs are created, weak given
the magnitude of employment loss during the recession. And now the elimination
of temporary Census jobs will make the picture look more bleak, although more
accurate. A few more private sector jobs is not enough, we need 225,000
every month for 3 years to re-employ 8 million workers who lost their jobs and
another 125,000 a month to keep up with population growth." 
A few more data points from this week, and then
let's look at some of the implications. The numbers from the Conference Board
survey were weak. The total of people planning to buy a major appliance is at
an almost 16-year low. Car sales were low last month, and the survey says they
may go lower, as plans to buy a car are down from 6% to 3.7%. In fact, in
almost all categories plans to buy were down. Which makes sense, as 17% of
people say their incomes are decreasing. New home inventory is back up to
8.5 months of supply. As noted above, single-family sales hit an all-time low,
as anyone who wanted to buy a home did so in order to get the government
incentive. Just as with Cash for Clunkers, all we did was bring buying forward;
we did not create actual new buyers, at least not in any significant numbers. Money Supply Concerns After the explosion in the money supply by the
Fed in the depths of the Great Recession, growth in the money supply has gone
flat. We recently looked at the fact that M-3 (the broadest measure of money
supply) has turned negative for the first time in many decades. Look at the
adjusted monetary base, below. 
And now let's look at MZM, or Money of Zero Maturity. MZM is a
measure of the liquid money supply within an economy. MZM represents all money
in M2, less the time deposits, plus all money market funds. MZM has become one
of the preferred measures of money supply because it better represents money
readily available for spending and consumption. This measurement derives its
name from its mixture of all the liquid and zero-maturity money found within
the "three M's" (Investopedia). Notice that it too has gone flat, for over a
year now. 
These charts suggest that deflation is in the wind. A Central Banker's Nightmare Let's recap. Unemployment is high and is in reality going higher
if you count those who would take a job if they could get one. Incomes are
weak. Plans to purchase discretionary items are falling. Housing is likely in
for a further drop in prices. The stock market is not exactly booming. Treasury
yields are falling, not from a credit crisis or a flight to quality, but
because of economic conditions (deflation). Money supply is flat or falling.
Prices are under pressure. The list goes on, and all factors are indicative of
deflation. As noted last week, the data suggests we could see weak growth
in the last half of the year. Over two-thirds of the past quarter's 2.7% growth
was from inventory rebuilding, which surveys seem to show is abating as
inventories begin to stabilize. I was on Larry Kudlow's show (links below) last Tuesday, and he
gave me some time to air my views. My main concern, as readers know, is that we
may have a weak economy in the latter half of the year and then introduce a
large tax increase, which my reading of the economic studies on tax increases
suggests will throw us into recession. Recessions are by definition
deflationary. (Not to mention what another one would do to unemployment and the
stock market!) With inflation at less than 1%, could we see the central
banker's nightmare of outright deflation? We very well could. I think that is
what the bond market is saying. How would the Fed react? For an answer, we need to go back to
Ben Bernanke's famous helicopter speech of November 2002, entitled "Deflation: Making Sure 'It' Doesn't Happen Here." (By the
way, I have always been convinced that his remark about printing presses and
helicopters was an attempt at economist humor, which is why we don't get many
offers from comedy clubs.) I did a fuller assessment of that speech
in my weekly letter at http://www.2000wave.com/article.asp?id=mwo112802.
But I want to pull out a few quotes from the speech. You can read the
speech itself at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/BoardDocs/speeches/2002/20021121/default.htm Let's sum up the helicopter section: You can create
inflation by printing a lot of money. But that is not the interesting part of
the speech. Quoting from my letter: "Let's look at what Bernanke really said. First, he
begins by telling us that he believes the likelihood of deflation is remote. But,
since it did happen in Japan, and seems to be the cause of the current Japanese
problems, we cannot dismiss the possibility outright. Therefore, we need to see
what policies can be brought to bear upon the problem. "He then goes on to say that the most important
thing is to prevent deflation before it happens. He says that a central bank
should allow for some 'cushion' and should not target zero inflation, and
speculates that this is over 1%. Typically, central banks target inflation of
1-3%, although this means that in normal times inflation is more likely to rise
above the acceptable target than fall below zero in poor times. "Central banks can usually influence this by
raising and lowering interest rates. But what if the Fed Funds rate falls to
zero? Not to worry, there are still policy levers that can be pulled. Quoting
Bernanke: "'So what then might the Fed do if its target
interest rate, the overnight federal funds rate, fell to zero? One relatively
straightforward extension of current procedures would be to try to stimulate
spending by lowering rates further out along the Treasury term structure - that
is, rates on government bonds of longer maturities.... "'A more direct method, which I personally prefer, would be for the Fed to begin announcing explicit ceilings
for yields on longer-maturity Treasury debt (say, bonds maturing within
the next two years). The Fed could enforce these interest-rate ceilings by
committing to make unlimited purchases of securities up to two years from
maturity at prices consistent with the targeted yields. If this program were
successful, not only would yields on medium-term Treasury securities fall, but
(because of links operating through expectations of future interest rates)
yields on longer-term public and private debt (such as mortgages) would likely
fall as well. "'Lower rates over the maturity spectrum of public
and private securities should strengthen aggregate demand in the usual ways and
thus help to end deflation. Of course, if operating in
relatively short-dated Treasury debt proved insufficient, the Fed could also
attempt to cap yields of Treasury securities at still longer maturities, say
three to six years.' "He then proceeds to outline what could be done if
the economy falls into outright deflation and uses the examples, and others,
cited above. It seems clear to me from the context that he is making an
academic list of potential policies the Fed could pursue if outright deflation
became a reality. He was not suggesting they be used, nor do I believe he thinks
we will ever get to the place where they would be contemplated. He was simply
pointing out the Fed can fight deflation if it wants to." (And now, in 2010, that question might become more
than academic.) With the above as background, we can begin to look
at what I believe is the true import of the speech. Read these sentences,
noting my bold-faced words: "... a central bank, either alone or in cooperation
with other parts of the government, retains
considerable power to expand aggregate demand and economic activity even when its accustomed policy rate is at zero. "The basic prescription for preventing deflation is
therefore straightforward, at least in principle: Use
monetary and fiscal policy as needed to support aggregate spending...." (As
Keynesian as you can get.) Again: "... some observers have concluded that when
the central bank's policy rate falls to zero - its practical minimum - monetary
policy loses its ability to further stimulate aggregate
demand and the economy. "To stimulate aggregate spending when short-term interest
rates have reached zero, the Fed must expand the scale of its asset purchases
or, possibly, expand the menu of assets that it buys." Now let us go to his conclusion: "Sustained deflation can be highly destructive to a
modern economy and should be strongly resisted. Fortunately, for the
foreseeable future, the chances of a serious deflation in the United States
appear remote indeed, in large part because of our economy's underlying
strengths but also because of the determination of the Federal Reserve and
other U.S. policymakers to act preemptively against deflationary pressures.
Moreover, as I have discussed today, a variety of policy responses are
available should deflation appear to be taking hold. Because some of these alternative
policy tools are relatively less familiar, they may raise practical problems of
implementation and of calibration of their likely economic effects. For this reason, as I have emphasized, prevention of
deflation is preferable to cure. Nevertheless, I hope to have
persuaded you that the Federal Reserve and other economic policymakers would be
far from helpless in the face of deflation, even should the federal funds rate
hit its zero bound." And there you have it. All
the data pointing to a slowing economy? It puts us closer to deflation. It is
not the headline data per se we need to think about. We need to start thinking
about what the Fed will do if we have a double-dip recession and start to fall
into deflation. Will they move out the yield curve, as he suggested? Buy more
and varied assets like mortgages and corporate debt? What will that do to
markets and investments? Note that last bolded line:
"For this reason, as I have emphasized,
prevention of deflation is preferable to cure." If he is true to his
words, that means he may act in advance of the next recession if the data
continues to come in weak and deflation starts to actually become a threat.
That is the thing we don't see in all the economic data - the potential for new
Fed action. Let's hope that, like the deflation scare in 2002, it doesn't come
about. Stay tuned. "Why don't you reform yourselves? That task
would be sufficient enough." -
Fredaric
Bastiat It is time to hit the send button. The letter is
overly long already. I'll finish with this thought. This financial reform bill
should be thrown out and they should start over. So much has been tagged onto
this bill that has nothing to do with reform but is all about political
agendas. It is also far too vague. Essentially, they create all these new
committees or empower the bureaucracies that missed it last time to come up
with the actual details of regulation. For all intents and purposes, a small
number of unelected individuals will be given almost total control to write new
rules overseeing a huge part of our economy. No matter how well-intentioned,
this is not something that should be done in closed rooms. We need major reform, of course. And when are we
going to get to Freddie and Fannie, which are totally ignored but will cost the
taxpayer the most? Local Congressman Jeb Hensarling has it right. He estimates
there are about 3 unintended consequences on every page of that 1,200-page
bill. Oh, the Kudlow links: http://www.cnbc.com/id/15840232/?video=1533514810&play=1 http://www.cnbc.com/id/15840232/?video=1533518497&play=1 I am aggressively working on my new book, The
End Game. I hope it is going to a good one, given the hours I am putting
in. Have a great week. Your wishing he was back in Tuscany analyst,
 John Mauldin
John@FrontlineThoughts.com
Copyright 2010 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved
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John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA) which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS) an NASD registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. All material presented herein is believed to be reliable but we cannot attest to its accuracy. Investment recommendations may change and readers are urged to check with their investment counselors before making any investment decisions.
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