Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
New York City Jobs: Striking Divergence in Household Survey vs. Establishment Survey Posted: 18 Aug 2012 07:44 PM PDT The Federal Reserve Bank of New York is asking the question Good News or Bad on New York City Jobs? Unlike much of the nation, New York City has seen a robust rebound in employment since the recession. In early 2012, employment here reached 3.86 million, the largest number of jobs ever recorded. Yet the city's unemployment rate has risen in recent months and is now 10 percent—its peak during the recession—and well above the 5 percent rate seen before the downturn.Major Turning Points One of the reasons the BLS uses the household survey at all is that at major turning points the household survey tends to lead. At the onset of recoveries, new business startups lead in recoveries. Atb the onset of declines, small businesses going out of business would tend to lead declines. In this case, for New York City, there was no recovery at all as measured by the household survey. In an attempt to get the establishment survey and the household survey in sync, the BLS uses a Birth-Death Model hoping to compensate for the lag. Even still, there are problems as noted by the BLS. There is an unavoidable lag between an establishment opening for business and its appearing on the sample frame and being available for sampling. Because new firm births generate a portion of employment growth each month, non-sampling methods must be used to estimate this growth.In attempting to adjust the establishment (payroll) survey via the birth-death model, the BLS admits it may have introduced even more errors. Moreover, the BLS admits "lags". Those lags are especially critical at turning points. Some believe this is purposeful manipulation. I don't. I think it is modeling error. Regardless, if the US (in this case New York City) is at a turning point, the household survey is more apt to pick that up. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Reader Question: Why is the Euro So "Strong" in the Face of Break-Up Possibilities? Posted: 18 Aug 2012 10:13 AM PDT Reader Toney writes ... Hello Mish,Hello Toney, would not exactly call 1.23 "strong" but certainly there is room to fall. So why is it just sitting? Technically, the euro is at the lower end of a trading range and that would tend to bring out some buyers and some short covering. From that aspect, one might even wonder why the bounce has been anemic. A weekly chart will show what I mean. Euro Weekly click on chart for sharper image Technically, the euro can plunge a long way if that weekly support gives way. Will it? Key Questions on Breaking Up Right now the currency market is torn between whether or not the eurozone stays intact, and if not, what countries leave and how. A eurozone breakup is easily the primary driver. How the break-up occurs is unresolved. The Eurozone Cannot Possibly Survive Intact. As I have pointed out, The Problem in Europe is Arithmetic, Not Confidence. Will a break-up be orderly or disorderly? Will Germany leave or will Spain and Greece leave? Those are the key questions and right now I do not have an answer (and nor does anyone else). If Germany leaves, Deutschemark will soar and the euro will plunge. Moreover, if Spain and Italy leave in a disorderly fashion there might easily be a currency crisis of some sort, also forcing the euro lower. However, if Spain and Italy leave in an orderly fashion, the euro could strengthen. Right now, the market seems to be prepared for the "Grexit" and it does appear that Greece will leave in a somewhat- orderly fashion. Should Greece leave without causing a mess, the markets are likely to take that as a positive for the euro over the short-to-intermediate-term. I am roughly neutral on the euro for the short-term. A secondary factor is ECB printing and here the results are counter-intuitive. Every time the ECB comes up with a major program such as the LTRO, the euro has strengthened. That suggets the market favors keeping everything intact, even though it adds long-term pressures. For example, the LTRO made it easy for German and French to unload Spanish debt (a good thing for banks in those countries). However, the buyers of that debt were Spanish banks who ultimately will be left holding the bag. Short-term the LTRO was stabilizing, long-term it is going to increase the pressure on Spain to leave. Notice how screwed up things are. The normal fundamental factors in play regarding currencies are interest rate differentials, balance-of-trade flows, and concern over budget deficits. The US would not score well on those points, but clearly these are far from normal times. The euro now depends on when, in what order, and how disorderly a break-up will be. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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