07 Feb2023 Market Close & Major Financial Headlines: Wall Street Main Indexes Opened Fractionally Lower, Markets Swing 500 Points After Powell Remarks, Close Near Session Session Highs

Summary Of the Markets Today:

  • The Dow closed up 266 points or 0.78%,
  • Nasdaq closed up 1.90%,
  • S&P 500 closed up 1.29%,
  • Gold $1883 up $3.20,
  • WTI crude oil settled at $77 up $3.19,
  • 10-year U.S. Treasury 3.681% up 0.049 points,
  • USD $103.39 down $0.23,
  • Bitcoin $23,260 up $465 – Session Low 22.687

*Stock data, cryptocurrency, and commodity prices at the market closing.


Click here to read our Economic Forecast for February 2023


Today’s Economic Releases:

Home prices nationwide, including distressed sales, increased year over year by 6.9% in December 2022 compared with December 2021. On a month-over-month basis, home prices declined by 0.4% in December 2022 compared with November 2022 (revisions with public records data are standard, and to ensure accuracy, CoreLogic incorporates the newly released public data to provide updated results). The CoreLogic HPI Forecast indicates that home prices will decrease on a month-over-month basis by 0.2% from December 2022 to January 2023 and on a year-over-year basis by 3% from December 2022 to December 2023.

The U.S. Census Bureau and the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis announced today that the goods and services deficit was $67.4 billion in December, up $6.4 billion from $61.0 billion in November, revised.

U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services Deficit
Deficit: $67.4 Billion +10.5%°
Exports: $250.2 Billion –0.9%°
Imports: $317.6 Billion +1.3%°

In 2022, consumer credit increased by 7.8%, with revolving and nonrevolving credit increasing by 14.8% and 5.6%, respectively. During the fourth quarter, consumer credit increased at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 6.5%, while in December it increased at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 2.9%. This data is not inflation adjusted – inflation-adjusted consumer credit increased 1.8% year-over-year (red line on the graph below).

A summary of headlines we are reading today:

  • Russia’s Budget Deficit Jumps Amid Plunging Oil Revenues
  • Crude Oil Bounces Back As Earthquake In Turkey Creates Supply Concerns
  • Ship-To-Ship Loadings Of Urals Hit Record High As Russian Oil Heads To Asia
  • Oil Prices Climb Despite Underwhelming Chinese Demand
  • Fed Chair Powell says inflation is starting to ease, but interest rates still likely to rise
  • Dow finishes more than 250 points higher, and Nasdaq climbs 1.9% after Fed Chair Powell says inflation is declining
  • Bitcoin trades around $23,000 after Fed Chair Powell warns that rates could rise further
  • Futures Movers: Oil futures settle at their highest in a week on China demand hopes, Middle East supply issues

These and other headlines and news summaries moving the markets today are included below.

Weather Forecast: Today, Tonight, Tomorrow, Next Day, Five Days, for the U.S. and the World with links for longer-term forecasts: posted February 7, 2023

Updated at 10:40 p.m. EST Tuesday, February 7, 2023

Here is what we are paying attention to in the next 48 to 72 hours. This article also includes World weather forecasts.

It also includes links for longer-term outlooks and sometimes (like today) we show the maps that one finds if one clicks on those links. But we can not update all of those maps each day so look at the date and the duration of the period of time involved. If you want a more up-to-date map, click on the provided link which may be located in a table of links. If the date in the title of the article is not today’s date. just go to Econcurrents.com and look for today’s weather article.

We start with the U.S. Information.

Short Range Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
216 PM EST Tue Feb 07 2023

Valid 00Z Wed Feb 08 2023 – 00Z Fri Feb 10 2023

…Heavy snow through tonight for portions of the Cascades and northern
Rockies…

…Scattered severe thunderstorms and flash flooding possible Wednesday in
the middle and lower Mississippi Valley…

…Heavy snow possible in parts of the Upper Midwest and freezing rain
possible in the higher elevations of the Northeast on Thursday...

06 Feb2023 Market Close & Major Financial Headlines: Wall Street Main Indexes Opened Moderately Lower, Traded Sideways, Closed About Where It Opened

Summary Of the Markets Today:

  • The Dow closed down 360 points or 0.1%,
  • Nasdaq closed down 1.00%,
  • S&P 500 closed down 0.61%,
  • Gold $1880 up $3.50,
  • WTI crude oil settled at $74 up $0.99,
  • 10-year U.S. Treasury 3.638% up 0.106 points,
  • USD $103.61 up $0.69,
  • Bitcoin $23,010 up $132.77 – Session Low 22.657

*Stock data, cryptocurrency, and commodity prices at the market closing.


Click here to read our Economic Forecast for February 2023


Today’s Economic Releases:

Global Supply Chain Pressure Index (GSCPI) estimates for January 2023 show global supply chain pressures decreased moderately. The largest contributing factors to supply chain pressures were declines in Korean delivery times, Chinese delivery times, and Euro Area backlogs. The GSCPI’s recent movements suggest that the Asia developments that were interrupting the index’s normalization may have been a transitory factor.

A summary of headlines we are reading today:

  • Copper Rally Stalls As Market Awaits Chinese Demand Recovery
  • Russian Fiscal Budget Shows 35% Decline For January
  • India Predicts 500% Increase In Domestic Natural Gas Demand
  • U.S. Gasoline Prices See First Weekly Fall Of The Year
  • Saudi Arabia Surprises Markets By Increasing Oil Prices To Asia
  • Stocks close lower Monday as higher rates rattle investors
  • Amazon scales back cargo flying as demand cools, contractor says
  • Bitcoin struggles around $23,000 level as the new-year rally loses steam
  • Congress Is Set To Expose What May Be The Largest Censorship System In US History
  • Outside the Box: The stock market is wishing and hoping the Fed will pivot — but the pain won’t end until investors panic

These and other headlines and news summaries moving the markets today are included below.

03 Feb2023 Market Close & Major Financial Headlines: Wall Street Closes Deeply In The Red After Jobs Report

Summary Of the Markets Today:

  • The Dow closed down 128 points or 0.38%,
  • Nasdaq closed down 1.59%,
  • S&P 500 closed down 1.04%,
  • Gold $1879 closed down $52.20,
  • WTI crude oil settled at $73 down $2.67,
  • 10-year U.S. Treasury 3.536% up 0.138 points,
  • USD $102.97 up $1.22,
  • Bitcoin $23,368 down $125 – Session Low $23,257
  • Baker Hughes Rig Count: U.S. -12 to 759 Canada +2 to 249

*Stock data, cryptocurrency, and commodity prices at the market closing.


Click here to read our Economic Forecast for February 2023


Today’s Economic Releases:

Total nonfarm payroll employment rose by 517,000 in January 2023, and the unemployment rate declined from 3.5% to 3.4%. Job growth was widespread, led by gains in leisure and hospitality, professional and business services, and health care. Employment also increased in government, partially reflecting the return of workers from a strike. The household survey showed employment growth at 894,000 vs the establishment headline number of 517,000. The household survey increased the size of the workforce by 866,000. Interestingly, the all-in unemployment rate (U-6) worsened from 6.5% to 6.6%. This employment data is considered very good and suggests that the economy is not near a recession and that the Federal Reserve has a long way to go to cool inflation (as employment growth generally fans inflation). Wall Street does not want the federal funds rate to continue to increase to fight inflation, and the employment data shows that the rate will likely keep increasing in the foreseeable future.

Just a reminder that the above employment data are seasonally adjusted. Januarys historically have negative job growth due to the layoffs of seasonal jobs – as shown in the below NOT SEASONALLY ADJUSTED graph. The layoffs this January 2023 were less than normal causing the seasonally adjusted headline number to grow.

A summary of headlines we are reading today:

  • Oil Prices Crash After Perky Jobs Data
  • U.S. Drilling Activity Continues To Slow
  • Oil Prices Under Pressure Despite Looming Fuel Embargo
  • Here’s where the jobs are for January 2023 — in one chart
  • Amazon stock hit hardest after tech earnings bonanza, despite misses by Apple and Alphabet
  • Morgan Stanley’s Shalett advises investors to beware this bear market rally
  • Stockman: What Inflation Would Look Like In A True Free-Market Economy
  • New York NatGas Prices Erupt To 20-Year High Ahead Of Polar Vortex
  • The Fed: ‘Wow,” Fed’s Daly says after killer jobs report, but it doesn’t alter Fed’s inflation-fighting plan

These and other headlines and news summaries moving the markets today are included below.

02 Feb2023 Market Close & Major Financial Headlines: Dow Closed Down While The Small Caps Closed Significantly Higher

Summary Of the Markets Today:

  • The Dow closed down 39 points or 0.11%,
  • Nasdaq closed up 3.25%,
  • S&P 500 closed up 1.47%,
  • Gold $1927 down $15.40,
  • WTI crude oil settled at $76 down $0.56,
  • 10-year U.S. Treasury 3.398% up 0.002 points,
  • USD $103.73 up $0.51,
  • Bitcoin $23,847 up $19.90 – Session Low 23,519

*Stock data, cryptocurrency, and commodity prices at the market closing.


Click here to read our Economic Forecast for February 2023


Today’s Economic Releases:

According to NFIB’s monthly jobs report, 57% of owners reported hiring or trying to hire in January 2023, up two points. Of those hiring or trying to hire, 91% of owners reported few or no qualified applicants for the positions they were trying to fill. Twenty-seven percent of owners reported few qualified applicants for their open positions and 25% reported none. NFIB Chief Economist Bill Dunkelberg stated:

The labor shortage continues to be a major concern for small businesses in the New Year as nearly all owners trying to hire are reporting no or few qualified applicants. Small businesses’ sales opportunities are limited because of the staffing shortage but owners continue to make changes in business operations to compensate.

U.S.-based employers announced 102,943 cuts in January 2023, a 136% increase from the 43,651 cuts announced in December. It is 440% higher than the 19,064 cuts announced in the same month in 2022. Last month’s total is the highest January total since 2009 when 241,749 were announced in the first month of the year. It is the highest monthly total since September 2020 when 118,804 job cuts were reported.

The headline nonfarm business sector labor productivity increased 3.0% in the fourth quarter of 2022 as output increased 3.5% and hours worked increased 0.5%. (All quarterly percent changes in this release are seasonally adjusted annual rates.) HOWEVER, from the same quarter a year ago, nonfarm business sector labor productivity decreased by 1.5% reflecting a 0.8-percent increase in output and a 2.3% increase in hours worked. Annual average productivity decreased by 1.3% from 2021 to 2022. This is the largest annual decline in the measure since 1974 when productivity decreased by 1.7%.

In the week ending January 28, the advance figure for initial unemployment insurance claims 4-week moving average was 191,750, a decrease of 5,750 from the previous week’s unrevised average of 197,500.

A summary of headlines we are reading today:

  • The U.S. Solar Boom Is Still Facing Some Major Roadblocks
  • Global Battery Demand Is Soaring, But Supply Is Lagging Behind
  • U.S. Oil Is Replacing Russian Crude In EU Markets
  • Morgan Stanley: Expect More EV Price Cuts Ahead
  • S&P 500 advances more than 1% to its best level in five months as Meta leads tech-fueled rally
  • Mortgage rates drop to the 5% range for the first time since September
  • Mortgage rates drop to the 5% range for the first time since September
  • Market Snapshot: Nasdaq surges to a five-month high as Meta leads rally in tech sector

These and other headlines and news summaries moving the markets today are included below.

01 Feb2023 Market Close & Major Financial Headlines: Dow Closed Flat, NASDAQ And The S&P 500 Made Nice Gains After Fed Minutes

Summary Of the Markets Today:

  • The Dow closed up 7 points or 0.02%,
  • Nasdaq closed up 2.00%,
  • S&P 500 up 1.05%,
  • Gold $1968 up $22.50,
  • WTI crude oil settled at $77 down $1.91,
  • 10-year U.S. Treasury 3.413% down 0.114 points,
  • USD $101.17 down $0.93,
  • Bitcoin $23,741 up $750.42 – Session Low 22,853

*Stock data, cryptocurrency, and commodity prices at the market closing.


Click here to read our Economic Forecast for February 2023


Today’s Economic Releases:

The ADP National Employment Report shows employers created 106,000 jobs in January 2023 and annual pay was up 7.3% year-over-year. 106,000 is a very weak number but ADP said that weather-related disruptions on employment during their reference week likely negatively impacted the gains this month – significantly impacting business with 1 to 19 employees.

Construction spending during December 2022 was 7.7% above December 2021. However, when construction spending is inflation adjusted, it is DOWN 9.2% year-over-year. Construction is paying the price for the Fed’s inflation-fighting increase of the federal funds rate – and is a drag on the economy.

The January 2023 Manufacturing PMI registered 47.4%, 1 percentage point lower than the seasonally adjusted 48.4% recorded in December. Regarding the overall economy, this figure indicates a second month of contraction after a 30-month period of expansion. The Manufacturing PMI figure is the lowest since May 2020, when it registered a seasonally adjusted 43.5%. The New Orders Index remained in contraction territory at 42.5%, 2.6 percentage points lower than the seasonally adjusted figure of 45.1% recorded in December. The Production Index reading of 48% is a 0.6-percentage point decrease compared to December’s seasonally adjusted figure of 48.6%. Yes, manufacturing is currently a drag on the economy.

graph source: https://ycharts.com/indicators/us_pmi

The number of job openings increased to 11.0 million on the last business day of December 2022. Over the month, the number of hires and total separations changed little at 6.2 million and 5.9 million, respectively. This is a sign of continued strength in employment. The graph below shows that the number of job openings (red line) continue to far exceed the number of jobs being added (blue line).

The Fed FOMC meeting statement hiked the federal funds rate by 25bps as fully expected to a range of 4.5%-4.75%..

A summary of headlines we are reading today:

  • Germany’s Largest Gas Storage Facility Can’t Store Gas
  • U.S. Manufacturing PMI Hits Lowest Since May 2020
  • Nuclear Power Is Entering A New Era
  • Space Politics: A Battle For Lunar Minerals Is Unfolding
  • Oil Prices Inch Lower After EIA Confirms Crude Build
  • Goldman: The Fed Is Approaching A “Critical Inflection Point”
  • Full recap of the Federal Reserve’s rate hike and Chairman Jerome Powell’s news conference
  • S&P 500 closes higher on Wednesday, Nasdaq adds 2% as investors look past Fed’s rate hike
  • FedEx is laying off 10% of its officers and directors amid cooling demand
  • Here’s what the Federal Reserve’s 25 basis point interest rate hike means for your money
  • Stocks, Bonds, & Gold Soar As Powell Shrugs Off Loosening Financial Conditions
  • The Fed: Fed lifts interest rates by a quarter percentage point and signals ‘ongoing increases’

These and other headlines and news summaries moving the markets today are included below.

31Jan2023 Market Close & Major Financial Headlines: Wall Street Main Indexes Shot Upwards And Closed Higher As Fed Meeting Gets Underway

Summary Of the Markets Today:

  • The Dow closed up 369 points or 1.09%,
  • Nasdaq closed up 1.67%,
  • S&P 500 up 1.46%,
  • Gold 1944 up $4.60,
  • WTI crude oil settled at 79 up 1.21,
  • 10-year U.S. Treasury 3.503% down 0.048,
  • USD $102.07 down $0.20,
  • Bitcoin $22,971 up $183.84 – Session Low 22,631

*Stock data, cryptocurrency, and commodity prices at the market closing.


Click here to read our Economic Forecast for February 2023


Today’s Economic Releases:

The Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index® decreased in January following an upwardly revised increase in December 2022. The Index now stands at 107.1 (1985=100), down from 109.0 in December (an upward revision). The Expectations Index—based on consumers’ short-term outlook for income, business, and labor market conditions—fell to 77.8 (1985=100) from 83.4 partially reversing its December gain. The Expectations Index is below 80 which often signals a recession within the next year. Both present situation and expectations indexes were revised up slightly in December. Ataman Ozyildirim, Senior Director, Economics at The Conference Board stated:

Consumer confidence declined in January, but it remains above the level seen last July, lowest in 2022. Consumer confidence fell the most for households earning less than $15,000 and for households aged under 35.

The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price NSA Index, covering all nine U.S. census divisions, reported a 7.7% annual gain in November, down from 9.2% in the previous month. The 10-City Composite annual increase came in at 6.3%, down from 8.0% in the previous month. The 20-City Composite posted a 6.8% year-over-year gain, down from 8.6% in the previous month. CoreLogic Chief Economist Selma Hepp stated:

Housing market conditions deteriorated considerably at the end of 2022 as mortgage rates hit a 20-year high in November,  wiping out a considerable portion of homebuyers purchase power. As a result, the November CoreLogic S&P Case-Shiller Index continued to cool off posting a 7.7% year-over-year increase, marking the seventh straight month of slowing home price growth and the slowest increase since September 2020.

San Francisco was first to post an annual decline with prices down about 2% year-over-year. At the same time, pandemic boomtowns, such as Phoenix, Las Vegas and Seattle are now experiencing the largest waning in price growth from last year, while home prices in cities in the Northeast and Midwest such as New York and Boston, Chicago and Detroit, are more resilient given a lesser upswing in price growth seen in those areas during the pandemic.

The Chicago Business Barometer moderated by -0.8 points to 44.3 in January; the fifth consecutive month below 50. This follows a December rebound to signal a softer downturn. This barometer is used by pundits to predict the national ISM manufacturing levels.

A summary of headlines we are reading today:

  • BP Taps Deep Gas Reservoirs In Azerbaijan’s Caspian Sea
  • China’s Low Aluminum Production Worsens Supply Chain Challenges
  • Russian Oil Companies Told To Comply With Ban On Oil, Oil Product Exports
  • Traders Turn Bullish On Oil As Majors Report Earnings
  • Russia’s Pipeline Gas Exports To Europe Slump To Record Low
  • General Motors doesn’t expect significant U.S. production of EVs until the second half of the year
  • Dow closes more than 350 points higher, S&P 500 caps best January in four years
  • PayPal to lay off 2,000 employees in coming weeks, about 7% of the workforce
  • Market Extra: Coinbase stock poised to record the best month in history. Can the rally continue?

These and other headlines and news summaries moving the markets today are included below.

30Jan2023 Market Close & Major Financial Headlines: Wall Street Main Indexes Opened Lower, Trended Lower And Closed Near Session Lows

Summary Of the Markets Today:

  • The Dow closed down 261 points or 0.77%,
  • Nasdaq closed down 1.96%,
  • S&P 500 closed down 1.30%,
  • Gold $1922 down $7.40,
  • WTI crude oil settled at $78 down $1.89,
  • 10-year U.S. Treasury 3.55% up 0.032 points,
  • USD $102.27 up $0.34,
  • Bitcoin $22,749 down $962.37 – Session Low 22,652

*Stock data, cryptocurrency, and commodity prices at the market closing.


Click here to read our Economic Forecast for January 2023


Today’s Economic Releases:

The Texas Manufacturing Outlook Survey slowed in January. The production index, a key measure of state manufacturing conditions, fell from 9.1 to 0.2, with the near-zero reading suggestive of flat output. Other measures generally indicated weakened manufacturing activity this month. The new orders index was negative for an eighth month in a row—suggesting a continued decrease in demand—though it moved up from -11.0 to -4.0. The growth rate of orders index inched down to -12.3. The capacity utilization index was positive but dipped from 7.9 to 6.0, while the shipments index returned to negative territory at a reading of -6.3. Most other Fed regional manufacturing surveys have shown to be in contraction or minimal growth.

A summary of headlines we are reading today:

  • Energy Industry Leaders Call For Social Tariff To Tackle Winter Crisis
  • OPEC+ Closely Watches Chinese Factory Data
  • Ford Slashes Electric Vehicle Prices
  • Why Middle East Producers Cut Prices In The Face Of Soaring Chinese Oil Demand
  • Texas Oil And Gas Industry Braces For Severe Winter Weather
  • Stocks close lower, Dow sheds more than 250 points to snap six-day win streak
  • If January is the barometer it historically has been, stocks could see a very strong year
  • Bitcoin drops after weekend rally, and DOJ claims SBF tried to influence witness: CNBC Crypto World
  • US Halts New Licenses For Export To Huawei
  • The Absurdity Of Elon Musk’s Fraud Trial
  • Crypto: Fed rejects crypto bank’s application to join U.S. payment system

These and other headlines and news summaries moving the markets today are included below.

27Jan2023 Market Close & Major Financial Headlines: Wall Street Major Indexes Experience Steep Sell-Off In Last Fifteen Minutes, But Closed Moderately Higher

Summary Of the Markets Today:

  • The Dow closed up 29 points or 0.08%,
  • Nasdaq closed up 0.95%,
  • S&P 500 closed up 0.25%,
  • Gold $1929 down $1.10,
  • WTI crude oil settled at $79 down $1.62,
  • 10-year U.S. Treasury 3.52% up 0.029 points,
  • USD $101.96 up $0.12,
  • Bitcoin $23,125 down $14.65 – Session Low 22,638
  • Baker Hughes Rig Count: U.S. unchanged at 771 Canada +6 to 247

*Stock data, cryptocurrency, and commodity prices at the market closing.


Click here to read our Economic Forecast for January 2023


Today’s Economic Releases:

Personal income increased $49.5 billion, or 0.2% at a monthly rate, while consumer spending decreased $41.6 billion, or 0.2%, in December 2022. The increase in personal income primarily reflected increases in compensation and proprietors’ income. However, we prefer to view consumption and expenditures as inflation-adjusted year-over-year change to dampen the volatility – real disposable income (blue line on the graph below) improved to -1.7% year-over-year growth (from last month’s -2.3% and real personal consumption expenditures (red line on the graph below) growth improved to 2.2% year-over-year (from last month’s 1.7%). The personal saving rate (that is, personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal income) was 3.4% in December, compared with 2.9% in November.

The Pending Home Sales Index (PHSI)* — a forward-looking indicator of home sales based on contract signings — improved 2.5% to 76.9 in December. Year-over-year, pending transactions dropped by 33.8% (see chart below). An index of 100 is equal to the level of contract activity in 2001. Improved in this case means “not as bad as the previous month”.  NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun stated:

This recent low point in home sales activity is likely over. Mortgage rates are the dominant factor driving home sales, and recent declines in rates are clearly helping to stabilize the market.

A summary of headlines we are reading today:

  • Is The The Global Steel Industry In For Another Bumpy Year?
  • U.S. House Passes Bill To Limit SPR Withdrawals
  • Bed Bath & Beyond defaults on credit line, warns it can’t pay down debts
  • Audi’s new EV is a luxury SUV with augmented reality that doubles as a pickup
  • American Airlines beats fourth-quarter profit expectations as higher fares buoy revenue
  • The Fair Tax Act, explained: what to know about the Republican plan for a national sales tax, decentralized IRS
  • Bond Report: Treasury yields climb Friday, 10-year posts biggest weekly yield jump in a month while inflation cools
  • Market Snapshot: Tech-heavy Nasdaq climbs sharply, U.S. stocks rise as investors parse inflation data ahead of Fed meeting next week

These and other headlines and news summaries moving the markets today are included below.

26Jan2023 Market Close & Major Financial Headlines: Wall Street Closes Moderately Higher As GDP Comes In Strong

Summary Of the Markets Today:

  • The Dow closed up 206 points or 0.61%,
  • Nasdaq closed up 1.76%,
  • S&P 500 closed up 1.10%,
  • Gold $1930 down $12.60,
  • WTI crude oil settled at $81 up $0.90,
  • 10-year U.S. Treasury 3.495% up 0.033 points,
  • USD $101.81 up $0.18,
  • Bitcoin $23,024 up $87 – Session Low 22,899

*Stock data, cryptocurrency, and commodity prices at the market closing.


Click here to read our Economic Forecast for January 2023


Today’s Economic Releases:

Unfortunately, I do not think GDP came in strong as the headline suggests. Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 2.9% in the fourth quarter of 2022, after increasing by 3.2% in the third quarter. GDP in the fourth quarter primarily reflected increases in inventory investment and consumer spending that were offset by a decrease in housing investment. EconCurrents does not use quarter-over-quarter growth to evaluate GDP – but uses year-over-year growth to view GDP. 4Q2022 continued the downward slope of GDP growth showing 1.0% growth year-over-year, down from 3Q2022 1.9% year-over-year (see graph below).

The Real gross domestic product (GDP) release includes the inflation adjuster (deflator). This deflator (green line on graph below) shows continued moderation of inflation from 7.1% for 3Q2022 to 6.3% for 4Q2022.

In the week ending January 21, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted unemployment insurance weekly initial claims 4-week moving average was 197,500, a decrease of 9,250 from the previous week’s revised average. The previous week’s average was revised up by 750 from 206,000 to 206,750.

New orders for manufactured durable goods improved in December 2022 to 11.9% year-over-year – up from last month’s 6.9% year-over-year. If one inflation adjusts this data, the December improvement was 6.7%.  This is particularly strong growth and not indicative of a slowing economy. Much of this increase was driven by civilian aircraft orders.

My favorite coincident indicator, the Chicago Fed National Activity Index (CFNAI), showed three of the four broad categories of indicators used to construct the index made negative contributions in December – but the negative elephant in the room was industrial production. The index’s three-month moving average, CFNAI-MA3, decreased to –0.33 in December from –0.14 in November. According to the authors of the index, this means the economy did not expand in December 2022. The graph below shows the historical values of the CFNAI-MA3 (which is used for economic forecasting) – and the red line shows the value that the authors of the index believe is the recession line.

Sales of new single‐family houses in December 2022 were 26.6% below December 2021. An estimated 644,000 new homes were sold in 2022 which is 16.4% below the 2021 figure of 771,000. The median sales price of new houses sold in December 2022 was $442,100. The average sales price was $528,400. The seasonally‐adjusted estimate of new houses for sale at the end of December was 461,000. This represents a supply of 9.0 months at the current sales rate. The graph below shows the year-over-year change in houses sold (blue line) and the median sales price (red line). In other words, home prices continue to rise even while sales volumes fall.

Regional factory activity for the Kansas City Fed was basically flat in January 2023. The month-over-month composite index was -1 in January, up slightly from -4 in December and -2 in November  However, expectations for future activity were still positive, and many firms expected employment levels to increase over the next six months. Most regional Fed manufacturing indices are weak or in negative territory. One would expect poor manufacturing new orders and shipments in January.

A summary of headlines we are reading today:

  • Soaring Food Prices Prompt Eurasian Nations To Ban Food Exports
  • Bed Bath & Beyond shares plunge after retailer warns it doesn’t have the cash to pay down debts
  • Southwest forecasts lingering losses as bookings slow in wake of holiday meltdown
  • Chipotle seeks to hire 15,000 restaurant workers ahead of busy spring months
  • Walmart-owned Sam’s Club plans to open about 30 new stores over next five years
  • Comcast beats expectations even as broadband growth slows, Peacock racks up losses
  • Stock Warnings Get Louder With Estimates Falling
  • Lawrence G. McMillan: The S&P 500 is trying to top 4100, and the odds favor that happening by the end of January.

These and other headlines and news summaries moving the markets today are included below.