Am I missing something? Has not the FOMC marginally moved toward - not all
the way to - an agnostic position with regard to its next likely directional
change in the federal funds rate? That's what I took away from Fed Chairman
Bernanke's JEC testimony and Q & A today. Yes, the FOMC still sees higher
inflation as the "predominant policy concern ...[h]owever, the uncertainties
around the outlook have increased somewhat in recent weeks." One of those uncertainties
has to do with business capital spending. To wit, "the magnitude of the slowdown
[in business equipment and software expenditures] has been somewhat greater
than would be expected given the normal evolution of the business cycle." And
today's anemic report on February durable goods orders and shipments reinforced
the notion that the slowdown is greater than the Fed expected. Any other downside
risks? "[T]he correction in the housing market could turn out to be more severe
... perhaps exacerbated by problems in the subprime sector." And perhaps by
problems in the Alt-A market, too. "Moreover, we could see greater spillover
from the weakness in housing to employment and consumer spending than has occurred
thus far. Ask the folks in Irvine, California, the headquarters of New Century
Financial about the spillover from housing into employment and consumer spending
("Subprime
Mortgage Collapse Eviscerates California Headquarters", Bloomberg, March
28, 2007). My reading of all this is that the FOMC, although still concerned
that inflation might not moderate into its comfort zone, is also is now worried
more than it was on January 31 that real economic growth will not stabilize
in the range of 2% to 2-1/4%, but rather will head toward zero or below. That
worry is well placed if the FOMC takes into consideration the behavior of the
index of Leading Economic Indicators (see The Econtrarian, March 22, 2007, "Recession
Imminent? Both the LEI and the KRWI are Flashing Warning").
January-February Durable Goods Orders/Shipments Bode Poorly For Capex
New orders for durable goods rebounded a pathetic 2.5% in February after
a downwardly revised 9.3% January decline. New orders for core nondefense capital
goods - nondefense capital goods excluding civilian aircraft - fell 1.2% further
in February after their January decline of 7.4%. Adjusting for prices, the
January-February average of new core capex orders is down at an annualized
rate of 23.5% vs. the Q4:2006 average. New orders have more to do with future
capital goods expenditures in future quarters. So this whopping contraction
in January-February new orders will likely have economists revising down their
Q2 real GDP forecasts. With regard to current-quarter capex, shipments are
more relevant. The news there is not better qualitatively speaking. The January-February
average of real core capex shipments is down an annualized 12.0% vs. the Q4:2006
average. So, economists also may be revising down, yet again, their Q1 real
GDP forecasts as these shipments data are pointing toward the second consecutive
quarterly contraction in real expenditures for business equipment and software.
If so, then indeed, "the magnitude of the slowdown [in capex] has been somewhat
greater than would be expected given the normal evolution of the business cycle."