Regional New Orders Deteriorate; Sales Still Lead Inventories

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No significant new economic news today, so let me follow up on Wednesday’s post about production and sales.

The high frequency indicator I follow on the manufacturing side is the new orders components of the manufacturing indexes published each month by five of the regional Feds. As I wrote Wednesday, these had flipped from contraction into relatively strong expansion at year’s end.

With the reports this week by the New York and Philadelphia Feds, the situation has reversed. Here is their current status:

The regional average is more volatile than the ISM manufacturing index, but usually correctly forecasts its month-over-month direction. The ISM report for February already showed new orders retreating into contraction, so this suggests a further retreat next month. The three remaining regional Feds will report over the next 10 days.

On Wednesday I also reiterated that production typically responded to changes in sales, rather than anticipating them, pointing out that sales typically turn higher or lower before inventories do.

Since we had the report for retail sales earlier this week, here is the update of retail sales (dark blue, thick line) and total business sales (light blue, thin) vs. retail inventories (dark red, thick line) and total inventories (light red, thin) through February:

(Click on image to enlarge)


The leading/lagging relationship is easier to see on a YoY% basis:

(Click on image to enlarge)

In 2022 and 2023, the YoY change in inventories lagged sales by roughly 6 months.  The relative bigger incrrease in retail inventories in late 2024 may be an exception to the rule, but is likely just noise, especially since total business inventories did not confirm that big increase.

One thing that has distinguished slowdowns in growth from actual recessions in the past several decades has been how quickly businesses can adjust their inventories to a decline in sales. The “just in time” system allowed for quicker responses. To the extent the current situation is driven by tariff and other policy uncertainties, businesses may not be able to be so nimble.


More By This Author:

Jobless Claims Suggest Continued Sluggish Growth
Policy Uncertainty, Business Investment, And Consumer Spending
Two Cheers For A Great February Industrial Production Report

Disclaimer: This blog contains opinions and observations. It is not professional advice in any way, shape or form and should not be construed that way. In other words, buyer beware.

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