Industrial Production Index
The Federal Reserve Board released the March number for the Industrial Production Index. The result was an increase in the total index of .10%. The Industrial Production Index acts as a measure of output. It takes data from mining, manufacturing, electric utilities and gas utilities. Values are updated monthly. The manufacturing component, which includes plants, factories, mills and other businesses that process materials, saw a .09% rise in output in March.
The report also measured capacity utilization (which describes the amount of capital used relative to the amount of capital available) within each component of the index. The report showed that from 2009 to 2010, both manufacturing and mining companies have seen
The data seems to suggest that from 2009 to the present period, manufacturing companies and mining companies began to downsize and get rid of capital but became more efficient throughout the period of interest (as the increase in output indicates). The opposite seems to be true for energy and gas companies. Energy and gas companies began to expand their capital but their output has fluctuated. One possibility is that the energy and gas companies were forced to expand as demand increased at the end of 2009 due to the cold weather. Now that demand is decreasing they have excess capacity and decreased output.
-Robert Belsky
Economic Data:
CPI: On Wednesday Consumer Price Index was released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and came out relatively flat with an index level of 217.63 versus the estimated 217.71. It measures the change in the price of a basket of goods as a measure of inflation.
Retail Sales: Also on Wednesday, the Census Bureau released the retail sales number, which is used by economists to determine consumer spending in the US. For the month of March, retail sales levels rose over 100 basis points in comparison to last year’s numbers. Analysts expected a 1.2% gain month over month versus the actual data of 1.6%.
Jobless Claims: On Thursday unemployment claims for the past week were 484k versus the expected 440k, and still more than the same period a year ago (460k).
Market News:
As economic data was mixed this week, the market had a lot to digest. Along with mixed economic data, this past week included important corporate earnings results, volatile commodity prices from sugar to natural gas, and continued Greece issues which created extreme swings in the currency market. Nonetheless, the S&P 500 ended with a positive week, gaining over 1.2% by Thursday afternoon. This led the market over levels that haven’t been seen since September of 2008. Although many analysts believe the recent increase is indicative of an overpriced market, it may be hard to slow it down with many retail investors trying to jump on the trend they may have missed.
–A. Tarhini
Article submitted by: Robert Belsky and Alex Tarhini of the Capital Markets Lab (CML). To learn more about the Capital Markets Lab (CML) please visit https://business.fiu.edu/capital-markets-lab/.