US narrow money hinting at late 2016 growth surprise
Friday, April 22, 2016 at 10:59AM
Simon Ward

Having warned of recent economic weakness, US narrow money trends are now signalling a revival of growth during the second half of 2016, suggesting renewed upward pressure on interest rates and, possibly, the US dollar.

As previously discussed, turning points in six-month real (i.e. inflation-adjusted) narrow money growth have consistently led turning points in two-quarter GDP expansion in recent years – see first chart. Real money growth bottomed in October 2015 and had shown a modest revival through March. Weekly data through 11 April suggest a marked acceleration this month. (The final data point in the chart assumes no further change over the remainder of April and a 0.2% monthly rise in consumer prices.)


Narrow money is a much more reliable leading indicator of the economy than broader aggregates. Six-month growth of real M2, however, has also revived recently. A broader measure including institutional money funds and large time deposits remains subdued but is expanding in real terms at close to its average pace in recent years – second chart.


The narrow money signal is provisional. The recent pick-up needs to be confirmed by full April data. There is a risk that six-month growth will fall back in May, reflecting a large monthly increase in November 2015.
 
Monetary trends, it should be emphasised, typically lead the economy by between six and 12 months. The central expectation here is that activity will remain soft for several more months, mirroring narrow money weakness last autumn. Consistent with this, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s “nowcasting” model currently predicts GDP growth of only 1.2% at an annualised rate in the second quarter, after 0.8% in the first.

The labour market, moreover, is likely to lag any GDP rebound. Employment / unemployment data may soften during the current quarter. While low weekly jobless claims indicate that firms remain reluctant to lay off workers, business survey evidence and the Conference Board’s online help-wanted tally point to a slowdown in hiring – third chart.


Markets, therefore, could enjoy several more months of improving global economic news and a neutral Fed before needing to grapple with a scenario of uncomfortably strong US growth in late 2016.

Article originally appeared on Money Moves Markets (https://moneymovesmarkets.com/).
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