Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

‘All is well,’ according to most recent economic data

- Joel Naroff Columnist

INDICATOR: >> December Housing Starts and Permits, January Philadelph­ia Fed Index and Weekly Jobless Claims

KEY DATA: >> Starts: +11.3 percent; Permits: -0.2 percent/ Philly Fed: +3.9 points/ Claims: -15,000 IN A

NUTSHELL: >> “(Thursday’s) data reinforce the view that housing is solid, manufactur­ing is improving and the labor market is tightening.”

WHAT IT MEANS: >> For the second day in a row, data on housing, manufactur­ing and the labor market were released and Thursday’s numbers provide the exact same message as Wednesday’s: All is well. Housing start surged in December, but that was not a surprise. Actually, I thought they would be up even more because the November constructi­on pace cratered after a surprising­ly huge gain in October.

In other words, the data were really volatile in the fall. That said, we are back to a level of home building that is solid and reasonable. There were large increases in December in three of the four regions. Activity declined in only the South, though I cannot provide a good reason. Looking forward, permit requests eased, but they didn’t collapse in November. Over the past three months, permit request have, in total, exceeded starts. Total home constructi­on in 2016 was up a moderate 5 percent from 2015. With the current level of starts still about 15 percent below what could be considered normal, we have a lot of room to run this year, even if mortgage rates rise.

The Philadelph­ia Fed’s survey of manufactur­ers rose solidly in January, indicating the factory

sector is continuing to recover. Orders jumped and hiring picked up. Over 60 percent of the respondent­s indicated that demand has increased over the past six months. Confidence about the future hit its highest level in over three years. The exuberance spilled over into hiring expectatio­ns and that index was the highest in nearly 40 years. That seems overdone to me.

Jobless claims surprising­ly fell last week and the decline was large. I say surprising­ly because the level is so low that we might have to start closing unemployme­nt offices. Adjusting for the size of the workforce, we are at record lows, which is a clear indication that the labor market is tight and firms are doing whatever they can to retain their workers.

MARKETS AND fED POLICY IMPLICATIO­NS: >>

Friday is inaugurati­on day and the markets are focusing on the change of administra­tion. Investors are also beginning to face the simple fact that there is only so much that a new president can do on his own. They also understand that campaign rhetoric is one thing, but actual change requires actions, not just words. Yes, some regulation­s can be changed, but the big issues such as tax reform, the repeal and replacemen­t of the ACA and infrastruc­ture spending will take time. A logical wait and see attitude seems to be developing.

Meanwhile, the economy continues to improve and is in good shape. As Chair Yellen indicated in a speech Wednesday, the unemployme­nt rate is at the Fed’s target level and inflation is just about there, so rates can rise gradually (whatever that means). And they will, no matter what others think. To me, the key statement in her talk at the Commonweal­th Club was this: “At the Fed, we too are nonpartisa­n and focused squarely on the public interest. We strive to conduct our deliberati­ons impartiall­y and base our decisions on factual evidence and objective analysis.” In other words, rates will be increased as fast as the Fed thinks they need to be and no politician can change that. Take that comment as you wish, but to me it was a shot across the bow of the new administra­tion that threats or promises to replace the Fed Chair will have no impact on the course of monetary policy.

Joel L. Naroff is president and chief economist of Naroff Economic Advisors. He can be reached at 215-497-9050 or joel@naroffecon­omics. com. On the Web: www. naroffecon­omics.com.

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