Employment Growth Continues to Slow

Summary: The macro data from the past month continues to mostly point to positive growth. On balance, the evidence suggests the imminent onset of a recession is unlikely.

The bond market agrees with the macro data. The yield curve has 'inverted' (10 year yields less than 2-year yields) ahead of every recession in the past 40 years (arrows). The lag between inversion and the start of the next recession has been long: at least a year and in several instances as long as 2-3 years. On this basis, the current expansion will last well into 2018 at a minimum. Enlarge any image by clicking on it.

Unemployment claims are also in a declining trend; historically, claims have started to rise at least 6 months ahead of the next recession.



That said, there is one main watch out that bears monitoring closely:

Employment growth has been decelerating from over 2% last year to 1.4% now. It's not alarming but it is worth noting that expansions weaken before they end and slowing employment growth is a sign of late-stage maturation in the current expansion.

A second watch out had recently been demand growth, with retail sales growth falling under 1.5%. But this changed for the better in July: real retail sales growth (excluding gas) was a healthy 2.6% yoy. Personal consumption accounts for about 70% of GDP so retail sales has a notable impact on the economy.


Here are the main macro data headlines from the past month:

Employment: Monthly employment gains have averaged 175,000 during the past year, with annual growth of 1.4% yoy. Full-time employment is leading.

Compensation: Compensation growth is on an improving trend and near the highest in the past 8 years - 2.5% yoy in August.

Demand: Real demand growth has been 2-3%. In July, real personal consumption growth was 2.7%. Real retail sales (including gas) grew 2.5% yoy in July, making a new ATH.

Housing: Housing sales fell 9% yoy in July after making a 9-1/2 year high in March. Starts and permits are flat over the past two years due to weakness in multi-family units.

Manufacturing: Core durable goods growth rose 3.4% yoy in July. The manufacturing component of industrial production grew 1.3% yoy in July.

Inflation: The core inflation rate remains near (but under) the Fed's 2% target.