Employment and Housing Rebound

Summary: It's been a noisy few months for macro. The prolonged government shutdown in December significantly delayed many data reports. Into this mess, several reports were ugly:

Retail sales in December fell into yoy contraction for the first time since 2009.
New employment in February fell to the lowest level since 2010.
New home sales growth in November dropped 14% yoy, the lowest rate since 2011.


That weakness now looks anomalous: the data from the past month mostly point to positive growth. A recession starting in 2019 is unlikely.

The bond market sees continued growth. The yield curve has 'inverted' (10 year yields less than 2-year yields) ahead of every recession in the past 40 years (dots). The lag between inversion and the start of the next recession has been long: at least 7 months and in several instances as long as 2-3 years. On this basis, the current expansion will likely last through 2019 at a minimum (from JPM). Enlarge any image by clicking on it.



Likewise, high yield spreads never blew out during the market correction and have since declined/normalized. Default rates remain well below average. This part of the bond market is not signaling trouble (from JPM).



Unemployment claims are back in a declining trend. Historically, claims have started to rise at least 7 months ahead of the next recession: claims reached a 49 year low this month, a big positive.



Less positive is recent consumption data. Real retail sales declined on a yoy basis in December, but rebounded to 1.7% growth in March. The trend flattened in the period prior to the past two recessions and there is some risk that the same is beginning to happen now. Continued improvement in the months ahead is needed.