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September 2007
Just
Roll With It?
There has
been much written over the past month about credit market turmoil
in the US, that has now clearly spread well beyond US borders in
terms of fallout. As you know, we’ve written about the potential for
significant credit market problems for years now.
To the point where we have sounded like the folks
continuously crying wolf. So
now the wolf has at long last arrived on scene.
Whaddya know? Whether
it’s nominal and relative levels of credit market leverage set
against historical experience, the absolute mushroom cloud
explosion in OTC derivatives, etc., we’ve tried to cover the
waterfront of factual information regarding credit market excess.
So rather than joining what has now become a growing
consensus chorus of concern about the credit markets from the very
same folks who’ve had their collective heads buried in the sand
over prior years, we want to look ahead a bit to what may be
important consequences to come.
Let’s face it, we know what is because it has been as
plain as day in the data for years. But what we don’t know is future fallout.
There’s no
question that the financial markets over the past month have been
dealing with and attempting to discount credit market issues de
jour. But the fallout
consequences on the real economy may be very meaningful looking
ahead. Certainly
further deterioration in an already down and out housing is one
huge question mark, especially given the fact that the greatest
number of ARM resets we’re probably every going to see in our
lifetimes will occur between September of this year through the
summer of next. But
the next big issue the financial markets are going to have to deal
with in our minds is the potential for recession.
That has not yet been discounted in financial asset prices.
Rather than speculate and guess, we thought it timely to
home in on just one key economic aspect leading toward the
potential for recession that will be more than well watched as we
move forward – payroll employment.
As you’ve probably heard in consensus commentary lately,
many a pundit has stated, “there isn’t going to be a recession
as long as unemployment is low and payroll growth continues”.
In deference to these consensus thinkers, let’s have a
look at what we believe are leading indicators for employment
trends and the “messages” they are currently sending.
For without question, if you don’t believe trouble in
mortgage credit markets will impact consumer spending quite
negatively, maybe trouble in payroll employment will do the trick.
Let’s get right to it.
The first stop on this journey is the very meaningful correlation
between temp employment numbers and headline payroll trends.
THE major importance of this relationship is that temp employment
trends lead the headline payroll employment numbers and rate of
change trends. History is more than clear on the subject.
Have a look.

Over the past
decade and one half, temp employment has both peaked and troughed
ahead of the headline payroll trend. As such, it has been a
very important indicator to follow. By the way, as you can
see in the chart above, over the last few months, the year over
year change in temp employment has gone negative. Not a good
thing in terms of foreshadowing forward headline payroll
employment trends. As per historical experience, negative
rate of change trends in temp employment occurred just prior to
the early 1990’s and 2001 recession, but not during the
mid-cycle economic slowdown of the mid-1990’s.
Are current temp employment numbers and trends telling us
the next recession is simply not far off? We’ll just have
to see what happens ahead, but for now we take this message
seriously.
Another very
important leading indicator for macro payroll employment trends is
retail sales. But unlike its temp employment counterpart, which
tends to lead changes in payroll trends both on the upside and the
downside, retail sales lead payrolls directionally on the
downside. In terms of leading or lagging tendencies on the
upside, it's a mixed bag as you'll see in the short history below.
But for our current purposes in the present cycle, we’re
interested in leading tendencies on the downside, so watching the
year over year annual average change in retail trends is quite
important immediately ahead. If the rate of change in retail
bottoms prior to a bottom in annual payroll growth, we'll sit up
and acknowledge this fact as a potential precursor to a change in
labor market conditions for the better. We're not there yet.
In fact, we're going in the opposite direction.

Another
lead/lag indicator for headline payroll trends just happens to be
the trend in the household survey of payroll employment. For
those unaware, each month the BLS (Bureau of Labor Stats) really
conducts two payroll employment studies. One is the headline
(as reported in the financial press) report whereby the BLS
seasonally adjusts data and estimates new business formations and
hiring. Since the headline payroll report is really based
quantitatively on payroll tax records, and new businesses file
these with a lag, the BLS employs the infamous birth/death model
to come up with the headline number by estimating jobs already
created for which payroll tax records have not yet been received.
The second survey, if you will, is the household survey whereby
the BLS literally polls folks on the phone. As such, this
survey picks up new business formation and hiring trends before
the institutional headline report. And especially meaningful
in the current cycle is that the household survey can pick up
changes in immigrant construction jobs. Again the leading
tendencies here are very short term in nature. For
now, the year over year rate of change in the household survey is
below that of the headline, implying more headline payroll
experience downside to come. The important issue moving
forward is to watch for a turn or divergence in the household
survey relative to the headline numbers and trends. For now,
this says more southern journey to come for US payroll growth.

In our eyes,
what is very important to notice in the above chart is that the
rate of change in the household survey has turned up prior to the
headline survey trend at each meaningful bottom in total payroll
employment. Current
message? No bottom in
sight.
As a
brief tangent, through July, headline payroll growth in the US has
totaled 955 thousand new jobs.
Not bad. But of
this, 773 thousand of these newly created jobs are as a result of
birth/death model estimates – 81% of the total.
We’re not going to suggest the B/D model is some type of
conspiracy by any means, but rather point out what we believe is
the importance of seasonality in these estimates as we look ahead
over the remainder of 2007 and try to anticipate what the
consensus will be seeing in headline numbers.
Below we've created a seasonality chart for the birth/death
model using data from 2000 to present. Of course what is
important is obvious. The B/D model is consistently strong
during the February through June period each year. After
that, its influence trails off rather markedly, with the exception
of August. On an average seasonal basis, the B/D estimation
tailwind is about to subside in a big way over the second half of
this year. In conjunction with a slow economy of the moment,
and the fact that so many indicators we discussed above continue
to point south for forward payroll growth, is the headline payroll
report headed for tough sledding in the second half of the year if
indeed the prior first half strength in estimated job creation
subsides? We expect as much.

Last point to watch is corporate earnings growth.
In the following graph we’re using the pre-tax corporate profit
numbers that come to us courtesy of each GDP report from the
government. As is clear, we’ve marked important peaks in
the year over year rate of change in pretax corporate profits that
have indeed foreshadowed important rate of change peaks in payroll
employment. Like the headline payroll trend relationship
with temp employment, the change in corporate profits leads
payroll employment trends. Hence, important to monitor as
the current rate of change in corporate profit growth is
slowing. Will payroll growth follow?

Although we did not mark these,
it’s also true that year over year bottoms in corporate profit
growth have led rate of change bottoms in payroll experience.
As you’d guess, we’ll be following this closely ahead.
There you have it. It’s our thought that the real story of forward US payroll
employment growth is being foreshadowed and foretold in the
leading indicators for headline payrolls that are temp employment
trends, the rate of change in corporate profits, the annual growth
in retail sales, and the current downside corroboration in the
household employment survey.
Of course not once in this discussion did we mention the
very large potential for both forward construction and financial
services job losses that seem quite clear on the current horizon.
For now, many expecting the US to bypass an official
recession point to payroll strength as a key rationale for this
viewpoint supportive of consumer spending.
But the facts show us that tried and true leading
indicators of payroll trends are pointing in exactly the opposite
direction of strength. For
now, the year over year rate of change in payroll growth is below
the lows seen in the mid-cycle economic slowdowns of the mid
1980’s and 1990’s. Historical
precedent is telling us to be very suspect of those expecting US
payroll growth to remain strong.
These folks are guessing and hoping. We’ll leave
you with one last question. If
indeed US payroll employment growth slows meaningfully ahead, as
we expect as per the collective message of current data, can we
really believe the consumer spending and credit acceleration
dependent US economy won’t blink?
Stop listening to the talking heads and other assorted
Street fortunetellers guessing about the direction of the US
economy ahead and the potential for recession, and start looking
at the factual data right in front of our faces.
The real economic data may not be as entertaining, colorful
or as hilarious as the circus clowns on CNBC, but we guarantee you
the admission ticket for the investment entertainment show can be
oh so costly. Remember, once
you've purchased a ticket to the television Street pundit/circus
barker show of life, there are no refunds.
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