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Three dominant types of economic thought seem to analyze every data point and come to conclusions

September 12, 2019

We’ve all heard of the Rorschach test - you know, the one where you look at an inkblot and say what you see. The theory is that it’s a tunnel into someone’s subconscious thoughts or desires. If you’re obsessed with hockey you might look at an ink splotch and see hockey sticks, or pucks, a Stanley Cup, or even Bobby Orr; if someone is obsessed with outer space, she could look at the same picture and see flying saucers or aliens. These tests come to mind because lately, three dominant types of economic thought seem to analyze every data point and come to conclusions that always support their particular interpretation of the US economy.

One group is obsessed with President Trump’s tariffs, thinking they are slowing the economy. They even search the internet and earnings calls to find mentions of “trade uncertainty” to prove their point. But uncertainty is one thing, data are quite another. Total US trade in goods and services (exports plus imports, combined) was $4.9 trillion in 2016. In the past twelve months, it’s been $5.7 trillion, an increase of 16.3%. In other words, trade has grown faster than the overall economy. Yes, we know trade tensions with China are real and important for some companies. And yes, we look forward to the US reaching an agreement with China. But China is not the be-all-end-all when it comes to world trade. Supply chains are moving - trade is dynamic - which is why the costs to the US economy have been far less than static analysis predicted. So far this year, US imports from China are down 12.3% from the same period in 2018, but imports from Vietnam are up 33.2%, and they are up 20.2% from Taiwan, 9.8% from South Korea, 9.7% from India, and 6.3% from Mexico. Meanwhile, we’re confident that Congress will pass the new version of NAFTA by early 2020, facilitating stronger trade ties with Canada and Mexico.

Trade is moving forward, not dying. The second major thought group consists of those who oppose the president’s policies in general and are looking for any way they can to discredit the tax cuts and deregulation. They love to focus on supposedly weak business investment, which they say signals the ineffectiveness of the president’s policies. The problem with this theory is that, since the tax cut was enacted at the end of 2017, “real” (inflation-adjusted) business investment in equipment has grown at a 3.4% annual rate, while real business fixed investment (equipment, structures, and intellectual property) has grown at a 4.5% annual rate. These are respectable numbers. It was inventories that held down GDP growth back in Q2, and this can’t last with a strong consumer.

Moreover, productivity growth (the growth in worker output per hour) has accelerated, growing at a 1.7% annualized rate since the start of 2018 (and up at a faster 2.9% annualized rate so far in 2019), versus a 0.9% annualized rate for the four years ending in 2016.

The last of the three thought groups have been obsessing about the next recession since the moment the last one ended. Any day now they expect the “sugar high” to end. They celebrated when the ISM Manufacturing index dropped to 49.1 last week, but then the ISM index for the much larger service sector surprised on the high side at 56.4. For every data point that signals a slowdown, there are nine that don’t. For example, a soft 130,000 gain in headline payroll growth for August dominated headlines, but civilian employment (which includes small business) surged 590,000, wage growth picked up, labor force participation moved higher, initial claims remained low, and auto and truck sales rose. Not exactly negative news. If someone has an ax to grind about the US economy, we’re sure they’ll see a recession in whatever blot or piece of data they look at.

They can always find something to worry about. My point is that Politics plays a part in all that is said about this Trump economy. You can hate Trump, but do not criticize him for the policy changes that have stimulated an economy that we have not seen in multiple decades. This is real and sustainable. This is not a time to worry or complain, but stay invested and count your winnings over the next several years.

Last week was a rocky week for the US markets, despite there being only four trading days. The markets started on Tuesday with investors seemingly worried about the prospects for a trade deal after the Trump administration pushed ahead with the threatened tariffs on September 1st. With China announcing two weeks ago that the country would not retaliate against any new sanctions put in place, many investors were hoping the US would offer a small concession, delaying the planned tariffs. When the tariffs kicked in, many investors feared a trade deal was once again becoming elusive. Then, on Thursday, China announced that representatives would be coming to the US in September for trade talks at an administrative level, with a higher-level meeting planned for the beginning of October. What was interesting about this development was that China broke the story, not the US administration. At first, several US administration officials seemed unaware of the phone call on Wednesday night, along with who was coming to the US for talks and when, but they confirmed what China had announced. The markets took these developments as positive and jumped higher on Thursday, pushing to within a few percents of the all-time highs hit on several of the major US indexes.

Equities: US markets pushed higher last week on trade war hopes and with no major changes being anticipated in the markets’ thoughts about the Fed cutting rates here in the US as Europe prepares to start to further stimulate its economies. As expected, volume was well below average last week on all of the major US indexes since it was a holiday-shortened trading week.

○ S&P 500 (1.79%) – Below Average volume
○ NASDAQ (1.76%) – Below Average volume
○ Dow (1.49%) – Below Average volume
○ Russell 2000 (0.69%) – Below Average volume

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