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LEI & KRWI - IT'S
DIFFERENT THIS TIME?
by Paul L.
Kasriel
Senior Vice President & Director of Economic Research
The Northern Trust
Company
April 22, 2007
The bulls on the economy had better hope it’s different this time
because both the index of Leading Economic Indicators (LEI) and the
Kasriel Recession Warning Indicator (KRWI) are sending out recession
warning signals now that March data are available. As I discussed in
earlier commentaries (see The Econtrarian
"Recession Imminent? Both the LEI and the KRWI are Flashing
Warning" and The Econtrarian "When The
Facts Change, I Change My Model - What Do You Do?"),
year-over-year contractions in the quarterly average level of the LEI
usually presage recessions, as shown in Chart 1. The one exception to
this since the 1960 recession occurred in late 1966 – early 1967, when
an official recession did not occur although the pace of economic
activity slowed sharply, prompting an easing of Federal Reserve monetary
policy. Based on preliminary
March LEI data, the first-quarter average LEI was 0.58% below its
year-ago quarterly average. Assuming no major revisions to the
January/February LEI, the month-to-month change in the March LEI would
have to be revised up to 1.9% from its originally-reported 0.1% in order
for the Q1:2007 LEI to be even with that of Q1:2006. Revisions of this
magnitude are rare. Also plotted in Chart 1 are the year-over-year
percent changes in quarterly average levels of the index of Coincident
Economic Indicators (CEI). The growth rate of the CEI in Q1:2007, at
1.8%, is down about 90 basis points from its Q3:2006 growth. Growth in
the LEI shows the highest correlation (0.77) with growth in the CEI when
the LEI growth is advanced by two quarters.
Chart
1

Corroborating the
recession signal being sent by the LEI is the behavior of the ratio of
the coincident indicators to the lagging
indicators. This ratio tends to decline rapidly in advance of a
recession. Chart 2 shows the relationship between the year-over-year
growth in the LEI and the quarterly average behavior of the
aforementioned ratio on a four-quarter moving average basis. Notice that
the four-quarter moving average of the ratio, at 97.375, is already
lower than its nadir in the past cycle.
Chart
2

To refresh your memory,
the combination of a year-over-year contraction in the quarterly average
of the CPI-adjusted monetary base (unadjusted bank reserves and currency
held by the public) and a
negative four-quarter moving average of the spread between the 10-year
Treasury bond yield and the federal funds rate has signaled every
recession since that of 1969. I have modestly named this combination the
Kasriel Recession Warning Indicator. As shown in Chart 3, the KRWI is
now sending out a recession warning as of the first quarter of this year
in that the yield spread is negative and the real monetary base is
contracting.
Chart
3

Are the LEI and the
KRWI emitting false recession signals? Is it different this time?
Let’s look at the behavior of the three private-sector elements of
aggregate domestic demand – housing, business capital spending and
consumer spending to help us answer this question. Firstly, housing.
Completions of new houses correlate highest on a coincident basis with
the GDP line item, real residential investment expenditures. Chart 4
shows that the year-over-year behavior of new housing completions, down
19.50%, certainly suggests a recession is imminent, if not already upon
us.
Chart
4

Chart 5 shows the
year-over-year change in price-adjusted shipments of nondefense capital
goods, excluding aircraft. Although not as dramatic a decline as housing
completions, real shipments of nondefense capital goods ex aircraft fell
off a cliff starting in December of last year, declining year-over-year
in each of the three months ended February.
Chart
5

Chart
6 shows the year-over-year change in retail sales adjusted for prices.
This series shows much less of a definitive trend than the prior two
series in Charts 4 and 5. But real retail sales growth slowed to 2.11%
on a year-over-year basis in Q1:2007, down from 5.05% growth in
Q4:2006.Given that mortgage equity withdrawal has collapsed and
year-over-year growth in employment has slowed, this latest deceleration
in real retail sales growth may be the beginning of the real deal.
Chart 6

Related
to employment growth is unemployment growth. Chart 7 shows the behavior
of initial jobless claims. On a year-over-year basis, they are rising,
which is a typical prelude to recession.
Chart 7

I am not aware that any
recession has been predicted
by a consensus of economic prognosticators. Two reliable recession
indicators are now flashing a warning signal and private domestic demand
is showing weakness. Maybe it’s different this time? Perhaps it
isn’t. Only the National Bureau of Economic Research will know for
sure.
*Paul
Kasriel is the recipient of the 2006 Lawrence R. Klein Award for Blue
Chip Forecasting Accuracy

© 2007 Paul L. Kasriel
Editorial Archive
CONTACT
INFORMATION
Paul
L. Kasriel
Sr.
Vice President & Director of Economic Research
The Northern Trust Company
50 S. LaSalle Street
Chicago, IL USA
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