Vital Signs: Housing is Crucial for Recovery
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03/Apr/2008 4:48PM

The upcoming week is no goldmine of economic data, but it does offer a couple of key reports that will help to shape the debate over whether the economy is headed for a recession. Most private economists believe a downturn has already begun, and even Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke tried to cover all the bases when he testified before Congress on Apr. 2. His analysis: "It now appears likely that real gross domestic product will not grow much, if at all, over the first half of 2008 and could even contract slightly." That’s about as close as you will come to hearing Bernanke predict a recession.

As Bernanke told lawmakers, housing is at the center of both the economic and credit-market problems, and signs of improvement there are crucial to the timing of a recovery. On Tuesday, the report on pending sales of existing homes in February will offer further evidence on whether home demand is stabilizing. Data on pending sales tend to lead actual sales by a month or two. Actual sales of single-family homes rose in both January and February, amid some scant progress toward reducing the stock of unsold homes. Lower home prices and mortgage rates are starting to move the market: The National Association of Realtors Housing Affordability Index rose in February to its highest level in nearly five years.

One of the big offsets to housing’s drag on the economy has been improvement in foreign trade. On Thursday, the trade report for February will show the extent of trade’s support to economic growth in the first quarter. In the fourth quarter, a substantial narrowing in the trade deficit prevented growth in real gross domestic product from dipping below zero. The trade gap is on track to post a further narrowing in the first quarter, but not by as much in the previous quarter. Trade could once again be the difference between growth and contraction.

On the negative side of foreign trade, import prices continue to rise at a faster clip, and Friday’s data on import and export prices will update the trend. Crude oil and related fuels have been a key source of import-related inflation, but it’s not just oil. Prices of imported goods other than fuels in February were up 4.3% from a year ago, while they had risen at only a 2.5% pace during the previous year. Prices of imported autos, up 2.8%, are rising at the fastest clip since 1995, and the 2.1% growth rate of prices for consumer goods other than autos is the fastest since 1992.

Based on the expected performance of the coming week’s data imply that, the possibility of a recession will stay on the mind of Bernanke & Co., while inflation concerns will not be going away any time soon.

Here’s the weekly economic calendar, from Action Economics.

  Top Reports for the coming week

Reports

Date

Time

For

Median Estimate

Last Period

Consumer Credit (Bln$, monthly change)

Monday, April 7

3:00 p.m.

February

6.3

6.9

Wholesale Trade Sales

Wednesday, April 9

10:00 a.m.

March

0.4%

2.6%

International Trade Balance (Bln$)

Thursday, April 10

8:30 a.m.

February

-58.0

-58.2

Exports, Goods and Services (Bln$)

Thursday, April 10

8:30 a.m.

February

148.6

148.2

Imports, Goods and Services (Bln$)

Thursday, April 10

8:30 a.m.

February

206.8

206.4

Treasury Budget Balance (Bln$)

Thursday, April 10

2:00 p.m.

March

-95.0

-175.6

Import Price Index

Friday, April 11

8:30 a.m.

March

1.4%

0.2%

Export Price Index

Friday, April 11

8:30 a.m.

March

0.5%

0.9%

Consumer Sentiment Index, preliminary

Friday, April 11

10:00 a.m.

April

69.5

69.5




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03/Apr/2008 4:00PM

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