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UMich Is Worried About "Consumer Resilience" As Sentiment Tumbles To September Lows

UMich Is Worried About "Consumer Resilience" As Sentiment Tumbles To September Lows

We were wrong: several minutes ago when we documented the collapse in the Gallup Economic confidence, we said that "we look forward to the UMich confidence report to beat expectations when it is released in just a few minutes." Moments ago the official print came out and it was not pretty: sliding from 91 to 89.7, not only did the print miss expectations of a rebound to 92.0, but was the lowest print since September 2015, as well as the fourth consecutive drop.

US Industrial Production Plunges As March Auto Manufacturing Tumbles Most Since 2008

US Industrial Production Plunges As March Auto Manufacturing Tumbles Most Since 2008

The US economy has never - ever - seen Industrial Production drop YoY for seven months in a row without being in a recession. Down 2.0% YoY in March, the weakest since December and down 0.6% MoM (weakest since Feb 2015) the decline in factory output is driven a 1.6% plunge in vehicle production (2.8% collapse in motor vehicles specifcally) in March. This 1.76% drop is the worst for a March since 2008.

 

 

As The Fed details,

The Bank Of Japan Already Owns Over Half Of All ETFs; It Wants To Own More

The Bank Of Japan Already Owns Over Half Of All ETFs; It Wants To Own More

Less than six months after we pointed out that the BoJ owns 52% of the entire Japanese ETF market, Reuters reports that the Kuroda's Peter Pan fairy tale, aka the Bank of Japan, is thinking about buying even more. The BoJ is said to be currently buying $30 billion of ETF's a year under its current policy, however since the Nikkei is down over 10% this year, that figure is apparently not enough to keep the market propped up.

Here's how the BoJ's holdings in the Japanese ETF market looked visually in recent months:

 

As Empire Fed Prints Highest In Over A Year, Are The Fed's "Global" Concerns Easing?

As Empire Fed Prints Highest In Over A Year, Are The Fed's "Global" Concerns Easing?

Janet - you have a problem. Following the all-clear from China, soaring stock prices, and 'stability' in oil, Chicago Fed business conditions just hit a 17-month high. In other words, The Fed is gonna need some bigger 'turmoil' excuses or defending "no rate hikes" is going to look a whole lot more political than their independence would suggest.

Everything is awesome in Chicago too...

 

As The Chicago Fed notes:

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