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Feb 21, 2012 12:07 EST

from MacroScope:

Mid-Atlantic headwinds for U.S. employment

Ed Krudy contributed to this post

The Philadelphia Fed’s Mid-Atlantic manufacturing survey covers a pretty small chunk of an already shrunken U.S. factory sector. Still, analysts at Harris Bank have found that the survey’s employment component has been a pretty solid leading indicator of the monthly payrolls figures.

If the trend persists, then February’s report could be a bit of a letdown following a surprisingly robust gain of 243,000 jobs last month. The Philly Fed’s employment index dropped sharply in February to its lowest level since August.

According to Jack Ablin, Harris Bank’s chief investment officer:

For the last several months, the Business Outlook survey has been a keen predictor of the monthly change in the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ non-farm payroll. The survey came close to nailing last month’s 243,000 gain, even though economists expected a 140,000 pickup on average. Should the survey’s predictive power continue, investors could be disappointed with February’s BLS report. The Philly Fed survey implies roughly 50,000 net new non-farm payroll jobs added in February. Positive yes, but it would be a big momentum killer. Stay tuned. The payroll report is not due out until March 9th.

Aug 18, 2011 11:06 EDT

from MacroScope:

Philly Fed – the nightmare index economists can’t grasp

"Horrendous"

"Stink"

"Meltdown"

These are just a few of the (printable) words analysts have used to describe the August release of the Philadelphia Fed's factory activity index.

And well they might -- the Philly Fed has proven to be a nightmare indicator for economists. At -30.7 in August, the index came in far below the consensus forecast for a rise to +3.7 from July's +3.2. Even the lowest forecast was only -10.

That's probably one of the worst misses the Reuters polling team can recall in recent memory.

For three out of the past four releases, the Philly Fed number has come in below even the lowest forecast from dozens of economists. But that August result is something else.

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