Capacity Utilization, Fed Policy, Oil and China -- One Big Gordian Knot ~ Steve Blitz Morning Notes
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Friday, October 16, 2009

Capacity Utilization, Fed Policy, Oil and China -- One Big Gordian Knot

The production and capacity numbers released this morning indicate that the recession likely ended in June. But it as important, if not more so, to recognize that the reported 70.45% capacity utilization rate only just reaches the 70.93% low of the 1981-82 recession (the previous worst economic crisis since the Depression). The importance of this indicator owes to the Fed’s historic consideration of capacity utilization as the best real time indicator of economic activity (see the working paper “Improving Real-Time Estimates of the Output Gap” by Thomas Trimbur). From the official end of the past two recessions it took the Fed 38 and 32 months respectively before the first increase in the funds rate (see chart). The timing, of course, depends on how fast spare capacity is taken up. After the 2001 recession it took 32 months for capacity utilization to go from 73.53% to only 77.74%

To read whole article go to Pangea Market Advisory.


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