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IPFS News Link • Economy - Economics USA

Wholesale Inventories Surge, Sales Don't, Bond Market Panic

• https://moneymaven.io

Inventories are up 7.7 percent from a year ago. Sales are up 2.7 percent.

The Monthly Wholesale Trade report for January shows inventories rose 1.2% in January following a revised 1.1% in December.

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Sales

January 2019 sales of merchant wholesalers, except manufacturers' sales branches and offices, after adjustment for seasonal variations and trading day differences but not for price changes, were $499.8 billion, up 0.5 percent from the revised December level and were up 2.7 percent from the January 2018 level. The November 2018 to December 2018 percent change was revised from the preliminary estimate of down 1.0 percent to down 0.9 percent.

Inventories

Total inventories of merchant wholesalers, except manufacturers' sales branches and offices, after adjustment for seasonal variations but not for price changes, were $669.9 billion at the end of January, up 1.2 percent from the revised December level. Total inventories were up 7.7 percent from the revised January 2018 level.

Inventories/Sales Ratio

The January inventories/sales ratio for merchant wholesalers, except manufacturers' sales branches and offices, based on seasonally adjusted data, was 1.34. The January 2018 ratio was 1.28.

Econoday Consensus

The Econonoday consensus estimate was for a 0.1% rise in inventories in a range of -0.1% to +0.1%.

There are few indications of economic slowing that are more convincing than an unwanted build in inventories -- and that apparently is what's underway in the wholesale sector. Wholesale inventories jumped 1.2 percent in January to far exceed anyone's expectations and are up 7.7 percent year-on-year. Confirmation that this is unwanted comes from sales in the sector which did rise 0.5 percent in January but follow a long stretch of contraction. Year-on-year, sales are up only 2.7 percent. The sector's stock-to-sales ratio continues to climb, at 1.34 vs 1.33 in December and against 1.28 in January last year. Today's data confirm the wisdom of the Federal Reserve's cautious outlook.


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