CANADA DATA: Advance April Sales Estimates Suggest Slowing Econ Momentum In Q2

May-27 20:49

StatCan's advance estimate for April wholesale and manufacturing sales suggested weakness at the start of Q2, ahead of Friday's Q1 GDP release.

  • Wholesale sales (ex-petroleum, petroleum products, and other hydrocarbons and excluding oilseed and grain) fell an estimated 0.9% M/M (seasonally-adjusted), reflecting "lower sales in the motor vehicle and motor vehicle parts and accessories subsector", per Tuesday's release. That would be the biggest decline since May 2024, following 7 consecutive monthly increases. It would bring the 3M/3M annualized rate down to 7.8%, versus 9-11% in the first three months of the year.
  • This follows Monday's advance estimate for manufacturing sales, which showed a 2.0% M/M decline ("the largest decreases were in the petroleum and coal product subsector and motor vehicle industry group") for the third consecutive monthly drop.
  • The deceleration in momentum is even more pronounced here than in wholesales: the monthly drop would be the biggest in 18 months and brings sales back down to levels last seen 7 months earlier, with 3M/3M annualized sales also falling 2.0% (the first decline since October 2024 and comparing to +6.7% at the end of Q1).
  • As such, the estimate is indicative of a reversal of activity following a tariff-boosted first quarter, which may bode poorly for the April GDP prelim estimate due at the end of the week alongside Q1 GDP data.
  • That said, the advance estimate of retail sales for April out last week  is for 0.5% nominal M/M growth (still slower 3M/3M momentum at 2.6%, weakest since Aug 2024), suggesting that while the labor market and confidence remained soft at the start of Q2, consumer demand hasn't necessarily dropped along with it.
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US TSYS: Extraordinary Measures And Cash Look Sufficient To Head Off X-Date

Apr-25 20:32

Treasury has about $164B in "extraordinary measures" available as of April 23 to avoid hitting the debt limit, per its regular report out Friday. That's out of a maximum total of $375B (they have used $211B).

  • With Treasury cash looking healthy (around $600B), that's a fair amount of dry powder to get through the summer months to wait out the debt limit impasse. Tax receipts have looked strong with tariff revenues also starting to boost cash flows, further reducing the near-term urgency to adjust bond issuance.
  • This has also helped push back analyst “x-date” expectations to later in the summer/September. We expect to hear from Treasury about its own x-date assumptions next week.
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US TSYS: Treasury Market Trading Stayed Orderly In April: Fed Report

Apr-25 20:25

Liquidity across financial markets including the Treasury market deteriorated after President Trump's April 2 reciprocal tariffs announcement but market functioning was generally orderly, according to the Federal Reserve's semiannual report on financial stability, released Friday. (PDF link is here)

  • Treasury market liquidity has been poor for years and yields were particularly volatile in early April, contributing to a deterioration in market liquidity, the Fed said.
  • Nevertheless "trading remained orderly, and markets continued to function without serious disruption," according to the report, which looked at information available as of April 11. 

FED: Ex-Gov Warsh: Fed Has Failed To Satisfy Price Stability Remit

Apr-25 20:22

From our Washington Policy Team - Some fairly sharp words today from ex-Fed Governor Warsh on the central bank (who for what it's worth is seen by betting markets as by far the frontrunner for the next Fed Chair):

  • The best way for the Federal Reserve to safeguard its independence is for policymakers to avoid expanding the institution's role over time, including wading into policy areas that are outside its core mission, former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh, a leading contender to replace Jerome Powell as chair next year, said Friday.
  • "I strongly believe in the operational independence of monetary policy as a wise political economy decision. And I believe that Fed independence is chiefly up to the Fed," Warsh said in a speech at a Group of Thirty event on the sidelines of the IMF meetings. "Institutional drift has coincided with the Fed’s failure to satisfy an essential part of its statutory remit, price stability. It has also contributed to an explosion of federal spending." His speech made no mention of Trump's tariffs or the appropriate monetary policy to deal with them.
  • He said the ideas of data dependence and forward guidance widely adopted by Fed officials are not especially useful and might even be counterproductive. 
    "We should care little about two numbers to the right of the decimal point in the latest government release. Breathlessly awaiting trailing data from stale national accounts -- subject to significant, subsequent revision -- is evidence of false precision and analytic complacency," he said. 
    "Near-term forecasting is another distracting Fed preoccupation. Economists are not immune to the frailties of human nature. Once policymakers reveal their economic forecast, they can become prisoners of their own words. Fed leaders would be well-served to skip opportunities to share their latest musings."