The Conference Board

 


Press Release / News

The Conference Board U.S. Leading Index Decreased 0.1 Percent

July 21, 2008

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The Conference Board announced today that the U.S. leading index decreased 0.1 percent, the coincident index increased 0.1 percent and the lagging index decreased 0.3 percent in June.

LEADING INDICATORS. Four of the ten indicators that make up the leading index increased in June. The positive contributors — beginning with the largest positive contributor — were building permits, interest rate spread, index of supplier deliveries (vendor performance), and manufacturers' new orders for consumer goods and materials*. The negative contributors — beginning with the largest negative contributor — were real money supply*, stock prices, average weekly initial claims for unemployment insurance (inverted), average weekly manufacturing hours, index of consumer expectations, and manufacturers' new orders for nondefense capital goods*.

The leading index now stands at 101.7 (2004=100). Based on revised data, this index decreased 0.2 percent in May and increased 0.1 percent in April. During the six-month span through June, the leading index decreased 0.9 percent, with three out of ten components advancing (diffusion index, six-month span equals 30 percent).

COINCIDENT INDICATORS. Three of the four indicators that make up the coincident index increased in June. The positive contributors to the index — beginning with the largest positive contributor — were industrial production, personal income less transfer payments*, and manufacturing and trade sales*. The negative contributor was employees on nonagricultural payrolls.

The coincident index now stands at 106.9 (2004=100). This index decreased 0.1 percent in May and remained unchanged in April. During the six-month period through June, the coincident index decreased 0.3 percent, with two out of four components advancing (diffusion index, six-month span equals 50 percent).

LAGGING INDICATORS. The lagging index stands at 111.5 (2004=100) in June, with one of the seven components advancing. The positive contributor to the index was the change in CPI for services. The negative contributors — beginning with the largest negative contributor — were commercial and industrial loans outstanding*, average duration of unemployment (inverted), change in labor cost per unit of output* and ratio of consumer installment credit to personal income*. The ratio of manufacturing and trade inventories to sales*, and average prime rate charged by banks* held steady in June. Based on revised data, the lagging index decreased 0.2 percent in May and decreased 0.1 percent in April.

DATA AVAILABILITY AND NOTES.

The data series used by The Conference Board to compute the three composite indexes and reported in the tables in this release are those available "as of" 12 Noon on July 17, 2008. Some series are estimated as noted below.

* Series in the leading index that are based on The Conference Board estimates are manufacturers' new orders for consumer goods and materials, manufacturers' new orders for nondefense capital goods, and the personal consumption expenditure used to deflate the money supply. Series in the coincident index that are based on The Conference Board estimates are personal income less transfer payments and manufacturing and trade sales. Series in the lagging index that are based on The Conference Board estimates are inventories to sales ratio, consumer installment credit to income ratio, change in labor cost per unit of output, the consumer price index, and the personal consumption expenditure used to deflate commercial and industrial loans outstanding.

The procedure used to estimate the current month's personal consumption expenditure deflator (used in the calculation of real money supply and commercial and industrial loans outstanding) now incorporates the current month's consumer price index when it is available before the release of the U.S. Leading Economic Indicators.

The next release is scheduled for Thursday, August 21, 2008 at 10 A.M. ET.

For further information contact:
Ataman Ozyildirim
(1) 212 339 0399
ataman.ozyildirim@conference-board.org

Frank Tortorici
(1) 212 339 0231
f.tortorici@conference-board.org

Kenneth Goldstein
1 212 339 0331
ken.goldstein@conference-board.org

THESE DATA ARE FOR ANALYSIS PURPOSES ONLY. NOT FOR REDISTRIBUTION, PUBLISHING, DATABASING, OR PUBLIC POSTING WITHOUT EXPRESS WRITTEN PERMISSION.

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