US
Spending & Income: Two Charts
by Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Friday,
26 June 2009
"Everyone says higher
saving rates are needed. Just not yet – please...?"
"STOCKS SEESAW as savings rate
jumps," said the AP on Friday, amending its earlier "Stocks
decline" headline to try and fit the moves to the news, rather than the
other way round.
Either
way, reckon the newswires, "Investors are nervous because consumers are
saving more than they're spending."
But
if it really was the 15-year high in US personal savings rates – way up
at 6.9% of gross income – that spooked investors, just wait until Wall Street
gets down to crunching Uncle Sam's give-and-take in the latest Commerce Dept. figures.
And heaven forbid the
Chinese take a peek at US consumers' earnings...

Falling below zero for the
first time since 1960 or earlier, nominal US wages have fallen off a cliff in the last
six months.
Gross
income earned from employment has fallen year-to-date each month in 2009,
dropping in May to its lowest level since Oct. 2007 and down more than 2% from
the peak of last August.
So
how come consumers spending AND saving both rose last month, while pay packets
shrank?
"Obviously,
for the long run, it has been desired for decades that Americans save
more," said one fund manager to Reuters from Illinois. "But in the midst
of this recovery [sic] and the stimulus packages that have been put forward,
the hope would be to have them spending the money now."
And
there's the devil in the detail: the government stimulus.

The
Bureau of Economic Analysis's Personal Income & Outlays release shows government
benefits last month hitting a record both in Dollar terms and as a proportion
of gross personal earnings, rising above 17.9% of income across the economy.
For
comparison, Uncle Sam's donation to US personal income peaked at
14% during the early 1990s recession. The five-decade average is 11.1%.
Unemployment
insurance benefits, meantime, were almost twice the Dollar volume in May of October
last year. And yet the Street's apparently worried by US citizens putting too
much money aside, rather than by how much Washington's stepped up to support
them.
Still
think the fiscal or monetary stimulus will make for the exit any time soon...?
Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Gold price chart, no delay | Gold in 2009
Formerly City correspondent for The Daily Reckoning in London and
head of editorial at the UK's leading financial advisory for private investors,
Adrian Ash is the editor of Gold News and head
of research at BullionVault – winner of the Queen's Award
for Enterprise Innovation, 2009 – where you can Buy Gold Today vaulted in
Zurich on $3 spreads and 0.8% dealing fees.
(c) BullionVault 2009
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