Chicago, Brazil And Maybe No ‘V’?

 | Mar 01, 2016 01:50AM ET

The Chicago Business Barometer fell sharply again in February, almost exactly as it had risen sharply in January. In fact, for the past year that has been the dominant pattern of sharp alternating swings between “growth” and “contraction.” Despite that, months showing up below 50 (this is still a PMI) are still somehow “unexpected” :

Chicago-area business activity unexpectedly contracted in the month of February, according to a report released by MNI Indicators on Monday…

Economists had expected the index to drop to 53.0, although a reading above 50 would have indicated continued growth.

As with all PMIs, the actual reading is far less significant than the overall trend. That seems to be these wild swings anchored around the 50 mark. Volatility in economic accounts like this tends to suggest increased uncertainty, which would fit this overall environment. From the press release :

The Barometer’s decline was led by an 18.5 drop in Production, which completely reversed January’s near 16 point gain, pushing it back into contraction. New Orders also fell sharply and Order Backlogs slipped further into contraction, a situation that has persisted for a year. Employment also declined significantly, leaving it at the lowest since November 2009 and the fifth consecutive month below 50.

In other words, serious decay inside the report but ambiguously so (especially to the mainstream that still holds on to the recovery narrative) given the comparison to much better January. These large monthly variations actually predate 2015, having shown up in the middle of 2013 and then intensifying in 2014. That, too, fits the overall environment under increasingly uncertain financial conditions (“dollar”) that are playing havoc with any number of accounts and estimates, including GDP it would seem.