Those Spaces In Between

 | Nov 08, 2016 01:32AM ET

The LMCI was positive in October for the third time in the past five months. Revisions are to be expected in any statistic, but more so with the Fed’s factor model by its construction where it has to predict certain parts of its nineteen inputs. Not all those statistics are readily available when it is published and many undergo benchmark revisions themselves, so it is perhaps somewhat noisy if still at the same time exposing the idea of precision as more a fantasy than reality.

With those revisions in mind, as well as those that are surely to come, we are left with a labor market proxy that still very much fits our overall narrative. The economy is swinging from one “dollar” blow to the next. Right now happens to be one of those pauses which has allowed a measure of optimism to develop (so much that Alan Greenspan has been heavily booked again of late) but also some real economic “improvement” at least in that the “dollar” isn’t directly siphoning actual activity right at this moment (weak but not getting weaker).

Monetary irregularity is a real problem, not just theoretical. During the huge, global liquidations in January and February, as last August, we will never know how much activity was withheld or foregone because of inflexible or difficult finance, but there can be no doubt that there was some and that it was significant.

The problem is that once the “dollar” pressure is removed that discontinued activity is either lost or permanently altered; only part (at the margins) is delayed. Again, this makes sense on a personal or individual actor level as conceived of in real economic functions as risk. You intend to do something in January only to find yourself on the hook for being unable to fund that thing, so when conditions do somewhat improve you may have reconsidered whether it was worth the effort in the first place.

It is this process that we find all over the place; in various accounts and in various jurisdictions. The LMCI is just another one. Despite all the revisions, the “dollar’s” influence remains as prominent as ever.