June Chicago Fed Nat’l Activity Index Decreases to Negative 0.63

NEW YORK - The Chicago Fed National Activity Index for June dropped to negative 0.63 from a revised positive 0.31 reading in May, originally reported as positive 0.21.

Processing Content

Meanwhile, the three-month moving average (CFNAI-MA3) slumped to negative 0.05 in June, from May’s revised positive 0.31 reading, initially reported as positive 0.28, the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago reported today.

In June 2009, the index was negative 1.72, while the CFNAI-MA3 was negative 2.11 in that month.

The slightly negative reading for the CFNAI-MA3 indicates national economic growth was near its historical trend, and suggests subdued inflationary pressure from economic activity in the coming year, the Chicago Fed said.

The production indicators contributed negative 0.11 to the index (compared to a contribution of positive 0.61 in the previous month), while employment-related indicators contributed negative 0.13 after providing a positive 0.08 in May, the Fed said.

Consumption and housing-related data contributed negative 0.43 in the month, after contributing negative 0.45 the prior month, while sales, orders and inventories contributed positive 0.05, after a positive 0.06 contribution in May.

The index is a weighted average of 85 indicators of national economic activity, and is constructed to have an average value of zero and a standard deviation of one. A zero value for the index indicates that the national economy is expanding at its historical trend rate of growth; negative values are associated with below-trend growth while positive values indicate above-trend growth.

Overall, 36 of the 85 indicators made positive contributions to the index in the month and 49 made negative contributions. While 29 indicators were better than the previous month, 13 of these still made negative contributions to the index. Also, 56 indicators deteriorated from May to June.

The index was constructed using data available by July 22, with data for 52 of the 85 indicators having been published by then. The Fed said it used estimates for the missing data.


For reprint and licensing requests for this article, click here.
MORE FROM BOND BUYER
Load More