Over the course of 2019 we have been tracking three states – Michigan, Ohio and Indiana – because we believe the next US recession will start in the American upper-Midwest. Our thesis in a nutshell:
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Every slowdown has its own particular “Patient Zero”, the economic
equivalent of epidemiology’s first patient to fall ill from a new
disease. Identify that source and you can begin to understand how to
treat the ailment or, for our purposes, sound the recessionary alarm.
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Marginal increases in specific state level unemployment during prior
cycles correctly identified the root cause of each subsequent recession.
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In 2000, Massachusetts and Connecticut (heavily exposed to financial
services) saw increasing joblessness ahead of national trends as the dot
com bubble burst. In 2007, Nevada and Florida (the bubbliest housing
markets) were the first to see spiking unemployment.
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In this cycle, states exposed to manufacturing saw the largest
changes from 2009 – present in terms of unemployment, making them this
cycle’s most likely candidates for Patient Zero status.
Here’s what we see in the data:
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All 4 states have seen noticeably lower unemployment in recent years.
Only one – Indiana (blue line) – is consistently below the national
average, however. And its labor market remains robust today.
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Ohio’s (orange line) current unemployment rate of 4.2% is slightly
higher than the trough of 4.0% in June/July 2019 but still well below
last year’s 4.6%.
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Michigan’s (red line) unemployment rate stands at 4.1%, down from the
4.3% peak this July and basically the same as last year’s 4.0%.
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Pennsylvania (green line) was not on our original “states to
watch” list, but unemployment here is clearly moving in the wrong
direction. October 2019’s reading of 4.2% is noticeably higher than
earlier in the year (3.8% in Q2) and seems to be climbing quickly.
As a second data point on this topic, consider the Philadelphia Fed’s State Coincident Indexes. These use a combination of unemployment and wage data to measure the 3-month change in a state’s economic health.
Here is the current 50-state map of that data, coded by shades of green (growing economies), grey (flat) and red (shrinking economies):
This graphic shows a similar story to the rolling changes in unemployment data:
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Indiana is doing the best of our 4-state focus group.
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Michigan, despite the GM strike, is still marginally positive.
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Ohio and Pennsylvania are flat, the only 2 US states currently stuck in neutral.
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While there are 4 US states seeing outright contraction – Wyoming,
North Dakota, Kentucky and West Virginia – we would note that 2 (WY, ND)
have populations well below 1 million people.
Courtesy of Nick Colas of DataTrek, via Zero Hedge
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