Introducing the ADS Business Conditions Index
Every time I think I'm aware of all of the economic indicators available, I find a new one. This time it's the Philadelphia Federal Reserve's Aruoba-Diebold-Scotti Business Conditions Index, which was featured in this WSJ article on Tuesday:
"This index, which we will henceforth refer to as the ADS, takes in a variety of economic data, mashes it all together and comes out with an up-to-the-minute reading on the economy at least once a week. It saves common investors like us a lot of hard work trying to grapple with the individual pieces. The input data includes a composite of quarterly output data, unemployment indicators, industrial production, personal income less transfer payments, manufacturing/trade sales and gross-domestic-product growth.
The economic whizzes at the Philly Fed use a filter to help smooth the data so that the impact of less-frequent data, such as the GDP growth figures, blends seamlessly with more-frequent data, such as weekly new claims for unemployment insurance. The ADS looks at the entire economy, not just the Philly Fed's district. Additionally, because the ADS is updated so frequently, it's a real-time read on the economy that analysts don't have to wait a long time for, unlike the quarterly read on GDP."
HT: Mike LaFaive
6 Comments:
The ADS Index was updated today, based on first quarter real GDP and jobless claims reports, and is displayed above.
OK class, what is wrong with this sentence?
Damn! Would someone please answer so I don't have to admit that I don't know?
I will give you a clue. One of the words obviously does not belong.
Hmmm. Thinking...thinking...
Well, this is probably obvious, and I'll feel dumb when you tell me, but I give up.
Well, this is probably obvious, and I'll feel dumb when you tell me, but I give up.
Mark is resorting to the usual trick. He assumes that the report is of the "REAL GDP" when we all know that nothing could be further from the truth. When the GDP deflator number is made up by people who serve politicians the "REAL GDP" number can be whatever they want it to be.
"He assumes that the report is of the "REAL GDP" when we all know that nothing could be further from the truth."
Ahh. That was one of my choices. I DO feel dumb now.
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