The SA Business Cycle: Hard numbers still pointing to lower levels of activity

Our Hard Number Index (HNI) can now be updated for May 2009 with the release of two hard numbers, vehicle sales and the notes issued by the Reserve Bank at May month end. As we show below there is no sign of any improving trend in the SA economy to be derived from the HNI. The Index attempts to replicate the pace of growth – higher numbers indicate that growth is picking up momentum that is accelerating while lower numbers indicate that growth is slowing down.

The HNI peaked in late 2006 at a value of over 165 indicating that the economy was then moving ahead at a very rapid rate. The latest reading for May 2009 is 106.06 and down from its 109.06 reading in April. This indicates that not only has the economy slowed down but that it is in now in reverse and probably going backward more rapidly than earlier in the year.

The HNI may be regarded as representing the first derivative of the economy. The second derivative, that is the rate of change of the rate of change in economic activity, is still pointing lower indicating little sign of a bottoming out in the pace of economic activity.

The Hard Number Index May 2009

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Source: Investec Securities

The SA Business Cycle – The second derivative

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Source: Investec Securities

New vehicle sales are still in decline

Vehicle sales in May provide very little cause for comfort that interest rate sensitive spending is responding to lower interest rates. The growth measured as the change in vehicles sold in May 2009 over May 2008 showed a further decline compared to April growth. More discouraging is that the underlying trend in vehicle sales is still pointing down rather than up. We calculate this trend by smoothing vehicle sales and then annualising the monthly growth in this smoothed measure.

Growth in New Vehicle Sales

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Source: NAAMSA, Investec Securities

Not all bad news – the money cycle is pointing up

It is fortunately not all bad news. There is some consolation to be derived from the latest trends in the cash, that is Reserve Bank money supplied to the SA economy. Adjusted for the inflation trend, we can now observe an improving trend as may be seen below. Annual growth has turned marginally positive and the underlying trend has improved suggesting that a sustainable recovery in the supply of cash is under way. The driver of this series is lower inflation rather than any pick up in the cash supply itself as we also show. The growth in the actual cash supply (not adjusted for inflation) has been trending marginally lower as may be seen.

The real money supply cycle

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Source: Investec Securities

The cash cycle

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Source: Investec Securities

Is the Bank undertaking quantitative easing?

In this regard it is to be noted that the gross foreign exchange reserves of the Reserve Bank increased by a large US$1.724bn in May 2009. This indicates that the bank was very active resisting rand strength last month, notwithstanding the recent remarks from the Governor about intervention in the currency market. Of greater interest is that these purchases to not appear to have been sterilised by treasury open market sales of government securities.

The government deposits at the Reserve Bank that would indicate such operations actually fell in May to R66.153bn from R66.402bn in April. This may indicate that the bank and the treasury agree with us that quantitative easing, that is supplying the banks with more cash via operations in the currency market, to encourage them to lend more freely, is a good idea, given the weak state of the economy. A recovery in the supply of money and bank credit is essential to the purpose of reviving the SA economy.

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