Monday, May 24, 2010

Laughing as you sink

Monday, May 17, 2010

Geographic distribution of new car sales

We have been tracking the new car sales figures released each month by the Society of the Irish Motor Industry (SIMI).  These figures come out within a day or two of the month-end and give a instant insight into a key retail sector.
For the four months to April, SIMI’s figures give an increase of 38.3% on new car sales in the same four months last year.  The Central Statistics Office also produce data on new cars on registrations.  This is much more detailed than the SIMI data but the cost of this is a delay in the release of the figures.  The CSO have two datasets of interest
  1. Vehicle Registrations collected from VRT returns to the Revenue Commissioners
  2. Vehicle Licensing collected from license plate numbers issued by licensing authorities
The Vehicle Licensing statistics allow us to get a geographic breakdown of the number of new cars licensed in each licensing area.  Ireland has 30 licensing areas corresponding to the geographic identifiers used on license plate numbers.
The Vehicle Licensing figures indicate that for the first four months of the year there was a 35.1% increase in the number of new passenger cars licensed compared to the same four months last year.  This is broadly in line the the SIMI figures.
However using the CSO’s data we can get a breakdown of this by region.  The top five areas for the first four months of the year are:
Car Licenses by Area Top Four of the top five licensing authorities are in the south-east of the country.  On this list Kilkenny is also eighth with an annual increase of 46.8%.
The bottom five licensing areas are:
Car Licenses by Area Bottom
The two things to note here are the inclusion of Dublin in the bottom five, the country’s largest licensing area, and the negative figure for Limerick City, the only recorded drop in the country.  By contrast Limerick County ranked 14th with an increase in car licensing of 42.2%.
Although in the bottom five, the increase of 2,214 in new passenger car licenses in Dublin City and County is greater than the combined increase of 1,751 recorded for the top five licensing areas in the first table.
A table of the data for the first four months of the year for all 30 licensing authorities is available here
Finally, in percentage terms April was the best month of the year so far with an increase of  72.7% in new passenger car registrations on the same month last year.  Limerick City continues to be the poorest performing area with a drop of 56.8% on last year.  Waterford City and Roscommon also recorded drops.  At the other end, nine licensing areas had an increase of more than 100%.  Included here is the region of Cork City and County (+133.2%) which accounted for more than one-eighth of total licenses issued.  Full table here.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Core Inflation remains unchanged

The release of the April CPI figures from the CSO suggests that deflation is easing.  The headline rate of deflation eased from –3.1% in March to –2.1% in April.  However if remove the effect of two categories
  1. Energy Products make up 7.8% of the overall index and rose from 2.7% in the month and are up 9.1% in the year.
  2. Mortgage Interest makes up 6.7% of the index and rose 2.9% in the month and is down 0.7% on the year.
Removing these gives us a measure of core inflation we have been following for a number of months.  Although the overall inflation rate has become less negative this core inflation rate is largely unchanged.  It was -2.8% in March and remains –2.8% in April.
Core Inflation April
The overall index is being pulled up because of increases in energy costs (prices and taxes) because the huge drops in mortgage interest after the ECB rate cuts took place more than 12 months ago and are now out of the 12 month measure of inflation.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Industrial Production drops back slightly

After the big gain seen in January, the latest CSO release shows that industrial production volume has fallen back slightly for the last two months.  Even with these slight falls the long-term trend appears to be heading upwards.  However, this may not hold up to closer scrutiny.
Industrial Production March
The CSO have revised the slight increase shown in the provisional figures for February to a slight decrease.  The initial 1.2% monthly increase has been revised to a 1.3% decrease.  There was also a monthly decrease of 2.6% in March.   Even with these drops, the huge increase in January means the annual change in  industrial production is still positive. 
Industrial Production March2
However it could be that the one-off monthly increase of 20% that occurred in January is masking the actual trend.  If we look at the monthly changes, these have been negative for five of the past six months.
Industrial Production March3
Industrial production has shown monthly decreases for 15 of the past 24 months.  While the annual change remained positive in March, as it has for the first three months of the year, if the recent month on month trend continues (excluding the January blip) we could find industrial production dropping back below the levels seen last year.  The release of the April figures in a month’s time will shed light on this.

Monday, May 10, 2010

Retail Sales climb again

After an apparent kick-start in February the muted recovery of retail sales continued again in March.  The current release of the Retail Sales Index indicates this.
allbusiness
The annual change by volume has been positive for the past two months.  The annual change by value remains negative, because of price effects and possible bargain hunting, but has eased for the sixth month in a row to –1.6%.  We are a long way from the rates of decline seen 12 months ago.
Of course, the caveat is that the all-businesses index is heavily weighted towards the motor trades.  Motor trades make up 29% of the index in March and with new car sales in March up 78% on the same month last year, according to SIMI, this is bound to have a big effect on the all-businesses index. 
Here we look at the index excluding motor trades.
exmotor
Here we see that the annual declines have yet to unwind. Excluding motor trades, retail sales by value (-5.3%) and volume (-1.2%) are still lower than this time last year.  Looking at the more recent monthly changes we see a more positive picture.  When compared to February both value (+0.7%) and volume (+0.6%)  have increased.
By volume, the monthly change in retail sales excluding motor trades has been positive for the first three months of the year with increases of 0.5%, 1.0% and 0.6%.  We previously thought that the monthly change by value had been positive for February, but the preliminary estimate of +0.2% has been revised to –0.1% in the current release.
Looking at the actual index values we can see the slight upswing in the volume index represented by the above monthly increases.  For the value index, it does appear that the index has ‘bottomed out’ but the signs of growth following a jump of 1.2% in January eased somewhat with the 0.1% drop in February. The 0.7% increase in March puts us back in a positive direction again.
Retail Mar10a

Markets don’t work!

OK, I really don’t believe that and actually think that markets can be used in virtually all situations if properly designed and market forces are harnessed correctly.

However, last Thursday for about 10 minutes, at 7.45pm our time, the New York Stock Exchange did not work.  This fed to other exchanges. In a few manic minutes the DJIA fell about 900 points or about 10%.  There was little that could explain the precipitous drop.

Here is the few minutes as they played out on CNBC.  This is one instance in which the irritating Jim Cramer seems to have been right on the money.

While there obviously was a stroke of luck that they put up the Procter & Gamble chart, there were other stocks that had even more dramatic falls.  Some stocks that were trading at between $40 and $60 at 7.45pm fell to a fraction of a cent for a few seconds. See here.

The major exchanges came out later that day and said that trades that resulted in a move of more than 60% of the value of the share would be cancelled.  Owners of shares on the list linked above that sold for 0.1 of a cent were undoubtedly pleased with that.  With P&G falling by ‘only’ 30%, the trades that caused the swings in the above clip stand.  As Cramer said a few lucky people are after making a lot of money very quickly.

Although not official yet it seems likely the drop was caused by automated selling rules that kicked once a particular level is broken.  If a few major institutional investors have the same automated rule in place the market can become flooded with sell offers, that swamp the few bid offers that exist. 

The automated sell trades looked for buyers at any level and probably found at few automated bid offers at ridiculous low levels.  A trader who had bid offers inputted at very low levels suddenly struck it lucky.  On 99.99% of days these low-ball offers would be ignored.  Last Thursday was the 0.01% of days when the machines went haywire and those one-a-million prices came up – if only for a few seconds.  Pretty quickly the traders would have seen what was happening (though probably not understood it) and would override the automatic trades.  By then the damage was done.

Maybe a few of them should buy this t-shirt.

CAP payments and a small parish

Details of payments made to Irish farmers under the EU Common Agriculture Policy are made available on the website of the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food.  The link is here but the search feature is not very user friendly.  The top 100 recipients have been extracted from the database and can be seen here.

There were 137,748 payments under CAP in 2009 to Irish recipients. The average payout was €14,020. The total payout was €1,931,253,085 (€1.93bn).  I don’t really know much about the scheme and it’s overall effect. Natural curiosity brought me to examiner the figures from my home parish.

Here I saw that there were 150 recipients in the parish who received an average payout of €12,142, slightly below the national average.  The total monies received by residents of the parish under the scheme was €1,821,339.  It’s like the parish wins a lotto jackpot every year – guaranteed!

The highest payment was for €53,541 and the average of the top ten was €35,925.  The lowest payment was €172 and the average of the bottom ten was €670.  The median payment was €11,164.  Details of the payments can be seen here.

The parish is Cappamore in Co. Limerick.  According the associated Wikipedia page the population in 2006 was 1407 (669 in the village of Cappamore and 738 in the environs).  This means the parish received €1,294 on a per capita basis if the total population is included (and is unchanged since 2006).  The equivalent national figure is an average payout of around €430 per capita, around three times smaller.

The 2006 Census gives data on occupations.  The lowest-level geographic area available from the Census are District Electoral Divisions.  The Limerick DED of 057 Cappamore had a 2006 population of 1,400.  This is not the same as the parish of Cappamore and includes parts of other parishes.  Parts of the parish of Cappamore are not in the DED of Cappamore and are in the DEDs of 132 Bilboa and 062 Doon West.  Although not analogous we can view the figures from the Cappamore DED as being generally representative of the area.

According to the 2006 Census data there were 26 males and 5 females with recorded occupations of ‘Farming, Fishing and Forestry Managers’ in the Cappamore DED.  There were also three males and one female recorded as ‘Other Agricultural Workers’.  This would suggest there is a maximum of 35 people employed as farmers in the Cappamore DED.  The parish of Cappamore had 150 recipients (131 males and 19 females) under the CAP scheme.  I am sure the difference can be accounted for by a number of factors but I cannot be certain which.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Exchequer Balance improves but..

After stabilising in March the exchequer balance showed a slight improvement in April when compared to the same month last month.  By April of last year we were running a deficit of €7,316 million.  So far this year the deficit is running at €6,961 million.  This is an improvement of €355 million but it is barely noticeable on a graph of the cumulative exchequer returns when compared to previous years.
Exchequer Balance. to April
Looking at the Current Budget Deficit we see that the cumulative deficit is still worse than last year, though the gap is narrowing.  The current account was running a deficit of €6,428 million by the end of April last year.  Even with the tax increases, social welfare decreases and public sector wage cuts introduced for this year the current account has run a deficit of €6,932 million to the end of April.  This is an increase in the deficit of €504 million.
Cumulative Current Account Balances to April
It should be noted that the deficit for April was less than the deficit for the same month last year.  In April last year the current account ran a deficit of €3,797 million for the month.  This year the equivalent figure was €3,226 million.  This €571 million improvement was driven by both increases in taxation and reductions in expenditure.
Tax revenue in April was €182 million more than in the same month last year.  Voted current expenditure in April was €164 million less than in the same month last year.  The remainder of the improvement was due to non-tax revenue and non-voted expenditure.  While it is likely that reductions in voted current expenditure will continue for the rest of the year we will have to wait to see if the increases in tax revenue seen in April will be maintained.

Tax Revenue Rises!

Following the trend from March, the Exchequer Returns for April show that the fall in tax revenue is continuing to ease.  In fact it is possible to suggest that tax revenue is rising! The Department of Finance has published the following documents for April:
In an Information Note to accompany the release the Department state that:
Tax receipts are on target to end-April 2010. Overall €9,005 million in tax receipts were collected by the end of April, against a target of €9,012 million. The end-April year-on-year decline is 10.8%, at end-March it was 15%.
I think this is understating what has happened in April.  Here is the pattern in cumulative tax revenues the Department are commenting on.

EU Commission changes tack

Just seven weeks since the EU Commission admonished Ireland for using “favourable” macroeconomic growth forecasts in our budgetary policy documents.

Back in March the Commission published their opinion on Ireland’s Stability Programme Update published in December 2009.  In the update the Department of Finance laid out the figures detailed how Ireland will get our budget deficit back under the 3% of GDP limit by 2014.  This is the table that shows us getting back to the magic 3% level.SPU Table 1 The macroeconomic forecasts on which this is based can be seen here.

The Commission’s Opinion concluded that these projections were vague and overly optimistic.  They said

The budgetary outcomes could be worse than targeted throughout the programme period, mainly due to

  1. The fact that the consolidation efforts planned after 2010 are not underpinned by broad measures and are of an indicative nature only;
  2. The programme's favourable macroeconomic outlook after 2010; and
  3. The risk of expenditure overruns in 2010 and also beyond, to the extent that the still to be spelled out strategy should rely on expenditure restraint.

This, together with the likely need for further support measures for the financial sector, implies that also the debt ratio could turn out higher than planned in the programme.

Today the Commission releases their Spring Forecasts for the EU Economics.  The report on Ireland can be seen here with their main forecasts shown below.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Car sales up by almost 100% in April

The recovery in car sales continues to gather pace.  The figures just released by the Society of Irish Motor Industry (SIMI) show that new car sales in April 2010 were 95.4% ahead of sales in the same month last year.  This is on top of the increases we have identified for the first three months of the year.
Month
2009
2010
Change
% Change
January
15,799
16,595
+796
+5.0%
February
8,883
12,306
+3,423
+38.5%
March
7,764
13,813
+6,049
+77.9%
April
4,373
8,544
+4,171
+95.4%
Total
36,819
51,258
+14,439
+39.2%
Car Sales by Month April
We can see that annual changes have increased for each of the first four months of the year.  For the year to date 14,439 (or 39.2%) more cars have been sold than in the same four months of 2009 according to the SIMI data. 
Although there is an improvement, sales are still substantially below the levels seen prior to the current downturn.  Year-to-date sales are 52.0% below the 2008 levels and 56.4% below the 2007 peak.  This is shown in the graph below with an alternative representation of the data to April available here and full-year data here.
Car Sales Cumulative
These numbers will provide a strong boost to retail sales figures.  The March Retail Sales Index is due to be released by the CSO later this week.  The 77.9% annual increase in new car sales seen in March will provide strong boost for the All-Businesses Retail Sales Index with motor trades making up 29.0% of the March Index. What will be more interesting will be the performance of the Retail Sales Index excluding motor trades.
SIMI also claim that ‘only’ 5,000 of the almost 51,000 new car sold have seen buyers avail of the €1,500 VRT scrappage scheme rebate.  They also say the following:
An additional €60m in VAT and VRT for Government coffers has been generated from new car sales even after subtracting scrappage refunds.
It is hard to believe that is additional €60 million in VAT and VRT is due to the scrappage scheme.  To generate €60 million in revenue the 5,000 cars sold under the scrappage scheme would have to contribute €12,000 each VAT and VRT and €13,500 if we were to account for the €1,500 rebate.

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