Comerica Bank’s New Michigan Index Drops

The Comerica Bank Michigan Economic Activity Index decreased moderately by 0.5 percent in July. This year the Michigan Index has not shown consistent momentum, so far failing to put together back-to-back monthly increases in 2017. The state economy could get a temporary boost from auto production this fall as households and companies along the Gulf Coast replace vehicles that were flooded out from Hurricanes Harvey and Irma. However, our long-term outlook for vehicle production still calls for gradual declines over the next year despite the temporary boost to demand this fall. Only two out of nine index components were positive in July, industrial electricity use and state sales tax revenues. The nonfarm employment sub-index was unchanged for the month. Initial claims for unemployment insurance (inverted), housing starts, house prices, vehicle production, state trade and hotel occupancy were all negatives in July. Monthly job growth in Michigan has stepped down this year. In 2016 the state averaged a net gain of 7,700 jobs per month. Through the first eight months of 2017, the average has dropped to 3,000 net new jobs per month. The rapid rebound in manufacturing employment following the Great Recession has likely played out. Going forward, we expect to see flat to declining manufacturing employment, consistent with a mature business cycle and ongoing productivity gains for the state’s industrial base.

The Michigan Economic Activity Index consists of eight variables, as follows: nonfarm payrolls, exports, hotel occupancy rates, continuing claims for unemployment insurance, housing starts, sales tax revenues, home prices, and auto production. All data are seasonally adjusted, and indexed to a base year of 2008. Nominal values have been converted to constant dollar values. Index levels are expressed in terms of three-month moving averages.

Comerica Bank, with more than 200 banking centers in Michigan, is a subsidiary of Comerica Incorporated (NYSE: CMA), a financial services company headquartered in Dallas, Texas, and strategically aligned by three business segments: The Business Bank, The Retail Bank, and Wealth Management. Comerica focuses on relationships, and helping people and businesses be successful. In addition to Michigan and Texas, Comerica Bank locations can be found in Arizona, California, and Florida, with select businesses operating in several other states, as well as in Canada and Mexico.

To subscribe to our publications or for questions, contact us at [email protected]. Archives are available at http://www.comerica.com/economics. Follow us on Twitter: @Comerica_Econ.

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SOURCE Comerica Bank

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About the Author: Bob Cooper

Bob Cooper is Canadian Business Tribune''s senior editor. He is also a nationally syndicated newspaper columnist and a bestselling author. He lives in London Ontario and covers the intersection of money, politics and finance. He appears periodically on national television shows and has been published in (among others) The National Post, Politico, The Atlantic, Harper’s, Wired.com, Vice and Salon.com. He also has served as a journalist and consultant on documentaries for CBC and Global News . In 2014, he was the winner of the Society of American Business Editors and Writers' investigative journalism award, and the winner of the Izzy Award for Journalism from Ithaca College's Park Center for Independent Media. He was also a finalist for UCLA's Gerald R. Loeb Award and Syracuse University's Mirror Award. Before becoming a journalist in 2006, Sirota worked in Washington for, among others, U.S. Rep. Bernie Sanders, the U.S. House Appropriations Committee Minority Staff and the Center for American Progress.