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Q1 More Productive – Analyst Blog

Source: http://www.zacks.com/stock/news/20766/Q1+More+Productive+-+Analyst+Blog
Posted on Thursday, June 4th, 2009 | In Market Commentary, Stocks to Watch
Contributed by: Dirk Van Dijk (http://www.zacks.com/) -

Productivity is the ultimate determinate of our standard of living. If real GDP rises, but does so at less than the rate of population growth, then per capita GDP will fall. In the short term, it can be affected by changes in the proportion of people working, but over the long term increasing output per hour worked is the only way to make a society more wealthy.

Thus the news that in the first quarter grew at 1.6%, rather than the 0.8% originally estimated, is very welcome news. The consensus expectation was that it would be revised up, but only to 1.2%. Both output and hours worked were down in the quarter, but hours worked fell more than output, leading to better productivity.

It appears that within the numbers though there were some serious divergences, with productivity up at 1.8% for the whole business sector, but up 1.6% for the non-farm business sector. This would imply that things are going very well down on the farm given the relatively small size of farming in the current economy.

The service sector far outperformed manufacturing since manufacturing productivity was down 2.7% in the quarter. Within manufacturing, there was a serious divergence between durable goods, where productivity plunged 10.4%, and non-durable manufacturing, where it rose 1.9%. Manufacturing productivity is always more volatile than service sector productivity, but this is a big, big difference, especially with durable goods.

Part of that is due to the inherently more unstable nature of manufacturing, particularly durable goods relative to services, and part is due to different methods the government uses to do the calculations. However, the same calculations are done for durables and non-durables.

This data clearly indicates that non-durable firms should be doing better than durable goods firms. Stick to firms where people need to buy the stuff on a regular basis, not things that can easily be put off. For example, stick with firms like Procter & Gamble (PG) and Del Monte (DLM), not Winnebago (WGO) or Harley Davidson (HOG).

Read the full analyst report on “PG”
Read the full analyst report on “DLM”
Read the full analyst report on “WGO”
Read the full analyst report on “HOG”
Zacks Investment Research

Last 5 posts by Dirk Van Dijk





About Dirk Van Dijk (http://www.zacks.com/)
Dirk Van Dijk is a Senior Analyst at Zacks Investment Research. He writes the Earnings Trends article on Zacks.com which provides investors with an in-depth analysis of the markets, along with the profit performance of S&P 500 companies. Each week, this report identifies which S&P 500 sectors are showing strength and which are showing weakness. In addition, this valuable report highlights the most attractive sectors based on valuation and projected earnings growth. For more information, visit www.zacks.com or for the RSS Feed of this article: http://www.zacks.com/external/rss.php?f=34

One Response to “Q1 More Productive – Analyst Blog”

  1. Posts about Harley Davidson as of June 4, 2009 | The Dragons Attic Says:
    June 4th, 2009 at 7:53 pm

    [...] has agonized more over the meaning of its brand than Infiniti, Nissan’s luxury division, Q1 More Productive – Analyst Blog – straightstocks.com 06/04/2009 Productivity is the ultimate determinate of our standard of living [...]

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