Energy
A March survey by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas found most exploration firms need West Texas Inter-mediate (WTI) at $49 per barrel or higher to profitably drill a well. EIA doesn’t forecast WTI to reach that level until late in ’21. And Rystad Energy doesn’t see drilling activity returning to last year’s level for at least five years.
Manufacturing
Ninety percent of the losses in manufacturing were in durable goods, i.e., items that not easily consumed or that wear out quickly. Two-thirds of those losses can be tied to the energy downturn. Fabricated metal products (i.e., pipes, valves, flanges) and oil field equipment manufacturing have cut a combined 9,600 jobs. Without an increase in drilling activity, the jobs are unlikely to return.
Transportation and Warehousing
Passenger traffic through the Houston Airport System (HAS) traffic has improved. Early in the pandemic, it was down 90 percent. Today, traffic is down only 75 percent.
Though container volume at the Port of Houston is down 4.5 percent, the total weight of those containers is up 3.9 percent. Shippers, to economize, appear to be packing more cargo into each box.
Finance, Insurance, Real Estate, & Rental
Finance has fared well, with employment at banks, broker-ages and insurance agencies now above pre-pandemic levels. Consumers rushing to buy or refinance a home, the opening of dozen or so bank offices and branches, and until recently a hot stock market has helped create finance jobs during the pandemic. This momentum should support additional growth over the coming months.
Commercial real estate has struggled, however. The market recorded negative absorption for office, industrial and retail space in the second quarter. Some tenants have adopted a wait-and-see attitude, wanting to assess the impact of the recession on their business before considering new space. Others are struggling to pay their current rent. Brokers have reported an uptick in inquiries in recent weeks, suggesting demand may improve by Q4/20 or Q1/21. Employment in commercial real estate will remain flat until that happens.
Government
Job losses in the public sector are overstated. Every June and July, the sector drops 20,000 to 25,000 jobs as school districts, community colleges and universities close for the summer. Outside of public education, the government sector appears to have shed about 4,000 jobs. The employment outlook for this sector will depend on how well tax collections hold up as the economy reopens.
A False Assumption
The energy job losses layered on top of the pandemic losses have not made Houston worse off than other metros. In fact, Houston is faring better than many of its peers.
Houston is the nation’s fifth most populous metro. One might assume Houston would rank fifth or higher in jobs lost due to COVID shutdowns and the energy crunch. Houston actually ranks tenth among its peers, with fewer layoffs than less populous metros like Boston, Detroit, Miami, Philadelphia and San Francisco.
This Week's State Of The Economy - What Is Ahead? - 19 June 2020
Wells Fargo Economics & Financial Report / Jun 22, 2020
Retail sales kicked off the week with a bang, rising 17.7% month-over-month in May. The increase was larger than every single one of the 74 forecast submissions.
This Week's State Of The Economy - What Is Ahead? - 06 November 2020
Wells Fargo Economics & Financial Report / Nov 10, 2020
As of this writing, the outcome of the U.S. presidential election is undecided. Joe Biden, however, appears likely to become president based off of his growing lead in several key states.
This Week's State Of The Economy - What Is Ahead? - 27 November 2019
Wells Fargo Economics & Financial Report / Nov 28, 2019
A series of U.K. general election polls released this week continue to show Boris Johnson’s Conservative Party with a significant lead over the opposition Labor Party.
This Week's State Of The Economy - What Is Ahead? - 04 March 2022
Wells Fargo Economics & Financial Report / Mar 08, 2022
February\'s employment data showed the economy had strong momentum, but that seems pretty dated now with Russia\'s invasion of Ukraine and the Fed\'s shift to a more hawkish tone on monetary policy.
This Week's State Of The Economy - What Is Ahead? - 24 February 2023
Wells Fargo Economics & Financial Report / Feb 28, 2023
Existing home sales declined 0.7% in January, while new home sales leaped 7.2%. Real personal spending shot higher in January, and solid growth in discretionary spending suggests continued consumer resilience.
This Week's State Of The Economy - What Is Ahead? - 27 May 2022
Wells Fargo Economics & Financial Report / May 29, 2022
it looks like higher mortgage rates are starting to have some effect on the housing market as April...
This Week's State Of The Economy - What Is Ahead? - 20 August 2021
Wells Fargo Economics & Financial Report / Aug 24, 2021
The Wells Fargo Economics team notes in the Commentary that new COVID cases in New Zealand disrupted the Reserve Bank of New Zealand\'s plan to tighten monetary policy this week.
This Week's State Of The Economy - What Is Ahead? - 15 December 2023
Wells Fargo Economics & Financial Report / Dec 21, 2023
core CPI remained elevated in November at a 4.0% annual rate, a string of slower monthly prints suggests that disinflation has more room to run.
This Week's State Of The Economy - What Is Ahead? - 18 October 2024
Wells Fargo Economics & Financial Report / Oct 21, 2024
Retail sales came in stronger than expected in September, industrial production was weaker than expected and residential construction softened.
This Week's State Of The Economy - What Is Ahead? - 15 November 2024
Wells Fargo Economics & Financial Report / Nov 20, 2024
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 0.24% in October, the largest unrounded monthly uptick since April. This bump brought the 12-month rate to 2.6%, the first annual acceleration since inflation’s hot streak in Q1.