Industrial Price Index, a Leading Economic Indicator, Advances in Positive Territory for Second Straight Week
Posted on: Monday, 3 August 2009, 14:21 CDT
NEWARK, N.J., Aug. 3 /PRNewswire/ -- The Journal of Commerce-Economic Cycle Research Institute index of global industrial prices moved deeper into positive territory for the week ending July 31, the second straight weekly advance and a new sign of growing demand in the industry sector, The Journal of Commerce reported.
The Industrial Price Index, based on the daily prices of raw materials used in industrial production, ended the week of July 31 more than 2.1 percentage points higher than the previous week, reaching 88.2532, the highest point for the IPI since Oct. 17, 2008.
The gain marked an 11.9 percent improvement over the index's average over the previous 52 weeks, the strongest growth the IPI has grown since the week ending Aug. 1, 2008, shortly before the onset of a steep decline in world financial markets.
"The continued advance in both the level and the growth rate of the index tells us that the risk of a double-dip recession or an L-shaped recession is much less than feared," said Lakshman Achuthan, managing director of the Economic Cycle Research Institute, the New York-based economic research firm which puts the index together based on data collected by The Journal of Commerce.
The IPI has fluctuated in the low 80s since early June and moved into positive territory the week ending July 24 by growing 3.3 percentage points to 86.1637. The low point during the economic downturn came the week ending Dec. 19, 2008, when the IPI dipped to 63.8940.
On a year-over-year basis, the index remains far below the 132.2840 recorded a year ago, but the sequential increase suggests growing confidence and competition for raw materials in industrial markets.
The JoC-ECRI Industrial Price Index was created in 1985 by Geoffrey H. Moore, the economist who pioneered the study of business cycles at the National Bureau of Economic Research, where a committee of economists that he established is still the official judge of when the U.S. economy goes into and out of a recession.
The index is based on the prices of 18 industrial commodities that are tracked by the index that is compiled every weekday by The Journal of Commerce and ECRI.
The IPI is not a weighted average, but a pure reflection of prices. It does not include agricultural commodities or precious metals such as gold or silver, but only materials that are used in industrial production, such as nickel, tin, aluminum, plywood, benzene, cotton, burlap and crude oil.
In addition, half the commodities in the index are not "exchange-traded" commodities, which means their prices are not established on the floors of any of the world's commodity exchanges. This serves as a reality check on the prices of the other half, so the index cannot be skewed if a hedge fund or a speculator tries to manipulate the price of a commodity.
About UBM Global Trade
UBM Global Trade, formerly Commonwealth Business Media, Inc., has been the leading provider of proprietary data, news, business intelligence and analytical content supporting commercial maritime, rail, trucking, warehousing and logistics industries worldwide since 1827. The company's portfolio of more than 100 online, print and interactive workflow business solutions includes The Journal of Commerce, The Journal of Commerce Conferences, PIERS Global Intelligence Solutions and an array of international trade and transportation databases and directories. UBM Global Trade, a subsidiary of United Business Media Limited, is headquartered in East Windsor, NJ, with offices throughout the United States and in Canada and Hong Kong. For more information, explore www.ubmglobaltrade.com or call 800-221-5488 (+1-609-371-7700 outside the U.S. and Canada).
About United Business Media Limited
UBM (UBM.L) focuses on two principal activities: worldwide information distribution, targeting and monitoring, and the development and monetization of B2B communities and markets. UBM's businesses inform markets and serve professional commercial communities -- from doctors to game developers, from journalists to jewelry traders, from farmers to pharmacists -- with integrated events, online, print and business information products. Our 6,500 staff in more than 30 countries is organized into specialist teams that serve these communities, bringing buyers and sellers together, helping them to do business and their markets to work effectively and efficiently. For more information, go to www.ubm.com.
SOURCE The Journal of Commerce; UBM Global Trade
Source: PR Newswire
Related Articles
- RISI Introduces Weekly Price Coverage of US Recovered Paper Exports to Asia
- Chemical Week's Annual Global Forecast Conference Brings Together Chemical Industry Leaders in New York
- E-Trade to Unveil Global Trading Platform
- Global Trade Talks Deadlock on Farm Products
- World Bank urges global trade breakthrough at G8
- Digital River Signs E-Commerce Agreement With Fisher-Price
- Global Trade Reopened Along With Old Wounds
- Global Trade Talks Slide Closer to Failure
- Officials See Global Trade-Talk Hurdles
- Ontario, Calif., Officials Push to Focus City's Economy on Global Trade
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds