15 Facts About The Imploding U.S. Economy That The Mainstream Media Doesn’t Want You To See

Tyler Durden's picture

Submitted by Michael Snyder via The Economic Collapse blog,

You are about to see undeniable evidence that the U.S. economy has been slowing down for quite some time.  And it is vital that we focus on the facts, because all over the Internet you are going to find lots and lots of people that have opinions about what is going on with the economy.  And of course the mainstream media is always trying to spin things to make Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton look good, because those that work in the mainstream media are far more liberal than the American population as a whole.  It is true that I also have my own opinions, but as an attorney I learned that opinions are not any good unless you have facts to back them up.  So please allow me a few moments to share with you evidence that clearly demonstrates that we have already entered a major economic slowdown.  The following are 15 facts about the imploding U.S. economy that the mainstream media doesn’t want you to see…

1. Industrial production has now declined for nine months in a row.  We have never seen this happen outside of a recession in all of U.S. history.

2. U.S. commercial bankruptcies have risen on a year over year basis for seven months in a row and are now up 51 percent since September.

3. The delinquency rate on commercial and industrial loans has been rising since January 2015.

4. Total business sales in the United States have been steadily dropping since the middle of 2014.  No, I did not say 2015.  Total business sales have been in decline for nearly two years now, and we just found out that they dropped again

Total business sales in the US did in April what they’ve been doing since July 2014: they dropped: -2.9% from a year ago, to $1.28 trillion (not adjusted for seasonal differences and price changes), the Censuses Bureau reported on Tuesday. That’s where sales had been in April 2013!

5. U.S. factory orders have been dropping for 18 months in a row.

6. The Cass Shipping Index has been falling on a year over year basis for 14 consecutive months.

7. U.S. coal production has dropped to the lowest level in 35 years.

8. Goldman Sachs has its own internal tracker of the U.S. economy, and it has fallen to the lowest level since the last recession.

9. JPMorgan’s “recession indicators” have risen to the highest level that we have seen since the last recession.

10. Federal tax receipts and state tax receipts usually both start to fall as we enter a new recession, and that is precisely what is taking place right now.

11. The Federal Reserve’s Labor Market Conditions Index has been falling for five months in a row.

12. The employment numbers that the government released for last month were the worst that we have seen in six years.

13. According to Challenger, Gray & Christmas, layoff announcements at major firms are running 24 percent higher this year than they were at this time last year.

14. Online job postings on the business networking site LinkedIn have been declining steadily since February after 73 months in a row of growth.

15. The number of temporary workers in the United States peaked and started falling precipitously before the recession of 2001 even started.  The exact same thing happened just prior to the beginning of the 2008 recession.  So would it surprise you to learn that the number of temporary workers in the United States peaked in December and has fallen dramatically since then?

Earlier today, we learned that two of our biggest corporations will be laying off even more workers.  Bank of America, which is holding more of our money than any other bank in the country, has announced that it is going to be cutting about 8,000 more workers

Bank of America is expected to reduce staffing in its consumer banking division by as many as 8,000 more jobs.

 

The nation’s largest retail bank by deposits has already reduced the staffing in its consumer division from more than 100,000 in 2009 to about 68,400 as of the end of the first quarter of 2016, said Thong Nguyen, Bank of America’s president of retail banking and co-head of consumer banking at the Morgan Stanley Financials Conference Tuesday.

And Wal-Mart has announced that it is going to be eliminating “back-office accounting jobs” at approximately 500 locations

Walmart is going to cut some back-office accounting jobs at about 500 stores in a bid to become more efficient.

 

The job cuts will occur mostly at stores mostly in the West and involve accounting and invoicing workers, says spokesman Kory Lundberg. Instead, bookkeeping functions will be switched to Walmart’s home office in Bentonville, Ark. Cash at the stores will be counted by machine.

Day after day we are hearing about more layoffs like this.  So why would this be happening if the U.S. economy truly was in “recovery mode”?

Even with how manipulated the GDP numbers are these days, Barack Obama is on course to be the only president in all of U.S. history to never have a single year when the economy grew by at least 3 percent.  The truth is that our economy has been stuck in the mud ever since the end of the last recession, and now a major new downturn has clearly already begun.

And you want to know who else realizes this?

Foreign investors do.

Last month, foreign investors dumped U.S. debt at the fastest pace ever recorded

Foreign investors sold a record amount of U.S. Treasury bonds and notes for the month of April, according to U.S. Treasury Department data on Wednesday, as investors priced in a few more rate increases by the Federal Reserve this year.

 

Foreigners sold $74.6 billion in U.S. Treasury debt in the month, after purchases of $23.6 billion in March. April’s outflow was the largest since the U.S. Treasury Department started recording Treasury debt transactions in January 1978.

There is no debate any longer – the next economic crisis is already here.  This is so abundantly obvious at this point that even George Soros has been feverishly dumping stocks and buying gold.

We can argue about whether the U.S. economy started turning down in late 2015, early 2015 or late 2014, and it is good to have those debates.

But at the end of the day, what is far more important is what is ahead.  Fortunately, our downturn has been fairly gradual so far, and let us hope that it stays that way for as long as possible.

In much of the rest of the world, things are already in full-blown panic mode.  For instance, Venezuela was once the wealthiest nation in South America, but now people are literally hunting cats and dogs for food.

Absent a major “black swan event” of some sort, we won’t see that happening in the United States for at least a while yet, but without a doubt we are steamrolling toward a major economic depression.

Unfortunately for all of us, there isn’t anything that any of our politicians are going to be able to do to stop it.

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
sudzee's picture

Just about time for 100billion paper gold dump.

BandGap's picture

They can try but the Chinese will buy. That tactic hardly moves the needle anymore. Check it out -

http://didthesystemcollapse.com/

 

Seasmoke's picture

I've noticed the spread on SILVER has been getting larger and larger. Very interesting.

bob_stl's picture

It's not that the main stream media doesn't want people to know, it's that the pretty boy and girl main stream media doesn't know anything other than what the politburo tells them.

Government needs you to pay taxes's picture

We've got the best plunge protection team on the planet working to manipulate equity and oil prices TO THE MOON.  Top men.  Now BTFD.

bamawatson's picture

absolutely correct; continue buying; zh is peddling fiction; all is well

MillionDollarBonus_'s picture

5 Facts about the economy that prove that we are in a recovery:

1. The S&P 500 is trading over 2000 and probing new all time highs

2. Interest rates are at all time lows

3. The percentage of Americans without health insurance has declined from 18% to 13% following the Affordable Care Act

4. Record number of college educated Americans

5. Venture capitalists investing record amounts in innovative silicon valley startups 

Leopold B. Scotch's picture

Bonus, you forgot to cite the low jobless rate numbers. 

tmosley's picture

Only thing that can save us is artificial general intelligence, and that is at least 1-2 years out. Until then, existential risk is exploding. Hopefully to be mitigated by November/next January.

jeff montanye's picture

i say the mainstream media loves b.o. and cankles because they (all) are banksters and zionists.

if the msm were so damn liberal why did they poop in bernie's soup?

aside from that, the article is on the money (or lack of it).

Lorca's Novena's picture

Thank you MDB for stating the truth! You certainly are a fresh breath of air in this negative skewed website! I cant wait for DOW 20K!!! 

In fact, I'm buying a few more investment properties since the future is so bright!

VinceFostersGhost's picture

 

 

1 out of 5 households........no family member has a job.

 

Yes we can?

 

I don't think so.

boattrash's picture

But the good news in the article; Bank of America to shit-can 8,000 employees. Fuck BofA!

Nobody For President's picture

Good job MDB, love it.

1 and 2 are related to the Fed squeezing middle class savers out of savings in traditionally safe investments and into stawks, plus corporations with really cheap money buying back their own stawks to increase management bonuses, with the additional bonus of the middle class getting hammered and the .01% getting a LOT richer;

3. Yep, the FSA got aboard, paid for by the former middle class with their much higher premiums;

4. And our graduates are $1.2 Trillion in debt for that record number, with the bonus of a record number of college grads are back living with mom and dad at home.

5. All that cheap money is gotta go somewhere, and of course Twitter is worth ~$15/share...

jeff montanye's picture

good points all.  i would emphasize how record low and falling interest rates are not a sign of recovery but of the opposite.

bobsmith5's picture

OMG MDB, do you ever stop with your bullshit.  I mean here you go again saying the most stupid things to the most sophisticated people in the world when it comes to economics and finance.  You sound like a child who lives in a complete fantasy world.  You will have to be hit over the head with an economic sledgehammer before you wake the hell up.  And, I wonder if even then that will work with a skull as thick and incredibly stupid as yours.  I mean MDB, what you are posting indicates not just ignorance but outright stupidity of the worst kind.

TheEndIsNear's picture

No he isn't. That's what I thought at first until I checked out his website.

Elco the Constitutionalist's picture

His website also looks like satire, though it is a bit on the dry side.

Miles Ahead's picture

Which is why the geniuses on here complain.  They like their satire wet.  Very.  They don't realize that would be slapstick.  But hey, they both begin with 's' so I can understand their confusion.  Like this genius below...

@bobsmith: The most sophisticated in the world when it comes to economics and finance???  Au contraries sparky. 

How about a high level of red-necked marginally educated but very dogmatic angry white male pretender fucks who are too uncultured to recognize and appreciate great comedy, mixed in with an otherwise normal cross section of sophisticated and not-so, perhaps, kinda…community.

Here's how to keep score.  Since all polls indicate that "95% of Americans are idiots" but we have Europeans and Asian on here so let's dial it back to 90% - any time the ratings for MDB are more than 10% up he's doing a great job and the sophisticated and cultured want him to stay. 

Remember the formula as this: (five stars are good)

10(^) > v = *****

Have a great life.

jeff montanye's picture

well done.  still chuckling.

Taint Boil's picture

Nope – I think you’re wrong, MDB is a Zero Hedge genius …. If you don’t get it, you’ll probably never will.

BigJim's picture

 No he isn't. That's what I thought at first until I checked out his website.

JFC, his website's even funnier. How obtuse you people are.

Beowulf55's picture

MDB is trolling for clicks!  Now I get it!  Knew there was a method to his insanity.......

RAT005's picture

Fool me once, shame on you.  Fool me twice, shame on you again! !

Tall Tom's picture

 

 

 

DeutcheBank is currently trading at $12.78.

 

Not too much longer....MDB

 

T minus 14 days and counting.

 

I am so sorry. They will fail to make the Reserve Requirement and are insolvent.

 

The consequential defaults on that notional $60 Trillion in Derivatives exposure, even if just 5% are not balanced out, will cause cascading financial failures globally.

 

I predict an early freeze this year...in the waning days of Summer. A CREDIT FREEZE.

 

Then they will create currency...and over do it. The hyperinflationary inferno will leave only scorched earth behind.

 

We have encircled Russia and NATO is using Cybercrime as an excuse for War.

 

Remember what happened to Berlin Betty and Tokyo Rose? Propaganda is a War Crime, MDB

 

The global financial system is imploding. 

Wild tree's picture

Too true TT.

DeutcheBank defaults on that notional $60 Trillion in Derivatives exposure is the 500 lb canary, and the cascade effect will be far harder to stop than Lehman Brothers simply because of the size of the default.

Dominoes, dominoes line them up,  watch them fall, this will be the biggest lineup of all.

Where's that dang popcorn.....

Kirk2NCC1701's picture

TPTB Wil blame the Brexit and Trump.

Predictable.

jeff montanye's picture

and don't forget credit suisse.  i believe it is underperforming deutsche bank.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-04-18/banker-unrest-threaten...

 

BigJim's picture

OK, TT, I'll bite - what do we get if Douche Bank don't blow up in 14 days?

founthead's picture

"The consequential defaults on that notional $60 Trillion in Derivatives exposure, even if just 5% are not balanced out, will cause cascading financial failures globally."

Hope you understand the difference between the "notional" value of Derivatives, and the real exposure - approx. 5% of the notional. So 5% unbalanced would be 5% of 5% of $60 Tr. (ie 0.25% - $150 Bln). Still a very large amount of losses...

Do that math to the $700 Tr (notional) of total derivative market (ie 1,750 Bln) - still large enough to cause a total meltdown.....

 

 

bloofer's picture

Uh.... These are all bad things. I mean, why would you cite a list of negatives to prove recovery? Makes no sense.

ejmoosa's picture

1. S&P 500 profits per share down more than 10% year over year.

2. Interest rates still too low to eliminate inflation.

3. % of Americans with $5500 deductibles at all time highs.

4.  Record number of college educated Americans that can now read at a 10th grade level.

5. Venture capitalists generating least number of startups in modern American history.

Main_Sequence's picture

Why do you even bother to post here?  I guarantee that those 6 upvotes are from 5 of your other accounts.

fbazzrea's picture

MDB, surely you jest with tongue-in-cheek?

1) S&P at ridiculously high P/E and other comparable measures of ROE, ROI, etc. What goes up must come down. As we speak.

2) A healthy economy does not have "Interest rates are at all time lows." Bankers do not forego profits except in times of desperation. Savers are being punished. Spendthrifts and over-leveraged speculators rewarded. Mean reversion even paused. For now.

3) ACA is total failure. Terrible coverage. Rapidly escalating premiums. IRS fining po' folks unable to afford their glorious health ins. contrivement but too "wealthy" to receive Medicaid. Numbers dropping like flies... and even more next year.

4) Record student debt. Unpayable. Massive defaults looming.

5) Desperate VC money gambling on rapidly moving tech. Here today. Gone tomorrow. Put your retirement in their hands.

Miles Ahead's picture

Come on guy.  Think.  THINK.  Jesus...

Blue Boat's picture

Soooo many newbies on here that haven't picked up on some of the usual shtick.

Yawn, they'll catch on eventually. Or not......

no ita lever's picture

These are not facts that you can rely on MDB, cmon. S&P is manipulated, check. Interest rates should not be this low, check. The premiums have skyrocketed for healthcare, check. Record number of communist zombies with basket weaving degrees at a record (so we agree on that one), check. Where is this innovation you speak of, details please, charts anyone? check.

 

Which office in the Rainbow House do you occupy, inquiring minds want to know?

 

ybic

Consuelo's picture

Now ~THAT~ is the MDB we have come to know & love...

jeff montanye's picture

he certainly is trying but this area (the deflationary depression) is harder to argue against than some of his other topics where it is more a matter of opinion (is a rose prettier than a lily?, should the government give x to the poor?  is "it" "fair"?  how important are the things obama and hillary say?) hence the satire can seem more convincing as true belief.

Handful of Dust's picture

Houston auto sales dip sharply in May


For the year, overall regional auto sales are down 18 percent. A record 376,481 vehicles were sold in metro Houston in 2015.

April and May's sales show that the clutches of the energy downturn and resulting job losses have reached into auto sales, InfoNation owner Steve McDowell wrote in a summary of the results.

 

http://www.chron.com/business/retail/article/Houston-auto-sales-dip-shar...

sekhars's picture

and ofcourse you are not peddling fiction ?  it is all true MDB 

lasvegaspersona's picture

If 'probing' means repeated trying...but failing' to reach previous highs...well then you have a point. Snyder is beating you 15 to 5 though...get some more of that 'awesomeness' data in a hurry.

It is now official...MDB is better click bait that nekked pictures of young girls...congrats MDB...

Ralph Spoilsport's picture

"4. Record number of college educated Americans" that can''t find jobs, even with advanced degrees in Telephone Sanitation, Vegetable Polishing and FaceBook Etiquette. 

 

Sanctuary2's picture

But how do we trust those numbers? (or any numbers, for the record?)

Nexus789's picture

1. Stocks are in a bubble 2. Interest rates are artifically low and destroying the real economy 3. Obozo health is collapsing 4. Record numbers of qualified Americans are without jobs 5 VC are no more than a pump and dump operations with a less than 10% success rate and 10% is generous..

RAT005's picture

MDB, once in awhile an obvious post like this is reassuring ;-)