I wrote last month that several economic indicators seemed to be turning positive.
I may have spoken too soon.
The last two weeks a number of key stats have taken a notable turn for the worse.
U.S. commercial paper yields, for one. I know I've been talking about this a lot lately, but the action in this market is getting very unsettling.
On Friday, yields on 90-day asset backed commercial paper spiked to 0.49%. Their highest since July 1, 2009.
90-day yields settled back yesterday, but at higher levels than we've seen for the last several months. There is a notable flight from this market.
Bank lending has also taken a nosedive of late. Since April 7, outstanding loans at U.S. commercial banks have fallen by over $50 billion. The biggest two-week drop so far in 2010.
(Remember, the big "jump" for the week of March 31, was a statistical anomaly. Caused by banks bringing loans held in special purpose vehicles back onto their balance sheets, as mandated by new accounting rules.)
It seems that, after a short respite, the economic climate has once again turned dubious. Forewarned is forearmed.
By. Dave Forest of Notela Resources
Dave is Managing Geologist of the Pierce Points Daily E-Letter. More