It’s not a good sign for your health if your blood pressure drops too low. Similarly, the economy is probably sick when its circulatory system slows down. You don’t need a blood pressure gauge to know it either. Just count how many trucks you see on the highway.Under normal conditions, busy highways and seaports mean a growing economy. Businesses are producing more stuff finding its way to consumers.That was happening since we emerged from the Great Recession in 2009, albeit slower than in the past cycles.Now with freight traffic dropping, the economy could soon get dizzy… and we’ll all feel it then. Rush to Import When the trade war picked up steam , something unexpected happened. Freight volumes shot up.Anyone who was paying attention knew by mid-2018 that American buyers were going to pay more for imported goods.US businesses responded by rushing to import as much as possible before tariffs (i.e., taxes) rose even higher. Hence the Overheated Highways I wrote about in May.Note, this wasn’t new demand. It was the same goods in the same amounts companies would have bought later on. They just bought them sooner in order to avoid tariffs .When businesses moved up their import purchases, it meant they would import less in the future. Cargo Volumes Decline Now the future is here. Warehouses are full, and cargo traffic is slowing. Here are a few telltale headlines, just from this month.
You can see trucking costs climbed like crazy from mid-2017 through the end of 2018. Now they’re reversing downward.The last time that happened was late 2014, when oil prices crashed. The US had a kind of mini-recession over the next year. The next time may not be so “mini.” Economic HeartbeatPeople who monitor this data closely are getting concerned. Annual growth in the widely respected Cass Freight Index, which tracks North American freight shipments, dropped in the last four consecutive months.The editors, who weren’t too bothered by the first three declines, said this in their latest report:As we try to navigate the ebb and flow of the economy, we don’t pretend to have any ‘secret sauce’ or incredibly complex models that have exhaustively analyzed every data point available. Instead, we place our trust in the simple notion that the movement of tangible goods is the heartbeat of the economy, and that tracking the volume and velocity of those goods has proven to be one of the most reliable methods of predicting change because of the adequate amount of forewarning that exists…Beyond our concern that the Cass Freight Shipments Index has been negative on a YoY basis for the fourth month in a row,
