Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of contributors
- 1 Introduction
- PART I NEW CONCEPTS AND METHODS
- 2 Toward a theory of leading indicators
- 3 A time-series framework for the study of leading indicators
- 4 A probability model of the coincident economic indicators
- 5 An international application of Neftci's probability approach for signaling growth recessions and recoveries using turning point indicators
- 6 On predicting the stage of the business cycle
- 7 Bayesian methods for forecasting turning points in economic time-series: Sensitivity of forecasts to asymmetry of loss structures
- 8 New developments in leading indicators
- PART II FORECASTING RECORDS AND METHODS OF EVALUATION
- PART III NEW ECONOMIC INDICATORS
- Index
8 - New developments in leading indicators
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of contributors
- 1 Introduction
- PART I NEW CONCEPTS AND METHODS
- 2 Toward a theory of leading indicators
- 3 A time-series framework for the study of leading indicators
- 4 A probability model of the coincident economic indicators
- 5 An international application of Neftci's probability approach for signaling growth recessions and recoveries using turning point indicators
- 6 On predicting the stage of the business cycle
- 7 Bayesian methods for forecasting turning points in economic time-series: Sensitivity of forecasts to asymmetry of loss structures
- 8 New developments in leading indicators
- PART II FORECASTING RECORDS AND METHODS OF EVALUATION
- PART III NEW ECONOMIC INDICATORS
- Index
Summary
Long-leading versus short-leading indicators
Most of the leading indicators that have been in use for many years have relatively short leads, averaging about six or eight months at business cycle peaks, when recessions begin, and two to four months at troughs, when recoveries start. Since there are often delays of a month or so in reporting the figures, and even longer delays in judging whether a turn in an indicator is significant, a recession or recovery may be well under way before it can be recognized. One way to deal with this problem is to distinguish indicators with exceptionally long leads from others.
The new long-leading index currently published by the Center for International Business Cycle Research takes a step in this direction. Using the revised list of fifteen leading indicators (Moore, 1989), we classified as long-leading those that had average leads of at least twelve months at peaks and six months at troughs during 1948–82. The four indicators that qualified as long-leading were bond prices, real money supply (M2), new building permits for housing, and a profit margin indicator, the ratio of prices to unit labor costs in manufacturing. A longleading index constructed from these series is shown in Figure 8.1, together with the short-leading index based on the other eleven series. Also shown is the Department of Commerce leading index as revised in March 1989, which contains two of the series in our long-leading group (money supply and housing permits), seven series in our short-leading group, and two other series.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Leading Economic IndicatorsNew Approaches and Forecasting Records, pp. 141 - 148Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1991
- 4
- Cited by