Philadelphia Fed Report Explained

The Philadelphia Fed Report, formally known as the Business Outlook Survey and sometimes abbreviated as BOS, is a monthly survey produced by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia (informally known as the Philadelphia Fed) which questions manufacturers on general business conditions. The index covers the Third Federal Reserve District (the jurisdiction of the Philadelphia Fed), namely covers eastern and central Pennsylvania, the nine southern counties of New Jersey, and Delaware.[1] The report is sometimes also called the Philadelphia Fed Index because it includes reporting of some index values.[2] [3]

History

The Philadelphia Fed Report has been published monthly since May 1968, and archives for all historical data (revised to account for seasonal adjustments) are available on the website.[4]

Details and data reported

Release schedule

The Philadelphia Index is conducted monthly by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia and questions voluntary participants on things such as unemployment, new orders, shipments, inventories, and prices paid. The report is released on the third Thursday of every month, making it the earliest such regional report which is released to investors.[1] [3] For instance, the report for April 2014 was released on Thursday, April 17, 2014.[5]

Survey questions

The survey is a one-page survey asking respondents to include their name, title, company name, and mailing address, and then seeking their opinion on how they think various indicators related to business changed over the past month, as well as how they anticipate it changing over the next 6 months. For each question, they may select between the options of decrease, no change, and increase.[6] The questions include:

The percentage of respondents selecting particular responses can be accessed, and charted over time to compare responses in different months.[5]

Higher survey figures suggest higher production, which contribute to economic growth. Results are calculated as the difference between percentage scores with zero acting as the centerline point. As such, values greater than zero indicate growth, while values less than zero indicate contraction.[2]

Some months have additional special questions included in the survey. For instance, the month of April 2014 asked the following questions:[5]

  1. How important are the following factors in influencing your firm’s decision to remain in the three-state region?
  2. Have the same factors become more or less important in recent years?

for the following list of factors:

Reception

Academic reception

The Philadelphia Fed Report has been the subject of some academic literature on economic indicators as well as the relationship between business uncertainty and economic activity.[7] [8] [9]

Reception in the financial press and blogs

The indices reported in the Philadelphia Fed Report are widely cited and used in the financial press.[2] [3] [10]

The monthly reports are also the subject of many articles in the financial press and blogs, such as Business Insider,[11] Yahoo! Finance,[12] RTTNews,[13] and Advisor Perspectives.[14]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Business Outlook Survey. Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. April 22, 2014.
  2. Web site: Philadelphia Fed Survey. Investopedia. April 22, 2014.
  3. Web site: Philadelphia Federal Index. Investopedia. April 22, 2014.
  4. Web site: Business Outlook Survey Historical Data. January 9, 2014. April 22, 2014. Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.
  5. Web site: April 2014 Business Outlook Survey. April 22, 2014. April 17, 2014. Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.
  6. Web site: Business Outlook Survey Questionnaire Sample. April 22, 2014. Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.
  7. Rüdiger . Bachmann . Steffen . Elstner . Eric R. . Sims . Uncertainty and Economic Activity: Evidence from Business Survey Data . American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics . 5 . 2 . 2013 . 217–49 . 10.1257/mac.5.2.217 . 8671580 .
  8. Web site: What Does the Philadelphia Fed's Business Outlook Survey Say About Local Activity?. Nakamura. Leonard. Trebing. Michael. Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. December 2008. April 22, 2014.
  9. Taking the measure of manufacturing. Schiller. Timothy. Trebing. Michael. Business Review. 4. 2003.
  10. Web site: Philadelphia Fed Business Outlook Survey Diffusion Index General Conditions. Bloomberg. April 22, 2014.
  11. Web site: Philly Fed Manufacturing Surges: Philly Fed Business Outlook Survey April 2014. Business Insider. Boesler. Matthew. April 17, 2014. April 22, 2014.
  12. News: The positives in the Philadelphia Fed's Business Outlook Survey. Soni. Phalguni. February 27, 2014. April 22, 2014. Yahoo! Finance.
  13. Web site: Philly Fed Index Indicates Rebound In Regional Manufacturing Activity. March 20, 2014. RTTNews. April 22, 2014.
  14. Web site: Philly Fed Business Outlook Again Beats Forecast. Short. Douglas. April 17, 2014. April 22, 2014. Advisor Perspectives.