|
Houston Beige
Book
An Update on the Houston Economy
July 2006
Bill
Gilmer reviews recent economic conditions in Houston.
Solid economic performance
continues in Houston, but at a slower pace. Six months ago, local
job growth was running at a 3.3 percent annual rate. But over the
past six months the annual pace has slowed to only 1.7 percent.
Houston’s Purchasing Managers Index has averaged 64.3 over
the past six months, but the latest reading was down to 61.1. The
local unemployment rate has stabilized at 5.1 percent over the past
three months. All of these readings on the economy are quite good,
but perhaps indicate a recent period of economic consolidation in
the current oil boom.
Retail
and Autos Sales
Like the rest of the United States, Houston consumers appear to
be feeling a squeeze from higher energy prices. Retailers reported
slower sales in Houston in recent weeks, with most categories of
stores seeing sales falling below plan. Compared with the previous
June, new car and truck sales were up by 9 percent this year. For
the first half of 2006, trucks and SUVs led car sales in Houston
by 27 percent—only slightly lower than the difference in the
same period of 2005.
Real
Estate
Apartment occupancy continues to decline—now down nearly 2.5
points over the first half of 2006—as Katrina subsidies disappear
and evictions mount. Overall absorption was negative in the second
quarter. Rental rates are up, but costs are also up significantly
because of rising energy prices and hurricane-related insurance
premiums.
The local housing
market rests on much better economic foundations than many other
U.S. housing markets, and it continues to excel. The number of existing
homes sold in June was up by 14 percent compared with last June,
and the median home price has risen by 7.2 percent. New home sales
are up less strongly, but they remain on pace for a record year
in 2006.
Energy
Prices
The price of sweet crude oil in recent weeks remained near $70 per
barrel through early July, based on continued geopolitical tension
in Nigeria, Iran and North Korea. But the price jumped to record
levels above $75 as new conflicts grew in Gaza and Lebanon. Crude
price was also supported by gasoline demand that pushed to five-year-high
levels over the Fourth of July. Wholesale prices for conventional
gasoline rose by 30 cents per gallon in June and early July, while
reformulated gasoline prices—already elevated by concern about
a conversion to ethanol oxygenates—rose much less.
Natural gas
prices weakened in recent weeks, from $6.25 in early June to near
$5.50 by mid-July. Rising crude prices and the threat of tropical
weather could not provide enough support to overcome weak seasonal
demand and rising inventories. Cool weather in the Ohio Valley and
the northeastern U.S. has pushed natural gas inventories to the
highest levels of the past eight years.
Refining
and Chemicals
Refining utilization on the Gulf Coast pushed up to 95 percent,
the highest since the 2005 hurricanes but still below normal for
this time of year. Strong margins of $15–$20 per barrel have
made refiners reluctant to perform routine maintenance, but they
are delaying maintenance anyway because of high cost, labor shortages
and difficulty scheduling the work.
Many chemical
producers continue to lose the pricing power afforded by last year’s
hurricanes, but falling feedstock prices have sheltered margins
of natural gas-based products. Ethylene and propylene prices have
both been supported by plant outages in recent weeks, although ethylene
capacity has now largely returned to normal.
Oil
Services and Machinery
Drilling activity continues to rise, keeping the demand for oil
services strong. The story remains much the same as the past 24
months, with land-based, gas-directed drilling leading the activity.
At the margin, low natural gas prices have led to some switching
from gas- to oil-directed drilling, and day-rates for land rigs
may have stabilized, or at least are rising more slowly. Jack-up
rigs continue to exit the Gulf of Mexico in advance of the hurricane
season, with rig owners unwilling to accept reduced day-rates or
possible extended work interruptions during the hurricane season.
Higher insurance rates also play a role.
| Gilmer
is a vice president at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
SUGGESTED
CITATION:
Gilmer,
Robert W.
(2006), Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Expand Your
Insight Houston Beige Book, July 2006, www.dallasfed.org/eyi/houston/hbb0605.html. |
|
About
EYI | Global
Economy | U.S.
Economy | Regional Economy
| Free Enterprise
| Money & Banking
| Technology
Federal Reserve Bank of
Dallas | FRB
Dallas Publications
|