9781118041581

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
Forecasting 163

more accurate. The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis has developed (and pub-
lishes) the Index of Leading Indicators. This index signals future changes in
the course of the economy. The revised index is a weighted average of 11 eco-
nomic series:


  1. Weekly hours of manufacturing workers

  2. Manufacturers’ new orders

  3. Changes in manufacturers’ unfilled orders

  4. Plant and equipment orders

  5. The number of housing building permits

  6. Changes in sensitive materials prices

  7. Percentage of companies receiving slower deliveries

  8. The money supply

  9. The index of consumer confidence

  10. The index of 500 companies’ common-stock prices

  11. Average weekly claims for unemployment insurance


Positive changes in the first 10 indicators (and a decline in the last) indicate
future economic growth, whereas persistent declines in the index presage a
weak economy and possible recession. On average, the composite index tends
to turn down nine months before the onset of recession. The index increases
about four to five months before the economy bottoms out and begins to grow.

Forecasting Performance

When macroeconomic and microeconomic risks loom large, a firm’s decisions
are only as good as its economic forecasts.

In 1987, Walt Disney Co. embarked on an ambitious project to open a $2 billion
theme park outside of Paris. Besides the park, Disney’s investment encom-
passed over 5,000 hotel rooms, office space, hundreds of private homes, and a
golf course. However, since opening in April 1992, Euro Disney has floundered
with lower-than-expected revenues and elevated costs. In the low season
(November through March) Disney’s luxury hotels averaged only 10 percent
occupancy rates. Indeed, there were no buyers for the additional hotels that the
company planned to build and sell. The average European visitor spent far less
on food, lodging, and merchandise than the average visitor to the company’s
American parks.
In making its decision to build the park, Disney faced a monumental task of
economic forecasting: The company’s planning relied on both microeconomic

Forecasting the
Fate of Euro
Disney

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