Lagging Indicator

Lagging Indicator

Table of Contents Expand Note that similar technical approaches can be applied to economic indicators such as GDP or other measures of economic performance, as lagging indicators to confirm a change in trend. Businesses can also track leading indicators that measure internal performance, such as customer engagement or employee satisfaction, which can be influenced more directly and lead to changes in lagging indicators. In business, a lagging indicator is a key performance indicator that reflects some measure of output or past performance that can be seen in operational data or financial statements and reflects the impact of management decisions or business strategy. Lagging indicators in business are a kind of key performance indicator (KPI) which measure business performance after the fact, such as sales, customer satisfaction, or revenue churn.

A lagging indicator is an observable or measurable factor that changes sometime after the economic, financial, or business variable with which it is correlated changes.

What Is a Lagging Indicator?

A lagging indicator is an observable or measurable factor that changes sometime after the economic, financial, or business variable with which it is correlated changes. Lagging indicators confirm trends and changes in trends.

Lagging indicators can be useful for gauging the trend of the general economy, as tools in business operations and strategy, or as signals to buy or sell assets in financial markets.

A lagging indicator is an observable or measurable factor that changes sometime after the economic, financial, or business variable with which it is correlated changes.
Some general examples of lagging economic indicators include the unemployment rate, corporate profits, and labor cost per unit of output.
A lagging technical indicator is one that trails the price action of an underlying asset, and traders use it to generate transaction signals or confirm the strength of a given trend.
In business, a lagging indicator is a key performance indicator that reflects some measure of output or past performance that can be seen in operational data or financial statements and reflects the impact of management decisions or business strategy.
Lagging indicators differ from leading indicators, such as retail sales and the stock market, which are used to forecast and make predictions.

Understanding Lagging Indicators

A lagging indicator is a financial sign that becomes apparent only after a large shift has taken place. Therefore, lagging indicators confirm long-term trends, but they do not predict them. This is useful because oftentimes, many leading indicators are volatile, and short-term fluctuations in them can obscure turning points or lead to false signals.

Looking at lagging indicators is one way to confirm whether a shift in the economy has actually occurred.

Economic Lagging Indicators

The U.S. Conference Board publishes a monthly index of lagging indicators along with its index of leading indicators. These include lagging indicators such as the average duration of unemployment, the average prime rate charged by banks, and the change in the Consumer Price Index for Services.

Some general examples of lagging indicators include the unemployment rate, corporate profits, and labor cost per unit of output. Interest rates can also be good lagging indicators since rates change as a reaction to severe movements in the market. Other lagging indicators are economic measurements, such as gross domestic product (GDP), the consumer price index (CPI), and the balance of trade (BOT).

These indicators differ from leading indicators, such as retail sales and the stock market, which are used to forecast and make predictions.

Business Lagging Indicators

Lagging indicators in business are a kind of key performance indicator (KPI) which measure business performance after the fact, such as sales, customer satisfaction, or revenue churn. They can be difficult or impossible to influence directly.

Businesses use tools to measure, track, and compare various leading and lagging indicators of performance.

Because they are at least partially the outcome of business decisions and operations, they provide insight into the results achieved by how a business is being run. Businesses can also track leading indicators that measure internal performance, such as customer engagement or employee satisfaction, which can be influenced more directly and lead to changes in lagging indicators. 

Businesses can use business intelligence tools such as dashboards to measure, track, and compare various leading and lagging indicators of performance.

Technical Lagging Indicators

Another type of lagging indicator is a technical indicator that lags the current price of an asset, which occurs after a certain price move has already happened. One example of a lagging technical indicator is a moving average crossover.

Unlike other lagging indicators that compare different economic variables to each other, a technical indicator compares the value of a given variable to its own moving average over a given interval or other historical characteristics. Technical traders use a short-term average crossing above a long-term average as confirmation when placing buy orders since it suggests an increase in momentum.

The drawback of using this method in asset trading is that a significant move may have already occurred, resulting in the trader entering a position too late. Note that similar technical approaches can be applied to economic indicators such as GDP or other measures of economic performance, as lagging indicators to confirm a change in trend.

Related terms:

Business Cycle Indicators (BCI)

Business cycle indicators are a composite of leading, lagging, and coincident indexes used to make economic forecasts. read more

Balance of Trade (BOT)

Balance of trade is the difference between the value of a country's exports and the value of its imports; it is the largest component of a country's balance of payments. read more

Business Intelligence – BI

Business intelligence (BI) refers to the procedural and technical infrastructure that collects, stores, and analyzes data produced by a company. read more

Composite Index of Lagging Indicators

The Composite Index of Lagging Indicators is an index published monthly by the Conference Board, used to assess the recent direction of the economy. read more

Coincident Indicator

A coincident indicator is a metric that shows the contemporaneous state of economic activity within a particular area.  read more

The Conference Board (CB)

The Conference Board (CB) is a not-for-profit research organization which distributes vital economic information to its peer-to-peer business members. read more

Consumer Price Index (CPI)

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) measures the average change in prices over time that consumers pay for a basket of goods and services. read more

Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

Gross domestic product (GDP) is the monetary value of all finished goods and services made within a country during a specific period. read more

Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)

Key performance indicators (KPIs) are quantifiable measures that gauge a company's performance against a set of targets, objectives, or industry peers. read more

Leading Indicator

A leading indicator is an economic factor that can be used to predict which way a market or economy may go in the future. read more