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NEW$ & VIEW$ (30 APR. 2015): No gain, no (Fed) pain; Housing gains; Earnings gain.

Slowing U.S. Growth Muddles Fed Plans The Fed pointed to cooling economic activity and reduced job-market gains in its latest policy statement, underscoring uncertainty about when the economy will rebound and clouding the timing interest-rate increases.

“Economic growth slowed during the winter months, in part reflecting transitory factors,” the Fed said. (…)

The 0.2 percent rise in first-quarter GDP reported yesterday by the Commerce Department fell short of forecasters’ already-soft projections of 1.0 percent. This bears a striking resemblance to 2014, when forecasters anticipated a 1.2 percent expansion in the first three months but the initial print was 0.1 percent. Ultimately, it was revised down to negative 2.1 percent.

Since 2010, first-quarter GDP growth has averaged 0.6% while all other quarters 2.9%. That stop-and-start pattern has forced Fed officials to regularly second-guess their own economic forecasts.

Doug Short once again has the best charts:

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While backward looking, this breakdown is instructive. Spending on goods has been exceptionally weak which left manufacturers with excess inventories which will need to be depleted before production resumes. Given weak exports, U.S.manufacturing could remain weak for a while, unless consumer spending bounces back.

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Markit echoes what most economists are currently saying:

However, there is plenty of evidence to suggest that the first quarter slowdown represents a temporary blip, and that growth will rebound in the second quarter.

Most importantly, the first quarter saw business disrupted by extreme weather hitting parts of the country. West Coast port closures also hit trade and manufacturing supply chains.

Some of the ‘hard’ official data for March are also hinting at a rebound. Retail sales rose for the first time in four months, manufacturing output edged higher for the first time since November and durable goods orders jumped 4.0%.

The survey data are likewise showing signs of growth having picked up compared to earlier in the year. Markit’s US PMI surveys collectively signalled the strongest pace of economic growth for seven months in March, and preliminary ‘flash’ data for April signalled a robust pace of expansion being sustained at the start of the second quarter.

It’s not just businesses that are brushing off slowdown fears. Consumer confidence surveys remain at, or near, post-recession highs, suggesting that consumer spending will revive after growing at the slowest pace for a year in the first quarter, providing an important boost to the economy in the second quarter. (Moody’s)

Supporting this, private investment outside of the oil and gas industry hummed along nicely in Q1. A particularly encouraging sign is the sharp increase in investment in computer software and research and development, which boosted growth more than at any time in the past 60 years after the late 1990s. (FT)

Not to kill hopes entirely but maybe curb one’s enthusiasm:

The Fed acknowledged that the pace of job gains has moderated, growth in household spending declined and business investment softened.

The facts over the last 3 months are pretty soft (at annual rates):

  • U.S. IP –3.7%
  • Retail sales –1.6%
  • Housing starts –46.2%
  • Building Permits –7.7%
  • Core capex orders –7.3%
  • Exports –19.8%

Also, Evercore ISI Company Surveys do not point to a strong April.

Unless oil prices recover to the $75 range, oil and gas investments will continue to decline. Also, imports rose 1.8% following a 10.4% increase in Q4. The growth rate would have probably been larger were it not for West Coast port disruptions. Watch for imports to accelerate in the current quarter, cutting into GDP.

Fortunately, housing seems to want to start to contribute:

U.S. Mortgage Applications Hint at Higher April Home Sales

Mortgage Bankers Association mortgage applications data provides more hope for housing in 2015. This volatile index declined 2.3 percent last week, but the longer-term trend is more important — and more encouraging.

The monthly average rose more than 6 percent from the period before and is up about 29 percent from a year earlier.

The MBA’s purchase-only index (excluding refinancings) provides a cleaner read on mortgages that support housing demand. The monthly moving average has risen nearly 14 percent in both monthly and yearly comparisons.

Home sales figures for April won’t come out for another few weeks. March existing home sales advanced more than 6 percent, accelerating to an annualized rate of 5.2 million units from 4.9 million units. This partially offset the 11.4 percent drop in new home sales to an annual pace of 481,000 from 543,000. The rise in purchase-mortgage applications suggests an April pickup in transactions is in store.

So far, home sales have outstripped a rise in purchase-mortgage applications and have not been linked to any recovery in total mortgage debt outstanding. That implies households have not been overleveraging to make the purchase.

BTW:

U.S. Pending Home Sales Index Rises

The National Association of Realtors said Wednesday its pending home sales index, which is based on contract signings for purchases of previously owned homes, increased 1.1% to a seasonally adjusted level of 108.6 in March from an upwardly revised reading of 107.4 in February.

The index rose 11.1% in March from a year earlier.

The Northeast continues to severely lag with pending sales down 5.5% in Q1 and up only 0.6% YoY.

German Labor Market Extends Recovery

German unemployment declined for a seventh month in April as companies became more confident that the recovery in Europe’s largest economy is here to stay.

Joblessness fell a seasonally adjusted 8,000 to 2.79 million, the Federal Labor Agency in Nuremberg said on Thursday. Economists had predicted a drop of 15,000. The unemployment rate remained at 6.4 percent, the lowest level since reunification.

CHINA

China’s March Macro-economic Climate Indices all showed weakness for the month, but the drop in the Business Cycle Signal really caught our attention. The lowest reading during the financial crisis was 74.7, in Jan 2009, but BCS now reads 65.3. We are concerned. (ISI)

Bank of Japan Cuts Price Outlook Japan’s central bank cut its outlook for prices but leaves policy unchanged, despite continuing speculation over further easing action.

(…) It said the inflation rate in the current fiscal year that started in April would likely be 0.8%, compared with a 1% forecast made in January. It said there was “considerable uncertainty” in the inflation outlook.

Russia Cuts Interest Rates The Bank of Russia cut interest rates for the third time this year and said it was ready to ease monetary policy further in the latest sign that the Russian economy is steadying.

The central bank cut its key rate by 1.5 percentage points to 12.5% and said it would cut rates further as inflation slows.

The WSJ headliner implying the Russian economy is steadying does not jibe with the Russian central bank statement:

According to Bank of Russia estimates, the labour market adjusts to the new conditions mostly through wage decrease and part-time employment. These factors, alongside with a decrease in retail lending, will result in further decline in consumer activity. Fixed capital investments will continue to contract due to persistently high economic uncertainty, deterioration of companies’ financial performance, tighter lending conditions, limited ability to replace foreign sources of funding with domestic ones given shallow Russian financial market, as well as high prices for imported investment goods. Sluggish domestic demand will contain imports. Net exports will be the only factor to make a positive contribution to the output growth. These factors will lead to a fall in GDP in 2015. Later on, as import substitution expands, sources of funding gradually diversify, lending conditions ease, and oil prices rise to some extent, the quarter-on-quarter GDP growth is expected to recover.

Brazil raises rates to highest level in 6 years

The country’s central bank raised the benchmark Selic rate late on Wednesday by an expected 50 basis points to 13.25 per cent — the highest level since January 2009.

EARNINGS WATCH
  • 292 companies (67.1% of the S&P 500’s market cap) have reported. Earnings are beating by 6.1% while revenues have missed by -0.3%.
  • Expectations are for revenue, earnings, and EPS of -3.3%, -0.8%, and +0.9%. Excluding Energy, growth would be 2.3%, 7.4%, and 9.4%, respectively. This excludes the likelihood of beats.

NEW$ & VIEW$ (29 APR. 2015): Housing; Earnings.

Case-Shiller Home Price Index Climbs

The S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index, covering the entire nation, rose 4.2% in the 12 months ended in February, weaker than a 4.4% increase in January. (…)

Both the 10-city and 20-city indexes saw larger year-over-year increases in February than in January. The 10-city index gained 4.8% from a year earlier, up from 4.3% in January. The 20-city index gained 5% year-over-year, compared with a 4.5% increase in January. (…)

Not seasonally adjusted, the 10-city and 20-city indexes saw significant month-over-month increases of 0.5%, their largest increases since July 2014. The U.S. index rose 0.1% over the prior month in February.

Seasonally adjusted, the 10-city and 20-city indexes rose 0.9% and the national index rose 0.4%. (…)

The Homeownership Rate Is Now the Lowest Since 1989, But There’s a Silver Lining

The seasonally adjusted homeownership rate declined to 63.8% in the first quarter of 2015 compared with 65% in the first quarter of 2014, according to estimates published by the Commerce Department on Tuesday.

For the second consecutive quarter, the number of total households–renters and owners–jumped significantly. Because many of those new households are renting, that can drive down the homeownership rate as a percentage of total households, while providing a glimmer of hope in the long term.

The report estimated that renter households increased by more than 1.8 million from the first quarter of 2014, while the number of owner households decreased by 386,000. The quarterly estimates are viewed as not terribly reliable by some economists, but the numbers suggest a step in the right direction.

Economists have been waiting for 20-somethings to emerge from their parents’ basements and begin renting on their own. That is important for the owner-occupied market because, eventually, those renters will likely buy homes. (…)

Another bright spot is that the vacancy rates for both rental apartments and owner-occupied homes was low, economists said. The rental vacancy rate fell to 7.1% in the first quarter of 2015 from 8.3% the year earlier.

The homeowner vacancy fell to 1.9% from 2% in the first quarter of 2014.

After shacking up with family or friends for the past few years, millennials finally seem to be striking out on their own. The number of U.S. households grew by 1.48 million in the first quarter from a year earlier, following a 1.66 million increase in the final three months of 2014, according to data released yesterday by the Census Bureau. While the numbers can be volatile, it marks the fastest back-to-back gains in household formation since the second half of 2005. Separate reports show that the previous weakness in household formation was driven by millennials — young adults born after 1980 — so that group is most likely to be driving the improvement, says Maury Harris, economist at UBS in New York.

Just kidding The missing ingredient is showing up:

(…) among the five builders reporting last week (representing 18% of U.S. new home sales), aggregate 1Q15 new home orders grew 20.9% y/y. This parallels remarkably close to the 20.6% y/y growth the U.S. Census Bureau reported in its combined January-March data, and it’s tracking better than the 18% y/y new home sales growth we are projecting for all of 2015.

(…) early indications are confirming the first signs of recovery among first-time buyers. As noted above, D.R. Horton’s Express Homes division witnessed a tripling of its y/y orders, while Pulte’s Centex operation saw its highest absorption rate per community since 2008. It remains unclear if there is a precise driver for this entry-level recovery. But, it seems likely that a number of factors are contributing, including more accessible low-down payment financing, steady job growth, lower gasoline prices, and attractive mortgage rates. (Raymond James housing analyst)

Bank of Canada’s Poloz dispels speculation of housing bubble

The Bank of Canada’s top brass assured a parliamentary committee that Canada’s bloated housing market has not become a risky asset bubble, despite the central bank’s own calculation that house prices nationwide are roughly 20 per cent overvalued.

“We don’t believe we’re in a bubble,” Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz said in testimony Tuesday to the House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance. He said Canada’s long-running boom in the housing market hasn’t been underpinned by the kind of rampant speculative buying that is the hallmark of an asset bubble. (…)

Mr. Poloz added that the overvaluation doesn’t necessarily mean the market is in need of a 10-to-30-per-cent downturn to bring it back into balance. He said that rising incomes as the economy gains momentum could help close the affordability gap, without a sharp drop in home values. (…)

Mr. Poloz reiterated that the non-energy segments of the Canadian economy are starting to assert themselves more strongly in the current quarter, as the impact of the oil shock that were felt in the first quarter and the 2014 fourth quarter begin to fade, and the pickup in non-energy export demand gains momentum.

“The segments of non-energy exports that we expected to lead the recovery are doing so, and we expect this trend to be buttressed by stronger U.S. growth and the lower Canadian dollar.”

Specifically, Mr. Poloz noted that key Canadian export sectors tied to U.S. business investment – including machinery and equipment, building materials, metals and aerospace – are showing “very positive growth.” (…)

Euro-Area Bank Lending Increases for First Time Since 2012

Thailand Unexpectedly Cuts Rate After Growth Forecast Cut

The Bank of Thailand lowered its one-day bond repurchase rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 1.5 percent on Wednesday, a move predicted by only two of 20 economists in a Bloomberg survey. The baht slid as much as 0.6 percent, and the benchmark SET index fell as much as 1.2 percent, heading to its lowest close since March 31.

The central bank is using a “strong dose of medicine” because exports may contract, hurting private investment and consumption, which can’t be offset by a rebound in tourism and government spending, Assistant Governor Mathee Supapongse said. The finance ministry earlier lowered its forecast for gross domestic product growth this year to 3.7 percent from an earlier estimate of 3.9 percent.

EARNINGS WATCH
  • 251 companies (62.0% of the S&P 500’s market cap) have reported. Earnings are beating by 6.0% while revenues have missed by -0.4%.
  • Expectations are for revenue, earnings, and EPS of -3.4%, -1.1%, and +0.6%. Excluding Energy, growth would be 2.2%, 7.1%, and 9.1% Surprised smile, respectively. This excludes the likelihood of beats.
Saudi Arabia’s King Salman Replaces Crown Prince, Foreign Minister

(…) The cabinet reshuffle also included the appointment of Saudi Aramco Chief ExecutiveKhaled al-Faleh as health minister and chairman of the state oil giant. Mr. Falih joined Saudi Aramco more than three decades ago and has been the president and the chief executive of the company since January 2009. His replacement wasn’t immediately named. The post of Aramco chairman had been held by veteran oil minister Ali al-Naimi. (…)