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NEW$ & VIEW$ (31 JULY 2015): China: Slow and Slower; Eurozone Deflation? Earnings Watch.

Economy Picks Up but Stays in Its Rut Gross domestic product posts modest growth, as revisions show recovery to be weaker than thought

Gross domestic product, the broadest measure of goods and services produced across the economy, grew at a 2.3% seasonally adjusted annual rate in the second quarter, the Commerce Department said Thursday. And the economy actually expanded at a 0.6% pace in the first three months of the year, an upward revision from a previously reported 0.2% contraction.

Yet further data revisions going back more than three years show the expansion—already the weakest since World War II—was even worse than previously thought, with GDP increasing at an average annual rate of 2% between 2012 and 2014, down 0.3 percentage point from prior estimates.

While the first half’s growth rate of 1.5% was better than expected thanks to the first-quarter revision, economic growth so far this year has been even slower than during last year’s tepid first half and well below the pace of the overall recovery. (…)

Strong job gains and accelerating wage growth supported stronger household consumption in the second quarter, contributing two percentage points to the overall quarterly GDP number. Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of economic output, rose 2.9% in the second quarter, compared with 1.8% in the first three months of the year.

Consumers also appear to be spending some of the money they saved earlier this year on cheaper gasoline. The saving rate fell in the second quarter, to 4.8% from 5.2% in the previous quarter, while Americans spent more on long-lasting products including cars. (…)

One persistent weak spot has been business investment, which actually subtracted from GDP growth in the second quarter for the first time since 2012. Nonresidential fixed investment—which reflects spending on software, research and development, equipment and structures—retreated at a 0.6% rate, compared with a 1.6% growth rate in the first quarter.

The slowdown reflects a sharp drop in spending on structures, as energy firms have scaled back their investment plans this year following a steep drop in oil prices that began in mid-2014. Prices appeared to have stabilized, but have started to slip again in recent weeks, a sign that those pressures could continue to weigh on growth in the second half. (…)

The price index for personal consumption expenditures—the Fed’s preferred measure for inflation—rose at a 2.2% pace in the second quarter. Core prices, which exclude food and energy costs, rose 1.8%.

David Rosenberg is not among those expecting a September hike:

(…) if the Fed was intent on making a move, yesterday was the opportunity to signal something. (…) If this is the manner in which the central bank is trying to signal a September tightening, it’s actually pretty lame.

If the Fed really wants to convey a hawkish signal, why would it use the word “soft” to describe exports and capital spending as well as “moderate” with respect to consumer spending growth.

On May 4th, 2004, just before the June 30th rate hike, the Fed said “the Committee believes that policy accommodation can be removed at a pace that is likely to remain measured”.

Now, that is how you get the market prepped!

(…) But a review of Fed statements over the past 10 years indicates the risk language used by the Fed is a poor predictor of “regime change.” (Graphic: link.reuters.com/zyn35w) (…)

“Risks seem a little tilted to the downside. China, oil, Europe,” said Cornerstone Macro economist Roberto Perli, a former Fed board staffer. But the current risk language “doesn’t represent a major constraint… Policy is so accommodative, to say risks are ‘nearly balanced’ could justify a 25 basis point increase.” (…)

This a.m.:

Goodbye 2015 Rate Hike: Quarterly Increase In US Wages Is Smallest On Record

The quarterly increase in US wages was just 0.2% – a third of the 0.6% rise expected – and a meager 2% increase Y/Y in line with all the other depressed BLS data, which dashes the “wage growth is looming” meme and crushed the 0.7% rise in Q1 that had so many hopeful of escape velocity any day now.

Because the ECI tracks the same job over time, it removes shifts in the mix of workers across industries, which is a shortcoming of the hourly earnings figures, which makes this number even more of a diaster. This is the weakest US wage growth since records begain in 1982 and half as slow as the weakest of 57 economist estimates.

Eurozone remains on the edge of deflation Inflation steady at 0.2% but plummeting commodity prices still weigh

Looking at the main components of euro area inflation, services is expected to have the highest annual rate in July (1.2%, compared with 1.1% in June), followed by food, alcohol & tobacco (0.9%, compared with 1.1% in June), non-energy industrial goods (0.5%, compared with 0.3% in June) and energy (-5.6%, compared with -5.1% in June).

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Core inflation (ex-energy, food, alcohol and tobacco) declined 0.7% MoM in July after rising 0.1% in the previous two months. It had jumped 2.3% (9.5% a.r.) in the February to April period! YtD, core inflation is down 0.1%.

CHINA
Bets Rise That China’s Yuan Will Fall Investors take positions to protect against yuan weakening, a signal of waning confidence in Beijing

Activity has ramped up in the yuan options market, where investors are taking positions to protect against a potential weakening of the yuan against the U.S. dollar over the next three to six months.

Those bets have increased after Beijing last week announced measures to support China’s flagging trade sector, including allowing a more market-driven currency. (…)

Another factor adding to investor unease are the seemingly conflicting messages from policy makers. Last week, China’s State Council, or cabinet, signaled it would widen the yuan’s trading band and allow greater fluctuation in the currency. Meanwhile, the People’s Bank of China on Tuesday said it would keep the yuan stable.

The central bank sets a daily reference rate against the U.S. dollar and allows the currency to trade 2% above or below that level. (…)

The debate about the yuan’s direction comes ahead of the International Monetary Fund’s decision later this year on whether to grant the yuan elite status as a reserve currency. The IMF’s Special Drawing Rights basket, which constitutes the fund’s emergency-lending reserves, currently includes the U.S. dollar, the euro, the British pound and the Japanese yen.

That’s one reason why Beijing has kept a firm grip on its currency in recent weeks, holding the yuan traded onshore at its most stable level in almost a decade despite volatility in global currency markets. In contrast, its offshore counterpart, which is freely traded in Hong Kong by foreign investors, has weakened over the past couple months.

Danny Yong, founder of Singapore-based hedge fund Dymon Asia Capital Ltd. and one of Asia’s most closely watched currencies investors, in a letter to his investors last week said he doesn’t expect the currency to weaken with further stock declines. A depreciating currency would create a headache for China, from spurring capital flight to drawing the ire of global politicians seeking to protect trade competitiveness.

“If Chinese equities continue to fall, the Chinese government will have all the more reason to maintain a stable foreign exchange policy and will avoid unnecessary volatility caused by depreciating its currency,” Mr. Yong said in the letter. “Policy makers see more costs than benefits now to weakening the currency…Our view is that a further equity rout for now does not change China’s current foreign exchange policy.”

Pointing up However, if China’s economic health worsens significantly, Mr. Yong said “the government will use all tools at their disposal including the currency.” (…)

Car companies such as PSA Peugeot Citroën, Audi and Ford have slashed growth forecasts while industrial goods groups such as Caterpillar and Siemens have all spoken out on the negative impact of China. (…)

Audi and France’s Renault both cited China as they cut their global sales targets on Thursday, with Christian Klingler, sales chief at Audi parent Volkswagen, predicting “a bumpy road” in the country this year.

Peugeot slashed its growth forecast for China from 7 per cent to 3 per cent while earlier this week Ford predicted the first full-year sales fall for the Chinese car market since 1990.

US companies have also been affected. “In Asia, the China market has clearly slowed,” said Akhil Johri, chief financial officer at United Technologies, the US industrial group at the company’s earnings call last week. “Real estate investment, new construction starts and floor space sold are all under pressure.” (…)

In the consumer goods sector, brewer Anheuser-Busch InBev said on Thursday that volumes fell 6.5 per cent in China as a result of “poor weather across the country and economic headwinds”.

Among industrial goods companies, Schneider Electric, one of the world’s largest electrical equipment makers, reported a 12 per cent fall in first-half profit and cut guidance because of “weak construction and industrial markets” in China.

Jean-Pascal Tricoire, chief executive, said there was “persistent weakness in China” which showed little sign of going away soon.

Siemens, the German industrial giant, on Thursday said sales in China fell 8 per cent in the quarter and Chinese new orders slid 2 per cent when adjusted for currency swings.

You must also have noticed that just about every one of China’s major trading partners are seeing very week exports, from Taiwan to South Korea, Vietnam, Thailand and Indonesia.

Ninja The big fear in Beijing:

China’s state planner said on Friday a slowing economy must not be allowed to morph into social risks as the volatile Chinese stock market fell again. (G&M)

But the economy is clearly weaker than official stats indicate. CEBM Research shows how Q2 GDP was heavily “lifted” by brokerage revenues (!) and that the real pace is closer to 6%, if not lower.

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Cam Hui tracks a few indicators of the real activity in China:

CANADA
TD warns of ‘vulnerability’ of frothy Toronto, Vancouver home markets

(…) “When we put it all together, key housing indicators on balance continue to highlight the vulnerability of the Toronto and Vancouver housing markets to a significant correction in activity and prices,” they said.

“In light of its hotter price performance over the past three to five years and greater supply risk, this vulnerability appears to be comparatively high in the Toronto market,” they added.

“Still, even in Toronto, the same metrics would assign a ‘medium’ rather than ‘high’ risk to the kind of painful and disorderly price adjustment that was endured in the United States a half-decade ago.” (…)

“While the metrics provide some contrasting signals both within and across the two markets, the balance of evidence places the risk of a steep and painful price adjustment in the medium-to-moderate camp,” they said.

“Put another way, indicators are generally flashing a cautionary yellow rather than green (low risk) or red (high risk).” (…)

Overbuilding seems to be more of a threat in Toronto, they added, citing the fact that condo developers “appear to be holding onto a record number of newly completed but unsold units.”

But the Toronto rental market is tight, they said, which should provide some relief on that front.

Oil falls after OPEC comments imply no supply cut

(…) Badri said rising demand would prevent a further fall in oil prices and suggested cuts in OPEC output would have little impact on the market.

OPEC members produced around 31.25 million barrels per day (bpd) in the second quarter, about 3 million bpd more than daily demand, a Reuters survey showed this week.

EARNINGS WATCH

Softer day yesterday.

  • 341 companies (75.3% of the S&P 500’s market cap) have reported. Earnings are beating by 5.7% while revenues have positively surprised by 0.5%.
  • The beat is 72% (74% Wednesday). Ex-Financials: 75% (78%)
  • Expectations are for revenue, earnings, and EPS of -3.4%, 0.2%, and +1.6%. EPS growth is on pace for 3.0%, assuming the current 5.7% beat rate for the remainder of the season. This would be 7.9% (8.2% Wednesday) on a trend basis (ex-Energy and the big-5 banks). (RBC Capital)
US equity margin debt flags market top Where the echoes of the end of China’s bull run can be heard on Wall Street

(…) “Margin debt has risen 11 per cent since the start of the year to reach a record high even as the rally in stocks has become increasingly narrowly based,” note analysts at research boutique Gavekal Dragonomics.

“Although high margin debt will not trigger an equity market collapse, it could exacerbate the downside move should any external shock trigger a sell-off, especially as the ratio of margin debt to total market capitalisation is approaching historical danger levels.” Moreover, “the negative wealth effect of an abrupt decline in the stock market could tip the US economy into recession”, Gavekal suggests.

It is not exactly reassuring that the last time margin debt was at comparable levels was in 2000 and 2007, according to BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research. “We see it as a yellow flag,” Merrill’s technical analyst Steve Suttmeier notes. (…)

Investor Sentiment Craters

AAII Bullish 073015

AAII Bearish 073015

AAII Neutral 073015

NEW$ & VIEW$ (30 JULY 2015): Housing; Fed’s Lowflation Dilemma; Breathless Technicians.

U.S. Pending Home Sales Slip in June 

The National Association of Realtors said Wednesday its index of pending home sales fell by 1.8% to a seasonally-adjusted 110.3, the lowest level since March, but 8.2% higher than June 2014.

Pending home sales rose 0.4% in the Northeast and 0.5% in the West from May. They fell by 3% in the Midwest and South.

The trend remains up: pending home sales rose 4.5% YoY in Q2 after rising 3.1% in Q1.

Sequentially, Q2 sales are up 1.5% or 6.1% annualized. Regionally, sales are all over the map with sales up 16.8% QoQ in the Northeast (+16.0% YoY), +0.6%  in the Midwest (+8.6%), –2.4% in the South (+10.3%) and +0.7% in the West (+11.7%). (Charts from Haver Analytics)

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A new report from Pew Research Center shows that a higher percentage of millennials, a group defined by Pew as adults born 1981 or later, is living with parents than in 2010, despite the ongoing recovery.

In the first third of 2015, 26% of millennials lived with their parents, up from a prerecession 22% in 2007 and 24% in 2010, when the recovery began. That translates to 16.3 million young adults in their family homes, compared with 13.4 million in 2007. (…)

Of course, many millennials are living independently: 42.2 million of them in 2015. But that’s slightly fewer than the 42.7 million who lived independently in 2007. (…)

A study from the Federal Reserve Board also points to one factor that, unlike the labor or housing market, has resisted cyclical trends: student debt. As the Pew study notes, the recession drove many young adults towards higher education. (…)

But all that schooling came with a serious price tag. Lisa Dettling and Joanne Hsu, economists at the Federal Reserve Board, found that mean balances on student loans rose to $12,000 by early 2014, up from $5,300 in early 2005. By analyzing individual-level credit data, Ms. Dettling and Ms. Hsu show that each additional $10,000 in student loan debt makes someone 4.6% more likely to move in with a parent.

Even if student loans are a proxy for upward mobility (higher earnings might be more likely with a degree or credential), “any income effects signaled by large loan balances are swamped by a behavioral effect wherein large balances incentivize moving in with a parent,” they wrote. (…)

Parsing the Fed: How the July Statement Changed from June

Fed Statement Tracker

Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met inApril suggestJune indicates that economic activity has been expanding moderately after havin recent months. Growth in household spendingchanged little during the first quarter. The pace of job gains picked up while the unemployment rate remained steadys been moderate and the housing sector has shown additional improvement; however, business fixed investment and net exports stayed soft. The labor market continued to improve, with solid job gains and declining unemployment. On balance, a range of labor market indicators suggests that underutilization of labor resources has diminished somewhat. Growth in household spending has been moderate and the housing sector has shown some improvement; however, business fixed investment and net exports stayed softince early this year. Inflation continued to run below the Committee’s longer-run objective, partly reflecting earlier declines in energy prices and decreasing prices of non-energy imports; energy prices appear to have stabilized. Market-based measures of inflation compensation remain low; surveybased measures of longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable. (…)

Jon Hilsenrath rightly focuses on lowflation:

Federal Reserve officials face a conflict as they plan to start raising interest rates later this year: There has been a lot of progress in their goal for U.S. job growth, but little in their objective of modestly rising consumer prices.

The central bank on Wednesday left its benchmark short-term interest rate near zero—for the 2,417th straight day—but dropped several hints after a two-day policy meeting that it is near seeing enough improvement in the job market to prompt officials to raise the rate as early as September.

At the same time, the Fed flagged nagging concerns in its postmeeting statement that inflation remains too low, which is making officials hesitant on the timing for liftoff and inclined to raising rates very gradually after the first increase.

So, China has become a factor in Fed policy:

The ripple effects of China’s market woes

(…) There could be several big ripple effects. First, the wild oscillations have shaken faith in the competence of China’s technocrats. For years, bureaucrats have defied doom­sayers predicting that China’s hybrid system of central planning and market forces would collapse under its own contradictions. Now the bureaucrats don’t look so good. Initially, they pumped up the market in what looks like an ill-conceived effort to enact what has been called the world’s biggest debt-to-equity swap. Worried that loans made to companies as part of a massive stimulus programme would turn sour, technocrats encouraged a stock market binge. Their subsequent actions to stop the bubble from bursting have looked anachronistic and heavy-handed. They have virtually criminalised selling stocks, banning anyone who owns more than 5 per cent of a company from offloading shares.

“This has set the Chinese stock market back 10 years,” says one close observer of China’s capital markets. Not only have such blunderbuss tactics revealed panic and outmoded instincts, they have not worked. (…)

Second, the assumption that China will gradually move towards a more market-based system might need to be reassessed. Recent events could persuade authorities they have been moving too fast. That could have an impact on everything from the pace at which China opens its capital account and makes the renminbi convertible to how fast it liberalises domestic interest rates. (…)

“What this reveals is that there is still a fundamental tension in China between a desire to intervene and a desire to let market forces operate,” says Fred Neumann, chief Asia economist at HSBC. That could affect whether the International Monetary Fund includes the renminbi in its special drawing rights, or whether China’s A-shares gain access to the MSCI Emerging Market index. Certainly, the clumsy intervention by authorities has had a chilling effect on global sentiment. Larry Fink, chief executive of BlackRock, said foreign investors would need to reassess.

The third possible impact is on China’s growth. True, it is not obvious how a market fall will spill over into the real economy. China has bucked sharp stock market slides before. This time, though, the risks are higher. Many in­ves­tors have borrowed heavily to buy shares. If authorities cannot stop a slide, some banks and brokerages could be at risk. The confidence-sapping oscillations are also taking place against the background of a much softer economy, one probably growing more slowly than the official 7 per cent figure suggests. If another point or two were shaved off growth, it could send very real tremors around the globe. Since 2008, China has been the motor of the world. The travails of its stock market add to evidence that this motor is spluttering.

China’s stock market regulator began its most recent press briefing with a telling instruction for the mostly local journalists in attendance. “We have a requirement concerning speculative reports,” said the China Securities Regulatory Commission. “They must first be confirmed by the CSRC in order to prevent the spread of false information and market disturbance.”

The warning was a reminder that as a “national team” comprised of largely state-owned entities struggles to shore up China’s stock market, the government is orchestrating an equally important cheerleading campaign involving a broad array of state media outlets. (…)

The 8.5 per cent fall on July 27 left the SCI just 200 points above 3,500 — the level at which the government’s rescue effort began in earnest on July 8.

A move below the intervention point would be embarrassing for the national team led by China Securities Finance, the CSRC vehicle fronting a rescue effort estimated to be worth at least Rmb2.2tn ($350bn). (…)

In terse late night statements, posted in question and answer format, the CSRC has pledged to pursue all “relevant clues” as it pursues stock “dumping” in contravention of its July 8 decree banning listed companies’ large shareholders and directors from selling their shares.

Investors have also been urged to report any such “malicious” activity to official hotlines, in a throwback to the Cultural Revolution and other political campaigns in which the Chinese Communist party encouraged people to monitor and inform on their neighbours. (…)

China’s ripple effects on commodity prices…

…and world trade:

(…) a slowdown in China could have a profound effect on prices for U.S. consumer goods, depressing them even further. And further weakening in Chinese demand for commodities and other globally traded goods could cool inflation even further. So while the Fed might be confident the U.S. can keep growing, it would also worry that if the economy gets dented, very low inflation could turn into deflation.

China keeps exporting deflation. Now, commodity prices, in general, are also seriously deflating. While the USD keeps rising…

SENTIMENT WATCH

Technicians are out of breadth:

From Barron’s:

(…) Now, we have a serious breakdown in the small-capitalization Russell 2000 index interrupted by an oversold condition and a small upside reversal pattern Tuesday (see Chart 1). Even with Wednesday’s gains that breakdown is still in effect.

Investors may not be familiar with the Russell’s completed pattern. As we can see in the chart, the index formed and broke three trendlines originating at last October’s low. Called a “fan lines” pattern, it resembles a folded paper fan. But what it represents is a transition from bull to bear. We can even see two lines broken in the relative performance chart, as well, to confirm the change.

When the first and second lines broke, the index fell but then rallied back to test the now-broken lines, even setting a new high in the process. But the index was slowly rolling over and unable to sustain rallies. When the third line broke the sell signal was given.

Many traders wait for a more traditional break of horizontal support with the index taking out its May low. Indeed, there is a good deal of support in the zone between 1211.50 and 1220.50, which runs through several turning points formed over the past 29 months (the index traded near 1227 Wednesday afternoon). Coupled with a touch of the 200-day moving average and oversold short-term momentum indicators thanks to the steep late July selloff the rebound should not have been a surprise.

While small and midsized stocks have broken, the big-cap S&P 500 has not, at least not in its traditional formulation. This index is capitalization weighted so the biggest stocks carry the most influence, and this shows up quite well in the equal-weighted version. However, it is the cap-weighted version on which most people focus, and it also bounced off its 200-day average (see Chart 2). That keeps it officially in its year-to-date trading range and one of the few reasons I am suppressing my inner grizzly for now.

The bounce this week was not entirely because certain technical levels were reached but rather due to the phoenix-like awakening of some of the market’s worst sectors. Energy led the rebound Tuesday with basic materials and industrials close on its heels. This worst-to-first phenomenon is really just a snapback in beaten-down sectors. In my experience, it is more likely that if the market is going to resume its advance it will be the sectors that resisted the decline best that should lead the way.

I also find it disturbing that the Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR exchange-traded fund (ticker: XLP ) is trading at 52-week highs while technology stumbled significantly over the past two weeks. Staples are defensive stocks that tend to lead when times are uncertain or bearish. Technology is one of the expected leaders in any bull market.

The semiconductor sector in particular is in trouble, with the iShares PHLX Semiconductor ETF ( SOXX ) down more than 13% from its June 1 peak and solidly below its 200-day average.

In short, the technical evidence available now, from sector action to declining market breadth, suggests cash is still a very good idea.

From NBF:

While the S&P has rebounded over the past couple of days it is notable that the IBD 50 fund ETF of leading stocks has not participated. As the accompanying chart indicates, the leading stocks as a group closed lower than they did two days ago. In other words, no rebound in the face of a bounce on the S&P. The chart has made a secondary high and appears set to test lower levels.

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Meanwhile, new daily 52-week lows on the three major U.S. exchanges hit 735, the highest number since October 2014. More of the same internal deterioration.

The relative performance of leading stocks is starting to falter. A ratio chart of the IDB 50 ETF/ S&P made a lower high and is ready to break a prior low.

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EARNINGS WATCH
  • 285 companies (67.5% of the S&P 500’s market cap) have reported. Earnings are beating by 6.0% (6.1% last Tuesday) while revenues have positively surprised by 0.3%.
  • The beat rate is 74% (75%) . Ex-Financials: 78%.
  • Expectations are for revenue, earnings, and EPS of -3.7%, 0.0% (-0.2%), and +1.4% (+1.1%). EPS growth is on pace for 3.4% (3.5%), assuming the current 6.0% beat rate for the remainder of the season. This would be 8.2% (8.4%) on a trend basis (ex-Energy and the big-5 banks).

The big surprise among all surprises is that Industrials’ beat rate is 85% with 74% of companies already in. Their miss rate is only 8% in spite of the slow economy, slow exports and the dollar.

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OIL

(…) Weekly oil-output estimates from the EIA started to show falling production in April. Separate EIA reports on shale-oil drilling have forecast production declines for months. But the EIA’s monthly figures, which are released on a two-month delay, threw the market a curveball by showing that production hit a 44-year high in April and that previous months’ production was higher than initial forecasts.

U.S. crude prices have dropped 18% this month, reversing a spring rally. Some investors who entered the year betting on an oil-price rebound have responded with complaints that the U.S. data aren’t up to the task of providing an accurate picture of domestic drilling conditions. (…)

Why the discrepancy between weekly and monthly results? The EIA’s weekly production numbers are based on a forecasting model, not reported output, which underlies the monthly reports.

(…) The EIA, a wing of the Energy Department focused on data collection and analysis, says its current figures are accurate and reliable, adding that the discrepancies between its initial reporting and later revisions haven’t widened this year.

The next monthly oil report, which will include data through May, is due Friday. (…)

Alternatives abound, but even forecasters concede there is as much art as science in many of these calculations. Consulting firm PIRA Energy Group recently told clients that the U.S. produced about 9.3 million barrels a day in April, 400,000 barrels a day less than the government figures show.

PIRA’s April data accounted for lower Texas production due to flooding, while the EIA’s didn’t, said Gary Ross, head of global oil at PIRA.

“We’re all trying to bring exactness to this business that doesn’t really exist,” Mr. Ross said. (…)

Nerd smile Maybe people should look at other sources for better data. Since most of the shale oil production is transported by rail, U.S. rail carloads of petroleum and petroleum products, while not the perfect data, has the merit of being accurate and timely. These charts from the AAR are through June 2015 and July data will be out next week.

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Carloads peaked during Q1’15 and have declined 2.5% YoY during Q2. They were up –1.1% YoY in April, +0.5% in May and –7.3% in June. Production has also started to drop in Canada as Canadian carloads of petroleum products, up 3.3% YtD through June, were down 4.5% in May and down 4.9% in June.

The reduction could begin as soon as September and would amount to about 200,000 to 300,000 barrels a day, bringing production to about 10.3 million barrels a day, the people said. Saudi Arabia told the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries that it produced 10.56 million barrels a day in June, a record high.

“It is purely based on the [domestic] demand situation,” one of the people said, adding that “production is likely to hover around” 10 million barrels until the end of the year. (…)

The planned reduction likely wouldn’t affect exports and demonstrates that at least part of the kingdom’s recent production figures were related to its domestic-energy needs. Much of the recent production went to Saudi Arabia’s domestic refineries, including the two 400,000 barrels a day refineries it recently brought online with France’s Total and China’s Sinopec. (…)

Already faced with recession and sanctions, a further drop in crude might force the country’s central bank into an emergency rate hike — after four cuts already this year —  according to 65 percent of economists surveyed by Bloomberg from July 24-29. Thirty-nine percent of analysts said the government might impose Greek-like capital controls and 22 percent predicted a takeover of at least some of the country’s banks.

When asked about the central bank’s own analysis of the $40-per-barrel oil scenario, which found a roughly 600 billion ruble capital deficit and two-fold increase in the share of non-performing loans, 69 percent of economists said it has accurately estimated the risks to the Russian economy and banking sector.

The impact on growth from $40 oil would be particularly severe, weakening the ruble to 65 against the U.S. dollar by end-2015 and causing the economy to contract by 5 percent this year and 1 percent in 2016. Compare that to the far less pessimistic baseline consensus provided by Bloomberg’s monthly economic survey, which currently forecasts a 3.5 percent contraction in 2015 and a 0.5 percent expansion in 2016.