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It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so (Mark Twain)

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THE DAILY EDGE: 20 NOVEMBER 2018: Testing, Testing…

Trump Threatens High-Tech Export Curbs in Latest Swipe at China

The Trump administration is considering tighter curbs on technology exports, a step that Deutsche Bank AG says would have a “profound and long lasting adverse impact” on relations between the U.S. and China.

A request for public comment, published Monday on the U.S. government’s Federal Register, asks if a list of new technologies that have national security applications — from artificial intelligence to microprocessors and robotics — should be subject to more stringent export-control rules. That would affect U.S. manufacturers as well as purchasers in China. (…)

Under the proposed curbs, Apple Inc., Alphabet Inc.’s Google, IBM, Amazon.com Inc. and similar companies could see limits placed on the way they export the technology behind voice-activated smartphones, self-driving cars and fast supercomputers to China, the Washington Post reported. (…)

The proposal also raises the prospect of retaliation from China, where the anti-monopoly regulator is already investigating Samsung Electronics Co., SK Hynix Inc. and Micron Technology Inc. (…)

From the WaPo article:

(…) “If you think about the range of products this potentially implicates, that’s massive. This is either the opening of a big negotiation with the industry and the public, or a bit of a cry for help in scoping these regulations,” said David Edelman, the director of the Project on Technology, the Economy, & National Security at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. (…)

The Commerce Department explicitly said it hopes to protect national security without “hampering the ability of the U.S. commercial sector to keep pace with international advances.” The rules come at the request of Congress, which authorized them as part of a recently passed defense bill. On Thursday, the agency said it is “committed to laying the proper foundation to ensure that those technologies critical to national security remain protected to ensure the safety of our country.” (…)

Many executives at big tech companies have bristled at White House-backed tariffs on China, fearing that Beijing’s retaliation could result in higher costs for them — or higher prices on components for their products. Others simply don’t want to anger Beijing, which controls one of the world’s largest markets for tech devices. (…)

“We view this as a really important process that our industry is taking very seriously and plan to engage in, because the outcomes are of great consequence for us,” said Christian Troncoso, a policy director at BSA | The Software Alliance, a Washington-based trade group for companies including Apple, Microsoft, IBM and Oracle.

Pretty serious stuff with loads of known and unknown unknowns.

NDX

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U.S. Home-Builder Sentiment Fell in November NAHB index drops eight points, underscoring builders’ rising concerns over climbing interest rates and home prices

Eight points! Traffic also declined by 8 points, that’s 15%!

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John Burns, CEO of John Burns Real Estate Consulting, says that his own survey suggests that the Home Builders Index should be closer to 50 than its current 60 and that home sales will collapse in the next 6 months.

Big hurdles for builders is that house prices have risen much faster than wages and rent while mortgage rates have increased nearly 50% from 3.4% in 2016 to almost 5.0%.

  • How vulnerable is the housing market?

(…) Those trends look eerily similar to those observed back in 2006, or just before the U.S. housing market collapsed. So, should investors be concerned about the U.S. housing outlook? To be sure, a house price correction can never be ruled out, especially if, as we expect, economic growth and employment creation pace down next year. But in our view, a housing crash à la 2007-2011 is unlikely anytime soon. Our optimism rests on the quality of mortgage originations in recent years. Latest data from the New York Fed puts the mortgage delinquency rate in the third quarter at just 1%, the lowest since 2006Q2. The difference between now and 12 years ago, however, is the share of sub-prime in mortgage origination. As today’s Hot Charts show, just 3% or so of recent mortgage originations has been sub-prime, compared to 13% back in 2006. Mortgage lenders have seemingly learnt from past mistakes by not only tightening lending standards but also disproportionately increasing the qualifying threshold for lowest rated borrowers. (NBF)

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A case where the solution is part of the problem (my yellow highlight).

SENTIMENT WATCH
Goldman Says It’s Time for Equity Investors to Boost Their Cash It may be wise to dial back on risk in equities, the bank said.

“Mixed-asset investors should maintain equity exposure but lift cash allocations,” Goldman strategists led by David Kostin wrote in a Nov. 19 report. “Cash will represent a competitive asset class to stocks for the first time in many years.” (…)

As for stocks, investors should tilt their portfolios toward defensive sectors including utilities, the Goldman strategists wrote. They forecast the S&P 500 will generate “a modest single-digit absolute return” next year as the “robust” profit and economic growth seen in 2018 slows. (…)

  • The base case, with 50 percent probability, sees the S&P 500 Index closing this year at 2,850, up from Monday’s close of 2,690.73. It then rises 5 percent to 3,000 in 2019.
  • The downside case, with 30 percent odds: the risk of a 2020 recession starts weighing heavily on investors, with the S&P 500 ending 2019 at 2,500.
  • The upside case, at 20 percent probability: economic growth stays strong for a longer period of time, and the benchmark index closes at 3,400 next year.

Let’s see. Trailing EPS are now $157.74 or about $160.25 pro forma the tax reform for the full 12 months. At today’s opening of 2600, the Rule of 20 P/E is 18.3, where it troughed in January 2016, a testing level for investor sentiment with an actual P/E of 16.2. Back in early 2016, trailing EPS were still declining from their mid-2015 high and inflation was rising, unlike now.

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Goldman’s “base case” for a 2850 close this year would bring the Rule of 20 back to 20.0 assuming no change in inflation. It “upside case” of 3400 next year would require a Rule of 20 P/E of 21.9 given current forward EPS of $172. Always gutsy to expect equities to trade at overvalued levels…As to GS’ “downside case”, assuming a recession, all bets are off but a 2500 close in a recessionary 2019 seems pretty optimistic to me.

Interestingly, Merrill’s recent manager survey reveals a similar negativism for world profit growth as in 2011, 2012 and 2016.

  • SMALL CAPS EARNINGS REVISIONS

Just received Refinitiv’s latest numbers and up revisions went back below 50% for small caps (ALL minus 500): 47% last week from 55.8% in the previous two weeks.

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If GE Debt Gets Junked, Markets Have Reason to Shudder Holders of GE bonds are preparing for one of the world’s biggest borrowers to be downgraded to junk. To get a sense of what that might do to the markets, take a look back to the turmoil caused by the 2005 downgrades of General Motors and Ford—but worry that this time it might be worse.

(…) GE’s financial troubles are self-inflicted, not a sign of broader problems in the economy. Yet, it is the world’s sixth-most indebted nonfinancial company, behind Volkswagen ,Toyota, AT&T , SoftBank, Ford and Daimler. And it has more traded debt outstanding than any of them, totaling $122 billion, according to Refinitiv. It is big enough to shake the entire market. (…)

But the credit-rating firms say that if GE’s restructuring goes as planned, there’s no need for further downgrades. If GE can get its finances under control, the panic will abate all by itself. (…)

Hopefully GE will end up merely as a case study in financial mismanagement, rather than the trigger for messy markets. I’d expect only a short period of turmoil, rather than serious trouble, if GE is downgraded—but I do fear that the overall debt load will hurt a lot in the next economic downturn.

James Mackintosh misses a few points discussed yesterday (There Will Be Blood!)

(…) “At the end of the process GE will look like a shell of what it used to be, but it will survive,” said Mr Culp’s confidant. “As long as there is a debt pile that risks bring the company down, GE will keep on selling.” (…)

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THE DAILY EDGE: 13 NOVEMBER 2018

Small-Business Confidence Stays at Near-Record High The National Federation of Independent Business said its optimism index remains strong at 107.4 in October. Although down slightly, that was still close to the index’s 1983 high.

On Tuesday, the NFIB said its small-business optimism index remains strong at 107.4 in October, albeit down slightly for the second consecutive month following August’s record reading of 108.8. The August reading broke the previous record of 108 set in July 1983. (…)

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Hmmm…Enjoy the good times.

Apartment Developers Are Slowing Construction. That Could Mean Higher Rents. Rising construction costs and a tight labor market are slowing a nearly decadelong apartment boom, likely easing a burgeoning glut at the top end of the market that has been forming across the U.S.
OIL

In a monthly report, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries said world oil demand next year would rise by 1.29 million barrels per day, 70,000 bpd less than predicted last month and the fourth consecutive reduction in its forecast.

“Although the oil market has reached a balance now, the forecasts for 2019 for non-OPEC supply growth indicate higher volumes outpacing the expansion in world oil demand, leading to widening excess supply in the market,” OPEC said in the report.

“The recent downward revision to the global economic growth forecast and associated uncertainties confirm the emerging pressure on oil demand observed in recent months.”

In the report, OPEC said its oil output rose further in October by 127,000 bpd to 32.90 million bpd after the June deal.

OPEC said the world would need 31.54 million bpd from its 15 members in 2019, down 250,000 bpd from last month. This suggests there will be a 1.36 million bpd surplus in the market should OPEC keep pumping the same amount and other things remain equal. (…)

Non-OPEC supply will rise in 2019 by 2.23 million bpd, the Vienna-based organization said, 120,000 bpd more than previously thought and far more than the increase in world demand.

Oil and gas giants such as Royal Dutch Shell (RDSa.AS), Chevron (CVX.N) and BP (BP.L) are generating as much cash at today’s oil prices of around $70 a barrel as they did in 2014, before crude spiraled down from over $100 a barrel to lows of below $30 a barrel.

As they emerge from the deepest downturn in decades, boards have vowed to remain thrifty and stick to lower spending targets in order to return value to shareholders after years of pain. (…)

The richest areas will have been exploited by the mid-2020s, meaning the average well drilled in 2025 will be less productive than today, the agency said in its annual World Energy Outlook. The U.S. will still be pumping large quantities of crude from shale rock — also known as tight oil — but output will taper off because a larger number of wells are needed to be completed to maintain or increase production. (…)

SENTIMENT WATCH

From MarketWatch

According to Goldman, its indicator at 73% marks the highest bear-market reading since the late 1960s and early 1970s, which (with a few exceptions) is consistent with returns of zero over the following 12 months. Any reading above 60% signals that subsequent returns will be lower (see chart below):

(…) For one, the bank’s Bull & Bear indicator, which tracks investor sentiment is hanging around 3.1, meaning no “contrarian buy signal” is being flagged, he says. The gauge runs from 0 to 10, with the high end representing extreme bullishness and the low end extreme bearishness. (…)

Managers surveyed believe the peak of this bull run is not here yet, with 12% upside seen from current levels, taking the S&P 500 to 3,056 (weighed average). That said, one of three respondents said they think the market has already peaked. (…)

Cash levels also dropped in November to 4.7% from 5.1%, meaning investors bought into that October correction, upping exposure to U.S. and emerging-markets stocks, REITs and health care, which is now the No. 1 overweight, in the survey.

And in a surprise to few, allocation to global techs fell out of bed, with just a net 18% of managers saying they’re overweight the sector. (…)

Ned Davis Research has its own Crowd Sentiment Indicators, courtesy of Steve Blumenthal:

  • NDR Crowd Sentiment Poll: Neutral Pessimism (S/T Bullish for Equities)Current weekly sentiment reading is 57.4.  It was 53 last week.
  • Best buying opportunities occur at “Extreme Pessimism” readings below 57.
  • Gain/Annum for the S&P 500 Index (data from December 1, 1995 to present).
  • Current indicator score highlighted in yellow:

Source: Ned Davis Research
NDR Disclosure; CMG Disclosure.

  • NDR Daily Trading Sentiment CompositeExtreme Pessimism (S/T Bullish for Equities).  Current reading highlighted below.
  • Current daily sentiment reading is 31.11.  It was 25.56 last week.
  • Best buying opportunities occur at “Extreme Pessimism” readings below 41.5.
  • 1994 to Present and 2006 to Present below (current indicator score shaded below):

Source: Ned Davis Research
NDR Disclosure; CMG Disclosure.

TECH WRECK

The NDX is down 10.7% from its Oct. 1 peak of 7700 and its 200dma has flattened:

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The equal-weight NDX is down 8.6% from its peak and its 200dma is declining:

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Why would anybody be surprised? You can’t buy growth only from price increases.

The global smartphone market over time:

Source: ANZ Research (via The Daily Shot)

U.S. Adopts New Battle Plan for China’s Theft of Trade Secrets The Trump administration is broadening its China trade battle beyond tariffs with a plan to use export controls, indictments and other tools to counter the theft of intellectual property.

(…) The officials hope that the unprecedented actions taken to defend Micron—the largest American memory-chip maker—will encourage more U.S. companies to work with the government to counter intellectual property theft. (…)

The Commerce Department announced on Oct. 29 that it would effectively bar exports and transfers of U.S.-origin technology to Fujian Jinhua Integrated Circuit Co. The startup, backed by $5.7 billion in state funding, is one of China’s best hopes to build a world-class semiconductor industry. Because Jinhua depends on U.S. technology to produce its own chips, the restrictions could kill its business.

The announcement was unique in the way that it defined Jinhua as a national-security threat: U.S. officials said the Chinese company’s alleged theft of Micron’s IP could threaten the U.S. military supplier’s ability to stay in business. (…) China wants Jinhua to become its own homegrown producer of DRAM, but the nascent firm still relies on tools from U.S. suppliers to make its chips. (…)

PIKy Times in China
Unit of China’s HNA Offers Investors Airline Vouchers in Lieu of Cash

Last week we learned that holders of 271 million yuan ($39 million) of Agro-Pastoral Group Co. debt agreed to take ham or pork gift packages instead of interest payments, according to a filing on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange on Thursday reported by Grant’s which added its own suggestion that Payment in Kind be replaced by “Payment-In-Swine”

Fewer International Students Head to the U.S. American colleges and universities face growing challenge amid rising competition from other countries, concerns about safety and immigration policies

The number of new international students enrolling at American institutions fell by 6.6% during the 2017-18 academic year, on top of a 3.3% decline the year before, according to a report by the Institute of International Education released Tuesday.

Meanwhile, the total number of international students in the U.S. plus those working here on a student visa rose by just 1.5% this year. That was down from average annual growth of 6.1% over the past decade, a period during which enrollment of international students doubled.

Foreign students are big business: They pumped $42 billion into U.S. college and university coffers in the 2017-18 school year alone. (…)

The slowdown comes as U.S. schools struggle with demographic and revenue challenges due to the falling number of Americans graduating from high school. As a result, U.S. colleges and universities have become increasingly dependent on revenue generated from international students. Public schools often charge international students more than what domestic students pay. (…)

China remained the largest single source of international students, accounting for about a third of all students who come to the U.S. for postsecondary degrees. The number of students coming from Canada and Mexico, meanwhile, fell by 4.3% and 8.1%, respectively. (…)

Carol Spradling, director of the school of computer science at Northwest Missouri State University, said international enrollment began declining precipitously two years ago, following a “perfect storm” that included President Trump’s election with his tough talk on immigration and the shooting of an Indian immigrant worker in Olathe, Kan. The downturn, she said, had a huge impact on her school’s finances. (…)

Bolton Warns China Against Limiting Free Passage in South China Sea
North Korea Keeping Up Work on Missile Sites, Report Says