The enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it’s the illusion of knowledge (Stephen Hawking)

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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NEW$ & VIEW$ (5 JUNE 2014)

ECB cuts deposit rate below zero Central bank hopes historic move will help to avert deflation

The ECB cut its main refinancing rate to 0.15 per cent, from 0.25 per cent, and its deposit rate from zero to minus 0.10 per cent, becoming the first major central bank to venture into negative territory.

The ECB hopes the move will lift inflation by weakening the euro and spurring lending in the bloc’s more troubled periphery.

Fed Survey: Demand for Skilled Workers Stirs

Rising demand for skilled workers could push up salaries across more sectors of the U.S. economy, according to the Federal Reserve’s latest survey of regional economic conditions.

Hiring activity in general was “steady to stronger” across the U.S. from April through late May, according to the Fed’s “beige book,” based on anecdotal information about economic activity throughout the central bank’s 12 districts. Overall, the report pointed to an economy that was improving from its weak performance earlier this year, boosted largely by stronger consumer spending and job growth. The report comes two weeks ahead of the Fed’s June 17-18 policy meeting.

Companies in several regions reported difficulty filling jobs for highly skilled and upper-management positions. (…)

The Fed banks in Minneapolis, Kansas City and San Francisco reported pay increases were concentrated among workers in information technology, engineering, professional services and some skilled trades, according to the report. Outside of those jobs, few workers are seeing salary bumps.

In the Cleveland region, “skilled trade workers are very difficult to find and are driving up wages,” according to the report. In the Dallas region, a staffing firm said employers are paying higher relocation bonuses for talented employees, “particularly engineers.”

A New York-area employment agency said many candidates are getting multiple offers and that could put upward pressure on salaries going forward. A Maryland staffing agency echoed that sentiment.

The report highlighted steady improvement across other parts of the economy after a harsh winter. More than half the Fed districts pointed to strong auto sales, with other regions seeing “steady” sales. In the Philadelphia region, dealers reported “phenomenal” sales in April and have a bullish outlook for the rest of the year. (…)

Welcome back dropouts: data suggests Americans rejoining workforce

For the first time in six years, the share of people who either have a job or are looking for one is on the rise in a majority of U.S. states, a sign one of the deepest scars of the economic crisis could be healing.

Most states have experienced sharp declines in labor force participation since the 2007-2009 recession, but a Reuters analysis of government data found a reversal could be underway.

Anecdotal reports suggest that in many parts of the country, demand for labor appears to be growing enough to get people who had dropped out of the workforce to restart their job hunts.

“We are getting more job creation and we are seeing more people come in,” said Paul Turek, a labor economist with Washington state’s Employment Security Department. (…)

The state data, which can diverge from the national statistics because of adjustments the government makes to account for seasonal swings and other local economic factors, suggests she [Yellen] may be right to wait. (…)

Some more facts on housing

from a recent survey conducted by the MacArthur Foundation titled “How Housing Matters” (via Zerohedge):

As MarketWatch reports, “although mortgage rates are still quite low, down payments, poor credit and tighter lending standards remain three of the biggest hurdles for buying a home, especially among young people, Blomquist says. “The slow jobs recovery for young adults has made it harder for them to save and to get a mortgage.” Some 84% of young people are delaying major life decisions due to the poor economy, according to a 2013 survey by Generation Opportunity, a nonprofit think tank based in Arlington, Va.”

What’s more, at least 15% of American homeowners (or residents of 78 counties across the country) were living in housing markets where the monthly mortgage payment on a median-priced home requires more than 30% of the monthly median household income — long considered the maximum for rent/mortgage repayments. Housing costs above that threshold are “unaffordable by historic standards,” says Daren Blomquist, vice president at real estate data firm RealtyTrac. In New York county/Manhattan, mortgage payments represent 77% of the median income and in San Francisco County represents 70%.

As a result of a broken economy and lack of good job opportunities the “American dream” is now on its last legs: more than half of Americans, or 54%, believe that buying a home has become less appealing than it once was while some 43% of respondents have indicated that it is no longer the case that owning a home is “an excellent long-term investment and one of the best ways for people to build wealth and assets.” Even as seven in 10 renters (70%) aspire to owning a home, high proportions (58%) believe that “renters can be just as successful as owners at achieving the American Dream.”

But there is hope as younger people find jobs, they normalize their lives:

U.S. Household Formations Normalizing

The number of U.S. households climbed 1.38 million in March 2013 from the previous year (according to the Census Bureau’s population survey), in line with the two-decade median (1.35 million). That’s a marked improvement from the post-recession low of 0.36 million in 2010, and the third straight year above one million. Of note, the number of households headed by someone younger than 25 rose for the first time in seven years, likely due to the improved labor market. While household formations likely slowed more recently, according to the Census Bureau’s Household Vacancy Survey, the pent-up supply of potential homeowners should drive housing activity for some time. (BMO Capital)

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Stats on mortgage apps for purchase remain weak on the surface but Raymons James notes that the seasonally adjusted index is up 11% since February 21, which marked a 19-year low.

The service sector is uber important in the U.S. and is a big job creator:

Services-Sector Growth Accelerates The U.S. non-manufacturing sector expanded further last month, according to data released Wednesday by the Institute for Supply Management. Employment, however, continued to lag other activity indicators.

The Institute for Supply Management’s nonmanufacturing purchasing managers index increased to 56.3 in May from 55.2 in April. It was the highest reading since August 2013.

The report said that 14 industries reported increased business activity in May, with one reporting decreased activity.

Some ISM subindexes increased further after posting big advances in April. The new orders index rose to 60.5 in May after it advanced to 58.2 in April from 53.4 in March.

The ISM business activity/production index increased to 62.1—the highest level since February 2011—after jumping to 60.9 from 53.4 in March. The ISM employment index increased to 52.4 from 51.3 in April. (…)

Non-manufacturers maintained their pace of inventory building last month. The ISM inventory index held at 55.5. The prices index edged up to 61.4 from 60.8. Just as in the manufacturing report, non-manufacturers report higher prices for food and steel products. (Charts from Bespoke Investment)

Hotels are a big part of the service sector and are directly impacted by the economy. In its latest weekly measure, Smith Travel Research reported that U.S. industrywide hotel revenues per available room (revpar) increased 7.7% Y/Y during the week ended May 31 from year-ago levels following growth rates of 9.2%, 9.6%, 10.6%, and 13.6% respectively during the previous 4 weeks.

And by the way, average daily room rates are up 4.7% Y/Y nationally.

Widening U.S. Trade Gap Dims Growth Views

The nation’s trade deficit widened 7% in April from a month earlier to its highest level in two years, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. Imports rose 1.2%, but exports fell 0.2%, marking the fourth decline in five months.

The report suggests American households and firms stepped up spending after snowstorms and icy weather walloped the economy in the winter. But much of their spending—on items like cars, cellphones and machinery—flowed outside the U.S. to foreign firms, undercutting domestic growth.

The export drop suggests sluggishness in overseas economies like Europe is sapping demand abroad for American-made products and services. Exports declined across the board, hitting farmers, jewelers, jet-engine makers and drilling-equipment manufacturers.

Credit Suisse economists on Wednesday said they expect the economy to grow at a 3% annual rate from April through June, down from a previous estimate of 4%. Several other economists made similar moves. Barclays Capital dropped its estimate to 2.9% from 3% in light of the trade figures.

Note that non-petroleum imports rose 5.7% in the 3 months to April, 25% saar!

China Composite PMI Employment Drops At Fastest Pace Since Feb 2009

China’s Services PMI printed at 50.7 – its lowest since August 2011, as the business expectations index dropped to an 11-month low. The Composite PMI improved (after 3 months of contraction) but most notably, the composite employment declines at the fastest pace since Feb 2009. What is perhaps most worrisome is, as Markit notes, The latest survey signalled the second-weakest degree of optimism since the series began in November 2005.”

Euro-Zone Retail Sales Rose in April

Eurostat said the volume of sales rose 0.4% from March, and 2.4% from April 2013. That was the largest year-to-year increase since March 2007, when sales rose 3.0%.

Figures released by Eurostat Wednesday showed consumer spending rose by just 0.1% in the first quarter, and the prolonged weakness of household expenditure has been a major contributor to the weak performance of the euro-zone economy since the 2008 financial crisis.

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High five However, core retail sales declined 0.1% in April following no change in March. January and February were up 1.6% in total. Last 4 months: +1.5% or +4.6% saar.

High five But Markit just released its May Retail PMI for the Eurozone, suggesting that retail sales were weak for a third consecutive month:

Eurozone retail sales were broadly unchanged from the previous month in May, according to the latest PMI® data from Markit. This stagnation at the aggregate level masked contrasting trends across the big-three eurozone nations, however, with a solid drop in sales in Italy countering a notable rise in trade in Germany and a slight uptick in France.

The Markit Eurozone Retail PMI – which tracks month-on-month changes in the value of retail sales – registered at 49.9 in May, broadly in line with the 50.0 mark that separates expansion from contraction and below April’s three-year high of 51.2. When measured on a year-on-year basis, eurozone retail sales were down to the greatest extent for three months, albeit only moderately.

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Pointing up This recent lull could mean troubles in coming months:

Stocks continued to accumulate, however, growing for the sixth straight month partly as a consequence of sales being lower than targeted levels. The gap
between actual sales and plans was indeed the widest since last October. As well as trimming their spending, retailers also parted with more staff during May, extending the current sequence of decline in eurozone retail employment to nine months. The rate of job shedding was little-changed from the modest pace
recorded in the previous month. Only in Germany did retail staffing levels rise since April.

May’s survey meanwhile showed a further easing of the rate of wholesale price inflation faced by eurozone retailers, to the slowest in more than four years. In spite of cost inflation having moderated, however, gross margins again fell sharply and to the greatest extent in four months.

Confused smile Expired Corporate Tax Breaks May Have to Wait Out November Elections

Businesses will likely have to wait until after the November elections to know if there will be a renewal of popular expired business tax breaks, ranging from credits for R&D to deductions for equipment purchases.

A bill to extend the tax breaks failed in May, and on Tuesday Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D., Nev.) said a deal is unlikely before the midterm elections in November, according to a Reuters report.

The bill to extend the tax credits had been approved by the Senate Finance Committee, but Senate Republicans blocked a vote on the bill on the floor.

In recent weeks, the House had moved to renew and make permanent the expired tax breaks, including the research credit and bonus depreciation, which would allow businesses to deduct 50% of many capital purchases up front. However those don’t stand much of a shot in getting through the Senate.

“The House and Senate…can’t even agree on which measures should be renewed, at what levels and for how long,” Corey Boles, a senior analyst at political consultancy group Eurasia Group, said in a note to clients this week.

Though these tax breaks are often retroactively renewed, businesses are already changing their business plans while they wait out the stalemate in Congress.

Previous tax breaks “allowed us to hire three or four more new positions as well as purchase over $1 million worth of equipment,” Dominic Wade, president and owner of Mohawk Fabric Co., told CFO Journal.

While larger businesses can afford to wait out Congress, many smaller businesses like Mohawk don’t have the cash flow.

“I can’t make plans today or six months from now if I don’t know… what the tax code is,” Mr. Wade said.

Berlin paves the way for fracking

Germany is set to lift its ban on fracking as early as next year, after caving in to business demands that it should reduce its dependency on Russian energy and boost competitiveness with US manufacturers.

Applications to carry out the controversial process for extracting the country’s estimated 2.3tn cubic metres shale gas reserves will be subject to an environmental impact assessment under new legislation to be discussed by the cabinet before the summer recess. (…)

Germany’s estimated reserves of shale gas are significantly smaller than those of Poland and France, which have the biggest recoverable reserves in Europe. However, German shale gas, which is concentrated in its northern states, still has the potential to provide a long-term domestic supply. (…)

“Through fracking technology, Germany could obtain more than 35 per cent of its gas consumption from domestic sources,” the BDI statement said. (…)

ELECTRIC CARS
Why Atlanta Is Juiced for Electric Cars

Atlanta has become a surprise success for electric car makers and the reasons—state subsidies and unfettered access to carpool lanes—offer a telling lesson in what it takes to lift demand for the vehicles.

Georgia provides more than $4,000 in income-tax credits on average for an electric-car purchase, cut-rate electricity, employer support of recharging stations and, in Atlanta, access to high-occupancy vehicle lanes in the city’s congested roadways.

Atlanta’s emergence as the No. 2 metropolitan market in the U.S. after San Francisco for electric-vehicle sales, according to researcher IHS Automotive, illustrates how public subsidies remain key to luring buyers away from gasoline-powered vehicles, and the extent to which employers and friends can influence plug-in car sales.

Atlanta recently leapfrogged Seattle to claim the second-highest level of electric vehicle registrations among major U.S. metropolitan areas in the 12 months through March. San Francisco is still No. 1. Cheap electric power helps: Georgia Power Co., the primary utility in Atlanta, offers a plug-in charging, off-peak rate of 1.3 cents per kilowatt-hour. The average cost across the nation is 11.88 cents a kilowatt-hour, says the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

The share of electric cars in Atlanta is small—just 2.15% of registrations—but that is more than five times the national average share of .38%, according to researcher IHS. Atlanta is the only city in the top 14 that isn’t on the West Coast and number 15 is Austin, Texas, which has .47% share of registrations.

“I think it’s because the technology and understanding and how it fits into the lifestyle of people is really starting to resonate,” said Jules Toraya, the Zero Waste manager with the city of Atlanta, which has tried to streamline the process for businesses to install charging equipment. Residents are saying, “when you factor what you pay, and what I am saving, it is essentially a free car.”

(…) Capitol City tells prospective buyers they can lease a Leaf for two years for as low as $199 a month after a $2,499 down payment. Including $1,387 in taxes and other fees, and an estimated $15 a month for electricity, that is $9,022 to drive the car for 24 months. But after factoring in the $5,000 Georgia tax credit, and savings on gasoline, the dealership says driving the Leaf will cost just $28 a month.

Atlanta’s electric car boom also highlights the risk auto makers run when they rely on government policy to support sales.

Georgia spent $943,665 on tax exemptions for 233 residents in 2012, according to the state, the most recent year for which figures were available. Auto makers said last year’s outlays are certain to have grown substantially as volumes jumped. Some Georgia lawmakers, concerned by the rising costs of electric car subsidies, want to phase them out.

“There are times when it makes sense to bootstrap a technology if that is for the greater good. But at some point, where a subsidy on a two-year lease makes it essentially free, I think that is too generous and not good policy,” said Alpharetta, Ga., Rep. Chuck Martin, who proposed the bill to eliminate the tax credit of up to $5,000 a car.

Coca-Cola’s downtown Atlanta headquarters recently doubled to 75 the number of parking spaces available with charging spots. “The idea there is that employees are here eight or nine hours a day. They will get the equivalent of half a tank,” said Eric Ganther, a transportation planner for Coca-Cola.

Coke estimates that more than 100 of its Atlanta employees drive to work in electric cars out of 4,900 workers on campus.

Tim Goudie, who works in marketing at Coca-Cola, says his Leaf cost $320 a month to lease with the credits figured in. Its electricity costs him $20 a month, compared with between $200 and $220 a month in gasoline. Combine that with access to the high-occupancy vehicle lane, and the advantages are strong for an electric vehicle, he said.

Mr. Goudie says a co-worker asked about his Leaf, “and I went through the facts and the figures and the savings and have convinced him to go buy it.”

NEW$ & VIEW$ (4 JUNE 2014)

U.S. Vehicle Sales Surge

Auto buyers were out in force last month, lifting sales of light vehicles to the highest level since July 2006. According to the Autodata Corporation, unit sales of light vehicle sales during May increased 4.6% (8.3% y/y) to 16.77 million (SAAR). The gain recovered a 2.2% April decline and raised sales by 8.9% since December.

Auto purchases improved 6.6% (5.9% y/y) to 8.04 million and nearly matched November’s high of 8.14 million. Sales of domestic autos increased 6.5% (5.7% y/y) to 5.67 million. Sales of imports gained 6.8% (6.2% y/y) to 2.37 million.

Sales of light trucks recovered 2.8% m/m (10.7% y/y) to 8.73 million, raising them to the highest level since April 2007. Imported light truck sales showed notable strength with a 7.8% increase (-2.1% y/y) to 1.06 million. Sales of domestic light truck sales rose a lesser 2.1% (12.8% y/y) to 7.67 million.

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Cars on the road in the US are still pretty old

From FT Alphaville:Chart from the BLS, which adds:

The average age of households’ cars, vans, sport utility vehicles (SUVs), and trucks increased from 10.1 years in 2007 to just over 11.3 years in 2012. Chart 2 shows that the share of newer vehicles (those manufactured less than 5 years earlier than the year shown) dropped by nearly 33 percent from 2007 to 2012 while the share of vehicles 11–20 years old grew by 25 percent over the same timeframe.

In other words, there was a big decline in the share of relatively new cars combined with a big increase in the share of cars very likely to be scrapped soon.

Meanwhile, US light vehicle sales in May climbed at the highest rate in seven years, though such a pace was common throughout the pre-crisis years:

In an earlier post we looked at one of the differences between the auto and housing markets, specifically that credit has flowed much more freely to the former, which is among the several reasons that car sales rebounded more quickly than did single-family homes.

But the two markets also share something in common: favourable cyclical tailwinds amid questionable longer-term secular pressures.

A resumption of household formation growth, so weak in the aftermath of the recession, likely means that the pace of growth in residential investment and construction will be positive for a while, despite the recent worrying pause. But it’s also possible that some of the fall in homeownership since the recession was permanent. If so, and the result is a relatively higher share of people living in apartments, then the amplification effect on the rest of the economy will be weaker than if households were moving into single-family homes.

Similarly, the average age of cars remains high, which means that the pace of car sales shouldn’t fall for a little while, especially given that credit remains so loose in the sector. (Though the growth rate of sales might start to flatten, as Bill McBride notes.) In the longer run, however, American car ownership and driving appears to be declining because of a combination of demographic pressures and shifting preferences, though it is still too early to conclude that this trend won’t reverse.

And the two sectors are linked: as the BLS notes, the rate of vehicle ownership for households in multifamily residences has declined by 6 per cent since 2001, while they have stayed constant for all other households.

U.S. Factory Sector Orders and Inventories Strengthen

large imageNew orders to all manufacturers increased 0.7% (4.9% y/y) during April following a 1.5% March advance, revised from 1.1%. A 0.6% rise was expected in the Action Economics Forecast Survey. The gain reflected a 0.6% rise (7.1% y/y) in durable goods orders, led higher by a 13.2% surge (5.8% y/y) in defense aircraft & parts bookings. Factory sector orders excluding transportation rose 0.5% (3.8% y/y), the weakest gain of the last three months. Orders for nondurable goods (which equal shipments) improved 0.7% (3.0% y/y), making up a 0.5% March decline.

Inventories in the factory sector matched expectations and increased 0.4% (2.8% y/y) after a 0.2% March rise.

In all, new orders have increased 16.5% SAAR in the past 3 months and unfilled orders 8.2%.

Walmart’s ‘Made in USA’ push exposes strains of manufacturing rebirth

When Walmart pledged last year to buy an extra $250 billion in U.S.-made goods over the next decade, it appeared to be just what was needed to help move America’s putative manufacturing renaissance from rhetoric to reality.

But suppliers trying to reshore production as part of the initiative by the world’s largest retailer are running into practical problems as they try to restart long-idled corners of U.S. manufacturing.

Companies that make the leap have to grapple with a host of challenges, including a shallow pool of component suppliers, an inexperienced workforce, and other shortcomings that developed during the country’s long industrial decline. (…)

Cindi Marsiglio, the Walmart vice president overseeing the U.S. sourcing push, says the retailer and its existing suppliers have 150 active reshoring projects in various stages of development. For all too many, she says, finding U.S.-made component parts has emerged as a vexing problem. (…)

The issue is so widespread that Walmart is making it the focus of a two-day summit it is hosting in August in Denver. At a similar summit held in Orlando last year, Walmart focused on connecting suppliers with economic development officers from states hoping to lure the new factories.

The retailer says it is especially interested in having factory owners with excess capacity attend the August event – even those that aren’t interested in supplying Walmart directly. The hope is that they can become contract manufacturers to Walmart suppliers looking to produce in the United States. (…)

The forces pulling production back to the United States are powerful and real and include lower domestic energy prices, increasingly competitive wage rates, the benefits of greater automation, and a renewed appreciation for the value of being able to respond quickly to shifting U.S. customer demands. (…)

Walmart declines to say how many products it has introduced as a result of the 18-month-old Made in USA initiative. But the company says consumers can now buy everything from U.S.-made flat-screen TVs, light bulbs and towels and curtains in its stores and on its website. (…)

INFLATION WATCH

The Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on Wednesday said the annual rate of inflation in its 34-member states rose to 2.0% from 1.6% in March, while in the Group of 20 leading industrial and developing nations it rose for a second straight month, to 2.8% from 2.5%. The G-20 accounts for 90% of global economic activity. (…)

According to the OECD, four of its members experienced a decline in prices over the 12 months to April, all of those being in Europe.

(…) But there are signs that the problem is easing outside the currency area. In both the U.S. and Canada, the annual rate of inflation rose to 2.0% in April from 1.5%, while in the U.K. it rose to 1.8% from 1.6%, and in Japan it surged to 3.4% from 1.6%, although that jump was largely due to a rise in the sales tax.

There were also significant pickups in some large developing economies that have in recent years driven global economic growth, and been the leading source of inflationary pressures. The annual rate of inflation rose in Brazil, Russia, South Africa and India, although it eased in China.

In each month’s ISM Manufacturing and Non-Manufacturing reports, respondents to the survey are asked whether or not they are seeing an increase or decrease in the prices of commodities they deal with. In this month’s survey on the manufacturing sector, there was a notable uptick in the number of commodities that were rising in price.  As mentioned above, respondents noted price increases in 22 different commodities, which was the highest since May 2011 and up from 12 in April.  

While 22 commodities were up in price this month, just four declined.  That works out to a net of 18 commodities rising in price which was also the highest level since May 2011.  The chart below shows the net number of commodities rising in price going back to 1999 on a three month moving average basis.  While the current level is the highest since July 2011, we would note that prior to the financial crisis, these kinds of levels were far from uncommon.  That being said, that was also a period where average year/year CPI was running at a rate that was considerably higher than it is now.

  • Wage inflation?

Don’t see wage inflation? Well, we shall see whether Seattle turns to be a leading indicator because the city council there just unanimously voted in a $15 per hour minimum wage. That is a 60% hike. It will be interesting to see if the price of that Big Mac and grande latte stay where they are (if you’re a Fed dove, not to worry, these don’t affect the ‘core’) — have a look at Seattle Approves $15 Minimum Wage, Setting a New Standard for Big Cities on page A15 of today’s NYT. U.S. consumer spending power is coming back too — Gallup’s survey for May showed that shoppers’ average daily spending jumped $10 to $98 — the highest this has been in six years. (David Rosenberg)

Fed Officials Growing Wary of Market Risk Federal Reserve officials, looking out at mostly calm financial markets, are starting to wonder whether tranquility itself is something to worry about.

(…) “It is a problem of their own making. They can’t have it both ways,” said Martin Barnes, chief economist at BCA Research, an investment-advisory firm. “If they want to sustain zero interest rates and push up asset prices, how can they expect to have that with no excesses and no risk taking?”

Some measures suggest the market has taken the Fed’s assurances further than the central bank intended.

Fed funds futures contracts traded on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange indicate investors expect the Fed’s benchmark federal funds interest rate to average 0.6% in December 2015, up from near zero now. That is notably below the 1% rate that is the median of projections released by Fed officials after their March meeting. Futures markets indicate investors expect a 1.6% fed funds rate in December 2016, below the Fed’s own median projection of 2.25%.

Ms. Yellen gently pushed back on the market’s sense of certitude in a mid-April speech at the Economic Club of New York in which she emphasized the unknown. “It is important to note that tying the response of policy to the economy necessarily makes the future course of the federal funds rate uncertain,” she said.

But risk premiums on bonds haven’t budged since. (…)

China Economic Activity Remained Sluggish, Real Estate Remains Largest Potential Risk

CEBM’s June survey results revealed that economic activity remained sluggish in May. Industries exposed to real estate showed the weakest sales performance this month.

In upstream industries, steel sales remained weak, especially sales going to project construction. Cement demand was sluggish and prices dropped significantly in several regions. In consumer related areas of the economy the overall picture remains underwhelming. The boom in home appliance sales observed in previous months stalled in May. Department stores and restaurants reported weak sales performance, and most respondents claimed sales were weaker-than-expected. As for external demand, container freight shipments exceeded expectations in May, a possible signal of an improving export environment.

Similar to last month, the major headwind to activity was the real estate sector. According to our survey, sales campaigns ramped up in tier 1 and tier 2 cities, but a subsequent short-term rise in sales performance was not observed. Lackluster new home sales displayed a knock-on effect on used home sales transactions. Due to weak sales, expectations from both real estate developers and agencies for trading volume and transaction price have turned pessimistic. Credit pressure in June will also affect the economic recovery. Without sufficient policy easing and stimulus, property sales will continue along a downward trend. In addition, according to our city commercial bank survey, mortgage rates remain high, deterring potential buyers from starting the application process.

VALUATION CHARTS

This Price/Sales chart from Evergreen Capital Management (via Valuewalk) is scary on its own. The problem is that it is on its own. Charts measuring P/S and P/Bk must be accompanied by charts on profit margins and ROEs to be meaningful. Two stocks may sell at 2x sales but if one company’s net margin is 3% and the other one’s is 5%, the latter’s stock can be seen as better value. Similarly, if a stock was selling at 1.5x sales in 2000 when the company’s margins were 3%, what should we think of the stock valuation in 2014 if it then sells at 2x sales but the company’s margins have increased to 4%?

Here’s a set of charts from CPMS (Morningstar), a software I have been using for a long time so I know its database is reliable. Their U.S. data only go back to 1993.

  • This chart plots the P/E (red) and the P/CF of the median CPMS stock universe of over 2000 companies. This larger sample than the S&P 500 Index shows P/E and P/CF ratios near the high end of their historical range (the red dot indicates the P/E based on consensus estimates for 2014).

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The second chart shows that profit (red) and cashflow margins for the same median stock have improved very significantly over the years, supporting higher multiples.

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  • Breaking the CPMS universe in two tiers based on market cap. Tier 1 stocks (largest 1000 caps) appear less expensive…

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…especially when considering the huge increase in profitability since 2004.

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  • Tier 2 stocks look relatively more expensive relative to their history but if profit forecasts are accurate, they look less expensive…

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…also after considering their margin expansion:

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  • Price to Book Value is even more interesting to me because BV is less volatile than sales. Here, one can argue that Tier 1 stocks are on the expensive side: their P/B is at the 2007 peak level and their ROE is lower. The green dot is the ROE if consensus earnings are met in 2014.

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  • Tier 2 stocks are even less appealing on this metric.

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This is really SHOWTIME! for equities and the economy.

This Credit Suisse chart indicates that many investors are boycotting the show!…

…or is it because they have decided to quit gambling altogether?

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Ghost The Average Russell 2000 Stock Is Down 22% From Its Highs

It’s hard to “fully commit” to this rally given “corroded internals,” warns FBN Securities technical analyst JC O’Hara in note. As we previously noted, new highs are extremely negatively divergent from the index strength, as are smarket money flows, but what has O’Hara “very disturbed” is the fact that the average Russell 2000 stock is over 22% below its 52-week highs. As O’Hara notes, investors are ignoring “technical signals that have historically forewarned” of a drop; they’re “jumping onto a plane where only one of the two engines is working. The plane does not necessarily have to crash but the risk of an accident is much higher when the plane is not firing on all cylinders.”

And as we noted previously, the negative divergences are mounting…

Breadth is not at all supportive…

h/t Brad Wishak of NewEdge

“Smart money” Flow is decidedly the wrong way…

Ghost Bears Tap Out: Assets At Bearish Funds Hit Record Low

The last 3 months have seen that sentiment morph into actual positioning as institutional investors have been net sellers of US equities since April leaving assets in bear funds at record lows.

As FBN’s JC O’Hara notes, it’s a sign of capitulation when there’s no one left to bet on a decline… and remember margin has already rolled over… meaning the levered longs are unwinding too…

Charts: dshort.com and FBN