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)

Invest with smart knowledge and objective odds

NEW$ & VIEW$ (29 OCTOBER 2015): Fed Up? Earnings Up!

Fed Keeps December Rate Hike in Play Officials remove explicit mention of concern at overseas tumult, delivering warning to markets

Federal Reserve officials explicitly said they might raise short-term interest rates in December, pushing back against investors who have bet that the central bank wouldn’t move this year.

The message appeared to have the desired effect. Before the Fed released its policy statement Wednesday, traders in futures markets put about a 1-in-3 probability on a Fed rate increase this year; after the release, that probability rose to almost 1-in-2. (…)

Officials pointed specifically in the policy statement to their Dec. 15-16 meeting as a moment when they might act on rates. Individual officials have signaled before that they expected to move before year-end, but the Fed’s policy-making committee hadn’t previously pointed so explicitly in an official statement to the potential timing of a rate increase. (…)

The Fed said in deciding whether to raise rates “at its next meeting” it would “assess progress—both realized and expected—toward its objectives of maximum employment and 2 percent inflation.”

Having pointed explicitly to the December meeting, the Fed has potentially set itself up for criticism if it doesn’t follow through. (…) Sleepy smile

(…) Divisions within the central bank over whether it should move without good evidence of accelerating inflation and wages are still very real. (…)

“They went out of their way to brace the markets,” said Robert Tipp, chief investment strategist at Prudential Fixed Income. “It was a surprise return to the active, potentially hawkish side from what seemed a pretty cautious posture in the last meeting.” (…)

What U.S. Growth Looks Like Without the Government Spending Slowdown If the government hadn’t pulled back on spending since 2010, the economy would have grown at near a 3% pace.

(…) From 2010 through the first half of 2015, year-over-year economic growth was 0.9 percentage point lower, on average, than it would have otherwise been without the government pullback, according to an analysis of Commerce Department data. (…)

The drag lessened somewhat over the past year to about a 0.5 percentage point. That coincides with a federal budget agreement that blunted the impact of automatic spending cuts known as the sequester. The level of government spending has begun to rise again, but it’s still growing at slower pace than the rest of the economy.

The latest budget proposal, which Congress is considering this week, would boost discretionary federal spending further, by around $80 billion over the next two years. (…)

Japan’s Industrial Production Unexpectedly Rises in September

Output climbed 1 percent from the previous month, exceeding all 32 estimates in a Bloomberg survey, which had a median forecast for a decline of 0.6 percent. Electronic parts, devices and chemicals led the advance last month, in the face of a Chinese slowdown that has undermined Japanese exports. (…)

Production slid 0.9 percent from a year earlier. Companies forecast it would jump 4.1 percent in October from September, before dropping back 0.3 percent in November.

Significant contributors to the output gain in September included electronic parts and integrated circuits used for smartphones and other devices as well as cosmetics. Production of cosmetics increased ahead of sales of new products. (…)

China’s Premier Floats New Five-Year Growth Minimum of Around 6.5%

(…) The nation needs annual growth of at least 6.53 percent in the next five years to meet the government’s goal of establishing a “moderately prosperous society,” Li said in an Oct. 23 speech to Communist Party members, according to people familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified as the remarks weren’t public. (…)

China’s central bank shouldn’t adopt quantitative easing to flood the economy with too much money, Li said, according to the people. (…)

China also faces challenges including disinflation and overcapacity, while companies are facing difficulties in operations, Li said. He said policy makers need to restructure the economy to avoid the middle-income trap and not purely emphasize speed. (…)

Pointing up Li, speaking to the Communist Party Central Committee’s Party School, underscored China’s avowal to avoid cheapening the yuan as a tool to stoke exports. Recent depreciation in the currency has been a “market action,” he said, according to the account. The program to bolster international use of the yuan will continue to advance, he said, while capital flows across borders have brought challenges to monitoring. (…)

The premier said fiscal and financial risks are increasing, and that the stock-market rout suffered earlier this year was caused by leverage, such as a surge in margin financing. Growth cannot return to the days in excess of 10 percent, though it can stay in a reasonable range, Li said. (…)

FT Alphaville adds:

As Deutsche’s Jim Reid said, “We’re not sure whether something was lost in translation that explains why the second decimal is so important but that is a direct quote… While this doesn’t appear to be the new official target of the Chinese government, the comments are a big signal that China’s government look set to lower their growth target when we eventually hear the outcome from the four-day meeting.”

It would also be a well flagged lowering of said growth target (from around 7 per cent) but to be approved anyway as it represents another step towards reality (chart below of various estimates courtesy of Bloomberg) and away from an old model of economic growth which most think needs to be put aside rather quickly.

(Same Li Keqiang at the bottom there, naturally. He of the now less useful, if not abused, index and the very useful wikileaked quote that “All other figures, and especially GDP statistics, were ‘for reference only’, Li told the Ambassador, with a broad smile on his face.”)

Which brings us back to what that GDP target is all about. Obviously, the true growth level matters, in terms of rebalancing in particular, but the GDP fetish, as Justin Fox puts it, isn’t about that. Why target at all if that was the case? And it’s not about employment as poor counting and low connectivity between the two measures appears to demonstrate.

The most rational explanation we’ve come across is that the GDP target is a way to get people moving within a very top-down system – that includes production targets etc so a downshift matters even if it has to be directional due to a form of path dependency built into the number. Which is, basically, why it’s always the direction that matters *shrug*

Or, from JCap’s Anne Stevenson-Yang (again):

A key reform that was much discussed at the 18th Party Plenum involved reducing reliance on GDP targets to motivate the bureaucracy. It was thought internationally that removing GDP growth targets would signal a shift to quality-of-life rather than quantitative measures of value.

In reality, discussion of the GDP target has revolved around eliminating an industrial production target , not eliminating an overall target. That is because government planners correctly anticipated in the last FYP period that industrial production was peaking and could not grow further. Targets for agriculture and for service industry growth were accordingly raised. In the event, too much of China’s GDP is dependent on manufacturing and so governments moderated their ambitions: some have eliminated industrial production targets within “redlined” en- vironmentally sensitive areas. Some have issued ambitious agricultural targets and de-emphasized manufacturing. But without a GDP target the government would lack a key organizational tool: how else to reach across such vast expanses of territory and motivate bureaucrats across the kingdom?

China Abandons Three-Decade-Old One-Child Policy to Lift Growth

The party’s decision-making Central Committee approved plans to allow all couples in China to have two children, the official Xinhua News Agency said Thursday at the end of a four-day party gathering in Beijing.

Oil majors rush cuts to hit $60 break-even Shell’s decision to axe a Canadian project shows extent of the downturn

(…) Unusually — and in contrast to the $200bn-plus of future spending shelved by energy companies since last year’s crude price collapse — work on Carmon Creek was well under way. This was no flight of fancy. Shell had already taken the decision to invest: it was clearing the site, procuring major equipment, building accommodation for staff, and starting work on wells.

Its late move to down tools, says Anish Kapadia of energy investment bank Tudor Pickering Holt, shows how companies “are getting yet more aggressive on capex cuts and return expectations” — and suggests Shell is “moving towards the ‘lower for longer’ camp” on oil prices.

(…) any new project requiring an oil price of more than $60 a barrel — almost 50 per cent below last year’s peak — is now either being scrapped or deferred until industry costs have come down sufficiently.

Hence BP’s decision to delay its Mad Dog 2 project in the Mexican Gulf. Along with French oil major Total, the UK-based energy group has pledged to balance its books on $60 oil, aiming to cover its dividend from cash flow by 2017. Norway’s Statoil also says the “break-even” price for its Johan Castberg project in the Arctic, awaiting a green light, is now $60 a barrel.

Does this mean, then, that $60 is the new long-term oil price? Not necessarily. Big oil companies appear to have as little idea as anyone what the price of Brent crude will be this time next year — let alone five or 10 years’ time. (…)

Nevertheless, there are reasons why $60 is, for now, a sensible assumption. Although higher than the current spot price of $48, it is the price where investors believe oil will be in two years from now. Futures markets point not to a fall, but to a slow, drawn out recovery for Brent crude. And $60 is the price at which analysts believe much remaining US shale oil and gas — up to 10m barrels a day of peak production, according to Goldman Sachs — could be economic. (…)

Russia Oil Production Poised for Record as Industry Defies Slump

Production of crude and a light oil called condensate is on track to reach 10.77 million barrels a day in October, topping the previous month’s revised figure and setting a record for the second month running, according to Bloomberg estimates based on Energy Ministry data.

Russian production has withstood a collapse in oil prices amid a global supply glut, while output in the U.S. has fallen about 5 percent from its June peak. Oil-extraction and export tax rates shrink in Russia at lower prices, giving companies a buffer against the slump, while the weaker ruble has reduced costs.

“Russian oil companies are insulated from oil price corrections,” said Artem Konchin, an oil and gas analyst at Otkritie Capital in Moscow. “Through the tax framework, the government took the brunt of the blow, just as it used to take most of the windfall profits. The rest of the story is in the ruble depreciation.” (…)

Output from January to October averaged about 10.7 million barrels a day, a 1.3 percent increase over the same period in 2014, the data show. That’s in line with the Russian Energy Ministry’s full-year forecast for production of 533 million tons, or 10.7 million barrels a day. (…)

Also consider that oil exports are Russia’s sole major source  of dollars.

EARNINGS WATCH

Almost two-thirds of the way and it just keeps getting better!

  • 267 companies (64.4% of the S&P 500’s market cap) have reported. Earnings are beating by 4.4% (4.3% yesterday) while revenues have met expectations (missed by 0.4% yesterday).
  • The beat rate is 70% on EPS, 74% ex-Financials. Revenue beat rate is 36%.
  • Expectations are for a decline in revenue, earnings, and EPS of -3.8%, -3.1%, and -2.0% (-2.3% yesterday). EPS growth is on pace for -0.4% –0.5% yesterday, –0.9% two days ago), assuming the current beat rate for the remainder of the season. This would be 7.2% excluding Energy (7.1% yesterday, +6.6% Tuesday and +4.5% last week). (RBC Capital)

In effect, Thomson Reuters’ tally now shows Q3 EPS at $29.46, up 1.7% from $28.97 two weeks ago. Trailing 12-m EPS would thus reach $118.70.

At 2090, the S&P 500 Index is up 11.2% from its Sep. 29 low when I first upgraded (essentially on valuation) and 7.2% since the second upgrade on Oct. 5 (adding my expectations of a good earnings season).

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The Rule of 20 P/E is now 19.5 and “fair value” of 2148 only 2.8% above current levels. The risk/reward ratio is once again dangerously unbalanced which requires a re-assessment currently underway.

Importantly, the S&P 500 Index has closed above it 200-d m.a. which is back on a rising trend…Fingers crossed

This looks like the Oct. 2014 snap back although the Russell 2000 has been lagging, so far…

Punk Same day headlines! All serious media!

Crying face From the same media, same morning!

Sarcastic smile Who has ever heard of the Mendoza Line?

If stocks fall below the ‘Mendoza line,’ watch out!

(…) Similarly, the 2,000 level on the S&P is where market participants will change their minds about stocks, determining that they are in bad shape — which threatens to become a self-fulfilling prophesy that will lead to the actual acceleration of losses, said Streible.

“That is the level we keep testing,” he said in a Tuesday “Trading Nation” segment. “If we come back below 2,000, the market should continue going lower.”

Busy? Don’t even bother reading the whole article. Really not worth it, except to show that silliness is totally back.

NEW$ & VIEW$ (28 OCTOBER 2015): Housing and Millenials; Good Earnings Season.

U.S. Durable Goods Orders Decline Is Broad-Based

New orders for durable goods fell 1.2% during September (-3.0% y/y) following a 3.0% August drop, revised from -2.0%. Expectations had been for a 1.0% decline in the Action Economics Forecast Survey. During the last ten years, there has been an 88% correlation between the y/y change in durable goods orders and the change in real GDP. Weakness in durable goods bookings was pervasive during both Q3 and Q2.

Last month’s decline was paced by a 7.6% drop (-13.2% y/y) in orders for nondefense capital goods. A 35.7% drop (-37.2% y/y) in aircraft & parts led the decline. Nondefense capital goods orders excluding aircraft & parts eased 0.3% (-7.3% y/y) after a 1.6% shortfall. Elsewhere in the transportation sector, motor vehicle & parts orders increased 1.8% (13.1% y/y). Overall orders excluding the transportation sector eased 0.4% (-5.3% y/y). They improved 0.2% during all of last quarter after a 0.6% dip in Q2. (…)

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Call me Here’s What Companies Are Saying About Wage Growth in Their Earnings Calls
HOUSING AND MILLENIALS

(…) The seasonally adjusted homeownership rate remained at 63.5% in the third quarter, according to estimates published by the Commerce Department on Tuesday, unchanged from the quarter earlier.

The number of homeowner households increased by 123,000 in the third quarter from a year earlier, while the number of renter households increased by 1.3 million. (…)

The numbers underscore a worrying trend, according to economists, as the housing market is strengthening but leaving many renter households behind. Home prices grew 4.7% in the year ended in August, according to a report released Tuesday by S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index.

But while strong price growth is good news for current homeowners, because prices are growing more quickly than incomes it is making it difficult for renter households to afford homes. A lack new home buyers making the transition from renting poses a long-term challenge to the strength of the housing market.

The vacancy rate for rental housing rose to 7.3% from 6.8% in the second quarter. It was still slightly lower than 7.4% the same time last year. (…)

The real problem is new house prices which jumped by nearly $100k or 40% since 2011. Builders need to address the lower end segment.

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Employers say they plan to hire 11% more fresh college graduates for U.S. jobs this year than last, according to a survey of 201 employers from the National Association of Colleges and Employers, which tracks college hiring.

Those projections align with a recent Michigan State University survey of more than 4,700 employers that projected a 15% increase in hiring for new graduates across all degree programs, including associate’s, bachelor’s, master’s, doctorate and professional degrees. The strong outlook reflects an economy on the rebound from the recession, the report said.

The new NACE report also dovetails with a recent study from Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce, which found that job growth since the recession has been led by high-wage occupations, many of which require bachelor’s degrees.

The NACE numbers suggest prospects for the class of 2016 could surpass those of this past summer’s graduates, who entered one of the best hiring marketsin recent memory. A majority of employers told NACE last spring that they planned to increase hires from the class of 2015, posting an average of 148 openings, up nearly 50% from the previous year. Pay for new grads has been on a rising trend, too, with average starting salaries for 2015 grads reaching $50,651, up 5.2% from 2014.

Employers have a positive view of the college-hiring market overall, NACE found. This year, 42% of respondents characterized the job market for class of 2016 as “very good” or “excellent,” according to NACE. That’s up from two years ago, when 18% characterized it that way, NACE said. (…)

Five million more Americans can join a program to lower student-debt bills, part of a broad campaign by the Obama administration that has provided relief for some households but done little to reduce underlying college costs.

Under rules effective Tuesday, any American who borrowed directly from the federal government for college or graduate school can enroll in a program called Pay As You Earn. The program—previously open to only newer borrowers—sets the monthly payment at 10% of a borrower’s discretionary income, defined as adjusted gross income minus 150% of the federal poverty level.

Monthly payments typically drop by hundreds of dollars under the program but extend beyond the standard 10 years—to a maximum 20 years for those with undergraduate loans and 25 years for those with graduate loans. Any remaining balances at that point are forgiven. (…)

The expanded program will cost an estimated $15.4 billion over 10 years. (…)

More than 1 in 5 Americans with student loans—excluding those still in school—are at least three months behind on a payment, Federal Reserve Bank of New York figures show. About 7 million had gone at least a year without making a payment as of July, Education Department data show. (…)

Among the 69% of last year’s college seniors who owed student loans, the average debt burden upon graduation was $28,950, 2% higher than the previous class, the group said. (…)

(…) According to a new survey by Bank of America and USA Today, millennials ages 18 to 34 say they have a clear understanding of their financial situation and 44% are prepared for a rainy day, with three months of living expenses saved up. But 75% say they worry about their finances “often” or at least “sometimes,” with 39% saying they are “chronically stressed” about money. (…)

The bad news is that according to the BofA survey, the top financial priorities of Millennials are the following:

  • 70% said being debt-free was a top priority
  • 63% said having an emergency savings fund was a top priority
  • 62% said spending less than they earn was a top priority

(…) In a separate survey conducted by BlackRock, WSJ reports that the Millennial generation is not only likely to be frugal, it is almost certainly not going to be investing in the so-called HFT-rigged, Fed-manipulated casino known as the “market.”

Nearly four in 10 people surveyed said they want to make sure they have enough cash saved as a security blanket for an emergency before they save for retirement. And the vast majority said they find it difficult to keep up with bills and save for retirement at the same time.

That squares with other recent data from U.S. Financial Diaries, a project of the New York University Financial Access Initiative and Center for Financial Services Innovation, which found many households are saving regularly for small, short-term emergencies, such as an unexpected dip in income or a spike in expenses. But those emergencies happen so often it prevents them from building up larger amounts to put toward long-term goals.

More than a third of respondents in the BlackRock survey also said investing money felt risky, and they were afraid of losing money–even though only 7% said they had actually lost money on a past investment. And a full 72% said they did not see investing as a way to help them reach their financial goals.

Pointing up The punchline: nearly half of people ages 25 to 34 agreed that “what you might earn investing isn’t worth the risk of losing your money,” the most of any other generation.

Two out of three agreed that “investing is like gambling.” And despite having decades to save for retirement, 70% of their portfolios are in cash or cashlike investments, according to BlackRock. (…)

There Are Hardly Any One-Bedroom Rentals for Less Than $2,000 in San Fran and NY
China Steel Demand Slumps at ‘Unprecedented Speed’

Demand is collapsing along with prices, banks are tightening lending and losses are stacking up, the deputy head of the China Iron & Steel Association said on Wednesday.

“Production cuts are slower than the contraction in demand, therefore oversupply is worsening,” said Zhu at a quarterly briefing in Beijing by the main producers’ group. “Although China has cut interest rates many times recently, steel mills said their funding costs have actually gone up.”

China’s mills — which produce about half of worldwide output — are battling against oversupply and sinking prices as local consumption shrinks for the first time in a generation amid a property-led slowdown.(…)

“China’s steel demand evaporated at unprecedented speed as the nation’s economic growth slowed,” Zhu said. “As demand quickly contracted, steel mills are lowering prices in competition to get contracts.” (…)

Steel demand in China shrank 8.7 percent in September on-year, it said. (…)

Crude steel output in the country fell 2.1 percent to 608.9 million tons in the first nine months of this year, while exports jumped 27 percent to 83.1 million tons, official data show. Steel rebar futures in Shanghai sank to a record on Wednesday as local iron ore prices fell to a three-month low. (…)

(…) Prices will probably average $45 a metric ton next year and in 2017, said Carol Cowan, Moody’s senior vice president in New York. So far this year, they have averaged about $58. The glut may expand as the majors boost low-cost output and Gina Rinehart’s Roy Hill mine in Australia begins shipments, Cowan said in an interview on Tuesday. (…)

“New supplies continue to come on, certainly through this year and then to 2016.” (…)

Faltering demand and slumping prices won’t prevent the largest iron ore producers from expanding because they’re low cost, Cowan said. Some less-efficient competitors in China and elsewhere can also tolerate lower prices for longer as weaker producers’ currencies combine with cheaper energy prices to cut mining costs, she said.

“That gives a little bit more breathing room, if you will, to some higher-cost production that would otherwise come out,” Cowan said. “Our expectations are certainly the big ones are not going to pull back production. The question is whether iron ore producers in China, which are probably higher cost, cut production, by how much and when.”

Japan’s retail sales fall piles pressure on BOJ

This is CNBC’s headline which is similar to most other media reports I have seen this morning

Retail sales fell 0.2 percent in September from a year earlier, compared with economists’ median estimate for a 0.4 percent rise, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry said on Wednesday.

The decline, which followed five straight months of gains, was largely due to sluggish demand for cars and fuel, according to the data.

This is the WSJ headline today: Japanese Retail Sales Fall Unexpectedly. And the full article is behind a new paywall!

Pointing up But here’s the reality:

On a seasonally adjusted basis, retail sales rose 0.7 percent in September from the previous month.

Only Reuters seems to read the stats correctly:

Retail sales fell 0.2 percent in September from a year earlier but rose 0.7 percent from the previous month after flat growth in August, data from the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry showed on Wednesday.

On a quarterly basis, retail sales increased 1.8 percent in July-September after a feeble 0.2 percent gain in April-June, a sign household spending was emerging from the doldrums.

EARNINGS WATCH

More than half way and results are pretty good so far.

  • 226 companies (58.3% of the S&P 500’s market cap) have reported. Earnings are beating by 4.3% (best so far this season) while revenues have missed by -0.4%.
  • The beat rate for EPS is 69% (73% ex-Financials). The revenue beat rate is 34%
  • Expectations are for a decline in revenue, earnings, and EPS of -4.0%, -3.4%, and -2.3% (-3.0% yesterday). EPS growth is on pace for -0.5% (-0.9% yesterday), assuming the current beat rate for the remainder of the season. This would be 7.1% excluding Energy (+6.6% yesterday and +4.5% last week).
HSBC: The Fed’s Dot Plot Is Destructively Deceptive Lies, damned lies and dot plots.

The Federal Reserve’s economic forecasts and much discussed dot plot might be a source of more confusion than clarity, according to HSBC Strategist Lawrence Dyer.

The central bank’s Summary of Economic Projections haven’t proven too accurate — but that’s not the primary basis of his gripe. Rather, Dyer has a more fundamental qualm with the assumptions underlying the construction of the numbers as well as how they are interpreted and reported.

“Mark Twain’s description of the three types of lies may be of use to bond investors looking to interpret the FOMC’s rate guidance – statistics can deceive,” quipped the strategist. (…)