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$ (24 DECEMBER 2015): Merry Christmas

Consumers Keeping Growth Afloat Optimistic consumers are keeping the U.S. economy on track for continued modest growth, despite weakness overseas and a manufacturing slump at home.

(…) Even with healthy consumer spending, however, the U.S. economy seems unlikely to accelerate much beyond its average postrecession growth rate of 2.2% anytime soon as it faces powerful forces like demographic changes and slow productivity growth. (…)

Consumer spending rose 0.3% in November from a month earlier, the Commerce Department said Wednesday, and personal income also rose 0.3%. The personal saving rate last month was 5.5%, ticking down from October but still at its second-highest level since the end of 2012. (…)

Meanwhile, overall inflation remains subdued, with the broad personal consumption expenditures price index rising just 0.4% in November from a year earlier, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. Underlying inflationary pressures appear steady, with prices excluding food and energy rising 1.3% on the year last month.

From Haver Analytics:

Personal consumption expenditures increased 0.3% during November (2.9% y/y) following no change in October, revised from 0.1%. (…) Spending also rose 0.3% (2.5% y/y) in constant dollars as prices remained unchanged. A 1.4% increase (6.3% y/y) in real home furnishing & appliances purchases led last month’s gain as it added to a 0.3% rise. Recreational goods buying was notably strong and rose 1.0% (10.1% y/y) on the heels of a 1.6% jump. Real motor vehicle purchases gained 1.0% (-0.2% y/y), rebounding from a 2.2% fall. Nondurable goods sales also strengthened 0.9% in constant dollars (3.0% y/y) after two months of slight decline. Real purchases at gasoline filling stations were notably firm, rising 1.6% (2.4% y) and rebounding from a 2.1% shortfall. Clothing spending strengthened 1.1% in real terms (2.1% y/y), food & beverage buying also gained 1.1% (1.1% y/y) but “other” purchases improved a lesser 0.5% (5.2% y/y). Real spending on services was little-changed (2.0%) for a second consecutive month. Real health care outlays rose 0.2% (3.6% y/y), the smallest rise since April, but recreation services spending fell 1.1% (-0.0% y/y) after a 0.1% rise.

Personal income improved 0.3% (4.4% y/y) after an unrevised 0.4% increase. A 0.2% rise had been expected. It was powered by a 0.5% gain (4.5% y/y) in wage & salaries which followed a 0.6% rise. Rental income jumped 0.8% (7.2% y/y) for the second straight month. Transfer receipts rose 0.3% (5.2% y/y), driven by a 2.2% jump (13.4% y/y) in payments to veterans. Medicare receipts rose 0.5% (4.3% y/y) for a second month. Jobless insurance benefits recovered 0.9% (0.9% y/y) after declines in three of the prior four months. Proprietors earnings ticked 0.1% higher (2.7% y/y) after two 0.4% increases. Dividend earnings declined 0.8% (+3.2% y/y) while interest earnings fell 0.2% (+3.1% y/y) for the second straight month.

Disposable personal income increased 0.3% (3.9% y/y) after a 0.4% gain. Adjusted for price inflation, take-home pay rose 0.2% (3.5% y/y), the smallest rise since June.

The personal savings rate eased to 5.5% from an unrevised 5.6%. The rate remained nearly the highest since 2012. Personal saving increased 23.3% during the last twelve months.

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Malls Reel as Web Roars With Holiday Shopping

(…) Even as the margin of error to have gifts comfortably arrive before the holiday melted,shoppers chose the Internet over a trip to the mall. Sales at physical stores fell 6.7% over the most recent weekend, while traffic declined 10.4%, according to RetailNext, which collects data through analytics software it provides to retailers. That is worse than the 5.8% decline in sales and the 8% drop in traffic recorded from Nov. 1 through Dec. 14. (…)

Retailers have faced challenges this year that include unusually warm weather that has damped demand for coats, sweaters and other winter gear, as well as a decline in spending by tourists visiting the U.S. as a result of the strong dollar. (…)

Online-only retailers, however, have pulled back on broad promotions in December, according to PwC research. “The leading online-only retailers aren’t playing the big promotion game as much. They are using big data and tailoring personal curated items,” to spur online shoppers to buy, said Steve Barr, retail consultant at PwC.

E-commerce sales rose 11.8% from Nov. 26 through Dec. 20 compared with a year ago, according to ChannelAdvisor Corp., which makes e-commerce software and measures online transactions. Forrester Research Inc. expects e-commerce to account for 14% of retail sales in November and December. (…)

According to RetailNext, shoppers who did trek to stores during the last weekend before Christmas spent more per visit than last year, but the last-minute rush likely won’t make up for what is turning out to be a lackluster season.

Craig Johnson, the president of research firm Customer Growth Partners, estimates total sales are likely up 3.1% so far for the season, less than his prediction for a 3.2% increase. He is holding out hope that retailers can make up lost ground in the week after Christmas, when 10% to 15% of holiday sales occur, according to the National Retail Federation.

And in what could be a rare bright spot for retailers with physical stores, 47% of consumers polled by the NRF said they planned to shop in stores that week, compared with 43% who said they planned to shop online.

U.S. Durable Goods Orders Little Changed in November

Durable goods orders were little changed in November (+1.2%y/y) following a 2.9%m/m jump in October (revised down slightly from the initially reported 3.0%m/m rise). Action Economics’ Forecast Survey had anticipated a 0.7%m/m decline. A swing in orders for nondefense aircraft and parts was the major source of the November slowdown. Nondefense aircraft orders slumped 22.2%m/m in November after having surged 78.7%m/m in October. The timing of the Dubai airshow was likely behind this wide monthly swing in aircraft orders. Excluding orders in the transportation sector, other orders slipped 0.1%m/m (-1.9%y/y) after a 0.5%m/m increase in October. Market expectations looked for an unchanged reading.

Capital goods orders also moderated in November after a good start to the fourth quarter in October. Core capital goods orders (capital goods orders excluding defense and aircraft) slipped 0.4%m/m following a downwardly revised 0.6%m/m increase in October (originally +1.3%m/m). This left these orders up 1.3% AR from the third quarter average. Core capital goods shipments remained tepid in November. They fell 0.5%m/m after a downwardly revised 1.0%m/m fall in October (originally -0.5%m/m). This left these shipments down 4.8% AR from the third quarter average and augurs a weak reading for business equipment spending in the Q4 national accounts.

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Investors Pull Out of Mutual Funds at the Fastest Rate in Two Years

Net redemptions reached $28.6 billion in the week ended Dec. 16, according to a statement from the Investment Company Institute, a trade group. It was the biggest weekly outflow since June 2013, ICI data show.

Some of the redemptions might reflect year-end tax-loss selling, which are sales made for tax purposes, ICI Senior Economist Shelly Antoniewicz said in the statement.

Investors withdrew $11.1 billion from stock funds, $12 billion from bond funds and $5.6 billion from funds that buy a mix of stocks and bonds. Municipal bond funds attracted $647 million, the only category that saw inflows.

Mutual funds have experienced net redemptions every month since July, according to ICI data. In each of the first six months of the year, funds gathered money.

Sad smile A Pessimist’s Guide to the World in 2016

Smile The Optimist Guide to 2016

Sarcastic smile How to Be the Ultimate Contrarian Investor in 2016

NEW$ & VIEW$ (23 DECEMBER 2015): Oil Strategy!

U.S. Existing-Home Sales Plunged in November Sales of previously owned homes plummeted in November as delays caused by new mortgage red-tape and a dwindling supply of residences on the market pushed down sales to a level not seen since April 2014.

Existing-home sales fell 10.5% last month to a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 4.76 million, the National Association of Realtors said Tuesday, well below the 5.32 million economists expected. The double-digit decline was the sharpest since July 2010, when sales took a hit from the expiration of a home-buyer tax credit.

The NAR blamed the lion’s share of the November decline on closing delays caused by new federal rules implemented by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in October, although it said rising home prices and tight inventory continued to challenge potential buyers. (…)

The number of existing homes for sale fell more than 3% on the month in November and was down nearly 2% on the year. (…)

In November, the national median home price rose to $220,300, the 45th consecutive month of gains year over year, and 6.3% higher than the same month last year.

We will get November pending home sales (contracts recorded at the time of sale) next week but October pending sales were +0.2% MoM and +2.1% YoY, thus not pointing to the outsize November decline. Nevertheless, pending sales have been weakening since they peaked in May. Seasonally adjusted, pending sales dropped 4.3% (-13.5% a.r.) between May and September.

Philadelphia Fed Survey; Nonmanufacturing Business Conditions Deteriorate

The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia reported that its Index of Nonmanufacturing Sector Activity at the company level fell to 25.5 in December, the lowest level since August. The reading was well below the year-ago level of 47.5, and the full-year number of 31.5 was down from 39.1 in 2014. These diffusion indexes are not seasonally adjusted.

A lower inventory figure of 0.0 provided the largest drag on December activity. A shorter workweek and fewer capital expenditures also weighed on business.

Offsetting much of this reduction was improvement in new and unfilled orders Revenues and full-time permanent employment also improved along with pricing power.

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Aruoba-Diebold-Scotti Business Conditions Index

The Aruoba-Diebold-Scotti business conditions index is designed to track real business conditions at high frequency. Its underlying (seasonally adjusted) economic indicators (weekly initial jobless claims; monthly payroll employment, industrial production, personal income less transfer payments, manufacturing and trade sales; and quarterly real GDP) blend high- and low-frequency information and stock and flow data.

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Pretty weak readings lately!

Gift with a bow Sad smile Richmond Fed: December Retail Sales Contracting

Service sector activity remained subdued in December, according to the latest survey by the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond. Retail sales contracted for a second consecutive month and shopper traffic dropped. Big-ticket sales fell sharply. Retail inventories were little changed. Revenues rose at a slightly faster pace at other services firms, however.

Service sector employment strengthened further in December, with more hiring than a month earlier and continued increases in average wages.

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Retail sales remained in a slump going into the holidays, with the index dropping to -36 from last month’s reading of -12. Big ticket sales fell in December, pulling the index seven points lower to -32. In addition, shopper traffic declined, reducing the index to -19 from -3.

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If this is a reflection of the entire USA…

EARNINGS WATCH

The S&P 500, down 2.6% so far this month, is on track for its worst December since 2002 and, before that, 1986 in spite of encouraging earnings trends as per Thomson Reuters.

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Alexander Ineichen does great work with his Risk Management Research group. It is unfortunate that his pricing is beyond my means. However, he occasionally graciously sends me some of his work.

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Speaking of China:

  • Dec. 21: Bloomberg reports that “To boost growth, China says fiscal policy must be forceful and monetary policy must be flexible.”
  • Dec. 22: “China will take further steps to support growth, including widening the fiscal deficit and stimulating housing.”
  • Bond yields in China declined to 2.93%, anticipating another rate cut.
Steaming mad U.S. Calls for 256% Tariff on Imports of Steel From China

Corrosion-resistant steel imports from China were sold at unfairly low prices and will be taxed at 256 percent, according to a preliminary finding of the U.S. Department of Commerce. (…)

In November, the government found that all those countries, except Taiwan, subsidized their domestic production by as much as 236 percent of its price.

Tuesday’s tariffs, combined with countervailing duties as high as 236 percent announced on Nov. 3, create a barrier to imports of these steel products from China, said Caitlin Webber, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence in Washington. (…)

OIL STRATEGY
OPEC Predicts Oil-Price Rebound, Supply Cut

In its closely​watched annual World Oil Outlook,​published Wednesday, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries said it expects the price of its basket of crudes to rise to $70 a barrel in 2020 and $95 a barrel in 2040, compared with​$30.74 a barrel on Monday. (…)

The organization’s report suggests the group might have to change tack. It said it expects to cut its own supply to 30.6 million barrels a day in 2019. That​ is more than one million barrels a day lower than its production of 31.7 million barrels a day in November, which was its highest in three years. (…)

The current decline in oil prices is driving up demand for oil,​the report said, forecasting a rise to 97.4 million barrels a day by 2020, compared with an estimated 92.8 million barrels a day this year. But ​OPEC​ added that the impact of lower​crude prices would be mitigated by high taxes on motor oil along with fuel-efficiency measures, notably in China.

On the other hand, technological breakthroughs and a rebound in oil prices mean North American production likely ​will prove resilient despite their high cost.

The OPEC report said oil supply from the U.S. and Canada would reach 19.8 million barrels a day by 2020, an increase of 2.5 million barrels a day over 2014.Even production of U.S. light-tight oil—in ​which hydraulic-fracturing techniques extract crude from shale formations,​ at a cost often higher than $50 a barrel—is expected to rise to 5.2 million barrels a day in 2020 from 4.4 million barrels a day this year, according to the organization.

From the FT we get this call for “the right signals”:

(…) “If the right signals are not forthcoming, there is a possibility that the market could find that there is not enough new capacity and infrastructure in place to meet future rising demand levels, and this would obviously have a knock-on impact on prices,” said Abdalla El-Badri, secretary-general of Opec, in the report. (…)

More good stuff from the Globe & Mail:

Demand for OPEC crude will reach 30.70 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2020, OPEC said, lower than 30.90 million bpd next year. The expected demand from OPEC in 2020 is about 1 million bpd less than it is currently producing. (…)

Nonetheless, the report shows that the medium-term outlook – from OPEC’s point of view as the supplier of a third of the world’s oil – has improved. In the 2014 edition, demand for OPEC crude was expected to fall to 29.0 million bpd by 2020. (…)

In a change of tack from previous reports, OPEC now says many projects work at lower prices too.

“The most prolific zones within some plays can break even at levels below the prices observed in 2015, and are thus likely to see continued production growth,” the report said.

Global tight oil output will reach 5.19 million bpd by 2020, peak at 5.61 million bpd in 2030 and ease to 5.18 million bpd in 2040, the report said, as Argentina and Russia join North America as producers.

Last year’s estimates were 4.50 million bpd by 2020 and 4 million bpd by 2040.

Under another, upside supply scenario, tight oil production could spread to Mexico and China and bring supply to almost 8 million bpd by 2040, OPEC said. As recently as 2013, OPEC assumed tight oil would have no impact outside North America. (…)

Bloomberg concludes (my emphasis):

(…) The 30.7 million barrels of daily output needed from 12 of OPEC’s members in 2020 is about 300,000 a day less than required this year, when it repeatedly pumped above its production target before scrapping the limit altogether earlier this month. The supply total excludes Indonesia, which formally rejoined OPEC on Dec. 4.

OPEC assumes that prices will rise to average $80 a barrel in nominal terms in 2020, and $70.70 in real terms. Last year it had anticipated nominal prices of $110 and real levels of $95.40. That means the value of the group’s output in 2020 would be $218 billion less than estimated a year ago, when it first embarked on the policy to protect market share.

The organization increased its estimate for global oil demand in 2020 by 500,000 barrels a day to 97.4 million a day. By then, fuel consumption in emerging nations will overtake that in the industrialized economies of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, it said.

The group cut forecasts for non-OPEC supply in 2020 by 1 million barrels a day to 60.2 million a day as “market instability” leads to reductions in spending and drilling. Non-OPEC supply will still grow by 2.8 million barrels a day this decade, including 800,000 barrels of additional U.S. shale oil. OPEC said the outlook, which incorporated some data set in the middle of the year, was “clouded by uncertainties.” (…)

I don’t need to do the exact math: OPEC’s output gain: +2-3% thanks to 40-50% price drop…

(…) Gloom has descended on the region amid an oil price rout that has halved the price of crude over 18 months and wiped $360bn off export earnings just this past year. (…)

“2015 has been a difficult year, but this is just the beginning of a multiyear adjustment process: 2016 will be just as tough, and then there is 2017 and 2018,” says Masood Ahmed, the International Monetary Fund director for the Gulf region. “Next year the slowdown is not going to ease up.” (…)

From an overall fiscal surplus of more than 10 per cent of gross domestic product in 2013, the GCC economies have plunged deep into the red. In October, the IMF estimated that the six countries’ overall deficit would be 13 per cent of GDP this year and little changed next year.

Gulf governments are now contemplating the introduction of sale and corporate taxes to produce new, non-oil sources of revenues for state coffers.

Such moves are viewed with suspicion by populations accustomed to government support and are set to usher in a more difficult era for business. (…)

Standard & Poor’s, the rating agency, has estimated a 10–20 per cent slide in Dubai residential prices for 2015. (…)

Cash-strapped governments have been running down deposits in domestic banks to fund their budget deficits and the banker expects liquidity to tighten further as state oil revenues continue their decline. (…)

With some small and medium-sized businesses already closing down because of the rising cost of capital, optimism is hard to come by: almost every sector is affected by the crunch. (…)

FYI: