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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CHINA SERVICES PMI ALSO STRENGTHENS

Caixin China Composite PMI™ data (which covers both manufacturing and services) indicated the fastest expansion in Chinese business activity since early 2013 during October. This was shown by the Composite Output Index rising from 51.4 in September to 52.9 at the start of the fourth quarter.

October survey data indicated that activity growth was predominantly supported by stronger growth in manufacturing output, though services activity growth also picked up from the previous month. Furthermore, goods producers registered the quickest expansion in production since early 2011. Business activity at services companies meanwhile rose at a moderate pace that was the fastest for four months. This was illustrated by the seasonally adjusted Caixin China General Services Business Activity Index rising from 52.0 to 52.4 in October.

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Total new order growth also strengthened at the beginning of the fourth quarter, with both sectors reporting an improvement in underlying market conditions and a subsequent rise in customer demand. Manufacturers saw the fastest expansion in new order books for just over two years in October. Services providers saw a rate of new business growth that, though modest, was the quickest seen since June. The marked upturn at manufacturers and faster increase at service providers led composite new orders to increase at the strongest pace since November 2014.

Chinese manufacturers continued to cut their staff numbers during October, though the rate of reduction was the weakest since May 2015. Meanwhile, services companies expanded their payrolls for the second month in a row, with the rate of growth edging up to its strongest since January. Firms that hired additional workers generally commented on business expansion plans and expectations of future activity growth. Overall, Chinese employment declined at a marginal pace that was the slowest in the current 17-month sequence of job shedding.

The amount of unfinished work increased across both manufacturing companies and service providers during October, with panellists across both sectors linking the rise to increased new order intakes which exerted pressure on capacity. Goods producers saw a moderate increase in outstanding business overall. Meanwhile, it was the first increase in backlogs at services companies since May, albeit at a marginal pace. At the composite level, unfinished work rose at a pace that, though modest, was the fastest since March 2011.

Manufacturing companies reported the sharpest rate of input cost inflation since September 2011 in October amid reports of greater costs for raw materials. At the same time, input prices rose at a moderate pace across services companies. The much faster increase in costs for goods producers was the main factor leading composite input prices to rise at a solid pace that was the strongest in just over five years.

Selling prices for manufactured goods increased at the fastest rate since February 2011, which a number of panellists attributed to the passing on of higher input costs to clients. Prices charged for Chinese services was meanwhile little-changed from the previous month, with some companies mentioning that increased competitive pressures had limited their pricing power. Nonetheless, the marked rise in prices set by goods producers led composite output charges to increase at the quickest pace since April 2011.

Service providers remained generally positive that business activity would increase over the next year. Furthermore, the level of confidence improved to its second-strongest in eight months. Anecdotal evidence suggested that improving economic conditions, forecasts of an expanding market sector and new project developments could all boost activity.

THE DAILY EDGE (2 November 2016)

U.S. Light Vehicle Sales Reach New High

Total sales of light vehicles during October increased 3.0% (0.6% y/y) to 18.29 million units (SAAR), and added to September’s 4.5% gain. The latest level was the strongest since July 2005.

Pacing the increase was a 4.9% rise (7.4% y/y) in sales of light trucks to 11.02 million units after a 2.9% gain. Sales of imported light trucks increased 5.6% (10.3% y/y) to 1.76 million units following a 2.0% decline. Domestic light truck sales gained 4.7% (6.9% y/y) to 9.27 million units after a 3.8% rise. Truck sales increased m/m to 60.2% of the light vehicle market, up from 55.6% during all of last year.

Auto sales nudged 0.3% higher to 7.27 million units (-8.2% y/y) following a 6.9% jump. Imported car sales rose 0.8% (-6.8% y/y) to 1.96 million units, adding to September’s 4.4% improvement. Domestic car sales gained 0.1% (-8.7% y/y) to 5.31 million units, following the prior month’s 7.9% jump.

Imports share of the light vehicle market of 20.3% compared to 19.8% during all of last year. Imports share of the passenger car market of 27.0% compared to 27.1% during all of 2015. Imports share of the light truck market rose to 15.9% from 14.0% last year, though that was lower than the 17.5% peak in May.

Wow! 18.3 million annual rate! But Ward’s puts the total at 17.9 million as Ford’s sales had to be estimated because a fire at their headquarter delayed the release of their number. Whatever, there has been a nice recovery since the March low. A new upward trend or still plateauing? First ten months sales are up marginally. (Charts from CalculatedRisk)

Light trucks sales are particularly strong at 9.3 million, likely reflecting the renewed strength in manufacturing as yesterday’s PMI surveys revealed.

(…) Repossessions in the US hit 1.6m in 2015, the third highest level on record for data going back 20 years, falling short of the 1.8m and 1.9m peaks seen in 2008 and 2009, respectively.

That number is predicted to rise to 1.7m this year, according to Tom Webb, chief economist at Cox’s Automotive. (…)

A year ago most of the cars that Mr Neglia repossessed were from fraudulent schemes — people renting cars under a fake name and not returning them, for example. Today, he sees a larger number of individuals simply unable to repay on their loans. (…)

But so far, the risks have not turned to reality in the ABS market. Wells Fargo notes in a recent report that there have been 435 ratings upgrades across the subprime auto sector this year, and no downgrades. Borrowing costs for issuers across the subprime spectrum have also reduced through 2016 as investors continue to clamour for the relatively high returns offered by the products. (…)

U.S. Construction Activity Declines Again

(…) The value of construction put-in-place fell 0.4% (-0.2% y/y) during September following a 0.5% August dip, revised from -0.7%. The value of construction spending has been moving sideways since the middle of last year, following strong gains from 2012 through 2015. (…)

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EARNINGS WATCH
  • 346 companies (76.7% of the S&P 500’s market cap) have reported. Earnings are beating by 5.9% while revenues are meeting expectations.
  • Expectations are for revenue, earnings, and EPS growth of 2.3%, 1.4%, and 3.5%, respectively.
  • EPS is on pace for +4.9%, assuming the current beat rate for the remainder of the season. This would be +8.4% excluding Energy.

This is from RBC Capital. Thomson Reuters’ tally says EPS will rise 3.2%. Forecasts for Q4 are being trimmed almost daily. TR now sees Q4 EPS up 7.1%, down from +8.3% on Oct. 1.

Still, trailing EP are rising, reaching $116.93 yesterday (per TR), up 0.9% from Sep. 30. The Rule of 20 P/E is back to its 20.0 fair value level.

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BofA Institutional Clients Sell Stocks For A Record 21 Straight Weeks Due To Soaring Redemptions

(…) According to BofA, last week, during which the S&P 500 fell 0.7%, BofAML clients were net sellers of US equities for the third consecutive week (-$0.9bn vs. -$0.4bn the prior week). Of these, institutional clients continued to lead the selling; this group has now sold US stocks for the last 21 weeks.

The reason for the relentless selling? They have no choice, as they continue to be bombarded with redemption requests by clients who can’t wait to shift from active to passive – and much cheaper – funds:

Record outflows this year from active funds—a large sub-set of the institutional client grouping—have likely been a big contributor here. (Meanwhile, passive funds have seen slowing but continued inflows this year, and we’ve seen a similar trend in BofAML clients’ purchases of ETFs—see Table 1). Hedge funds also sold stocks (for the second consecutive week), while private clients were small net sellers after three weeks of buying. Clients continued to sell both large and small caps but buy mid-caps, which are the most expensive size segment. Buybacks by corporate clients slowed slightly vs. the prior week, and month-to-date are tracking the lowest of any Oct. since 2010.

(…) Finally, putting the “smart money” selling in context, both YTD and since the start of the Second Great Depression, it almost seems like “greater fool” retail investors are still deserpately needed for the final paper-to-cash handoff.

So, the so-called “smart money” is selling but not for the smartest reasons.

Clinton Narrowly Leads Trump With Independents in New Bloomberg Poll
Face reality: Facebook’s controversies

The social-networking giant is expected to announce strong growth in its quarterly profits and sales today. Its advertising business has been on a winning streak, and its share price has risen by more than a quarter this year. Facebook now controls more than 13% of the worldwide digital-ad business (second only to Google, with 32%). But it has been dogged by a succession of controversies. In September the firm revealed that it had been overstating how much time people spent watching videos on its properties. Its policing of inappropriate content was ridiculed when one of photojournalism’s most famous shots—a naked young napalm victim from the Vietnam War—was removed. And it came under fire after revelations that advertisers can choose to exclude certain racial groups from targeted messages. All this attention just serves as a distraction for executives who are trying to build a business that will ultimately rival Google in size. (The Economist)

Fascinating that FB and GOOG together control 45% of the digital ad market.