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

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THE DAILY EDGE (22 February 2017)

SYNCHRONIZED ACCELERATION?

At 54.3 in February, the Markit Composite PMI Output Index dropped from 55.8 in January, according to the flash estimate. The latest reading signalled that private sector output growth moderated from the 14-month high recorded at the start of 2017 but still indicates a solid pace of economic growth overall.

Taken together, the PMI readings for the first two months of the year suggest that the GDP should rise by 2.5% in the first quarter, assuming no further change in momentum is seen in March.

However, latest survey data indicated that business optimism dipped to its lowest since September 2016, which suggests companies have become more cautious about spending, investing and hiring. A drop in new business growth to a five-month low adds to the risk that the upturn could slacken further in March.

The drop in the flash February PMI was caused by a broad-based weakening of business activity growth. The services ‘flash’ index fell to 53.9 from 55.6 in January, while the manufacturing ‘flash’ output index dipped to 55.7 from 56.7.

Manufacturing continued to be restrained by subdued exports, which once again barely rose in February. Producers blamed the strong dollar as a main cause of poor foreign sales, leaving domestic demand as the key source of new orders.

The survey’s employment index fell to a three-month low, though continued to run at a level broadly indicative of a respectable 165,000 jobs being added to the economy in February.

Although manufacturing hiring was sustained at the same pace seen in January, albeit down from December’s 18-month high, the rate of service sector job creation slipped for a second month running.

The February survey also found inflationary pressures to have subsided for a second successive month. Firms’ average input prices and average selling prices both rose at the slowest rates for three months, with the latter showing an especially modest increase.

The slower growth of companies’ costs suggests that there’s some scope for consumer price inflation to moderate from the 2.5% annual rate of increase seen in January.

Pointing up Manufacturers signalled that input cost inflation was at its highest level since September 2014. This was linked to increased prices for a range of raw materials, particularly metals and oil related inputs. However, factory gate price inflation was only marginal and slipped to a three-month low in February, thereby suggesting a continued squeeze on operating margins.

Via CalculatedRisk:

The Chemical Activity Barometer (CAB), a leading economic indicator created by the American Chemistry Council (ACC), posted a strong gain in February of 0.4 percent, following a similar 0.4 percent gain in January. This follows a steady 0.3 percent gain every month during the third quarter of 2016. All data is measured on a three-month moving average (3MMA). Accounting for adjustments, the CAB is now up 5.0 percent over this time last year, marking its strongest year-over-year performance since September 2010.

In February all of the four core categories for the CAB improved, with the diffusion index strengthening to 71 percent. Production-related indicators were positive, with the housing report indicating slipping starts, but improving permits. This was coupled with an improvement in U.S. exports. Equity prices also improved at a robust pace, reflecting an improvement in consumer and business confidence. Overall the barometer continues to hint at gains in U.S. business activity through the third quarter.

Applying the CAB back to 1912, it has been shown to provide a lead of two to fourteen months, with an average lead of eight months at cycle peaks as determined by the National Bureau of Economic Research. The median lead was also eight months. (…)

The Markit Eurozone PMI registered 56.0 in February according to the preliminary ‘flash’ estimate. Up from 54.4 in January, the latest reading was the highest since April 2011.

The rise in the flash PMI means that GDP growth of 0.6% could be seen in the first quarter if this pace of expansion is sustained into March.

Growth accelerated in both manufacturing and services to rates not seen since early-2011, with the goods-producing sector again enjoying the faster rate of expansion, aided by exports being boosted by the weaker euro.

Pointing up February saw the largest monthly rise in employment since August 2007 as rising sales encouraged hiring. Service sector jobs were created at a rate not seen for nine years and factory headcounts showed the second-largest rise in almost six years.

Firms’ appetite to hire was also buoyed by improved confidence about the outlook. Business expectations about activity levels in a year’s time rose to the highest since comparable data were first available in July 2012.

The survey therefore indicates that companies are currently firmly-focused on expanding in the face of rising sales and fuller order books.

The big surprise was France, where the PMI inched above that of Germany for the first time since August 2012. Both countries look to be growing at rates equivalent to 0.6-0.7% in the first quarter.

France’s revival represents a much-needed broadening out of the region’s recovery and bodes well for the eurozone’s upturn to become more self-sustaining.

Inflationary pressures meanwhile continued to intensify. Firms’ average input costs rose in February at the steepest rate since May 2011, with rates accelerating in both services and manufacturing. The latter once again recorded the steeper rise, linked to higher global commodity prices, the weak euro and suppliers regaining some pricing power amid stronger demand.

Suppliers’ delivery times, a key indicator of supply chain capacity constraints and pricing power, signalled that delivery delays were the most widespread since June 2011.

An index based on the combination of input costs and suppliers’ delivery times provides a useful gauge of price pressures, and tends to move ahead of core inflation. This gauge is now at its highest since May 2011.

The ECB will be cheered by the signs of stronger growth and further upturn in price pressures. Only in 2004 and 2010 have we seen the combination of such robust growth and rising price pressures without the ECB tightening policy (see charts). However, policymakers will no doubt remain concerned that elections and Brexit could disrupt the business environment this year. No change in policy therefore looks likely until at least after the German elections in September.

ECB policy and PMI business activity

ECB policy and PMI price pressures

* Based on input prices and supplier delivery times indices  Sources for charts: IHS Markit, Eurostat.

  

More from Markit:

February also saw the largest overall increase in new business since April 2011. Inflows of new work grew at the strongest rates for almost six years in both manufacturing and services, reflecting a broad-based upturn in demand. Manufacturers’ order books again received an extra boost from rising exports, which also swelled to the greatest extent since April 2011 due to the combination of rising demand and the weaker euro.

Stronger influxes of new work meant backlogs of work accumulated at a rate not seen since May 2011, suggesting firms in both sectors lacked capacity to cater for current demand.

Average selling prices for goods and services also rose as firms passed higher costs onto customers. However, although rising at the steepest rate since July 2011, the rate of inflation remained muted compared to that seen for input costs, suggesting margins remained under pressure.

French firms continued to report falling selling prices while German output prices showed the
largest monthly increase since June 2011.

And yet:

  • Japanese manufacturing output growth accelerates
  • imageFlash Japan Manufacturing PMI™ at 35-month high of 53.5 in February (52.7 in January).
  • Flash Manufacturing Output Index at 54.3 (53.2 in January). Sharpest rate of growth for three years.
  • Record-high business confidence at Japanese manufacturers.

Japan’s manufacturing engine shifted into a higher gear during February, as faster increases in output, new business and employment were reported. Subsequently, business confidence was at a survey-high, with goods producers buoyed by the strongest upturn in the sector for 35 months.

Encouragingly, with backlogs of work accumulating for the first time in 14 months, the added pressures on capacity should ensure growth will be maintained at a solid pace during at least the first half of this year.

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Office Landlords Struggle to Raise Rents

(…) Green Street Advisors, of Newport Beach, Calif., has revised its projections for rent increases through 2020 to about 3% annually from 4% annually.

The firm said that rent increases in 2016 also were less than expected. (…)

Last year, for example, new supply equaled 1.2% of the total U.S. office space, compared with 0.3% in 2012, according to Green Street. Between this year and 2021, new supply is expected to equal 7.6% of total space, the firm said.

Meanwhile, job growth is slowing in some markets. In New York, office jobs grew by 21,700 in 2016 compared with 44,900 in 2015, according to the city’s Office of Management and Budget. The agency is projecting job growth of 1.3% and 0.9% in 2017 and 2018 respectively.

In Silicon Valley, vacancy is growing in some markets partly due to merger-and-acquisition activity, according to Phil Mahoney, vice chairman of Newmark Cornish & Carey, a real-estate services firm. (…) “We have over 1 million square feet of sublease space in Santa Clara,” Mr. Mahoney said. “We really haven’t seen that much in this whole cycle.” (…)

Why Trump’s Immigration Crackdown Could Sink U.S. Home Prices
The Inevitable Turn in World’s Most Important Property Market

(…) Prices for new homes edged up 0.2% in January from the previous month, the slowest growth in more than a year, according to the country’s statistics bureau. Average prices in the biggest cities—including Shanghai and Shenzhen, which kicked off the rally in 2015—had basically stopped going up. (…)

And while the bubble may not be getting bigger, the problems haven’t gone away. Land bought by developers at the peak of the frenzy sits on their books, and the money borrowed to buy that land will have to be repaid. The net debt of Cinda Real Estate, a state-owned developer that splurged billions of dollars on land during the boom, for example, increased 57% to $5.1 billion compared with a year ago, as of September. The other problem: Mortgage growth has been astronomical over the past year. Homeowners and speculators continue to believe that the government will never let the market crash. (…)

SENTIMENT WATCH

From the Daily Shot:

A year ago, we heard “sell everything” from RBS.

Source: CNBC, @charliebilello

Now it’s “buy everything”? A contrarian indicator?

Source: CNBC, @charliebilello

THE DAILY EDGE (21 February 2017)

Did you miss yesterday’s post: DEEP INTO THE TWILIGHT ZONE

Conference Board’s Leading Indicators Index Rises Again The Conference Board’s leading economic index jumped again in January, a sign that the U.S. economy could continue growing in the first half of this year.

The Conference Board’s leading economic index rose 0.6% last month, accelerating from a 0.5% clip in December and 0.2% growth in November.

January’s gain was broad-based across the indicators. Ataman Ozyildirim, director of business cycles and growth research at The Conference Board, said the U.S. economy may accelerate in the near term.

The board’s coincident index—designed to reflect current economic conditions and made up of four data points including nonfarm payrolls—rose 0.1% last month after being up 0.3% in December.

The index of lagging indicators rose 0.3% in January after growing 0.5% in December.

  • The Conference Board:

In the six-month period ending January 2017, the leading economic index increased 1.6 percent (about a 3.3 percent annual rate), much faster than the growth of 0.9 percent (about a 1.8 percent annual rate) during the previous six months. In addition, the strengths among the leading indicators have become more widespread.

Conference Board's LEI

Smoothed LEI

While the absolute change in the Leading Indicator was certainly positive, we prefer to look at how the Leading Indicator performs relative to the coincident indicator index.  The level of this reading isn’t particularly important but its direction is a very good advance warning of approaching recessions.  As shown in the chart below, the ratio between the Leading and Coincident Indicators tends to drop sharply immediately before and during a recession.  Over the last few months, the ratio has started to turn upwards again after a period of stagnation since the post-recession high print of 1.098 in June 2015.  A new high print, which looks quite likely after the 1.097 level printed this month, would be an indicator that recession isn’t likely in the near term.  With a number of other pieces of economic data suggesting a ramp up in business activity and consumer spending, the Leading/Coincident Indicator ratio adds to the case that a recession in US economic activity is still nowhere close.

021717 LEICEI

Economic Outlook from Freight’s Perspective – Two Green Lights

Both the Shipments and the Expenditures Indexes have now turned positive. Throughout the U.S. economy, there is a growing number of data points that suggest that the worst is over and the economy is getting better. Some data points are simply less bad, but an increasing number of them are better, and even a few are becoming outright strong.

The 3.2% increase in the January Cass Shipments Index is yet another data point which strongly suggests that the first positive indication in October may have indeed been a change in trend. In fact, it now looks as if the October index, which broke a string of 20 months in negative territory, was one of the first indications that a recovery in freight had begun in earnest. (…) the overall freight recession which began in March 2015 appears to be over.

There is normal seasonality at work, and we are continuing to get daily reports of stronger shipment volume in almost all modes from both hard data sources and industry anecdotes. It also looks far less troubling when compared to the seasonality in 2013, 2014 and 2015. Not only was January 2017 higher than last year, but it was stronger than January 2014 and almost as strong January 2015, both of which fell further from higher summer/fall peaks.

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The strength in European airfreight gives us increasing confidence that the improving trends in the freight economy are not confined to the U.S. We should also point out that historically, strength in this index has been followed by a stronger European PMI. Simply put, it looks as if the European economy is also improving.

The recent strong surge in Asia Pacific airfreight gives us increasing confidence in the technology segment of the global economy – not because everything that moves in this lane is a semi-conductor, but because the largest overall segment/type of good that is moved via airfreight in this lane has one or more semi-conductors in it. Hence, there historically has been a high level of correlation between Asia Pacific airfreight and semi-conductor billings.

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INFLATION WATCH

From The Daily Shot:

Russia Overtakes Saudi Arabia as World’s Top Crude Oil Producer
Saudi Arabia Breaks Records on Oil Exports and Output for Year
EARNINGS WATCH

Factset:

Overall, 82% of the companies in the S&P 500 have reported earnings to date for the fourth quarter. Of these companies, 66% have reported actual EPS above the mean EPS estimate, 11% have reported actual EPS equal to the mean EPS estimate, and 22% have reported actual EPS below the mean EPS estimate. The percentage of companies reporting EPS above the mean EPS estimate is below the 1-year (71%) average and below the 5-year (67%) average.

In terms of revenues, 53% of companies have reported actual sales above estimated sales and 47% have reported actual sales below estimated sales. The percentage of companies reporting sales above estimates is above the 1- year average (52%), but equal to the 5-year average (53%).

In aggregate, companies are reporting earnings that are 2.9% above expectations. This surprise percentage is below the 1-year (+4.4%) average and below the 5-year (+4.2%) average.

The blended (combines actual results for companies that have reported and estimated results for companies that have yet to report) year-over-year earnings growth rate for Q4 2016 is 4.6% today, which is above the estimated earnings growth rate of 3.1% on December 31. The downside earnings surprise reported by AIG was mainly responsible for the decline in the overall earnings growth rate during the past week.

The blended sales growth rate for Q4 2016 is 5.0% today, which is slightly above the estimated sales growth rate of 4.9% on December 31.

At this point in time, 90 companies in the index have issued EPS guidance for Q1 2017. Of these 90 companies, 61 have issued negative EPS guidance and 29 have issued positive EPS guidance. The percentage of companies issuing negative EPS guidance is 68%, which is below the 5-year average of 74%.

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On guidance, IT companies provided 31 of the 90 warnings with 17 of the 31 being positive. Ex-IT, 47 of the 59 companies providing guidance have guided negatively (80%).

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AIG’s Q4’16 results included a huge $5.6 billion charge from “prior year adverse reserve development”. Given AIG’s business, this is clearly an operating loss but investors and aggregators need to consider it company-specific. It is not a one-time charge: AIG reported a $60 billion charge in Q4’18 which totally blinded many people in 2009 if they failed to consider it company-specific. Remember that AIG’s losses then subtracted $5.13 to S&P 500 quarterly earnings even though AIG only represented 0.02% of the Index (this is partly why the CAPE valuation model, still to this day because it uses trailing 10-year earnings, significantly underestimated earnings throughout the bull market (The Shiller P/E: Alas, A Useless Friend).

I calculate that AIG’s latest charge reduces S&P EPS by $0.65 per share; this only 2.1% of the quarterly total, a far cry from 2008 when it shaved some 10% off the index “normalized” EPS. Some aggregators will treat this charge as operating which is technically correct but rather useless when valuing the entire S&P 500 Index. The ultra conservative S&P Capital IQ now has total 2016 EPS at $106.86, 10.2% lower than Factset and Thomson Reuters/IBES which carry $119.04 and $118.47 respectively. I have been using TR’s numbers during the last 2 years because I think they best represent fundamental Index trends. Estimates for 2017 are all converging to $130.

Goldman: ‘Cognitive dissonance exists in the US stock market’

Goldman Sachs analysts believe investors and traders in the stock market are acting irrationally.

“Cognitive dissonance exists in the US stock market,” Goldman Sachs’ David Kostin said. “S&P 500 is up 10% since the election despite negative [earnings per share] revisions from sell-side analysts.”

Earnings and expectations for earnings growth are the most important drivers of stock prices in the long run. In the short run, however, earnings and prices will often diverge.

“Investors, S&P 500 management teams, and sell-side analysts do not agree on the most likely path forward,” Kostin continued. “On the one hand, investors, corporate managers, and macroeconomic survey data suggest an increase in optimism about future economic growth. In contrast, sell-side analysts have cut consensus 2017E adjusted EPS forecasts by 1% since the election and ‘hard’ macroeconomic data show only modest improvement.” (…)

“Sell-side analysts appear hesitant to incorporate potential tax reform and deregulation into their estimates given elevated policy uncertainty,” Kostin said. (…)

“We are approaching the point of maximum optimism regarding policy initiatives,” Kostin said. “We expect investors will soon de-rate their expectations of potential 2017 EPS growth as they face the reality that the accretive impact from tax reform will not occur until 2018.” (…)

Earnings growth down and stock prices up?

Hedgopia has this chart showing elevated price to sales on the S&P 500 Index:

Chart 3

Rising price/sales is not necessarily a bad thing, as long as profit margins are also rising. Since the 2014 peak in margins, the P/S ratio has lifted 8% while margins declined also 8%. This 16% gap will need to be closed somehow…

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SENTIMENT WATCH
Morgan Stanley Says Markets Are Underpricing the Risk of a Plunge and Surge

Investors might have forgotten that in any given year, there’s almost a one-in-five chance of a 15 percent tumble in American stocks, according to Morgan Stanley. (…)

“The risk of a severe equities decline over the next 12 months is about average,” the Morgan Stanley analysts wrote in a Feb. 20 note. “Many assume it is lower. At the same time, we also see a credible bull case centered on more greed, and animal spirit, in the near term. Credit underprices the former, while equity volatility underprices the latter.” (…)

The analysts looked at a variety of indicators to determine the risk of a significant sell-off in U.S. stocks, including economic indicators such as jobless claims and housing data along with market prices including the cost of oil. Analyzing data since 1950, the chance of a 15 percent drop of the S&P 500 within a 12-month period is 18 percent, they wrote.

BAML’s Hartnett Sees Additional “Melt-Up” In Stock Prices

(…) To develop its thesis, Hartnet and his team note foundational pillars of analysis:

1. Structural market changes are more important than ever. Flow and positioning data help identify the impact of new market entrants, newly active participants (e.g. risk parity and quantitative funds), and the increasing prevalence of cross-asset mandates

2. It’s better to be buying. Our research shows that measuring fear is easier than measuring greed, and that market tops tend to be a process, whereas market bottoms form quickly. As a result, “buy” conditions are often more visible than occasions to “sell short” in our view.

Point #1 suggests that this time is different…yeah! Sure.

Point #2 advises to “keep buying; we can’t really measure the extent of the current overvaluation but we do understand the process and we will surely tell you when to get out.”

In the meantime, you could take read DEEP INTO THE TWILIGHT ZONE to look at measures of greed and fear and analyse these charts to acquaint yourself with the “process” in case your friendly broker is away on a cruise at the crucial time.

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There are alternate ways to measure greed and fear as these Yardeni charts show:

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(…) The deliberations show the challenge the administration faces as it tries to reconcile the competing goals of cutting taxes, boosting military and infrastructure spending, preserving Medicare and Social Security programs and keeping budget deficits from soaring. (…)

The economy has grown around 2% on average over the past decade. Many economists believe sustained growth at more than 3% will be difficult to achieve without a sharp rebound in productivity growth and a reversal in the slowing expansion of the U.S. labor force, developments few are projecting. Worker productivity growth has slowed to 0.7% a year since 2010, a sharp slowdown from rates exceeding 3% in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

The internal Trump projections are at odds with other assessments of the economy’s long-run growth prospects. The Congressional Budget Office, a nonpartisan agency that provides analysis to Congress, estimates the economy will grow 1.9% annually between 2021 and 2027. The Federal Reserve forecasts growth of 1.8% over the long run. (…)

“It is awfully hard to get to 3%. I don’t know where a number like that would come from,” said Dale Jorgenson, a Harvard economics professor who specializes in such projections. Mr. Jorgenson’s most recent forecasts show an economy growing by 1.8% annually over the next decade. That’s in part because the labor force is aging, meaning there are fewer workers to produce goods and services, and because the educational attainment of the workforce has plateaued, meaning workforce skills aren’t advancing. Major policy changes such as a tax-code overhaul could boost growth to 2.4%, he said.

Trump officials believe a regulatory rollback and a tax-code revamp will unleash growth that drives a recovery in productivity, sends business investment higher and draws idled workers back to the labor force. They also assume interest rates would remain low because the U.S. would become a more attractive place to park money. (…)

Republicans in Congress won’t be able to rely on such estimates when they produce a budget resolution for the coming fiscal year because they use estimates from the CBO. (…)

Republicans and Democrats in prior administrations said presidents have typically been hesitant to produce implausibly glowing projections because it could weaken their credibility with Congress and the public. (…)

(…) Ryan spent at least a half-hour explaining why the border adjustment is essential. But multiple GOP senators told POLITICO they felt his talk was too wonkish and hard to follow. Some bristled at being told to keep their “powder dry” while Ryan is aggressively campaigning for the tax.

“I heard ‘keep your powder dry’ as, ‘Don’t articulate your cogent arguments against our bad idea,’” one senator said. “I have not yet talked to a single senator who’s enthusiastic about it. Ryan and [Ways and Means Chairman Kevin] Brady seem to have a near-theological commitment to it.”

At the Senate GOP lunch a week earlier, former Sen. Phil Gramm of Texas blasted the border adjustment tax idea. His arguments were easier to follow and resonated with many of his ex-colleagues, attendees said.

“To me he made more sense,” said Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.), contrasting Gramm’s presentation with Ryan’s. (…)

(…) the prospects in the Senate, at this point, appear grim.

TREAT YOURSELF
787: Made in USA?