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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THE DAILY EDGE (18 July 2017)

GOP Abandons Senate Health Bill, Plans Repeal Vote Senate GOP leaders abandoned their effort to dismantle and simultaneously replace much of the Affordable Care Act, after the defections of two more Republican senators.
House Republicans Set Out Plan to Rewrite Tax Code House Republicans are unveiling an ambitious fiscal plan on Tuesday that could let them pair a landmark tax bill with at least $203 billion in deficit-reduction measures.

The strategy, embedded in the House GOP fiscal 2018 budget, faces a host of political and procedural obstacles, including many of the same ones that derailed the party’s health-care bill in the Senate. (…)

Most bills can be filibustered in the Senate and require a 60-vote threshold. What Republicans are trying to do is take advantage of an exception to that rule—the so-called reconciliation procedures allowed under budgetary law.

Under reconciliation, fiscally oriented bills can become law with a simple-majority vote in both chambers and a signature from the president. They can’t increase long-run budget deficits and must hit fiscal targets set out by the budget. To get to that point, Congress must adopt a budget first, which means the House and Senate must agree twice, once on the budget and then again on the ultimate bill. (…)

Before they can advance the tax bill, the House and Senate must agree on the same version of the budget. The Senate Budget Committee hasn’t yet released a budget or set a date. President Donald Trump doesn’t need to sign the budget resolution; he would need to sign the subsequent bill into law.

The budget could change significantly in the Senate and it could also be revised to facilitate whatever tax agreement the House, Senate and White House agree on.

(…) For starters, the Trump administration will be selling a tax plan of its own, and, with luck, one precooked with congressional leaders, rather than hoping somebody else presents one that is acceptable. That alone would change the dynamic.

More broadly, the belief that it is essential to revamp the tax system to lower tax rates, especially corporate rates, is as close to gospel as you can reach in today’s Republican Party. Nothing unifies the GOP like cutting taxes. (…)

That isn’t to say changing the tax code is simple—not by a long shot. There certainly are intra-Republican differences.

Most notably, House Speaker Paul Ryan and Ways and Means Chairman Kevin Brady have long been pushing the idea of building a new tax system around a border-adjustable tax—a tax that essentially imposes a levy on imports while letting exports leave the country tax-free. The idea is to both build domestic industries and supply chains while also raising a big chunk of revenue to finance tax cuts elsewhere. (…)

There are plenty of other complications, including a debate about how much to cut taxes at the top end of the income scale. If tax reform were simple, three decades wouldn’t have passed since the last significant one. And the prospect of finding Democratic support is nearly as bleak as it has been on health care.

Still, the fundamental idea of lowering rates and simplifying the tax code is one Republicans are almost desperate to rally around. If that holds true, we’ll be left to ponder how different the story of Mr. Trump’s first year might have been if Republicans had been able to start with an idea that united them rather than one that divided them.

White House Unveils Its Plans for Remaking Nafta The Trump administration released its road map for remaking the North American Free Trade Agreement that aims to preserve “Buy America” provisions and reduce the U.S. trade deficit, but steps back from some of President Donald Trump’s most fiery campaign rhetoric on trade.
Global Trade’s Evolution May Check Trump’s Protectionism President Donald Trump has looked to make protectionism respectable again, but changes in the international economy and the institutions governing trade are acting as constraints on what he can achieve.
All Signs Point to a Cyclical Slowdown in Inflation Even as central bankers get more hawkish, the data show there’s a change underway that the Fed is likely to miss.

U.S. import prices post second monthly drop

The Labor Department said on Tuesday that import prices decreased 0.2 per cent last month after an upwardly revised 0.1 per cent decline in May.

In the 12 months through June, import prices increased 1.5 per cent. That was the smallest gain since last November and followed May’s 2.3 per cent increase. The year-on-year increase in import prices has slowed sharply since posting 4.7 per cent in February, which was the biggest advance in five years. (…)

Last month, prices for imported petroleum fell 2.2 per cent after decreasing 1.2 per cent in May. Imported petroleum prices have not risen since gaining 0.8 per cent in February.

Import prices excluding petroleum edged up 0.1 per cent after being unchanged the prior month. Import prices excluding petroleum increased 1.4 per cent in the 12 months through June.

Meanwhile:

Americans Remain Slightly Positive About U.S. Economy

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Economic Review: Attention Shoppers

The majority of the economic reports over the last two weeks have been disappointing, less than the consensus expectations. The minor rebound in activity we’ve been tracking since last summer appears to have stalled. Retail sales continue to disappoint and inventory/sales ratios are once again rising – from already elevated levels. Even the positive reports were clouded by negative undertones. So far though our market based indicators have not deteriorated sufficiently to create any urgency when it comes to recession. (…)

The ugliest reports of the last two weeks concerned consumption or rather the lack thereof. The retail sales report was disappointing no matter how one sliced and diced it. Like many of the other economic reports we track, the recovery in retail sales that started last summer is fading and fading fast. The popular notion that Amazon is stealing all the sales from traditional retailers cannot account for the overall weakness. Indeed, non-store sales are still rising but at a slower pace, showing that the slowdown isn’t confined to bricks and mortar locations.

The weak consumption numbers are reflected in several other reports, most prominently inventory. Both wholesale and total business inventories rose faster than sales pushing inventory/sales ratios higher. In particular, auto inventories are probably way too high given that sales appear to have peaked. Inventory had been moderating relative to sales but the ratio is now rising again. That will be a positive for GDP in the short run but unwanted inventory will eventually have to be worked off before production ramps up again.

Weak consumption may also have been a factor in the weak inflation reports. Both PPI and CPI were less than expected and expectations for future rate hikes are fading. The trade report also confirmed weak US consumption and growth relative to the rest of the world with exports rising and imports falling. The result was the continued downtrend of the US dollar. (…)

The economic data has been lousy recently but the markets seem to be looking past that and toward improved global growth. The rest of the world certainly is due for an upturn if for no other reason than cyclicality. And that may indeed have a positive impact on US growth but right now the data is actually pointing to a peak in the mini cycle upturn that started last summer. For now, I see no reason to expect a recession imminently but neither do I see any reason to expect an acceleration in US growth. 

It has never been wise to bet against the US consumer but I wonder if we might finally have reached peak consumption. Younger generations certainly don’t seem interested in the conspicuous consumption of their elders. And it may be dawning on Baby Boomers – finally – that if they ever want to retire they are going to have to save more and consume less. Another thing I’ve noticed recently is that the quality of goods seems to have slipped considerably over the last few years. I find clothing in particular to be of very poor quality but I could say the same about a lot of other items as well. Even restaurant quality seems to have slipped especially at the big chains that all seem to be serving the same bland items. Maybe that has finally caught up with retailers as consumers balk at paying up to maintain an illusion of prosperity.

Consumption is the result of growth not the cause and it shouldn’t be a surprise after all these years of weak growth that consumption is weak too. Especially when one considers the debt piled up to pay for much of our previous consumption. Our market indicators seem to be saying that growth in the rest of the world will be sufficient to maintain our current secular stagnation, new normal rate of growth. Maybe but that has never been the case in the past; the US is the dog that wags the tail of the global economy. Is it different this time?

THE DAILY EDGE (17 July 2017)

U.S. Retail Sales Fell 0.2% in June Decline contributed to the first back-to-back sales drop since July and August 2016

Retail sales had declined a revised 0.1% in May. It was the first back-to-back sales drop since July and August 2016. (…)

Excluding autos, sales were down 0.2% last month; economists had expected a 0.2% gain. Excluding both autos and gasoline, sales fell 0.1% in June, the first decline for the measure in nearly a year.

In the second quarter, total retail sales were up just 0.2% from the first three months of the year. Overall retail sales rose 3.9% in the first half of 2017 compared with the same period a year earlier, well outpacing the recent trend for consumer-price inflation. (…)

Sales at nonstore retailers, mostly online-shopping outlets, were up 0.4% from May and rose 9.2% on the year. (…)

Retail Sales YoY
 Core Retail Sales YoY
  • The next chart illustrates retail sales “Control” purchases, which is an even more “Core” view of retail sales. This series excludes Motor Vehicles & Parts, Gasoline, Building Materials as well as Food Services & Drinking Places.
Control Sales YoY
US Restaurant Industry Stuck In Worst Collapse Since 2009

One month after we reported that the “restaurant industry hasn’t reported a positive month since February 2016“, we can add one more month to the running total: according to the latest update from Black Box Intelligence‘s TDn2K research, in June both same-store sales and foot traffic “growth” declined once more, dropping by -1% and -3%, respectively, extending the longest stretch of year-over-year declines for the US restaurant industry to 16 consecutive months – the longest stretch since the financial crisis – with sales rising in 45 markets while declining in 150 with Texas, the worst region in the US, suffering a 2.2% and 4.1% decline in sales and traffic respectively. (…)

Source: TDn2K

Auto Defaults Are Soaring
U.S. CPI Again Weaker than Expected in June

The headline index was unchanged from May (+1.6% y/y) against a market expectation (from the Action Economics Forecast Survey) of a 0.1% m/m increase. This index had unexpectedly slipped 0.1% m/m in May. The core index (that excludes food and energy prices) edged up 0.1% m/m (1.7% y/y, remaining at its lowest reading since May 2015) in May but market expectations were for a 0.2% m/m rise in June.

The energy index declined again in June, falling 1.6% m/m (+2.3%y/y), offsetting the monthly increase in the index for all items less food and energy. This was this index’s fifth monthly decline in the past six months. All the major energy component indexes declined in June, with the gasoline prices falling 2.8% m/m (-0.4% y/y). The food index was unchanged in June from May (+0.9% y/y) following a 0.2% m/m increase in May.

The June increase in the index for all items less food and energy was its third straight such increase. The rise was due to core services prices. Goods prices excluding food and energy fell 0.1% m/m (-0.6% y/y) for their fourth consecutive monthly decline. Of the major categories, only prices of medical care goods posted a monthly increase (+0.7% m/m, +3.2% y/y) in June.

Prices of services excluding energy rose 0.2% m/m in June (+2.5% y/y) with monthly increases in all the major subcategories. The shelter index continued to rise (+0.2% m/m), and the indexes for medical care (+0.3% m/m), motor vehicle insurance (+1.0% m/m), education (+0.3% m/m), and personal services (+0.3% m/m) also increased. Airfares (-2.7% m/m) and prices for wireless telephone services (-0.8% m/m) fell in June.

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  • The good news about the softening consumer inflation is the recent improvement in real (inflation adjusted) wages. (The Daily Shot)

U.S. Industrial Production Improves

Industrial production increased 0.4% during June (2.0% y/y) following a May 0.1% gain, revised from no change. A 0.3% increase had been expected in the Action Economics Forecast Survey. A 1.6% rise (9.9% y/y) in mining output drove the total higher, strong for the fifth month this year. Utilities output held steady (-2.2% y/y).

Factory sector production gained 0.2% (1.2% y/y) as it followed a 0.4% decline. Consumer products production held steady (0.3% y/y) as nondurable goods output declined 0.3% both m/m and y/y. (…) Motor vehicle & parts production gained 0.7% (0.9% y/y) and computer & video output rose 0.3% (4.5% y/y). Production of business equipment rose 0.2% (0.8% y/y), but information processing & related equipment production fell 0.3% (+4.5% y/y).

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ECRI Weekly Leading Index: WLI Growth Index Continues Decline in 2017
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First-Time Home Buyers Show More Interest in Market

Google searches related to buying a first home jumped 11 percentage points to 44% of all home buying-related search activity in 2017 compared with a year earlier, according to a study of Google search data conducted by Chase Home Lending.

In all, first-time buyers accounted for 33% of all home sales in May, up from 30% a year earlier, according to the most recent data from the National Association of Realtors. (…)

But so far this year, new purchasers accounted for 42% of all buying this year through April, up from 40% in 2016 and 31% during the lowest point during the recent housing cycle in 2011, according to the most recent data from Fannie Mae, which defines first-time buyers as anyone who hasn’t owned a home in the last three years.

Some first-time buyers captured by the Fannie Mae data are older, including former spouses who downsize after a divorce or death or people who rented for a period after losing their homes to foreclosure.

But by another measure, young people in particular are getting more active in the housing market. Customers under the age of 35 made up 36% of Chase’s mortgage origination volume in 2016, up 16 percentage points from the year before. (…)

China Maintains 6.9% Economic Growth as Beijing Walks Tightrope

China’s growth data released Monday by the National Bureau of Statistics came in above a forecast for 6.8% growth by economists polled by The Wall Street Journal.

On a quarter-over-quarter, seasonally adjusted basis, gross domestic product expanded 1.7%, the bureau said, compared with growth of 1.3% in the first quarter, suggesting that momentum in the economy may be even stronger than the year-over-year figure indicates. (…)

Industrial output rose 7.6% in June from a year earlier, coming in above both May’s 6.5% gain and market expectations. Retail sales grew by 11.0% in June from a year earlier, accelerating from the previous month’s 10.7% and also beating forecasts. Fixed-asset investment in nonrural areas of China climbed 8.6% year over year in the first six months of 2017, matching the increase in the January-May period but exceeding economists’ expectations.

A deceleration in property investment was an indication that still-robust housing sales might lose steam later this year. Large developers have pulled back on new construction as credit becomes harder to come by and local governments set restrictions on property purchases. The property sector accounts for about a third of overall GDP. (…)

EARNINGS WATCH

From Factset:

Overall, 6% of the companies in the S&P 500 have reported earnings to date for the second quarter. Of these companies, 80% have reported actual EPS above the mean EPS estimate, 10% have reported actual EPS equal to the mean EPS estimate, and 10% have reported actual EPS below the mean EPS estimate. The percentage of companies reporting EPS above the mean EPS estimate is above the 1-year (70%) average and above the 5-year (68%) average.

Surprised smile In aggregate, companies are reporting earnings that are 8.2% above expectations. This surprise percentage is above the 1-year (+4.7%) average and above the 5-year (+4.2%) average.

In terms of revenues, 83% of companies have reported actual sales above estimated sales and 17% have reported actual sales below estimated sales. The percentage of companies reporting sales above estimates is well above the 1-year average (56%) and well above the 5-year average (53%).

In aggregate, companies are reporting sales that are 1.7% above expectations. This surprise percentage is above the 1-year (+0.5%) average and above the 5-year (+0.5%) average.

The blended earnings growth rate for the second quarter is 6.8% today, which is higher than the earnings growth rate of 6.4% last week. If the Energy sector is excluded, the blended earnings growth rate for the remaining ten sectors would fall to 4.3% [+3.9% last week] from 6.8%.

The blended sales growth rate for the second quarter is 4.8% today, which is equal to the sales growth rate of 4.8% last week. If the Energy sector is excluded, the blended revenue growth rate for the index would fall to 3.9% from 4.8%.

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Thomson Reuters IBES compilation gives Q2 ES rising 8.1%, +5.2% ex-Energy 

(…) J.P. Morgan Chase led the way with record profit in the second quarter of $7.03 billion. Even so, executives cut their guidance for lending growth in 2017 as well as for interest income. (…)

“It’s just unfortunate, but it’s hurting us, it’s hurting the body politic, it’s hurting the average American,” Mr. Dimon said of Washington inaction. “We have become one of the most bureaucratic, confusing, litigious societies on the planet. It’s almost an embarrassment to be an American citizen traveling around the world and listening to the stupid shit we have to deal with in this country.

“We have to get our act together,” he added. (…)

(…) J.P. Morgan said it now expects net interest income to rise by around $4 billion this year, down from its earlier expectation of $4.5 billion, on slower loan growth and a decline in long-term interest rates during the second quarter. (…)

But in the second quarter its total loans were up just 4% from a year earlier, compared with 6% in the first quarter and 7% for all of last year.

Others are feeling the impact even more strongly. Total average loans at Wells Fargo were up just 1% from a year earlier, compared with 4% in the first quarter. (…)

OPEC Quietly Opened the Taps in June
SENTIMENT WATCH

(…) Taken together, the indicators pointed to an economy that is entering the ninth year of expansion steady and still creating jobs at a healthy clip, but without obvious additional momentum. (…)

“Rather, the data indicate that hopes for a prolonged period of 3% GDP growth sparked by Trump’s victory have largely vanished, aside from a temporary snapback expected in the second quarter.” (…)

For the recently ended second quarter, forecasting firm Macroeconomic Advisers projected 2.3% growth and the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s high-profile GDPNow model predicted a 2.4% growth pace. (…)

(…) The greenback sank to a 10-month low Friday, rounding out its worst week since May, as weaker-than-forecast economic data raised doubts about the prospect of additional Federal Reserve tightening this year.  (…)

CETERIS NON PARIBUS: