U.S. Industrial Production Rose 0.7% Capacity utilization grew 0.4 percentage point to 78.0%, its highest level in three years
(…) Production increased broadly across all sectors and has risen 3.5% over the past year. (…) Factory output rose 0.5% over the month and 1.8% over the past year.
From Haver Analytics:
U.S. Housing Starts and Building Permits Decline
Total housing starts in April fell 3.7% (+10.5% y/y) to 1.287 million (SAAR) from 1.336 million during March, revised from 1.319 million. (…) Starts of single-family homes nudged 0.1% higher last month (7.2% y/y) to 894,000, following a 0.8% decline in March to 893,000 million units. Starts of multi-family units declined 11.3% to 393,000 units and reversed the increase during the prior month to 443,000 units.
In the Midwest, housing starts declined 16.3% (-18.4% y/y) to 164,000 following a 27.3% March increase. Starts in the West fell 12.0% (+12.0% y/y) to 346,000, the lowest level in six months. Housing starts in the Northeast were off 8.1% (+34.1% y/y) to 114,000, the lowest level since December. To the upside, starts in the South increased 6.4% (16.3% y/y) to 663,000 after a 1.3% gain.
Building permits declined 1.8% (+7.7% y/y) to 1.352 million units following a 4.1% March increase. Single-family permits improved 0.9% (7.9% y/y) to 859,000 after a 4.0% decline. Permits to build multi-family homes fell 6.3% (+7.4% y/y) to 493,000, after rising 20.4%.
NY FED BUSINESS LEADERS SURVEY
So much difference between current situation and expectations.
EMU Inflation Bumps Up But Remains Well Below Target As Other Problems Boil Over
EMU core and headline inflation rates continue to grow at rates that are at a significant discount to their objective (which is just a bit below 2%). Headline inflation grew by 0.3% in April, but the core only rose by 0.1%. Still, headline inflation at 1.3% year-over-year is below where it was one year ago at this time (1.8%). On the other hand, core inflation, despite its small uptick in April, is up by 1.2% year-on-year, a tick faster than its year-ago pace of 1.1%. (…)
But the South keeps cruising at its own speed. German and French inflation is at target and accelerating while inflation in Italy and Spain is rising at half the target rate. Will the ECB allow inflation to run wild in the North in order for the South to catch up? What do you do as a bond investor in the European Disunion?
Good luck with that!
Brent Crude Hits $80 Amid Concerns Over Iran Supply
Nafta Deadline Arrives With Little Prospect for an Agreement
China Approves Toshiba’s $18 Billion Sale of Its Memory-Chip Unit Private-equity firm Bain Capital received approval from Chinese antitrust regulators for its deal to buy Toshiba’s memory-chip unit.
U.S. Births at a 30-Year Low American women are having children at the lowest rate on record, with the number of babies born in the U.S. last year dropping to a 30-year low.
SENTIMENT WATCH
The Market’s New Boss The shift has been going on for some time but it became very clear this week: Interest rates are now more important than profits for stock performance.
(…) Even the 3-month Treasury bill’s yield, at 1.9%, is now higher than the S&P 500’s trailing dividend yield of 1.8%. (…)
If rates keep rising, the number of stocks that can generate strong growth will dwindle. That makes for crowded trades that inevitably end in nasty selloffs. We’ve got a way to go but the path has been laid.
Not really that there is a new boss. Rather that TINA has left the building and that interest rates, i.e. inflation, are having an impact on valuation.
Small Caps Set New Highs, Outpacing Multinational Peers Shares of small U.S. companies climbed to a fresh record, reflecting their gains in the recent tax overhaul and signs that U.S. growth once again looks more robust than that from overseas.
(…) The Russell 2000 index of smaller U.S. companies rose 1% Wednesday to 1616.37, topping its Jan. 23 closing high. For the year, the index is now up 5.3%, outperforming both the S&P 500, which has risen 1.8%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which is up 0.2%. Those indexes are still more than 5% below their January highs. (…)
The S&P 500 gets about 30% of its revenue from outside the U.S., compared with 21% for the Russell 2000, according to a Bank of America Merrill Lynch research note last month. (…)
The Russell 2000 is currently trading at 32.1x trailing EPS which are forecast to jump 39% over the next 12 months.
I am no expert on U.S. small caps but I suspect there is an oil price effect in forward earnings. Ed Yardeni tracks the S&P 600 index. These charts tend to support the oil price effect assumption given that oil prices cratered in the second half of 2014.
Analysts also tend to prove very optimistic on small caps margins.
This last chart plots forward earnings by sectors. Energy and Health Care are the only 2 S&P 600 sectors with sharply rising earnings this year.
Trump, fake news and the seeds of doubt ‘According to a recent poll, 77% of Americans believe major news outlets report falsehoods’
Not here!