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: 12 NOVEMBER 2018: Remarkable Profits

U.S. Producer Prices Surged in October Growth was driven by gains in prices for services, which grew 0.7%

The producer-price index, a measure of the prices businesses receive for their goods and services, rose a seasonally adjusted 0.6% in October from a month earlier, the Labor Department said Friday. This was the biggest monthly increase since September 2012.

When excluding the often-volatile food and energy categories, prices were up 0.5% in October from the prior month. Excluding food, energy and a volatile gauge of margins called trade services, prices grew 0.2%% last month. (…)

From a year earlier, the overall producer-price index increased 2.9% in October, while prices excluding food and energy grew 2.6% and prices excluding food, energy and trade services rose 2.8%. (…)

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Haver Analytics’ table shows that core PPI is rising at a 2.5-3.0% annualized rate but mainly because of core services as core Goods PPI has slowed considerably since summer:

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Oil Jumps as OPEC Moves Closer to Cutting Output Oil prices climbed out of the red after weeks of losses that had wiped out all of crude’s gains for 2018, as OPEC and its allies signaled a willingness to again cut production amid surging global supply.

(…) “We need to do whatever it takes to balance the oil market,” Saudi Arabian Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih said Monday at the start of an international gathering here of petroleum ministers and industry leaders.

Mr. Falih, the de facto head of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, said if current supply and demand levels don’t shift, the oil-cartel and its partner producers, led by Russia, would need to cut production by around 1 million barrels a day at the group level.

Those comments came less than a day after Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s biggest member and the world’s largest exporter of crude, Russia and other producers met here in the United Arab Emirates capital to debate a potential output cut.

While the group didn’t make a final decision on output levels Sunday, they acknowledged a need to again shift strategy just months after a decision to ramp up production. (…)

“There is a consensus that there will be oversupply in 2019,” Omani Oil Minister Mohammed bin Hamad al-Rumhy told The Wall Street Journal after exiting the meeting Sunday. He said the coalition of producers would likely agree to cut back on supplies when they gather next month in Vienna. (…)

Saudi Arabia’s Mr. Falih on Sunday also said his country would unilaterally slash its exports next month by around 500,000 barrels a day, compared with November levels. However, Russia—currently the world’s largest oil producer—sent mixed messages on whether it would pull back on supply. (…)

Fed Holds Rates Steady, Signals More Rate Increases Ahead Central bank offers a mostly upbeat assessment of economy

(…) In September, Fed officials penciled in plans to raise their benchmark short-term rate once more this year. Officials are equally split over whether to raise rates two, three or four times next year. That would push the rate closer to 3%, which is where most officials expect it to settle over the long term—a so-called neutral level that neither spurs nor slows growth.

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell last month played down the debate over whether the Fed would raise rates above neutral, suggesting it was premature because rates are still boosting growth. Rates are “a long way from neutral at this point, probably,” he said. “We need interest rates to be gradually, very gradually, moving back toward normal.” (…)

Meanwhile

China’s Central Bank Ready to Tackle ‘Profound’ Economic Changes

(…) “External conditions are undergoing profound changes, downward pressures are increasing, some companies are seeing more difficulties in their operations, risks accumulated over the long term are being exposed,” the People’s Bank of China said in its quarterly monetary-policy report published late Friday. The bank will “preemptively adjust and fine-tune policies according to the changing conditions.” (…)

While sticking to what it calls “prudent and neutral” policy, the PBOC omitted a previous phrase in its policy outlook that had said it was “firmly against flood-like strong stimulus” (…)

Two weeks ago:

(…) “The leadership is paying great attention to the problems, and will be more preemptive and take action in a timely manner,” according to the statement Wednesday. The Politburo reiterated that China will maintain a proactive fiscal policy and a prudent monetary policy, while trying to find solutions to help private businesses. (…)

(…) “Internationally, advanced technology and key technology is more and more difficult to obtain. Unilateralism and trade protectionism have risen, forcing us to travel the road of self-reliance,” Mr Xi told workers in September during a tour of China First Heavy Industries in north-east Heilongjiang province, known as the heart of China’s rust belt. (…)

EARNINGS WATCH

The Q3 earnings season is almost over. Seventy-seven percent of the 451 companies that have reported so far beat expectations with a record beat rate of +6.5%. Only 2 sectors did not beat by more than 4.1%. The revenue beat is +1.4% to an expected 8.5% growth rate, up from 7.4% forecast on Oct.1.

A truly remarkable earnings season with earnings now expected up 27.8% (21.6% on Oct. 1) per Refinitiv IBES. The tax reform contributes 7-10% and buybacks add 1.9% in Q3 per Refinitiv, leaving 16-19% growth in comparable operating earnings on a 8.5% revenue growth. This in the 10th year of an economic expansion. Truly remarkable.

Trailing EPS are now $157.62 or about $160.15 pro forma the tax reform for the full 12 months.

Full year EPS are likely to exceed the current $162.65 estimate which assumes 17.8% growth in Q4 earnings when tax reform will add 7%+ and buybacks 2.0%. This would leave only 9% growth in operating earnings. The odds favor another good beat to bring 2018 growth rate around 25%.

Corporate pre-announcements improved last week and are now more in line with the recent history, suggesting no major deterioration half way into the final quarter. Analysts remain upbeat, particularly on large companies:

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Since the market low at 2639 on October 29, trailing EPS have advanced 1.0% while inflation has retreated some. The Rule of 20 P/E, which peaked at a very overvalued level of 23.5 in January, is now a moderately undervalued 19.2 on pro forma trailing and 18.9 on the full year 2018 achievable estimate.

Tariffs on Chinese imports are a major, unquantifiable, risk factor as we approach the Nov. 20 meeting between Xi and Trump. On the basis of the NAFTA negotiations and the Eurozone “truce accord”, the odds are tilted in favor of a deal which would be acceptable to China and allow the Trump administration to save face with some wins. Markets would be relieved. But Trump is a loose cannon and the White House hardliners are busy lobbying. On tariffs, the odds are positive but the consequences of losing the bet can be significant since the future under 25% tariffs on a large swat of imported Chinese goods is unpredictable and scary.

Pressures from labor costs are real and a rising risk increasingly mentioned in conference calls and in corporate surveys. So far, there has been no really scary acceleration in wages but the Atlanta Fed Wage Tracker is close to 4.0%, a level that proved negative on margins in the last 2 cycles as wages (costs) rose much faster than inflation (revenues) (red rectangles = CPI range).

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Thanks to the fiscal stimulus and tax cuts, business sales have recently strongly accelerated while inflation remained contained, preserving margins even though wages firmed up.

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But the Fed wants to normalize interest rates and prevent a wage/inflation cycle. Inflation seems to provide some relief here but for how long given the strength in demand, supply bottlenecks and looming tariffs. The Fed is clearly telegraphing its intentions, warning both employers and employees to moderate their stance on wages even though conditions (labor shortage and strong profits) naturally favor rising wages. But when Amazon boosts its minimum wage to $15.00 (starting Nov. 1), it lifts the tide for everybody throughout the economy. The Fed will scrutinize whether these higher costs get easily passed on. Watch inflation!

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Analysts are now shooting for revenue growth of 6.5% in Q4, 5.2% ex-Energy, slowing to the low 5s during 2019 (mid-4s ex-E). Absent any new stimulus, a likely scenario given the split Congress, overall demand could wane while labor and other costs rise. If investors angst about margins today when revenues are growing 8.5%, just imagine their fears if and when top line growth slows to 4.5%.

Especially with

MESSY TARIFFS

The tariff balls thrown out by the Trump administration are beginning to bounce everywhere causing a lot of unforeseen damage. The huge and complex auto industry feels all of these bounces:

Earlier this year, Pierburg US LLC, a manufacturer of parts (…) sued one of its suppliers over tariffs imposed this year by the Trump administration. The two sides have been in business for at least 20 years.

Pierburg alleged that the supplier’s refusal to ship electric motors from China to Pierburg’s factory in South Carolina unless it paid the 25% tariff cost in full was “extortion.” A failure to deliver the parts could shut down multiple auto factories and “plunge the automotive industry into complete chaos,” Pierburg said in court filings.

The supplier dismissed Pierburg’s claims as “hyperbolic rhetoric,” arguing in filings that it was under no contractual obligation to ship parts at the pre-tariff price, because of the “unexpected nature and monumental effect of the current trade war.” (…)

Over the summer, some auto makers pre-emptively sent out letters through their legal departments, warning suppliers that the tariffs shouldn’t be a pretext for renegotiating price agreements, say executives and attorneys who were contacted. Some companies are now asking tariff-relief provisions be inserted into new supply agreements going forward, a request nearly unheard of before this summer, say attorneys.

(…) the new tariffs will cost Toyota $100 million this fiscal year and likely even more in the following year. “We’re not going to have a blanket statement to say we agree to absorb 100% of the costs,” Mr. Young said in an interview. “It’s not an open checkbook.”

The average operating profit margin in the auto parts manufacturing business is already slim–about 7%, according to the Original Equipment Suppliers Association—so extra costs can hit earnings hard. Car companies, facing cooling U.S. demand for cars and trucks after a multiyear growth streak, are also reluctant to pass costs on to car buyers by raising prices.

Ford Motor Co. CEO Jim Hackett said in September that tariff-related costs would shave about $1 billion from the company’s bottom line this year. General Motors Co. also dialed back its full-year profit guidance in July, citing rising commodity costs related to new steel and aluminum tariffs.

Some smaller parts suppliers have resorted to pleading with customers for help.

This summer, (…) Clips & Clamps Industries, a small Detroit-area parts maker with about 57 employees, sent one-page letters to about 15 customers proposing a cost-sharing arrangement for future contracts. Clips & Clamps was on pace to turn a profit this year, but rising materials costs have wiped out its margin.

Two customers agreed. A few politely declined. One buyer from Canada wrote back, expressing sympathy. “They basically said: ‘I’m sorry your government is doing this to you, but what do you expect me to do about it?’” Mr. Aznavorian said. (…)

Peterson American Corp., North America’s largest privately owned maker of springs used in car engines, was recently told by one of its steel vendors that the company would withhold shipment of the wire coils it delivers to its factories unless the manufacturer agreed to pay the tariff costs. (…)

“We’ve had a couple other suppliers threaten to hold trucks,” he said. “It’s happening all over the industry.”

Barron’s: Bank of America Merrill Lynch strategist James Barty:

“We continue to believe that the outcome of US/China trade talks is crucial to global markets,” Barty contends. “Failure would accentuate the deterioration in global growth and fully justify investors’ fears.” (…)

Third-quarter earnings saw an uptick in the number of companies blaming tariffs for lackluster guidance, and we can expect more to do so the longer the trade war trundles on. (…)

TECHNICALS WATCH

The S&P is bouncing against its declining 200dma:

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As is its equal-weighted index:

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Pointing up The 13/34–Week EMA Trend Chart is worrisome:

Still positive: Ned Davis Research has its own demand/supply indicator: it looks at a smoothed total volume of declining issues versus a smoothed total volume of advancing issues using a broad market equity index.

  

Lowry’s Research sees the “re-appearance of strong Demand and the likelihood for new highs for the bull market in the weeks and months ahead.” Its Buying Power Index climbed back to the dominant position above the Selling Pressure Index, “also demonstrating a resurgence in Demand”.

This is true for large caps which “have clearly been the primary beneficiaries of Demand during the rebound rally (…). By contrast, “continued weakness among small caps during a further market rally would be consistent with an aging bull market.”

“Since 1950, US stock markets have never been down six months and a full year following midterm elections.”

Stock Market Bulls Re-Emerge After Bruising Selloff Money managers are doubling down on stocks after a brutal October selloff, as cheaper valuations and the potential for continued profit gains help support a rebound among equities.

UBS Group AG said Thursday it was increasing its exposure to stocks, including in the U.S. and emerging markets, while asset-management giant BlackRock Inc., BMO Global Asset Management and QMA, the $128 billion quant-equity arm of PGIM, Prudential Financial ’sinvestment-management business, all recently reiterated their preference for stocks. (…)

“Even if we use our own relatively cautious estimates on earnings for 2019, which include the expected impact of tariffs in the U.S. and Asia and a modest slowdown in headline economic growth, valuations still look favorable,” [UBS] added.

The broad index is currently trading at 16 times forward earnings, down from 17 times at the end of the September, according to FactSet. Meanwhile, the risk premium among U.S. shares stands at 4.6%, above the long-term average of 3.2%, UBS added. (…)

In emerging markets, equities are now trading at 11 times future earnings, a discount to the 30-year average of 13 times, according to UBS. European stocks are trading at 12 times future earnings, versus a long-term average of 16 times. (…)

Devil Arrrgh!

  • Emerging markets at “a discount to the 30-year average of 13 times, according to UBS”. It truly kills me to read stuff like that and think some trusting folks will invest on wrong, twisted facts. Here are the real facts: 
    • Since 2000, that’s almost 20 years, the P/E on the MSCI Emerging Markets has ranged between 8.0 and 13.0. So much for the 30-year average of 13.
    • Any idea how the complexion of “emerging markets” has changed in the last 30 years and how that might have affected the “average” P/E ratio? Just in the last 10 years, China has moved from 14% of the MSCI EM Index to its current 31%. A bunch of “Others” are next in line at 27% from 39% in 2008 while Brazil went from 14% to 6% and Russia from 10% to 3%. So if you still want to trade on the basis of an EM 30-year average P/E ratio, or on such an average for that matter, you should not read Edge and Odds. Barely knowing what you buy and unable to know what you will eventually sell, you’ll never get any edge, and the odds will always be very much against you. Buy lottery tickets instead.
  • Europe MSCI Index P/E last reached 16 times very, very briefly in early 2015. Prior to that, you have to go back to the 2002 bear market to meet a P/E of 16 on collapsed earnings. Since 2003, the EMU MSCI P/E has fluctuated between 7.5 and 15.0 times forward earnings. These are known, post factum earnings. The P/E on future, unknown earnings, is now 11.9. FYI, local currency EMU EPS are barely above their last peak of 2011 and remain 15% below their 2007 peak level. Not exactly what analysts have been saying for several years. Same with revenues. Why should we care about this totally dis-functional artificial creation, however beautiful Europe is?

(…) it’s fair to say that much of Europe, including France, remains afloat financially only because of implicit backing from the European Central Bank (…). So here’s the problem: If Italy is authorized to spend whatever it wants, other governments might feel a political need to do the same. Eurozone countries then could end up in a race to use up the ECB’s credibility for fear others will use it up first. (Holman W. Jenkins, Jr. in the WSJ)

Geographical diversification? Only if you really want to dilute potential gains with a hodge-podge of equity markets that have nothing to do with each other, are terribly difficult to understand, are awfully volatile and unpredictable and/or invest in companies operating in questionable legal frameworks. As Don Coxe used to say, Emerging/Submerging markets. And that includes Europe’s Club Med countries.

Markets in the USA, Canada, the U.K., Germany, and Japan provide plenty of opportunities without all the uncertainties (known and unknown unknowns) coming with other markets. Nothing wrong to play India or China for a small percent of one’s investable assets but leave me alone with Europe, EMU and EM benchmark non-sense.

 A Non-Recession Bear Market Has Likely Begun

Steve Blumenthal:

If evidence emerges that the U.S. economy is slowing, a non-recession, cyclical bear market would be the most likely outcome. That’s my base case.

Since 1946, non-recession bears have had a median decline of around 23% lasting about six months.  With recession, the median decline is 37% lasting an average of 17 months.

NDR did a study looking at data back to 1946. They found there have been 16 corrections of at least 10% within what they define as cyclical bull markets. There are secular (or long-term) bull and bear market cycles (we are currently in a long-term secular bull) and shorter-term cyclical bull and bear market cycles. Of the 16 minus 10% cases, eight were followed by breadth thrusts. Breadth thrusts are defined as a high percentage of stocks moving up together – an indicator of market strength. Healthy markets see the majority of stocks accelerating vs. just a few carrying the market higher as was the case in 1999 and perhaps Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix and Google in the current cycle. Recall that in September, just 10 stocks accounted for more than 100% of the 9% gain in the S&P 500 Index. A great example of the lack of broad-based stock participation or non-breadth thrust.

  • In the eight cases where there was positive broad participation, the cyclical bull lasted another 22 months and the S&P 500 Index gained an additional 56.3% (median percent change) before reaching a peak.
  • In the eight non-breadth thrust cases, the cyclical bull lasted another six months and the S&P 500 Index gained an additional 21.3% (median percent change) before reaching a peak.
  • Bottom line: The S&P 500 gained 13.6% over seven months from the February 8 low to the September 20 high. Looking at the non-breadth thrust data (1946 to present), odds favor the short-term cyclical bull market top is in. Absent recession, downside risk is 23%. Lighten up or hedge that equity exposure on rallies and buy the 20% dip.

The S&P 500 tested its February low and held. It is currently sitting just above its 200-day moving average line. A 20% correction from the September 20, 2018 high of 2,931 is roughly -600 points. Vegas odds favor a better buying opportunity below 2,400. We’ll see.

Needed for a non-recession bear: rapidly rising inflation and/or a profit recession. Neither is obvious at this time. Tariffs are the big threat at this point.

Surprised smile Volkswagen capable of building 50 million electric vehicles: CEO in Automobilwoche  Volkswagen’s electric vehicle platform and battery procurement plans are being readied to handle production of 50 million vehicles, Chief Executive Herbert Diess told German trade publication Automobilwoche.

The electric vehicle platform has been “booked” for 50 million cars, Diess said, adding that battery procurement has also been readied to handle this amount.

“We have bought batteries for 50 million vehicles,” Diess was quoted by Automobilwoche on Monday.

Volkswagen Group sold 10.7 million vehicles in 2017.

A Fifth of China’s Homes Are Empty. That’s 50 Million Apartments

(…) Soon-to-be-published research will show roughly 22 percent of China’s urban housing stock is unoccupied, according to Professor Gan Li, who runs the main nationwide study. That adds up to more than 50 million empty homes, he said.

The nightmare scenario for policy makers is that owners of unoccupied dwellings rush to sell if cracks start appearing in the property market, causing prices to spiral. (…)

Holiday homes and the empty dwellings of migrants seeking work elsewhere account for some of the deserted properties, but purchases for investment are a key factor keeping the vacancy rate high, according to Gan. (…)

THE DAILY EDGE: 8 NOVEMBER 2018

U.S. Oil Falls for 8th Day in a Row as Supplies Surge

(…) The Energy Information Administration said Wednesday that inventories of crude oil in the U.S. surged by 5.8 million barrels last week to 432 million barrels, the highest total since early June. The report also said U.S. oil production exploded to a record 11.6 million barrels a day last week, from 11.2 million barrels a day a week earlier. (…)

“Saudi Arabia has indicated several times that they intend to preserve market stability, so the last increase in oil inventories has triggered it to put a supply cut on the agenda of the meeting,” said Giovanni Staunovo, commodities analyst at UBS Wealth Management.

President Trump, speaking at a press conference Wednesday, said his decision to soften the oil sanctions against Iran was directly responsible for driving down market prices for crude oil.

“I’m driving them down. If you look at oil prices, they’ve come down very substantially,” Mr. Trump said. “That’s because of me. Because you have a monopoly called OPEC, and I don’t like that monopoly. I don’t like it.”

Mr. Trump said the softened oil sanctions on Iran “will get tougher as time goes by, maybe,” but added he has to be careful because “I don’t want to drive the oil prices up to $100 or $150 a barrel.” (…)

Just in time for a merry end of year:

  • Morgan Stanley’s retail sales tracker shows an improvement in October.

Source: Morgan Stanley Research (via The Daily Shot)

China Car Sales Drop for Fifth Month to Leave Carmakers Reeling
  • Retail sales of sedans, multi-purpose vehicles and sport utility vehicles dropped 13.2 percent to 1.98 million units last month, the China Passenger Car Association said on Thursday. Sales in the first ten months of 2018 fell 2.5 percent to 18.4 million units. (…)
  • Total vehicle sales this year will remain under 30 million units and could drop from 2017, Wu Wei, a National Development and Reform Commission official, said Wednesday. Deliveries of vehicles to dealerships amounted to 28.9 million units last year, rising 3 percent from 2016.
  • To stimulate demand, China’s top economic planning body has submitted a proposal to halve the tax on purchases of vehicles with engines no bigger than 1.6 liters, people familiar with the matter said last month. No decision has been made, they said.
POLITICS
Democrats’ House Victory Complicates Trade Deals The Trump administration is facing a heated trade battle with Congress after the Democratic Party retook the House of Representatives, posing a significant challenge to President Trump’s deal with Mexico and Canada.

(…) Most Democrats, backed by unions, have voiced skepticism about liberalizing trade unless the deals allow workers in the other countries to take advantage of higher labor standards and wages. Passage “will depend on whether unions will want to push it,” a senior White House official said.

The AFL-CIO, a large federation of labor unions, said in official comments that it has “serious doubts that the improved rules will make a meaningful difference to North American working families without additional provisions.” Several environmental groups have rejected the new agreement as well. (…)

Democratic lawmakers complain the new deal doesn’t have strong enough enforcement mechanisms to ensure that Mexico implements tougher the labor rules, which include requirements for allowing fully independent unions with collective bargaining rights to help boost wages. (…)

Mr. Trump still holds leverage. He has repeatedly warned he would withdraw from the current version of Nafta if he doesn’t get a new one. Faced with a choice between Mr. Trump’s USMCA or a withdrawal from the deal, many lawmakers would hesitate to take a hard line. (…)

Republicans Weaponized the House. Now, Democrats Will Use It Against Trump 
US midterm elections: Is gridlock good?

(…) Conventional wisdom has it that a gridlocked Congress is good for markets as it prevents politicians from interfering in the economy. However, US markets have received a considerable boost from the president’s tax cuts and deregulation measures.

Going forward, gridlock means less fiscal support for the economy as Democrats are unlikely to back further tax cuts. This could create a problem for US growth in 2020 when the existing package fades and is not replaced by further measures. It is possible that the president and the Democrats could strike a deal on infrastructure spending, but they may hesitate to take measures that could help get Trump re-elected as president.

Faced with a potential block on fiscal policy, the president may turn to trade policy and look to strike a deal with China and so prevent a further damaging escalation in the trade war. From an economic perspective, that would be the logical step. However, Trump will have to weigh up whether the economic costs outweigh the political benefits of playing to his base support – many of whom see tariffs as an essential part of putting America first. (…)

In the House, a number of Republican moderates lost or chose not to stand for re-election. This means the Republican House caucus will become more conservative and more Trump-like. The new House Democratic majority will be more challenging to the president on a number of issues. Consider the possibility of a House committee issuing a subpoena for him to release his tax returns. (…)

Gavekal has a more positive view:

In short, the US investment environment remains positive for growth and equity markets. While the exceptional growth of economic output and corporate profits seen this year will likely soon moderate, financial conditions remain favorable. There are risks to the status quo—chief among them being rising trade barriers, higher labor costs and rising interest rates. The trade war is little affected by this election, and remains a concern. On the margin, this election result probably reduces the risk that labor costs and bond yields rise rapidly from here on. Both are likely to keep trending upward, but if they do so gradually then this growth period and equity bull market probably have a while longer to run.

My humble view:

Politicians being what they are, their sight is now totally focused on November 2020. Dems will make sure not to help Trump in any way and Trump will make sure voters are aware of that. As the FT reports, the new Congress, which takes office in January, will be the most ideologically polarised in US history, according to a scoring system developed by Adam Bonica, a professor at Stanford University.

Gridlock means that equity investors will need to assess how corporate profits will behave during 2 years when the economy will be left to its own: no new major fiscal stimulus, no new major tax cuts while corporate costs will keep rising (e.g. wages, logistics, interest rates) while Federal debt will go through the roof following the 2017-18 fiscal largesse.

Best outcome is gridlock brings Goldilock. Good luck!

The NYT:

Exit Polls: How Voting Blocs Have Shifted From the ’80s to Now
  • Women broke hard for Democrats, this year, even more so than usual.
  • In the 2016 presidential election, 55 percent of white women voted for Republicans. And this year, the group backed Democrats and Republicans evenly.
  • This year, voters under age 30 broke for Democrats by a 35-point margin.
  • All racial groups moved left, but white voters remain solidly Republican.
  • This year, Asian voters swung left more than any other voters of color.
  • Lower-income voters remain a core part of the Democratic Party’s base, but this year, the second largest shift left came from voters who make $50,000 to $100,000 annually. The wealthiest voters continue to vote Republican.

I find this chart fascinating: all income groups have shifted left in spite of the strong labor market and tax cuts:

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EARNINGS WATCH

We now have 419 reports in, 78% beat rate and a continually rising beat factor reaching a record +6.6%:

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Q3 earnings are now expected to be up an amazing 27.7% from 21.6% expected Oct.1 and 26.6% and 24.9% in Q1 and Q2 respectively.

Trailing EPS are now $157.53 or about $160 pro forma the tax reform for the full 12 months. Future EPS have not changed in recent days.

At 2800 on the S&P 500 Index, the Rule of 20 P/E is 19.7 on pro forma trailing EPS. Maybe, Mr. Market’s main fear before the mid-terms was a loss of both Congress and the Senate. Gridlock bring Goldilocks?

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TECHNICALS WATCH

Not my forte, but I note that

  • the S&P 500 Index jumped back up above its 200dma;
  • the 200dam is still declining but that could reverse quickly with a few more good days.
  • there was never a lower low since the February 9 low.

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