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THE DAILY EDGE: 9 JANUARY 2023: Goldilocks?

Jobs Gains, Wage Growth Show Signs of Cooling Employers added 223,000 jobs in December, the smallest gain in two years.

Employers added 223,000 jobs in December, the smallest gain in two years, the Labor Department said Friday. Average hourly earnings were up 4.6% in December from the previous year, the narrowest increase since mid-2021, and down from a March peak of 5.6%. (…)

Friday’s report sent markets rallying as investors anticipated it would cause the Fed to slow its pace of rate increases. The central bank’s next policy meeting starts Jan. 31. The Fed’s aggressive rate increases aimed at combating inflation didn’t significantly cool 2022 hiring, but revisions to wage growth showed recent gains weren’t as brisk as previously thought. (…)

The unemployment rate fell to 3.5% in December from 3.6% in November, matching readings earlier in 2022 and just before the pandemic began as a half-century low. Fed officials said last month the jobless rate would rise in 2023. December job gains were led by leisure and hospitality, healthcare and construction. (…)

The labor force participation rate, which measures the share of adults working or looking for work, rose slightly to 62.3% in December but is still well below prepandemic levels, one possible factor that could make it harder for employers to fill open positions.

The average workweek has declined over the past two years and in December stood at 34.3 hours, the lowest since early 2020.

Hiring in temporary help services has fallen by 111,000 over the past five months, with job losses accelerating. That could be a sign that employers, faced with slowing demand, are reducing their employees’ hours and pulling back from temporary labor to avoid laying off workers. (…)

The combination of slower employment growth (revisions cut 28k jobs on October and November) with reduced hours and slowing wages brought growth in aggregate weekly payrolls (labor income: employment x hours x wages) down to +0.17% MoM in December after +0.23% in November. Last 2 months: +2.4% a.r., a marked slowdown from +9.0% for the year and +6.8% in the second half.

Weekly hours (brown bar) unusually declined MoM two consecutive months. On a YoY basis, employment rose 3.0% in December but weekly hours are down 1.4%, leaving labor demand up a low 1.6%.

Hourly earnings (black) rose 0.27% MoM or 3.2% annualized in December (4.6% YoY). For Q4, the growth was 4.2% a.r.,  slower than the 4.8% rate in the first 9 months of the year.

fredgraph - 2023-01-07T055357.278

Weekly overtime hours have been cut sharply throughout 2022 but they dropped 7.6% from 3.9 to 3.6 in the last 2 months to levels that historically were only reached during recessions:

fredgraph - 2023-01-09T070827.795

The big surprise in the December NFP report is the large revisions to wages for October and November which meaningfully changes the trend as can be seen in the next 2 charts:

Average Weekly Earnings (MoM) after the November report

Average Weekly Earnings (MoM) after the December report

fredgraph - 2023-01-07T062534.882

The substantial acceleration in October and November disappeared and December growth is half that of the previous 3 months. Note also that the downward revisions to wages were larger for service-producing workers, potentially helping keep services inflation lower than expected.

In all, this report shows that the labor market is not as hot as feared: demand for labor is “nicely” slowing and wage gains are actually decelerating.

Actually, the FOMC could soon shift its focus away from wages and inflation towards jobs demand. Employment keeps rising but weekly hours have declined in the last 2 months and employment for temporary workers, often the canary in the coal mine, has now declined for 4 consecutive months and at a particularly fast clip.

fredgraph - 2023-01-07T064803.668

Surely, scenarios calling for a wage spiral and stagflation must be downgraded, if not eliminated.

The probability of recession rises with this report but a soft landing also gains credibility, assuming the Fed agrees.

The WSJ’s Nick Timiraos, often called the Fed’s mouthpiece, wrote on Friday night:

(…) Fed officials have kept their options open for their Jan. 31-Feb. 1 meeting by declining so far to spell out what might lead them to approve another half-point rate rise or to step down to a more traditional 0.25-point increase. “I am very open to both,” said Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic during a panel discussion Friday at an economics conference in New Orleans. (…)

The report offered little evidence that the Fed’s rapid rate rises last year have significantly slowed hiring. Employers added 223,000 jobs in December and the unemployment rate dropped to 3.5% from 3.6% in November, returning to a 50-year low.

But revisions to figures on wage growth showed recent gains weren’t as brisk as previously thought and instead indicated they continued slowing through the end of the year. (…)

After the release of Friday’s reports, investors saw a roughly 75% probability of a 0.25-point rate increase at the Fed’s coming meeting, and a 25% probability of a larger half-point bump, according to interest-rate futures market prices compiled by CME Group. (…)

Job openings held nearly steady at historically high levels in November, adding to evidence the labor market remained strong heading into 2023, according to a separate Labor Department report released Wednesday. The figures showed layoffs stayed low and a larger share of workers quit their jobs in November than a month earlier, a sign Americans were still confident in their employment prospects.

The data point to a solid overall job market even though some large technology companies are announcing layoffs. (…)

Officials are trying to balance the risk of raising rates too much and creating unnecessarily higher unemployment with the risk of not doing enough to slow down spending and investment, which could allow higher inflation to become entrenched.

Mr. Powell said at the news conference it was “broadly right” that the Fed’s best way to manage the risk of over-tightening would be to slow rate increases to smaller, more traditional 0.25-point increments as soon as the central bank’s next meeting. (…)

More broadly, Mr. Bullard said [Thursday] recent economic data buoys the Fed’s chances of slowing inflation without a serious economic downturn—achieving a so-called soft landing.

“The probability of a soft landing has increased compared to where it was in the fall of 2022, where it was looking more questionable,” Mr. Bullard said. “The labor market has not weakened the way many have predicted,” suggesting the economy is more resilient and providing Fed officials “a little more time to get inflation down to the 2% level,” he said.

Inflation readings have been encouraging recently, but the Fed’s fight against rising prices isn’t over, the leaders of the Richmond and Kansas City Federal Reserve banks said Friday.

The U.S. central bank must remain vigilant on reducing inflation even as rising interest rates could boost the risk of recession, Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin said at a forum in Durham, N.C.

“I get a lot of questions about whether the Fed should remain this committed given that risk,” Mr. Barkin said. “I guess my simple answer is that everyone hates inflation, and we are the ones mandated to address it. The Fed’s objective isn’t to hurt the economy; it’s to reduce inflation.”

At an event in Kansas City, Esther George, the president of the Kansas City Fed, said that “even as goods prices have started to decline, services prices continue to rise, boosted by a tight labor market.” (…)

“The experience of the ’70s showed that if you back off on inflation too soon, it comes back stronger, requiring the Fed to do even more, with even more damage,” he said. “If you change the target before it is achieved, as some have recently advocated, you put the Fed’s credibility at risk, which in turn increases the sacrifice required in order to control inflation. And if you think supply-chain improvements and our actions to date are enough to bring inflation down quickly, then our more gradual rate path should limit the harm.”

Ms. George said that the Fed’s aggressive action last year “has demonstrated its commitment to restoring price stability.”

“This may explain why measures of longer-run inflation expectations have remained relatively stable even as realized inflation has proven to be stubbornly high,” she said.

Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook noted recent signs that inflation has cooled, but said it has to fall much more to reach acceptable levels.

“Inflation remains far too high despite some encouraging signs lately, and is therefore of great concern,” Ms. Cook said in remarks prepared for delivery Friday at the Allied Social Science Associations conference here.

“I would caution against putting too much weight on the past few favorable monthly data reports,” she added. (…)

Fed officials, including Ms. Cook, have noted that price increases for goods have slowed recently, in part because supply-chain bottlenecks have eased. Housing costs, another main source of price pressures, are expected to ebb in the coming months.

She said, however, that the Fed remains concerned about inflation in other services because of rapid wage growth in the tight labor market.

“Inflation in other core services—a large category that covers activities as varied as travel and recreation to medical and legal services—has remained stubbornly high,” Ms. Cook said.

Nerd smile Not true: core services ex-shelter prices, the largest component of core PCE price inflation, were down MoM in October and unchanged in November; last 4 months +3.2% annualized.

Macy’s Reports Uneven Holiday Season Shoppers spent less on electronics and jewelry but more on food, as inflation continued to pressure consumers.

The department-store chain on Friday said that it expects sales for its year-end period to be at the low-to-midpoint of its previous range of $8.16 billion to $8.4 billion.

It also reaffirmed its fourth-quarter earnings guidance of $1.47 to $1.67 a share and said that it continued to make progress in reducing its inventory levels.

“Based on current macroeconomic indicators and our proprietary credit card data, we believe the consumer will continue to be pressured in 2023, particularly in the first half,” Macy’s Chief Executive Jeff Gennette said Friday. (…)

According to Mastercard SpendingPulse, which measures in-store and online retail sales across all payment types, retail sales from Nov. 1 through Dec. 24 increased 7.6% compared with the same period a year prior. The figures aren’t adjusted for inflation and include restaurants, gas stations and convenience stores but not car dealerships.

Restaurants had the biggest gain, according to Mastercard, with sales up 15.1%, as people dined out more now that Covid-19 restrictions have eased. Apparel sales rose 4.4%, but sales of electronics and jewelry fell 5.3% and 5.4%, respectively.

Online sales grew 10.6%, while sales at bricks-and-mortar stores rose 6.8%, Mastercard said. (…)

As I reported last week, BofA’s card spending per household grew 1.2% YoY during the holiday shopping season.

We also learned that vehicles sales were 13.31 million SAAR in December 2022 (Wards Auto estimate), down 5.9% from the November sales rate, and up 4.7% from December 2021.

Per the aggregate weekly payrolls, consumer spending should be up about 6.5% YoY in December, down from 8.1% in October and 7.6% in November. PCE inflation was 5.5% in November down from 6.1% in October. Real expenditures could thus be around +1.5% YoY in December after +2.0% in November and 1.9% in October.

fredgraph - 2023-01-07T070902.564

The sharp slowdown in labor income in the last 2 months points to a tougher retail environment during the first half of 2023.

Auto Rising Auto Loan Interest Rates Drive Share of $1,000+ Monthly Payments to Record Levels in Q4

New data from Edmunds reveals:

  • The average annual percentage rate (APR) on new financed vehicles climbed to 6.5% in Q4 2022 compared to 5.7% in Q3 2022 and 4.1% in Q4 2021. The APR on used financed vehicles climbed to 10% in Q4 2022 compared to 9% in Q3 2022 and 7.4% in Q4 2021.
  • 15.7% of consumers who financed a new vehicle in Q4 2022 committed to a monthly payment of $1,000 or more — the highest it’s ever been — compared to 10.5% in Q4 2021 and 6.7% in Q4 2020. 5.4% of consumers who financed a used vehicle in Q4 2022 committed to a $1,000+ monthly payment — also a record high — compared to 3.9% in Q4 2021 and 1.5% in Q4 2020.
  • The average down payment for new and used vehicles hit record highs in Q4 2022, climbing to $6,780 and $3,921, respectively.
  • Edmunds data reveals that new-vehicle lease penetration dropped to 16% in Q4 2022, compared to 29% in Q4 2019. Luxury new-vehicle lease penetration dropped to 26% in Q4 2022, compared to 53% in Q4 2019.

“Just as new and used car prices finally started to cool off in Q4, rapidly rising interest rates created an even greater barrier to entry for consumers who rely on financing — which is the vast majority of car shoppers,” said Ivan Drury, Edmunds’ director of insights. “Although the last quarter of the year typically skews toward luxury vehicle purchases, this near-record percentage of vehicles that are being purchased rather than leased reflect tougher market conditions far more than affluent consumers shelling out a bit more than usual to treat themselves over the holiday season.”

Edmunds analysts caution that the combination of costlier vehicle financing and cooling used car values could spell trouble for some consumers down the road if they do not budget or plan accordingly. Edmunds experts conducted a deeper dive into the share of new vehicle sales with a trade-in that had negative equity in Q4 2022, which reveals:

  • 17.4% of new vehicle sales with a trade-in had negative equity in Q4 2022, compared to 14.9% in Q4 2021 and 31.5% in Q4 2020.
  • The average amount owed on upside-down loans was $5,341 in Q4 2022 compared to $4,141 in Q4 2021 and $5,059 in Q4 2020.

“Vehicle equity is really a tale of two gears for consumers over the past few years,” said Drury. “At the onset of the pandemic, consumers benefited from low interest rates and elevated trade-in values, helping shield even the more questionable financing decisions from resulting in negative equity. This unique confluence of market forces resulted in some vehicle owners being able to take advantage of positive equity on their loans and even their leases. But as we shifted toward an environment with diminished used car values and rising interest rates over the past few months, consumers have become less insulated from those riskier loan decisions, and we are only seeing the tip of the negative equity iceberg.”

Almost Daily Grant’s adds:

Mark Cohen, professor at Vanderbilt University, apprises Bloomberg that the $1,000 bogey represents about 17% of the monthly income of the median U.S. household, whereas the pre-2020 era typically featured auto payments equivalent to 4% to 6%.

Mug Beer Sales Drop as Consumers Balk at Prices U.S. demand for beer fell at the end of last year after a strong run of defying inflation.

In the 12 weeks before Christmas, beer prices rose an average of 7% higher than the year-earlier period, according to an analysis of Nielsen data by the Bump Williams Consulting Co., an industry consulting firm. And in some beer categories—including American lagers like Bud Light and Coors Light—prices soared 10% or more. U.S. demand for beer fell as consumers reacted with sticker shock. Corona brewer Constellation Brands Inc. STZ 2.66%increase; green up pointing triangle now says it plans to make “more muted” price increases in the coming fiscal year, because higher-than-usual price increases in October slowed its sales growth.

“The consumer is overly sensitive to pricing actions,” Constellation Chief Executive Bill Newlands told analysts Thursday when the company lowered its earnings forecast, sending shares down nearly 10%. “We need to be careful in balancing our growth profile and our pricing profile.” (…)

U.S. retail-store sales volume of imported beers such as Modelo Especial grew 4.2% in 2022, but fell 0.5% in the four weeks before Christmas, according to Bump Williams Consulting. Superpremium domestic beer brands such as Michelob Ultra grew 0.8% in 2022, but fell 2.3% in the same December period.

The October price increases offset these declines, and kept dollar-sales growth at around 5% in the last quarter of 2022. In December, however, the dollar-sales gains shrank and the sales-volume decline accelerated, said Dave Williams, vice president of analytics and insights at Bump Williams Consulting.

Another troubling figure for the beer industry: Beer imports to the U.S. dropped more than 10% in November from the same month a year earlier, according to an analysis of U.S. Department of Commerce data released this week by the Beer Institute, a national trade association.

“The sharp drop in volume trends is concerning, and a concerning sign for the true health of the category moving forward,” Mr. Williams said. “Price sensitivity can only be stretched so far, even for beer.” (…)

Constellation Thursday said that higher costs for raw materials, packaging, fuel and freight costs had hurt its operating margins in the quarter ended Nov. 30. The company said that in its 2024 fiscal year, it will stay within its traditional price-increase range of 1% to 2%. (…)

Surprised smile Canada’s employment jumps the equivalent of 1 million U.S. jobs!

The labour market ended the year on a high note with an increase of 104K jobs in December, shattering consensus expectations. This concludes 2022 with an employment gain of 394K, while the population over age 15 grew at its fastest rate since at least 1976 (+497K) thanks to massive immigration.

As a result, the unemployment rate fell by a full percentage point over the past year to 5.0%, just above the record low of 4.9% recorded in June and July.

(…) not only is the overall figure spectacular, but so are the details. After a slump earlier in the year, full-time and private employment rose for the fourth consecutive month in December to record levels. Surprisingly, the sector that contributed most to the December employment increase was construction, despite weakness in the residential sector.

While [Friday’s] data is unquestionably very strong, we continue to believe that the job market will moderate in the coming months. While payrolls continue to grow, total hours worked have essentially stalled since Q1. Historically, consumers have been clairvoyant in perceiving reversals in the labor market. The most recent data from the Conference Board tells us that optimism about the labor market outlook is fading, with the indicator returning to its 2019 level after reaching historic highs in 2021.

The CFIB survey indicates that small businesses still perceive significant labor shortages, but that hiring intentions are fading. Indeed, the number of firms planning to increase their workforce is similar to those planning to decrease it, suggesting a hiring freeze at the aggregate level.

This morning’s data does not change our view that the Bank of Canada should be cautious about considering further rate hikes after the very aggressive tightening orchestrated in 2022. With extremely tight monetary policy and consumers simultaneously suffering from a loss of purchasing power, an interest payment shock and an unprecedented negative wealth effect, we continue to expect the economy to be near stagnant in the first half of 2023. (NBF)

Goldman Sachs:

Hourly wage growth of permanent employees decreased by 0.2pp to +5.2% year over year. Monthly sequential wage growth of permanent employees slowed down markedly to +0.2% (GS sa) in December (vs. +0.6% in November). On a three-month annualized basis, wage growth was +6.1% (GS sa, vs. +6.0% in November) and has been roughly flat at this level since September.

The higher-than-expected headline change in employment increases the likelihood of a 25bp hike in January, as we forecast. However, we think the implications for the BoC are probably more limited than the headline increase on its own would imply because the participation rate also moved up and sequential wage growth declined. We maintain our forecast that the BoC will pause in March but see a higher risk of another 25bp hike.

Eurozone labour market still going strong with unemployment at 6.5%

November 2022 was another strong month for eurozone labour markets. Unemployment was unchanged from October at 6.5%, the lowest rate since the data series began in 1998, with many of the larger countries seeing the rate decline, such as France, Italy and Spain, however large increases in Austria and Portugal offset these developments.

Overall, the resilient labour market is a positive for Europeans who are already seeing incomes come under pressure due to high inflation. This dampens the negative economic consequences of the inflation shock.

With a mild recession as the most likely economic outcome for this winter, there is some cooling of the labour market to be expected. Still, with a labour market this tight, it is unlikely that unemployment will run up enough to make labour shortages a thing of the past. That makes this a key risk for the ECB at the moment.

While inflation expectations are fairly well anchored right now, chances of higher trending wage growth remain an upside risk to inflation for this year. While there is no evidence of a wage-price spiral so far, the ECB has taken a hawkish turn and will remain worried about wage growth rising further anyway.

US Rejects Oil Offers in First Attempt to Replenish Stockpiles

The Biden administration is delaying the replenishment of the nation’s emergency oil reserve after deciding the offers it received were either too expensive or didn’t meet the required specifications, according to people familiar with the matter. (…)

The department will put off the purchase it had originally planned for next month, but its program, which used a new approach that accepts fixed-price offers, will continue, one of the people said.

The Biden administration had planned to start buying crude when it dropped around $70 a barrel. Oil fell during the fourth quarter and US benchmark prices fell close to those levels last month. (…)

Goldman:

As this winter is shaping up to be one of the warmest on record for Europe, apparent in last week’s 14-day ahead forecast showing the first three weeks of January as over 2 std warmer than normal. This unseasonable heat impacts not just Europe but also the US, where the January warmth is set to have twice the impact of the December cold, driving down demand for all winter fuels significantly lower.

In the past two weeks natural gas on both sides of the Atlantic collapsed by nearly 20%, with oil down 8.5%, and grains 3.8%. Oil demand is hit not only by the lost heating demand, but also by the lost gas-to-oil substitution in Europe with European gas price prices back to September 2021 levels at €70/MWh. Weaker energy prices then pulled down grains prices despite tightening Argentine supply.

We estimate that the immediate spot demand hit to oil could be as much 1.5 million b/d and should European gas prices remain weak for the rest of this year, the extended loss of gas-to-oil substitution would lower our oil price forecast by $4/bbl for 2023.

However, this doesn’t take into consideration a faster reopening of China, a stronger underlying European economic outlook as a result of relaxed energy constraints and a more benign inflationary backdrop. We estimate a faster reopening of China is alone worth +$5/bbl on the 2023 oil price forecast. Accordingly, we maintain our 2023 bullish outlook on oil and commodities with this latest warm weather posing downside risks to our gas price targets.

China Central Bank Official Says Growth to Be Back on Track Soon

The world’s second-largest economy is expected to quickly rebound because of the country’s optimized Covid-19 response and after its economic policies continue to take effect, Guo Shuqing, party secretary of the People’s Bank of China, said in an interview with People’s Daily published on Sunday. (…)

Guo pledged to use financial policies to boost the income of people affected by Covid outbreaks to meet basic demands and enhance consumption. The financial sector should also develop products that will encourage home and car purchases, he said. (…)

  • Goldman Sachs: Mobility continued to improve: The three mobility measures that we track, including the 100-city traffic congestion index, 19-city subway ridership, and domestic passenger flights, continued to show improvements in early January. The year-over-year decline of the 100-city traffic congestion index narrowed from its trough of around 20% in late December to 5-10%. Of the 19 cities with subway data, we observe increases in subway ridership in all of them now. The level of activity remains low – most cities’ subway ridership is 30-40% below this time last year – but the speed of the recovery appears high.

Traffic congestion was around 5% below year-ago level in latest reading

image_2 (18)

Source: Wind, Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research

EARNINGS WATCH

The Q4 earnings season kicks in this week.

Goldman Sachs:

S&P 500 revenues are expected to grow by 8% year/year, with all sectors positively contributing. Nominal economic growth has remained strong and explains most of sales growth in our top-down model. The recent 4% decline in the trade-weighted dollar represented a declining headwind for the translation of foreign sales since approximately 30% of S&P 500 sales are generated internationally.

In contrast, the outlook for profit margins remains challenged. S&P 500 margins contracted year/year for the first time in 3Q (-45 bp) and analysts expect this degradation to accelerate in 4Q (-81 bp to 11.2%). At the sector level, Energy is expected to expand margins the most (+364 bp). Excluding Energy, S&P 500 margins are estimated to contract 134 bp to 11.0%.

Consensus expects the aggregate S&P 500 index will post 0% EPS growth in 4Q 2022 vs. 4Q 2021. S&P 500 earnings growth decelerated from +12% in 1Q to just +3% in 3Q. S&P 500 ex. Energy EPS is expected to fall 5%.

More than 20% of S&P 500 market cap has pre- announced in 4Q 2022, the highest share since 1Q 2020. Similarly, the 3-month trend of S&P 500 FY2 EPS revision sentiment stands at -31%, the most negative reading outside of the 2008 and 2020 recessions. (…) on net, we see greater downside risks and expect further negative revisions.

For 2023, we forecast flat annual EPS growth compared with bottom-up consensus expectations of +3%. The gap reflects our assumption of greater margin compression than consensus expects. Excluding Energy, which benefits from high commodities prices and capital control, S&P 500 profit margins in 2023 will fall by 50 bp to the pre-pandemic levels of 11.3%.

Factset:

During the fourth quarter, analysts lowered EPS estimates for the quarter by a larger margin than average. The Q4 bottom-up EPS estimate decreased by 6.5% (to $54.01 from $57.78) from September 30 to December 31.

Here is the average decline in the bottom-up EPS estimate during a quarter during the past:

  • Five years (20 quarters): 2.5%

  • Ten years, (40 quarters): 3.3%

  • Fifteen years, (60 quarters): 4.8%

  • Twenty years (80 quarters): 3.8%

At the sector level, nine of the 11 sectors witnessed a decrease in their bottom-up EPS estimate for Q4 2022 from September 30 to December 31, led by the Materials (-18.8%), Consumer Discretionary (-13.5%), and Communication Services (-11.8%) sectors. On the other hand, two sectors witnessed an increase in their bottom-up EPS estimates for Q4 2022 during this time: Energy (+2.0%) and Utilities (+2.0%).

While analysts were decreasing EPS estimates in aggregate for the fourth quarter, they were also decreasing EPS estimates in aggregate for CY 2023. The bottom-up EPS estimate for CY 2023 declined by 4.4% (to $230.51 from $241.20) from September 30 to December 31. 

Here is the average decline in the bottom-up EPS estimate for the next year during the fourth quarter during the past:

  • Five years (20 quarters): 0.2%

  • Ten years, (40 quarters): 1.3%

  • Fifteen years: 2.7%

  • Twenty years (80 quarters): 2.2%

At the sector level, nine sectors witnessed a decrease in their bottom-up EPS estimates for CY 2023 from September 30 to December 31, led by the Communication Services (-10.0%), Consumer Discretionary (-8.8%), and Materials (-7.7%) sectors. On the other hand, two sectors witnessed an increase in their bottom-up EPS estimates for CY 2023 during this time: Utilities (+1.0%) and Energy (+0.9%).

Pointing up But the earnings season has already started with 20 early reporters: (Refinitiv)

Through Jan. 6, 20 companies in the S&P 500 Index have reported earnings for Q4 2022. Of these companies, 75.0% reported earnings above analyst expectations and 25.0% reported earnings below analyst expectations. In a typical quarter (since 1994), 66% of companies beat estimates and 20% miss estimates. Over the past four quarters, 76% of companies beat the estimates and 21% missed estimates.

In aggregate, companies are reporting earnings that are 5.1% above estimates, which compares to a long-term (since 1994) average surprise factor of 4.1% and the average surprise factor over the prior four quarters of 5.3%.

Of these companies, 65.0% reported revenue above analyst expectations and 35.0% reported revenue below analyst expectations. In a typical quarter (since 2002), 62% of companies beat estimates and 38% miss estimates. Over the past four quarters, 73% of companies beat the estimates and 27% missed estimates.

In aggregate, companies are reporting revenues that are 0.1% below estimates, which compares to a long-term (since 2002) average surprise factor of 1.3% and the average surprise factor over the prior four quarters of 2.5%.

Pointing up Pointing up  Note, however, that the actual earnings for these 20 companies are down 10.7% on a 3.7% increase in revenues in Q4. These same 20 companies reported Q3 earnings up 3.8% on a 12.2% revenue gain. The basket includes 12 consumer centric companies, 5 ITs, 2 Industrials and 1 Financial.

Morgan Stanley Warns US Stocks Risk 22% Slump US equities face much sharper declines than many pessimists expect, according to bank strategist Michael Wilson.

Michael Wilson — long one of the most vocal bears on US stocks [and ranked No. 1 in last year’s Institutional Investor survey]— said while investors are generally pessimistic about the outlook for economic growth, corporate profit estimates are still too high and the equity risk premium is at its lowest since the run-up to 2008. That suggests the S&P 500 could fall much lower than the 3,500 to 3,600 points the market is currently estimating in the event of a mild recession, he said.

“The consensus could be right directionally, but wrong in terms of magnitude,” Wilson said, warning that the benchmark could bottom around 3,000 points — about 22% below current levels. (…)

Wilson, however, warned while a peak in inflation would support bond markets, “it’s also very negative for profitability.” He still expects margins to continue to disappoint through 2023. (…)

John Authers:

Even though the employment numbers at first blush suggest that the Fed has done a good job of tightening money without breaking anything, it’s also likely that the central bank will be unhappy about this.

The Fed’s strategy is to use a tightening of financial conditions to spur the corporate sector into driving the kind of economic slowdown that will help bring price rises under control. Strengthening stocks and falling bond yields make conditions easier (and the weaker dollar that accompanies them tends to make liquidity far more easily available for much of the rest of the world).

According to Bloomberg’s index of US financial conditions, which combines a number of different measures, they’re now their loosest since October, and almost back to their norm for the last decade (marked by a 0). The tightening of financial conditions that the Fed engineered last year is now in danger.

THE DAILY EDGE: 6 JANUARY 2023

PMI SERVICES

USA: Decline in business activity gains pace in December, as demand conditions worsen

US service providers signalled a sharp fall in business activity at the end of the year, according to the latest PMI™ data. Output levels declined further amid weak demand conditions and another monthly drop in new orders. Domestic and foreign client demand contracted as economic uncertainty and high interest rates led to reduced customer spending.

Subdued demand resulted in muted business expectations for output over the year ahead, as concerns regarding inflation and the future order pipeline dampened confidence. Although employment continued to rise, the pace of job creation was only marginal overall as cost saving initiatives and lay-offs weighed on hiring.

Meanwhile, rates of input price and output charge inflation eased to the slowest paces since October 2020. Reductions in costs for some inputs were passed through to customers in an effort to remain competitive and drive sales higher.

The seasonally adjusted final S&P Global US Services PMI Business Activity Index registered 44.7 at the end of the year, down from 46.2 in November, but up slightly from the earlier released ‘flash’ estimate of 44.4.The rate of decline in output accelerated for the third month running and was the second-fastest since May 2020. Lower business activity was commonly attributed to a further reduction in new orders, as client demand weakened due to the impact of higher interest rates and inflation on customer spending.

image

Service sector firms continued to record a contraction in new business in December. Lower purchasing power among clients reportedly drove the latest downturn in new orders. The decline in customer demand was strong overall and the steepest in over two-and-a-half years.

At the same time, new export orders fell further in December, albeit at the slowest pace for three months. Anecdotal evidence suggested that global economic uncertainty and high inflation in key export markets hampered new export sales.

On the price front, cost pressures softened notably at the end of 2022. Service providers stated that although supplier and wage bills rose sharply, this was partly offset by reductions in some key input prices.The rate of cost inflation moderated to the slowest since October 2020 and was only slightly quicker than the series average.

Firms sought to pass through cost savings, where applicable, in an effort to drive sales higher and remain competitive in December. The pace of increase in output charges eased for the eighth month running. Selling prices at service sector firms rose at the slowest rate in over two years.

In line with lower new order inflows, service providers moderated their hiring activity during December. The rate of job creation was only marginal overall and the second-slowest since September 2021. Although some companies reportedly hired skilled and temporary staff, others mentioned that redundancies and the non-replacement of voluntary leavers dampened employment growth.

Backlogs of work declined for the third month running, as lower new order volumes allowed firms to work through incomplete business.

Finally, service sector firms registered optimistic expectations regarding the year ahead. That said, the degree of confidence was below the series average amid concerns surrounding inflation, high interest rates and future demand conditions.

Siân Jones, Senior Economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said:

“US private sector firms brought 2022 to a close signalling marked obstacles to overcome with relation to the health of the economy. Contractions in output and new business were broad-based and gathered pace in December as customer unease led to dwindling demand and order postponements.

“Despite weak demand conditions, firms continued to hire staff. Nonetheless, the pace of job creation was only slight as some firms turned their focus to filling temporary worker and long-held skilled jobs vacancies, whilst others reported instances of employees being laid off.

“A notable development through the month was a stark easing in inflationary pressures across the private sector. Muted demand for inputs led to the least marked uptick in costs for over two years, while companies also saw a slower increase in selling prices in a bid to entice customers and boost sales. The pass through of cost savings in the form of customer discounts will likely signal further adjustments to inflation as we enter 2023.”

Eurozone downturn eases in December as price pressures cool

The S&P Global Eurozone Services PMI Business Activity Index rose to 49.8 in December. This was up from 48.5 in November and signalled only a marginal decline in service sector output across the euro area. Overall, this was the softest decrease in activity since last August.

A sixth successive monthly reduction in new business was registered in December. Falling export orders also contributed to this. That said, the overall rate of decrease in new workloads was the softest in five months.

Outstanding business volumes fell for a second successive month as reduced new business enabled companies to focus on orders pending completion. A further expansion in employment also boosted resource availability. The rate of job creation was only fractionally stronger than the 20-month low seen previously, however.

Input prices and output charges both rose markedly in December, although rates of inflation eased to 11- and four-month lows respectively.

Finally, business confidence edged up to a four-month peak but remained historically subdued.

Commenting on the final Eurozone Composite PMI data, Joe Hayes, Senior Economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence said:

“The eurozone economy continued to deteriorate in December, but the strength of the downturn moderated for a second successive month, tentatively pointing to a contraction in the economy that may be milder than was initially anticipated. Weaker declines were also seen broadly across the euro area nations, and most notably in Germany, whose economy has been the primary drag on the eurozone as a whole in the second half of this year.

“Cooling price pressures have helped temper the decline in economic activity levels. A particularly marked slowdown in manufacturing inflation bodes well for other sectors of the economy, although this has partly been down to relatively benign developments across European energy markets at the end of 2022. Services inflation remains stickier for now, reflecting a sharp rise in labour costs, which continued to be pushed up by continued hiring efforts.

“Nevertheless, there is little evidence across the survey results to suggest the eurozone economy may return to meaningful and stable growth any time soon. Demand conditions remained fragile as clients have retrenched, while business confidence remains bogged down by recession concerns, energy cost uncertainty and persistently high inflation and a tightening of financial conditions.”

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CHINA: Pressure on service sector activity eases in December

Latest PMI data signalled a further fall in business activity across China’s service sector at the end of 2022, as ongoing efforts to curb the spread of COVID-19 continued to disrupt operations and dampen demand. That said, both activity and new work fell at softer rates than in November. The level of outstanding business meanwhile expanded at the quickest pace since May, and firms registered a softer fall in employment. Inflationary pressures moderated further, with both input costs and prices charged rising at mild rates.

When assessing the 12-month outlook for business activity, firms expressed stronger optimism in December. Moreover, the level of positive sentiment improved to its highest for nearly a year-and-a-half as firms projected a strong recovery from the pandemic.

The seasonally adjusted headline Business Activity Index rose from a six-month low of 46.7 in November to 48.0 in December. While the sub 50.0 index reading indicated a fall in Chinese service sector activity for the fourth straight month, the rate of decline was only modest overall. Lower output was often linked to the impact of COVID-19 containment measures on operations, including temporary business closures, and customer demand. However, some companies indicated a relative improvement in conditions compared to November.

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Overall new work also decreased for the fourth month running, albeit at a slower pace than in November. Restrictions around travel and the subsequent reduction in client numbers was mentioned by a number of firms. The pandemic also weighed on external demand, with new export business declining for the second time in three months.

Outstanding business meanwhile rose for the fifth month in a row, with some firms stating that they had been unable to work through backlogs due to COVID-19 restrictions. Though modest, the rate of accumulation was the quickest seen since May.

A combination of cost-reduction policies and voluntary leavers drovea further decline in service sector employment in December. Despite easing from November’s record pace and being modest, the rate of job shedding was quicker than seen on average in 2022.

Relatively subdued demand conditions led to a further easing of price pressures at the end of the fourth quarter. The rate of input cost inflation moderated to a six-month low, with expenses rising marginally overall. Greater cost burdens were often attributed to higher staff, raw material and fuel costs. At the same time, companies raised their own charges only slightly and at the softest pace since August. There were reports that efforts to remain competitive had restricted firms’ abilities to hike their fees in December.

Service providers were generally confident that business activity will be higher than current levels in 12 months’ time. Moreover, the degree of optimism was the highest seen since July 2021. Companies that foresee higher output frequently mentioned that they expect the pandemic situation to improve, restrictions to ease, and operations and demand to recover.

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What if Inflation Suddenly Dropped and No One Noticed? The high year-over-year rate masks progress in the past five months. But we’re not out of the woods.

By Alan S. Blinder (professor of economics and public affairs at Princeton, served as vice chairman of the Federal Reserve, 1994-96)

Maybe we should start the new year with some good news: Inflation has fallen dramatically.

No, that’s not a prediction; it’s a fact. With one month remaining in 2022 (in terms of available data), inflation in the second half of the year has run vastly lower than in the first half. In fact—and this is astonishing—it’s almost back down to the Federal Reserve’s 2% target. Even more astonishing, hardly anyone seems to have noticed.

Yes, there’s a catch or two or three, to which I’ll come back. But first the good news:

Over the past five months (June to November 2022), inflation has slowed to a crawl. Whether measured by the consumer-price index, or CPI, which most people watch, or the price index for personal consumption expenditures, or PCE, which the Federal Reserve prefers, the annualized inflation rate has been around 2.5% over these five months.

Yes, you read that right. Yet hardly anyone has noticed this stunning development because of the near-universal concentration on price changes measured over 12-month periods, which are still 7.1% for CPI inflation and 5.5% for PCE inflation. (…)

But when the inflation rate changes abruptly, 12-month averages can leave you watching recent history rather than current events. Today is one of those times.

As mentioned, the CPI inflation rate over the past 12 months has been an alarming 7.1%. But the U.S. economy got there by averaging an appalling 10.6% annualized inflation rate over the first seven months and a mere 2.5% over the last five. The PCE price index tells a similar story, though a somewhat less dramatic one. The 5.5% inflation rate over the past 12 months came from a 7.8% rate over the first seven months followed by a 2.4% rate over the last five. (…)

So is today’s true inflation rate a mere 2.5%, meaning that Jerome Powell and the Federal Reserve can relax? Not quite. Now for the catches I promised earlier.

First, we’ve had this wonderfully low inflation rate for only five months. That’s longer than one or two months, which is why I’m writing this article. But it’s still too short a time to declare victory.

Second, if you concentrate instead on “core” inflation, which excludes food and energy prices, annual inflation over the past five months has run higher: a 4.7% annual rate for the CPI and 3.7% for the PCE. So the Fed’s fight against inflation isn’t over.

That headline inflation has dropped more than core inflation tells you that lower food or energy inflation played a meaningful role. In this case, it was energy. As measured in the CPI, energy prices have dropped 11% over the past five months, whereas they rose 27% over the previous seven. And perhaps this constitutes a third catch. With the war in Ukraine still raging and Iran in turmoil, maybe we can’t count on gasoline remaining at $3 a gallon.

Was the rest of the stunning drop in inflation in 2022 due to the Fed’s interest-rate policy? Driving inflation down was certainly the central bank’s intent. But it defies credulity to think that interest-rate hikes that started only in March could have cut inflation appreciably by July. There is an argument that monetary policy works faster now than it used to—but not that fast.

What did change dramatically was the supply bottlenecks. Major contributors to inflation in 2021 and the first half of 2022, they are now mostly behind us.

Peering ahead, the bottlenecks almost certainly won’t return. Another energy shock can’t be ruled out but looks unlikely. And the anti-inflationary effects of the Fed’s monetary policy are yet to come.

Altogether, the inflation future does indeed look brighter than the inflation past. Happy New Year.

Mr. Blinder is obviously not one of my readers. I started to “take the under” on the inflation bet several months ago, documenting the details suggesting slower inflation ahead. Mr. Blinder is right, we’re not out of the woods yet, but the forest is looking less frightening than one year ago.

But he also focuses too much on the recent benefits of supply debottlenecking. Goods inflation is not what would sustain high or low inflation going forward. Services prices are to be closely watched.

On December 27, I wrote:

November is the first month when the Fed’s drive to slow consumption and cool inflation shows convincing results. Real expenditures were flat in total and down 0.6% on goods (-1.5% on durables) while real services rose a steady, moderate 0.3%.

Core PCE inflation (blue bars) slowed from +0.55% in August, +0.46% in September, +0.26% in October to +0.17% in November.

Even PCE-Services prices (red) are behaving well.

Mr. Powell’s goal to see inflation slow over 12, 9, 6 and 3 months is currently met. Here’s the sequence: 4.6%, 4.3%, 4.3%, 3.6% respectively.

We’re not at 2% yet, but with the last 2 months at +2.6% a.r., the odds are very good that the sequence will be even lower by the time the FOMC meets next on Feb. 1.

fredgraph - 2022-12-23T114432.768

Note also that core services ex-shelter prices, the largest component of core PCE price inflation, were down MoM in October and unchanged in November; last 4 months +3.2% annualized.

But wage trends remain problematic, beyond the short-term relief from goods deflation and lower energy prices:

Vehicles Sales Declined to 13.31 million SAAR in December

Wards Auto estimates sales of 13.31 million SAAR in December 2022 (Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rate), down 5.9% from the November sales rate, and up 4.7% from December 2021.

Sad smile BTW from BofA: “In the 2022 holiday shopping season, total card spending per HH grew 1.2% y/y”

Euro-Zone Inflation’s Sharp Drop Masks Underlying Pressures

December’s reading came in at 9.2%, Eurostat said Friday, with slower growth in energy costs the only reason for the moderation. The figure reflects slowdowns in Germany, France, Italy and Spain and was less than the 9.5% that economists polled by Bloomberg had expected.

Highlighting how inflation continues to menace Europe’s economy, however, a measure of underlying price pressures that strips out energy and food edged up to a record 5.2%. (…)

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A second month of cooling price gains in the euro zone, which expanded to 20 countries from 19 this month as Croatia joined, came after Germany’s government paid some households’ natural gas bills to cushion the surge in costs since Russia invaded Ukraine.

Indeed, the drop in German consumer prices was almost solely responsible for the 0.3% monthly decline in the euro area, according to Bloomberg calculations. (…)

  • The breakdown by main expenditure categories showed services inflation rose 0.2pp to 4.4%yoy, and non-energy industrial goods inflation rose three-tenths of a percentage point to 6.4%yoy. Of the non-core components, energy inflation fell 9.2pp to 25.7%yoy, while food, alcohol and tobacco inflation rose two-tenths of a percentage point to 13.8% yoy. (GS)
Toronto Housing Market Slumps to Record Annual Price Drop

(…) Higher mortgage costs have already forced many potential buyers to the sidelines in Toronto, causing the number of sales to fall 48.2% in December from the same period last year when the market was approaching its peak. New listings have also fallen, but at a slower rate, the real estate board said.

The benchmark price of a home in Toronto fell 0.8% in December from the month before to C$1.08 million ($797,000), not adjusted for seasonality, according to the city’s real estate board. That brought the one-year price decline to 8.9%, the biggest drop for a calendar year since the benchmark was first compiled in 2005, the data show. Prices are down 19% since March.

Still, with Canada’s population growing at its fastest pace in decades thanks to high levels of immigration, many observers expect the housing market to stabilize. Some of the data from Toronto suggest that process may have already begun. The average selling price — which is considered more volatile and less reliable than the benchmark price — was flat in December compared with November, on a seasonally-adjusted basis.

Sales in December were similar to October and November on a seasonally-adjusted basis. (…)

Even with its declines over the past nine months, Toronto’s benchmark home price is still nearly 37% higher than three years ago.

The country added just over 437,000 new permanent residents in 2022, according to Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC). This topped the department’s target for the year, as well as the previous high of 405,000, reached in 2021.

Immigration now accounts for three-quarters of Canada’s population growth. The federal government’s immigration plan calls for the admission of 1.45 million more new permanent residents over the next three years, which is equivalent to 3.8 per cent of the country’s population.

The majority of the permanent residency spots have been set aside for economic immigrants, a term for newcomers who either have money to invest, or specific desirable skills, or can demonstrate that they are capable of opening businesses.

The federal government has said immigration is crucial for the economy, and that it accounts for as much as 90 per cent of labour force growth in Canada. (…)

“There is little debate that strong population growth goes hand-in-hand with strong real home price gains over time,” said Douglas Porter, Bank of Montreal’s chief economist.

Mr. Porter analyzed the relationship between population growth and home prices in 18 developed countries. He found that countries with the fastest population growth during the decade leading up to 2020 – such as New Zealand and Canada – had greater home price inflation than those where populations remained stable or decreased. (…)

Where Mr. Porter does expect the surge in newcomers to make a difference is in the rental market, where borrowing costs are less of a factor. Rents have already risen sharply over the past year, and he expects increased competition will push prices higher still. (…)

Email German Postal Workers Seek 15% Wage Increase as Negotiations Kick Off

(…) The wage demand is more than the 10.5% increase the Verdi union sought for 5 million public-sector workers in October. (…)

Carmaker Volkswagen AG and the IG Metall union reached an agreement in November to increase pay in two stages — 5.2% from June 2023 and 3.3% from May 2024. Energy provider RWE AG agreed to raise the base salary of its 18,000 employees by a minimum 6% as well as granting two one-off payments of €1,500 each the same month. (…)

China May Ease ‘Three Red Lines’ Property Rules in Big Shift

Beijing may allow some property firms to add more leverage by easing borrowing caps, and push back the grace period for meeting debt targets set by the policy, according to people familiar with the matter. The deadline could be extended by at least six months from the original June 30 date, the people said. (…)

The so-called “three red lines” metrics, that emerged in 2020, were the hallmark of a massive property crackdown by Beijing as it sought to reduce developers’ leverage, lower risk in the financial sector and make homes more affordable as part of President Xi Jinping’s common prosperity push.

The measures, which imposed strict debt and cash-flow targets on real estate firms, choked off liquidity for the highest-leveraged developers, contributing to the avalanche of defaults and construction halts that sparked mortgage boycotts and plunging sales across the nation.

With access to credit markets largely closed, developers have defaulted on more than 140 bonds in 2022, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Overall, developers missed payments on a combined $50 billion in domestic and global debt based on issuance amount. (…)

Fears of further contagion meantime weakened consumer confidence and roiled global investors who had long assumed the government would bail out the real estate titans. The crisis spooked buyers, driving home sales down by the most in at least two decades, while home prices declined for 15 straight months.

After almost two years of housing market pain, Beijing is changing its stance. Under the new proposal, China will ease restrictions on debt growth for developers depending on how many red lines they meet, the people said, asking not to be identified discussing a private matter.

Companies that meet all three thresholds will no longer have borrowing caps and can use letter of guarantees from banks to pay land purchase deposits, the people added. (…)

More than 30 companies were able to meet all three lines as of June last year, including China Vanke Co. and Longfor Group Holdings Ltd., based on Bloomberg calculations. (…)

Beijing is obviously desperate, after having made blunders over blunders. It will now instruct its own banks to bail the sector out, piling more debt on sick companies.

EQUITIES

China-Developed mRNA Covid Vaccine Starts Test Production Chinese drugmaker CanSino Biologics started trial production of a vaccine using mRNA Technology to target new variants of Covid-19 that are behind the country’s current outbreak.

(…) The Tianjin-based biotech firm plans to produce 100 million doses of the vaccine, designed to combat Omicron during the first phase of manufacturing, according to a company release posted to its social-media account late on Thursday.

The vaccine is now undergoing clinical trials that have shown positive results in terms of safety and ability to provoke an immune response, the release said.

CS-2034, as CanSino’s shot is now called, is based on the same gene-based messenger RNA technology found in Pfizer Inc. and Moderna Inc.’s vaccines. The breakthrough comes after almost three years of fighting the pandemic, during which Beijing has relied largely on homegrown vaccines that have grown less effective than mRNA shots in combating new strains of the virus. (…)

The CanSino vaccine targeting the BA.5 strain of the Omicron variant produced neutralizing antibody levels 29 times higher than a previous version, when used as a booster for people [who] had received three doses of inactivated vaccines, CanSino said. It added that the Chinese mRNA vaccine also provides a better and safer immune response in people aged 60 or above than other mRNA vaccines. (…)

In September, Indonesia approved another Chinese-made mRNA vaccine for emergency use, becoming the world’s first to give a green light to a Chinese vaccine using the technology. The vaccine, known as AWcorna, was co-developed by Chinese drugmakers Suzhou Abogen Biosciences Co. and Walvax Biotechnology Co., as well as a research institute run by China’s military.

China has rebuffed repeated US offers to share advanced vaccines as Beijing battles a fast-spreading wave of Covid-19, a rejection that’s led to growing frustration among American officials concerned about a resurgence of the pandemic.

Worried about the rise of new variants and impact on China’s economy, the US has repeatedly offered mRNA vaccines and other assistance to President Xi Jinping’s government through private channels, according to US officials who asked not to be identified discussing the deliberations.

US officials have also proposed indirect ways to supply the vaccines in an effort to accommodate political sensitivities in China on accepting foreign aid, they said, without providing more details. (…)

Only about two-thirds of people over age 80 have gotten fully vaccinated as of November, the last time [“official”] data was released.

Moreover, accepting vaccines from the US is likely a nonstarter politically for Xi, as it would shine a spotlight on Beijing’s failure to develop its own mRNA vaccine at a time when China is pushing for self-reliance amid a broader strategic fight with the US. China historically has been reticent to accept outside assistance during crises. (…)

The two sides continue to speak through health channels, another person said, adding that China’s response to the repeated US offers has been firm. Every time, Chinese officials have told their US interlocutors that Beijing has the situation under control and doesn’t require assistance, according to the people. (…)

Liu [Pengyu, a spokesman for the Chinese embassy in Washington] cited a University of Hong Kong study that suggested three doses of Sinovac Biotech Ltd.’s CoronaVac were 97% effective against severe illness or death, roughly in line with three doses of an mRNA vaccine. He added that China has administered 3.4 billion shots domestically and has an annual production capacity of 7 billion doses, making China a player in vaccine exports.

“China can not only meet domestic demand but also supply to other countries in need,” he told reporters. “We are also working to upgrade the vaccines to make them more effective and bolster vaccinations to cope with possible new variants so that we will continue to play a constructive role in the global Covid fight.” (…)