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

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NEW$ & VIEW$ (11 AUGUST 2014)

Earnings season recap. More debate on economic slack.

U.S. Productivity Rises at 2.5% Pace in Second Quarter

Nonfarm labor productivity, or output per hour worked, advanced at a 2.5% seasonally adjusted annual rate from April through June, the Labor Department said Friday. The gain failed to offset the 4.5% decline in the first three months of the year, the largest quarterly drop since 1981.

From a year earlier, productivity advanced 1.2%. That is only slightly ahead of the 1% average rate recorded in 2012 and 2013, and well off the better than 3% gains in the first year of the recovery. The pace of productivity gains the past two years have coincided with annual economic growth of a little better than 2%. Meanwhile, unit labor costs, a gauge of inflationary pressures, rose at a 0.6% annual rate in the second quarter following a 11.8% leap in the first quarter. From a year earlier, unit labor costs are up 1.9%, essentially in line with other inflation measures.

One bright spot in Friday’s report came in manufacturing. Productivity in the sector rose at a 3.6% pace during the second quarter and is up 2.1% from a year earlier. Both gains easily outpace the broader business sector. Meanwhile, unit labor costs in manufacturing have largely been contained, up 0.8% from a year earlier.

Comp. data have been quirky and noisy lately. Taking a 4Q moving average, one finds that comp. per hour was up 2.1% Y/Y in Q2.

Decline in ‘Slack’ Helps Fed Gauge Recovery

All are signs of an economy still healing from a deep downturn that created lots of economic slack: the gap between the resources we have and those we are using.

By many measures, such slack has narrowed considerably, but not completely, even five years after the recovery began. Conditions aren’t quite back to what was normal before the 2008 financial crisis.

Job Market Tilts Toward Workers as U.S. Enters Virtuous Cycle The balance of power in the job market is shifting slowly toward employees from employers.

(…) Americans who have been hunting for employment for more than six months are finding they’re having better luck landing a job, while people who had given up looking are returning to the labor force to resume their search.

Companies, meanwhile, are beefing up their in-house recruiting teams and increasingly using complicated computer algorithms to scour the Web for prospective job candidates. (…)

Employers in general have been “pretty stubborn” about increasing wages, said Jeffrey Joerres, executive chairman of ManpowerGroup (MAN), a Milwaukee-based staffing company with $20.3 billion in revenue last year. That may be about to change as the pool of available candidates shrinks.

“You can see a little anxiety among employers,” he said. “I can feel the inflection point is coming.”

Michael Durney, chief executive officer of Dice Holdings Inc. (DHX), agrees.

“I think you’re going to start to see wage inflation,” said Durney, whose company provides specialized websites that match employers with potential employees in industries such as technology and financial services. (…)

Businesses also are more inclined to hold onto staff. Conversions — giving full-time jobs to the temporary employees Manpower provides — are at a three-year high, according to Joerres. (…)

Express Employment had almost 90,000 job orders from employers in June, up from 62,000 a year earlier, Funk said.

More noise for Mrs. Yellen…

The WallStreetExaminer blog supports the doves as it deciphers the non-seasonally adjusted numbers to check on wage pressures:

Employment Cost Increases By SectorThe year over year gain in actual employment costs for all civilian workers was, are you ready for this–2%! That, indeed, is the highest it has been since 2011, when it spent the 2nd through 4th quarters rising at rates of 2-2.25%. Last year it never got above 1.9%. It’s a breakout! Or maybe not quite. This number is still within the same range of growth rates that it has been since the second quarter of 2010.

The gain, such as it was, was driven by gains of more than 2% in 6 major employment sectors. On the other hand, 4 broad sectors rose by less than 2%, and they can’t seem to get out of their own way. 3 of them have been wallowing below 2% since early 2011 and all 4 have been since early 2012.  Here’s a breakdown of the actual, not seasonally adjusted annual rate of gain by major sector.

Here’s how it looks on a graph.

Employment Costs By Sector- Click to enlarge

Before you get all outraged about government workers leading the increases, note that they got screwed in 2011 and 2012, falling below private sector workers for more than a year. The current surge looks like catch-up for that time when they were not getting raises. At about 16% of the workforce the government sector may be big enough that had it not been for this apparently compensatory increase, the total aggregate number for all employees may not have made it to a new 2 year high.

Another notable factor is that the 5 sectors that rose less than 1.75% comprise more than half of all US workers. The majority of US workers are experiencing compensation increases that do not even keep up with CPI, which we know, in addition, to be understated. (…)

Among the stronger sectors, Construction AND Extraction showed a gain of 2.1%. The problem there is that all of the gain is due to Extraction. Extraction means mining, and oil and gas production. Extraction is booming, while construction–not so much. In June, the BLS reported a year to year to year increase of 4.64% in average weekly earnings for mining and oil and gas extraction workers. But construction workers got virtually nothing, showing a gain of 0.24%. According to BLS data, there are approximately 850,000 employees in mining and oil and gas extraction. There are more than 6 million construction employees. How the BLS averaged those two together to come up with a 2.1% overall increase is beyond my ability to comprehend. I am the simple one.

So when you break these numbers down, recognizing the catching up of government workers which is probably temporary, and the likely overweighting of gains in mining and oil and gas extraction, that leaves just 4 sectors barely above a 2% increase.

One is Transport workers. They account for less than 3% of the US workforce. Their year to year increase is still below the peak levels of the past two years. The current uptick does not yet indicate that they’ve turned the corner.

Likewise those in another sector gaining more than 2%, Sales, saw an increase that remains well below the peaks of the past 2 years. Finally, managers and professionals and office and administrative workers have been flatlining at a 2% rate of increase for 2 years. There’s no breakout there either.

Looking at the 4 weaker sectors comprising the majority of US workers, the idea of a turn there is ludicrous.

Overall, private sector workers and those in education are not keeping pace with inflation, and the recent gains for non-education government workers could prove transitory. Considering the trends of the actual data in all of these major sectors, there’s no breakout here. The corner has not been turned. (…)

Good analysis. However, don’t forget that wages are a very lagging indicator. I side with David Rosenberg’s analysis which finds that

50 million American workers are in industries that are already at full employment. That is 35% of the workforce. A year ago, that number was zero. And 35% of the private workforce is also now in the process of enjoying accelerating wage growth. What is holding back the aggregate data are two sectors facing relentless downward pressure -construction and financial services.

But we have reached a critical mass where a rising share of the labour force is beginning up against a supply wall -wage growth for a significant and rising minority, enough to spin the dial on national income and spending is on the mend.

OECD Indicators Point to Slowdown in Germany

(…) But the outlook for Germany appears to be weakening, with the country’s leading indicator falling again during June in what the OECD said was a sign of “growth losing momentum.” After a strong first quarter, many economists estimate that the German economy contracted in the second quarter, in part because of an unusually large number of days being lost to vacation. (…)

The OECD said its leading indicators for France and Italy continue to point to stronger growth, as they have done for a number of months. However, those pickups have yet to materialize, leaving Spain as the only major euro-zone economy to enjoy a significant acceleration over recent quarters. (…)

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Sarcastic smile Where’s Italy’s recession on these charts?

Italy’s Problem Is Europe’s Problem

(…) Italy’s paralysis is all the more striking given the strengthening recovery in countries that have undertaken reforms. Spain is now the fastest growing economy in the euro zone, expanding by 0.6% in the second quarter. Citigroup expects the Greek economy to grow this year by 1.1%; Unemployment in Portugal has been falling for almost two years to 13.9% from a peak of 17.5%; Cyprus should return to growth in 2015, far sooner than predicted at the time of its financial collapse last year. (…)

That is why Italy’s stalled economy is a challenge for the European Central Bank too. For the past year, the ECB has come under growing pressure to embark on large-scale purchases of government bonds to address the euro zone’s low inflation rate. (…)

Germany adds to eurozone worries

Official data, due to be published on Thursday, are expected to show that growth in the eurozone stagnated in the second quarter. Economists polled by Reuters forecast growth of just 0.1 per cent between April and June, compared with 0.2 per cent in the first three months of the year.

German Economy Backbone Bending From Lost Russia Sales

Sad smile Leading to this chart from The Short Side Of Long:

China Loosens Monetary Conditions in Test of Credit Power

China loosened monetary conditions last quarter at the fastest pace in almost two years, a Bloomberg LP gauge showed, testing the waning effectiveness of credit in supporting economic growth.

Bloomberg’s new China Monetary Conditions Index — a weighted average of loan growth, real interest rates and China’s real effective exchange rate — rose 6.71 points to 82.81 in the second quarter from the previous three months. That’s the biggest jump since the July-September period of 2012, with May and June’s numbers the first back-to-back readings above 80 since January 2012.

New yuan loans in July will be a record high for that month, according to a Bloomberg News survey of analysts before data due by Aug. 15, suggesting officials are keeping the credit spigot open even as debt risks mount. While consumer inflation below the government’s goal allows room for more easing, economic data will determine how far policy makers go. (…)

China Inflation Tame in July

The consumer-price index rose 2.3% on year, in line with economists’ forecasts and unchanged from the previous month, according to data released by the National Bureau of Statistic. Prices rose 0.1% from a month earlier.

The CPI rose 0.1% M/M in July.

Meanwhile, the producer-price index, which tracks the prices paid to companies at the factory gate, has been stuck in deflation for more than two years, thanks to a combination of falling prices for raw materials and excess capacity in many Chinese industries.

The index logged a 29th straight month of declines in July, falling 0.9% year-over-year. But that is still mild compared to drops of 2% or more seen earlier this year. 

CANADA: Surprisingly negative jobs report supports low-rate stance

Statistics Canada’s monthly tally of hiring and firing produced a net gain of 200 positions last month, as a 60,000 increase in part-time jobs marginally outweighed a 59,700 plunge in full-time positions.

Canada’s unemployment rate dropped to 7 per cent from 7.1 per cent, but only because more than 35,000 people gave up looking for work, according to StatsCan’s report, released Friday in Ottawa. (…)

StatsCan estimates there were 17,820,900 people working in July, only 0.7 per cent more than a year ago. The labour participation rate, which measures the percentage of the population either working or seeking work, dropped to 65.9 per cent, the lowest since October 2001. Employment in goods-producing industries has shrunk by 56,000 positions this year, reducing the headcount to its lowest since January 2012, according National Bank Financial.

Speaking of National Bank Financial, their group of fine economists again provide the more insightful stuff:

Full-time employment has been particularly weak in Canada with a cumulative loss of 4,000 jobs so far in 2014. As today’s Hot Charts show, an unprecedented divergence has recently emerged between our country and the U.S. when it comes to full-time job creation: whereas the U.S. is growing at a robust 2% clip on a
year/year basis, Canada is actually contracting. What’s behind the weakness? The goods-producing industries has seen the destruction of 92,000 jobs over the past year with more than half of those losses coming from construction – the sector that spearheaded the rebound in job creation after the last recession.

As shown, a 3.7% annual drawdown in construction headcounts is extremely rare outside recessions. Is this development a harbinger of a much bigger slowdown in Canadian economic activity? We do not think so. For one, available data still point to a marked acceleration in real GDP in the coming months. For another, we doubt that the recent pace of layoffs in the construction industry can be maintained at a time when the value of new building permits is surging (we hit a record high in June). Should the upcoming report on new home starts show a level of around 180,000-to-200,000 units in July, a rebound in construction jobs could be in
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EARNINGS WATCH

Factset:

Overall, 446 companies in the S&P 500 have reported earnings to date for the second quarter with 73% reporting actual EPS above the mean EPS estimate. This percentage is slightly above the trailing 1-year average (72%). In aggregate, companies are reporting earnings that are 4.2% above expectations, which is also above the trailing 1-year (+3.2%) average. As a result of these upside earnings surprises, the earnings growth rate for the S&P 500 has improved to 8.4% today from 4.9% on June 30 and from 6.8% on March 31.

In terms of revenues, 64% of companies have reported actual sales above estimated sales and 36% have reported actual sales below estimated sales. The percentage of companies reporting sales above estimates is well above both the 1-year (55%) average and the 4-year average (57%).

The blended revenue growth rate for Q2 2014 is 4.3%, which is above the estimated growth rate of 2.8% at the end of the quarter (June 30).

In aggregate, companies are reporting sales that are 1.7% above expectations. This surprise percentage is well above the 1-year (+0.6%) average and the 4-year (+0.6%) average.

All ten sectors are reporting higher earnings relative to a year ago. Five of the ten sectors are reporting double-digit earnings growth, led by the Telecom Services and Health Care sectors. On the other hand, the Financials sector is reporting the lowest earnings growth of all ten sectors.

At this point in time, 80 companies in the index have issued EPS guidance for the third quarter. Of these 80 companies, 56 have issued negative EPS guidance and 24 have issued positive EPS guidance. Thus, the percentage of companies issuing negative EPS guidance to date for the third quarter is 70% (56 out of 80). This percentage is above than the 5-year average of 64%.

But well below the 6-quarter average of 79%.

Analysts expect earnings growth for the S&P 500 for the second half of 2014 to be in the same range as the 8.4% growth currently being reported for Q2 2014. For Q3 2014 and Q4 2014, analysts are predicting earnings growth rates of 7.1% and 9.9%.

Note that the estimated growth rate from Q3 was cut from 9.0% on June 30 to 7.1%, in spite of these facts:

  • Q2 actual EPS growth of +8.4% is 4.2% above expectations and shared across all sectors with 5 of the 10 sectors recording double digit growth in Q2.
  • Q2 actual revenue growth of +4.3% is 1.7% above expectations.
  • Margins keep growing. Q2 margins at 10.2% leapt above the previous 5Q highs.

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S&P’s database of 452 company reports shows a 66% beat rate and a 21% miss rate, the former being in line with recent years while the latter is much lower than the 24.7% average of the past 8 quarters. Interestingly, only 3 of the 10 sectors meaningfully better the average beat. Excluding Health Care (82%), IT (73%) and Materials (70%), the beat rate drops to 61%.

Q2 EPS are expected to come in at $29.56, up from the suspicious $29.18 last week and +12.1% Y/Y. Revenues are up 5.8% Y/Y, a marked acceleration from Q1’s +3.4% and Q4’13’s +0.5%.

S&P also says that margins rose nicely form 9.5% in Q2’13 to 10.1% this year, another record.

Trailing 12-month EPS should total $112.05 after Q2, up a significant 12.9% Y/Y. Q3 and Q4 estimates receded a little to $30.21 (+12.2% Y/Y) and $32.38 (+14.6%) respectively.

In all, this will end up as a pretty good earnings season. The bears have little meat to feed on as revenues have accelerated, margins keep rising and guidance is not deteriorating. At 1932, the S&P 500 Index is selling at 17.2x trailing EPS, a clear premium on the average (and median) of 13.7x since 1927, 1953 and 1983. Only if you are using data since 1993 (18.5) can you affirm that equities are cheap. At your own risk however!

The more dependable Rule of 20 P/E is at 19.2, a mere 4% below the “20” fair value (2020 on the S&P 500 Index).

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The latest Investors Intelligence survey revealed that bulls fell sharply to 50.5% from 55.6% a week ago. It noted that the latest reading is almost out of the caution territory and represents a decline over 12 points from the multi-year high of 62.6% in mid-June. It added that the spread between the bulls and bears contracted to 33.4% from 39.4% in the last survey and nearly low enough to shift to a neutral.

I will come back to that shortly. 

A 1.4-acre property in Lake Tahoe sold on Thursday for $1.6 million in bitcoins, joining a handful of other real-estate transactions that used the virtual currency.

NEW$ & VIEW$ (14 JULY 2014)

U.S. GDP: THE PROBLEM IS PRODUCTIVITY

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David Rosenberg:

The economy is clearly showing its verve and only the trade gap is preventing real GDP growth from surging in excess of a 4% annual rate in Q2. (…) the labour side of the economy is behaving as if we have a 4% growth economy. That auto sales are at eight-year highs of 17 million units or that the ISM combinations are at a firm 55 merely add credence to that view (not to mention factory orders at a six-month high). (…)

The problem this cycle is with productivity growth which has been faltering badly.

Meanwhile, commodities are helping the 99%:

Prices for soybeans, corn and wheat fell sharply on Friday after the U.S. Agriculture Department projected bigger-than-expected harvests and stockpiles this year, extending months of market bearishness for three of the biggest U.S. crops by value.

Soybean futures dropped about 3%, wheat fell by more than 4%, and corn prices slid to the lowest level in nearly four years as the USDA, in its closely watched monthly World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates report, said favorable weather is expected to lead to big jumps in crop production this year, outpacing demand.

Cotton prices also fell Friday, ending at the lowest level in two years, because the USDA increased its estimate for U.S. production by 10% to 16.5 million bales in the year beginning Aug. 1.

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Wells Fargo Results Show Lending Fears

Overall, Wells Fargo posted a 3.8% rise in second-quarter net income from a year earlier to $5.73 billion. Per-share earnings of $1.01 met analyst expectations, but revenue slipped 1.5% to $21.07 billion. With the latest profit gain, Wells Fargo eked out its 16th quarter in a row of growth in year-over-year net income but broke a streak of record profits over nearly four years, based on data from FactSet.

Wells Fargo’s credit-loss provisions totaled $217 million, compared with $652 million a year earlier and $325 million in the prior quarter. Improving credit has bolstered financial results at banks across the industry, although that trend is expected to slow as lending rebounds.

Like many of its rivals, Wells Fargo, based in San Francisco, is awash with savers’ money—average deposits rose 9% to $91.7 billion in the three months ended June 30 compared with the same period a year earlier—but is struggling to deploy them because of the low returns on many loans and investments.

As a result, Wells Fargo’s net interest margin—a key profitability figure that measures the difference between what a bank makes on lending and what it pays depositors—narrowed to 3.15%, compared with 3.47% a year earlier and 3.20% in the prior quarter. It was the lowest net interest margin in at least the past three years, according to FactSet. (…)

John Shrewsberry, Wells Fargo’s chief financial officer, said in an interview the bank isn’t concerned about its lower net interest margin. “We won’t stop taking our customers’ deposits,” he said, adding that Wells Fargo would rather sit on the cash than risk putting it to work in investments that might later suffer losses. (…)

Wells Fargo—the country’s biggest provider of home loans—saw mortgage originations fall about 58% from the year-earlier quarter to $47 billion, driven by a persistent slump in refinancing activity that has outweighed any gains in loans for new home purchases.

Some 74% of home loans were purchase mortgages, up from 44% a year ago, suggesting home buyers may be beginning to fill the gap left by the end of the refinancing boom.

Still, the bank offset the weakness in its mortgage business, which now accounts for roughly 8% of revenues, by stronger lending in other areas. Total loans grew 3.6% from a year earlier to $828.9 billion. Commercial and industrial loans climbed 10%, or $19.4 billion; auto loans jumped 11%, or $5.4 billion, and credit-card lending rose 10%, or $2.4 billion. (…)

Euro-Zone Industrial Output Slumped in May

The European Union’s statistics agency Monday said output from factories, mines and utilities fell by 1.1% from April, although it was up 0.5% from May 2013. That was the largest month-to-month drop since September 2012.

Economists said the scale of the decline was likely exaggerated by the fact that the May 1 public holiday was on a Thursday, with many workers also taking the following day off to create a longer, four-day break including the weekend.

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It may have been the calendar in May (BTW, energy IP was +3.0% in May), but what was it in March and December (both –0.4%). Last 3 months: –0.8%, last 6 months: –1.0%.

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Europeans apparently did not use the longer week-end to shop as May retail sales were unchanged after falling 0.2% in April. Last 3 months: +0.1%, last 6 months: +0.1%. Core retail sales: last 3 months: –0.4%, last 6 months: +0.4%.

Draghi Seen Delivering $1 Trillion to Banks in ECB Offer Mario Draghi’s newest stimulus tool will hand banks more than 700 billion euros ($950 billion) of cheap funding, economists say.

The European Central Bank president’s targeted lending program for banks will boost credit for the real economy as planned, and at the same time help keep the financial system flush with cash, according to the Bloomberg Monthly Survey of 45 economists.

The ECB has identified lending to companies and households as a key weakness in the euro area’s fragile recovery. The so-called TLTRO program, part of a wider package of measures announced in June, offers as much as four years of low-cost funding tied to bank lending that Draghi said this month could ultimately provide as much as 1 trillion euros.

Low rates change Germans’ housing habits

(…) A property boom in the German capital pushed up the value of the average apartment by 27.5 per cent from 2010 to 2013, according to property researchers bulwiengesa. Prices in towns and cities across the country have soared by a fifth over the past four years. Since 2012, the average time it takes to sell a house privately has fallen by almost a fortnight to eight weeks, figures from property website immobilienscout24.de show. (…)

“There are signs in the real estate market of price developments that are dangerous,” Wolfgang Schäuble, Germany’s finance minister, warned last month.

The Bundesbank, which along with the finance ministry and regulator BaFin, sits on the Financial Stability Commission, the body tasked with maintaining the health of the financial system, said earlier this year that property prices in the big cities were now overvalued by as much as 25 per cent.

Germany remains a nation of renters. The owner occupancy rate is just 53 per cent, according to Eurostat, compared with 78 per cent in Spain and a euro area average of 67 per cent. The rate has barely changed since 2010.

Barriers to home ownership, such as transaction costs of around a tenth of a property’s value, are high. Strong tenants’ rights and a vibrant rental property market also help in swaying Germans from becoming homeowners. But conditions are ripe for change. (…)

There are anecdotal signs that cheap money is already shifting attitudes, with the younger generation increasingly viewing property as a sound investment. In research on Frankfurt’s property market early this year, bulwiengesa reported mounting interest from people in their 30s. (…)

Canadian Dollar Drops as Jobs Loss Supports Central-Bank Caution
In Canada, a Central Banker’s Unusual Approach Head of Bank of Canada Looks Beyond Economic Models for Clues

Central-bank economic models failed to foresee the storm that devastated the global economy in 2008. Stephen Poloz, the head of Canada’s central bank, the Bank of Canada, is trying an alternative approach he thinks will have better foresight: actual human beings.

In a December speech he compared the world’s central bankers to “the sailors of another era who were driven far off course by a nasty storm. When things calmed, they found themselves in the Southern Hemisphere. Suddenly the navigational chart that they relied on—the night sky—was completely different.”

(…) Since taking over in June 2013, Mr. Poloz has pushed staff and himself to look beyond models for on-the-ground evidence to understand Canada’s economic challenges.

His director of Canadian research traveled to Calgary to quiz energy companies about the investment outlook and to Toronto to talk to big retailers about competitive pressures in setting consumer prices. (…)

One example: The central bank’s models said a U.S. economic recovery and a decline in the Canadian dollar should lead to a jump in exports and economic output. But it hasn’t.

Mr. Poloz and his staff have been turning to exporters for answers. His conclusion: Some key sectors, like auto-parts manufacturing, have lost competitiveness, leading the U.S. to buy more from lower-cost producers such as Mexico and overseas. Thus a weaker Canadian currency and more U.S. growth aren’t helping them much and Canada’s economy has become uncomfortably more dependent on housing and household spending. (…)

About 10 subsectors, including machinery, equipment, building materials and aircraft, have in fact recovered as expected, or are doing even better. But 21 others, including the auto sector, food and beverage suppliers and chemical makers, are no longer as competitive as they were before the recession when they take their goods to market in the U.S.

As the researchers drilled down and talked to companies, they found that in some industries–clothing, textiles and furniture, for example–competition from lower-cost producers, including China, picked up steam. Trade deals also eliminated some textile tariffs. New entrants started to make bigger inroads; suppliers to the auto industry cited tougher competition Mexico and Korea.

Research on the subsectors published in a bank working paper in April suggested only about half of exporters will be helped by a lower Canadian dollar, since many sectors face longer-term competitive challenges. Many of the sectors that stand to benefit from a lower dollar, such as consumer products, are already among the sectors that have maintained their market share in the U.S. (…)

Another sign the bull market is nearing its end Analysis: Companies no longer want to buy their own shares, a worrisome sign

New stock buybacks fell to $23.2 billion in June, the lowest level in a year and a half, according to fund tracker TrimTabs Investment Research. In May, the total was just $24.8 billion, and the monthly average in 2013 was $56 billion.

That’s worrisome, according to TrimTabs CEO David Santschi, because “buyback volume has a high positive correlation with stock prices.”

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Just kidding The red arrows are from me to indicate that the correlation is far from perfect…even though the calculated correlation is 0.61. Note that since 2006, the correlation between EPS and the S&P 500 Index is 0.86 (0.97 since 1926).

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So, keep reading.

EARNINGS WATCH
Analysts Have Not Slashed Earnings Expectations for Q2 to Date

The estimated earnings growth rate for the second quarter is 4.6% this week, slightly below the estimated growth rate of 4.8% last week. Small downward revisions to EPS estimates for companies in the Energy and Financials sectors were partially offset by small upward revisions to EPS estimates for companies in the Health Care sector, resulting in the small decline in the overall earnings growth rate for the index during the week.

Although the growth rate for the second quarter has dropped since March 31, analysts cut earnings estimates for the quarter by the lowest amount since Q2 2011. The percentage decline in the Q2 bottom-up EPS estimate (which is an aggregation of the earnings estimates for all 500 companies in the index and can be used as a proxy for the earnings for the index) was 1.7% during the quarter (to $28.96 from $29.45). This decline in the EPS estimate was lower than the trailing 1-year (-3.9%), 5- year (-2.9%), and 10-year (-4.6%) averages for a quarter. In fact, this marked the lowest decline in the bottom-up EPS estimate during a quarter since Q1  2011, when the bottom-up EPS estimate only decreased by 0.6% during the quarter (to $22.08 from $22.20).

S&P’s most recent update (July 10) shows that of the 27 companies that have reported so far, 16 beat (59%) and 8 missed (30%). Fourteen of the reports were from consumer sensitive companies. Seven beat and 6 missed.

Q2 EPS estimates are now $29.12 (per S&P), down from $29.24 on July 1.

The earnings season gets in higher gear this week with 157 reports. Important week!

SENTIMENT WATCH

Today’s main narrative, courtesy of Barron’s (Climbing a Staircase of Fear):

“The worst-case scenario that anyone sees today is a short-term correction of 5% to 10%.” (…)

“People think the risk is contained at 10%,” Hayes says. “Maybe it will be greater than that.”

That’s exactly what concerns Wells Capital Management’s Jim Paulsen, who thinks the correction, when it comes, could look a lot more like a bear market than your run-of-the-mill selloff. “I’d feel a lot better about a correction if everyone weren’t waiting in line with me,” he says. “Whatever correction we do get could scare everyone who was waiting to buy the dip.”

But wait, Paulsen is not through:

THAT POSSIBILITY ISN’T SCARING HIM AWAY, however. The reason: He believes the bull market isn’t over yet. Not even close. In fact, he thinks the S&P 500 could ultimately trade as high as 3,000 five years from now. Before you scoff, consider: It would take no more than earnings growth of 4% annually and a willingness of investors to pay 22 times those earnings. And he doesn’t want to miss the upside. “The worst thing an investor can do is get too focused on the chance of a temporary correction and miss the rest of this bull market,” Paulsen maintains. (…)

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