The enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it’s the illusion of knowledge (Stephen Hawking)

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

Invest with smart knowledge and objective odds

THE DAILY EDGE (15 March 2017)

Fed Is Ready to Raise Rates, but Key Bank Metric Suggests Caution

(…) Bank loans across all categories are growing 4.6% annually, the slowest pace since 2014, according to weekly Federal Reserve lending data from March 1. The trend is particularly marked in business loans, which are now increasing 3.9% annually, a rate that is a nearly six-year low. A number of factors are at play including rising interest rates; bankers also say some of their business clients put borrowing on hold before the U.S. election and aren’t yet confident enough to jump back in. (…)

Bank loans are one of the hard data not showing any economic momentum. This chart from David Rosenberg illustrates the weakness in borrowings in the last 3 months, that is since the elections.viewer.aspx

Yet:

The Business Roundtable CEO Economic Outlook Index rose 19.1 points in the first quarter from the fourth quarter, to reach 93.3, according to a survey released Tuesday. It was the largest one-quarter gain for the index since the fourth quarter of 2009, when the economy was just emerging from the recession. Readings above 50 indicate economic expansion. (…)

The Roundtable survey showed CEOs upgraded their forecast for 2017 economic growth to a 2.2% increase, from the 2% gain forecast in December. (…)

“CEOs strongly believe that we can do a lot better than we’ve been doing,” he said. “With the right policies, this country can do better. We’re not believers that we’re stuck in low growth forever.” [J.P. Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon] (…)

Mr. Dimon isn’t concerned that higher interest rates could slow growth. The Federal Reserve is expected to raise its benchmark rate at a meeting this week.

A rate increase is a  “sign of strength, not a sign of weakness,” he said. (…)

The survey showed 41% of CEOs expect to increase hiring at their firms in the next six months, up from 35% in the prior quarter’s survey. And 46% plan to boost capital spending, also up from 35% in the December reading.

The NFIB surveys are also showing that exploding optimism has not triggered much actual spending just yet.

Thinking smile Could it be that companies are delaying expenditures waiting for the eventual tax reform that could allow full capex expensing in the first year? Maybe but weak capex spending is not a very recent trend as this Pictet chart shows:

image

The USA has not seen such widespread optimism for a very long time. Consumers, small business owners, CEOs, economists, strategists, commentators and investors are all displaying jolliness like if none of these groups includes any Democrat whatsoever.

Gallup's U.S. Economic Confidence Index by Political Party

Equity markets will occasionally feed from sentiment, boosting P/E ratios in anticipation of eventually higher earnings. But confidence alone is not enough. Equity markets need the proteins only supplied by actual profits to remain energized and healthy. David Rosenberg produced tables comparing various measures of confidence levels with equity returns 12 months later. Whether you look at consumer confidence, ISM surveys or the NFIB index, equity returns tend to be inversely proportional with confidence levels.

AMAZING CHART

From Pictet:image

Natural-Gas Glut Deepens

A flood of natural gas swamping the U.S. is turning into a global glut, sinking prices and dimming the hopes of American producers to export their way out of an oversupplied domestic market.

Natural-gas futures have fallen 25% over the past 2½ months. The declines continued Tuesday, with April futures dropping 3.45% to $2.938 a million British thermal units on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Shares of gas-production companies are among this year’s worst performers. (…)

Many investors wagered that new gas-fired power plants and record exports would help burn off much of the excess supply in the U.S. But a historic level of exports hasn’t been enough to transform a market dominated by unpredictable weather and massive new supplies from fracking. (…)

One issue for U.S. producers is their own growing influence: More gas for sale world-wide—often floating on ships—eases bottlenecks that once drove big local price spikes. Global prices for natural gas have plummeted, down by half in some places in recent years.

Mild U.S. weather in February also has reduced demand. Warm winter temperatures sapped about 2.9 billion cubic feet a day of demand from the market this season, compared with just the 2.3 billion cubic feet a day of new exports added, according to Platts Analytics, a unit of S&P Global Platts. (…)

U.S. gas producers have nearly doubled their number of rigs from a historic low last year. Oil rigs also have nearly doubled, and they produce gas as a byproduct. Macquarie estimates that 9 billion cubic feet a day of new gas from oil wells alone between 2017 and 2021 will completely cover all new demand from exports.

Global supply is likely to increase by 44% in 2020 from 2015 levels and outpace new demand through the end of this decade, according to Moody’s Investors Service. (…)

Pipeline delays in Mexico and President Donald Trump’s pledge to change trade terms with that country could undermine sales to the most important export market for U.S. producers. Mexico last year received nearly 60% of U.S. gas exports, according to EIA. (…)

Oil Falls For 7th Day As Saudis Report Output Hike After Warning U.S. Shale Firms

(…) Saudi Arabia said it raised its oil production to 10.011 million barrels per day in February, up 2.7% from January, but still under the 10.05 million-barrel target the country agreed to under a production-cut deal reached last year between OPEC and top non-OPEC countries.

But the number conflicted with figures OPEC derived from other sources, showing Saudi production falling by 68,100 barrels a day to 9.8 million barrels per day. (…)

The OPEC report comes as Saudi energy minister Khalid Al-Falih told attendees at IHS’s CERAWeek energy conference in Houston last week that the output deal is “so far so good,” but his country “will not bear the burden of free rides” by others in the agreement. (…)

The Saudis can talk and warn all they want. American entrepreneurs are not just sitting on their hands and praying:

Source: @jsblokland, @DeanDijour via The Daily Shot

Meanwhile…

Strong Chinese Data Contain One Warning Sign: Flagging Consumption

(…) Value-added industrial output, a proxy for economic growth, expanded by a faster-than-expected 6.3% in the first two months of 2017 from a year earlier, compared with 6.0% growth in December,

Investments in factories, buildings and other fixed assets in urban areas rose by a better-than-expected 8.9% year over year in the January-February period, compared with an increase of 8.1% in 2016. (…)

Sheng Laiyun, a spokesman with the statistics bureau, said private investment in property, factories and other capital goods tied to Beijing’s public-private infrastructure projects is noticeably better. “The business environment has improved,” he said in a briefing. (…)

Property investment rose 8.9% in the first two months of 2017 to 985.4 billion yuan ($142.5 billion) compared with a 6.9% increase in all of last year, the statistics bureau said. Housing sales rose 22.7% by value in January and February from a year earlier, according to Wall Street Journal calculations, compared with a 49.2% increase in January-February of 2016. (…)

However, retail sales clocked the slowest increase in 11 years, with a 9.5% rise in the two-month period, according to the National Bureau of Statistics, compared with a 10.9% increase in December.

  
Ninja Goldman Turns Cautious on Stocks

Call me Did you miss yesterday’s TAXATION MATTERS

THE DAILY EDGE (3 November 2016): November Jitters

Fed Sends New Signals About a Possible December Rate Increase Inflation is finally showing signs of behaving the way Federal Reserve officials want it to, bolstering the case for them to raise short-term interest rates next month

(…) Inflation has “increased somewhat since earlier this year,” Fed officials said in a statement released after a two-day policy meeting, noting also that some investors’ expectations of future inflation “have moved up but remain low.” (…)

The Fed’s policy committee “judges that the case for an increase in the federal funds rate has continued to strengthen but decided, for the time being, to wait for some further evidence of continued progress toward its objectives,” it said. (…)

The word “some” is new. Given that the October manufacturing PMIs were strong almost throughout the world, the Fed needs to make sure that the U.S. consumer is active during the coming holiday period because that would clear the remaining excess inventories in the system and set the stage for a good 2017 first half. The Fed statement acknowledged the slowdown in consumer spending in Q3 vs Q2 (“Household spending has been growing strong rising moderately…”). The FOMC of Dec. 13-14 should have enough info on retail sales to assess the trend.

Everybody is focused on Friday’s payroll data but retail sales are more significant at this point. Higher employment with increased savings would not help clear excess stocks.

Retail sales will suffer in the months ahead due to rapidly rising medical and rental CPI.  Whenever rental and medical costs have risen significantly in the past, they have led to a big decline in retail sales.  You can see from the chart below that Medical CPI plus Rental CPI provides a nine month lead on Redbook Same Store Sales.  Consumers will start cutting back spending on non-essential items in order to pay for medical care and housing.

Retail stocks are highly correlated to the ups and downs of same store retail sales.  As you can see from the next chart, the S&P 500 Consumer Discretionary sector has fallen sharply when rental and medical costs have risen, notably in 2001-02 and 2008-09.

Interesting, but I am not sure Redbook sales are still a good proxy for retail sales given online sales.

BTW, Thomson Reuters’ Same Store Sales Index

(…) is expected to show a 1.1% gain for October 2016, an improvement from October 2015’s -0.4% result. An increase of 3% or more indicates a healthy retail industry. (…)

October marks the last month of the retail industry’s third quarter. Our Thomson Reuters Quarterly Same Store Sales Index, which consists of 80 retailers, is expected to post 1.1% growth for 3Q (vs. 1.4% in 3Q 2015).

image

U.S. ADP Private Payroll Gain Eases

The ADP/Moody’s National Employment Report indicated a 147,000 increase (1.9% y/y) in October nonfarm private sector payroll employment following a 202,000 September addition, revised from 154,000.

The ADP report is not a solid indicator but it was pretty weak in October.

Worldwide manufacturing growth hits two-year high

The JPMorgan Global Manufacturing PMI, compiled by Markit from business surveys in over 30 countries, rose to 52.0 from 51.0 in September, its highest since October 2014. The upturn means that the latest survey data are roughly consistent with global manufacturing output rising at a reasonable 4% annual pace.

Both output and new orders grew at the strongest rates for just over two years, and the recent drag from inventory reduction continued to ease. Stocks of both finished goods and inputs showed the smallest declines for over a year.

Global exports continued to rise at only a modest rate, however, acting as a dampener on overall order book and production growth, especially in the emerging markets. While the developed world manufacturing PMI edged up to a 24-month high of 53.0, the emerging market PMI merely rose to 50.9 (albeit a 20-month high).

Key drivers of the overall global improvement were the US and China, where the PMIs hit 12- and 27-month highs respectively, the latter buoyed by output rising in China’s factories at the fastest rate for over five years (despite a renewed drop in exports).

The upturn was broad-based, however, as further support came from Europe, where the eurozone PMI hit a 33-month high and the UK continued to register solid growth. The Nikkei PMI for Japan also recorded its best performance for nine months, and the Russian PMI meanwhile lifted to a four-year peak.

However, the fastest rate of growth (as signalled by the headline PMI) continued to be reported by the Philippines, followed by the Netherlands and Germany, these two runners-up highlighting the relative strength of factory production in northern and central Europe (neighbouring Austria and the Czech Republic were also in the top eight).

India moved into fourth place, helping demote the UK to fifth place. The UK nevertheless remained a strong performer, thanks largely to the weakened pound. Only the Philippines and then Germany reported faster export sales growth than the UK in October. (…)

Brazil once again suffered the steepest downturn, despite seeing its smallest deterioration in nine months, followed by Malaysia and then South Korea, the latter two sitting in contrast to the surging growth recorded in the Philippines and highlighting the marked divergence in manufacturing trends within Asia.

(…) the survey provided scant evidence that prices were being driven up by demand rising faster than supply. Suppliers’ delivery times, for example, were largely unchanged, suggesting much of the increase in costs could be explained by higher oil prices rather than a fundamental improvement in suppliers’ pricing power.

(…) Production expanded especially sharply, growing at the fastest rate since March 2011, helped by a further rise in new orders. A renewed decline in export sales, albeit marginal, suggested that much of the uplift was driven by a welcome strengthening of domestic demand.

Part of this further improvement in manufacturing conditions therefore appears to have been due to the government’s efforts to stimulate the economy through fiscal measures. Other encouraging leading signals were busier supply chains and increased purchasing activity.

(…) Job cuts in the manufacturing sector consequently continued to be widely reported despite strong improvements in output and new orders, as companies downsized and sought cost savings. On a brighter note, there were nascent signs of stabilisation in the manufacturing workforce as the rate of decrease in employment slowed to the weakest since May 2015.

CEBM Research’s own analysis suggests that China’s manufacturing-related employment surged 28% in October.

CETERIS NON PARIBUS

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. is using its e-commerce stronghold in China to grow beyond its online marketplace. The company reported strong results in its latest quarter, with users increasing spending and the company showing profit potential in areas that include internet and entertainment services, the WSJ’s Alyssa Abkowitz reports. The Chinese internet giant is betting big on cloud computing, and is challenging Amazon Web Services and Microsoft with growing business that could give the company a cushion against a hard landing for China’s economy. The foundation e-commerce business is still growing, however, and defying China’s downturn. It’s also changing in significant ways: mobile revenue now accounts for 78% of Alibaba’s China retail revenue, and users of mobile devices are spending more every time they log in, suggesting the market is getting more comfortable with big purchases as well as small, one-off retail buys.

SHORT-TERM PAIN FOR LONG-TERM GAIN

Ocean carriers shouldn’t expect relief from overcapacity anytime soon, or even during this decade. A new report from the Boston Consulting Group Inc. projects the imbalance between shipping supply and demand will only grow in the next few years, WSJ Logistics Report’s Erica E. Phillips writes, suggesting that this year’s plunging freight rates and shrinking carrier profits will only grow worse without a big shock to the market. BCG says in a new report that the market right now shows container shipping lines steaming straight ahead with a strategy of adding more and bigger ships even as global trade sputters. The bottom line: the cap between shipping capacity and demand that reached 7% this year will grow to between 8.2% and 13.8% in 2020, the firm says. Freight rates have ticked up this fall, but analysts say that’s just brief relief for carriers, not a trend.

43%:Share of global container shipping the top three carriers will hold next year, according to Maersk, compared to 17% twenty years ago.

OIL

Oh-Oh! Is there suddenly a demand problem in the U.S.? This is the biggest weekly crude surplus on record.

The Daily Shot adds this telling chart:

Russia continues to agree with OPEC about the need to “cut” production while sharply raising its own output.

And these two:

Gift with a bow All just in time for Thanksgiving and Christmas…

U.K. Must Hold Vote in Parliament Before Brexit: Court Ruling

The Economist: “An appeal is likely. The government insists that it conducts foreign affairs under the ancient “royal prerogative”, without lawmakers’ oversight.

Egypt Free Floats Its Currency, Devaluing It Against the Dollar Egypt’s central bank said Thursday it would freely float the local currency, a move aimed at eliminating a flourishing black market for U.S. dollars and securing a much-needed IMF loan, but devaluing the pound by almost half.
EARNINGS WATCH

Good season overall.

  • 385 companies (83.1% of the S&P 500’s market cap) have reported. Earnings are beating by 6.1% while revenues are surprising by 0.2%.
  • Expectations are for revenue, earnings, and EPS growth of 2.5%, 1.9%, and 4.1%, respectively.
  • EPS is on pace for +5.1%, assuming the current beat rate for the remainder of the season. This would be +8.6% excluding Energy.
  • If there are no further beats this season, EPS would grow 4.1% with revenues, margins and buybacks contributing 2.5%, -0.5%, and 2.1%, respectively. Excluding the drag from Energy, margins would be adding 100 bps.

So margins are back on the uptrend! Recent PMI surveys reveal that manufacturers are seeing some pricing power finally while wages are not (yet) threatening.

Thomson Reuters’ tally sees EPS up 3.3% in Q3 but Q4 estimates are being trimmed from +8.3% on Oct. 1 to +6.8% yesterday.

NOVEMBER JITTERS

September and October have historically been the worst months for equities. Lance Roberts shows that early November can also be nasty, even more so during election years:

First, if we look at the month of November going back to 1960, we find that there is a bias for the month to end positively 61% of the time. In other words, 3 out of every 5 months finished in positive territory which is why it is included in the seasonally strong period of the entire year. Furthermore, the average and median returns for the month top 1% over the course of that time. (…)


A look at daily price movements during the month, on average, reveal the 5th through the 8th trading days of the month are the weakest followed by mid-month. (…)

However, during election years, we see the same periods remaining weak, but more dramatically so as the volatility of election years skews the average of all years. In other words, regardless of who is elected on the 8th, look for a relief rally on the 9th, followed by a sell-off over the next few days. The traditional post-Thanksgiving rally tends to be stronger performance wise as the “inmates run the asylum” during exceptionally light volume trading days.