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

NEW$ & VIEW$ (29 SEPTEMBER 2015): Consumers Consume; Investors Consumed; Upgrading Equities Slightly.

U.S. CONSUMERS EARN AND SPEND

Personal income increased 0.3% in August following a 0.5% July rise, revised from 0.4%. Strong average hourly earnings lifted wages & salaries by 0.5% (4.1% y/y), +6.6% annualized in the last 2 months.

Disposable personal income increased 0.4% after a 0.5% rise. The 3.6% y/y gain was the strongest since February. In real terms, take-home pay rose 3.2% y/y but +4.2% annualized in the last 2 months.

Personal consumption expenditures increased 0.4% (3.5% y/y), the same as in July which was revised from 0.3% (+4.8% a.r. last 2 months). In real terms, the 0.4% gain in spending was the strongest in three months bringing the last 2 months +4.2% a.r.. Real durable goods purchases jumped 1.2% (5.5% y/y), helped by a 2.1% surge (2.4% y/y) in motor vehicle purchases.

The personal savings rate fell to 4.6% from 4.7%, revised from 4.9%.

Illustrating the rising confidence consumers have on their income prospects, real expenditures on durable goods have accelerated sharply throughout 2015. They are up at a 6.6% annual rate this year, +8.7% in the last 4 months!

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This is important with U.S. consumers accounting for nearly 70% of the economy and for a meaningful chunk of world demand. See IS THE FED IN LEFT FIELD, AGAIN? if you missed it.

BTW: Goods vs services economy: wages in goods-producing industries are down $9.7B in the first half. They are up $90.4B in services-producing industries.

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U.S. Pending Home Sales Decline Sharply

The National Association of Realtors (NAR) reported that pending sales of single-family homes declined 1.4% during August (+6.7% y/y) following an unrevised 0.5% July gain. Expectations were for a 0.4% increase according to Bloomberg.

Sales declines spread through most of the country. In the Northeast, sales fell 5.6% (+8.0% y/y). Sales in the South moved 2.2% lower (+5.3% y/y) and in the Midwest sales eased 0.4% (+6.2% y/y). Moving 1.8% higher were sales in the West (9.3% y/y).

Stop and go pattern: Sept-Dec 2014: –1.7% a.r.. Jan-Apr 2015: +26% a.r..May-Aug 2015: –5.9% a.r. (Chart from Doug Short)

Pending Home Sales

ATA Trucking Index decreased 0.9% in August

American Trucking Associations’ advanced seasonally adjusted For-Hire Truck Tonnage Index declined 0.9% in August, following a revised increase of 3.1% during July. In August, the index equaled 134.2 (2000=100), down from 135.3 in July. The all-time high of 135.8 was reached in January 2015.

Compared with August 2014, the SA index increased 2.1%, which was below the 4% gain in July. Year-to-date through August, compared with the same period last year, tonnage was up 3.3%.

Fed’s Dudley: Still Likely on Track for 2015 Rate Rise
Currencies of Commodity Producers Fall
OIL

Morgan Stanley downgraded the sector to market weight, indicating the supply glut in oil may not improve for another year, at a minimum, and that investors will likely find a better entry point in six to nine months. (…)

A scary thought for the remaining oil bulls: Parker posits that oil is perhaps much more like natural gas than is currently acknowledged, implying that meaningful upside from current levels might not be on the horizon. (…)

  • Thumbs up Credit Suisse: Hitting Rock Bottom

    (…) If prices are to rise, then, it’s going to have to be either the United States or other non-OPEC producers that will cut production – and finally American producers appear to have begun to do just that. The number of active oil rigs in the United States has fallen from some 1,600 in December 2014 to 644 in late September. There can be a considerable lag between when rig counts begin to fall and when production drops, but the disconnect can’t last forever.

    Already, a rolling measure of the oil supply coming out of four major shale oil plays in the United States shows that production has been declining since June. Stuart points out that the data finally began to show that overall U.S. oil production rolled over in the second quarter of this year, and he expects the decline to continue until the middle of 2016.

    Credit Suisse’s energy team believes the WTI price will stay below $55 a barrel until the second quarter of 2016 – precisely so that cash-flows stay low enough and so that energy companies will have to cut production. They don’t expect prices to rise above $65 a barrel, enough for supply outside the US to grow again, until 2018. Credit Suisse believes Brazil, Canada and North Sea producers such as the United Kingdom and Norway will face declining production in 2016, while Russia may see a slight increase.  

    Supply, of course, is only one side of the price equation. Global oil demand has been growing, and Stuart believes it will begin to outpace supply – 95.4 billion barrels to 95.1 billion barrels – in the fourth quarter of 2015. Much of the acceleration of demand-growth is coming from the U.S. and Europe, where economic growth is expected to sustain in the coming months. Credit Suisse believes European oil demand will increase 1.6 percent in 2015, a marked about-face from the 1.4 percent contraction in 2014, while U.S. demand is expected to grow more than twice as fast this year (1.9 percent) as it did last (0.8 percent).

    Even in China, Stuart points out that demand has continued to expand over the last few years and months, despite the country’s economic slowdown. Credit Suisse believes that Chinese leaders are committed to additional stimulus to stabilize growth, but the failure of such efforts and a subsequent nosedive in economic activity in China and the rest of Asia pose the biggest risk to the bank’s energy forecast. For now, it seems as though increasing global demand and tightening supply will slowly start to push prices higher next year. Just don’t expect $100 a barrel anytime soon.  

  • Oil rises as tighter U.S. market offsets Asia woes Oil prices rose on Tuesday after evidence of tightening supplies in the United States, the world’s biggest oil consumer, outweighed concerns over the health of the Chinese economy.

But the outlook for the U.S. economy looks brighter and oil supply there appears to be tightening with data estimating a drawdown of over 1 million barrels last week from the Cushing, Oklahoma delivery hub for U.S. crude.

Current data show that output fell from a peak of 9.6 million barrels a day in April to 9.3 million barrels a day in June. The latest monthly data, which will include the first production figures for July, are due Wednesday. (Chart from Scotia Capital)

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Allow me to reproduce the OIL segment from my Sept. 2 NEW$ & VIEW$, reminding you that the next update on oil shipments by train will be released by the AAR next Friday.

A big debate is whether U.S. shale production is declining. Monday, the DOE released monthly figures for crude oil supply and disposition for the month of June. Total U.S. crude oil production declined by 104,000 bpd from May to June and prior months (Jan-May) production figures were revised by ~40,000-130,000 bpd lower. Here’s Raymond James’ summary:

Monthly crude oil production averaged 9.296 MMbpd in June, down 104,000 bpd from the newly-revised April figure of 9.400 MMbpd (which in turn was revised lower by 111,000 bpd). The largest component of the sequential decline was lower-48 onshore production falling by 95,000 bpd (offshore PADD 3 & 5 and Alaska were down a combined 9,000 bpd) on top of a revised 74,000 bpd decline in May. On a state-by-state basis, Texas showed the largest sequential decline, with production falling by 66,000 bpd in June.

With this month’s introduction of the new data set, production data for the months of January to May have been revised – all of them lower, by between 40,000 bpd and 130,000 bpd.

Regular Bearnobull readers will recall that timely and never revised data from the Association of American Railroads have been showing declining rail shipments of petroleum products since April (see the OIL segment in my Aug. 10 New$ & View$)

U.S. Class I railroads originated 111,068 carloads of crude oil in the second quarter of 2015, down 2,021 carloads (1.8%) from the first quarter of 2015 and down 21,189 carloads (16.0%) from the third quarter of 2014, which is the peak quarter for rail crude oil originations.

I added this simple math:

YoY, the drop in Q2 crude oil traffic was 18.4%, confirming that U.S. shale oil production entered a downtrend during Q2 which seemed to intensify in July given that carloads of crude oil and other petroleum products sank 13.6% YoY after -7.3% in June, +0.5% in May and -1.1% in April. Weekly average carloads in July 2015 were 13,582, the lowest since October 2013. (…)

BTW, Raymond James adds this:

Total product demand was estimated at ~19.6 MMbpd for June, up from ~19.1 MMbpd in May but down from the implied weekly demand figures. Importantly, gasoline demand increased by ~1.5% sequentially to just under 9.4 MMbpd (up 4.0% y/y), implying impressive growth for the biggest driver of total U.S. demand. Additionally, continued strength in the weekly figures implies that our forecast from January for 3% demand growth for gasoline in 2015 may well prove conservative.

India’s RBI Cuts Key Interest Rate More Than Expected India’s central bank cut its key interest rate more than markets expected and for the fourth time this year amid optimism Indian inflation rates will remain low.

Reserve Bank of India Governor Raghuram Rajan cut the repurchase-agreement rate by 0.5 percentage point to 6.75%. That brings the total easing by India’s central bank to 1.25 percentage points since the beginning of the year. (…)

Mr. Rajan noted in the policy statement that inflation hit a nine-month low in August, and that despite the monsoon shortfall and the uneven distribution of seasonal rains, food inflation pressures have been contained by the government’s supply-management policies.

“Since our last review, the bulk of our conditions for further accommodation have been met,” Mr. Rajan wrote in his policy statement. He also noted that underlying economic activity remains weak. (…)

The central bank said Tuesday it is marking down its growth forecast for this fiscal year, which ends in March, to 7.4% from 7.6%. (…)

Airbnb Crimps Hotels’ Power on Pricing Hoteliers are seeing less-than-optimal results as many compete head on with home-rental company Airbnb on rare events that draw huge crowds like Pope Francis’ visit to the U.S. last week.

(…) In New York City, Airbnb listings last week reached nearly 20,000 during the pope’s visit, according to Airdna, a Santa Monica, Calif.-based firm that analyzes Airbnb data.

Since New York has about 116,000 hotel rooms, according to data tracker STR Inc., Airbnb increased the city’s lodging supply by about 17%. Philadelphia saw a nearly 16% increase in accommodations last week, including the more than 7,000 listings from Airbnb. In Washington, D.C., Airbnb listings were less of a factor, adding only about 2.5% of inventory. (…)

The pope’s visit isn’t an isolated case. Hotels in Louisville, Ken., saw a surge in competition from Airbnb listings during the Kentucky Derby, while hotels in Palm Springs, Calif., experienced the same around the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, according to Airdna.

Lodging analysts say hotels rely on these popular one-time or annual events to get some of their highest room rates of the year. But with the pop-up room supply from home-rental companies, hoteliers are finding it increasingly difficult to maximize profits for events that attract big crowds.

“It’s sapping their pricing power,” says Stephen Boyd, a hotel analyst with Fitch Ratings. (…)

Morgan Stanley lodging analyst Thomas Allen says his research shows that, in the 25 largest U.S. markets, the impact of Airbnb looks negligible. The number of days when hotels achieved a 95% or higher occupancy level has been rising since 2009. At the same time, he added, the 25% rate premium hotels can charge on nearly-full nights, compared with the average night, is roughly the same as a decade ago, before Airbnb.

Still, many hotel owners say they feel the pinch around tentpole events. Jon Bortz, CEO of Pebblebrook Hotel Trust, told analysts on a recent call that his properties were feeling the impact of Airbnb during certain events, especially those that attract large crowds paying their own way. He cited in particular the Comic-Con International festival in San Diego, where Pebblebrook has an Embassy Suites and a Westin hotel.

While his company used to have an “ability to price at maybe what the customer would describe as sort of gouging rates,” he explained on the call, “I’d say we’ve lost a lot of that ability at this point within the major markets where these events take place.”

Like always, the biggest impact will be during the next downturn…

SENTIMENT WATCH
  • Commodity rout or commodity crisis?

Investors are becoming concerned that what has looked like a commodity rout will turn into a full blown-crisis. The 15-month fall in prices is unlikely to be reversed soon, with the Federal Reserve calling time on the cheap-money era and China still struggling to recover from its slump. The drop in commodities is easily seen in copper – viewed as a bellwether for the global economy by some – where the price has dropped through its 200-month moving-average in recent days, a month-end support level that has held since 2004.

Chief U.S. equity strategist David Kostin lowered his year-end price target for the S&P 500 to 2,000 from 2,100, citing slower than anticipated growth from the world’s two biggest economies and lower than expected oil prices.

This drop of nearly 3 percent would be the benchmark index’s first negative year since 2011, though this level also represents upside of more than 6 percent from where the S&P 500 closed on Monday.

Kostin’s team lowered its estimate for calendar year earnings to $109 from $114, which would mark a decline of 3 percent from 2014. (…)

“S&P 500 price-to-earnings multiple fell by an average of 8 percent during the three months following Fed ‘liftoff’ hikes in 1994, 1999, and 2004,” wrote Kostin. “During the same episodes S&P 500 index fell by an average of 4 percent as growing earnings offset the multiple compression.”

Kostin sees liftoff by the Federal Reserve in December as an event that will dampen any so-called Santa Claus rally. Rising bond yields, the strategist reasons, entail that investors will be willing to pay less for each dollar of earnings generated by S&P 500 companies.

“We expect the Treasury curve to bear flatten as short-rates rise at a faster pace than ten-year note yields during the next few years,” he wrote. “Rising bond yields are consistent with lower multiples.” (…)

“Flat is the new up’ will be the 2016 investor refrain.” Confused smile

Ed Yardeni (my emphasis):

(…) During the current bull market, many of the relief rallies were triggered by central bank moves to provide more liquidity into financial markets. As I observed yesterday, the central bankers may be starting to lose their credibility. In my opinion, investors would have favorably greeted the widely expected Fed rate hike following the September 16-17 meeting of the FOMC. It would have demonstrated the Fed’s confidence in the strength and resilience of the US economy.

Instead, the FOMC passed on doing so, emphasizing for the first time concerns about the global economy and financial system. Yet on Thursday, Fed Chair Janet Yellen said that she still expected a rate hike before the end of the year. Yesterday, FRB-NY President Bill Dudley said the same. The Fed’s transparency makes it transparently clear that Fed officials are clueless. That’s not good for investor confidence.

Yesterday, Dudley said that the US economy is “doing pretty well.” Notwithstanding the recent puzzling hawkishness of the Fed’s two leading doves, they and their colleagues on the FOMC will continue to confront a weak global economy when the committee meets on October 27-28 and December 15-16. They will have to be concerned that combined with the strong dollar, the US economy won’t continue to do so well.

That’s what’s unnerving investors right now. Yesterday’s implosion in Glencore’s stock price was the latest confirmation that the global commodity industry is in a major bust, which is also depressing capital goods producers of mining equipment. In addition, yesterday we learned that profits at Chinese industrial companies plunged 8.8% y/y in August, with losses deepening even after five interest-rate cuts since November and government efforts to accelerate projects. Leading the losers were Chinese coal companies.

I am starting to think that getting a relief rally this time might be more challenging than in the past, when central banks had more ammo and more credibility. If the market’s main concern is the slowdown in global economic growth, there’s not much reason to expect any upside surprise anytime soon. If the US economy remains strong, it is unlikely to be strong enough to lift global growth. Meanwhile, investors may continue to fear that the poor economic performance of the rest of the world will increasingly weigh on the US.

So what will it take to revive the bull given this assessment of the global economic situation? As long as it doesn’t all add up to a global recession, the bull should find comfort in good companies that can continue to find growth in a world of secular stagnation. Commodity users should continue to benefit from the woes of the commodity producers. Valuation multiples are also more attractive now than they were earlier this year. Needless to say, earnings have to keep growing and US consumers have to keep consuming for the secular bull to survive this latest challenge.

The actual low in October 2014 was 1819 on Oct. 15. At that point, the Rule of 20 P/E was 17.95 vs its current 19.1. We are thus back into “lower risk” territory even if not terribly undervalued. The S&P 500 is down 10.4% from its level Aug. 20 level when I went from two stars to one and off 11.8% from its recent peak of 2130. While volatility remains high and this week’s China PMI will likely not help sentiment, current valuations no longer warrant a single star rating. Going to two stars for now…

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(…) The rebukes represent a reversal of an important driver of the mergers-and-acquisitions boom over the past few years, namely a surge in the stock prices of companies announcing acquisitions. Those rising prices had the twin effect of emboldening other buyers and boosting the value of shares that are often used as currency. Should investors continue to punish acquirers, they could add to threats gathering over an M&A market that is running at a near-record pace.

Since July 1, acquirers’ share prices fell 0.6% on average on the first day of trading following the announcement of an M&A deal over $1 billion, according to data provider Dealogic. That would be the first quarterly decline in three years and follows increases of 4% and 5.4% in the first and second quarters, respectively. (…)

“Volatility is never a friend of M&A,” saidGregg Lemkau, co-head of global M&A atGoldman Sachs Group Inc. “If that persists for an extended period of time, people may start to get more anxious.” (…)

Investors have become less accommodating of deals in other ways, too. They balked last week at the terms of two bond sales backing a pair of large recent acquisitions, cable operator Altice NV’s purchase of Cablevision Systems Corp. and chemical company OlinCorp.’s takeover of Dow Chemical Co.’s chlorine-products unit. The bonds ended up being more expensive and raising less cash than the companies had hoped.

Should bond and stock investors lose their lust for M&A deals, buyers could find their financing options limited.

Pointing up Historically, acquirer share-price declines were the norm. The average buyer’s stock fell most years from 1996 through 2011 as investors cast a wary eye on the risks that come with trying to integrate workforces and systems, retain customers and blend cultures.

They have risen at least 1.4% each year since then, as shareholders began to reward companies using their cash to pursue growth in a sluggish economic environment and as buyers promised to deliver quick profits.

But that old skepticism may be creeping back, in part, analysts said, because some of the worst deals in history were done near the peak of an M&A cycle. (…)

  • Debt-Market Tumult Hits Corporate-Bond Sales Bond-market turmoil mounted Monday, as three companies reduced or put off planned bond sales in response to soft investor demand, damped by concerns that a global economic slowdown is taking shape.

NEW$ & VIEW$ (9 JULY 2015): Fed up or not? Equities: Testing, testing…

Global Tumult Gives Fed Some Pause on Rates Worries about global turbulence and soft spots in the U.S. economy weighed on Federal Reserve officials when they gathered in June, trepidations that could cause them to wait longer before raising interest rates

Several Fed officials have said publicly since the June meeting that a first interest-rate increase in nearly a decade could be warranted as early as September. But minutes of the June 16-17 gathering, released Wednesday, showed their underlying unease about taking that big step. (…)

Among the Fed’s worries, the minutes noted, were “uncertainty about whether Greece and its official creditors would reach an agreement and about the likely pace of economic growth abroad, particularly in China and other emerging market economies.” They also expressed concern about the slow pace of U.S. consumer spending. (…)

“Many participants expressed concern that a failure of Greece and its official creditors to resolve their differences could result in disruptions in financial markets in the euro area, with possible spillover effects on the United States.” (…)

“I visited China recently, and I arrived fully cognizant of the concerns people highlight—slower growth, the unsustainability of the current export-driven model, debt buildup, bubbles in the equity and housing markets, the risk of falling investment, and the overall international implications of those risks,” John Williams, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, said in a speech Wednesday. “But I have to say that, after talking to officials and academics there, I was a lot less concerned about China’s near-term economic outlook on my return flight than I was heading over.” (…)

“Until I have more confidence that inflation will be moving back to 2%, I’ll continue to be in wait-and-see mode,” Mr. Williams said Wednesday.

Wait, wait! In the same WSJ, referring to the same speech:

Fed’s Williams: U.S. Still on Track For 2015 Rate Rise

“Policy is data dependent,” Mr. Williams said. But given the positive outlook for the U.S., “I still believe this will be the year for liftoff, and I still believe that waiting too long to raise rates poses its own risks,” he said.

The official added that the easiest path is for the Fed to move rates up off near- zero levels before inflation goes over the central bank’s 2% price target, saying “I see a safer course in starting sooner and proceeding more gradually” with rate rises. (…)

He said “our employment goal is in sight” and he expects the jobless rate to edge down from its current 5.3% level to around 5% by the close of 2015, moving even lower next year. He said wage gains are a sign the job market is “nearly healed.”

Mr. Williams also said inflation, which has fallen short of the Fed’s 2% target for three years, is likely to tick higher and hit desired levels by the end of next year. But he added he’d like to see confirmation inflation is moving up before shifting the stance of Fed interest rate policy.

Speaking of inflation:

Tim Duy has a good post on the Fed’s dilemma:

Mediocre Tranquility

The US economy is an island of mediocre tranquility in the midst of the stormy sea of the global economy. Tranquil enough to keep the Fed eyeing its first rate hike despite the surrounding storm, but sufficiently mediocre that they feel no reason to rush into that hike. As such, the Fed will remain on the sidelines until the forecast points toward sunnier skies. Uncertainty from Greece and China are likely raising the bar on the domestic conditions that would justify a rate hike. (…)

Bottom Line: The US economy is plain vanilla. Clearly not accelerating enough to justify a faster pace of monetary policy normalization, but not slow enough for the Fed to abandon their hope of at least initiating the first rate hike this year. They are still looking for stronger numbers, however, to pull that trigger. Fed officials on average are cautiously optimistic the issues in China and Greece will not spill over to the US economy, giving them the opportunity to hike rates.

Still, in the absence of confirmation of that hypothesis, those issues still decrease the odds of a rate hike this year. This is especially the case if the recent decline in commodity price places renewed downward pressure on inflation. Such an outcome would raise the bar on the strength of the remaining data to justify a rate hike. In her speech Friday, we will hopefully learn more of Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen’s view on the importance of Greece and China for US monetary policy. 

Bank of Korea lowers GDP growth forecast

The Bank of Korea has downgraded its forecast for gross domestic product to 2.8 per cent from a 3.1 per cent projection made in April. At the start of the year it expected to achieve 3.9 per cent growth.

The BoK estimated the country’s GDP grew just 0.4 per cent in the April-June quarter, far lower than its previous estimate of 1 per cent, as domestic spending took a hit after the spread of Mers forced schools to shut down and reduced the number of foreign tourists. (…)

“The downward revision was needed due to the impact of slowing exports, the Mers crisis and drought,” said Lee Ju-yeol, BoK governor. “But a gradual recovery is expected from the third quarter as the temporary shock of the last quarter subsides.” (…)

China Stocks Rebound; Biggest Gain in Six Years Chinese shares made their biggest daily gain in six years Thursday, restoring confidence in Beijing’s suite of attempts to rescue its struggling stock market.

The Shanghai Composite rose 5.8% to 3709.33, after losses in eight of the last 10 trading days. The smaller Shenzhen market rose 3.8%. Still, both indexes have lost around a third of their value in the past month. The small-cap ChiNext board, which has shed some 38% from its June highs, rose 3%.

Some companies that had halted trading of their shares lifted suspensions, and their stock prices immediately rose by the maximum 10%. (…) A total of 1,473 companies, or 51.1% of all stocks on the Shanghai and Shenzhen markets, remain suspended. (…)

China’s outstanding margin loans fell to 1.5 trillion yuan ($241.7 billion) as of July 8, down from 2.27 trillion yuan at its peak on Jule 18, according to data provider Wind Info. But some say the unwinding of margin loans—one of the main triggers for the recent spate of volatility—is still far from complete. (…)

Testing, testing…

From Ed Yardeni:

(…) In the past, this index was highly correlated with the price of copper, which failed to confirm the recent ascent in Chinese stock prices. Instead, the nearby futures price of copper remained near its lowest reading since July 2009.

The latest moves by Chinese officials to prop up stock prices certainly won’t revive confidence in China’s stock market. Why would anyone want to invest in a market where the government can ban selling?

Yesterday, Bloomberg reported: “China’s securities regulator banned major shareholders, corporate executives and directors from selling stakes in listed companies for six months, its latest effort to stop the nation’s $3.5 trillion stock-market rout. Investors with stakes exceeding 5 percent must maintain their positions, the China Securities Regulatory Commission said in a statement. The rule is intended to guard capital-market stability amid an ‘unreasonable plunge’ in share prices, the CSRC said.”

Regulators have introduced market-boosting measures almost every night over the past several days, as the following selected timeline shows:
6/25: PBOC injects cash into the financial markets.
6/27: PBOC cuts interest rates and lets banks lend more money.
7/1: Investors allowed to put up real assets as collateral to buy stocks.
7/2: Stock manipulation will be investigated.
7/4: IPOs suspended.
7/4: People’s Daily urged investors to stay calm.
7/4: Twenty-one brokerage firms will invest $19 billion in a stock market fund.
7/7: Trading suspended in more than 1,300 companies.
7/8: State-run companies ordered to maintain holdings in listed units.

Charting the Rise and Fall of China’s Equity Market

The real Grexit:

Emerging currencies in line of fire China displaces Greece as main cause for concern

(…) MSCI’s emerging equity index suffered a 2.5 per cent drop on Wednesday, its biggest in two years.

Bernd Berg, EM currencies strategist at Société Générale, said that while many EM investors had been focusing on Greece, attention had clearly shifted to China, which provided about a third of global growth.

“More and more investors will see there has been a significant drop-off in commodity prices since June, and China has clearly taken centre stage in EM.’’ (…)

EQUITIES: Testing, testing…
Signs to Watch for a Major Peak in Stocks and Impending Bear Market

I am not a great fan of technical analysis but there are a few things I like watching. There are all in this chart:

This chart presents a possible roadmap for monitoring the risk of a major peak and bear market by comparing the technical similarities between the prior two market tops and where we are today. 

signs market peak

Red Flag Number One (√)

The first technical warning sign indicated in the chart above is a significant divergence between the relative strength index (RSI) and the market itself, as we see today. This is noted by a declining pattern of lower highs in the RSI as stocks continue to make higher highs, a sign that the market is “topping out”. In the late ‘90s this divergence persisted for many years as the tech bubble reached ever-higher valuation levels. In 2007 this divergence lasted over a much shorter period (6 months) before the market finally peaked and succumbed to massive selling.

Since this divergence can persist for months or years, we also look to two other technical red flags for possible signs of a market peak and impending bear market.

Red Flag Number Two (√)

The second technical sign to look for is a major crossover in the MACD (moving average convergence-divergence) indicator shown in the bottom panel. This is often used by technical analysts as a buy and sell signal. As shown by the dotted lines, a MACD sell signal occurred near both prior market tops in May of 2000 and December of 2007. We now see the MACD buy signal issued in 2009 has crossed over to a sell, indicating the possibility of a major market top.

Important note: though I have smoothed this indicator to eliminate any prior buy and sell signals that didn’t correspond to major market turning points, as you’ll often hear, “past performance is not indicative of future results.” Since we must be alert to the possibility of a false sell signal at the current time, we look to an additional red flag for further confirmation.

Red Flag Number Three

When a major line of support becomes resistance, you now have confirmation of a possible trend change in the market. This occurred around January-February of 2001 and May-June of 2008 (see red circled regions on the chart) when the S&P 500 failed to break back above its 12-month moving average. After that point in time, the market persisted in a bearish downtrend until a confirmed change of direction with a new bull market. Currently, the S&P 500 is trading just above the 12-month moving average and has yet to break down further. If it does and fails, our third red flag will be raised.

Important Caveat

As we all know, history does not repeat itself, but it does rhyme. Even if the same technical pattern plays out again (i.e., all three red flags come to fruition), no one can predict the exact magnitude (depth) or duration (length) of a subsequent market decline, should one occur, since no two tops or bear markets are alike. The most prudent investment strategy is to monitor market action, incoming data, and make corresponding adjustments as the situation requires. The chart presented is one of many tools for doing just that.

I particularly watch the 200 day moving average: where the Index (2045) is vs the m.a. (2056) and whether the m.a. is still rising (yes).

SPY MA

The S&P 500 is sitting on its rising 200 day m.a. and right on 20 on the Rule of 20.

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Trailing S&P Index earnings are forecast to decline 0.8% QoQ when the Q2 earnings season is over, possibly throughing after having dropped 3.4% since Q3’14, before recovering 4.4% after Q4 if current estimates are met. This, coupled with diminishing inflation expectations, will help support valuations unless deflation risks pop up again.

Let’s watch how earnings behave over the next few weeks. Rising earnings are always the best tailwind for equities. Without the earnings tailwind, markets are a lot more vulnerable to shifting sentiments.

Fingers crossed Corporate Earnings Will Easily Hurdle a Low Bar Falling oil prices and a rising dollar will weigh on earnings season, but health care, financials look strong.

Analysts are predicting a weak second-quarter earnings season, with profits falling for the first time since the third quarter of 2012.

As usual, however, estimates have come down to the point that Corporate America can probably clear the hurdle, “beating” lowered expectations. Analysts surveyed by FactSet Research are forecasting profit per share generated by companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 during the second quarter to fall 4.5% to $28.70. That’s weaker than the 2.1% drop forecast in late March. (…)

Two big drags on earnings are the energy sector — far and away the weakest component of the S&P 500 — and the strong dollar, which has eaten away at foreign earnings for U.S. multinationals. The market collapse in China, rising labor costs in the U.S., and hints of deflation in a lackluster global economy have added to the headwinds. (…)

Energy company profits are expected to fall a whopping 54% this year. Remove the sector from forecasts, and the S&P sees better than 8% profit growth, powered by double-digit earnings increases for the health-care, financial, and consumer discretionary sectors. (…)