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THE DAILY EDGE (18 September 2017): Recession Watch

U.S. Economic Growth Hampered By Recent Hurricanes Retail sales declined 0.2% in August while industrial production both tumbled by 0.9%

A pair of severe hurricanes—Harvey, which hit Texas and Louisiana in late August, and Irma, which struck Florida in early September—are set to jumble economic indicators this fall.

Early evidence came Friday when the Federal Reserve reported that U.S. industrial production dropped a seasonally adjusted 0.9% in August from the prior month, its largest decline since the 2007-09 recession. The Fed said Hurricane Harvey was responsible for most of the decline by depressing oil drilling, petroleum refining and other industrial activity. (…)

The Commerce Department said it couldn’t isolate the effect of Hurricane Harvey on retailers last month.

And just to blur things up even more

Friday’s retail sales report for August was as important as it was bad. Yet, the various media I survey did not make much of it, perhaps thinking it was all Harvey’s fault.

Let’s deal with the easier stuff first:

The Federal Reserve indicated that storm damage curtailed the change in total industrial production, as well as the change in factory sector activity, by roughly 3/4 percentage point during August. Industrial production declined 0.9% last month (+1.6% y/y) following a 0.4% July gain, revised from 0.2%. Factory output fell 0.3% (+1.5% y/y) following no change in July, revised from -0.1%. (…)

That means IP would have decline 0.2% without Harvey, bringing the last 2 months to +0.2% (+1.2% a.r.) and the last 3 months to +0.4% (+1.6% a.r.). Most of the estimated impact from Harvey is in Utilities and Mining (O&G). Trends in most other sectors remain pretty dismal as Haver Analytics table shows:

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Most worrying is Consumer Goods production which was almost flat in 2016, is down YoY in August and dropped at a 2.8% annualized rate in the last 3 months. American manufacturers of consumer goods have not increased their production since July 2015. Why? Lack of demand!

  • Retail sales in downspin?

Harvey can probably be blamed for a very small part of the 0.2% decline in August retail sales but he claims innocence for all previous months’ reported and revised numbers:

  • On July 17, June retail sales were reported down 0.2% after –0.1% in May. Ex-Autos, ex-gasoline, sales were down 0.1% the first decline in this measure in nearly a year. The U.S. consumer appeared spent out.
  • On August 15, July retail sales were reported up 0.6% and June sales were revised from down 0.2% to up 0.3%. False alarm, the consumer is out there spending.
  • On September 15, August retail sales were reported down 0.2% and July sales were revised from +0.6% to +0.3% and June was revised from up 0.3% to down 0.1%.

August data will surely be revised, up or down, but this is what we have at this point: Retail and Food Services Sales have totally stalled after January 2017 (+0.3% in the last 7 months, same ex-food). So far in Q3, sales are growing at a 0.6% annualized pace relative to the prior quarter (1.4%).

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Retail control sales (excludes food, autos, building materials and gasoline and which is a direct input into GDP), declined 0.2% following a 0.6% gain in July. Control sales are running at a quarterly annualized pace of +1.3% compared to +3.9% in 2Q.

I have been writing on the very fragile state of the U.S. consumer throughout 2017 (recently in SEPTEMBER!), pointing out the widening divergence between income and expenditures and the resulting worrisome drop in the savings rate. Stated briefly, Americans have been overspending their income since early 2016, dissaving to the point where they now have little cushion to absorb any shock. Like Harvey and Irma if you live in the south, like a 14% spike in gas prices if you live anywhere in the USA.

From the September University of Michigan Survey of Consumers:

  • buying intentions for autos dropped from 152 last April to 136, the lowest reading in 3 years;
  • buying plans for homes went from 155 in April to 138 in September, lowest in 6 years;

This is happening right at the start of the most important period for the economy: back-to-school, Thanksgiving and Christmas. There’s an old saying in retail: “as back-to-school goes, so goes Christmas” …

Slow manufacturing of consumer goods reflect the absence of any momentum in new orders from merchants which reflect the absence of any momentum in consumer demand.

The chart below plots the YoY rate of growth in nominal retail sales and nominal GDP. Retail sales are still up 3.2% YoY but if they remain flat (seasonally adjusted) through December, like they have since January, the YoY growth rate will collapse to +0.8% at year end.

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Merchants would find themselves overstocked and would further reduce their orders, killing consumer goods manufacturers in Q1’18.

This is how a U.S. recession could arrive without any direct contribution from the Fed.

But here’s how the Fed could contribute: rising debt + rising interest rates = problems:

(…) JPMorgan’s credit card delinquencies rose 1.16 percent in August from 1.15 percent in July, while Capital One reported a delinquency rate of 3.97 percent, up from 3.81 percent in July.

Discover Financial Services’ (DFS.N) monthly credit card delinquency rate rose to 2.1 percent in August versus 2 percent in July.

Overall, seasonally-adjusted credit card delinquency rates for U.S. banks rose to 2.47 percent in the second quarter from 2.20 percent a year earlier, according to New York Fed data. (…)

There has been a notable increase in the transition to serious delinquency levels primarily among borrowers with credit scores of below 660, the NY Fed said in a blogpost.

“It is not clear yet what effect it will have on the future. But historically it has been the case that once these delinquency rates start to rise, they can continue to rise,” Haughwout said. (…)

And banks halt lending, yaddi, yaddi, yadda…

Online sales can be blamed, but only to an extent. Overall demand is weak, even for toys:

(…) In addition to shrinking sales and heightened competition, Toys ‘R’ Us has been burdened with debt from a leveraged buyout 12 years ago. (…) A Toys ‘R’ Us restructuring would add to a list of more than 20 retailers, including RadioShack and Payless Shoe Source, that have filed for bankruptcy since the beginning of 2017. Another big box chain, Staples Inc., recently agreed to be taken private in a leveraged buyout. (…)

Some large toy brands, such as Lego and Star Wars, have also struggled recently, while the collectible Shopkins toys, which Toys ‘R’ Us helped launch, is on the downswing. Earlier this month, Lego AS reported its first decline in sales in 13 years and said it would cut 8% of its workforce. Another toy maker, Mattel Inc., replaced its chief executive earlier this year after a slide in holiday sales. (…)

Fingers crossed Hopefully, these won’t slip any further (from The Daily Shot):

  

The ECRI Weekly Leading Index has turned sharply lower, totally unnoticed by equities (chart from Ed Yardeni)

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From the ECRI blog:

(…) Most believe recessions are caused by shocks that then propagate through the economy. In contrast, our research shows that endogenous cyclical forces periodically open up windows of vulnerability for the economy, and that, once it is cyclically vulnerable, almost any exogenous shock can easily tip it into recession. Because such shocks tend to arrive sooner or later, an economy’s entry into a susceptible state is almost always followed by recession. (…)

Needless to say, the debate on the Fed’s next moves will only intensify, within and without the Fed. The economy is clearly weak and could quickly get a lot weaker. Forthcoming eco data will be very noisy and the Fed is split on the real inflation trends. Unlike the bond market:

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Sorry, You Are Probably Not Getting a Raise Next Year Businesses plan to keep budgets for raises relatively flat in 2018, while devoting more dollars to performance-based pay, a new survey says.
Eurozone Wage Growth Hits Two-Year High The pace of wage growth suggests inflation may be set to accelerate

(…) Eurostat said wages were 2.0% higher in the three months through June than a year earlier, the fastest rise since the first quarter of 2015 and up from 1.3% in the previous three-month period. (…)

Friday’s figures follow data released earlier this week that showed the number of people in work across the eurozone rose 0.4% during the second quarter, and at 155.6 million was the highest number ever recorded. With more people in work, and earning more, spending power is on the rise, a boost for the eurozone’s growth prospects. (…)

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Economists Boost Euro-Area Outlook, See Best Year in a Decade
SENTIMENT WATCH

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(…) More and more investors are piling into stocks that are rising rather than buying those that are falling:

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(…) The question is whether this is a problem. Market breadth, which measures the number of stocks that are rising, can be a sign of market vitality or weakness. And volume is another way to look at market breadth. So receding volume flows into declining stocks could be a worry. But there are a number of reasons not to be concerned, at least not yet. First, market breadth overall has not been shrinking. Of the S&P 500, 355 are up through mid-September. That’s slightly more than the 332 that were up at this time last year and far more than the 191 that were up in the first eight and a half months of 2015.

(…) the rise of passive investing has most likely blurred all of these technical market indicators. (…)

  • Ned Davis Research shows that demand volume remains greater than supply volume (via cmgwealth.com) :

Smile The bull market has turned into the Seinfeld market. During every episode, investors are watching for something to happen. When nothing happens, especially nothing bad, investors are bemused and show their appreciation by throwing more money at the bull. (Ed Yardeni)

Selling Pressure not only dropped [last week], but reaffirmed its long-term downtrend by recording its lowest reading since the start of the bull market in 2009. Thus, the rising Supply historically associated with an approaching major market top is currently nowhere in evidence. At the same time, Demand is expanding on both a short and intermediate term basis. That is, Buying Power has resumed its long term expansion, while the Short Term Index (which measures the shorter term trend in Demand), has recently shown its most rapid expansion since the market rally from the Nov. 2016 low. Thus, this week’s new highs in the major price indexes have been confirmed by an ongoing contraction in Supply and expansion in Demand – a pattern that has historically provided investors with the best opportunities for new buying.
        

  • Nonetheless, overall volume keeps declining as Ed Yardeni shows:

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BITCOIN
  • (Mohamed A. El-Erian)
M.B.A. Applications Decline for Third Year in a Row Applications to full-time M.B.A. programs in the U.S. fell for a third straight year, the latest signal that business schools are struggling to entice young professionals out of a strengthening job market.

THE DAILY EDGE (15 August 2017)

CONSUMER WATCH

Sales at retailers and restaurants jumped 0.6% from a month earlier, the biggest increase since December, the Commerce Department said Tuesday. Excluding cars, sales rose 0.5%. (…)

Sales over the internet drove last month’s increase, with spending at nonstore retailers growing 1.3%, the most since December. One big factor: Amazon’s Prime Day, a popular day of discounts at the site.

Other retailers also posted strong gains. Car sales jumped 1.2%, as did spending on building materials and garden equipment. Sales at furniture outlets, grocery stores, restaurants and department stores all rose healthily.

Meanwhile, spending on gasoline, electronics and clothing fell. (…)

The May 2017 to June 2017 percent change was revised from down 0.2% to up 0.3%. 

Median household spending growth expectations decreased from 3.3% in June to 2.8%. This series has been volatile, but the current reading is below its average of 3.2% for the most recent 12 months. The decrease was driven mostly by less educated (high school or less) respondents.

Restaurant sales dropped again in July, dealing a blow to an industry that had shown modest signs of improvement in recent months. Same-store sales were down -2.8 percent, a sharp 1.8 percentage point decline from June. The drop was disappointing in light of the -1.3 percent average comp sales for the first six months of the year and -1.6 percent recorded in the last half of 2016.

Same-store traffic declined -4.7 percent in July, a 1.7 percentage point drop from June. (…)

Calculated on a two-year basis, sales in July 2017 were down -4.2 percent compared with July of 2015. Same-store traffic was -8.7 percent for that same period. These are the weakest two-year growth rates in over three years, additional evidence that the industry has not reversed the downward trend that began in early 2015.

The restaurant industry’s data are not as bad, as of June:

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  • The official stats to June:

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  • Part of the reason is that food-at-home prices have dropped significantly, widening the gap between eating at home or going out:
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Eurozone Factory Output Slides Activity at the eurozone’s factories, mines and utilities fell at its sharpest pace in 2017 during June, an indication that the economy may be settling down after an acceleration in growth during the first six months of the year.

The European Union’s statistics agency said Monday that industrial production was 0.6% lower in June than in May, while being 2.6% higher than in the same month last year. The decline in output was the largest since December 2016, and more than the 0.4% forecast by economists. (…)

Of the eurozone’s four large national economies, only Italy bucked the trend, recording a 1.1% rise in output, while Germany and France recorded declines of a similar magnitude and Spain was flat.

Across the eurozone, the June drop would have been larger if not for a 1.8% jump in energy output, as production of capital goods slumped by 1.9%, and of durable consumer goods by 1.2%.

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Whatever line we look at above, the overall trend is not particularly strong, is it? (Eurostat pdf). Haver Analytics is not too worried:

Output appears to be on a steady track with a minor setback this month. The country level data for the EMU also show somewhat widespread declines in June after seeing a solid slate of advances in May. June appears to be a month in which output has slowed to reduce the overall pace of growth to something that is more sustainable rather than signaling a slowdown of any sort.

  • Meanwhile in the USA and China:
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 U.S. Oil Drillers Keep Pressure on OPEC With Record Shale Output
Shadow Fed is Glum on Stock Market Camp Kotok’s fearless forecasters mainly see little change in economic and financial measures such as interest rates, GDP, bond yields and oil prices, but they are somewhat bearish on stocks.

(…) The predictions for core inflation, for example, averaged 1.9%, with a high of 3.2% and a low of 1%. In other words, the consensus expectation is for little change. Likewise, a marginal bond selloff will push yields on 10-year Treasurys to 2.57% and U.S. benchmark oil prices will be $50.20 a barrel or barely changed.

The one bold and surprising prediction is for a modest retreat in stocks over the next year. The forecasts for the S&P 500 were as low as 1800, a 27% drop from today’s levels, while the average was just 2416. (…)

John Mauldin gives more info from the camp here.

  • WTI crude oil: $50.20 (but the range was all over the place, from $30 to $76)
  • S&P 500: 1,340, with surprisingly few really bearish views
  • Gold: $1,340, and while there were a few outliers in both directions, people were generally looking for a strong movement upward.
  • Dollars per euro: $1.14
  • US GDP: 2.12%, again with a very wide range, but interestingly, nobody was predicting a negative GDP or an outright recession.

Takeaway 1: Almost everyone expects a serious market correction before the end of the year. Most of the people I talked to were concerned about market complacency; and even if they were bullish, which many of them were, they were surprised that we’ve gone this long without a correction.

Takeaway 2: In talks with people I seriously respect, I found more concern about valuations and spreads in the bond market than about valuations in the stock market. As I sat with a few people and “war-gamed” what the next recession will look like, a general agreement emerged that the credit markets will be far more volatile than they were last time, even though banks are better capitalized today than they were 10 years ago. The problem is simply that credit markets have no liquidity and valuations are extraordinarily stretched. And not just in the US.

U.S. Stock Buybacks Are Plunging

FULL CIRCLE: FROM BOOM TO BUST TO BOOM TO …
Miami Beach Faces 31-Month Supply Of Luxury Condos Listed For Sale

More than 675 luxury condo units are formally listed for sale at a minimum price of at least $1 million in the barrier island city of Miami Beach in the South Florida county of Miami-Dade, according to a new report from Condo Vultures® Realty LLC.

Based on luxury condo sales of nearly 22 units monthly in the first half of 2017, Miami Beach now has more than a 31-month supply of units available for purchase in the tricounty South Florida region of Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach during this year’s Summer Buying Season, according to the report based on data from the Southeast Florida MLS Matrix v7.0.

A balanced market is generally considered to have about six months of supply. (…)

Surprised smile It is worth noting this report only tracks those Miami Beach luxury condos formally listed for sale. The report does not factor in the nearly 47,700 new condo units currently in the development pipeline east of Interstate 95 in the tricounty South Florida region. (…)

Currently, about 31 Miami Beach luxury condo units are under contract waiting to transact – or pending – at an average asking price of about $4.1 million each or $1,537 per square foot, according to the statistics. 

Between January and June of 2017, the average transaction price of a Miami Beach luxury condo was less than $2.5 million or $1,255 per square foot.

This means the current asking price of a Miami Beach luxury condo listed for sale is about 42 percent higher than the average transaction price achieved on a per-unit basis and nearly 22 percent higher than the average transaction price on a per-square-foot basis in the first six months of 2017.

In the first half of this year, the sellers who were able to unload their units needed about 180 days to transact a Miami Beach luxury condo listed for sale. The current Days-On-The-Market average for Miami Beach luxury condos listed for sale is about 226, according to the statistics.

Merck, Intel and Under Armour CEOs Quit Trump Advisory Council

(…) Mr. Frazier, who is African-American, and Mr. Krzanich and Mr. Plank, who are white, were three of the 28 business and union leaders the president named to the advisory council aimed at helping him boost U.S. manufacturing jobs. (…)

In June, Elon Musk of Tesla Inc. and Robert Iger of Walt Disney Co. resigned from advisory roles after Mr. Trump said the U.S. would withdraw from the Paris climate accord. (…)

Source: RealClear politics

Sun A glut of low-cost solar panels in the U.S. is triggering an unusual fight over tariffsand environmental policy. The U.S. International Trade Commission this week will hear arguments over calls by bankrupt solar-panel maker Suniva Inc. for new barriers on imported solar cells. The WSJ’s Erin Ailworth reports that Suniva’s demand for tariff and other restrictions on foreign manufacturers has united disparate forces, including green-energy advocates and conservative free-trade policy groups that oppose the tariffs. Suniva says it’s being crippled by cheap imports, mostly from Asia, that have pushed down prices. The imports have been a boon to U.S. solar installers, with the cheap prices spurring adoption of rooftop solar panels, but they’ve pushed Suniva to close factories in Michigan and Georgia and enter bankruptcy. A lawyer backing the petition says its “time to take a stand” against Chinese manufacturers on behalf of Suniva—which is majority owned by a company based in Hong Kong.