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$ (5 MAY 2014)

U.S. EMPLOYMENT
Jobs Growth Jumps as Economy Gains Steam U.S. employers in April added jobs at one of the fastest paces of the recovery, rekindling hopes for an upturn strong enough to alleviate the economy’s longstanding ills.

Nonfarm employment grew by 288,000 in April and the jobless rate sank to 6.3%, the Labor Department said Friday. The new jobs—spread across an array of industries from retail to construction—put total payrolls closer to the all-time peak, reached near the recession’s start, after a long and grinding recovery. (…)

Still, the report included numerous worrisome signs, among them another exodus of workers from the labor force and persistently weak wages. (…)

Job Growth Gathers Strength

After revisions to prior estimates, job growth over the past three months has averaged 238,000—far above last year’s pace—and other metrics this week showed new momentum in the manufacturing sector and a rebound in consumer spending.

But the economy has seen regular bursts of momentum broken by sudden downswings. Looking beyond the monthly volatility, employment growth has averaged about 197,000 jobs over the last year—roughly in line with the pace of the past few years. (…)

The month-over-month plunge in the jobless rate reflected a sharp contraction in the pool of American workers, with far fewer people seeking jobs. That sent the labor-force participation rate back to a three-decade low of 62.8%, puzzling economists and policy makers who have been expecting participation to pick up as jobs increased.

Workers’ wages—stagnant for years—budged little last month despite the apparent hiring spree. Wages rose just 1.9% from a year earlier, limiting Americans’ ability to significantly raise their living standards. (…)

Nearly 10 million Americans remained unemployed in April, more than a third of them out of work for at least six months. About 7.5 million Americans were stuck in part-time jobs because they couldn’t find full-time work.

A broader measure of unemployment that includes involuntary part-time workers and people too discouraged to search for a job fell to 12.3% last month. But it stood at 8.4% just before the recession started in December 2007.

(…) Public-sector employment appears to be stabilizing, with local and state governments adding 15,000 jobs in April to help offset a small decline at the federal level.

(…) The retail sector grew by 35,000 jobs in April, and employment in food services—including restaurants and bars—climbed by 33,000.

More facts from the FT:

  • Confused smile In retrospect, the freezing winter that caused so much angst earlier this year was barely a blip in the data, as the numbers have been steadily revised up. The figure for January now stands at 144,000 after the initial report of 113,000; February is at 222,000 compared with the initial report of 175,000. That vindicates the Fed’s decision to disregard those seemingly weak months.
  • Over the past three months, job gains have averaged a healthy 238,000. In the private sector alone, the average was 225,000.
  • The six-month moving average for non-farm payrolls – the best way to read the volatile data – is now at 202,000. That is one of the strongest readings of the recovery, consistent with steady progress in bringing down the unemployment rate.

The big question mark:

  • According to Wrightson ICAP’s chief economist, Lou Crandall, the monthly drop in the labor force has run more than 200,000 seven times since early 2012, and each time has rebounded in subsequent months. The average initial decline has averaged 377,000; the average rebound, 345,000. What is happening, then, is that when rebounds follow declines, the labor-force entrants are just as likely to be employed as to be unemployed. Thus, most of the initial decline in the jobless rate turns out to be confirmed, as it will probably be in this case. (Barron’s)
  • Participation has just gone back to where it was at the start of the year, however, so overall the gains on the unemployment rate this year do reflect people gaining jobs.

Ms. Yellen thought participation had bottomed:

“Labour force participation, which had been falling, has ticked up this year,” she said in a speech a few weeks ago.

In summary, courtesy of Goldman Sachs’ chief economist Jan Hatzius:

• Since the start of the Great Recession in late 2007, the labor force participation rate has fallen by more than three percentage points, including a sharp drop in April back to the late-2013 lows. The extent of the decline has surprised many economists, ourselves included. What accounts for it, and will it continue?
• The first question is relatively easy to answer. Using an approach similar to that of a recent Philadelphia Fed study, we can show that the decline reflects a combination of 1) more retirements, 2) more disability, 3) higher school enrollment, and 4) more discouraged workers.
• The second question is more difficult, but we believe the answer is no. The most important reason is that the big increase in retirements in the last three years looks far less “structural” to us than generally believed. Many people seem to have pulled forward their retirement because of the weak job market. This leaves correspondingly fewer retirements for future years, and it means that the impact of retirements on participation is likely to become much less negative.
• The other drags on participation are also likely to abate or reverse. Inflows into disability insurance are now slowing sharply, consistent with past cyclical patterns. The school enrollment surge has started to reverse as young workers are finding better job opportunities. And stronger labor demand is likely to pull many discouraged workers back into the job market.
• If participation does stabilize or rise a bit, the decline in the unemployment rate should slow even if payroll growth stays at the sturdy levels seen in recent months. This is one key reason why we believe Fed rate hikes are still far off.

But the Philadelphia Fed paper, in fact, concludes that

(…) it is not clear whether the overall participation rate will increase any time soon, given that the underlying downward trend due to retirement is likely to continue.

Still driving blind…

Markit says that employment growth has already begun to slow:

There are signs that the pace of job creation will start to moderate. For sure the 0.1% annualised rate registered by official GDP in the first quarter is insufficient to sustain anything like the average pace of job creation seen throughout the past two years. Even the more buoyant PMI survey data, which have typically provided a reliable guide to the trend in the non-farm payrolls data, suggest that the underlying pace of private sector job creation has eased from over 200,000 at the start of the year to just over 100,000 as the rate of economic growth has cooled.

While the flash PMIs for April indicated that the underlying pace of economic growth has been stronger than the official GDP numbers so far this year, the survey data suggest that the pace of expansion has slowed since late last year to around 2.0% at the start of the second quarter, a rate of growth which historically generates around 100,000 extra jobs per month. On this basis, the surprising 288k rise in April may be the best we see for a while.

The overall picture from the employment report is therefore one that adds to the sense that Fed talks will increasingly move towards the timing of the first rate hike and away from worries about whether the QE taper could cause the recovery to stall, but the first rate rise still looks some way off.

However, ISI’s company surveys are now clearly above anything seen in this expansion.

Our Overall Company Surveys advanced from 54.0 to 54.4, the highest since July 2006 led by Autos, homebuilders, and tech cos.  More importantly, breadth improved with the Company Survey Diffusion Index which leads the regular surveys from +8.8% to +9.6%, a three year high. As summer approaches, there is  risk that momentum fades as we have seen frequently since 2010 in both our Company Surveys and some government series.  Encouragingly, some growth multipliers like bank lending and employment are also better, and capex is stronger as measured by our cap goods cos. survey and the durable goods report. Our Retailer Survey which has been a good indicator at turning pts  moved down from 52.3 to 51.7 this week while pricing power moved down from 26.5 to 26.0.  Our Trucking Survey (highest correlation with Real GDP at 90%) moved down from 63.1 to 62.1. ISI’s Homebuilders’ Survey improved this week, moving up from 59.8 to 62.6, the highest level on the survey since June 2013. Participants reported a better week of sales post holiday and spring break, with events also helping to draw in the consumer.

Atlanta Fed Tool Suggests Full Employment Could Be Reached In Six Months The Federal Reserve’s Promised Land for the unemployment rate could be here as soon as six months from now, a development that could rev up the debate over when to start raising short-term interest rates.

If the economy can keep up something like the current rate of monthly job gains, unemployment could fall by year end to the top of the range Fed officials’ say they expect over the long run, according to a jobs calculator offered by the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta on its website.

This level is often referred to as “full employment,” the lowest unemployment rate consistent with stable inflation at the Fed’s goal of 2%. The Fed’s “central tendency” estimate of that range is 5.2% to 5.6%. The central tendency excludes the three highest and three lowest of the 16 officials’ projections submitted before the March Fed meeting.

According to the Atlanta Fed’s calculator, the unemployment rate could decline to 5.6% in six months if employers added on average 239,000 jobs per month. That’s well below the number added in April, and roughly the same as the average 238,000 jobs added over each of the past three months.

The calculator has a number of factors that can be adjusted. For example, to get to that 5.6% unemployment rate, it assumes the labor force participation rate holding steady at its current level of 62.8%.

But the idea of a stable labor force participation rate may be unlikely. This measure — the share of adults holding or actively seeking jobs — has been falling for some time. The rate was 62.8% last month, down from 63.2% in March and 63.4% in April of the previous year.

The participation rate’s decline in April played a big role in driving the rapid decline in the jobless rate. As people drop out of the labor force, they are no longer counted as unemployed.

The possibility the economy could reach full employment in a mere six months could test the central bank’s outlook for short-term rates. Most Fed officials projected in March they would start raising short-term rates from near zero in 2015. If the unemployment rate falls closer to full-employment, some policy makers could press to raise rates sooner. Some officials have signaled they could support interest rate increases when the jobless rate hits around 5.5%.

However, Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen and several other officials say the jobless rate overstates the degree of improvement in the labor market and too much of the drop in labor force participation is driven by discouraged workers who’ve stopped looking for employment. (…)

INFLATION WATCH

A wide range of companies have reported upward pressure on wages in the early months of the year, including asset-manager State Street Corp., coatings manufacturer PPG Industries Inc. and eatery operators Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. and Darden Restaurants Inc.

Martin Ellen, chief financial officer at drinks maker Dr Pepper Snapple Group Inc. projected a $30 million rise in “people-related costs” for the current year, “reflecting both general inflation in our field labor costs” and higher health and benefit expenses. Mr. Ellen told investors he expected to see compensation costs rise more significantly in the third and fourth quarters of the year, with wage inflation pushing employee costs up about 2% and accounting for about two-thirds of the year’s total increase.

The comments are at odds with broader economic data—U.S. Labor Department figures on Friday showed private-sector nonfarm hourly wages grew just 1.9% in April from a year earlier—and economists aren’t finding much evidence of a strong uptick in wages five years after the recession ended.

Pointing up Still, executives at more than two dozen large companies—including manufacturers as well as financial and services companies—reported rising wages in significant portions of their businesses, much of it in the U.S., as they discussed first-quarter results.

(…) Employee compensation as a share of national income has fallen to its lowest point since 1951, at 66%, while profits rose to a level not seen since around the same time, at about 16%, said Christopher Probyn, chief economist at State Street Global Advisors, a unit of State Street Corp. (…)

State Street Chief Financial Officer Michael Bell said the company raised base salaries an average of 3%, effective in April. “I would certainly acknowledge that the 3% is a fair amount higher than the last couple of years where we had very small increases,” Mr. Bell told investors. “We thought it was important given the competitive landscape and the importance of keeping our top talent.” (…)

For Houston chemical maker LyondellBasell Industries NV, rising wages have surfaced in new investments, particularly a series of plant expansions in Texas. Construction on a $1.3 billion project to expand ethylene production capacity has already begun, and wages are climbing amid plans for similar projects at other companies, LyondellBasell executives said.

Addressing investors and analysts in March, Sergey Vasnetsov, the company’s senior vice president of strategic planning, cited “escalation of wages” and “tight availability of qualified labor.”

LyondellBasell CEO James Gallogly elaborated last week, saying labor quality had declined as well, reducing productivity. He predicted both trends would intensify as competing projects are started in the next several years.

“We’re still in the early phases, so when some of those big projects ramp up, I think it’s going to get worse, not better,” Mr. Gallogly told investors. “I would expect cost to be higher, and I expect things to come in a little slower.”

Some of the increases at railroad Kansas City Southern were the result of scheduled pay increases under railroad union contracts, spokesman William Galligan said.

A few companies stand to gain directly from wage increases. One is Robert Half International Inc., a staffing and consulting firm, which earns more when the temporary employees it places are paid more.

“We saw rising pay rates for our temporary staff, which, in turn, meant rising bill rates,” Chief Financial Officer M. Keith Waddell told investors and analysts. “So we’re very encouraged that we’re starting to see some wage inflation, which is usually indicative as you’re beginning to start the growth part of a cycle in earnest.” (…)

Some companies said the impact of wage increases was damped by productivity gains and cost-cutting efforts.

Quest Diagnostics Inc., the medical-laboratory chain, said new savings from a multiyear cost-cutting program helped offset inflation in the company’s wage bill, as well as recent lower-margin acquisitions.

Darden Restaurants, which operates the Olive Garden and LongHorn Steakhouse chains, among others, reported that productivity gains and improved insurance and unemployment expenses “mostly offset the effect of wage rate inflation” and sagging sales. (…)

Label-maker Avery Dennison Corp. told investors that productivity gains and sales growth barely overcame “higher employee-related expenses” during the quarter. A spokesman described the increases as merit raises, plus broader wage inflation in a segment that operates extensively in emerging markets.

Asked by analysts in the company’s April 23 earnings call whether the rise in labor costs reflected additional hiring or simply higher pay, the company pointed to the latter.

“It’s all wage inflation, 90-plus percent of it,” Chief Financial Officer Mitchell Butier said.

FedEx Corp. said it would raise its freight-delivery fuel surcharge for some deliveries and next year start charging for ground delivery based on package volume for all packages.

The 3-percentage-point fuel-surcharge increase, effective June 2, applies to shipments by its FedEx Freight segment within the contiguous U.S., within Canada, and between the continental U.S. and Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and Canada, the company said.

FedEx said its freight business updates fuel surcharges for the U.S. and Canada every week based on published average diesel fuel prices.

In addition, the company said its FedEx Ground division will start applying so-called dimensional-weight pricing to all shipments, effective Jan. 1. FedEx Express already applies this pricing to all packages.

Currently for FedEx Ground, dimensional-weight pricing, which bases shipping rates on package volume, only applies to packages measuring three cubic feet or greater.

Friday’s announcement follows a 3.9% increase in shipping rates for FedEx’s freight and domestic express-shipping businesses, announced earlier this year.

The rate increases come as FedEx and rival United Parcel Services Inc. face increased pressure from smaller companies offering lower-priced shipping services, as well as from retailers, such as Amazon.com Inc. and Wal-Mart Stores Inc., who are testing their own deliveries.

China wakes up to growing pension problem Issue sparks largest Chinese factory strike in decades

(…) Workers at Yue Yuen Industrial, which makes running shoes for Nike and Adidas at a big factory complex in Gaobu, said it underpaid their pensions for years.

After 11 days of protest, the Dongguan municipal government handed them a rare victory by saying the company should have based contributions on a higher pay level. Yue Yuen estimates that it will have to pay an additional $31m just this year after agreeing to base pension payments on workers’ total pay, including overtime.

The strike cast a harsh spotlight on Yue Yuen, the biggest employer in Gaobu, one of many towns that form the manufacturing metropolis of Dongguan. But workers, labour activists and factory managers say the practice is widespread in the Pearl River Delta – the manufacturing workshop of the world – in south China.

Local governments are allowing manufacturers to pay lower pension contributions than required as they worry about companies leaving, particularly as factories face double-digit wage rises each year. (…)

Local authorities are finding themselves increasingly in a bind. While they want to keep factories, they also want to avoid the kind of strikes that raise concerns in the eyes of potential investors. Some factory managers say multinationals will now pay closer attention to the pay practices of their suppliers in China. (…)

EARNINGS WATCH

From Factset:

Overall, 371 companies have reported earnings to date for the first quarter. Of these 371 companies, 74% have reported actual EPS above the mean EPS estimate and 26% have reported actual EPS below the mean EPS estimate. The percentage of companies reporting EPS above the mean EPS estimate is above the 1-year (71%) average and above the 4-year (73%) average.

In aggregate, companies are reporting earnings that are 5.4% above expectations. This surprise percentage is above the 1-year (+3.1%) average, but slightly below the 4-year (+5.8%) average. If this is the final percentage for the quarter, it will mark the highest earnings surprise percentage since Q1 2011 (7.0%).

In terms of revenues, 52% of companies have reported actual sales above estimated sales and 48% have reported actual sales below estimated sales. The percentage of companies reporting sales above estimates is below both the 1-year (54%) average and the 4-year average (58%). In aggregate, companies are reporting sales that are 1.1% above expectations. This surprise percentage is above the 1-year (+0.3%) average and above the 4-year (+0.6%) average.

The blended earnings growth rate for the first quarter is 1.5% this week, above the blended growth rate of 0.3% last week. Seven of the ten sectors are reporting higher earnings relative to a year ago, led by the Telecom Services and Utilities sectors. Three sectors are reporting lower earnings relative to a year ago, led by the Energy and Financials sectors.

The blended revenue growth rate for Q1 2014 is 2.8%, which is above the estimated growth rate of 2.5% at the end of the quarter (March 31). Eight of the ten sectors are reporting revenue growth for the quarter, led by the Utilities sector. On the other hand, the Financials sector is the only sector reporting a decline in revenue for the quarter, while the Energy sector is reporting flat sales (0.0%).

At this point in time, 72 companies in the index have issued EPS guidance for the second quarter. Of these 72 companies, 53 have issued negative EPS guidance and 19 have issued positive EPS guidance. Thus, the percentage of companies issuing negative EPS guidance to date for the first quarter is 74%. This percentage is above the 5-year average of 65%.

High five But it is way lower than that of the past year at the same time in the quarter.

Although companies are reporting slight earnings growth (1.5%) for Q1, earnings growth for the S&P 500 is projected to be much higher for the remainder of the year. For Q2 2014, Q3 2014, and Q4 2014, analysts are predicting earnings growth rates of 6.5%, 10.0%, and 10.3%. For all of 2014, the projected earnings growth rate is 7.8%. Fingers crossed

Trading Falls at J.P. Morgan J.P. Morgan Chase sounded an alarm on Wall Street, warning that a slump in its trading revenues will deepen in the second quarter of the year.

The largest U.S. bank by assets said in a regulatory filing late Friday it expects its markets revenue, which includes fixed-income and equities trading, to decline 20% in the quarter, sharper than the 17% drop it posted in the first quarter.

That drop, in turn, was worse than the 15% decline the bank’s chief executive, James Dimon, in late February had said J.P. Morgan was seeing so far in that quarter.

The biggest driver of J.P. Morgan’s weakness: a decline in revenue from its fixed-income, currencies and commodities, or FICC, unit.

Fixed-income trading at the nation’s biggest banks has been hampered in recent quarters by a slow economic recovery, both at home and abroad. Investors have pulled back from exotic fixed-income securities in favor of low-risk government bonds, which are less profitable for banks. New regulations, meanwhile, have prompted Wall Street firms to exit from once-lucrative businesses such as energy trading.

Bank of America Corp. BAC +1.06% and Citigroup Inc. C -0.06% also released their quarterly regulatory filings this past week, but neither mentioned markets revenue. (…)

Big U.S. banks have reported varied results from their fixed-income units of late, mainly due to the differing mixes of the components inside the businesses.

For the first quarter, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. GS -0.93% reported a 13% decline in its FICC trading business, excluding debt adjustments, a slump that wasn’t as severe as analysts had expected. Bank of America logged a 15% decline in its FICC business in the first quarter from a year ago, after stripping out a large one-time number that weighed down first-quarter 2013 results. Meanwhile, at Citigroup, first-quarter FICC revenue fell 18% from a year earlier.

Morgan Stanley, MS -1.70% a smaller player, recorded a 35% rise, or 9.2% when adjusted for the value of the company’s debt.

Both Morgan Stanley and Goldman benefited from a business mix more skewed toward commodities, which did well in the first quarter, aided by bad weather that jostled energy markets. Banks that have bond-trading activities more exposed to macroeconomic headwinds, in businesses such as interest-rates and currencies, meanwhile, did worse in the first quarter, according to ISI analyst Glenn Schorr.

Stock trading, by contrast, has held up relatively well at most banks. While a spate of new rules on capital and risk-taking have curbed activity in FICC, which had been the industry’s biggest profit engine in the years leading up to the financial crisis, stocks are easily traded and rarely held for long on balance sheets, making them more attractive under the new rules.

Morgan Stanley posted a 16% rise in equities revenue in the first quarter from the same quarter a year earlier. Citigroup posted a 7% increase in equities trading for the first quarter over the same quarter a year earlier. Bank of America was flat, while J.P. Morgan registered a 3% decline. Goldman suffered a 17% decline in equities-trading revenue in the first quarter.

J.P. Morgan addressed another problem on Friday: Russia. The bank said it has shrunk its total exposure to the country, just as Citigroup and Bank of America have done, in the wake of the imposition of U.S. economic sanctions against Russia for its dealings with Ukraine.

J.P. Morgan said its total exposure to Russia was $4.7 billion as of March 31, down 13% from $5.4 billion on Dec. 31. The decrease bounced Russia from the list of top 20 countries in which J.P. Morgan is exposed.

SENTIMENT WATCH
Takeovers Put Fuel in Stocks’ Empty Tank The biggest surge in corporate takeovers since before the financial crisis is revving up an otherwise sputtering stock market.

U.S.-based companies this year have proposed or agreed to $637.95 billion worth of mergers or acquisitions—either as the buyer or the target—the most at this point since Dealogic started tracking these figures in 1995. That includes Pfizer Inc. PFE -1.28% ‘s $106 billion offer forAstraZeneca AZN.LN -0.15% PLC, which rejected the offer.

Shares of the companies getting snapped up have jumped an average of 18% the day after the deal news, according to Dealogic.

And contrary to conventional wisdom, shares of the buyers in proposed deals have risen. Buyers’ shares are up an average of 4.6% the day after a deal’s announcement. That is the highest postdeal share jump on record, according to Dealogic.

In contrast, from 1996 through 2011, the acquirer’s shares fell 1.4% the day after a takeover was announced.

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Jeremy Grantham on Bubbles: ‘I Am Sure It Will End Badly’

Legendary investor Jeremy Grantham predicts the bull market still has plenty of room to keep rallying, perhaps for another year or two. But another move higher will be followed by an inevitable crash, one in which pain will be felt far and wide.

Stocks aren’t as frothy now as they were at previous market peaks, he says, and the Federal Reserve is also keeping interest rates pinned near zero while maintaining accomodative monetary policies. That’s why he doesn’t think the market has topped now. But the day of reckoning is coming.

“I am sure it will end badly,” Mr. Grantham, founder of the Boston-based money-management firm GMO, wrote in his quarterly letter to investors.

Mr. Grantham expects this year “should continue to be difficult” through October (he didn’t specifically allude to “sell in May and go away” but his prediction matches that adage). He then predicts the rally will regain steam in the fourth quarter and continue through the end of 2016.

He sees at least 20% rally in the S&P 500 through the presidential election, one that would take the index to at least 2250. After that, it’ll get ugly.

“Around the [presidential] election or soon after, the market bubble will burst, as bubbles always do, and will revert to its trend value, around half of its peak or worse, depending on what new ammunition the Fed can dig up,” says Mr. Grantham of GMO, which manages about $112 billion in assets for large pension funds, endowments and accredited investors through private accounts. (…)

In his quarterly letter, Mr. Grantham estimates the market is currently overvalued by 65%, predominately because of the types of investors driving the market in the short-term.

“Purist value managers may try to block out the siren call because they don’t wish to be tempted, and some may hear it and do nothing because the gains are never certain and the lack of prudence is painfully obvious in the end,” he wrote. “Yet long-term value managers are outnumbered by momentum managers – always were and probably always will be – and momentum managers have no such qualms. Why this time, then, would they not play the game with even more enthusiasm, at least enough to drive the market to…2,250 and perhaps a fair bit beyond? And although nothing is certain in the market, this is exactly what I believe will happen.” (…)

“The bull market may come to an end any time, indeed as I write it may already have happened,” Mr. Grantham said. “It could be derailed by disappointing global growth, profits sagging as deficits are cut, a Russian miscalculation, or, perhaps most dangerous and likely, an extreme Chinese slowdown. But I believe it probably (i.e., over 50%) will not end for at least a year or two and probably not before it reaches a level in excess of 2,250 on the S&P 500.”

Another smart investor reneging his valuation indicator importantly based on margins mean-reverting. Even though “the market is currently overvalued by 65%” (!!), he elects to rest on the Fed put and on past market seasonality, hoping that momentum investors will carry us all to new highs before we all dive into the abyss.

NEW$ & VIEW$ (1 APRIL 2014)

DRIVING BLIND?
Yellen Assures Markets on Rates Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen offered new assurances the Fed intends to keep interest rates low, describing in unusually personal terms why the economy needs these policies to support a weak job market.

Here’s what she said last week on when the Fed will start raising rates:

“It’s hard to define but, you know, it probably means something on the order of around six months [after the bond-buying program ends] or that type of thing,” she said. “What the statement is saying is it depends what conditions are like.”

And here are what conditions are like:

(…) “The recovery still feels like a recession to many Americans, and it also looks that way in some economic statistics.” (…)

Nothing really changed in a week, except the realization that her forward guidance was too explicit. Yesterday, she was explicit on the evidence that conditions are not what they need to be, not that things have really changed in a week:

Ms Yellen also argued that a significant chunk of the decline in labour force participation – which is down from 66 per cent of the working-age population before the financial crisis to 63 per cent afterwards – was due to lack of demand in the economy.

Based on the evidence, my own view is that a significant amount of the decline in participation during the recovery is due to slack, and another sign that help from the Fed can still be effective.”

Here’s her evidence from her speech in Chicago:

imageOne form of evidence for slack is found in other labor market data, beyond the unemployment rate or payrolls, some of which I have touched on already. For example, the seven million people who are working part time but would like a full-time job. This number is much larger than we would expect at 6.7 percent unemployment, based on past experience, and the existence of such a large pool of “partly unemployed” workers is a sign that labor conditions are worse than indicated by the unemployment rate. Statistics on job turnover also point to considerable slack in the labor market. Although firms are now laying off fewer workers, they have been reluctant to increase the pace of hiring. Likewise, the number of people who voluntarily quit their jobs is noticeably below levels before the recession; that is an indicator that people are reluctant to risk leaving their jobs because they worry that it will be hard to find another. It is also a sign that firms may not be recruiting very aggressively to hire workers away from their competitors.

A second form of evidence for slack is that the decline in unemployment has not helped raise wages for workers as in past recoveries. Workers in a slack market have little leverage to demand raises. Labor compensation has increased an average of only a little more than 2 percent per year since the recession, which is very low by historical standards.5 Wage growth for most workers was modest for a couple of decades before the recession due to globalization and other factors beyond the level of economic activity, and those forces are undoubtedly still relevant. But labor market slack has also surely been a factor in holding down compensation. The low rate of wage growth is, to me, another sign that the Fed’s job is not yet done.

A third form of evidence related to slack concerns the characteristics of the extraordinarily large share of the unemployed who have been out of work for six months or more. These workers find it exceptionally hard to find steady, regular work, and they appear to be at a severe competitive disadvantage when trying to find a job. The concern is that the long-term unemployed may remain on the sidelines, ultimately dropping out of the workforce. But the data suggest that the long-term unemployed look basically the same as other unemployed people in terms of their occupations, educational attainment, and other characteristics. And, although they find jobs with lower frequency than the short-term jobless do, the rate at which job seekers are finding jobs has only marginally improved for both groups. That is, we have not yet seen clear indications that the short-term unemployed are finding it increasingly easier to find work relative to the long-term unemployed. This fact gives me hope that a significant share of the long-term unemployed will ultimately benefit from a stronger labor market.

A final piece of evidence of slack in the labor market has been the behavior of the participation rate–the proportion of working-age adults that hold or are seeking jobs. Participation falls in a slack job market when people who want a job give up trying to find one. When the recession began, 66 percent of the working-age population was part of the labor force. Participation dropped, as it normally does in a recession, but then kept dropping in the recovery. It now stands at 63 percent, the same level as in 1978, when a much smaller share of women were in the workforce. Lower participation could mean that the 6.7 percent unemployment rate is overstating the progress in the labor market.

Jefferies’ David Zervos:

“This could be one of the most dovish speeches I have ever read from a Federal Reserve official. If anyone doubts Janet’s belief that there is excessive slack in labor markets – read the tape. And if anyone doubt’s Janet conviction that there are no material inflation risks on the horizon – read the tape.”

The jury is out on this…

Meanwhile, conditions at retail stores are distorted by the weather and the late Easter this year:

 image image

So, we got the weather and a late Easter to blame. Driving blind!

Polar Vortex Chilled U.S. Profits in First Quarter

(…) Freezing temperatures and mountains of snow in the first three months of 2014 kept shoppers indoors, grounded flights and made it harder for shippers to fill product orders. As a result, Macy’s Inc. shut 244 stores for at least part of January, Union Pacific Corp.’s trains ran 9 percent slower and Delta Air Lines Inc. canceled 8,000 flights in January and February.

Companies already blaming the weather for poor performance include FedEx Corp., General Motors Co. and McDonald’s Corp. More will probably attribute weakness to the cold, even in cases where management may bear part of the responsibility, said William Stone, chief investment officer of PNC Wealth Management in Philadelphia, which manages $128 billion.

“For many of these businesses there’s a true impact,” Stone said in a phone interview. “The skill is to separate how much of it really is the weather and how much is them taking some liberty to blame other execution problems on the weather.”

Earnings at Standard & Poor’s 500 Index companies rose an estimated 1.1 percent in the first quarter, according to analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg, slower than the 8.8 percent increase in the previous three months and the lowest rate since the second quarter of 2012.

Factset:

  • For Q1 2014, 93 companies in the S&P 500 have issued negative EPS guidance and 18 companies have issued positive EPS guidance. If these are the final numbers, it will mark the second highest number of companies issuing negative EPS guidance and the third lowest number of companies issuing positive EPS guidance for a quarter since FactSet began tracking the data in 2006.
  • The percentage of companies issuing negative EPS guidance is 84% (93 out of 111). If this is the final percentage for the quarter, it will mark the second highest percentage on record (since 2006).
  • On average, companies have issued EPS guidance that has been 6.7% below the mean EPS estimate. This percentage decline is smaller than the 5-year average of -10.8%.image
Growth Is Picking Up In U.S. Office Market Businesses Adding Space at Fastest Pace Since 2007

The amount of occupied office space grew by 9.8 million square feet in the first three months of the year, up from 9 million square feet in the fourth quarter of 2013 and an average of 5.2 million square feet a quarter between 2011 and 2013, according to Reis.

But the first-quarter growth rate—accounting for a 0.3% increase in the occupied office space—remains slow by historic standards, reflective of the sluggish labor market. Throughout much of the 2000s, occupied space routinely grew by 12 million to more than 20 million square feet a quarter.

The vacancy rate nudged down to 16.8% from 16.9% in the fourth quarter of 2013, but still well above the 12.5% rate reached in mid-2007, according to the Reis report, which tracks 79 metropolitan areas. Rents sought by landlords in the first quarter grew 0.7% to $29.28 per square foot.

Cities with growing industries such as technology and energy continued to outpace the rest of the country. The San Jose area, which includes Silicon Valley, and San Francisco had the nation’s highest rent growth during the past 12 months, with annual rents increasing 6.1% and 4.8% to $26.17 and $37.28 a square foot, respectively.

Technology firms have been gobbling up space at a rate not seen since the late 1990s dot-com boom. (…)

Slowing Inflation Poses Risk to Recovery Consumer-price growth in the world’s largest economies slowed for the third straight month in February, fueling concerns that too little inflation, rather than too much, could threaten the global economy’s fragile recovery

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on Tuesday said the annual rate of inflation in its 34 members fell to 1.4% from 1.7% in January, while in the Group of 20 leading industrial and developing nations it fell for a third straight month, to 2.3% from 2.6%. The G-20 accounts for 90% of global economic activity.The decline in the inflation rate was driven by lower energy prices, while the core rate of inflation in the OECD—excluding energy and food—was unchanged at 1.6%.

The OECD said six of its members experienced a decline in prices over the 12 months to February—all being in Europe.

CHINESE ALSO DRIVING BLIND:
CHINA: OFFICIAL VS PRIVATE SURVEYS

Today’s FT’s headline:

China factory data hint at stability Pressure on Beijing to add fresh stimulus eases

Hmmm…

China’s official manufacturing purchasing managers’ index rose for the first time in six months, edging up to 50.3 in March from 50.2 in February. On the other hand, the independent HSBC survey  fell to 48.0 from 48.5.

Zerohedge illustrates:

Just in case you are wavering between the official or HSBC survey, here’s another private survey:

  • China Economic Activity Below Seasonal Trends in March
  • CEBM’s April survey results revealed lower than expected sales across nearly all industries.
  • The overall economic environment remains sluggish.
  • Looking forward into April, the forward-looking CEBM Industrial Expectations Index (SA) decreased significantly to -20.4% from -1.7% in February. The weak economy in Q1 2014 had a strong impact on sentiment among our respondents, and most of them have lowered their own expectations earlier in the month.
  • Relatively satisfactory sales and expectations in exports and home appliance stores are attributed to the recovery of external economies, especially in the US and Europe.

J.P. Morgan economist sums it up:

”Despite the slight increase in the March [official] PMI reading, it underperforms the normal seasonal pattern rather notably, suggesting that the underlying momentum in the manufacturing sector likely remains on the soft side… The only relatively bright spot seems to be the export sector, as the export order component for both the NBS and Markit manufacturing PMI readings rose in March.”

Beware, it’s April fools’ day!