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$ (31 MARCH 2014)

Consumer Sluggishness Seems to Be Growth Drag, for Now A deceleration in consumer spending in recent months helped knock down estimates for U.S. growth in the first quarter, deferring hopes for a sustained pickup in the economy.

Consumer spending rose a seasonally adjusted 0.3% in February, the Commerce Department said Friday. But the prior month’s spending was revised to show a gain of just 0.2%, instead of the initial estimate of 0.4%, following a weak 0.1% gain in December.

The modest performance was among the reasons a number of economists downgraded their growth estimates for the quarter that ends Monday. Research firm Macroeconomic Advisers on Friday forecast U.S. gross domestic product will grow at a 1.3% pace in the first three months of the year, down from its earlier 1.5% estimate. J.P. Morgan Chase lowered its first-quarter estimate to 1.5% from 2%. Barclays Capital revised its GDP growth projections down to 2% from 2.4%. And consultancy MFR Inc. slashed its estimate to 1.2% from 1.8%. (…)

The picture isn’t entirely bleak as the U.S. emerges from its coldest winter in four years. Spending on physical goods rose 0.1% last month, the first gain since November. Spending on services rose 0.3%. Personal income was up a seasonally adjusted 0.3% on top of January’s 0.3% gain, in part thanks to expanded Medicaid benefits under the Affordable Care Act. (…)

Winter weather has remained harsh across the Northeast and Midwest, helping explain why inflation-adjusted spending on energy rose 0.3% in February after spiking 2.7% in January. (…)

Economists credited part of February’s increase in spending and income to the rollout of the ACA. Medical expenses accounted for more than half the rise in spending as people signed up for Medicaid or private insurance plans, according to Capital Economics economist Paul Dales.

Without a boost from the health-care law, consumer spending would still have grown last month, “but it would be pretty modest,” Mr. Feroli said.

Income Gets a Lift Thanks to Government Assistance 

Almost half of the increase in personal income in the past two months has come from bigger government transfer payments even though that category only accounts for about 16% of all personal income (adjusted for employer and employee payrolls taxes paid).

Much of the surge in transfers reflects higher Medicaid spending as more people are covered under the Affordable Care Act. That extra spending has more than offset the decline in unemployment checks once extended-jobless benefits ended. After the ACA enrollment period ends, the lift to income should dissipate.

Compensation of employees—mainly paychecks–has grown at a slower pace, reflecting weaker job growth and minimal pay raises. A more balanced consumer sector will depend on wages and salaries growing at a faster clip in coming months.

Revisions confirm what we all knew: previous data did not reflect reality as conveyed by weekly chain store sales and corporate testimonies.

Weather or not, the U.S. consumer is in weak shape:

  • Nominal wages increased 0.4% over 3 months, 1.6% annualized.
  • Inflation (PCE basis) also rose 0.4%. Real wages, last 3 months: totally frozen.
  • Real disposable income rose 0.2% over 3 months, 0.8% annualized.
  • Real expenditures also rose 0.2%.

BloombergBriefs’ Richard Yamarone:

imageSpending on the “Fab Five” indicators of discretionary spending is not entirely favorable. The ultimate discretionary purchase, dining out, was unchanged in February, and only 0.9 percent higher than 12 months ago. While casino gambling increased 1.5 percent, it was 6.5 percent lower than February 2013. Expenditures on cosmetics and perfumes inched up 0.4 percent, or 0.9 percent year over year, while women’s and girls’ clothing increased 1.55 percent in the month and 0.9 percent year over year. The strongest of the “Five” was spending on jewelry and watches, which climbed 3.5 percent in the month, and is 7.3 percent above year ago levels. This shouldn’t be surprising since they are popular Valentine’s Day purchases.

Essentially the economy is running on an empty tank of very low-octane fuel. Compensation growth is weak, and the reliance on government transfers is unlikely to spark any cylinders. Expectations for a solid recovery should remain reduced until there’s a definitive improvement in the quantity and quality of personal incomes.

Will this help?

Loans Are Finally Easier to Get Conditions for People Financing Homes and New Cars Are the Best in Five Years

(…) In general, however, lending “is loosening up again after being extremely tight,” says Michele Raneri, vice president for analytics at Experian Information Solutions, a major consumer credit-rating company. “For years, it was really difficult to get different kinds of loans, bank cards, as well as mortgages.”

Melanie Welsh, president of Envision Mortgage, a Wilmington, N.C., mortgage broker, says she’s seeing some loosening of credit standards for mortgages, with banks willing to underwrite loans on slightly lower credit scores than a year or so ago.

“Banks are becoming more open to [borrowers] who don’t have perfect credit scores,” she says. That even includes loans for second homes, an area where it had been particular hard to get credit. (…)

And importantly, there are simply more loans being granted. The volume of “near prime” loans rose 9.5% in the fourth quarter of 2013 from a year earlier. Loans to “prime” borrowers rose 7.7%. Subprime loans, meanwhile, have risen to 5.2% of mortgages from 3.9% a year earlier.

“That’s telling you that there is pent-up demand from consumers who want to borrow and they are now finding it easier to borrow,” says Experian’s Ms. Raneri.

While regulators are still keeping a tight lid on lending practices, “banks are relaxing their credit standards slowly and carefully,” says Mr. Spitler. (…)

Banks are also granting more home-equity loans and lines of credit, in part because rebounding home values leave more homeowners with equity they can tap. There were $111 billion in new home-equity lines of credit handed out in 2013, up from $86 billion in 2012, according to Experian. In addition, the limits on these Helocs have also been rising.

In contrast to home loans, auto credit rebounded quickly from the crisis. That was due to a combination of factors, including a tendency of people to keep making car payments even when they stop paying a mortgage, as well as the fact that it’s often easier for a bank to resell a car that has been repossessed than a foreclosed house.

As a result, even those with the worst credit are finding it easier to borrow to purchase a car these days. The dollar value of subprime car loans rose by 31% in 2013.

Potential credit-card users, meanwhile, may be noticing more pitches in their mailbox. But a closer look may show that the borrowing limits are lower than they used to be.

The reason: laws passed in 2009 that rewrote the rules on credit cards. Those new rules made it much harder for issuers to raise interest rates on borrowers who don’t make timely payments.

As a result, banks are less willing to offer high credit limits to untested customers, says Novantas’s Mr. Spitler. Otherwise, he says, when it comes to willingness to lend via credit cards, “banks have gone pretty much back to normal.”

CFOs Downgrade Profit, Hiring Outlook For 2014 Chief financial officers of large companies are bracing for slower profit growth and hiring over the next year, according to a new survey that offers a downbeat outlook for the North American economy.

Deloitte LLP’s first-quarter survey of CFOs found top corporate bean counters forecast their company’s earnings would grow 7.9% in the next year. That was the weakest reading in the category since the survey began in 2010. The firm plans to release the poll results Monday.

On the hiring front, the 109 North American CFOs said domestic hiring at their firms would rise just 1% in the next year. That’s slower than the 1.4% they forecast when surveyed in the fourth quarter, and below the 1.7% expansion in U.S. payrolls last year.

Sad smile The forecasts mark a stark departure from Deloitte’s prior surveys, which found financial executives to be at their most optimistic at the start of the year. Economic forecasters generally expect U.S. growth to accelerate later in 2014.

“CFOs are typically most confident about their numbers this time of year,” said Sanford Cockrell, a Deloitte national managing partner and leader of the firm’s CFO program. “The fact that these numbers are down is surprising to us.”

Mr. Cockrell said the outlook reflects concerns about the stability of the economic recovery, price stagnation and weak employment gains restraining consumer demand. “From conversations I’ve had with clients, there is extreme caution around growing payrolls,” he said.

The survey’s overall sentiment figure – “net optimism” — remained in positive territory but fell from the fourth quarter for the first time in the survey’s four-year history. (…)

Deloitte surveyed the CFOs last month. Of those polled, almost 70% were based in the U.S., 21% in Canada and 9% in Mexico. About two-thirds work for publicly traded companies and more than 80% are at firms with more than $1 billion in annual revenue.

Other highlights of the report:

  • In response to the Affordable Care Act, 60% of CFOs said they intend to pass cost increases on to employees, a jump from 40% in the prior quarter’s survey. The report found 16% expect to reduce the level of benefits provided. Just 7% said the law would reduce hiring.
  • Executives in the retail and wholesale sector were most pessimistic about 2014, with nearly 40% reporting declining optimism versus 15% growing more positive. The health-care and energy industries were the most optimistic.
  • Capital-investment expectations held nearly steady from the prior quarter at a 6.5% gain, but were below year-earlier levels. Sales expectations for the next 12 months did advance to 4.6% in the first-quarter survey, from 4.1% the prior quarter.
  • CFOs are not likely to reduce their company’s debt loads in the coming year, with almost two-thirds saying deleveraging is unlikely.

That said, ISI’s company surveys are on track to bounce a significant +1.7 over the past 5 weeks, led by truckers, auto dealers, and homebuilders. This strongly suggests the economy is bouncing back from the bad weather, as do unemployment claims.

But just bouncing back from bad weather may not be sufficient…

EARNINGS WATCH

Q1 ends today. Some earnings previews. First from Factset:

Over the course of the first quarter, analysts have lowered earnings estimates for companies in the S&P 500 for the quarter. The Q1 bottom-up EPS estimate  dropped 4.5% (to $27.02 from $28.29) from December 31 through yesterday.

During the past year (4 quarters), the average decline in the EPS estimate during the quarter has been 3.2%. During the past five years (20 quarters), the average decline in the EPS estimate during the quarter has been 4.2%. During the past ten years, (40 quarters), the average decline in the EPS estimate during the quarter has been 4.4%.

The estimated earnings decline for the first quarter is -0.4% (YoY) this week, slightly below the estimated decline of -0.1% last week and below the estimate of 4.4% growth at the start of the quarter. If this is the final percentage for the quarter, it will mark the first year-over-year decrease in earnings since Q3 2012 (-1.0%).

At this stage of the quarter, 111 companies in the index have issued EPS guidance for the first quarter. Of these 111 companies, 93 have issued negative EPS guidance and 18 have issued positive EPS guidance. Thus, the percentage of companies issuing negative EPS guidance to date for the first quarter is 84% (93 out of 111). This percentage is well above the 5-year average of 65%.

Negative guidance is much higher than Q1’13’s (78.2%) but in line with Q4’13’s.

Now Zacks Research:

Expectations for the Q1 earnings season as whole remain low, with total earnings expected to be down -1.8% from the same period last year on +0.9% higher revenues and modestly lower margins. As has been the trend for more than a year now, estimates for Q1 came down sharply as the quarter unfolded. The current -1.8% decline in total earnings in Q1 is down from +2.1% growth expected at the start of the quarter in January.

The -2.4% decline to total S&P 500 earnings since the start of Q1 in January is greater than what we witnessed in the comparable period in 2013 Q4, but is broadly in-line with the magnitude of the 4-quarter average of negative revision.

With two-thirds of S&P 500 members typically beating earnings estimates in any reporting cycle, actual Q1 results will almost certainly be better than these pre-season expectations.

Guidance has been overwhelmingly weak for more than a year now, keeping the revisions trend firmly in the negative direction.

What we haven’t seen for a while instead is some evidence of strength on the revenue front and favorable comments from management teams about business outlook. Corporate guidance has been negative for almost two years now, causing estimates to keep coming down and the long hoped-for earnings growth turnaround getting pushed forward. Guidance is important in any earnings season, but it is particularly important this time around given the relatively elevated expectations for the second half of the year and beyond.

Consensus estimates for 2014 Q3 and Q4 have held up quite well, even as expectations for Q1 and Q2 came down over the last few months. Total earnings are expected to be up +9% in the second half of the year after the +1.9% growth pace in the first half of the year. We started last year with somewhat similar hopes, but had to sharply ‘revise’ those estimates as the year unfolded, with the starting point of the hope-for growth turnaround getting pushed to this year instead.

Punch Corporate management has become masters at the “under-promise to over-deliver” game. Here’s why:

Thomson Reuters latest analysis by Greg Harrison examines the frequency in which companies in the S&P 1500 index exceed or fall short of analyst EPS and revenue estimates and quantifies the impact on stock prices (Click here for the full report). The results show that positive earnings surprises result in positive excess returns, while in-line results and negative surprises both result in underperformance on average. Revenue surprises result in directionally similar excess returns, and when combined with earnings, significant positive excess returns can be expected on average when both EPS and revenue beat analyst expectations.

Over the past five years,
• Companies that beat EPS estimates saw their stock outperform the index by 1.6% the following day on average, while those that missed underperformed by 3.4%. Companies that reported EPS in line with estimates underperformed the index by 1.1%.
• Companies that beat revenue estimates outperformed the index by 1.4% the following day on average. Negative revenue surprises resulted in underperformance of 2.0%.image

• Earnings beats are considered to be of lower quality when they are not accompanied by revenue results that also beat expectations. Companies only significantly outperform when they exceed both EPS and revenue estimates.

• When companies miss their EPS estimate while beating their revenue estimate, they tend to underperform even more, lagging the index by 2.0% on average.

image

CHINA: SLOW AND SLOWER
Lightning China’s property woes Real estate sales appear to have slumped, adding to concerns that more developers may be heading for default

Surprised smile Data from 42 cities monitored by China Confidential, a research service at the Financial Times, showed that sales volumes during the first 23 days of March were down 34 per cent from the same period a year earlier.

The chart below shows that although on a month on month basis property sales jumped – due to the annual seasonal pick up after Chinese new year – this jump was weak compared to that seen in March 2013, resulting in a plunge in year-on-year sales volumes.

(…)  The weak sales volumes also corresponded with a 21 per cent rise in floor space available for sale in 14 monitored cities compared to March last year, increasing pressure on real estate developers to cut prices and shift apartments.(…)

Xinhua, the official news agency, said developers were loathe to talk openly about “price cuts” but were offering free interior renovations, free household appliances or waiving downpayment requirements in order to lure buyers.

Homelink, a domestic property agency, was quoted by local media as saying that residential housing transactions in Beijing plunged by 65 per cent in the first quarter year on year. Guangzhou and Shanghai also saw a sharp year on year decline in property sales.(…) (Source: China Confidential)

China’s biggest banks more than doubled the level of bad loans they wrote off last year, in a sign that financial strains are mounting as growth in the world’s second-largest economy slows.

The five biggest Chinese banks, which account for more than half of all loans in the country, removed Rmb59bn ($9.5bn) from their books in debts that could not be collected, according to their 2013 results. That was up 127 per cent from 2012, and the highest since the banks were rescued from insolvency, recapitalised and publicly listed over the past decade. (…)

Liao Qiang, China banks analyst with rating agency Standard & Poor’s, said lenders appeared to have adequate provisions for a downturn. But he expressed concern that banks were using write-offs to keep their non-performing loan (NPL) ratios artificially low.

“Some banks fear that if the NPL ratio is undesirably high, there may be some negative publicity, and so they are more active in write-offs,” he said. (…)

Fingers crossed China’s debts do not signal imminent implosion

By Peter Sands, chief executive of Standard Chartered bank (via FT)

(…) Those who are bearish on China seize on this ratio as evidence that the country is heading for a crash, a debt-driven hard landing. They highlight the industrial overcapacity and excess of built infrastructure as the inevitable consequences of such debt-fuelled growth. They remark on the rapid increase and opacity of shadow banking. And they point to stresses in the interbank market, the recent default of a bond issued by a solar company and the weakness in the renminbi as warning signals of an imminent implosion.

Yet to jump to the conclusion that such a crash is inevitable is wrong. Equating China’s debt problem with what occurred in the US and Europe before the crisis ignores some important differences. To start with, while China borrows a lot it also saves a lot. So it has largely been borrowing from itself. This is very different from being dependent on foreign creditors.

Moreover, the increase in borrowing has largely been driven by companies rather than the government or consumers. Yet at the same time, and rather paradoxically, China’s businesses have also been accumulating significant savings. With little pressure to pay dividends or improve returns, they are recycling their money through the banks and shadow banks to lend to other companies. It is not an efficient way to allocate resources but it is more an indicator of the deficiencies of the capital markets than of systemic over-indebtedness.

Furthermore, China has largely borrowed to fund investment. When you borrow to consume, as the US and Europe did before the crisis, you have little to show for it afterwards other than a slide in living standards when the party stops. When you borrow to invest, you may end up with some white elephants and overcapacity but you also gain some superb infrastructure, such as China’s high-speed rail network, and some world-class productive facilities.

Finally, China has recognised the problem. Not for Beijing the delusion of a “new economic paradigm” that blinded so many policy makers and bankers in the west before the crisis. The leadership knows it has a problem and it is determined to tackle it. At this month’s China Development Forum, a government-sponsored conference in Beijing attended by many of the country’s senior leaders, almost every session touched on the topics of over-leverage and overcapacity. (…)

Gradually deleveraging without overly damping growth will be tricky. Transforming the way China’s entire financial system works is a Herculean endeavour. There will be rough patches along the way, and plenty of scope for slips and stumbles – but so far Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of the People’s Bank of China, and his regulatory and government counterparts have proved remarkably sure-footed.

It helps that, while the composition of growth in China is changing, the underlying drivers remain strong. Urbanisation continues apace. Domestic consumption, particularly of services, is increasing fast; and, since there is no overcapacity in services, there is plenty of scope for generating growth and jobs. So, while there will be bumps and bruises along the way, China looks much more likely to navigate its way though these challenges than many western observers contend.

Japan Industrial Output Unexpectedly Drops as Tax Hike Looms Japan’s industrial production fell in February, undershooting all forecasts by economists surveyed by Bloomberg News, as the first sales-tax increase since 1997 risks stalling recovery in the world’s third-biggest economy.

(…) Output fell 2.3 percent from the previous month, the steepest drop in eight months, the trade ministry said in Tokyo today. The median estimate of 28 economists was for a 0.3 percent gain. A separate gauge of manufacturing fell in March for a second straight month.

While the weakness partly reflected disruptions from heavy snowfall, the data showed manufacturers are bracing for a slump in demand following tomorrow’s sales-tax increase. Inventories fell for a seventh straight month, lessening the likelihood of even sharper output cuts as the higher consumption levy pushes the economy into a one-quarter contraction in April-June. (…)

The 3 percentage-point increase in the sales tax is forecast to cause the economy to shrink at an annualized 3.5 percent in the second quarter, before a rebounding grow 2.1 percent in the following three months, according to a separate Bloomberg survey.

  • Inflation Without Wage Growth Threatens Japan’s Recovery

Japan’s inflation edged higher in February. The CPI rose to 1.5 percent from a year earlier compared with a 1.4 percent yearly rise in January. Core inflation excluding food and energy costs came in at 0.8 percent, the highest level since 1998.

Real wages continue to fall even with unemployment at 3.6 percent in February, down from 3.7 percent a month before. The annual round of wage negotiations delivered limited gains. At Toyota, for example, union members received a 0.8 percent bump — far less than the increase in prices.

These tepid wage increases reveal companies’ uncertainty about the economic outlook, which makes them unwilling to pass on higher profits to workers in generous wage deals. Increased hiring in 2013 reflected a rise in the number of part-time and temporary workers, whereas the number of full-time employees
actually fell.

Limited gains in wages mean households have little scope to increase spending. Real household living expenditure fell 2.5 percent annually in February. That’s in spite of an increase in the consumption tax in April, which was expected to boost consumption in the months before.

The government indicated that it will front load budget spending to buoy growth. That should help offset the negative impact of the tax increase on demand. It does little to address the underlying problem of stagnant wage growth. (…) (BloombergBriefs)

 image image

Euro-Zone Inflation Rate at ’09 Low

The European Union’s statistics agency Monday said consumer prices rose by 0.5% from March 2013, the lowest annual rate of inflation since November 2009 and

image

well below the European Central Bank’s target of just under 2%.

Some of the weakness in the inflation measure during March was down to falling energy prices, which dropped 2.1% from March 2013. But prices for other goods and services that are driven by purely domestic demand rose at a slower pace, and the core measure of inflation—which excludes volatile items such as energy and food—slowed to 0.8% from 1.0% in February.

Germany’s plan for a minimum wage, initially attacked as a job-killer, is winning begrudging support from business leaders.

When Chancellor Angela Merkel proposed a statutory pay floor of €8.50 ($11.70) an hour last fall, economists warned it could put hundreds of thousands of Germans out of work. But as managers and business lobbyists review the details of the draft legislation that her cabinet is preparing to adopt April 2, many are saying they can live with the law—and may even benefit from it. (…)

Germany is one of only seven countries in the 28-member European Union without a national minimum wage. For decades, it has let business groups and trade unions set pay and working times in collective agreements.

But a growing number of German companies are shunning these deals, contributing to a decade of largely stagnant wages. Meanwhile, many of the new jobs that have contributed to Germany’s low unemployment rate in recent years have been low-paid service-sector positions. Just as rising wealth inequality in the U.S. prompted President Barack Obama recently to call for a higher minimum wage, a widening income gap in Germany has boosted support for a pay floor.

When Ms. Merkel’s new coalition proposed the minimum wage following elections last fall, more than 80% of Germans welcomed it. At least five million German workers now earn less than €8.50 an hour. Minimum-wage proponents say lifting low pay could help rebalance Germany’s economy, which has long relied on exports for growth while domestic demand barely budged.

Several prominent economists have voiced doubt. (…) But many employers say they aren’t preparing pink slips. Arnulf Piepenbrock, a managing partner at facilities-management firm Piepenbrock Unternehmensgruppe GmbH, said he doesn’t plan to lay off any of its 3,581 cleaning staff in eastern Germany, even though they currently earn less than €8.50 an hour.

A large reason lies in the small print of the 56-page draft bill, which says companies governed by wage agreements would have two years to adapt. (…)

The phased-in approach would also mute the law’s overall impact. Today, €8.50 represents 58% of the German median hourly wage, which would rank second in Europe behind France’s minimum wage in terms of generosity, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. But by 2017, Germany’s proposed minimum wage will have fallen to 50% of the median wage, putting Germany in the middle of the OECD’s ranking table.

(…)  Entry-level wages at most manufacturers are already well above €8.50 an hour. (…)

INFLATION WATCH
Grain Bulls Proved Right With Best Rally Since 2010

Now, Brazil’s worst drought in decades is threatening coffee, sugar and citrus crops as U.S. farmers contend with dry and freezing weather. The two represent about a sixth of global trade in farm goods. Futures markets are responding, exchanging cattle and hogs at record prices and adding 62 percent to the cost of coffee.

“Last year, people believed that things were back to normal, and that we were going to have huge inventories,” said Kelly Wiesbrock, a portfolio manager at Harvest Capital Strategies in San Francisco, which oversees about $1.8 billion. “Those assumptions usually catch people off guard. If there’s another supply disruption, then we could potentially be in a tight spot. It’s all dependent on weather.”

The S&P Agriculture Index of eight commodities climbed 6.4 percent since the start of March. (…)

Combined net-bullish positions across 11 agricultural products climbed more than fivefold in the first quarter, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show. As of March 25, investors held 1.06 million contracts, the most since February 2011. Wheat holdings are the most bullish in 16 months, and coffee bets are the highest in six years.

Wheat traded in Chicago is poised for the biggest quarterly gain since September 2012. Cold, dry weather has reduced the outlook for winter crops in the U.S., the top exporter, just as a rail backlog delays supplies from Canada. Fields in Germany had 49 percent less rainfall than average in the past 180 days, according to World Ag Weather.

Escalating tension in Eastern Europe has threatened to disrupt grains shipments. Russia is set to be the fifth-largest wheat exporter this year, ahead of Ukraine, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture data. American corn sales booked for delivery before Sept. 1 are more than double the year-earlier pace, USDA data show.

Brazilian farmers, already enduring the worst drought in decades, may next face a deluge of rain on the world’s biggest coffee, sugar and citrus crops, according to Somar Meteorologia. (…)

SENTIMENT WATCH
The PE Index No One Wants To Look At

Investors have a tendency to pay too much when things are going well, and sell for too little when the market struggles, so it’s useful to have an idea of how much sentiment is currently built into stock prices. That’s why Citi has been using its Panic/Euphoria index since 2002 to measure sentiment using an array of sometimes contradictory factors. The current level of euphoria implies an 80% chance of a market downturn in the next year, small caps have the highest valuations relative to large caps in 35 years, and Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen’s comment that rates might increase six months sooner than expected sent barely a tremor through the markets.

The model uses premiums paid for puts and calls, short interest, retail money market funds,margin debt, the average bullishness of the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) and Investors Intelligence, gas prices, trade volumes, commodity prices, and put call ratios to arrive at an estimate for sentiment. The factors are equal-weight, but they are also averaged and detrended in ways that make the model proprietary.

The model was also recently adjusted to exclude the effects of the dot com bubble, and Levkovich says that the updated version would have provided more useful euphoria signals ahead of previous market tops, showing the general robustness of the model.

APRIL FOOLS’ DAY?

I know I’m a bit early but I wanted to pass Zerohedge’s scoop on:

From [Bank of America’s chief technician MacNeil] Curry, whose latest track record in market calls has hardly been successful:

We believe NOW ITS TIME TO DO AN ABOUT FACE and turn bullish risk assets for the next several weeks. From both a price and seasonal perspective, evidence says that the consolidation in the S&P500 is nearing completion and the larger bull trend is about to resume. Treasury yields should also participate as the week long consolidation in 5yr yields is drawing to a close.

That said, even the BofA analysts is starting to hedge quite aggressively: “Bigger picture, we are growing concerned that this equity rally is VERY mature and that US Treasury Vol is setting up for a significant breakout. But, to be clear, those are bigger picture concerns and NOT FOR THE HERE AND NOW.

Maybe. Maybe not. Either way, here is what the historical data says.

April is the strongest month of the year for the S&P500. Since 1950 it has averaged OVER 2.00% for the month with the 3rd highest monthly probability of an advance at 64%

(…) So while one should prepare to hear a litany of how April is historically the best month for stocks ahead of the just as infamous “Sell in May and go away” which has not been the case for the past 4 years, the reality is that this historic patterns such as this, or any others, have zero bearing on the current experiment in “confidence boosting” central planning. In other words, the only thing that continues to “matter” for risk, is what the Chairwoman may have had for dinner.

Pointing up SUBSCRIBER DAILY EMAILS

Since I started publishing in early 2009, subscribers to my (free) daily emails received a short summary of the daily posts with a link to the complete blog post. Recently, a few readers asked me to show the full text in the feed which I have been doing in recent weeks. I did not anticipate that this might annoy so many other subscribers. I have thus elected to return to the summary feed which, in truth, makes more sense for most subscribers given the length of many posts. My apologies to others who might be inconvenienced.

NEW$ & VIEW$ (10 FEBRUARY 2014)

Slow Jobs Growth Stirs Worry Over Recovery A hiring chill hit the U.S. labor market for the second straight month in January, reflecting employers’ reluctance to take on new workers despite some of the nation’s strongest economic growth in years.

U.S. payrolls rose a seasonally adjusted 113,000 in January after December’s lackluster gain of 75,000 jobs, marking the weakest two-month stretch of job creation in three years, the Labor Department said Friday.

Yet the unemployment rate ticked down to 6.6%—the lowest level since late 2008. The decline came because more people found jobs last month as opposed to last year when it fell in part because of unemployed Americans abandoning their job hunts and dropping out of the labor force. (…)

The report left several puzzles unanswered, including the dichotomy of solid growth and weak hiring. Throughout the recovery, businesses have been able to boost production at a faster pace than employment. That trend could also be supporting GDP growth despite the hiring slowdown. (…)

The latest data suggest weather may have slowed hiring in December, but not in January. (…) Payrolls in construction, an industry often hardest hit by frigid temperatures, grew by 48,000 last month after December’s decrease of 22,000. The manufacturing sector added 21,000 jobs last month. The construction and manufacturing sectors tend to pay higher wages than retail jobs, which declined by 13,000 last month.

The health-care sector added just 1,500 jobs in January after a gain of 1,100 jobs in December. The sector had supplied a steady stream of jobs for years, raising more questions about whether the rollout of the Affordable Care Act last fall is restraining hiring.(…)

To be sure, the report offered a few bright spots. In January, the size of America’s labor force actually grew, by nearly 500,000 people, as more people got jobs and looked for work.

In addition, the ranks of the long-term unemployed—those out of work for six months or more—thinned, dropping to 3.6 million from 3.9 million. Some of that may have been partly due to more than 1.3 million Americans losing federal unemployment benefits in December; some of those workers may have given up their job search or taken jobs they otherwise wouldn’t. The Senate failed to advance a renewal of those benefits this past week. (…)

This was the WSJ’s rundown of Friday’s NFP report, a good reflection of the confusion. After all, the narrative before December’s NFP report was that the U.S. economy was accelerating north of 3.0% GDP growth and 2014 would be a much better year overall. The reverse in the narrative was exacerbated by the plunge in the ISM Manufacturing PMI for January.

Most if not all the negatives have been well publicized by the media. So, here’s a dose of optimism from factual data, just to keep us all balanced:

  • The annual revisions to the 2013 data were good news. The BLS had already said that March 2013 employment would be revised up by 369,000 jobs. The revisions from March through to December 2013, however, show an additional 140,000 jobs. The new data suggest the economy added 194,000 jobs a month in 2013, roughly 11,300 more than the previous estimates. This is 6.1% more new jobs per month on average than originally estimated. While December new jobs were only revised up by 1k, November’s were revised up by 33k. Monthly changes were revised up 52k in total for the first 6 months of 2013 and up 84k for the second half with 71k of the 84k revisions occurring in the last 3 months of the year. Upward revisions are a positive sign.
  • The Labor Department conducts two surveys for the employment report. The establishment survey of employers gave us the disappointing 113,000 nonfarm payrolls gain, while the household survey showed 638,000 new jobs added last month (or a still robust 616,000 removing the population control effect.)  While the two job measures often vary month-to-month, in the long run they track one another. Looking at year-over-year growth rates, the household employment numbers seem to be catching up to the steady rise in payrolls as reported by U.S. establishments. (WSJ)
  • In addition to the unemployment rate, Labor also calculates a broader measure of underemployment that includes the unemployed plus persons marginally attached to the labor force and people who can only find part-time work because of economic conditions. The rate has fallen by almost two percentage points in the past year, with a one-point decline in just the last three months.  At 12.7%, January’s rate is the lowest since November 2008. One driver: the rapid drop in workers who are working part-time but want full-time work. The number has dropped from more than 8 million in October to 7.3 million in January. Considering the strong number of jobs reported by households, those no longer working part-time probably gained full-time employment. That’s a plus for consumer spending and incomes. (WSJ)
  • There are two logical responses to losing [long term unemployment] benefits: either accept any job that is going, even at much lower wages than you want, or else stop looking.(…) Less in keeping with the benefits story, the percentage of the population participating in the labour force picked up from 62.8 to 63 per cent, suggesting that more people came into the labour force. (FT)
  • The percentage of working-age Americans with a job rose to 58.8% last month, the highest since October 2012.
  • The well publicized dismal January ISM Manufacturing report added to the slowdown fears. However, other reports tend to confirm that economic momentum continues. Markit’s U.S. Manufacturing PMI, which has tracked official data on factory orders better than the ISM, suggests that “ the underlying trend in new orders appears to have been as strong, if not slightly stronger, than late last year.” As the WSJ chart on the right shows, manufacturing employment has been gaining momentum in the past 4 months.
  • Markit’s Services PMI, a far more useful indicator for job creation, reached 56.7 in January, up from 55.7 in December with continued strong new orders and employment gauges. Markit says that “The headline index suggests service sector output continued to expand at a robust pace in January, with the latest increase in overall business activity the fastest for four months.”
  • The recent NFIB release revealed improved employment at small companies, the best job creators in the U.S.: “Overall, it appears that owners hired more workers on balance in December than their hiring plans indicated in November, a favorable development (apparently undetected by BLS).”

imageMarkit also believes that the underlying employment trend is better than what the official data paint:

The hiring trend depicted by the official data is also bleaker that the picture painted by Markit’s PMI™ surveys, which have shown companies across
manufacturing and services continuing to take on extra staff in significant numbers in recent months (in the region of 180-195,000) alongside resilient growth of
output and order books.

The PMIs, which had correctly signalled the robust rate of economic expansion in the second half of last year, indicate that growth remained robust at the start of 2014, with the January PMIs broadly consistent with GDP continuing to grow at an annualised rate of at least 3% in the first quarter. Such solid growth implies that the hiring trend is likely to revive again in February.

Good Sign for Jobs: More Quitting The Outlook: The percentage of U.S. workers who voluntarily left their job—the “quit rate”—hit 1.8% in November, the highest during the recovery, in a healthy sign for the labor market.

The percentage who voluntarily left their job—the nation’s “quit rate”—hit 1.8% in November, the highest in the recovery and up from a low of 1.2% in September 2009, according to the Labor Department. About 2.4 million workers resigned in November. Some retired or simply chose not to work. But most quit to hunt for a new job or because they had already found one.

Figures for December, due Tuesday, will probably show further gains in quitting, economists say. (…)

imageWhile more Americans are quitting, U.S. employers are still moving slowly to hire. A separate measure from the Labor Department that tracks the number of hires as a share of overall employment remained at 3.3% as of November, the latest data available, the same level as a year prior and well below the 3.8% average between late 2000 and 2006. “You want to see quits and hires going one for one,” says Jason Faberman, senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago.

Economists say part of the reason the quit rate is rising is that more of the jobs the economy is creating are in industries like retail and restaurants, known for higher turnover and relatively low pay. Roughly 20% of November’s quits were in the “accommodation and food services” sector, up from 17.5% in the same month two years ago. By contrast, only 5.2% of November’s quits were in manufacturing, which tends to pay more, down from 5.9% two years before. As the share of jobs in high-turnover sectors grows, the overall quit rate would be expected to rise.

Meanwhile, the longer-term picture suggests Americans are becoming less peripatetic when it comes to their jobs. The quit rate actually edged down during much of the 2000s, even when the economy was booming. After the 2001 downturn, quitting levels failed to return to their prerecession highs. Some 51% of U.S. workers have been with the same employer for at least five years, up from 46% in 1996, according to a January 2012 survey by the Labor Department.

One reason for the growing stability is America’s aging population. Older workers change jobs less frequently than younger ones. But there are other drivers, including growing health-care costs that make some workers reluctant to leave the safety of jobs with good benefits.

If such trends persist, it is likely that labor-market churn will continue decreasing over time. That could exacerbate an already deeply entrenched problem: long-term unemployment. Without more Americans leaving jobs for more promising positions, it is that much harder to find slots for people out of work for months and trying to get back in the game.

To end the rundown of Friday’s NFP report: Average hourly earnings rose five cents. The length of the workweek was steady at an average of 34.4 hours. In effect, real wages have been rising throughout 2013 after declining the previous 28 months. But there is this problem:

Low-Wage Hours At New Low As ObamaCare Fines Loom

Low-wage workers clocked the shortest workweek on record in December — even shorter than at the depth of the recession, new Labor Department data showed Friday.

The figures underscore concerns about the ObamaCare employer insurance mandate’s impact on the work hours and incomes of low-wage earners.

It’s impossible to know how much of the drop relates to ObamaCare, but there’s good reason to suspect a strong connection. The workweek has been getting shorter in many of the same industries where anecdotes have piled up about employers cutting hours to evade the law’s penalties.

While weather likely played some role in December, that’s not the driving factor. The low-wage workweek in November had already matched the prior record low — set in July 2013, just as the Obama administration delayed the employer mandate until 2015.

Further, January’s data not yet broken down by industry subgroup show that rank-and-file retail workers saw another big fall in average work hours, matching a record-low 29.7 hours a week.

In December, office supply chain Staples cut the schedules of part-time workers to a maximum of 25 hours per week, below the 30-hour threshold at which the Affordable Care Act’s employer mandate kicks in.

In November, David’s Bridal reportedly cut even full-time salespeople and stylists below the 30-hour mark.

ObamaCare’s penalties won’t apply until 2015, but they will reflect 2014 staffing levels, giving employers little time to adjust.

More Jobs, Fewer Hours

IBD’s gauge of the low-wage workweek, now at 27.4 hours, includes the 30 million nonmanagers working in private industries where pay averages up to $14.50 an hour.

These industries boosted payrolls by 700,000 (nonsupervisors) in 2013, or 2.4%, but hours worked grew at half that rate. In effect, shorter hours would have explained 323,000, or 47%, of those new jobs.

Again, weather wasn’t the primary factor. Even if the workweek had held steady in December, the workweek would have been responsible for one-third of the jobs added in low-wage private industries last year.

That’s not to say that overall job creation is weaker than it appears. That’s because the workweek has moved higher for non-low-wage workers. This group, including managers and those in higher-paying industries, is now clocking a longer week than prior to the recession.

That divergence explains why many economists and nonpartisan arbiters like the Congressional Budget Office have concluded that ObamaCare has had no impact on part-time employment. The effect doesn’t show up in aggregate workforce data, but that is the wrong place to look.

Finally, CalculatedRisk has a set of charts supporting slow but on going improvements in the U.S. labour situation:

Not to say that all is good. We may well be in another soft patch (weaker housing, autos, energy costs, retailing, high inventories) but nothing too serious, especially since interest rates are backing down amid much softer fiscal headwinds.

ISI’s company surveys, conducted weekly and covering a broad corporate spectrum, are holding up nicely in spite of the apparent excess inventories in the economy:

image

Speaking of higher energy costs, Joao Peixe at OilPrice.com points out:

As natural gas prices climb, reaching over $5/mcf again on 4 February, and with an unseasonably cold winter, local utilities say that natural gas customers’ bills are 30-40% higher now than last winter.

Last week, we saw natural gas prices rise above $5 for the first time in three years, then falling back a bit only to rise again on 4 February, with March futures trading above $5.25/mcf—or more than 6%, according to expert trader Dan Dicker.

Customers are footing the bill for higher gas prices and the coldest November-January period in four years in the Midwest and Northeast.

In Omaha, Nebraska, weather has been about 30% colder this year than last, and utility regulatory officials saying that gas use among customers is up while bills are up by 34-38% over last year.

Utilities are paying high prices for gas because demand has been higher and consumption rates at a level that has reduced storage by about 17% over the average of the previous five years. (…)

As Dicker noted for The Street, “Low stockpiles caused by sequestration and a rush of domestic exploration and production companies away from natural gas production in favor of shale oil is taking its toll and providing the first real and consistent support of prices since 2007. Suddenly, natural gas markets are vulnerable to price spikes and traders are afraid to be short.”

If you think we’ve seen all of the bad weather for the year, the Browning Newsletter will discourage you, whether you live on the East, Central or West USA:

In 80% of similar years, late winter remained cold in the Eastern and Central US through February. In 60% of these years, there was little to no slowing of the eastward sweep of storms, so while temperatures were cold, they were not as extreme as they were in mid-winter. The jet stream became less variable, hitting the Midwest and Upper South, but not as extreme in Texas and Gulf. At the same time, in 80% of similar years, more cool air and precipitation entered the Pacific Northwest and Western Canada. (In 40% of these years, some of this precipitation even hit California.)

Here’s the bad news. This shows sign of being one of those 20% of years where the drought lasts all winter! Even though it has been more common during the past
century for the infamous “Ridiculously Resilient Ridge to fade in late winter – allowing a “Fabulous February” or “Miracle March” to break or at least alleviate the Western drought – meteorologists don’t think it is likely this year. The High in the atmosphere is showing no sign of leaving.

Meteorology is like the stock market: a game of probabilities.

Canada sees slight bump to job numbers

Employment rose by 29,400 jobs, recouping some of December’s losses. The jobs gain, along with a drop in the number of people looking for work, lowered Canada’s jobless rate to 7 per cent, the same level as a year ago.

U.S. consumer credit posts biggest jump in 10 months

Total consumer credit rose by $18.8 billion to $3.1 trillion, the Federal Reserve said on Friday. That was the biggest gain since February. Revolving credit, which mostly measures credit-card use, rose by $5 billion in December after climbing $465 million in November. Revolving credit figures can be volatile.

Non-revolving credit, which includes auto loans as well as student loans made by the government, increased $13.8 billion in December. (Chart from Haver Analytics)

French Economy Continues to Sputter

(…) a survey by statistics bureau Insee showed industrial production dipped 0.3% in December from November. Economists expected only a 0.1% decline. It had risen 1.2% in November.

In a separate report, the Bank of France forecast the economy will grow 0.2% quarter-on-quarter at the start of this year, marking a slowdown from the 0.5% expansion the central bank has forecast for the final three months of 2013. (…)

Sentiment in manufacturing was stuck at the same level in January as December, at 99, just below the long-term average reading of 100, the central bank’s survey showed. Sentiment in services improved slightly, but remained even further below the long-term average at 94 in January.

The Bank of France survey echoes others—Insee’s business sentiment survey for January was also stuck at the same level as December.

imageThe weak industrial-production figures in December were partly explained by mild weather decreasing demand for energy in France. But manufacturing output was also disappointing as it failed to record any growth. (…)

Markit’s Composite PMI for France registered 48.9 in January from 47.3 in December (chart above). Markit’s Retail PMI for France has been below 50.0 since October and French retailers remain pessimistic:

The value of goods ordered by French retailers for resale decreased for a twenty-eighth consecutive month in January. Moreover, the rate of contraction accelerated since December.

EARNINGS WATCH

The Q4’13 earnings season is turning out to be pretty reasonable.

While the market has pulled back quite a bit this earnings season, the underlying data for corporate America has been strong.  As shown below, 65% of companies that have reported this season (1,100+) have beaten bottom line EPS estimates, while 64% have beaten top line revenue estimates.  If these beat rates hold, it would be the strongest earnings beat rate seen since Q4 2010 and the strongest revenue beat rate since Q2 2011.

  • Factset updates us on S&P 500 companies :

Overall, 344 companies (69%) have reported earnings to date for the fourth quarter. Of these 344 companies, 72% have reported actual EPS above the mean EPS estimate and 27% have reported actual EPS below the mean EPS estimate. The percentage of companies reporting EPS above the mean EPS estimate is
slightly above the 1-year (71%) average, but slightly below the 4-year (73%) average.

In aggregate, companies are reporting earnings that are 3.3% above expectations. This surprise percentage is equal to the 1-year (3.3%) average, but below the 4-year (5.8%) average.

The blended earnings growth rate for the fourth quarter is 8.1% this week, above last week’s blended earning s growth rate of 7.8%. The Financials sector has the highest earnings growth rate (24.5%) of all ten sectors. It is also the largest contributor to earnings growth for the entire index. If the Financials sector is excluded, the earnings growth rate for the S&P 500 falls to 4.9% (unchanged from last week).

In terms of revenues, 68% of companies have reported actual sales above estimated sales and 32% have reported actual sales below estimated sales. The percentage of companies reporting sales above estimates is well above the average percentage recorded over the last four quarters (54%), and well above the average percentage recorded over the previous four years (59%). If the final percentage for the quarter is 68%, it will mark the highest percentage of companies reporting sales above estimates since Q2 2011 (72%).

In aggregate, companies are reporting sales that are equal to expectations (0.0%). This percentage is below the 1-year (0.4%) average and below the 4-year (0.6%) average. The blended revenue growth rate for Q4 2013 is 0.8%, above the growth rate of 0.3% at the end of the quarter (December 31).

At this point in time, 71 companies in the index have issued EPS guidance for the first quarter. Of these 71 companies, 57 have issued negative EPS guidance and 14 have issued positive EPS guidance. Thus, the percentage of companies issuing negative EPS guidance to date for the first quarter is 80% (57 out of 71). This percentage is above the 5-year average of 64%, but slightly below the percentage at this same point in time for Q4 2013 (86%).

For Q1 2014, analysts are now expecting earnings growth of only 1.5%. However, earnings growth is projected to improve in each subsequent quarter for the remainder of the year. For Q2 2014, Q3 2014, and Q4 2014, analysts are predicting earnings growth rates of 8.2%, 12.2%, and 11.7%. For all of 2014, the projected earnings growth rate is 9.4%.

Pointing upGuidance changes are only slightly worse than at the same time 3 months ago (for Q4’13) and one year ago (for Q1’13).

The biggest drag on Q4 revenue growth is from the Finance and Energy sectors, revenues in Finance down -12.6% (with results from 78.5% of the S&P 500’s Finance sector results already out) and -5.4% in the Energy sector (55.6% of the sector’s total companies have reported). Excluding both of those sectors, revenue growth for the remaining S&P 500 companies that have reported results doesn’t look that bad – up +4.4%, compared to +4.6% in 2013 Q3 for the same group of companies and the 4-quarter average of +3.4%. Revenue growth has improved for the Transportation and Technology sectors and somewhat for the Industrials as well.

So, margins keep rising as the Factset chart shows. Revenues ex-Finance, ex-Energy, are rising nicely in real terms and are not decelerating just yet. Productivity rose 3.2% QoQ in Q4’13 (+1.7% YoY) while unit labour costs fell 1.6% (-1.3% YoY). Mean reverting is not visible.

World economy also looks reasonably good after all the January PMIs (Chart from Moody’s):

image

THE JANUARY EFFECT ON FEBRUARY

From BofAML via ZeroHedge:

February is bad for risk, especially after a down January

February is a month when the S&P500 tends to take a breather. Since 1950 it has averaged a return of -10bps and risen 55% of the time. HOWEVER, after a negative January the month of February turns much nastier. In such instances, it averages a decline of -1.4% and with the odds of a decline rising to 63%.

Here’s the chart for the 12 months of the year, courtesy of RBC Capital:image