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THE DAILY EDGE (15 September 2016): Trade Protectionism Explodes

US CEOs are not very optimistic, especially on hiring and sales.

Yesterday, we saw how “cautious” small business people are (here). The bigger execs are not more optimistic as The Daily Shot illustrates:

UPS Projects Holiday Hiring in Line With Last Year United Parcel Service Inc. on Wednesday said it expects to hire about 95,000 extra employees for the holidays, the same number as the past two years, in the latest signal that seasonal hiring will remain flat.
Hanjin Creditors Seek to Keep Ships Anchored in U.S. Waters A group of creditors who have gone unpaid for services such as towing and fueling say that the judge’s order shouldn’t apply to vessels chartered by Hanjin because they are not legally its property.
OIL
Iran offsetting decline in U.S. oil output

After getting a lift from a Saudi/Russia “deal” in early September, oil prices seem to be struggling again. Perhaps markets are realizing that such agreement between the two “to cooperate in world oil markets” is not credible. After all, Saudi Arabia’s oil production rose in both the second and third quarters this year despite last February’s “deal” between the two countries to freeze output at January levels. As we had pointed out in Hot Charts last December and again in February, such bilateral “deals” are meaningless because the oil market is now a non-cooperative game, meaning that producers have an incentive to maximize output. Moreover, such incentives are enhanced in Saudi Arabia and Russia by the need to generate revenue to address their deteriorating public finances. So, the oil supply glut is likely to remain a problem for a while longer.

Making things worse with regards to excess supply is the return of Iran to global oil markets after sanctions were lifted. As today’s Hot Charts show, the increase in Iran’s oil output more than offset the decline in the U.S. in the first half of 2016. In fact, Iran has been able to grow its oil output faster than the rest of OPEC, boosting its share of the cartel by two percentage points (to 11%) in less than a year. (NBF)

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A close-up chart from The Daily Shot:

Fiscal Policy Makes a Quiet Turn Toward Stimulus For years, the world has looked to central banks to prop up economic growth. But now governments are stepping up: Fiscal policy across the developed world is collectively turning more stimulative for the first time since the end of the recession, Greg Ip writes.

This may be the most underappreciated economic development of the year. While the scale of the stimulus is modest in dollar terms, it signals a more profound shift in the political winds.

Globally, the rise of political populism has pushed deficits down the list of priorities while elevating tax cuts and benefits for the working class. With enough critical mass, such measures could persuade central banks to rethink their own super-easy monetary policies, which would undermine the case for today’s rock-bottom bond yields and pricey stocks. (…)

And here’s the elephant:

Here is a nice chart showing both monetary and fiscal stimulus in China. (The Daily Shot)

 
Average Cost of Employer Health Coverage Tops $18,000 for Family in 2016 Pace of cost increase slowed by accelerating shift into high-deductible plans, new survey shows

Annual premium cost rose 3% to $18,142 for an employer family plan in 2016, from$17,545 last year, according to the annual poll of employers performed by the nonprofit Kaiser Family Foundation along with the Health Research & Educational Trust, a nonprofit affiliated with the American Hospital Association.

Employees paid 30% of the premiums for a family plan in 2016, compared with 29% last year, according to Kaiser. For an individual worker, the average annual cost of employer coverage was $6,435 in this year’s survey, with employees paying 18% of that total. The change in annual premium for individual coverage from 2015 wasn’t statistically significant. (…)

Kaiser foundation analysts suggested that the movement of workers into higher-deductible plans reduced the rate of premium growth by half a percentage point this year and another half-point last year.

Employers’ efforts to stem cost increases are the major driver behind the shift, said Drew Altman, chief executive of the Kaiser Family Foundation. High-deductible plans typically have significantly lower premiums than other types of plans. “Practically, it’s a step they can take to keep their costs down,” he said.

This year, 29% of covered workers were enrolled in high-deductible plans that can be paired with savings accounts that aren’t taxed, up from 24% last year and 20% in 2014.

At the same time, the share of employees with health coverage who had traditional preferred provider organization plans was just 48% this year—the first time it had dipped below half since 2001, when health-maintenance organizations were more prominent.

In another milestone, for the first time, more than half of workers had a deductible of more than $1,000 for a plan covering a single person. The share was 51%, compared with 46% last year. However, some of those workers’ deductibles are offset by employers’ contributions to their tax-free accounts. (…)

A separate Kaiser foundation poll of consumers, performed in June, found that among insured people, deductibles were cited more often than premiums as the greatest financial burden related to health care. (…)

TRADE PROTECTIONISM EXPLODES

World GDP growth, which has been trending down in recent years, is on track to grow roughly 3% this year, the slowest pace since 2009. Some of the explanations for the moderation in growth include China’s economic rebalancing (which is having repercussions across global supply chains), tight fiscal policy worldwide (which is offsetting monetary policy stimulus), underinvestment (which has lowered the world’s potential GDP), and elevated debt levels and deteriorating demographics which are restraining consumption particularly in advanced economies.

Another culprit perhaps is the rise of trade protectionism, the latter explaining in part why global trade volumes are on track to grow this year at the slowest pace in eight years. As today’s Hot Charts show, 2016 is set to be the worst in years, with discriminatory measures vastly outnumbering measures aiming to liberalize trade. (NBF)

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The report, which was discussed at a 25 July meeting of the WTO’s Trade Policy Review Body (TPRB), shows that 22 new trade-restrictive measures were initiated by WTO members per month during the mid-October 2015 to mid-May 2016 review period. This constitutes a significant increase compared to the previous review period, which recorded an average of 15 measures per month, and is the highest monthly average since 2011.

During the same period, WTO members adopted 19 new measures per month aimed at facilitating trade, a slight increase compared to the previous review period.  The stockpile of trade-restrictive measures in place grew by 11 per cent during the review period.

“The report shows a worrying rise in the rate of new trade-restrictive measures put in place each month — hitting the highest monthly average since 2011,” Director-General Roberto Azevêdo said. “We hope that this will not be an indication of things to come, and clearly action is needed. Out of the more than 2,800 trade-restrictive measures recorded by this exercise since October 2008, only 25 per cent have been removed.

Total U.S. trade usually rises between recessions:

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Total trade has also been flat in Europe for nearly 5 years:

The volume of exports to the rest of the world shrank by 10 per cent for July this year, compared to the same month in 2015, while imports also shrank by 8 per cent, Eurostat said today. The result follows a sharp drop in German exports, which unexpectedly slumped by 10 per cent on the year to July.

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BTW: world IP keeps suffering partly as a result:

In the Eurozone, the bloc’s industrial production fell in July. (The Daily Shot)

Here’s the U.S. IP…

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…Japan’s…

…and China’s (from Trading Economics):

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Singapore High-Rise Office Rents Decline 7% as Demand Slows
Long Bonds Waver in Volatile Trading In recent weeks, investors have pulled money from bond funds and increased wagers on lower interest rates, creating the conditions for a crowded trade—in which investors have large and similar positions—that is apt to suddenly reverse.

Amplifying the swings are the use of strategies that use leverage, or borrowed money, some traders said. (…)

Investors yanked $1.9 billion out of government bond funds in the week ended Sept. 7, according to strategists at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, marking the largest weekly outflow in six months. (…)

Taking advantage of low interest rates, investment-grade companies flooded the market with new bonds last week with issuance reaching $48.43 billion, the highest weekly total since May and ninth highest on record, according to LCD, a unit of S&P Global Market Intelligence. (…)

Hedge funds and money managers had $10.5 billion of net wagers betting on higher prices of 10-year Treasury note futures for the week that ended Sept. 6, according to Cheng Chen, U.S. rates strategist at TD Securities, citing data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. The figures came off a high reached in July that reflected the most on a weekly basis since December 2012. (…)

Since the start of 2015, ETFs and passive global bond funds have reported net inflows of more than $28 billion, according to AllianceBernstein.

“The influence of ETFs has risen, and some are heavily leveraged,” said Chris Iggo, chief investment officer of fixed income at AXA Investment Managers. “That’s going to mean exaggerated price moves from time to time.”

There’s a $300 Billion Exodus From Money Markets Ahead

With a seismic overhaul of the $2.6 trillion money-market industry weeks away from kicking in, money managers are bracing for a last-minute exodus of as much as $300 billion from funds in regulators’ cross hairs.

Prime funds, which seek higher yields by buying securities like commercial paper, are at the center of the upheaval. Their assets have already plunged by almost $700 billion since the start of 2015, to $789 billion, Investment Company Institute data show. The outflow has rippled across financial markets, shattering demand for banks’ and other companies’ short-term debt and raising their funding costs.

(…) most of the cash leaving prime and tax-exempt funds has streamed into less risky offerings focusing on Treasuries and other government-related debt, such as agency securities and repurchase agreements. These funds are exempt from the new rules, which the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission issued in 2014.

As a result, banks’ unsecured lending rates, such as the dollar London interbank offered rate, have soared. Three-month Libor was about 0.85 percent Wednesday, close to the highest since 2009.

(…) “You’ll see the prime-fund space continue to shrink until we hit mid-October,” said Tracy Hopkins, chief operating officer in New York at BNY Mellon Cash Investment Strategies, a division of Dreyfus Corp.

“After that,” she said, “I would not be surprised to see assets return, once customers get accustomed to the floating NAVs and want to earn incremental yield over government money-market funds.”

Meanwhile, the Ted Spread has been rising…

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Markets’ Focus on Timing of Fed Hike Is a Distraction By Mohamed A. El-Erian
New Laws Haven’t Made Big Banks Safer, Paper by Lawrence Summers Says Big Wall Street banks are no safer today than they were before the 2008 financial crisis, despite a raft of new rules aimed at safeguarding the system, according to a new paper co-authored by former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers.
On This Day Eight Years Ago Lehman Filed For Chapter 11: There Have Been 672 Rate Cuts Since

THE DAILY EDGE (14 September 2016)

OUTLOOK FOR BUSINESS CONDITIONS DROPS SHARPLY, PUSHING INDEX LOWER IN AUGUST

The Index of Small Business Optimism declined two-tenths of a point in August to 94.4, with owners refusing to expand; expecting worse business conditions; and unable to fill open positions, according to the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB).

nfib-optimism-graph

According to the survey, 15 percent said that finding qualified workers was their biggest problem.  Thirty percent said they had job openings that they couldn’t fill.  That’s the highest level since the recovery.

“There’s a very disturbing picture emerging in the economy,” said Duggan.  “A growing number of small business owners are paralyzed by the political climate. They’re especially reluctant to hire.  On the other hand, there’s another group of  small business owners who want to hire, but can’t find qualified workers to fill positions.”

 optimism-components-nfib-201605 optimism-components-nfib-201605

Weak sales:image

Wages rising faster than sales inflation compress margins:image

Hence:image

From Bespoke Investment:nfib-091316-problem-cost-of-labor

Household Incomes Leapt 5.2% in 2015; Poverty Rate Drops U.S. household incomes jumped in 2015, delivering the first increase in eight years, with the largest gains in the bottom fifth of earners. The overall 5.2% jump was the largest since the Census Bureau began releasing the data nearly 50 years ago.

(…) Median household incomes stood 1.6% shy of the 2007 level, before the last recession took its toll, and 2.4% below the all-time high reached in 1999.

The figures show how several years of robust employment growth, including 2.4 million people who gained full-time work last year, helped regain ground lost after an especially wrenching downturn, particularly for lower-income households. Longer hours, higher wages and lower inflation also have contributed to the improvement.

(…) even with the gains reported Tuesday, the typical male full-time worker earned around $150 less last year than in 1998, after adjusting for inflation. (…)

The Census Bureau found 29 million people, or 9.1% of Americans, lacked health insurance in 2015. That is down from 33 million people, or 10.4% of the population, in 2014. The uninsured rate has dropped significantly since 2008, when millions more Americans lacked coverage. (…)

The largest increases in incomes last year were for the bottom fifth of all earners, which could reflect rising state and local minimum wages. As a result, the ratio between incomes at the 90th and the 10th percentiles narrowed.

Meanwhile, the figures showed incomes at the 60th, 80th, 90th and 95th percentiles reached new records after adjusting for inflation. Incomes for households at the 10th and 20th percentiles still stood 9.9% and 7.6% below their peaks set at the end of the 1990s, respectively. (…)

From the NYT:income

Punch Save more for retirement or plan for less income, BoC official says

(…) Wilkins said economists estimate the interest rate needed to balance savings and investment when the economy is operating at potential has fallen in Canada to 1.25 per cent, from three per cent in the early 2000s.

She noted that while the Bank of Canada’s key interest rate target is set at 0.5 per cent, it is less stimulative that it would have been a decade ago at that level when the so-called neutral rate was higher.

“At the same time, as population aging continues, the neutral rate could fall further, unless productivity growth picks up or global savings fall,” Wilkins said.

“And the longer weak investment persists, the more important this risk becomes.” (…)

Some related JPM charts:

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The US Consumer Taps Out: BofA Internal Credit Card Data Shows Retail Spending Tumbles

(…) We already saw a weakening in July retail sales based on both the BAC aggregated card data and Census Bureau figures. Based on the BAC aggregated card data, retail sales ex-autos fell 0.1% mom SA in August, a payback from 2Q strength.”

The details, as per BofA, reveal that “the BAC aggregated card data showed that retail sales ex-autos declined 0.1% mom SA in August. This follows the 0.3% mom decline in July and pushes the 3-month average down to -0.2% mom.” The number would have been even worse if BofA had not decided to adjust out data from the recently bankrupt Sports Authority. As BofA writes, “there is a special factor to account for — we adjusted our data to control for the bankruptcy of Sports Authority, which officially shut stores this month. We expect the Census Bureau will do the same.” In other words, if one did not “adjust” the data for this factor, it would have been an outright disaster. (…)

Cartier Parent Richemont Warns on Profit After Sales Slip The maker of Cartier jewelry and watches issued a profit warning as it posted a tumble in sales, reflecting the challenges luxury-goods companies face from weaker demand in Asia and a decline in tourism in Europe.

(…) Geneva-based Richemont said sales fell 14% for the five months through August from the previous year at actual exchange rates. At constant exchange rates, sales declined 13%. It also said it expects operating profit for the six months through September to fall around 45% from the previous year.

“We are of the view that the current negative environment as a whole is unlikely to reverse in the short term,” the company said. (…)

The results came weeks after Swatch Group AG reported a 52% plunge in first-half profit. Net sales at the company, known for its cheap plastic watches but also the owner of expensive brands such as Omega, Blancpain and Breguet, fell 11%. (…)

Richemont said sales were down in much of Europe, “particularly in France, due to a significantly lower level of tourist activity.”

In Asia, sales growth in mainland China and Korea “was more than offset by the continuing weakness of the Hong Kong and Macau markets,” where the company is buying back inventory, Richemont said. Sales in Japan declined sharply, in part due to the strong yen that hurt tourism. (…)

Sales also fell in the Americas, but at a slower rate than in other regions. (…)

China new Rmb loans bounce back and beyond expectations

New renminbi-denominated bank loans in August rose to Rmb948.7bn, up 17.1 per cent year on year after falling almost 69 per cent in July to Rmb463.6bn, according to new figures released by the People’s Bank of China.

That was markedly higher than a median estimate from economists of Rmb750bn. New monthly household loans in August came to Rmb675.5bn, accounting for 71 per cent of the total. (…)

Total social financing (TSF), Beijing’s favoured gauge of overall liquidity encompassing most major forms of financing, rocketed to Rmb1.47tn, exceeding by more than half a median estimate of Rmb900bn. The figures came in nearly Rmb1tn higher than July’s Rmb487.9bn. (…)

China economist Julian Evans-Pritchard at Capital Economics suggested the pickup in credit growth was likely to add to optimism among investors in the near-term and strengthened the case against more easing from the People’s Bank of China this year. But he also noted that August’s figures still left broad credit growth below the recent peak from April to June for this year, adding that “with the PBOC now signalling that it is keen to rein in credit risks, we still expect a further slowdown in the coming quarters.”

Luxury-Home Sales in Vancouver Plunge on Foreign-Buyer Surcharge
Toronto sees spike in house sales as Vancouver market cools
Japan opens door to temporary foreign workers  Trend is a little-noticed effect of Abenomics stimulus

(…) Since Prime Minister Shinzo Abe came to power at the end of 2012, the number of foreigners living in Japan is up almost 10 per cent to 2.2m, with the number of “technical interns” rising 27 per cent and the number of foreign students up 36 per cent.

While permanent immigration is rigidly controlled, the figures highlight one of the safety valves that Japanese companies use to control wage inflation, with worker inflows equivalent to 10-15 per cent of total job creation under Abenomics. (…)

One of the main areas of migration is “technical interns”, a visa category that is supposed to allow workers from developing countries to train for up to three years at high-tech companies. Numbers are up by 41,178 to 192,655 since Abenomics began.

“Some are real trainees but some are disguised imports of cheap labour,” says Mr Fukao. Almost half of the technical interns are from China but numbers from Vietnam have exploded, rising threefold to 57,581 since 2012, reflecting Japan’s industrial ties with the fast-growing economy.

Student numbers are also up sharply, by 65,760 to 246,679, and the visa status allows some part-time work. (…)

The subject remains controversial. Mr Abe has flirted with a few schemes to allow inhighly skilled workers, but only a few thousand have arrived to date, and there is little political will to do more. But as labour shortages bite, especially in areas such as nursing care, that may change. (…)

With Federal Reserve policymakers warning of still subdued inflation in the US, the threat from higher consumer prices — which could burn holders of US Treasury bonds — also fell to 15 per cent in September.

Markets addicted to central banks’ backstop, Citi warns Central bank efforts to soften the blow to markets from weakening fundamentals are losing their impact and are leaving a system vulnerable to shocks, analysts at Citi said.
BOJ to make negative rates centerpiece of future easing: sources The Bank of Japan will consider making negative interest rates the centerpiece of future monetary easing by shifting its prime policy target to interest rates from base money at its review next week, sources familiar with its thinking say.

Meanwhile,

Libor’s Reaching Point of Pain for Companies With High Debt

A benchmark for near-term borrowing, the three-month U.S. dollar London interbank offered rate, has risen above 0.75 percentage point. That’s a key threshold for junk-rated companies with about $230 billion of loans outstanding according to data compiled by Bloomberg — with Libor above that level, the borrowers will have to pay more interest over time. The increase so far could amount to about an extra $230 million of total interest expense annually for the companies. (…)

Record level of fund managers say bonds and equities overvalued Monetary stimulus causes a record 54% of money managers to say valuations are too high

Powered by record amounts of monetary stimulus from the world’s central banks, 54 per cent of investors surveyed by Bank of America Merrill Lynch said a combined measure of bonds and equities was now overvalued — an all-time record for the survey which has been running since the start of the century.

Fears of overvaluation drove some money managers to retreat to the safety of cash at the start of the month, with investors increasing their cash holdings to 5.5 per cent in September, up from 5.4 per cent in August. (…)

Despite the relative despondency about valuations in financial markets, more than a quarter of money managers expected higher global growth over the next year — a nine-month high for the survey.

“Macroeconomic optimism is firmly at pre-Brexit levels, with economic growth expectations at their strongest since June,” said Manish Kabra at BofA. (…) (Charts via The Daily Shot)

“HIGH DIVIDENDS”, REALLY?

This chart from Greg Merrill shows the ratio of dividends from the “high-dividend” portfolio (SDY) to that from the S&P500 (SPY). SDY dividend payout is now less than 20% higher than SPY. (The Daily Shot)