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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)

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NEW$ & VIEW$ (9 JUNE 2016)

U.S. JOLTS: Job Openings Rate Reaches Record High, But Hires Ease Again

The job openings rate increased to 3.9% during April after remaining at 3.8% for three months. The latest level equaled the record high. The private sector job openings rate increased to a record 4.2%. This rate compared to 2.2% in the public sector. (…) The job openings rate is the number of job openings on the last business day of the month as a percent of total employment plus job openings.

The hires rate in April dropped sharply to 3.5%, the lowest level since August 2014. The private sector rate declined m/m to 3.9%, a three month low. (…) The hires rate is the number of hires during the month divided by employment.

The actual number of job openings increased 2.1% to a record 5.788 million (3.7% y/y). A 4.1% y/y rise in private sector openings was led by a 23.1% y/y surge in manufacturing and a 17.6% y/y increase in construction. These were followed by a 16.4% y/y gain in retail trade and a 6.4% y/y improvement in education & health services. Job openings in leisure & hospitality rose 5.1% y/y, but professional & business services openings fell 22.0% y/y. Government sector job openings were roughly unchanged y/y following gains of 7.6% and 39.8% in 2015 and 2014.

The number of hires declined 3.7% m/m to 5.092 million in April, the third decline in four months, and they were roughly steady y/y. Hires grew 5.2% during all of last year and 8.2% in 2014. Private sector hiring was little changed y/y versus peak 8.3% growth in 2014. (…)

The total job separations rate was steady at 3.5%, down from its cycle high of 3.6%. The actual number of separations increased 2.1% y/y. (…) Separations include quits, layoffs, discharges, and other separations as well as retirements.

The layoff & discharge rate fell to the record low of 1.1%. The private sector rate of 1.2% was also at the all-time low and compared to 0.6% in the public sector. Layoffs overall declined 8.5% y/y in the private sector, but were up 14.3% y/y in the public sector.

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See all JOLT charts at Bespoke Investment.

Notice how the recent pattern in the hires rate since 2015 resembles that of 2012-13. Given the continued rise in openings, there is hope that employment will bounce back in June even of positive revisions for May. Mish Shedlock has a good piece on that today if you want to get even more confused:

BLS Says Jobs Openings Up; Actually, Openings Falling Fast!
US Tax Receipts Signaling Recession?

This is from Mish Shedlock who got it from Liz Ann Sonders, Senior Vice President, Chief Investment Strategist, Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. who got it from Evercore ISI.

US federal personal tax receipts receipts are falling fast. So is the Evercore ISI State Tax Survey.

The last two times the survey plunged this much, the US was already in recession.

Is it different this time?ISI Tax Receipts

Target charges suppliers more to help offload unsold inventory

U.S retailer Target Corp (TGT.N) is asking many suppliers to take on up to an extra 3-5 percent of the cost of promotions and price cuts after slow sales so far this year. (…)

In May, Target reported a drop in sales for the quarter ended April 30, and Chief Executive Brian Cornell predicted an extended period of promotions ahead for the retailer and rivals.

Most suppliers who spoke to Reuters said they will have to comply or at least deliver part of Target’s demands so old stock can make way for new season products. That will strain already thin margins.

“Target is not leaving a lot of room for negotiation here,” said one supplier, who asked to remain anonymous. “They want to get this unsold stock out of their stores in the next three months.” (…)

All this stuff about jobs, consumers and sales is crucial given the inventory overhang that just won’t go away. In fact, it has gotten worse. These are not voluntary stockings, illustrating how weak sales are. Not a trivial problem even in a service economy where many services are linked to the retail and manufacturing activity.

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Freight Rates Push Lower as Truck Capacity Outweighs Demand

A report published Tuesday by Cowen and Co. and Chainalytics said the spot market, where shipping prices currently are cheaper, is taking a bigger role in truck transportation as companies look to take advantage of plentiful capacity on the roads.

The report said the difference between spot and longer-term contract rates expanded in April, a sign that low demand is giving retailers and manufacturers more bargaining power. (…)

Pointing up Early reports show demand was still week by the end of May, the report said. (…)

Speaking of May, Gallup’s survey provides little hope of a turn:

Trend: Amount of Money Americans Report Spending "Yesterday," Monthly Averages

Notably, Gallup has yet to see an increase in average spending from May to June in any of the prior eight years that it has tracked consumer spending. Thus, if history is a guide, one would expect June spending this year to be at or below May’s level.

First week of June: Redbook reports that same-store sales were up a slow 0.6 percent year-on-year in the June 4 week (…)

China Exports Continue to Shrink as Demand Wanes China’s exports declined in May for the second consecutive month while imports fell slightly as weak demand further weighed on the world’s second-largest economy.

Exports slid 4.1% last month from the previous year, after declining 1.8% in April, the General Administration of Customs said Wednesday. The rate was slightly stronger than the median 4.6% decline economists had forecast.

Imports in the period fell by a less-than-expected 0.4% from a year ago, compared with a 10.9% drop in April, mostly due to rising commodity prices. The customs agency said China’s trade surplus widened to $49.98 billion in May from $45.56 billion in April.

Bank of Korea Surprises With a Rate Cut South Korea’s central bank took markets by surprise by cutting its main policy rate to a record low, in a move to support the economy as lowered expectations of a U.S. rate increase over the summer gave the bank room to ease further.

(…) The finance ministry is widely expected to lower its growth forecast of 3.1% for this year when it makes its next economic policy announcement in late June or early July. The central bank has already trimmed its annual growth estimate to 2.8% from 3% this year. Some economists say the bank may lower its growth outlook again in July. (…)

Exports—which account for half of Korea’s economy—shrank for the 17th straight month in May. Inflation slowed to 0.8% in May, far below the central bank’s annual target of 2%.

The BOK previously cut its policy rate in June 2015.

China’s Factory-Gate Deflation Eases in Capacity-Cut Drive

Amid a drive by the Communist Party leadership to cut excess capacity, producer prices fell 2.8 percent, the least since late 2014 and less than the 3.2 percent decline economists had estimated in a Bloomberg survey. The consumer price index rose 2 percent from a year earlier, less than the median forecast of 2.2 percent. (…)

For consumers, vegetable prices dropped 21.5 percent in May from April, while pork and gas prices rose, the statistics bureau said. Compared with a year earlier, gains in food prices slowed to 5.9 percent from 7.4 percent in April. Non-food prices rose 1.1 percent. (…)

CEBM China survey:

Steel order volume in May fell M/M in contrast to market expectations. With prices dropping quickly, buyers took a wait and see approach. June order volume is expected to continue to exhibit a downward trend due to 1) seasonal factors, 3) tepid downstream demand, and 3) the sharp drop in May crude steels prices persuading buyers to delay procurement. Survey results indicate that the market will face an oversupply situation and that inventory will continue to rise.

Shipping volumes have increased along US routes though other routes remain flat. Many respondents reported a noticeable improvement in the US economy and expect prices and volumes to increase somewhat in June. However, feedback from the Canton Fair suggests fewer orders than in years past. In anticipation of the Christmas holiday season, shipments will begin to pick up in June and July, but volume is not expected to be as strong as in years past.

George Soros Comes Back to Trading With Bearish Bets George Soros has returned to trading after a long hiatus, lured by opportunities to profit from what he sees as coming economic troubles, directing a series of big, bearish investments.

Worried about the outlook for the global economy and concerned that large market shifts may be at hand, the billionaire hedge-fund founder and philanthropist recently directed a series of big, bearish investments, according to people close to the matter.

Soros Fund Management LLC, which manages $30 billion for Mr. Soros and his family, sold stocks and bought gold and shares of gold miners, anticipating weakness in various markets. Investors often view gold as a haven during times of turmoil. (…)

“China continues to suffer from capital flight and has been depleting its foreign currency reserves while other Asian countries have been accumulating foreign currency,” Mr. Soros said. “China is facing internal conflict within its political leadership, and over the coming year this will complicate its ability to deal with financial issues.”

Mr. Soros worries that new troubles will arise in China partly because he said the nation doesn’t seem willing to embrace a transparent political system that he contends is necessary to enact lasting economic overhauls. Beijing has embarked on overhauls in the past year but has backtracked on some efforts amid turbulent markets. (…

“If Britain leaves, it could unleash a general exodus, and the disintegration of the European Union will become practically unavoidable,” he said. Still, Mr. Soros said recent strength in the British pound is a sign that a vote to exit the EU is less likely.

“I’m confident that as we get closer to the Brexit vote, the ‘remain’ camp is getting stronger,” Mr. Soros said. “Markets are not always right, but in this case I agree with them.” (…)

The last time Mr. Soros became closely involved in his firm’s trading: 2007, when he became worried about housing and placed bearish wagers over two years that netted more than $1 billion of gains.

East China Sea Tensions Rise Over Chinese Ships, Planes
Chinese navy incursion escalates tensions Tokyo summons Chinese ambassador at 2am to register protest

NEW$ & VIEW$ (8 JUNE 2016): The Complacent Fed;

THE COMPLACENT FED

During her Monday speech, while using the words “uncertain” and “uncertainties” 20 times, even qualifying “uncertainties” as “considerable” and “sizeable”, Mrs. Yellen concluded that she is seeing

good reasons to expect that the positive forces supporting employment growth and higher inflation will continue to outweigh the negative ones”

Yet, the Labor Market Conditions Index which uses her own 19 datasets peaked in October 2015, 7 months ago, turned negative in January and has been falling for the last 5 months.

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Difficult to find “positive forces supporting employment growth” on her own dashboard. These are conditions to ease, not to tighten.

Maybe the Fed’s own Beige Book gives her comfort since the June 1st Beige Book described the economy as expanding at a “modest or moderate” pace in 7 of the 12 districts, about the same as in recent editions. In general, optimism regarding the economic outlook far outweighed pessimism throughout the Beige Book, as it has for the past two years or so…

But LPL Financial Research offers its own analysis of the Beige Book:

We believe the Beige Book is best interpreted by measuring how the descriptors change over time. (…) To evaluate the sentiment behind the entire Beige
Book collage of data, we created our proprietary Beige Book Barometer (BBB). The Beige Book Barometer is a diffusion index that measures the number of times the word “strong” or its variations appear in the Beige Book less the number of times the word “weak“ or its variations appear. When the Beige Book Barometer is declining, it suggests that the economy is deteriorating.

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Here in 2016, although oil prices have rebounded more than 80% off the February 2016 lows, oil production has continued to fall, and the continued weakness in the oil patch has weighed on the overall barometer.

Pointing up However, most of the decline in the BBB since its 2015 peak has come in the non-energy-producing districts of the U.S., suggesting that there has been some spillover from lower oil prices and lower oil production to other parts of the economy.

Mrs. Yellen must know that her staff is positively biased:

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Why the focus on tightening? Samuel Rines, Senior Economist and Portfolio Strategist at Avalon Advisors in Houston, TX​. shares his views on that:

Why the Fed Needs to Make a Policy Error

(…) By so consistently telegraphing interest-rate hikes, the Fed has backed itself into a corner. It may be a policy error to continue raising rates at this point, but backing away from higher rates could spark a crisis of confidence, which would be even worse. The Fed is setting up to commit a policy error, and an error may be the best possible outcome now. (…)

Fed presidents frequently reiterate the primacy of data dependency in their policy-determination process, while emphasizing the lack of a preset course for future policy. But the language is typically unidirectional—always focused on what data are needed to justify a rate hike. No one talks about what would constitute evidence for a reversal. And this creates complications for the Fed’s ability to prudently conduct both present and future monetary policy. (…)

The reasoning to normalize policy is more that “it must be done” than that “it needs to be done.”

The logic as to why the Fed must remain on a tightening path is that it cannot afford to lose credibility. More accurately, it cannot afford to lose credibility in that way. By committing the policy error of misreading the economy, and significantly slowing an economic expansion, the Fed risks less credibility than it would by backtracking on it policy path. The Fed must maintain faith in the execution of its commitments and policies. (…)

Unconventional policy relies heavily on Fed credibility. Credibility allows the Fed to commit to achieving a certain outcome, and have markets believe it will happen. (…)

At the pace of the Fed’s own dot plot, interest rates will rise on a trajectory that almost guarantees an error. But it is an error the Fed needs to commit. Regardless of whether the policies are good or bad, the Fed cannot risk its credibility—credibility is critical to the efficacy of the tools it will use in the next downturn. The Fed must commit an error.

Weak Productivity, Rising Wages Putting Pressure on U.S. Companies U.S. companies are facing a toxic combination of dismal productivity growth, accelerating wages and sluggish demand, raising the risk they will slow hiring, cut spending further and weaken an already-fragile economy.

Labor productivity, or the amount of goods and services employees produce per hour worked, fell at a 0.6% annual rate in the first quarter, the Labor Department said Tuesday. (…)

Hourly compensation, encompassing everything from salaries to retirement benefits and health care costs, surged at a 3.9% annual rate in the first quarter, Tuesday’s report showed. It rose 3.7% over the past year, marking the biggest annual gain in two years. (…)

When wage compensation outruns productivity, the result is an acceleration in labor costs per unit of output. In the first quarter, those costs rose 4.5% at a yearly rate and 3% from a year earlier. If companies can’t boost productivity, they must either absorb the costs in their profit margins or raise prices.

Corporate profits are being squeezed as a result, and the worry is that companies will slow hiring and further slash spending.

A different worry for the Fed is that firms will react to higher labor costs by raising prices, pushing inflation above the central bank’s 2% target. (…)

  large image (Haver Analytics

U.S. Consumer Credit Increased at 4.49% Pace in April

Outstanding consumer credit, a measure of nonmortgage debt, rose by a seasonally adjusted $13.42 billion in April from the prior month, the Federal Reserve said Tuesday. The 4.49% seasonally adjusted annual growth rate is a slowdown from March’s downwardly revised 9.57% pace.

Revolving credit outstanding, mostly credit cards, rose at a 2.08% annual pace in April, the slowest pace since January. That is a steep drop-off from a downwardly revised rate of 13.34% in March, its fastest pace since February 2001.

Nonrevolving credit outstanding, including student and auto loans, rose at a 5.35% annual pace in April compared with March’s downwardly revised 8.22% growth rate. (…)

large image(Haver Analytics)

Household Spending Spurs Eurozone Growth

(…) The European Union’s statistics agency said the combined gross domestic products of the eurozone’s 19 members was 0.6% higher in the first quarter than in the final three months of 2015, and 1.7% higher than the first three months of last year. Eurostat had previously estimated that the economy grew by 0.5% on the quarter, and 1.5% on the year. On an annualized basis, the economy grew by 2.2%.

Eurostat also raised its growth estimate for the fourth quarter of last year, and now calculates that GDP increased by 0.4% on the quarter and 1.7% on the year, having previously estimated growth at 0.3% and 1.6% respectively. (…)

The pickup in growth during the first quarter was driven by an increase in household spending, which was up 0.6% from the final three months of 2015, doubling its growth rate in that latter period and recording its fastest expansion since the final quarter of 2014.

Rising government and investment spending also contributed to growth, while weaker export growth was a drag on the recovery. (…)

  • Low Yields Go Lower in Europe Yields on the 10-year government debt of Germany and the U.K. fell to all-time lows, a stark demonstration of the modern era of scant inflation, weak growth and outsize monetary policy.
China central bank holds line on growth forecast but sees more pain to come

China’s central bank slashed its forecast for exports on Wednesday, predicting a second straight annual fall in shipments, but said the economy will still grow 6.8 percent this year.

The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) also warned in its mid-year work report that the government’s push to reduce debt levels and overcapacity could increase bond default risks and make it more difficult for companies to raise funds. (…)

The report was released shortly after monthly data showed China’s exports fell an annual 4.1 percent in May, more than expected and the 10th decline in the past 12 months.

Imports were more encouraging, declining only marginally and much less than expected, pointing to improving domestic demand and adding to views that the economy may be slowly stabilising. Preliminary commodity trade data showed sharp rises in imports of copper and iron ores.

However, some economists cautioned that imports from Hong Kong may have once again been inflated by fake trade invoicing to disguise speculation on the yuan, which came under renewed depreciation pressure last month as the U.S. dollar surged. (…)

Despite cutting its forecast for exports to minus 1 percent from growth of 3.1 percent, the PBOC saw a domestic recovery remaining on track.

It upgraded its forecast for fixed-asset investment growth to 11 percent, an increase of 0.2 percentage points from estimates it made late last year. (…)

World Bank Cuts Growth Outlook The World Bank cut its forecast for this year’s growth of the global economy, citing troubles in developed and developing nations alike.

The bank’s latest projection pegs global growth at 2.4%, down from the 2.9% forecast in January and slower than last year’s weak pace. The bank also cut its forecast for growth in 2017 to 2.8% from 3.1%.

“The global outlook faces pronounced risks of another stretch of muted growth,” said World Bank chief economist Kaushik Basu. “A wide range of risks threaten to derail the recovery.”

Commodity exporters such as Brazil, Russia, Nigeria and Angola suffered some of the largest downward revisions. Governments have been forced to cut spending due to the price collapse in metals, energy and other commodities.Weakening currencies also are forcing central banks to raise interest rates to curb rampant inflation. And higher borrowing costs are weighing on investment and putting many company balance sheets deep into the red.

The bank pared its projections for the world’s largest economy, the U.S. A wounded energy sector, strong dollar and anemic international demand contributed to a 0.8-percentage-point cut in growth expectations—to 1.9%—for the year. (…)

Policy makers’ room to maneuver is shrinking. Although debt levels have moderated in many advanced economies, central banks are starting to run out of monetary-policy options. And politicians are reluctant to use government balance sheets to fund major injections of stimulus.

Options are even fewer among emerging-market exporters. Debt levels are rising, budget deficits are deepening and central banks are having to raise rates instead of cutting them to temper rising prices as their currencies weaken. Those countries, such as Angola, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, South Africa and Venezuela, are running average budget deficits of 5% of gross domestic product.

One major indicator of global weakness—trade growth—remains muted at 3.1%, well below precrisis trends. (…)

One bright note in the outlook: Emerging-market importers aren’t suffering the same downturn as exporters. In countries such as India, Hungary, Thailand and Vietnam, government deficits are actually lower than the bank forecast two years ago and debt levels as a share of economic output are falling. 

OECD lead indicator flags first signs of growth stabilization

Signs are emerging that a downturn in the United States and China, the world’s two biggest economies, may have bottomed out, the OECD’s monthly leading indicator showed on Wednesday.

The Paris-based Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development said its leading indicator (CLI) for the United States improved to 98.95 in April from 98.93 in March, the first increase in the reading since July 2014.

The index for China rose to 98.41 in April from 98.38 in March, its second consecutive monthly increase. The reading fell below the 100 mark in October 2014.

The OECD said its indicators showed stable growth momentum in the euro zone as a whole, including Germany and France, while the reading for Britain pointed to easing growth.

The index for the euro zone fell to 100.38 in April from 100.42 in March but has been above its long-term average of 100 since October 2013.

The OECD was also positive on the outlook for Brazil and Russia, which have suffered from a sharp downturn driven by a collapse in commodities prices.

“Amongst major emerging economies, CLIs for Brazil and Russia confirm the signs of positive change in growth momentum flagged in last month’s assessment,” the OECD said.  image

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HAVE A GOOD SUMMER!

image(Bluehawk Wealth Management)

Chinese Jets Intercept U.S. Spy Plane Over East China Sea The U.S. says one of two Chinese J-10 fighters intercepting a U.S. Air Force reconnaissance plane on routine patrol Tuesday closed on it at an “unsafe excessive rate.”