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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$ (3 JUNE 2016):

More Americans Plan to Retire After 70

Some 23 percent of Americans with jobs said they planned on being septuagenarian employees, up from 16 percent in 2009, according to Willis Towers Watson, a human resource consulting firm. While the average employee calculates he or she will retire at age 65, as a group they place the odds that they’ll still be working at age 70 at 50 percent. (…)

“The decline of defined benefit plans and employer subsidies for early retirement removed one tool that encouraged that orderly rate of workers retiring,” said Steve Nyce, a senior economist at Willis Towers Watson. (…)

Employees in the U.S. are more pessimistic about whether their generation will be “much worse off in retirement” compared with their parents’ generation. In America, 76 percent agreed or strongly agreed with that statement. Globally, 66 percent agreed. “The U.K., Japan, the U.S.—the more developed economies—tend to be less optimistic about the next generation,” said Nyce. (…)

The percentage of men 65 or older still on the job in the U.S. was 22 percent last year, up from 15 percent in 2003. Old age labor participation rates should rise a fair bit over the next decade or two, said Nyce. In the 1960s, the participation rate of older workers in the labor force was around 25 percent, he said.  (…)

Banks Warned of Tougher Capital Requirements Fed officials signaled they will toughen big-bank capital requirements even further, a move that will intensify pressure on the largest U.S. banks to consider shrinking.

The biggest American banks will likely have to bulk up their balance sheets further to protect against possible financial shocks, Federal Reserve officials said Thursday.

The new requirements could crimp profitability and dividend payouts at those firms, while increasing pressure on them to shrink.

Fed governors Daniel Tarullo and Jerome Powell, in separate public comments, said the central bank would probably decide to require eight of the largest U.S. banks to maintain more equity to pass the central bank’s annual “stress tests,” exams designed after the financial crisis to measure the ability of banks to weather a severe downturn.

“I have not reached any conclusion that a particular bank needs to be broken up or anything like that,” Mr. Powell said at a banking conference. The point is to “raise capital requirements to the point at which it becomes a question that banks have to ask themselves.” (…)

“That’s not good for us,” J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Officer James Dimon said Thursday at a financial-investor conference in response to the comments. (…)

Mr. Dimon also reiterated his view that J.P. Morgan doesn’t need to break up. “I’m like a broken record on this,” he said. The bank has defended itself more intensely for the past 18 months after analysts and investors have asked more pointed questions about whether the bank would be worth more in parts.

“We’re not running [the businesses] because we just love to be a big company,” he said. “We’re running them because it actually works for the customer….That shows up in market share and results; not because I said so.” (…)

“Effectively, this will be a significant increase in capital,” Mr. Tarullo said on Bloomberg television. He said the extra capital was necessary in case big banks face a danger that the Fed’s annual stress test didn’t predict. (…)

Mr. Powell also said the benefits of such rules are likely to outweigh the risk that they would hamper the smooth functioning of markets, by forcing banks to pull back from their market-making role. “I don’t believe that it will have a significant negative effect on liquidity,” Mr. Powell said of the Fed’s next move. Confused smile

The specific change that Messrs. Tarullo and Powell previewed Thursday involves taking the higher capital requirements big banks now face during normal times—the “surcharge” for being big—and forcing them to meet those standards during periods of stress as well. That effectively forces those institutions to hold even more capital on their books throughout the business cycle, as capital levels would likely fall during a recession when losses would rise. Fed officials have long said they were considering such a requirement, but these were the most explicit comments confirming that they are likely to impose that rule. (…)

What Deleveraging?

From Pimco via Business Insider’s 22 charts that define our outlook for the global economy: :

U.S.-China Trade Troubles Grow The U.S. and China, facing mounting political pressures at home, are seeing economic tensions flare to their worst point in years over currency and trade practices.

China has pushed the yuan to a five-year low against the dollar, reviving charges from American firms of currency manipulation to gain a competitive advantage for Chinese goods. The Obama administration has fired off a series of trade complaints and levied duties on several Chinese industries, from chicken feet to cold-rolled steel used in appliances and auto parts. (…)

U.S. Treasury and State Department officials fly to Beijing early next week for two days of talks to try to calm some of the trade irritants and address ongoing geopolitical tensions, particularly over the South China Sea, where their militaries are operating in sometimes dangerous proximity. (…)

China’s Vice Finance Minister Zhu Guangyao, while acknowledging at a media briefing Thursday major challenges for China’s economy, insisted Beijing would adhere to its reform agenda and commitments made by the Group of 20 against competitive currency devaluation. (…)

The U.S. recently slapped Chinese cold-rolled steel imports with duties worth 267%, accusing the country of selling products below production cost.

By supporting excess production capacity, the Chinese government is “engaged in economic warfare against the U.S.,” said John Ferriola, chief executive of North Carolina steel giant Nucor Corp. “Thousands of hardworking Americans have lost their jobs because of these illegal, unfair trade practices.” (…)

China acknowledges it has an excess-capacity problem. “But we have to prevent massive unemployment,” Premier Li Keqiang said in March. (…)

Chinese officials also are eyeing the U.S. political scene warily, concerned about making commitments the next administration could backtrack on.

Recent articles in China’s controlled media have raised questions about who is in control of U.S. economic policy. (…)

Auto And now that U.S. car sales have peaked out, in spite of record low interest rates, everything linked to car manufacturing, including steel demand, will slow down some more. Add the fact that the share of imports is rising owing to the strong dollar, and that demand for highly profitable SUVs could wane as gas prices recover, you get a pretty tough outlook for that important manufacturing sector.

J.P. Morgan Chief James Dimon Sounds Alarm on Car Loans Bank’s head warns that the fast-growing auto loan market, which has boomed along with rising car sales, a decline in gasoline prices and a consistently growing economy, may not remain a bright spot for long.

J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive James Dimon on Thursday called the auto-lending market “a little stretched,” the latest warning about a part of the economy that has boomed this decade. (…)

Mr. Dimon said that while he doesn’t see an auto-market downturn as imminent, he does see increased risk due to higher default rates from increased subprime lending, the growing use of longer repayment periods for borrowers and the potential for used-car prices to drop in coming years, which could hurt the value of lenders’ collateral when borrowers default.

Zerohedge has a good post on banks today including this:

Meanwhile, CEO Citigroup Mike Corbat indicated that the company’s second-quarter net income will be roughly 25% lower than the same period a year earlier, roughly the same as the abysmal first quarter.

NEW$ & VIEW$ (2 JUNE 2016): Watching the Monitoring…

May U.S. Auto Sales Slump

(…) In total, Americans purchased 1.54 million cars and light trucks last month in the U.S., according to data provider Autodata Corp., 6% fewer than a year earlier. The drop largely is due to two fewer selling days last month; sales were up modestly when adjusted for seasonal factors. (…)

May’s seasonally-adjusted annual sales rate, or SAAR, was 17.45 million vehicles, a healthy number by historic standards, but well behind the pace set in May 2015 and short of the 18 million-plus level set late last year. (…)

For now, substantial gains from fleet buyers who purchase outside the dealer network is propping up industry sales and keeping volumes near the record pace set in 2015. Fleet sales last month increased 13% compared with May 2015. (…)

But other key measures fell last month compared with a year ago, including annualized sales pace and consumer purchases at dealers. That shift is fueling worries that demand in the world’s most profitable vehicle market has peaked.

The nation’s largest auto maker, General Motors Co., which recently has focused more on retail buyers, posted a sharper decline than rivals. Toyota Motor Corp. also reported a sales drop, eroding U.S. market shares for two of the biggest auto makers in the world in 2016.

Overall, sales to individual consumers fell 10.6% in May, according to GM. Such sales are considered the best indicator of market demand. (…)

Another red flag: Sales incentives crept up 11% last month compared with the prior May, exceeding $3,000 per vehicle on average, Autodata reports. (…)

CalculatedRisk has the auto charts strongly suggesting that that we have seen the cyclical peak.

Auto inventories were already high at the end of April:

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There is also this new problem for U.S. manufacturers:

Imports share of the light vehicle market rose to 21.4%, the highest level since December 2013. Imports share of the passenger car market of 27.4% compared to 27.1% during all of last year. Imports share of the light truck market jumped to 17.2%, the highest level since March 2010. (Haver Analytics)

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High inventories and rising imports share mean tougher days for the U.S. manufacturing industry, already hurting from oil and the dollar:

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Speaking of manufacturing, yesterday’s PMIs from across the world were pretty dismal as order books were weak across the globe. China, in particular, seems nowhere near –re-accelerating:

Order books were hit by an increased rate of decline in new export orders during May. Producers of investment goods such as plant and machinery reported the steepest decline in export sales, as well as reduced total new orders, pointing to weak domestic and global investment demand. In contrast, manufacturers of consumer goods reported improvements in new orders and exports.

The past year has seen the largest culling of factory jobs seen over the survey’s 11 year history, exceeding that seen during the height of the global financial crisis as firms cut capacity to bring production in line with demand. So far this year, the highest incidence of job cutting has been seen in the energy & extraction, transport and chemicals & plastics sectors. The food & drink sector has seen the lowest rate of job cutting. (Markit)

Elsewhere, the Asian PMI excluding China and Japan pointed to stagnation, with the GDP-weighted index coming in at exactly 50.0.

The ongoing malaise in Asian manufacturing was once again linked to a downturn in trade flows, in turn broadly the result of weak global demand growth. New export orders fell across Asia at the second-fastest rate seen for just over three-and-a-half years.

Japan saw the steepest fall, suffering the largest monthly decline since January 2013 as the stronger yet hit competitiveness, followed by China, where the downturn was also one of the steepest seen over the past three years. Only Vietnam eked out any noteworthy increase in exports, although both Malaysia and South Korea reported marginal gains. (Markit)

U.S. Construction Activity Reverses Earlier Gain

The value of construction put-in-place declined 1.8% during April (+4.5% y/y) following a 1.5% March rise, revised from 0.3%. February’s 1.4% gain also was revised from 1.0%.

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So when Mrs. Yellen says that “growth looks to be picking up from the various data that we monitor” …

Does the Fed monitor the Redbook data?

Store sales rose 0.9 percent year-on-year in the May 28 week, helped by Memorial Day promotional sales and food shopping ahead of the long weekend. Month-to-date May store sales were a solid 2.2 percent higher than in April, which however was a rather weak sales month, but they were up only 0.7 percent from May of last year, well below the 2.2 percent year-over-year monthly growth rate seen at the beginning of the year. What may be considered to be disappointingly slow same-store sales growth was exactly in line with Redbook’s targets, and despite expectations of strong seasonal sales by retailers, Redbook’s preliminary targets for June are not exactly challenging either, up 0.8 percent year-over-year and down 0.8 percent from May.

Fed’s Beige Book: ‘Tight Labor Markets’ Are Pushing Up Wages Labor markets are tightening across most regions of the U.S., lifting wages for many workers, the Federal Reserve said in its latest beige book report on regional economic conditions.

The central bank’s latest report on regional economic conditions, known as the beige book, said Wednesday that “tight labor markets were widely noted in most districts.” Employment and wage growth were described as modest, with pay raises “concentrated in areas of labor tightness.” (…)

An exception was the oil patch, with “soft labor markets” reported across energy sectors in the Atlanta, Cleveland, Dallas, Kansas City and Minneapolis districts.

More generally, the Fed reported modest or moderate economic growth in the majority of its 12 districts. (…)

The wide-ranging report released Wednesday said consumer spending was “up modestly on balance” in many regions. Reports on the factory economy were mixed, and banks generally saw higher demand for loans. Crop conditions were described as “promising in many districts,” though “low commodity prices continued to put pressure on agricultural incomes.” (…)

Long-sluggish U.S. inflation remained subdued, with price pressures rising “slightly” across most regions, according to the report.

Brazil’s data reveal depths of recession

Brazil’s economy contracted 5.4 per cent in the first quarter from a year earlier, highlighting the challenge facing interim president Michel Temer as he tries to end the country’s worst recession in more than a century.

The figures were better, however, than analysts had expected with a Reuters poll forecasting a 6 per cent contraction, while the quarter-on-quarter decline was 0.3 per cent compared with a consensus estimate of 0.8 per cent. (…)

GDP contracted for the fifth straight quarter in the three months to March and has declined or been virtually flat in eight of the past 10 quarters. (…)

Government spending “increased by 1.1 per cent quarter-on-quarter, reflecting a last-ditch attempt by the Dilma administration to win back public support”, said Capital Economics’ Mr Shearing. “But with fiscal policy now set to tighten, this prop to the economy will go.” (…)

Saudis say Opec must steward oil market Riyadh considers output ceiling, Iran wants individual quotas

Saudi Arabia’s new energy minister has said it is time for Opec to “steward the market” to help supply and demand back into balance, suggesting the cartel’s largest producer is shifting approach after two years of letting oil prices fall.

Khalid Al Falih, speaking at the Opec secretariat before the group’s twice-yearly meeting, said the group should “encourage the rebalancing to take place” and said the kingdom wanted to avoid any oil shocks, damping fears Saudi Arabia is preparing to raise production significantly.

“Whatever action we take will be taking into consideration that the market is doing quite well by itself, so we will be very gentle in our approach,” said Mr Falih.

Saudi Arabia is expected to propose reinstating the group’s production ceiling, which was removed entirely at the December gathering of ministers.

The meeting is likely to be a showdown between the kingdom and its regional rival Iran, which has said any production target must be governed by individual output quotas.

“Anything without country quotas means nothing,” said Iran’s oil minister Bijan Zanganeh, who added the country’s output had risen to 3.8m barrels a day since sanctions against its oil industry were largely lifted in January.

He added Iran was targeting more than 4.7m b/d in the long term, illustrating the difficulty Opec may face in agreeing any output constraints. (…)

Internet Boom Times Are Over, Says Guru Mary Meeker

Growth of internet users worldwide is essentially flat, and smartphone growth is slowing, too. Those sobering insights were among the hundreds packed into the much-awaited Internet Trends report, an annual tech industry ritual led by Mary Meeker, a general partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. (…)