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$ (22 DECEMBER 2015)

Chicago Fed National Activity Index Deteriorates

The Chicago Federal Reserve reported that its National Activity Index (CFNAI) during November fell to a three-month low of -0.30 from -0.17 in October, revised from -0.04. The 3-month moving average eased to -0.20, its weakest reading since March and indicated that economic growth was slightly below its long-term trend. During the last ten years, there has been a 77% correlation between the Chicago Fed Index and the q/q change in real GDP.

Movement in the four component series of the overall index was mixed last month. The Production & Income reading fell to -0.27, its lowest reading since January 2014. The Employment, Unemployment and Hours figure eased to 0.05 from 0.08. These two positive readings followed two negative postings. To the upside, the Sales, Orders & Inventories series improved minimally to -0.02 from -0.03, but still posted the third negative number in four. The Personal Consumption & Housing series increased to -0.06, but has been moving sideways since the spring. The Fed reported that 37 of the 85 component series made positive contributions to the total while 48 made negative contributions.

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(Bespoke Investment)

BAD OMEN FOR NEW CAR SALES?

CarMax said last Friday that comp. sales declined 1% YoY during the quarter ended in November. Traffic fell for the first time in over two years. Stock dropped 8%. It is down 30% from its April peak.

U.S. Economy Grew 2% in Third Quarter, Led by Consumer Spending
Gas Now Cheaper Than Milk
Eurozone Consumers Shrug Off Security Concerns

(…) the second straight monthly strengthening of sentiment suggests that the attacks and their aftermath will have little impact on the eurozone’s economic recovery, in line with a pattern established in the wake of previous attacks on Madrid in 2004 and London in 2005.

“December’s improvement in eurozone consumer confidence is all the more reassuring as it was the first survey to be fully completed after the Paris terrorist attacks,” saidHoward Archer, an economist at IHS Economics. “This is particularly welcome news as consumer spending has played a leading role in the eurozone’s modest cyclical upturn.”

The pickup leaves consumer confidence well above its average going back to 1990, and at its highest level since June. (…)

Uber and Lyft funding rounds top $3.1bn Ride-hailing apps double their end-of-year fundraising

Uber and Lyft have each doubled their fundraising to amass a combined $3.1bn from investors, underscoring how the most prominent Silicon Valley start-ups still have access to capital even as some smaller companies struggle to access money.

Lyft is raising $1bn at a valuation of $4.5bn, which is more than double its valuation in May, according to filings. Meanwhile, Uber is raising $2.1bn at a valuation of $62.5bn, one of the highest valuations for a Silicon Valley start-up. (…)

Uber is the most highly valued private start-up in Silicon Valley, and its valuation has risen 25 per cent since its latest fundraising in June. (…)

Average S&P 500 Stock Right Near 20% Below 52-Week High

from52week

Global funds cut stocks, slowdown worries persist: poll Global investors cut their equity holdings in December and raised their exposure to bonds, a Reuters poll of fund managers showed on Tuesday, as worries about a global economic slowdown and uncertainty about the pace of Fed tightening persisted.

(…) Equity holdings fell to 47.9 percent, the lowest since September, while bond holdings rose to 37.9 percent, the highest since December 2014, reflecting a generally cautious mood among asset managers. (…)

The survey of 52 fund managers and chief investment officers in the United States, Europe, Britain and Japan was conducted between Dec. 14 and 21. (…)

Within their equity portfolios, asset managers trimmed their exposure to U.S. stocks by two percentage points to 38 percent, the lowest level since September. Euro zone equities were cut back to 18 percent, the lowest since January 2015. (…)

Investors raised their Japanese equity allocation to 20.6 percent, the highest level since November 2014, following a decision by the Bank of Japan to reorganize its massive stimulus program in an attempt to boost investment. (…)

Open-mouthed smile “Welcome Back, Baby!” SpaceX Completes Historic Rocket Landing

Dust off the history books, because today is a huge moment for space travel. For the first time ever, Elon Musk’s SpaceX has returned part of an orbital rocket safely to the ground. It promises to usher in a new era of reusable spaceflight.

The Falcon 9 rocket lifted off from Cape Canaveral in Florida at 8.29 p.m. EST yesterday (1.29 a.m. GMT today), taking 11 satellites to orbit as part of the ORBCOMM-2 mission. But undoubtedly the highlight of the mission occurred ten minutes later, when the first stage of the rocket used its thrusters to touch down at a landing site 10 kilometers (six miles) from the launch pad, having traveled to a height of 200 kilometers (125 miles). (…)

Live webcast here. The landing seen from a helicopter.

YIELDING TO HIGH YIELD

Last Friday’s New$ & View$ ended with a brief paragraph downgrading equities to 2 stars. More explanations:

The Rule of 20 has been excellent in providing unbiased readings on the risk/reward equation throughout this long cycle. Since the March 6, 2009 lows, the S&P 500 Index has bounced off the “20” fair P/E several times, always refusing to cross into the more dangerous “Rising Risk” (yellow) range where valuation downside risk begins to exceed valuation upside potential. Each time, this triggered a correction back to safer metrics even though history clearly shows that valuations tend to extend into overvaluation levels before retreating to safer ground.

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Measured by the Rule of 20, this has always happened in the 9 up cycles since 1958, except in the 1963-65 period when the Rule of 20 P/E kept bouncing off the “20” level and oscillate between 19 and 20 for 3 years before declining to 17.5 in mid-1966 as the S&P 500 Index dropped 16% even though earnings kept rising. The trigger was rising inflation from 1.7% in the fall of 1965 to 3.6% one year later.

In February 2015, valuation began to test the darker side, reaching 21 on the Rule of 20 in mid-May, a first indication that risk tolerance might be rising and that the we could finally reach the 22-23 levels on the Rule of 20 scale, culminating the “normal” valuation cycle.

I now believe that economic and financial conditions will not allow valuations to climax in the yellow zone, let alone reach the “Extreme Risk” area. In fact, investors are much more likely to seek safer grounds in coming months and downside to the 17.5 range on the Rule of 20 is quite possible as a result. At current earnings and inflation levels, this would take the S&P 500 Index down to 1825, 9% below current levels. Lower if inflation rises, and/or if earnings drop.

  • Earnings have stalled and even though they are holding ex-Energy, investors are no longer willing to discriminate.
  • To wit, nearly 50% of the stocks of operating companies on the NYSE are down 20% or more from their 52-week highs. Ex-energy, the ratio is 44% according to Lowry’s Research. The bear has clearly reached out and communicating vases are likely to keep working on the downside rather than on the upside.
  • Another proof of that is found in the high yield market where fear is spreading out. Given on-going weaknesses throughout the commodity space, a rapid turn of fortunes is a low probability event at this time.

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  • The commodity rout is so violent following a decade of rising prices and leverage that the final episodes could be pretty nasty with many potential known and unknown unknowns. Who can confidently predict when and where oil prices will bottom? And China? In such leveraged environments, groundhogs can surface anywhere, anytime. The year 2016 could well become groundhog year.
  • True, lower commodity prices benefit consumers. However, demographics and long lasting scars from the financial crisis seem to be keeping consumers cautious.
  • While many fear deflation, inflation is the bigger risk at this time. Core inflation is already at 2.0% and rising in the U.S. (in Europe +1.1% YoY but +2.4% a.r. in last 4 months). Core Services (59% of total CPI) are +2.9% YoY with essential items such as shelter +3.2%, medical care +3.1% and car insurance +5.5%. Energy is –14.7% YoY (gasoline –24.1%), holding overall CPI at +0.5%.
  • The longer the depression in the energy sector, the nastier things will get in credit markets.
  • A sudden turn in oil prices would rapidly feed into the CPI number. In November, deflating energy prices subtracted 1.1% to YoY CPI. Energy inflation cratered between July 2014 and January 2015, holding fairly steady in the past 10 months. Unless energy prices decline much more, their YoY impact on total CPI will seriously recede starting with the January 2016 reading. November energy prices were only 1.0% lower than in January. Assuming no change in prices from their November levels, total CPI will be +1.9% in the U.S. next month. Last time I looked, 2-year rates were 1.0% and 5-years were 1.7%.

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  • Mrs. Yellen talks smoothly with her “gradual” hikes and the market believes her if the futures market pricing 2 rate hikes in 2016 is any guide. But the FOMC tells us 4 hikes and a median Fed funds rate of 1.375% for 2016. The press release even openly says that “underutilization of labor resources has diminished appreciably since early this year”, and that “labor market indicators will continue to strengthen”. Fed’s labor job: check.
  • The FOMC expects inflation “to rise to 2% over the medium term as the transitory effect of declines in energy import prices dissipate and the labor market strengthens further”. Medium term? The Fed has zero control on oil or other commodity prices, in fact it has almost zero forecasting ability on these prices, like everybody else. What it can influence is already at its 2.0% target. How can it reasonably forecast total CPI at 2.0% “over the medium term”? If nothing new happen, we could well be there by springtime. This is not a dovish Fed, rather a Fed hopeful that oil prices do not spike back up too quickly. Shorter term, the bet looks good, but it could reverse rapidly. Still, the base effect should result in a lesser drag on the CPI from energy prices in coming months.

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  • And there are the knowns: recessions in Brazil and Russia, maybe Canada if energy prices stay as low for a while. Significant slowdowns in the Middle East economies and most other emerging markets. This leaves the U.S. (ex-energy country, 15% of GDP) and Europe as far as what is measurable and foggy China, the huge known unknown. The Fed is done pushing and is now hoping. Can Draghi walk the talk? Is Beijing too cautious, too late? It sure looks like Q4 in China is as slow as it is foggy.
  • Corporate profits ex-energy have held up in Q3 and seem to be doing the same in Q4. However, the recent Markit flash PMIs were rather disconcerting looking forward, especially the all-important Services PMI which abruptly dropped from 56.1 to 53.7, the lowest reading in 12 months:

(…) some service providers noted a more subdued willingness to spend among clients. Reflecting this, latest data indicated that incoming new work expanded at the slowest pace since January. Weaker growth of new business contributed to a decrease in backlogs of work across the service sector for the fifth month running in December.

(…) businesses such as transport, accounting, financial services and consulting citing reduced demand for many services from the goods-producing sector, as well as signs of some increased reluctance to spend among consumers. (…)

Inflows of new orders to the two sectors showed one of the smallest increases seen this side of the global financial crisis, slowing sharply in services and almost stalling in manufacturing.

(…) the degree of positive sentiment dipped to its lowest recorded for just over five years.

At the composite level, Markit concludes:

The survey data are consistent with gross domestic product rising at an annualised rate of 1.8% in the fourth quarter. That’s down only slightly from the 2.1% pace observed in the third quarter, but the survey shows a more severe slowing towards the end of the fourth quarter, with an annualised GDP growth rate of just 1.4% indicated for December alone.

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As of December 16, the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model forecast for real GDP growth (seasonally adjusted annual rate) in the fourth quarter of 2015 is 1.9%. The Blue Chip consensus, wider than ever, is +2.2% (median). Its low forecasts may even prove too high if Markit is right. What would the Fed do in a stagflation environment?

Evolution of Atlanta Fed GDPNow real GDP forecast

This is clearly a risk-off financial market with declining long-term moving averages on equities. Not friendly and rather dangerous. And I fail to see any chance of a credible Fed put around the corner.

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