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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$ (8 DECEMBER 2015)

U.S. Consumer Credit Growth Slows Americans added to their debt at a slower pace in October, suggesting cautious spending on the part of consumers at the start of the holiday season.

Outstanding consumer credit, a reflection of all debt besides mortgages, rose $15.98 billion or at a 5.5% annual rate in October, the Federal Reserve said Monday. That’s a tapering from September, when it rose at a revised annual rate of 9.9%, but a slight increase from August, when it grew at a 5.1% pace.

Revolving credit, mostly credit cards, rose at an annual 0.2% rate, sharply lower than in September, when it increased at an annual rate of 8.7%. October’s rate was the smallest gain since February.

Non-revolving credit, made up largely of auto or student loans, rose at a 7.4% annual rate, a slower pace than the revised 10.3% rate in September.

Haver Analytics says that during the last ten years, there has been a 47% correlation between the y/y growth in consumer credit and y/y growth in personal consumption expenditures.

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Pointing up Bespoke Investment charts consumer credit growth in real terms:

fed
In November, U.S. Consumer Spending Level at $92

We will get the November retail sales from the Commerce Department on Friday. In the meantime:

Americans’ daily self-reports of spending averaged $92 in November. This is the same as the October average, and remains slightly higher than the other monthly averages to date in 2015.

Trend: Monthly Averages of Reported Amount Americans Spent "Yesterday"

Each day, Gallup asks Americans how much they spent “yesterday” in restaurants, gas stations, stores or online — not counting home, vehicle or other major purchases, or normal monthly bills — to provide an indication of Americans’ discretionary spending. The November 2015 average of $92 is based on interviews with more than 14,000 U.S. adults.

While the November 2015 spending average is slightly below the $95 found in November 2014, it is similar to the $91 in November 2013. Other November averages since 2008 have been lower, between $66 and $87.

Gallup found that average daily spending increased significantly this year during the last few days of November and on Black Friday specifically. This spending increase could be a good sign as the U.S. enters the December holiday shopping period. Historically, spending increases by about $5 between November and December, although smaller increases were seen in 2008 and 2014.

Trend: Comparison of Average Reported U.S. Consumer Spending, October-December

In 2010, 2013 and 2014, spending increased from October to November, but it was stable or even decreased slightly in all other years. Last year, there was a large increase, $6, from October to November, but then a smaller one, $3, from November to December. Other than 2015, 2012 was the most recent year when spending was level between October and November. That same year saw a $10 jump between November and December, the largest jump Gallup has found between these two months.

Strong, consistent spending in November is a good sign for December spending. Consumer spending generally sees a boost as the year draws to a close, as a result of holiday shopping. And strong December spending is important to the health of the U.S. economy, because spending accounts for about two-thirds of the U.S. gross domestic product.

Remember that November 2015 was exceptionally warm across the USA.

Whirlpool Corp.:

Stronger consumer spending, especially on long-lasting durable goods, has bolstered growth at the Michigan-based appliance maker, which is hiring “in just about every U.S. location,” said James Keppler, the company’s vice president for integrated supply chain and quality for North America.

Chinese imports fall as economy struggles Renminbi heads for weakest close in 4 years

Imports fell 8.7 per cent in US dollar terms in November compared with a year earlier, trimming losses after a 12.6 per cent drop in October, customs data showed on Tuesday. Exports for November fell 6.8 per cent year-on-year, steeper than the 5 per cent fall in October. (…)

“Commodity prices extended their downward slide in November, but import volumes rebounded. The rise in crude oil imports probably reflects the increase in strategic reserves, while iron ore stockpiles at ports have continued to increase, suggesting that final demand hasn’t improved much,” economists at China International Capital Corp led by Liu Liu wrote on Tuesday.

Japan Avoids Second Recession of Abenomics Era Stronger-than-expected capital spending helped the Japanese economy grow in the third quarter, revised figures show.

Japan’s gross domestic product, the broadest measure of a nation’s economic activity, grew 1.0% in the third quarter from the prior three-month period on a seasonally adjusted annualized basis, the Cabinet Office said Tuesday. Previously it had estimated that the economy shrank 0.8% on that basis in the third quarter.

The upward revision allows the government of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to say the economy is on a recovery track after a revised decline of 0.5% in the second quarter. (…)

A main reason for the revision was business investment, which was initially estimated to have shrunk 5% in the quarter on an annualized basis. The revision showed it increased 2.3%. (…)

OIL

(…) The El Niño weather phenomenon has limited demand for natural gas and other heating fuels in the U.S. this year. Forecasts released Monday show above-average temperatures persisting for the next two weeks, at a time of year when demand for indoor heating is typically robust.

Temperatures in cities in the Midwest and East Coast could range between 15 and 25 degrees warmer than usual for the next 10 days, says Matt Rogers, meteorologist and president at Commodity Weather Group LLC.

Some traders say it is risky to bet on further declines for oil prices that are already down 29% on the year and well below $40—a level under which analysts say many producers can’t make money and will have to cut back. (…)

(…) The mean adjusted 2016 EPS estimate for Exxon Mobil Corp. has been cut by more than 9 cents a share and for Royal Dutch Shell Plc by 8.4 cents over the past month, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. EPS projections for Total SA, Europe’s second-biggest oil company, and Repsol SA are lower for 2016 than those for this year.

Those estimates assume a much higher price than the $41.19 a barrel that Brent traded at as of 9:57 a.m. in London on Tuesday. Oswald Clint, a London-based analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein has based his EPS estimates for oil majors at a Brent price of $60 a barrel, he said by phone Dec. 7. Alexandre Andlauer, a Paris-based oil sector analyst with AlphaValue SAS, has assumed a price of $63. (…)

There are several striking parallels between the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries’ current situation and the period from 1997 to 1999, when the group lost control of the market and oil slipped to less than $10 a barrel. While investors may wonder whether markets will follow a similar trajectory this time, it’s important to remember that OPEC emerged from the crisis to see oil prices surge all the way to almost $150 a barrel. If the parallels hold, markets could be in for a wild ride.

Nearly two decades ago, Venezuela had a growth spurt that lifted its output from 2.2 million barrels a day in 1992 to 3.5 million barrels a day six years later. Saudi Arabia responded by increasing its own production, flooding the market. This time around, Saudi Arabia has embarked on a production spree — pumping a record of 10.6 million barrels a day earlier this year — while Iran plans to boost daily output by as much as 1 million barrels next year after sanctions are lifted.

As OPEC lifted production in 1997, Asia headed into economic meltdown. The devaluation in July that year of the baht, the currency of Thailand, triggered a financial crisis that pushed Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore and Thailand into recession. The group’s GDP contracted 8.3 percent in 1998, compared to growth of 7.5 percent on average the previous decade, according to data from the International Monetary Fund. While Asia isn’t collapsing this time around, China is experiencing the slowest expansion in 25 years.

The oil slump of 1997 to 1999 was compounded by El Nino, which curbed demand for heating fuel by warming the ocean surface in the equatorial Pacific and making fall and winter in the Northern hemisphere milder than normal. Fast forward to 2015 and El Nino is already comparable to the record events of those years, according to the Bureau of Meteorology of Australia. Heating oil stockpiles in the U.S. and northern Europe are high, potentially affecting overall crude demand.

Just as they were nearly two decades ago, Saudi Arabia’s al-Naimi and Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh stand in opposition across the conference table in Vienna. Both have a long history of working together to resolve oil gluts, but the differences loom larger this time as their nations’ conflicting positions on Syria, Yemen and Iraq get in the way of the business of oil. (…)

(Bespoke Investment)

Anglo American to Slash Assets, Cut 85,000 Jobs, Suspend Dividend Anglo American announced a radical restructuring of its business that includes more asset sales and cutting 63% of its workforce in a bid to weather the severe slump in commodity prices.

Moody’s sticks with ‘negative’ outlook for Canadian banks in 2016

Moody’s Investors Service is sticking with its “negative” outlook for Canadian banks in 2016, pointing to challenges emanating from the struggling Canadian economy and a changing regulatory framework in the financial sector – even as the big banks continue to diversify abroad.

In its outlook, the credit rating agency pointed to Canada’s high household debt, the vulnerability of consumers with credit card balances and auto loans in a deteriorating economy, and the possibility that the federal government will create a so-called bail-in regime to protect taxpayers if banks fail.

Although this marks the third consecutive year that Moody’s has issued a negative outlook for the banks, this one stands out for its focus on asset risk, as the economy feels the impact of continuing low commodity prices. Moody’s expects the Canadian economy will expand by just 1.8 per cent in 2016, up from an estimate of 1 per cent growth this year.

“It’s not a huge thing. If it were only [asset risk], it would probably not be enough to tip the entire outlook into negative,” said David Beattie, senior vice-president of the financial institutions group at Moody’s. “But combined with the probable reduction in government support, that certainly does leave it firmly in negative.”

Even with the negative outlook, Moody’s has awarded the big banks some of its top credit ratings. The baseline credit assumption for Toronto-Dominion Bank is just three notches from the highest-quality debt. Bank of Nova Scotia is a notch below TD, followed another notch down by Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, Bank of Montreal and Royal Bank of Canada.

In other words, the negative outlook is applied to a relatively high level for the sector over all – and at a time when many of the banks have been making efforts to diversify beyond the Canadian economy. (…)

What It Means When Millennials Displace Boomers as Biggest U.S. Demographic
Confused smile Did You Forget Your Planes? Airport Takes Out Ad to Locate Owner

Malaysia Airports Holdings Bhd. placed an advertisement Monday in the nation’s best-selling English daily asking for the “untraceable” owner of three Boeing Co. 747-200F planes to come and collect them. The planes are parked at three separate bays at KLIA in Sepang, outside the Malaysian capital, the Star newspaper ad showed.

FUTURE PRESIDENTS?

NEW$ & VIEW$ (7 DECEMBER 2015): Oil? Earnings? Sentiment? Junk?

U.S. Employers Added 211,000 Jobs in November
  • Payroll employment rose +211,000 in November and the two prior months were revised up some +35,000.   Aggregate hours worked edged down -0.1%, but for the last three months, it has surged at a 7.6% annual rate.
  • The diffusion index climbed to 60.5%.
  • Construction sector employment surged +46,000 and manufacturing employment slipped -1,000.  
  • Private service employment rose +163000 in November.   
  • Government employment posted +14,000. Federal employment was up +6,000. Government employment is no longer a large drag on overall employment.
  • Average hourly earnings  rose +0.2% gain in November, +2.3% YoY. Last 3 months: +2.8% a.r.
  • Household employment rose +244,000 after surging +320,000 in the prior month. The participation rate edged up to 62.5%. 

Two charts from the WSJ:

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U.S. Trade Gap Widened 3.4% in October The U.S. trade deficit widened in October as exports resumed a steady decline, the latest sign a slumping global economy is draining foreigners’ appetite for American-made goods.

Exports fell 1.4% to a three-year low. Imports declined 0.6%. (…) Exports are down 4.3% this year compared with the first 10 months of 2014. (…)

Friday’s report showed exports fell due to a decline in industrial supplies—a category that includes oil—and capital goods, such as industrial engines. Imports, meantime, fell because of lower oil and food imports.

Exports to China were down 9.9% YoY while imports from China were down 1.7%. Exports to the EU were up 2.4% YoY while imports from the EU rose 3.3%.

  • Strong Dollar Shreds Wheat Exports The strong dollar is stifling U.S. agricultural exports, worsening the strain on farmers already dealing with a collapse in prices and weaker demand.
REAL TIME ECONOMY

The Association of American Railroads publishes its Rail Time Indicators about one week after the end of the month with timely industry data that are never revised:

Total carloads were down 10.4% YoY in November, the biggest monthly decline since October 2009. In fact, rail carloads have not been this low since 2008.

It’s not just energy- and steel-related products that are seeing lower rail carloads, though. Paper, lumber, farm products excluding grain, grain mill products — the variety of commodities with carload declines in November (and recent prior months too, for that matter) makes one wonder if the economy might be less robust than most economists currently think it is.

Actually, this next chart gives one the impression that this is China. Remember that Services dominate the U.S. economy as the chart on the right illustrates (NMI = Non-Manufacturing PMI):

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Intermodal traffic gives a better indication of final demand at the consumer level. Intermodal originations declined 1.0% YoY in November following –1.4% in October. This reflects the inventory correction underway across the economy given that most years, November is in the top half of months in terms of intermodal volume, but this year it is the third lowest.

The only clearly strong segment is Motor Vehicles and Parts:

If rail traffic were a Christmas tree, autos and auto parts would be the prettiest ornament on it right now. Combined U.S. and Canadian carloads were 7.1% higher in November 2015 than in November 2014, their fourth straight monthly increase and eighth in the past nine months.

Actually, carloads of autos and parts, which rose 2.5% in Q3, are accelerating sharply in Q4 with growth of 6.1% in October and 7.1% in November.

Auto UAW Wins Vote at VW Chattanooga Plant

The United Auto Workers union won its first organizing vote at a foreign-owned auto assembly plant in the U.S. South on Friday, in a ground breaking victory after decades of failed attempts.

About 71 percent of skilled trades workers who cast ballots at Volkswagen AG’s (VOWG_p.DE) factory in Chattanooga, Tennessee voted to join the UAW, according to the company and the union.

The skilled trades workers account for about 11 percent of the 1,450 hourly employees at the plant.

If the UAW victory, as expected, survives an appeal by Volkswagen to the National Labor Relations Board, the 164 skilled trades workers will be the first foreign-owned auto assembly plant workers to gain collective bargaining rights in the southern United States.

While the unit of skilled trades workers who maintain the assembly machinery are a fraction of the hourly work force, observers said the victory was significant and could serve as a launching pad for the union’s efforts to organize other foreign-owned plants in the south. (…)

Casteel, and Chattanooga UAW Local 42 President Mike Cantrell, in a separate interview on Thursday, said the election was a result of the “frustration” of skilled trades workers not having collective bargaining rights for wages and benefits. (…) 

CHINA ECONOMY SUBDUED IN NOVEMBER

From CEBM Research surveys: housing and autos look up but rest remains weak:

This month’s survey results display that aggregate demand remained weak in November. In upstream sectors, a continued fall in steel prices placed further operating strain on producers, while adverse weather conditions weakened demand for cement during the month. Container freight shipment volumes failed to meet optimistic expectations set at the start of November. Most respondents had anticipated a rise in volumes tied to Christmas orders, but according to respondent feedback shipment volumes were flat on a monthly basis and fell yea-rover-year.

In this month’s property developer survey, respondents reported a healthy volume of sales activity during what is normally a month of seasonally sluggish sales. Speaking with developer and real estate agent respondents, the consensus forecast is that December sales volume will match November sales helped along by sales promotions and further sector policy easing.

For a second consecutive month, auto sales performance was the highlight of our monthly survey. In October, sales surged in response to the government’s decision to halve the purchase tax on small automobiles. Based on this month’s survey respondent feedback, the sales environment in November improved further from October due to the purchase tax cut as well as seasonal factors. A majority of respondents have further upgraded their 4Q15 sales forecasts from last month and have upgraded their full year 2016 forecasts.

CEBM’s banking survey showed very few signs of an improvement in the real economy. Based on survey feedback, the scale of loan issuance in November changed very little from the previous month. On the demand side, reduced profitability has lowered enterprises’ willingness to borrow to invest. On the supply side, a negative outlook for GDP growth and a month-over-month rise in overdue loans in November resulted in banks adopting an even more cautious lending stance than in the month prior.

Looking forward to December, the CEBM Composite Sales Expectations Index fell from 0% in November to -9.5% in December. The change in this month’s reading largely reflects a further deterioration in sales expectations for industrial-manufacturing areas of the economy.

Confused smile OIL
Divided OPEC Set to Keep Pumping OPEC ended a contentious meeting without any production cuts, leaving members to continue pumping crude at near-record levels.

(…) Members demanding output cuts, such as Iran and Venezuela, were unwilling or unable to offer production cuts themselves. Those most able to cut, Saudi Arabia and its neighboring Persian Gulf states, refused unless all members participate along with some producers from outside the organization. (…)

The 30 million-barrel figure wasn’t mentioned in OPEC’s news release after the meeting, an unusual omission. Asked about the ceiling at the news conference, Mr. Kachikwu and OPEC Secretary General Abdalla Salem el-Badri emphasized that the group would continue at the “current production level.” Leaving the meeting, one minister, Iran’s Bijan Zanganeh, said, “We have no ceiling now.”  (…)

One explained that they “did not consider it necessary to put numbers in the communiqué.” (…)

(…) the group has been discussing production cuts with non-OPEC producers but those discussions were inconclusive so far. (…)

“There is nothing at the moment that could be done from OPEC to correct the situation,” said an OPEC delegate from a Persian Gulf Country. “Shale is the new reality.” (…)

None of the member countries can balance their budgets at current oil prices, and many of them need prices double what they are now to ease growing fiscal strains. (…)

“OPEC is not a cartel,” the Saudi oil minister Ali al-Naimi said Friday before the gathering.

He really meant “is no longer a cartel”. In fact, what’s the point of an OPEC now?

(…) the reality is that OPEC has gone from being fearsome to marginal to ineffectual. The keys to forecasting the price of oil today are on North Dakota’s plains, Iranian negotiating tables and Chinese factories, not in Viennese hotel suites. Without a member like Saudi Arabia with lots of spare capacity and the willingness to take some economic pain for the team, OPEC is toothless.

Pointing up Readers know that one of the best indicators for U.S. shale oil production is carloads of petroleum and petroleum products provided by the AAR. Carloads dropped 14.4% in Q3 after –2.5% in Q2. They are declining even faster in Q4 with October down 18.5% and November down 20.1% YoY. These are big declines! Carloads are now lower than their lowest level of 2013.

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The EIA tables show that the major tight oil plays in the U.S. produced 4.37 million b/d in October, down 3.3% YoY. These estimates have, so far, proven very conservative and they seem to be so again…

Meanwhile, the many forces at work:

It used to be said of OPEC that it was like a teabag – it only worked in hot water. If that is so, conditions on world oil markets could hardly be more difficult as prices languish at almost seven-year lows near $40 a barrel.

Yet, rather than closing ranks, OPEC is finding that an intensifying battle for market share, worsened by deep regional differences between Saudi Arabia and Iran, is driving it further apart. (…)

Halfway through last Friday’s six-hour meeting, an unexpected dispute erupted over the defining feature of the cartel. In a move sources say was masterminded by Saudi Arabia, ministers finally agreed for the first time in decades to drop any reference to the 13-member group’s output ceiling.

The pivot, which surprised not only markets but also some OPEC officials, appeared to be a direct response to Saudi Arabia’s arch-rival Iran, which has made clear it intends to make a rapid return to global oil markets next year as nuclear-related sanctions are lifted.

With Tehran looking to pump as much as 1 million barrels per day (bpd) more crude into a market already saturated with excess supply, an increase of about 1 percent in world supply, maintaining or legitimizing any pretence of OPEC limits – no matter how notional – was not an option for Riyadh.

“The ceiling issue was very controversial and they could not decide on it,” said an OPEC source briefed on the discussion inside the room. “Nobody was happy.”

Earlier, another source said there was a “huge disagreement among members, even bigger now, as oversupply is no longer mainly coming from Gulf delegates, but from Iran.”

In the near-term, the outcome of Friday’s meeting probably makes little difference in global markets. Ever since last year, most members have been pumping flat-out to defend their market from fast-growing upstart rivals like U.S. shale drillers.

And anyway the group’s 30 million bpd ceiling has largely been symbolic and, in practical terms, ignored.

Yet abandoning the pretence of production restraint threatens to intensify price wars between OPEC members, leaving them even less likely to agree on any market measures down the road, analysts said, and piling more pressure on prices.

In a note following the meeting, Goldman Sachs said it saw a rising probability that the markets may need to adjust through “operational stress” when the world runs out of storage capacity, reiterating its “lower for even longer” thesis. (…)

But the present Sunni-Shia conflicts setting Saudi Arabia and Iran at each other’s throats, particularly in Syria and Yemen, make the relationship between the two OPEC powers even more fraught.

“The fact that Iranian-backed Houthi militants are squaring off against Saudi-led troops in Yemen is not helpful, as increased Iranian oil revenues are likely to find their way to Iranian military interests in Yemen, Iraq and Syria,” said Aberdeen Asset Management’s investment strategist Robert Minter.

Hence OPEC is setting up for a showdown at the corral, he added, as Iran wants its pre-sanction market share back, and the Gulf states are not inclined to cede volume when they are already feeling the budgetary pain of reduced prices. (…)

What fully transpired during that afternoon remains unclear. But several OPEC sources said ultimately a decision was reached that having no ceiling at all would be less negative for oil prices than having a higher ceiling.

There appears to have been little if any debate about Iran’s production, although it has been clear for months that it will likely be the biggest challenge they face in 2016.

“We spent two minutes on that issue. You can’t stop a sovereign country from coming back to the market. So, debating it is irrelevant,” said Nigerian oil minister Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu. “As a matter of fact, our position is that Iran would displace somebody who is not an OPEC member.” (…)

EARNINGS WATCH
Cuts to S&P 500 Earnings Estimates For Q4 To Date Within Average Levels

In terms of earnings estimate revisions for the S&P 500, analysts have lowered earnings estimates for Q4 2015 within average levels to date. On a per-share basis, estimated earnings for the fourth quarter have fallen by 3.4% since September 30. This percentage decline is larger than the trailing 5-year average (-2.7%), but smaller than the trailing 10-year average (-3.6%) for this same point in time in the quarter.

It is also smaller than the trailing 1-year average of 4.2%.

Of the 109 companies that have issued negative EPS guidance, 83 have issued negative EPS guidance and 26 have issued positive EPS guidance. The percentage of companies issuing negative EPS guidance is 76% (83 out of 109), which is above the 5-year average of 72%.

However, it is better than at the same time last year when there were 90 negatives and 19 positives.

As a result of the downward revisions to earnings estimates, the estimated year-over-year earnings decline for Q4 2015 is -4.3% today, which is higher than the expected decline of -0.6% at the start of the quarter (June 30). If the Energy sector is excluded, the estimated earnings growth rate for the S&P 500 would jump to 1.0% from -4.3%.

As a result of downward revisions to sales estimates, the estimated sales decline for Q4 2015 is -3.0%, which is also higher than the estimated year-over-year sales decline of -1.2% at the start of the quarter. If the Energy sector is excluded, the estimated revenue growth rate for the S&P 500 would jump to 1.2% from -3.0%.

Among companies with negative guidance for Q4, 25 Consumer Discretionary companies have negatively guided so far (zero positives) compared with 21 at the same time last year (three positives). IT looks better however with 22 negatives and 10 positives compared with 22 negatives and 2 positives last year.

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SENTIMENT WATCH
Ghost The Stock Market Is Missing the Warning From Junk Junk bonds are headed for their first annual loss since the credit crisis, reflecting concerns that a six-year U.S. economic expansion and stock-market boom are on borrowed time.

U.S. corporate high-yield bonds are down 2% this year, including interest payments, according to Barclays PLC data. Junk bonds have posted only four annual losses on a total-return basis since 1995.

The declines are worrying Wall Street because junk-market declines have a reputation for foreshadowing economic downturns. Junk bonds are lagging behind U.S. stocks following a debt selloff in the past month. The S&P 500 has returned 3.6% on the year, including dividends.

Adding to the worries are signs that the selling has spread beyond firms hit by the energy bust to encompass much of the lowest-rated debt across the market, potentially snarling some takeovers and making it difficult for all kinds of companies to borrow new funds. (…)

The junk-bond default rate rose to 2.6% from 2.1% this year and will likely jump to 4.6% in 2016, breaching the 30-year average of 3.8% for the first time since 2009, said New York University Finance Professor Edward Altman, inventor of the most commonly used default-prediction formula.

Mounting defaults signal an end to the six-year bull run in credit fueled by the Federal Reserve’s long commitment to low interest rates, said Mr. Altman. He said downturns in the junk-bond market often presage stock-price declines and economic slowdowns. Some investors fear just such a reversal as the Fedprepares to raise interest rates this month for the first time since 2006.

“In most high-default periods we’ve seen in the past, the rise in default rates precedes a recession,” said Mr. Altman, who has been studying the subject for more than 50 years. (…)

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To be sure, the bottom hasn’t fallen out of the market. Higher-rated junk-bond issuers continue to find buyers for their bonds, and the retreat from risk so far is unfolding gradually. By contrast, junk bonds fell 26% in 2008. (…)

There are $1.3 trillion junk bonds outstanding as of Friday, up from $247 billion in 1998 and $709 billion in 2007, according to data from Bank of America.

Energy junk bonds are down 14% this year. Heavy-industry junk bonds have fallen 15% in 2015 and pharmaceuticals have fallen 8% since September, according to data from Barclays.

While investors are still buying some bonds in growth industries, such as restaurants and gambling, price drops for out-of-favor bonds have been fast and furious this year. That’s in part because new regulations have sharply curtailed trading by Wall Street banks, which cushioned past selloffs by buying bonds. (…)

S&P says that much of the decline in fundamentals has been linked to the significant slide in commodity prices, with failures in the energy and metals and mining industries making up a material part of the defaults recorded thus far.

Diane Vazza, head of global fixed income research at S&P, said: “By most measures, the rising number of defaults in the near future likely will be muted by historical standards, but the current crop of US speculative-grade issuers appears fragile and particularly susceptible to any sudden or unanticipated shocks.”

From the FT:

In the US, about three-fifths of defaults in 2015 have been among energy and natural resources businesses (…)

The sell-off has been concentrated in the energy and materials industries and the average yield for junk bonds in the two sectors shot above 12 per cent last week; no other sector has a yield above the overall average.

Chart: Corporate defaults

From Northern Trust:

Even though the Barclays 2% High Yield Index return is -0.5% through November 9, there’s been a wide dispersion in returns. There’s a 26% return differential between the best-performing sector (refining) and the worst-performing sector (independent energy). Of the 45 sectors in the Barclays index, 34 have positive returns and 16 have returns greater than 5%. In contrast, losses have been concentrated to just six sectors, with returns ranging from -5.5% to -15.9%. These sector returns show that high yield is no longer a beta-driven market fueled by accommodative Fed policy.

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This is very much in line with sector profit trends as seen above.

Moody’s view:

(…) the annual growth rate for profits from current production has slowed considerably from the 11.8% advance of the year-ended September 2012 to the 0.9% of the year-ended September 2015, expectations of a continued rise by profits suggest the US should avoid a recession through 2016. Each of the previous three recessions was preceded by a yearlong average for profits that was less than its record high. In other words, the longer profits fall short of their zenith, the greater is the risk of recession. (…)

The credit cycle is closely linked to the profits cycle. For example, the median high-yield default rate jumps up from 2.8% when the yearlong average of profits from current production expands year-over-year to 6.8% when profits contract.

Moreover, the forward-looking average EDF (expected default frequency) metric of US/Canadian non-investment-grade companies generated medians of 3.3% amid profits growth and a much higher 8.0% when profits shrank. Because the high-yield EDF is a leading indicator of default risk, the high-yield EDF is more sensitive to swings in profitability than is the actual default rate.

In addition, according to a sample of quarterly observations that begin with 1986’s final quarter, the high-yield bond spread’s median year-to-year change shows a decline of -47 bp when profits grow annually and a +138 bp increase when profits contract.

However, spreads are more likely to widen when profits contract, than to narrow when profits grow. The high-yield spread widened from a year earlier in 83% of the 29 quarters showing a yearly decline by profits, while the spread narrowed year-to-year in only 61% of the 87 quarters posting an annual increase by profits. (…)

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Despite a deceleration by the annual increase of profits from current production from the 1.7% of year-long 2014 to the 0.0% of the January-September 2015, early November’s Blue Chip consensus believes profits will accelerate to a 4.0% rise for yearlong 2016. However, the realization of 4% profits growth is very much in doubt.

Not only will US profitability be challenged by the loss of sales volumes and softening of product prices to a costlier dollar and the subpar expenditures of foreign economies, but margins will also be squeezed by the quickening of labor costs vis-a-vis revenues. Just when wage growth gathers momentum, the annual increase of core business sales will probably be halved from 2014’s 4.6% to 2015’s prospective 2.3%. (…)

Big trouble awaits US business activity if Q3- 2015’s slower rise by gross value added relative to unit labor costs persists. In terms of moving yearlong averages, recessions accompanied each of the three previous incidents showing a slower annual increase by gross value added relative to unit labor costs. For the year-ended September 2015, the good news is that the 4.3% annual increase by corporate gross value added still outpaced the accompanying 2.4% rise of unit labor costs.

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DIAMONDS ARE NOT FOREVER:
De Beers Shuttering Canada Diamond Mine in Commodities Rout

Prices for just about everything that comes out of the ground have been falling, and diamonds are no exception.  Polished-diamond prices have declined about 30 percent since 2011, according to an index from PolishedPrices.com. Prices for rough, uncut diamonds have dropped 44 percent over the same period.