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

U.S. FLASH SERVICES PMI AT 54.8 IN JULY

U.S. service providers signalled a slight rebound in business activity growth from the five-month low recorded in June. This was highlighted by a rise in the seasonally adjusted Markit Flash U.S. Services PMI™ Business Activity Index from 54.8 to 55.2 in July. The latest index reading – which is based on approximately 85% of usual monthly replies – was well above the crucial 50.0 no-change mark, but still weaker than the average for 2015 to date (56.3).

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Higher levels of service sector output have been recorded by the survey in each month since November 2013, with the latest upturn attributed to improving U.S. economic conditions and an associated increase in client spending. July data indicated that overall growth of new work picked up to a three-month high, reflecting rising levels of business and consumer spending, alongside successful marketing strategies and new product launches.

Sustained new business growth, and a slight increase in backlogs of work, contributed to another upturn in payroll numbers in July. Higher levels of service sector employment have been recorded for almost five-and-a-half years, and the rate of staff hiring in July was faster than the average seen over this period.

Service providers are upbeat overall about their growth prospects over the next 12 months, with around 41% of the survey panel forecasting a rise in business activity and only 3% anticipating a reduction. However, at 65.3 in July, the resulting Future Activity Index was down from 69.0 in June and the lowest for just over three years. Anecdotal evidence suggested that uncertainty regarding the economic outlook both at home and abroad had weighed on some service providers’ projections for activity growth over the next 12 months.

The latest survey meanwhile pointed to a solid increase in average cost burdens across the service sector. That said, the rate of inflation eased from June’s 20-month high. Prices charged by service providers also increased at a slower pace in July, which survey respondents linked to softer cost pressures and competitive pricing strategies.

Markit Flash U.S. Composite PMI™

Adjusted for seasonal influences, the Markit Flash U.S. Composite PMI Output Index posted 55.2 in July, up slightly from 54.6 in June and above the neutral 50.0 threshold for the twenty-first successive month.

The latest reading signalled a rebound in U.S. private sector output growth from June’s five month low, helped by faster rises in both manufacturing and services activity.

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NEW$ & VIEW$ (28 JULY 2015): Commodity Currencies; Silver’s Deflation Signal.

U.S. Durable Orders Up 3.4% in June

New orders for durable goods—products such as toaster ovens and aircraft carriers designed to last at least three years—rose a seasonally adjusted 3.4% in June from a month earlier, the Commerce Department said Monday. That marked the first increase since March.

Orders for capital goods excluding the volatile defense and aircraft categories climbed 0.9% in June, following two straight months of declines [totalling –1.1%].

Excluding transportation, new orders rose 0.8%, the largest increase since August 2014. Excluding defense orders, another volatile category, orders rose 3.8%.

Overall, new orders were down 2% in the first half of the year compared with the same period in 2014. Orders of core capital goods were down 3.4% in the first half.

For all of Q2, durable goods shipments totalled –0.5% (-2.0% a.r.) while inventories rose +0.4% (+1.6% a.r.). Another great chart from Doug Short:

Durable Goods Components

Weakness in Asia Batters Currencies Abroad The global commodities slump is testing the resilience of resource-driven economies, pushing currencies from Australia, Canada and Norway to lows not seen since the financial crisis.

(…) The loonie is down 8.1% against the U.S. dollar since May 14 in New York trading, making it one of the biggest victims of the steep decline in global commodity prices since then. In that same period, the Australian dollar is down 10% and the Norwegian krone, which is pegged to the euro, has dropped 9.8% against its U.S. counterpart. (…)

Oil prices are down more than half since last July, falling again below $50 a barrel amid growing concerns about global oversupply. The Canadian dollar has fallen by 17% over the same span.

Energy accounts for roughly 10% of Canadian economic output and a “disproportionate” amount of business investment, Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz said. (…)

Across Canada, a promised export rebound has been slower than expected, raising questions about how low the loonie may have to fall before Canadian export volumes begin to pick up. About 75% of Canadian exports are to the U.S. (…)

  • Record Shorts Send Mexican Peso to All-Time Low

The Mexican peso’s virtue as the most-traded currency in emerging markets is also its biggest curse. The peso’s $135 billion in daily trading makes the market so much deeper than for other developing countries that investors use the currency as a general proxy for risk. Bought a Brazilian corporate bond? Sell pesos to hedge any losses. Stuck with a load of Treasuries? Buy pesos to blunt the pain if a risk-on environment sparks a rout. Correlations are high enough that the hedges often work, according to JPMorgan.

  • The Bloomberg Commodity Index is trading at a 13-year low and has plunged 61 percent since its peak in 2008, as of yesterday.

Ghost The Signal In Silver (Part II) (Charles Gave)

Last year I came up with a chart that I found rather intriguing. It showed that on every occasion in the last 100 years when the price of silver dropped more than 25% year-on-year, consumer price inflation in the US took a nose-dive soon afterwards.

These days silver is mostly an industrial metal. But down the decades it has retained some of its monetary characteristics. What’s more, for more than a century silver has traded freely in the market, unlike gold which only started to float in the 1970s.

Since 1915 there have been 10 occasions on which silver has fallen more than 25% YoY, and every time the annual rate of CPI inflation subsequently declined by at least 2pp. Last year, when the price of silver plummeted, I concluded there were two possible scenarios. The first was that all prices were going to decline, and by quite a lot. The second, and far more likely, hypothesis was that the price of oil was going to collapse. Sure enough, the oil price did collapse.

Now, a year later, I find myself flabbergasted: once again silver is down 25% over the last 12 months.

To revisit my previous remarks: either the price of oil is going to take another big fall, which Anatole thinks likely, or prices are going to decline across the board, with the prices of key goods and services each declining by 2% to 3%.

Given that US consumer inflation is currently running at just 0.1%, the second scenario would plunge us back into general deflation. If that sounds unreasonably pessimistic, take a look at how the prices of non-oil commodities have performed over the last year. Copper is down 27%, rubber 16%.

If we recall Gavekal’s four quadrants—inflationary boom, inflationary bust, deflationary boom, deflationary bust—silver is unequivocally signaling that we are in the bottom half of the plot, and that the choice is between deflationary boom and the deflationary bust.

Which is it? Alas, I am not especially optimistic about economic activity.

I hate to be bearish. I’ve always maintained that persistent bearishness betrays a fundamental weakness of imagination. So I’ll just say that I’m getting increasingly concerned.

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EARNINGS WATCH
  • 197 companies (53.2% of the S&P 500’s market cap) have reported. Earnings are beating by 5.6% (5.8% last Thursday) while revenues have positively surprised by 0.2% (0.3%).
  • The beat rate is 75% (76%) , ex-Financials 78% (80%).
  • Expectations are for revenue, earnings, and EPS of -3.7%, -1.0% (-1.3%), and +0.3% (+0.1%). EPS growth is on pace for 2.9% (3.0%), assuming the current 5.6% beat rate for the remainder of the season. This would be 7.8% (7.9%) on a trend basis (ex-Energy and the big-5 banks).