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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 APR. 2015): Up or down?

Thumbs up Thumbs down Fed officials split over June rate rise Some members advocate waiting until 2016
Japan PMI data signal renewed economic downturn in March

At 49.4, the PMI survey measure of business activity across the manufacturing and service sectors hit a ten-month low. By falling below 50, the index also signalled the first monthly drop in activity since last October.

A lack of demand prompted firms to trim staffing levels for a second successive month, leading to largest (albeit still only modest) drop in employment since October 2012. However, although only minor, the drop in employment is a major setback for the economic recovery.

At the heart of the deterioration is a weakening of domestic demand. Service sector activity fell for a second successive month in March, attributed by survey respondents mainly to weak inflows of new business in home markets. (…)

OIL
  • Thumbs down Oil Slides as Supplies Soar Oil prices tumbled on Wednesday to their biggest loss in two months after data showed the largest weekly increase in domestic crude supplies in 14 years.

Wednesday slide was triggered by a report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration showing the nation’s crude stockpiles soared to a new record last week, posting the biggest increase in 14 years as oil production rose. (…)

U.S. crude production rose above 9.4 million barrels a day last week, the EIA said, near multidecade highs. The EIA said Tuesday it expects crude production to start declining in June. A Goldman Sachs report released Monday called for production to peak this month. (…)

(Ed Yardeni)

Stored supplies in Cushing, Okla., the delivery point for the Nymex contract, rose above 60 million barrels for the first time on record. Concerns have grown in recent months that Cushing inventories could hit maximum capacity, which the EIA said in September is 70.8 million barrels.

However, demand is expected to rise in coming months as drivers take more warm-weather road trips, and refineries typically buy more crude in the late spring to turn into gasoline and other fuels. The EIA on Tuesday forecast that U.S. crude stockpiles would start shrinking in June. (…)

Thumbs up But the WSJ article failed to report this from the same EIA release:

The EIA lowered its US crude oil production estimates for 2015 to 9.23 million b/d, down 120,000 b/d from its estimate a month earlier, and dropped its 2016 estimate to 9.31 million b/d, down 180,000 from its forecast a month earlier.

“The reduction in the crude oil production forecast reflects rig counts falling faster than EIA had initially expected, as oil-directed rigs have declined to the lowest level in more than four years as of late March,” the agency said. (Platts)

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Thumbs up Most media missed this yesterday:

Saudi Arabia’s oil minister, Ali Naimi, was quoted just before the market’s close as saying the kingdom was willing to work with other major oil producers to stabilize world oil markets and boost prices, which he expected would “improve in the near future.”

But he made clear that Saudi Arabia, other members of the Gulf Cooperation Council and OPEC would not bear the burden of stabilizing markets alone. (Platts)

There is also this:

A glut of unplaced Nigerian crude is expected to flow to Europe hoping to find end user demand after weak buying from Asia for Nigerian and West African light sweet crudes over the past month has left a large overhang of March, April and May cargoes.

Demand from Asian buyers especially India, the biggest buyer of Nigerian crude, has been on the wane for May cargoes, and traders expect more Nigerian crude to land in Europe in coming months.

The focus on Europe has been further enhanced by reduced interest from Nigeria’s other regular customers like Brazil, Indonesia and South Africa.
WAF crude differentials have been falling in the past month as sellers tried to attract buying interest. But buyers are holding back in expectation of even lower prices. (…)

Meanwhile:

China’s domestic car makers helped power a 9% rise in first-quarter passenger-vehicle sales, showing new strength on the back of booming demand for Chinese sport-utility vehicles despite a softening economy.

Foreign and domestic auto makers sold 5.3 million passenger vehicles in China during the first three months of the year, the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers said Thursday.

The gain was led by Chinese homegrown brands, which reported combined sales of 2.3 million vehicles, up 21% from a year earlier. By contrast, foreign players sold three million vehicles, up just 1% from a year ago.

In the first quarter, the combined share of Chinese brands rose to 43% of the country’s passenger-vehicle market from 39% in the same period last year, said the government-backed auto manufacturers’ group. (…)

According to the research firm, Chinese SUV brands had doubled their sales to around 460,000 vehicles in the first two months of this year compared with the same period last year. This was more than foreign SUV brands, which sold around 360,000 vehicles, up 8%.(…)

Overall, growth in China’s new-car sales eased in the first quarter compared with the year-earlier period, when sales had risen 10%. (…)

SENTIMENT WATCH
Thumbs down Thumbs up Why Earnings Season May Not Be Horrible for Stocks The list of headwinds hitting U.S. stocks this year has grown long. Earnings expectations are downbeat, but this pessimism may be overplayed.

(…) RBC Chief U.S. market strategist Jonathan Golub, for one, believes everything is setting up for a very strong run in the market. To support his argument, he says the long-term earnings trend remains intact, expectations for rate liftoff have been pushed off, valuations have come down and the negativity tied to first-quarter earnings has been overstated.

Companies typically exceed earnings expectations about 75% of the time. And Mr. Golub is calling for larger-than-normal beats this season. “Analysts lowered numbers too much in the energy sector and are overestimating the currency impact,” added Mr. Golub.

Scott Wren, senior global equity strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute, joins Mr. Golub in his thinking that the consensus is too pessimistic. “Investors should use any increased volatility to add to stock exposure in the more cyclical sectors,” said Mr. Wren.

The earnings outlook is not entirely upbeat across Wall Street though. Strategists at Bank of America Merrill Lynch Tuesday went so far as to forecast an earnings decline for the full year due to a stronger greenback and oil’s plunge. If that happens it would be the first annual profit decline since 2009, according to the bank, and would likely not bode well for stocks as the consensus across the Street is that earnings growth will return to record levels in the third quarter.

Even though Bank of America is not as optimistic as others, strategists there do see the earnings picture improving mid-year. “We do not expect the impact on [earnings] growth to get much worse from these levels and should start to fade by the second half of the year,” said Dan Suzuki, equity strategist at Bank of America. “The transient nature of the ‘earnings recession’ may explain why the market can end the year higher.”

If earnings beat consensus, as they have a tendency of doing, it should be a tailwind for stocks. Major averages fell in March in anticipation of a potentially rough reporting season. But, as the prior period showed, equities gained when results came in stronger than expected. After falling in January, the S&P 500 rallied an impressive 5.5% in February on the back of above-consensus results.

RBC’s Jonathan Golub does good work. He points out that

Bottom-up growth expectations of -4.2% seem quite ominous. However, when stated ex-Energy (and assuming beats) the result is likely to be 6–7%, plus buybacks.image

Relatively low negative company guidance in the last month tends to support the view that surprises will surprise on the upside. I will be more interested in the guidance going forward, however.

Thumbs up Thumbs down European Stocks Need to Show Earnings Power European stocks have raced higher. The importance of seeing earnings rise is now paramount.

(…) There is no doubt that European equities are no longer obviously cheap, trading on a multiple of around 16.6 times the next 12 months’ earnings, according to FactSet. (…)

While earnings for S&P500 companies are some 23% above their precrisis peak, for Stoxx 600 constituents they are 26% below, and have largely stagnated since 2010, FactSet data show. But there are some signs of hope. The fourth-quarter saw earnings rise 8.9% year-on-year, J.P. Morgan Asset Management notes. Analysts have become more bullish: Europe excluding the U.K. is the only region where earnings upgrades are outstripping downgrades, Citigroup notes. But the backdrop for earnings is good, particularly for exporters that benefit from a weaker euro. (…)

Thumbs up Fingers crossed Hong Kong Housewife Cheers Stocks as Workers Trade at Lunch

(…) “Things are getting quite exciting,” said Chow Man, a 68-year-old housewife who favors Chinese banks and infrastructure stocks and says she has as much as HK$200,000 ($25,000) in play. “It’s becoming like a hobby for a lot of mainland investors to trade stocks now. That’s why more of them are taking opportunities in Hong Kong.” (…)

“The rally may last for a few more days,” said the security guard, who’s hoping stocks will rise another 10 percent. “I’m just taking a lunch break to do some trading because the market is hot.” (…)

From Zerohedge:

No, that chart is fine, and nothing is wrong with your eyes: that was, indeed, until a few minutes ago, a 10% move in just the past two days!

From BNP Paribas via Zerohedge:

“Margin purchases are now accounting for almost 20% of equities daily turnover which itself has soared to wholly unprecedented levels in another sign of self-feeding speculative frenzy. What happens next is clearly an ‘unknown-unknown’. By definition detached from fundamentals, speculative bubbles are inherently re-enforcing in the short-term and frequently last longer than expected. The longer they continue, however, the larger the eventual bursting.”

There appears to be little doubt that this particular speculative bubble has indeed before “re-enforcing,” because as we showed last week,the pace at which Chinese investors are creating stock accounts has accelerated with nearly 1.7 million accounts created in the last week of March alone (up 50% from the previous week which itself saw a 58% spike from the week before). Compounding the problem is that many new market participants lack even a junior high-level education suggesting that they may not be adequately assessing the risk factors. As we put it: “We certainly don’t see what could go wrong here. Last month alone, a new investor base the size of Los Angeles — many of whom may be only semi-literate — piled into Chinese equities which have nearly doubled in the space of 8 months on the back of margin debt that can now be measured as a percentage of GDP and volatility is at a 5-year high. Everything should be fine.”

Rising Optimism Fuels Deal Rebound At the current pace, M&A volume for the full year would exceed $3.7 trillion, making it the second-biggest year in history.

(…) And after a decade of productivity gains and cash hoarding, many companies are in search of new earnings sources. Mergers and acquisitions of rivals can deliver that through margin improvement and growth opportunities, says Blair Effron, co-founder of Centerview Partners LLC.

The deal-advisory firm has worked on some of this year’s biggest mergers, including the combination of Kraft Foods Group Inc. and H.J. Heinz Co., valued at more than $50 billion.

“Executives in all sectors are saying: ‘We have a good stock price, a good financing market and our business is well in hand. It’s time to think about something more expansive, like M&A,’ ” Mr. Effron says. (…)

To be sure, deal making is still running behind the pace of 2007, when companies struck $4.3 trillion worth of combinations. Helping to boost the numbers then, private-equity firms made acquisitions at an unprecedented clip.

Such activity is lower now partly because some of those deals fell short of expectations. The current M&A wave is centered around traditional company-to-company mergers.

Deal volume as measured by number of transactions remains sluggish. A total of 9,932 mergers has been agreed to so far this year, compared with 10,861 in the same period in 2014. (…)

Beset by concerns over the health of some of its weaker countries, deal activity in Europe is lagging despite the boost from the BG deal announced Wednesday.

At the height of the M&A boom in 2007, activity was busier in Europe than the Americas. (…)

In an interview Wednesday, Scott Wine, chief executive of vehicle maker Polaris Industries Inc., said: “The strength of the dollar doesn’t always help in selling our products, but it does help when we’re looking to do acquisitions, especially outside of the U.S.” (…)

Clock Apple Watch Review: You’ll Want One, but You Don’t Need One The company has succeeded in making the world’s best smartwatch

NEW$ & VIEW$ (8 APR. 2015): Wage jolt? Eurozone jolt! Oil jolt? Buyback jolt?

Job Openings Climb to Highest Level in 14 Years, But Hiring Declines

Job openings climbed to 5.13 million in February, up from 4.97 million in January and from 4.88 million in December. But the number of Americans actually hired to fill jobs declined—falling to 4.9 million in February, down from five million in January and 5.2 million in December,  according to the Labor Department’s Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, known as Jolts.

(…) The number of voluntary quits declined in February to 2.7 million from 2.8 million in January.

The report was not all dour news, however. The number of involuntary layoffs dropped to 1.6 million from 1.7 million in January and December. The rate of layoffs matched the lowest level seen since the year 2000.

And the increase in openings implies that employers have a desire for more workers, though they took a step back in their hiring in February. There were 1.7 workers for every job opening in February, compared with more than six for each available job during the worst of the crisis. The number of underemployed workers per job opening fell to 3.7 in February. Underemployment–which includes those who want a job but have become discouraged from searching, those marginally attached to the labor force, and also part-time workers who want full-time work–has remained elevated throughout the recovery.

Here’s the LT chart from CalculatedRisk:

Pointing up Bespoke warns:

In our recap of the monthly Employment Situation Report, sent to Bespoke Premium subscribers last Friday, we noted that while average hourly earnings ticked up, the bulk of the gain came from managerial employees.  The chart below illustrates this effect.

JOLTS 040715 5

The combination of the high AHE reading (driven by non-production and supervisory workers) and the JOLTS report suggests that labor market demand is focused in the specialized section of the labor market; this narrative also makes sense in the context of high openings rates.  We think that eventually the rubber will meet the road: production and non-supervisory employees with less specialized skill sets (for instance, lower education levels) will eventually start jumping ship, increasing the quit rate and filling openings.  Alternatively, wages will go up.  

The math here is pretty inescapable; the only question is when.  It’s worth pointing out that last Friday’s low NFP number (126,000 versus 245,000 expected) can be partially explained by employers not being able to find workers that suit their needs, hindering jobs created.  Of course, that optimistic outlook doesn’t explain the whole disappointment, but the February JOLTS data very much supports that explanation as part of the larger picture.

A meaningful rise in the ECI when inflation stagnates would hurt margins…

Americans Pull Back on Credit-Card Debt in February Americans pared down their credit-card balances in February, the latest sign consumers are spending cautiously to start the year.

Total debt balances increased by a seasonally adjusted $15.52 billion to $3.34 trillion in February, the Federal Reserve said Tuesday. That reflected a 5.59% gain at an annual rate.

The latest figures showed household debt grew by $10.8 billion in January, a smaller advance than the initially estimated $11.56  billion gain.

Revolving credit, reflecting credit-card debt, fell at a 4.97% annualized rate in February. That marked the third decline for the measure in the past four months.

Nonrevolving credit, representing mostly auto loans and student debt, grew at a 9.44% annualized rate in February. That was the largest monthly increase in two years. (Chart from Haver Analytics)

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Purchase Mortgage Applications Increased, Highest level since July 2013

The seasonally adjusted Purchase Index increased 7 percent from one week earlier, reaching its highest level since July 2013. … The unadjusted Purchase Index … was 12 percent higher than the same week one year ago

Eurozone outlook brightens amid broad-based upturn

(…) The PMIs are indicating somewhat sluggish GDP growth of 0.3% in the first quarter. However, the important message from the survey is that the pace of expansion looks set to gather pace in coming months.

Inflows of new business are rising at the strongest rate since the spring of 2011, and companies are responding to the upturn in demand by taking on staff to an extent not seen for three-and-a-half years.

Encouragingly, with France returning to growth, all of the four largest euro nations are now back in expansion, thereby indicating a broad-based upturn which should therefore be more self-sustaining.

The upturn continues to be led by Spain, where GDP looks set to have risen by 0.7-0.8% in the first quarter according to the PMI data, with the pace of expansion having picked up further in March.

Growth also accelerated in Germany and Italy, hitting eight-month highs in March in both cases. The surveys point to GDP growth of 0.4% in the first quarter in Germany but a more modest 0.1% in Italy.

France was the only one of the big-four eurozone countries to see growth weaken in March, though the PMIs suggest the economy is set to have grown by 0.2% in the first quarter.

The European Union’s statistics agency Wednesday said retail sales fell 0.2% from January, but were nevertheless 3.0% higher than in the same month of 2014 after strong rises since September.

Poor reporting from the WSJ. The reality is that excluding food and gas, real core sales rose 0.1% even after having jumped 10.6% annualized since October.

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OIL
U.S. Oil Prices Rise to 2015 High

The U.S. Energy Information Administration said U.S. crude-oil output, which hit a 42-year high in March, would peak in April and May before falling from June to September.

The forecast comes a day after analysts at Goldman Sachs predicted production would peak this month. (…)

Saudi Arabia boosts oil output in aggressive move to claw back market share

On Tuesday, Saudi Arabia’s oil minister, Ali al-Naimi, revealed that the kingdom’s oil production in March was 10.3-million barrels a day – a record high. (…)

Two weeks ago, Mr. al-Naimi announced that Saudi crude production in March would be about 10-million barrels a day, which is about 400,000 barrels a day more than over the November figure. Now he has revealed that March production landed at 10.3-million barrels a day, an increase of almost 700,000 barrels a day over February. (…)

Mr. al-Naimi said that Saudi Arabia will continue to produce about 10-million barrels a day. (…)

Why is Saudi Arabia opening the spigot? There is no doubt that country’s own domestic demand is rising, thanks to heavy investment in new refineries, requiring more production. But it also appears that Saudi Arabia is making renewed push for market share for fear that a gusher of Iranian oil will soon hit the export markets as the Iranian embargo is ratcheted back. (…)

In March, both Iraq and Libya managed to boost production in spite of the violence and chaos in those countries. As a result, OPEC production in March was about 31.5-million barrels a day, an increase of 1.2-million barrels over February and 2-million barrels over March, 2014. The March figure is well above the second-quarter estimate put out by the International Energy Agency. (…)

LIBYAN OIL PRODUCTION RISES TO 600,000 B/D: NOC’S SANALLA

Libyan oil production has edged up to 600,000 b/d, Mustafa Sanalla, the chairman of state-owned NOC, told Platts Tuesday, up from the most recently reported level of 565,000 b/d. The country’s oil production is now closing in on almost 50% of its total capacity of around 1.5 million b/d, with the rise coming despite the fact that its oil sector remains in disarray with the two rival governments looking to secure control over the industry.

Over the weekend, the crisis escalated as the officially recognized government based in Tobruk in the east of Libya issued a directive aimed at diverting oil revenues from the country’s central bank to its own accounts. (…)

Despite the bitter rivalry between the two governments and the emergence of Islamic State fighters targeting oil infrastructure, Libyan production continues to rise and shipping sources have even suggested that confidence was returning with an increasing number of shipowners prepared to send vessels to the country.
There is also some optimism that two of the country’s main export terminals — Es Sider and Ras Lanuf — could reopen in the coming days, which would enable fields that feed the ports to resume production.

Canadian crude exports set record in January as light crude tops 1 million b/d: NEB

Exports of Canadian crude oil continued to climb in January despite the plunge in oil prices, rising 100,000 b/d to a new record high of 3.125 million b/d, National Energy Board data Monday showed. Total crude exports topped 3 million b/d for the first time in December. Light crude exports accounted for the entirety of January’s rise, climbing 115,750 b/d to their own record of 1.05 million b/d, the first time 1 million b/d mark has been breached since reaching 1.03 million b/d in November 2013.

In contrast, heavy crude volumes declined by 6,850 b/d to 2.075 million b/d, though exports remained near their all-time high of 2.095 million b/d set in September.

Firms Rely on Repurchases to Boost Per-Share Metrics

Of companies in the S&P 500 index, 22 that reported lower profits still posted flat or positive earnings per share because they sopped up some of their outstanding stock, according to a Wall Street Journal review of their most recent fiscal years provided by S&P Capital IQ.

That’s down from 29 companies the year before, in part because last year’s 11% increase in stock prices made buybacks progressively more expensive.

International Business Machines Corp. was one of the biggest names to juice its EPS. The company’s net income from continuing operations fell almost 7%, but EPS grew nearly 2% because it reduced its share count by 8% last year. It was the second year in a row that buybacks helped IBM deliver per-share earnings growth despite sagging profits.

Others that turned lower earnings into higher EPS included Caterpillar Inc.,Exxon Mobil Corp. and UnitedHealth Group Inc.

Companies buy back stock for many reasons, such as to offset dilution from stock-based executive pay, or when management feels Wall Street is significantly undervaluing the business. Increasingly, companies are using repurchases to appease activist investors who demand they return excess cash.

20% Last year, 308 companies in the index ended the year with fewer shares compared with 282 the year before.

They spent $553 billion on buybacks in 2014, the most in a calendar year since the $589 billion record set in 2007.

Nothing really new here. In each quarter of 2014, 20% of S&P 500 companies reduced their share count by at least 4% (21.3% in Q4’14). In total, 68% of S&P 500 companies reduced their share count YoY and 31% increased it.

There is no general conspiracy. The S&P 500 Index share count has been pretty stable since 2006. From the most recent peak in 2011, the share count has diminished only 2.8%.

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