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NEW$ & VIEW$ (11 DEC. 2014): Dollar Woes, Cdn Housing, Praying for Santa

U.S. retail sales jump 0.7% in November after +0.5% in October.
China Injects $65 Billion Into Banks China’s central bank is pumping about 400 billion yuan (nearly $65 billion) into the country’s banking system, the latest step aimed at boosting Chinese banks’ lending abilities to help spur the economy.

About 500 billion yuan in loans made in September by China’s central bank to the country’s top five state-owned banks are coming due this month. Uncertainty over whether the central bank would renew those loans has led the banks to grow wary of lending out their funds. Meanwhile, banks in China have been squeezed in recent weeks because many investors shifted their funds out of banks and into the stock market.

By pumping in the additional 400 billion yuan of short-term credit, the central bank is hoping to signal to the market that it is ready to step in when liquidity is short, according to the people.

The fund injections so far have been seen as a short-term effort to spur growth without flooding China’s financial system with excess credit. The moves fall short of more-dramatic efforts such as cutting the amount of deposits banks have to keep in reserve. Still, by extending more credit as those past loans expire, Beijing is showing it is getting increasingly uncomfortable with the slow growth.

The PBOC hasn’t publicly disclosed the fund injection—which started on Wednesday—for fears of sending the market too strong a signal that it is broadly loosening its monetary policy, according to the people.

The PBOC is doing the opposite of the ECB which is all talk, little walk…

(…) But many Chinese bank executives said such targeted steps are inadequate to address banks’ funding problems. Overall deposits—traditionally the main source of cheap funding for Chinese banks—dropped by 950 billion yuan in the third quarter, to 112.7 trillion yuan, the first quarterly decline since the late 1990s. The total fell to 112.5 trillion yuan in October.

As deposits decline, banks face pressure to either cut lending or find other, more-costly sources of funds. Chinese banks issued 548.3 billion yuan of new loans in October, down from 857.2 billion yuan in September. (…)

Oil’s Decline Puts a Chill on Drilling U.S. energy companies are starting to cut drilling, lay off workers and slash spending in the face of an accelerating decline in oil prices, which hit a fresh five-year low on Wednesday.

The number of rigs drilling for oil in North Dakota and parts of Texas has started to edge down, new drilling permits have dropped sharply since October, and many companies say they are going to focus on their most profitable wells.

EOG Resources Inc. this week said it would shed many of its Canadian oil and gas fields, close its Calgary office and lay off employees there as it refocuses in the U.S. Matador Resources Co. of Dallas is contemplating temporarily leaving the prolific Eagle Ford Shale area in South Texas in favor of drilling elsewhere in Texas and New Mexico where it can make more money. (…)

Drilling permits issued in the U.S. dropped 36% between October and November, according to data from Drillinginfo, but remain 13% above their year earlier level.

Another sign of the energy industry’s pullback: the number of rigs drilling for oil in the Eagle Ford Shale in Texas has started to drop. Drilling in the nation’s second most active oil region hit a peak of 210 rigs in July but recently fell to 190 rigs. (…)

Japan Machinery Orders Fall The first fall in Japanese core machinery orders in five months suggests capital spending could be set to weaken as Japan struggles to recover from an April sales tax increase that pushed the economy into recession.

Machinery orders dropped a larger-than-expected 6.4% from September, the government said Thursday, indicating that capital spending could be set to weaken as Japan struggles to recover from an April sales tax increase that pushed the economy into recession. Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal and the Nikkei had estimated that core orders would decrease 2.1%.

The figures are widely regarded as a leading indicator of capital expenditure, but are also known for their volatility, limiting the conclusions that can be drawn from one month’s data. (…)

Dollar rise set to harm emerging markets

(…) Part of the problem is that falling prices of oil and other commodities have been more bad than good for emerging economies as a whole. Commodities exporters have lost more than importers have gained, says David Lubin, head of emerging markets economics at Citi Research. (…)

Even a commodities importer such as Turkey is suffering. Mr Lubin notes that some of the gains on Ankara’s current account from cheaper oil imports have been countered by what has happened to the capital account, where portfolio flows have slowed. The Turkish lira has resumed its slide after staging a recovery in the first quarter of this year.

In commodities-exporting Brazil, where in 2010 ministers complained that the weak US dollar was putting the country at an unfair disadvantage, the weak real has not delivered the gains expected. This is a demonstration that for Brazil and others, a depreciating currency is not enough. Its benefits have been outweighed by a failure to raise competitiveness through investment in productivity. (…)

Emerging markets currencies

More generally, exports have ceased to be an engine of expansion for emerging markets in recent years, possibly because the quick wins of globalisation from low-cost labour arbitrage are being used up.

In a note released this week Capital Economics, a consultancy, notes that the growth of emerging market exports has been weak — and lower than overall GDP growth — for several years. It concludes: “[T]he tailwinds which supported the staggering EM export growth rates in the 2000s can’t be counted on to provide the same support to growth over the coming years”.

As a result, the stronger dollar is proving more of a threat than an opportunity. This is not a novel phenomenon: emerging market economies and asset prices have historically suffered from a rising dollar. (…)

Deeper and broader capital markets have meant that much sovereign debt has shifted into local currency. But private borrowing is another matter. The Bank for International Settlements, the central bankers’ central bank, this week warned that rapidly growing debt issuance by emerging market corporations may have created substantial currency mismatches.

The sparsity of the data means that the extent of the problem is unknown. The BIS says that international banks had increased cross-border lending to emerging markets to a total of $3.1tn by mid-2014, mainly in dollars. Non-bank private sector borrowers from emerging markets issued almost $375bn in international debt securities in 2009-2012, more than double the rate in the four years before the crisis. And that despite the sobering experience during the crisis itself, when a sharp rise in the dollar caused tens of billions of dollars’ worth of losses to emerging market corporations and drove some into bankruptcy. (…)

The damage that falls in emerging market currencies can wreak cannot be known in advance. That such depreciations are likely to do more harm than good, however, is all too probable.

And there’s the falling Yen:

Bank of Korea Mulls Cutting Growth Forecast as Headwinds Build

Tumbling oil prices and the yen’s slide to a six-year low against the won this week are increasing uncertainty for an economy that’s shown signs of weakness in exports and industrial production in recent months. (…)

Exports from Asia’s fourth-biggest economy fell 1.9 percent in November from a year earlier. Industrial production contracted 3.2 percent in October from the same month last year, the biggest decline since January, according to figures released Nov. 28. (…)

Bank of Canada Says Housing Market as Much as 30% Overvalued

The market is more likely to achieve a soft landing than the destabilizing crash some economists have predicted, the Bank of Canada said Wednesday in its semiannual Financial System Review. That soft landing, however, has yet to materialize in part because mortgage rates, long at ultralow levels, declined even further this year. Competition among retail lenders is also spurring some riskier lending, it said.

The Bank of Canada hadn’t previous provided an estimate of the market’s overvaluation, and the top of its range—10% to 30%—was high enough to surprise some economists. (…)

The proportion of Canadian households with a total debt-to-income ratio above 250% has almost doubled to 12% since 2000, and those Canadians carry about 40% of all household debt in the country, the Bank of Canada said.

More uninsured mortgages are being issued to “riskier borrowers” by both banks and other financial players, some of which face less stringent oversight, it said. In Canada, home buyers must insure mortgages if they put down less than 20% of the cost of the home.

Consumers with low credit scores are responsible for about 25% of new auto loans, with many seeking longer amortization periods and high loan-to-value ratios, it added. (…)

FT Alphaville adds:

(…) Canadian households owe, on average, a little more than 160 per cent of their annual income. That’s up from about 130 per cent in 2006, 105 per cent in 2001, and 85 per cent in 1990. To be fair, mortgage rates have dropped by about 10 percentage points over that period so the actual burden on households is actually lower now than it was in the early 1990s:

The danger is that these burdens are concentrated on people who may have trouble repaying if house prices drop or incomes take a hit. For one thing, about a third of Canadians have no debt, so the average debt-to-income ratio of borrowers is probably a lot higher than the aggregate numbers suggest. (If the distribution of income among those with and without debt were similar, we could say that the average debt-to-income ratio for Canadian borrowers is around 240 per cent. We don’t know enough to say that with any conviction, however.)

The debt burden is highly skewed among borrowers. About 12 per cent of Canadian households owe at least 250 per cent of their income. That share is small, but it has doubled since 2000. Moreover, these ultra-indebted borrowers owe a little more than 40 per cent of all Canadian household debt, while 19 per cent of all household debt is owed by borrowers with debt-to-income ratios of at least 350 per cent:

As if that weren’t bad enough, the Bank of Canada estimates that the ultra-indebted tend to be younger, and therefore more exposed to job loss or wage cuts during downturns. (…)

Here’s the BOC chart:

The staff economists were struck by the relative stability of their estimate of overvaluation compared to the two previous boom-bust cycles in the early and late 1980s. (…)

They also found that Canadian housing markets seems to be just as overvalued as in Australia and New Zealand, two other anglophone commodity exporters that have served as havens for Chinese flight capital. As the economists drily note, “little is known about foreign investment in housing, and this is an area for further research.”

One thing we wonder about is the width of the error bars in the last few years. There is a gap of nearly 20 percentage points between the upper and lower bound of house price overvaluation right now, compared to about 5 percentage points in the years before 2007. Isn’t it worrying that the model is becoming so unreliable right as people’s concerns about overvaluation are becoming most acute?

Pointing upWe don’t want you to get too gloomy. The following footnote suggests that the Bank of Canada thinks that even under a really unpleasant scenario, the impact wouldn’t be nearly as bad as it was south of the border:

Any parallels to the U.S. housing crash and its impact on the financial system are, however, limited. First, unlike in the United States, nearly all mortgages in Canada are full-recourse loans. Second, there is no evidence that the poor underwriting standards that supported the explosion of subprime mortgages in the United States prior to the crisis are present in Canada. Third, much of the Canadian housing finance system is backstopped by CMHC-guaranteed mortgages and, ultimately, by a fiscally sound federal government.

Then again, the Fed was pretty sanguine about the US housing market before that bubble burst, too.

Santa, Baby, the Market Needs You Now

For investors, Santa can’t come fast enough.

The Dow has been down more than 200 points during trading two days in a row; on Wednesday it closed down closer to 300 points. In the oil market, the wheels seem have come completely off the bus. Greece is back in political crisis. Europe is barely staying out of recession, barely avoiding deflation. The crash in the oil market has people concerned about defaults on the junk bonds that financed so many shale-oil projects. Also, it’s all coming at a time when the Fed is debating how and when to change policy directions, and the world’s other central banks seem unable to fill the void. (…)

In fact, some weakness at this point in December has a historical precedent, Bespoke Investment Group noted. “The recent declines have been pretty typical for a December,” they write. The last month of the year tends to open strongly. From about the sixth on to mid-December, however, it usually gives away those gains. “It isn’t until the second half of the month when the typical seasonal December strength kicks into gear.”

This month, the S&P 500 rallied a bit more than 1% through the fifth, and this week has “been under a fair amount of selling pressure.” After Wednesday’s rout, it’s down 2% on the month. “If the typical seasonal pattern holds, don’t be surprised to see more short-term weakness, before a strong second half to the month.”

Writing on the same theme, technical analyst Chad Gassaway wrote, “when the second week of December has traded lower, the following week closed higher by 0.97% with a 79.17% win rate since 1970.” (…)

Raymond James’ Jeffrey Saut had this last week:

According to “Moneychimp,” since 1950 the SPX has been “up” during December 49 years and “down” 15 years with an average monthly gain of 1.62%. I would note that if there is going to be some pre-Santa rally weakness, it historically comes in the first two weeks of December. If those historical odds hold this year, it is going to put tremendous pressure on the 90% of money managers that are underperforming their respective benchmarks. Indeed, even from most financial advisors I get the question, “Would you please explain in one of your letters why our portfolios are underperforming the S&P 500.” The answer to said question is pretty easy. You probably have too much cash and have too big a position in international investments. I would suggest advisors tell their clients just what their benchmark is. Additionally, if you are underperforming, but doing so with half of the S&P 500’s “risk” (beta), then you are a “risk-adjusted” financial advisor and have nothing to apologize for to your clients.

From Bespoke Investment:

NEW$ & VIEW$ (10 DECEMBER 2014)

Small Business Confidence Hits a 7.5 Year High

(…) Not only was November’s reading the highest since 2007, but it also took the headline index comfortably back above its historical average of 96.0 since 2000.

This looks like an upside breakout.

JOLTS Mixed; Private Sector Momentum Continues

The Job Opening and Labor Market Survey (JOLTS) showed continued momentum in the private sector labor market, with the Private Quit Rate holding steady at 2.2%, its 9th month in a row at or above 2%. Total Quits fell slightly. (…)

The total separations rate (quits, layoffs, and other separations such as retirements or deaths combined) rose to its highest level of the cycle.  While there are demographic effects that have a significant impact on this particular indicator that do not have as much influence over Quits or Layoffs, it’s still a notable high and indicates confidence on the part of workers.

Looking at Total Job Openings, the number of openings is just a hair below the cycle high set in August after a decline in September, and stands at 4.834 million, its 9th month above 4.0 million.

Looking at the same statistic via a rate (instead of gross numbers) shows that while total openings declined, private openings continue to rise steadily.

In all, the JOLT report confirms the strength in November’s payroll employment.

CASS FREIGHT INDEX REPORT November Freight Activity Higher than Expected; All Signs Point to a Strong End to 2014

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China Inflation Softens

Producer prices fell 2.7% during the month, the statistics agency said Wednesday, for the 33rd consecutive month of decline, highlighting lower global prices for commodities such as energy, ferrous metals and chemicals as well as excess capacity in many Chinese industries.

China Car Sales Hit the Brakes

(…) The China Association of Automobile Manufacturers on Wednesday said passenger-car sales in November rose 4.7% from a year earlier to about 1.8 million vehicles. It was the weakest gain since February 2013, when the weeklong Spring Festival holiday dented sales.

    

The data come after some mass-market brands recorded declining sales last month. Nissan and Honda Motor Co. both saw November sales fall 12% from a year ago. Ford Motor Co.’s passenger-vehicle sales fell 5%.

Lackluster sales are leading to growing inventories for some brands. Data from the China Automobile Dealers Association show that beginning from June dealers have begun to hold inventories of between 10% and 20% higher than the same period a year earlier. (…)

In China, analysts regard one-and-a-half months’ worth of cars on lots as the “alert level” where dealers should begin to be concerned about high inventory. By contrast, dealers in developed markets can hold bigger inventories mainly because they rely less on selling new cars to make money.

In October, the latest month for which CADA data is available, dealers on average held 1.48 months’ inventory. (…)

Car makers are also holding more inventory, analysts say. Jochen Siebert, managing director of consulting firm JSC Automotive, estimated current inventory held by car makers stands at 1.2 million cars—roughly double the number held last year.

America the frugal: US Consumer Sentiment Survey The slow start to the US holiday shopping season is no anomaly. McKinsey’s latest Consumer Economic Sentiment survey finds that some six years after the Great Recession, Americans remain reluctant spenders.

image(…) Consumers are still worried about losing their jobs (39 percent in 2014), and 40 percent of the consumers we surveyed said they are coping with the challenge of living paycheck to paycheck, up from 31 percent in 2012.

The significant economic pressure that families earning less than $75,000 a year feel has caused many of them to make spending adjustments in order to make ends meet. Roughly 40 percent of these households say they are making changes, including cutting back and delaying purchases, as compared with 22 percent of those in households earning at least $150,000 a year. (…)

While the number of consumers cutting back on spending has stabilized, Americans are still pinching pennies. Decreasing purchases of high-end brands and doing more one-stop shopping to reduce the number of trips are just as popular as they were last year, with 40 percent of consumers saying they have cut their spending over the past 12 months. An even bigger proportion of Americans (55 percent) say they continue to look for ways to save money, including paying more attention to prices, using coupons more often, shopping around to get the best deals, and buying more items in bulk. (…)

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Almost 40 percent say they will probably never go back to their prerecession approach to buying. Twenty nine percent say they now have new attitudes and values about spending, a figure that’s up from 17 percent in 2010. An additional 24 percent claim that their opposition to increased spending is the result of a change in their economic situation.

Those who do want to return to previous spending levels say they are waiting until they pay down enough debt or rebuild their savings (32 percent). One-quarter are waiting until they are back at their old income levels.

Crude Oil Prices Continue to Fall

There was more negative news for prices late Tuesday, as the U.S. Energy Information Administration cut its 2015 global demand forecast for oil by 200,000 barrels a day to an average of 92.3 million barrels a day next year, because of weaker global economic growth prospects.

Oil price plunge means survival of fittest Crude at $70 puts at least 1.5m b/d of projects for 2016 at risk
BP expects $1bn job cuts charge Energy group seeks to shed several thousand staff
SHALE OIL: PAPA KNOWS BEST

Extracts from a WSJ interview last Saturday with Mark Papa who retired last July as CEO of EOG Resources, the drilling company that he made into the largest crude-oil producer in the lower 48 over his decade and a half as chief.

(…) As Mr. Papa reads the global market, the price slump is the result of “a bit more production” that has made all the difference—an additional million or so barrels of new oil daily amid world-wide demand of about 92 million barrels a day. Some of that is “unanticipated supply coming out of places such as Libya,” he says, but the major driver is U.S. shale oil.

In 2012, Mr. Papa explains, the year-over-year growth of domestic shale oil was about a million barrels daily, and last year growth slowed to 800,000. “The general feeling was that we’ve had flush production and the easy stuff had been had, and as you got into the third year, it was becoming a little more difficult to achieve this tremendous boost in production.” About 700,000 barrels for 2014 was the consensus.

Instead, “to the surprise of most people,” Mr. Papa says, including himself, daily U.S. production growth this year surged to 1.2 million barrels on average. Now “the expectation is or was at $100 oil that the U.S. would continue to grow at a million barrels per day per year, per year, per year. People forecast, my gosh, we have more oil on the market than we thought, and next year we’re going to have an even bigger surplus of supply over demand, and the following year even more, and so perception became reality and all of sudden—boom.” (…)

What happened is that “a step-change efficiency improvement” sneaked up this year as technology advanced and drillers found ways to make wells more productive and extract more oil from the same play.

The drop in oil prices doesn’t mean the U.S. is heading into a boom-and-bust crash, Mr. Papa believes, but momentum will “decelerate considerably” after about six months. “U.S. oil production growth is going to slow in 2015, 2016, 2017 simply because E&P companies”—the industry term for Exploration & Production—“are not going to have the cash flow to reinvest.”

The major U.S. shale fields—the Bakken regional formation in North Dakota, the Eagle Ford in south Texas, the Permian basin in west Texas and southeast New Mexico—“still yield positive economic returns” with oil at $70 or even in the mid-$60s, Mr. Papa says. “Fringe areas” like the mid-continent Mississippian or the DJ basin in the Rocky Mountains will become less attractive. And some highly leveraged drillers may be shaken out if prices remain low, while for others introducing more discipline and incentives for innovation. (…)

“Where we sit today with shale is the same place a petroleum engineer sat in the 1940s with a conventional sandstone reservoir,” Mr. Papa says. The best recovery rate then was 10% to 15%, leaving the rest underground, much like shale now—but since has climbed to 40% or 50%. The technology doesn’t yet exist for shale to yield similar shares, but Mr. Papa is confident that over the next 10 years it will emerge, “which basically means we’re going to double or more the amount of oil we’re going to recover. . . . Technology is always going to find a way to unlock each increment of resources.” (…)

Important chart via ScotiaCapital:image

EARNINGS WATCH

Factset calculates that analysts have cut their Q4 estimates for the Energy sector by 20.5% (to $9.49 from $11.94) since September 30.

EI_12.5.14.png

The estimated earnings growth rate for the S&P 500 Index in Q4 2014 is 3.4%, down from +8.3% on September 30 but Energy is only one reason since

Nine of the ten sectors have lower growth rates today (compared to September 30) due to downward revisions to earnings estimates. (…) The Materials sector has recorded the second largest decline in expected earnings growth (to -4.0% from 6.9%) since the beginning of the quarter. (…)

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Not only has the estimated earnings growth rate for Q4 declined over the past two months, the estimated earnings growth rates for the first half of 2015 have come down sharply over this same time frame as well. For Q1 2015, and Q2 2015, analysts are currently predicting earnings growth rates of 5.6% and 6.8%, respectively. These earnings growth rates are well below the estimated growth rates of 9.5% and 10.4% for these same two quarters back on September 30. Similar to Q4, most of the decline in the expected earnings growth rates for both quarters can be attributed to analysts lowering earnings forecasts for companies in the Energy sector.

But there is this now:

Citigroup Sees $2.7 Billion Legal Hit Citigroup said it would spend $2.7 billion to bolster its legal reserves, wiping out the bulk of its expected fourth-quarter profit.
Bank of America, Citi Give Weak Outlooks for Trading Revenue

Bank of America’s chief executive, Brian Moynihan , said at an industry conference sponsored by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. on Tuesday that fourth-quarter trading revenue would be lower than both year-ago levels and the third quarter’s.

Citigroup’s CEO Michael Corbat estimated that the New York bank’s markets revenue would be down year-over-year by about 5%.

Fed Sets Tough New Capital Rule for Big Banks The Federal Reserve proposed tough new capital requirements for the biggest U.S. banks. J.P. Morgan Chase would face a capital shortfall of $21 billion under the proposal.

Eight of the largest U.S. banks will need fatter capital cushions as part of U.S. regulators’ latest efforts to make the financial system less risky.

The biggest impact will be felt by J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., the nation’s largest bank by assets, which is $21 billion short of the requirement, according to Fed officials. Fed Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer —in an apparent misstep—disclosed during an open meeting that J.P. Morgan is the only one of the eight banks to face a shortfall under the proposed rule. Fed staff had closely guarded details of the proposal’s impact on specific firms.

The proposal, which will be phased in starting in 2016 and take full effect in 2019, is aimed squarely at pushing big banks to shrink, an outcome regulators were explicit in saying they hope to encourage to reduce the likelihood a firm’s failure could require bailouts or damage the broader economy.

To meet the new capital charge, banks can either fund themselves with significantly more equity—which tends to be more expensive than deposits or borrowed money—than their smaller peers. Or they can get smaller and make other changes that would reduce the size of their extra capital levy. (…)

Most of the big, systemically important firms are already at the required levels but are likely to build larger capital cushions to keep them well above the requirement, analysts said, which could mean retaining a portion of their earnings every year. J.P. Morgan also is expected to meet the higher amount by retaining earnings. That could squeeze the ability of the big banks to return capital to their shareholders through higher stock dividends and stock buybacks, increasing market pressure on the banks to shrink or even break up. (…)

Sleeping half-moon “This was not a great night for the banks,” said Jaret Seiberg, an analyst with Guggenheim Securities. If Fed officials include the surcharge in the minimum capital level big banks must meet to pass the Fed’s annual stress test—which Fed officials say they are contemplating—“then it could delay for years the ability of the biggest banks to boost their return of capital to shareholders. And this could all lead to more shareholder pressure on the biggest banks to free up capital by divesting businesses and getting smaller.”