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)

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NEW$ & VIEW$ (1 MAY 2014)

Fed Cuts Bond Buys, Sees Growth Pickup The Federal Reserve said Wednesday that it would reduce its bond purchases to $45 billion a month and that it was starting to see a growth pickup in recent weeks after a harsh winter that hit the U.S. economy.

The central bank also stuck to its guidance on short-term interest rates, saying they would remain near zero for a “considerable time” after the bond-buying program ends later this year.

The Fed’s move came after a government report Wednesday showed the U.S. economy barely grew in the first quarter. The central bank’s policy-making committee acknowledged the first-quarter slowdown was worse than expected, saying in a statement that activity “slowed sharply.” Previously, the group had just said activity slowed.

Still, officials nodded to signs of economic improvement in March and April, suggesting they aren’t too worried about the winter slowdown.

Household spending “appears to be rising more quickly,” Fed officials said. Recent reports on retail sales and auto sales have been stronger than expected. But they said business fixed investment had “edged down” and repeated their view from March that the “recovery in the housing sector remained slow.” (…)

Ms. Yellen now enjoys an unusual period of calm. All nine voting members of the Fed’s policy committee supported the changes announced in the statement. That included Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota, who dissented in March.

The Fed committee currently consists of four Washington-based governors and five regional Fed bank presidents, for a total of nine voting members. Normally the committee has 12 voting members, but the Washington board now has three vacancies. Regional Fed bank presidents rotate on the committee from among 12 regional banks.

The committee has voted unanimously for action at two of its three meetings this year. That represents an unusually high degree of consensus for central-bank policy makers who have often been divided in the years since the financial crisis. Ms. Yellen has focused on maintaining consensus since taking the helm.

Economy Starts Year With Whimper

Gross domestic product, the broadest measure of goods and services produced across the economy, grew at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 0.1% in the first quarter, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. It marked the second-worst quarterly performance since the recession ended in mid-2009.

Harsh weather likely slowed first-quarter business investment and discretionary consumer spending. It could have even blocked exports—which notched their sharpest decline since the recovery began—from reaching ports.

(…) While some easing was broadly expected, the severity of the first-quarter slowdown surprised many economists, who forecast a growth at a 1.1% rate in a Wall Street Journal survey. (…)

Forecasting firm Macroeconomic Advisers projects the economy will grow at a 3.5% rate in the second quarter and expects growth in that vicinity for the rest of the year.

The primary driver of the latest weaker-than-expected growth figure: Exports fell at the fastest rate since the recession ended, declining at a 7.6% pace in the first quarter. The performance partly reflects shaky economies in Europe and Asia generating poor demand, rather than underlying weakness in the U.S. (…)

Cold weather also could have played a role in tumbling exports, said Jason Thomas, director of research at the Carlyle Group. Reports from the private-equity firm’s 200 portfolio companies indicate about half that drop in exports could be attributed to shipments failing to reach U.S. ports due to weather delays, boosting the prospects for a spring pickup.

“We had the best backdrop for growth entering a year since 2007,” Mr. Thomas said. “I think it’s likely that we’ll still get the growth rate we expected.”

Wednesday’s report showed the pace of consumer spending on goods rose at a mere 0.4% during the quarter. That was the smallest gain since 2011, a sign of fewer discretionary purchases.

But households spent more on services, including energy to heat homes and health care, causing total consumer spending to rise at a 3.0% pace, only slightly below the fourth quarter’s 3.3% rate.

If not for the increased spending on health care and utilities, the economy would have contracted in the first quarter. Medical spending rose at a time when millions of Americans were enrolling in insurance plans created under the new health-care law.

Residential fixed investment—spending on home building and improvements—declined at a 5.7% rate in first quarter. Cold weather likely halted some building. But other factors, including mortgage rates that are a percentage point higher than a year earlier, could be dissuading families from moving.

Business spending on equipment fell at a 5.5% pace in the first three months of the year. That was the largest decline since 2009. The slowdown in investment coincided with weaker hiring during the quarter. (…)

A separate Labor Department report Wednesday showed the employment-cost index, a broad measure of pay and benefits, rose a seasonally adjusted 0.3% from January through March. That was slower than the 0.5% gain in the fourth quarter of 2013. (…)

An analysis from Joan McCullough, East Shore Partners (via John Mauldin)

Consumption clocked in at a totally respectable 2.04%.
The breakdown?
On goods, the q/q figures look like this: Q4 0.66. Q1 0.08. Oops. Wrong way. But:
ON SERVICES: 1.96 up from 1.61.
What falls under Services spending?
Household Consumption.
Which includes spending on Housing and Utilities. And Healthcare. Which by the way, were the run-away leaders to GDP at 0.73 and 1.10, respectively, both up significantly from the prior quarter.
Ain’t that a real commentary about life in these United States? Your biggest concerns: the roof over your head, utilities and the mess that is healthcare spending. From the subsidizing heightened by Obamacare … to the outrageous OOP costs it has triggered.
These are all necessities. And this is where the spending has gone. Once again, there was no other major GDP component that contributed outside of Consumption. On Spending. Necessary spending to boot. OMAB.
PS For the heck of it, we point out that also under Services spending, spending on recreation services and food services/accommodations both went negative. Makes sense. By the time you pay the rent, the light bill and your healthcare premium or OOP, it’s you, Netflix and a bag of microwaveable popcorn.
 I see I hit a nerve.
The good bit about today’s lousy GDP? The revisions are TBD. And even if they don’t throw us the required heater, when it gets this bad, the only way to go is up. So coming off no growth, +2% looks like a hot, steamin’ deal.

U.S. Consumer Spending Surged 0.9% in March Consumer spending rose in March at its fastest pace in nearly five years, providing fresh evidence that the U.S. economy gained strength with the arrival of spring.

Personal consumption—spending on everything from electricity to sliced bread—surged a seasonally adjusted 0.9% from February, the Commerce Department said Thursday. That was its largest gain since August 2009. Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal had predicted a 0.6% rise in consumer spending.

Spending on physical goods rose 1.4% in March, including a 2.6% rise in spending on durable goods. Spending on services grew 0.7%.

Total consumer spending in February was revised up to 0.5% growth from an earlier estimate of 0.3%, providing a stronger foundation headed into March.

Consumer spending generates more than two-thirds of U.S. economic output. It sagged with the arrival of unusually harsh winter weather, growing a mere 0.1% in December and 0.2% in January following a muscular 0.6% rise last November. Still, its growth propped up the nation’s economy in the first quarter, helping offset big declines in exports and business investment.

Personal income rose in March by a seasonally adjusted 0.5%. Economists had predicted a 0.4% rise from February.

The personal saving rate fell to 3.8% in March, its lowest level since it hit a postrecession low of 3.6% in January 2013. It had been 4.2% in February.

Prices ticked up in March. The price index for personal consumption expenditures, which is the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge, rose a seasonally adjusted 0.2% from February, and rose 0.2% excluding the volatile categories of food and energy.

The price index was up 1.1% in March from a year earlier, and rose 1.2% excluding food and energy. That is up from February, when prices rose 0.9% from a year earlier, but inflation remains well below the Fed’s 2% target.

Pointing up LOW U.S. INFLATION: IT’S THE WEATHER!

Beginning in 2008, a pair of economists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology began tracking prices across the Internet to see if they could beat the Labor Department at its own game. Their task? Estimate the U.S. rate of inflation accurately before the government released its Consumer Price Index.

Dubbed the Billion Prices Project, that effort provided an amazingly close estimate of the CPI. Until quite recently, that is.

The PriceStats index, first developed by Alberto Cavallo and Roberto Rigobon at MIT, is part of a growing body of research that seeks to marry computer science and economics to gather real-time data online. The Internet-based measures hope to predict and even outdo official government statistics, and the gap between PriceStats and the CPI in recent months is a compelling test case as to which approach is better.

Their Web-based measure, now known as the State Street PriceStats inflation series, has tracked the official CPI so closely that it is frequently cited as proof that the Labor Department’s measure is honest and can be independently verified. So does the emerging gap reflect that the government measure is being cooked?

Actually, what’s happening is less sinister and more interesting, according to Jessica Donohue, the senior managing director at State Street who helps oversee the index. The gap could be explained by bad weather, and the superiority of online data in measuring commerce that increasingly takes place over computer screens, not cash registers.

To examine the divergence, Donohue looked at the monthly change in the two series, and quickly honed in on a split during the fourth quarter of 2013.

“It was really as you headed into November and December that the PriceStats series really ratcheted up while the official CPI had two months of going down,” she says. What else, she asks, happened in the last three months of 2013? “We had an overly harsh winter that started early. So people were buying through their online purchases more than their bricks-and-mortar purchases.”

If bad weather depressed foot traffic at stores, then retailers may have kept prices somewhat lower to keep the business coming in. Yet online, where purchases continue snow or shine, retailers had no need to offer discounts to bring in sales.

“The CPI is very much a bricks-and-mortar indicator and the PriceStats index can get a handle on demand even when weather conditions are tough,” she said. For the CPI, the Labor Department sends hundreds of price collectors into stores to record prices on the shelf. The PriceStats index, by contrast, scrapes the prices off websites.

And she has a bold prediction for the inflation outlook. Now that people aren’t hindered by weather, the CPI should converge toward the PriceStats Index, and not the other way around.

That could be welcome news for the Federal Reserve and for others who fret about inflation running too low. The official measure of inflation climbed 1.5 percent in March from a year earlier. The PriceStats measure, by contrast, has risen 2.5 percent. If Donohue and PriceStats are right, the disinflation scare of recent months could soon be over.

Punch 2.5% could be welcome news? Hmmm…

S Korean exports leap to 15-month high Economy reaps benefit of strong sales to US

South Korean exports rose 9 per cent in April from a year earlier – the highest figure for 15 months – as strong sales to the US reinforced hopes of an improved performance this year in this export-dependent economy.

Exports to the US grew 19.3 per cent, while sales to the ASEAN group of nations – which together account for more than a sixth of the country’s exports – increased 17 per cent, the trade ministry said on Thursday.

However, the encouraging export data were tempered by a weaker performance in China, where exports rose only 2.4 per cent. China is overwhelmingly South Korea’s biggest trade partner, and the countries are hoping to reinforce this relationship with a trade agreement later this year, but South Korean policy makers are watching closely China’s slowing growth and signs of stress in its financial sector. There was an even worse result in the EU, where exports declined 3.2 per cent.

NEW$ & VIEW$ (30 APRIL 2014)

THE BIG WAGER

National Bank Financial’s Stéphane Marion is one of the best economists around.

As the Federal Reserve continues to assess the economic situation, we see signs of tangible improvement in the transmission of monetary policy to the real economy that could trigger a shift in Fed guidance in the coming months. If small businesses decide to expand, than we have a real economic expansion on our hands (Mrs Yellen continues to use the word “recovery” when referring to the current cycle). As today’s Hot Charts show, commercial & industrial loans surged to a new all-time high last month, a development that suggests more capital expenditure (CAPEX) as we move into H2 2014. Historically, a CAPEX cycle that grows longer in the tooth will translate into more hires and rising wages. We have positive developments on both fronts. As shown, the proportion of small businesses that are currently increasing worker compensation is actually now back to its pre-recession level and hiring plans remain on an uptrend. We see U.S. GDP growth accelerating to around 4% in Q2 2014.

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If you missed my April 25 post THE BIG WAGER, I suggest you take a look. You will find more evidence that Ms. Yellen is about to change her rhetoric… and her guidance, likely towards her March 21 “6 month slip” which looks less and less like a slip.

Fed Watchers Ready to Connect the Dots  Central bankers likely will stay the course on reducing monetary stimulus when the Federal Reserve’s latest conclave ends Wednesday.

(…) Back in March, Fed officials thought the weakness in economic data probably stemmed from a frigid winter. Good news since then on employment, confidence, retail sales and industrial production during a more temperate March now leave less doubt.

So, notwithstanding an anticipated tepid first-quarter economic growth number scheduled for release just hours before the Fed’s meeting ends, officials almost certainly will stay the course on reducing monetary stimulus. That means a further $10 billion cut in monthly bond purchases to $45 billion, and nothing to change traders’ consensus that short-term interest rates will begin rising in the summer of 2015. (…)

Home-Price Gains Cooled in February

The Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller home price index covering 10 major U.S. cities increased 13.1% in the year ended in February. Case-Shiller’s 20-city price index advanced 12.9%, less than the 13.1% expected by economists and down from 13.4% for all of 2013.

On an unadjusted basis, both the 10-city and 20-city indexes were unchanged in February over January. Seasonally adjusted, the 10-city index was up 0.9%, while the 20-city measure increased 0.8%.

U.S. mortgage market index hits lowest since December 2000: MBA

The Mortgage Bankers Association said its seasonally adjusted index of mortgage application activity, which includes both refinancing and home purchase demand, fell 5.9 percent to 333.2 in the week ended April 25. That was the lowest level since December 2000, the group said.

“Purchase application volume remains weak despite other data which indicated the overall pace of economic growth is picking up. The combination of higher rates, new regulation and tight inventory are all leading to a weaker spring market than we have seen in years,” said Mike Fratantoni, MBA’s chief economist.

The MBA’s seasonally adjusted index of refinancing applications declined 6.9 percent, while the gauge of loan requests for home purchases, a leading indicator of home sales, fell 4.4 percent.

Enrollment in Student-Debt Forgiveness Programs Soars in 2014

Two federal programs that offer to wipe away huge accumulations of student debt have grown at a rapid clip this year, putting them among the government’s fastest-growing forms of financial assistance.

The Journal reported last week that enrollment in the plans—which allow students to rack up big debts and then forgive the unpaid balance after a set period—surged nearly 40% in the second half of 2013.

The growth of the programs hasn’t slowed. The number of borrowers in the income-based repayment programs climbed 24% between January through March to 1.63 million, the Education Department said.  The amount of debt absorbed grew by 22% to $88 billion—now nearly a 10th of all outstanding federal student debt.

At that rate, the government took on more than $5.3 billion per month in potential student-debt liability in the first three months of the year.

Interest in the programs began to surge in the middle of last year as the Obama administration promoted the programs through emails to borrowers and on the Internet. In the nine months through March, enrollment is up a staggering 72%.

The programs’ popularity comes as top law schools have taken to advertising their own plans that offer to cover a graduate’s federal loan repayments until outstanding debt is forgiven—opening the way for free or greatly subsidized degrees at taxpayer expense.

Expanding use of the programs, which have been rolled out and enhanced over the past several years, have mixed implications for borrowers and taxpayers. The programs cap borrowers’ monthly payments at 10% to 15% of their discretionary income, often reducing monthly bills by hundreds of dollars. Those borrowers are now more likely to stay current on their payments, avoiding default and the resulting damage to their credit.

(…)  outside groups are warning that the income-based repayment programs could increase taxpayer costs down the road, thanks to generous debt-forgiveness provisions. Those working in “public service”—government agencies or nonprofits—make payments for 10 years and then have the remaining balance forgiven. Those in the private sector have balances forgiven after 20 or 25 years, depending the specific plan.

The Brookings Institution, a centrist think tank in Washington, said in a report earlier this month the most popular income-based repayment plan could eventually cost taxpayers $14 billion a year. (…)

Euro-Zone Inflation Picks Up

The European Union’s statistics agency Wednesday said consumer prices rose by 0.7% from April 2013, a pickup from the 0.5% rate of inflation recorded in the 12 months to March, but well below the European Central Bank’s target of just under 2%.

April marked the seventh straight month in which the inflation rate has been below 1.0%. When the inflation rate fell below that level in October 2013—a sharp drop from 1.1% to 0.7%–the ECB quickly responded with a cut in its benchmark interest rate. Since then, however, it has done little, other than to pledge that it will act decisively if it fears that inflation is heading too far off its medium-term target of just below 2%.

Some of the weakness in the inflation measure during April was down to falling energy prices, which dropped 1.2% from April 2013, a smaller decline than the 2.1% recorded in March. But prices for other goods and services that are more sensitive to domestic demand rose at a slower pace, with prices for food, alcohol and tobacco up 0.7% on the year compared with a 1.0% rise in March.

But with services prices rising more strongly in response to higher demand at Easter, the core measure of inflation—which excludes volatile items such as energy and food—picked up to 1.6% from 1.1%.

German Unemployment Falls a Fifth Month as Economy Grows

The number of people out of work decreased for a fifth month, dropping a seasonally-adjusted 25,000 to 2.872 million, the Nuremberg-based Federal Labor Agency said today. Economists forecast a decline of 10,000, according to the median of 25 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. The adjusted jobless rate was unchanged at 6.7 percent, the lowest level in two decades.

France urges action to lower euro’s value Valls wants loose monetary policy alongside growth initiatives

(…) “because the level of the euro is too high”.

BoJ cuts growth forecast amid export fears Japan’s central bank defies calls for additional easing

According to the BoJ’s new projections, presented hours after the central bank kept its basic monetary policy settings on hold for the 14th meeting in a row, real gross domestic product will grow by 1.1 per cent in the fiscal year to March 2015. In its last interim forecast in January, the BoJ said it was expecting growth of 1.4 per cent, down a notch from its October estimate of 1.5 per cent.

The BoJ said “sluggishness” in emerging economies was the main reason for Japan’s muted export performance, but added that the steady shift of production overseas was also to blame. The increase in consumption tax, from 5 per cent to 8 per cent, would also have “adverse effects on households’ real disposable income”, the central bank said. (…)

Otherwise, the BoJ’s forecasts were bullish, signalling confidence that progress towards its 2 per cent target for consumer price inflation would continue, despite another consumption tax increase – to 10 per cent – scheduled for October 2015.

Consumer price inflation excluding the impact of tax rises would average 1.3 per cent in the current fiscal year, the BoJ said, rising to 1.9 per cent in fiscal 2015 and 2.1 per cent in fiscal 2016.

Russia in Recession Now, IMF Says Russia has already slid into recession and its central bank should be ready to tighten monetary policy, the head of the International Monetary Fund’s mission to Russia, Antonio Spilimbergo, said.

Hit by geopolitical crisis in neighboring Ukraine, Russia is on track to post a 0.2% economic growth this year, the IMF forecasts, slashing its growth projection from 1.3%. (…)

Concerns about the war-of-sanctions between Moscow and the West have already hurt investment activity, fueled capital flight and sent the ruble to all-time lows. Russia has already lost more than $60 billion in net capital outflow in the first quarter of this year and the IMF now sees 2014 net outflow at $100 billion.

CHINA: SLOW AND SLOWER

First, from The Short Side of Long blog:

Chinese Economic Activity Source: Standard Chartered Research

As we can see in Chart 9 above, recent components of the so called Li Keqiang Index have been rather weak. Railway freight is currently contracting from a year ago, while electricity production is growing at just above 5% from a year earlier. At the same time, recent loan figures show continued slowing in the month of March,with loan growth at the slowest rate since 2008 financial crisis.

While Manufacturing PMI readings have been average at best, other indicators also point to slow economic activity. Recent Producer Prices Index (PPI) remains in deflation territory and is currently down for 25th consecutive month. It seems that China is definitely working off at least some of the excesses it has built during the 2009 credit stimulus.

CEBM Research adds:

After the Spring Festival, property sales experienced a brief rebound before dropping again. Looking at the front end of the property industry value chain, excavator working hours have been slowing on a Y/Y basis, indicating weak housing starts. At the back end of the value chain, glass prices have continued to trend lower after Spring Festival. Also, auto sales dropped Y/Y in March. The slide in auto sales comes as no surprise given that property and auto consumption are closely linked. (…)

As for external demand, the CCFI (China Containerized Freight Index) continued to trend lower, showing no sign of export acceleration. According to our CEBM Global Mfg PMI Diffusion Index, China Mfg PMI is subject to downside risk in Q2. Taking into account seasonality, China Mfg PMI could fall back after April.

Confused smile As an aside, much is being made these days from China’s regional GDP reports which point to slower growth than suggested by the national accounts. CEBM Research tallied all regional reports and derived the implicit price deflator for each of them. Possibly reflecting the sheer size of China, inflation varies from +4.5% to –5%. How much time and money do you wish to invest based on numbers like these?

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Yet, China is at the top of the worries lists (from The Short Side of Long):

According to the recent Merrill Lynch Fund Manager Survey published in April, global fund managers have been losing sleep over a potential China hard landing.

Essentially nobody worries about inflation…

I don't know smile EBay Bites Repatriation Bullet

EBay Inc. took the unusual step of bringing home the bulk of its foreign-held cash, and triggered a $3 billion tax bill in the process. That marks a sharp contrast from Apple Inc., which went back to bond markets for $12 billion to fund its buybacks and dividends even though it is sitting on $150 billion in cash, much of it overseas.

EBay’s chief financial officer, Bob Swan, said, “We are an acquisitive company and we need to ensure we have the resources available to capitalize on targets that become available,” though he was quick to add that no large U.S.-based acquisitions are currently being announced. Still, $3 billion is a considerable hit for M&A plans that are merely speculative. Other companies have successfully tapped foreign cash for acquisitions without triggering a U.S. tax bill by focusing on foreign targets.

Pretty strange move…

Americans Grow Weary of World Stage, WSJ Poll Finds Americans in large numbers want the U.S. to reduce its role in world affairs even as a showdown with Russia over Ukraine preoccupies Washington, a Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll finds.

In a marked change from past decades, nearly half of those surveyed want the U.S. to be less active on the global stage, with fewer than one-fifth calling for more active engagement—an anti-interventionist current that sweeps across party lines. (…)

The poll showed that approval of President Barack Obama’s handling of foreign policy sank to the lowest level of his presidency, with 38% approving, at a time when his overall job performance drew better marks than in recent months. (…)

The poll findings, combined with the results of prior Journal/NBC surveys this year, portray a public weary of foreign entanglements and disenchanted with a U.S. economic system that many believe is stacked against them. The 47% of respondents who called for a less-active role in world affairs marked a larger share than in similar polling in 2001, 1997 and 1995.

Similarly, the Pew Research Center last year found a record 53% saying that the U.S. “should mind its own business internationally” and let other countries get along as best they can, compared with 41% who said so in 1995 and 20% in 1964. (…)

The poll found that 48% viewed globalization as bad for the U.S. economy, with 43% calling it a good development. Asked whether they preferred a congressional candidate who argued that free trade was a positive force or one who called it a negative force, 46% favored the pro-trade candidate and 48% the anti-trade candidate. (…)