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

NEW$ & VIEW$ (28 MARCH 2014)

Pending Home Sales Fall Unexpectedly The number of people signing contracts to buy previously owned homes unexpectedly declined in February, a sign the sector continued to struggle through unusually cold weather and rising mortgage rates.

large imageThe National Association of Realtors said Thursday its seasonally adjusted index for pending sales of existing homes dropped 0.8% in February from a month earlier to 93.9, its eighth straight month of declines. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires expected a 0.2% rise in pending home sales for February.

February’s reading was the lowest since October 2011, after hitting a recent peak of 110.8 in June. From a year ago, the pending-home-sales index was down 10.5%. An index of 100 is equal to the average level of activity during 2001.

Home sales were mixed across the country last month. In the South, sales fell 4.0% (-9.3% y/y) following a 3.1% January rise. Sales remained down 11.8% from the May peak. In the Northeast, a 2.4% decline (-7.4% y/y) pulled sales 14.4% below the peak last April. In the Midwest, sales firmed 2.8% (-8.5% y/y) following seven straight months of decline. Sales were off 15.5% since the May peak. In the West, sales gained 2.3% last month (-16.5% y/y), also after seven straight monthly declines. Sales were off by one-quarter from the peak. (Haver Analytics, including chart)

On a national level, listed for-sale inventory remains near historically low levels, though increased at a seasonally strong 6.4% m/m pace in February. (Raymond James)

Is there hope? KB Home saw strong traffic in February:

KB Home [KBH] Earnings Call 3/19/14: “January and February, sales and traffic were strong. In fact, our traffic was up dramatically in February over the prior year, a great indication that the spring selling season is well underway and also a pre-cursor of our future sales.”

Something not mentioned by Lennar:

Lennar Corp. [LEN] Earnings Call 3/20/14: “While we recognize the potential headwinds from a constrained and sometimes uncertain mortgage market, including
interest rate volatility, and sometimes volatile consumer confidence, and also diminishing investment purchasers in the resale market, we feel that the fundamentals
of short supply of available homes and pent-up demand will continue to define our strategy of land acquisition and growth and drive the recovery forward.”

As I wrote yesterday, continued weak mortgage applications in March don’t signal rising demand in the spring, a view supported by Moody’s:

Things may not soon warm up by much on the housing front. At the very start of housing’s peak spring selling season, the MBA’s index of mortgage applications for  purchase for March 21 was down by -16.9% from a year earlier. For the comparably situated week of a year earlier, this indicator of prospective homebuying activity was up by +9.9% yearly.

US economy grew 2.6% in fourth quarter Slight upward revision after rise in personal consumption

A 3.3 per cent increase in personal consumption was the main driver behind the revision. However, investment in inventories and intellectual property products was weaker.(Chart from Doug Short)

Click to View

The Next Problem: Too Much Profit America Inc.’s profit margins have hit another record. Be careful what you wish for.

imageThe Commerce Department on Thursday released data on corporate profits. Once again, these showed that income for U.S. businesses is growing at a faster rate than the economy. With after-tax profits up 4.8% in the fourth quarter from a year before and gross domestic product up 4.1% unadjusted for inflation, profits as a share of GDP—an economy wide proxy for corporate margins—hit a new record of 11.1%. If the measure was back at the average of 5.4% that prevailed in the 1990s, profits would be half what they are now.

Analysts expect margins to keep expanding, estimating that profits for S&P 500 companies will grow by 7.4% this year even as sales expand by just 3.8%, according to S&P Capital IQ. That could be a dangerous forecast—not so much because companies might not be able to meet it but because of what they might be doing to try to do so.

Chief among the factors contributing to profit-margin expansion is the tight lid companies have put on costs. They have been slow to hire and slow to raise wages. Inflation has outpaced gains in private-sector employee compensation over the past five years, according to the Labor Department. Spending on new equipment has been muted, too. Aggregate capital expenditure for members of the broad S&P 1500 index has grown by just 0.8% annually over the past five years, according to S&P Capital IQ.

Low rates have allowed many companies to refinance debt, cutting interest costs. The effective yield on investment-grade corporate debt, according to the BofA Merrill Lynch Corporate Master index, is now 3.1%, versus 5.8% in December 2007.

Taxes have been low as well, in part as companies offset them with losses taken during the recession. Income statements from companies in the S&P 500 showed an effective tax rate, including state and local taxes, of 29% in 2012 versus 32% in 2007, according to ISI Group’s David Zion. He calculates that their cash tax rate—what they actually paid—was 25% in 2012, against 31% in 2007.

For greater details on rising margins: CHINESE ROULETTE

Senate Clears Hurdle to Extend Jobless Benefits The Senate on Thursday voted 65-34 to begin debate on a new bipartisan agreement extending unemployment insurance for five months.

(…) The bill under consideration in the Senate would retroactively restore jobless benefits for the roughly two million unemployed people who had lost them in late December.

To ensure the benefits’ roughly $9.9 billion cost doesn’t add to the federal budget deficit, the bill contains provisions to raise revenue, including a “pension smoothing” provision from a highway bill set to phase out this year, which would allow employers to postpone contributions to employee pension plans.

Broken Deals in China Roil Markets Chinese importers of soybeans and rubber are backing out of deals, adding to a wide range of evidence showing rising financial stress in the world’s second-biggest economy.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture confirmed that China has canceled orders for 517,000 metric tons of soybeans, used to make cooking oil, and compares to imports of 63.4 million tons last year. South American soybean contracts have also been canceled because of weak demand, says trade journal Oil World. (…)

Natural rubber, mostly grown in Southeast Asia and used to make products ranging from tires to latex gloves, is also getting hit as some buyers from China refuse to honor existing agreements, or look for ways to negotiate discounts. Two large Asian rubber producers, who asked not to be named, said Chinese buyers had defaulted on them.

Traders say buyers are trying to ask for discounts, citing reasons such as cargo arriving a few days late and claims about poor quality or contamination, said Bundit Kerdvongbundit, vice president of Von Bundit Co., Thailand’s second-largest natural rubber producer. The contracts are already signed, but Chinese importers “refuse to take cargo or pay unless they get discounts.” (…)

Rubber prices have dropped more than 20% since the beginning of the year, due to worries over China’s slowing economy and a global surplus of the commodity. Many sellers who bought at high prices are unwilling to sell at a loss, pushing up stocks at the port of Qingdao to near-record levels recently. Stockpiles in some other commodities like soybeans and iron ore are also high as buyers hang on. (…)

Spanish Deflation Boosts Rate-Cut Bets

Preliminary data from Spain showed consumer price deflation for the first time since 2009 in March. Regional German figures showed a slowing pace of inflation, stoking expectations that the rate for the euro zone as a whole—due Monday—will drop further below the ECB’s target.

The 0.2 percent annual decline in Spanish consumer prices this month was larger than expected, the weakest figure since October 2009, and enough to push Spanish 10-year government bond yields to a new eight-year low.

Russian Border Buildup Stokes Worries Russian troops massing near Ukraine are actively concealing their positions and establishing supply lines that could be used in a prolonged deployment, ratcheting up U.S. concerns.
Global Growth at Risk as Ukraine Adds to Known Unknowns

(…) “There is a significant tail risk that’s growing for the world economy,” said Sinai, chief executive officer of the New York-based consultant. He sees a 10 percent chance of a global recession triggered by escalating tensions between Russia and the U.S. and Europe over Ukraine. (…)

El-Erian, chief economic adviser to Munich-based Allianz, said in an e-mail he is sticking with his prediction that worldwide growth will pick up this year. What’s changed is a greater chance there won’t be any acceleration, he said.

Fels and his team at New York-based Morgan Stanley agree, saying in a March 16 report that the risks to their forecast of 3.4 percent growth this year “are generally tilting to the downside.” The world economy expanded 3 percent in 2013. (…)

NEW$ & VIEW$ (27 MARCH 2014)

Surge in Durable-Goods Orders Masks Soft Business Investment Orders for aircraft soared in February, masking a pullback in business investment of long-lasting manufactured goods.

large imageOrders for overall durable goods rose a seasonally adjusted 2.2% in February from a month earlier, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. That was the largest increase to a key measure of manufacturing since November 2013 and above economists’ forecasts of an 0.8% rise.

Excluding the volatile transportation segment, durable-goods orders rose only 0.2%.

A measure of business investment in the report, known as nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft, dropped 1.3% in February and reversed January’s gains. The figure was roughly flat in January and February, compared with the same period a year earlier. (…)

Sad smile Poor reporting from the WSJ: the facts are: Feb. –1.3%, Jan. +0.8%, Dec. –1.6%, Nov. +3.0%, Oct. –0.6%, Sep. –1.2%. Last 6 months: –1.8% a.r., last 3 months: –8.7% a.r..

Businesses ramped up investment at the end of last year, but unusually cold weather so far this year may have led some to pull back. While there have been some employment gains and mild economic growth, the advances in the past year are still weaker than before the recession.

“There is thus far little evidence of an investment spending surge,” said J.P. Morgan economist Michael Feroli.(…) (Chart from Haver Analytics)

Weather again. Questions:

  1. How far in advance do you place orders for durable goods?
  2. Does harsh weather really impede one’s capability to place or receive orders?

This chart from Doug Short suggests that core orders may have reached their cyclical peak early in 2013 and have gone sideways in the past year.

image
U.S. Mortgage Loan Applications Move Lower but Loan Size Jumps

The 4-week average of the purchase index is now down about 19% from a year ago. The average loan size for home purchases increased to a record $279,300 last week.

Weak apps = weak housing demand.image

large image

Certainly not a first time buyer market!

U.S. jobs market dropouts increasingly likely to stay out

(…) According to economists who have analyzed Labor Department data, 6.6 million people exited the workforce from 2010 and 2013. About 61 percent of these dropouts were retirees, more than double the previous three years’ share.

People dropping out because of disability accounted for 28 percent, also up significantly from 2007-2010. Of those remaining, 7 percent were heading to school, while the other 4 percent left for other reasons.

In contrast, between 2007 and 2010, retirees made up a quarter of the six million people who left the labor force, while 18 percent were classified as disabled. About 57 percent were either in school or otherwise on the sidelines.

“This suggests the current drop in the labor force is more structural in nature,” said Sharif.

If so, there is less hope of luring people back to hunt for work as the jobs market tightens, as many Fed officials believed would be the case. (…)

Some Fed policymakers, such as San Francisco Fed President John Williams, are starting to acknowledge that structural factors are playing a big role in the labor force’s decline.

In a speech last month, Williams said the slack in the labor market could be “much less than assumed,” cautioning that inflation could rise more quickly than currently anticipated. (…)

The disappearing slack is underscored by a sharp decline in the ranks of the short-term unemployed.

These workers, whose skills are still sharp, are viewed as the most desirable by employers, economists say. Further, they appear to hunt for work more aggressively, according to a study released last week by former White House economist Alan Krueger. (…)

Some economists say the dwindling pool of attractive workers may already be leading employers to bid wages up. Average hourly earnings for production and nonsupervisory workers notched their biggest gain in four years in February, even as some broader measures showed little acceleration. (…)

But that was likely weather-related… There’s more:

Wage Pressures Looming in Two-Tiered Labor Market

image(…) workers across some industries are seeing fairly solid wage gains. About 30 percent of workers are seeing hourly earnings growth above 2.5 percent already. By contrast, last year wage weakness was fairly uniform. This implies an upward drift in wage growth as the tight part of the labor market continues to expand.

Recent work from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York also highlights the two-tiered nature of the labor market. Specifically, for those that are already employed, work is very easy to find. For those who have been out of work for an extended period of time, labor market conditions remain poor. Why is this relevant? Because the researchers found that short-term unemployment has a much stronger impact on price inflation than long duration unemployment.

(BloombergBriefs guest commentary by Neil Dutta , Renaissance Macro Research)

The Real Inflation Fear – US Food Prices Are Up 19% In 2014

The spot price (not futures speculation-driven)of US Foodstuffs is the best performing asset in 2014 – up a staggering 19%…

 h/t Bloomberg’s Chase van der Rhoer

CHINA: SLOW AND SLOWER
Bad News Piles Up for China’s Economy Signs of economic stress are mounting as Chinese companies report disappointing profits and state-owned banks take large debt write-offs.

(…) Standard & Poor’s, also on Wednesday, added to a chorus of concern over China’s debt. The ratings firm, in a quarterly Asia credit report, warned that policy makers may have to move sooner than expected to deal with massive lending by the so-called shadow banking sector, which encompasses local government financing vehicles, property developers and trust companies. (…)

S&P raised a fear that is gaining traction among China watchers: authorities may not be able to avoid some financial turmoil—and that will hit economic growth.

“Even viable investments could struggle to get financing,” S&P said. “China’s growth could fall sharply for at least a few quarters, led by investment.”

Countries that export heavily to China to feed its growth are worried any hiccups could impact their economies.

“You could see significant periods of turbulence in financial markets potentially affecting growth in China—and in commodity prices that would hurt Australia and New Zealand,” Grant Spencer, deputy governor of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand, said Wednesday. (…)

Goldman Sachs GS -0.93% last week cut its forecast for China’s first quarter annualized growth in 2014 to 5% from 6.7%. The gloom is reflected in Chinese corporate earnings: The world’s largest cellular operator, China Mobile, 0941.HK +2.22% reported last week its first decline in profits in 14 years. The country’s third-largest bank, Agricultural Bank of China, 601288.SH 0.00% posted its weakest profit growth last year since selling shares to the public in 2010. The bank doubled its volume of write-offs and transfers of bad loans in 2013 compared with the previous year. (…)

EARNINGS WATCH

The estimated earnings growth rate for Q1 2014 is 0.0%. On December 31, the earnings growth rate for Q1 2014 was 4.4%. Nine of the ten sectors have lower earnings growth rates today (compared to December 31) due to downward revisions to earnings estimates. (Factset)

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Fed Rejects Citigroup’s Dividend Plan Citigroup Inc. failed to get Federal Reserve approval to reward investors with higher dividends and stock buybacks, a surprising blow to Chief Executive Michael Corbat’s effort to bolster the bank’s reputation following a 2008 government rescue.

Despite Citi’s failure, the results set the stage for large banks to provide billions of dollars to investors after years of restraint enforced by regulators after the financial crisis. On Wednesday, 16 banks, including J.P. Morgan Chase JPM -1.69% & Co. and Bank of America Corp. BAC -0.17% , announced dividends worth $22.8 billion, a 23% increase over last year, according to data from Thomson Reuters.

But Citigroup will have to wait, and the bank’s stock fell 5.9% in after-hours trading. Citi’s rejection—its second in three years—was based on deficiencies in how the bank plans for a future recession, including its ability to project revenue and losses across all its operations under a scenario of sustained economic stress, according to the Fed.

The five institutions that didn’t get approval—Citigroup, Zions Bancorp,ZION -1.31% and the U.S. units of HSBC HoldingsHSBC -0.43% PLC, Royal Bank of Scotland GroupRBS -2.15% PLC and Banco Santander SASAN.MC +0.05% —must submit revised capital plans and suspend any increased dividend payments. The foreign-bank units will be restricted from issuing increased dividends to their parent firms. (…)

And this:

[image](…) In the bank’s proxy statement detailing his 2013 total compensation of $14.5 million, the bank called out Mr. Corbat’s work on improving “risk outcomes and controls.” Tellingly, the bank also noted his efforts to make progress with regulators, citing the Fed’s approval last year of its capital plan. That didn’t call for any increase in the dividend, although it did include a share buyback of up to $1.2 billion. (…)

If there is any solace for Citi shareholders, it is that the bank’s capital isn’t going anywhere. It will continue to pile up on the balance sheet. Citi already has a stronger capital position than big-bank peers. Barring catastrophe, Citi should eventually be able to return more capital to investors. (WSJ)

SENTIMENT WATCH
‘Candy Crush’ Maker Tumbles 16% in Trading Debut

(…) the worst first-day trading of any IPO this year. (…) King was the most profitable company to go public since Facebook Inc. in 2012, according to Dealogic. (…) King priced amid a tough week for Internet stocks. Twitter shares are down 13% in the past week, and Facebook Inc. is off 12%. Zynga shares are down 9.7%.