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THE DAILY EDGE: 27 MAY 2022

Personal Income and Outlays, April 2022

Just out:image

Retailers Get Lift From Resilient Shoppers Macy’s and Dollar Tree reported strong sales that bucked broader trends among retailers, but they warned of signs that inflation is changing consumer behavior.

Macy’s Inc. M 19.31%▲ and Dollar Tree Inc. DLTR 21.87%▲ reported strong sales increases in their most recent quarters. Those results came as shoppers spent more on clothing for work and special occasions, while turning to discount chains for necessities to offset rising costs for food and fuel. Another budget chain, Dollar General Corp., DG 13.71%▲ posted flat sales but raised its outlook for the full year, saying cash-strapped shoppers are gravitating to its stores more frequently.

The results, which sent shares of all three chains higher, ran counter to the performance of other large retailers such as Walmart Inc. and Target Corp., which last week reported steep profit declines as rising supply-chain, wage and inflation-related costs ate into earnings. On Thursday, Gap Inc. reported a steep sales decline and swung to a net loss. The company said its poor results were due to macroeconomic conditions and size and assortment imbalances at its Old Navy chain, which has been offering a wide range of sizes for all body types.

Executives at Macy’s and the dollar chains said they are feeling many of the same pressures that have hurt other retailers, and in some cases warned those forces would start to show up in their own results.

“Consumers are still spending, but headwinds are getting increasingly fierce,” Macy’s Chief Executive Jeff Gennette said in an interview. He added that its lower-income shoppers—those with household incomes of $75,000 or less—are trading down to less expensive items while middle- and higher-income shoppers have been less affected by inflation. (…)

Costco Wholesale Corp. said Thursday same-store sales rose 10.8% excluding currency and fuel fluctuations in the most recent quarter. Nordstrom Inc. this week reported a sharp increase in sales driven by categories such as apparel, shoes and designer items. (…)

Macy’s is benefiting from a shift toward dressier clothes meant for returning to the office and attending special occasions. That has left it with a surplus of items that were in demand during the height of the pandemic such as casual clothes, activewear and some home items that the company says it will need to discount to clear out. (…)

Adrian Mitchell, the retailer’s finance chief, said he expected inflation to outpace wage growth and contribute to an increase in bad credit-card debt. He also said that Macy’s would return to more normal hiring levels following an elevated pace last year, a sign the labor market might be cooling.

Macy’s reaffirmed its sales guidance for the year, of flat to an increase of 1% compared with last year. [After +13.6% in Q1].

At Dollar Tree, same-store sales—those from stores operating for at least 12 months—rose 4.4% during the quarter ended April 30, after the company broadly raised prices above $1 an item. (…)

Dollar General said same-store sales decreased 0.1% as fewer shoppers visited its locations in the April-ended period. (…)

Dollar General’s core shoppers—those from households that earn around $40,000 a year—are coming in more often and buying less in recent weeks, he said. “That would tell you that she’s trying to make ends meet,” Mr. Vasos said of a typical such customer. Higher-income shoppers, or those looking to burn less gas by shopping closer to home, are visiting more often, he said. (…)

Family Dollar’s same-store sales declined 2.8%. (…)

Retailers’ sales growth rates are all over the map, from -8.5% at Best Buy and Dick’s to +10.8% at Costco’s and +28% at Bloomingdale’s. Lockdowns, geography, target clientele, merchandise mix and quarter end combine to create confusion, from despair to exuberance. Even among discounters: Family Dollar -s -2.8% vs Dollar Tree +4.4%.

From the conference calls, we know that overall sales softened in March and got quite weak in April. The official stats confirm the trend, particularly looking at real sales. In April, nominal retail sales (red) were up 8.2%, but real retail sales per the St-Louis Fed (blue) were flat and my own version of real sales (black) was down 3.8%.

Amazon sales were up 7% in its Q1 ended in March, negative in real terms. WMT and TGT had comp sales up 3.0% and 3.3% respectively in nominal terms in their Q1 ended in April.

May U.S. Light-Vehicle Sales to Fall from April, But Q2 Still Expected to Improve on Q1

Via CalculatedRisk:

The Wards forecast of 13.4 million SAAR, would be down about 6% from last month, and down 20% from a year ago (sales were solid in May 2021, as sales recovered from the depths of the pandemic, and weren’t yet significantly impacted by supply chain issues).

Microsoft Slows Some Hiring Amid Economic Uncertainty The software company is the latest tech giant to become more cautious about hiring.

The Redmond, Wash., company said it would be reducing the pace at which it hires people for its software group that develops its Windows, Office and Teams applications. The group had been one of the company’s fastest-growing divisions in recent years. (…)

While the pace of hiring may be falling, Microsoft has pledged better pay for employees. Earlier this month, the company told staff it would be boosting compensation, in part in reaction to challenges created by low unemployment and high inflation. (…)

Other large tech players like Meta Platforms Inc., Twitter Inc. and Uber Technologies Inc. have also announced that they would be scaling back on hiring plans.

US Wage Increases Show Signs of Peaking in Welcome Sign for Fed

Share of small business owners planning wage hikes, have jobs hard to fill is falling

Goldman Sachs’ wage tracker is not topping out yet:

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Source: Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research

  • CEO pay rose 17% in 2021 as profits, share prices soared. (AP)
U.S. Pending Home Sales Decline Sharply in April

Home buying remains under pressure. The Pending Home Sales Index from the National Association of Realtors fell 3.9% (-9.1% y/y) during April after falling 1.6% in March, revised from -1.2%. It was the sixth consecutive monthly decline with total sales down 22.4% from the August 2020 peak.

Pending home sales declined in most of the country in April, except the Midwest where they rose 6.6% (-2.8% y/y) and recovered the prior month’s decline. Sales in the Northeast declined 16.2% (-14.3% y/y) to the lowest level since May 2020. In the South, sales fell 4.7% (-10.3% y/y), down 18.8% in the last six months. In the West, sales weakened 4.3% (-10.5% y/y), off 16.9% since October.

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  • Nearly one in five home sellers dropped prices during the four-week period ended Sunday, according to Redfin.
  • Home listings jumped 9% last week. (CNBC)
  • Big cities shrink

Data: Census Bureau. (Population is July 1, 2021.) Chart: Baidi Wang/Axios

More than half of the country’s 15 largest cities saw population decreases between July 2020 and July 2021, Axios’ Ivana Saric and Baidi Wang report. Chicago and San Francisco populations have now dropped close to their 2010 levels, The Wall Street Journal reports. New York (8.5 million) shrank. But it’s still more than twice the size of the next largest city, L.A. (4 million), the Census Bureau said.

Not your average tightening You need to be like old and experienced to have seen this type of “Financials Conditions” tightening before… (The Market Ear)

Is China’s No. 2 Staging a Stealth Covid-Zero Protest? In recent weeks, Li has re-emerged with his own voice. He has been pressing officials to stabilize an economy ravaged by draconian Covid-related lockdowns, while Xi has continued to push the zero-tolerance policy.

(…) While he didn’t criticize the Covid-zero policy or suggest shifting from it, the message was clear: Don’t overdo Covid containment.

An economist by training, Li talked at length about fiscal constraints and discipline. Beijing no longer has the money to spare, he said, a rebuff to provinces appealing for financial help:

This year’s transfer payments to local governments are the largest in recent years… I am here to let you know the bottom line. There is a reserve fund managed by the premier for natural disasters. Other than that, municipalities must manage to raise funds on their own.

“Put your limited funds to good use,” Li warned, according to a copy of the speech transcript seen by Bloomberg Opinion.

China’s political system is lopsided. While Beijing holds the purse string, locals have the shovels. The burden of policy execution, from building infrastructure to stamping out Covid outbreaks, lies with municipal, county and provincial officials. When local party chieftains believe preventing Covid outbreaks is their only performance metric, they can spiral into fierce competition, bidding to outdo each other with mass testing and lockdowns, especially in a politically important year. (…)

On the day of his speech, the National Healthcare Security Administration, which reports directly to the State Council where Li is the highest-ranking official, said it would no longer pick up the bills. In other words, if local governments want to conduct mass testing, they must pay for it themselves. Until now, Shenzhen billed 90% of its Covid tests to the national health insurance, reported Caixin.

And it’s not as if local governments are flush with cash. Municipalities get roughly one-third of their income from land sales. In the first four months of this year, the take from these transactions tumbled 30%. In other words, every yuan spent on mass testing and quarantine is an opportunity lost to build infrastructure and boost employment. (…)

Violent clashes, mounting infections and vacant factory floors: the turmoil that’s engulfed tens of thousands of workers at an Apple Inc. supplier in Shanghai is a troubling symptom of China’s extreme efforts to keep factories humming during its worst Covid outbreak since 2020.

Trapped in a bubble for almost two months, locked down by government decree and walled off from the outside world, Quanta Computer Inc.’s mostly low-wage workers are demanding more freedom and beginning to revolt against their overseers, people familiar with the matter said, asking not to be identified for fear of reprisals. (…)

The upheaval at one of the most prominent manufacturers operating out of the affluent eastern Chinese region adds to the growing tumult across society and industry over virus curbs. (…)

In past months, college students in Beijing have rebelled; housing compounds have staged protests; and social media users posting critical videos have tried to outwit an army of censors. (…)

Job Vacancies Hit Record in Canada’s Ever-Tighter Labor Market Openings increased 13.4% seasonally adjusted to just over 1 million, Statistics Canada reported Thursday, based on its monthly survey of employers. That’s up about 60% from the same period a year earlier.

The job vacancy rate — the number of unfilled jobs as a share of all positions — was 5.9% in March, matching a record high recorded last September. There was an average of 1.2 unemployed people for each job vacancy, down from 1.4 in February and 2.6 a year ago, according to the statistics agency. (…)

Separately Thursday, the Canadian Federation of Independent Business reported its members see wages rising by a record 3.5% average over the next year. About 35% of respondents see wage growth of at least 5%, also a record in monthly survey data back to 2009. (…)

(…) Core retail sales, which exclude gasoline and automotive and parts, increased 1.5% in March. In volume terms, sales were down 1%. Still, sales are expected to increase 0.8% in April, according to preliminary estimates. Retail sales were up 3% in the first quarter of this year, the largest increase since the third quarter of 2020.

A strong economy, booming jobs market, and elevated inflation argue for another “forceful” 50bp hike on 1 June. And the Bank of Canada is unlikely to stop there, with a red hot housing market and support from rising commodity prices suggesting it may be even more aggressive than the Fed this year. We expect CAD to benefit from BoC tightening in the medium term. (ING)

Employment levels versus pre-pandemic peakunnamed - 2022-05-27T073527.897

In response, the Bank of Canada’s commentary is becoming more robust. Deputy Governor Toni Gravelle warned this week that inflation has been “higher and more tenacious” than expected and the Bank is “committed” to bringing it down to target. Moreover, “our policy rate, at 1%, is too stimulative” and the bank is “prepared to be as forceful as needed” to get inflation to 2% and that involves getting to the neutral range for rates at 2-3% “quickly”.

This followed comments from Senior Deputy Governor Carolyn Rogers who also pointed to the need to get interest rates higher quickly “with the Canadian economy starting to overheat”. With BoC Governor Tiff Macklem having told us back in April that the Bank will no doubt be “considering taking another 50bp step”, it is unsurprising that the market is fully backing such a move on 1 June, given the latest raft of data. We would argue that you cannot dismiss the possibility of a 75bp hike given the current macro environment.

We don’t think the 50bp moves will stop next week. Canada’s economy is being boosted by rising commodity output in response to the global surge in prices in everything from oil to aluminium to wheat. At the same time, the housing market is even hotter than that of the US with the average home price nine times the average household income versus a “mere” 5.5 times income in the US.

Mortgage rates have not risen as rapidly in Canada as they have in the US due to the typical mortgage being a five-year mortgage amortised over 25 years. This rate is more determined by what happens to short-term borrowing costs rather than big swings at the long end of the yield curve, as for the typical 30Y fixed-rate US mortgage. To generate the same degree of monetary tightening, the Bank of Canada tends to need to be more aggressive on policy rate increases.

Consequently, we see greater upside for BoC rates than for the Fed funds rate in the US, with the Bank of Canada set to hike to 3.5% in early 2023, above the 2-3% “neutral range” highlighted by some BoC officials. Nonetheless, as in the US, the harder and faster you go to try and get a grip on inflation, the greater the chance of an adverse reaction in the economy. We wouldn’t be surprised to see the BoC having to consider reversing course in late 2023. (…)

We think the chances that the BoC will hike rates to 3.0% before the end of 2022 are quite elevated, which suggests that – unlike elsewhere in the G10 such as the eurozone or UK – there is some sizeable room for further hawkish re-pricing in rate expectations in Canada. Ultimately, this factor – along with the rate advantage itself – is a bullish argument for the loonie in the medium run, and we continue to see BoC tightening as a contributing factor to pushing USD/CAD below 1.25 in the second half of the year. (…)

At the current juncture, USD/CAD dynamics remain strictly tied to swings in global risk sentiment. We’ll likely need to wait for a sustained stabilisation in sentiment before we can see USD/CAD re-align with its fundamentals (rates, commodities, and growth stories), which point to a stronger CAD. With market instability possibly extending into the summer, USD/CAD may stay close to the 1.27-1.28 area, gearing up for a break lower in the latter part of the year.

UK imposes 25% energy windfall tax to help households as bills surge

Britain announced a 25% windfall tax on oil and gas producers’ profits on Thursday, alongside a 15 billion pound ($18.9 billion) package of support for households struggling to meet soaring energy bills.

The move, which will give each UK household a 400 pound discount on their energy bill and more for lowest-income households, marks a change of heart for Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government, which had previously resisted windfall taxes, calling them a deterrent to investment. (…)

More than 8 million low-income households will receive an extra 650 pound cost-of-living grant, with smaller additional sums for all pensioners and the disabled. (…)

TECHNICALS WATCH

From CMG Wealth:

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  • S&P 500 Large Cap Index – 13/34–Week EMA Trend Chart
  • Volume Demand vs. Volume Supply (NDR)
SPACs Are Warning They May Go Bust More than two dozen companies say they may not survive much longer.
AAA predicts 39.2 million Americans will travel 50 miles or more from home this holiday weekend, nearly 90% of them by car.
  • But they’ll shell out 50% more than last year to fill up their gas tanks.
  • The national average for a gallon of gas is $4.60, up $1.56 from last year, per AAA.

unnamed - 2022-05-27T072658.951

Data: ZETA; Chart: Axios Visuals

  • Electric air taxi startup Joby has been approved to carry paying passengers aboard conventional aircraft, the company tells Axios Generate’s Andrew Freedman.

Joby’s insect-like, ultra-quiet electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft are still undergoing testing. So for the time being, any Joby commercial flights will be limited to four-seat, gas-powered Cirrus planes.

  • The new Federal Aviation Administration certification, says Joby product chief Eric Allison, will help the company develop a customer-facing booking app, pilot workflow software and maintenance data reporting tools.
  • That experience, company reps say, will make it easier to deploy the eVTOL aircraft if and when Joby is cleared to fly passengers aboard them.

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Joby Aviation’s eVTOL aircraft. Photo courtesy Joby Aviation

THE DAILY EDGE: 26 MAY 2022: China’s Covid-Zero Ditched?

Orders for Long-Lasting Goods Rise Modestly New durable-goods orders increased by 0.4% in April, the sixth increase in seven months.

New orders for products meant to last at least three years increased by 0.4% to a seasonally adjusted $265.3 billion in April following a revised 0.6% rise in March, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. April marked the sixth increase in seven months.

Nondefense aircraft and parts orders were up 4.3%, rebounding from an 8.1% decline in March.

Excluding defense, orders of durable goods rose 0.3%. (…)

New orders for nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft, so-called core capital goods, a closely watched proxy for business investment, rose 0.3% to $73.1 billion in April compared with the previous month. (…)

fredgraph - 2022-05-26T070905.462

U.S. Mortgage Applications Continue to Weaken

The Mortgage Bankers Association’s Loan Applications Index fell 1.2% (-54.5% y/y) in the week ended May 20 after declining 11.0% in the prior week. Applications to refinance an existing loan continued to lead the decline with 3.9% drop (-74.9% y/y) after falling 9.5% in the week earlier. Applications for purchase improved 0.2% (-16.4% y/y) after falling 11.9% in the prior week.

The share of applications for refinancing fell to 32.3% in the week ended May 20. That as half the percentage this past December and nearly the lowest reading since December 2000. The percentage that were ARMs fell to 9.4%. (…)

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While on financing matters:

Fresh projections from the Congressional Budget Office show that higher interest rates could put pressure not seen in years on lawmakers’ spending plans, Axios’ Courtenay Brown writes.

As interest rates go up amid the Fed’s aggressive campaign to tamp down inflation, the cost of federal interest payments is expected to rise substantially — giving more fuel to those who want to pull back on spending. “Those are outlays that will soak up revenues, in a sense,” CBO director Phillip Swagel said at a press conference yesterday. “There are dollars going to that and not going to other uses, whether it be national security or education.”

The CBO estimates the 10-year Treasury yield will average 2.9% in 2023, almost a full percentage point higher than its last forecast a year ago.

  • Interest costs will top $1 trillion by 2032, per the CBO’s projections. That would be a record-shattering 3.3% of GDP — more than double its share this year.
  • The expected rise in rates accounts for about 70% of that growth in debt service costs over the next decade. The rest comes from annual deficits that are expected to add to debt levels (check out the chart above).

“Even as we see interest rates going higher, we don’t have recession in our forecast,” says Swagel. “We don’t have interest rates spiking in the way that might indicate the sort of sharp fiscal crunch. So this is a looming challenge, but we wouldn’t say it’s an immediate one.”

unnamed - 2022-05-26T074705.565

Data: Congressional Budget Office; Chart: Axios Visuals

The price of eggs is expected to rise as much as 21% this year, up from previous estimates of 6%–7%, new government data out today shows. (…) A bird flu outbreak that began in January has killed about 6% of commercial egg-laying chickens in the U.S., and the disease is still spreading. (…)

  • Poultry prices are expected to increase between 8.5% and 9.5%. The average price of a dozen large, grade A eggs was $2.52 in April and $2.05 in March, compared to about $1.40 in the spring of 2019.

Natural gas prices soar

unnamed - 2022-05-26T080016.593

Dick’s Sporting Goods Cuts Outlook

Dick’s Sporting Goods Inc. cut its earnings outlook for the year after posting a decline in first-quarter sales, but executives said that demand for fitness and outdoor goods was still strong.

The sports equipment and apparel chain said same-store sales, which reflect stores open at least a year and include digital sales, dropped 8.4% in the quarter while overall sales fell 7.5% from a year earlier. The company said it is now projecting same-store sales could fall as much as 8% this year and lowered its profit outlook.

On a conference call Wednesday, executives said they were being cautious given the uncertain macroeconomic situation but that they hadn’t seen big shifts in consumer spending. Executives said they haven’t had to resort to additional discounting to sell items. (…)

Ms. Hobart said a 40% increase in inventory levels at Dick’s was healthy and there were areas where she wished the company could find even more goods to sell. “We are still chasing products in certain categories,” she said. “We are not anticipating any significant markdown risk.” (…)

Dick’s new forecast calls for same-store sales to fall between 2% and 8% this year, compared with an earlier projection of being flat to down 4%. Per-share earnings adjusted for certain items are expected to be between $9.15 and $11.70, compared with the company’s prior guidance of $11.70 to $13.10. (…)

“No big shifts in consumer spending”? Dick’s sales are down 8.4% in Q1. CPI-Sporting Goods is up 7.5%! Perhaps if they had discounted a little sales would have been a bit better. As to markdown risk, good luck with inventory up 40%.

Fed officials raised possibility of ‘restrictive’ policy to fight inflation Minutes from May meeting show US central bank considered more hawkish stance on interest rates

(…) Officials “noted that a restrictive stance of policy may well become appropriate,” the minutes said. (…)

In an interview with The Wall Street Journal last week, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell laid out a relatively high bar to slow down rate increases. “This is not a time for tremendously nuanced readings of inflation,” he said. “We need to see inflation coming down in a convincing way. Until we do, we’ll keep going.” (…)

(…) “I don’t expect any discussion on that [the ECB’s bondholdings] at least for the remainder of this year and into next year. So we will focus on [interest] rates,” said Klaas Knot, who sits on the ECB’s rate-setting committee as governor of the Netherlands central bank, in a panel discussion at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. “That will imply that we will have a large balance sheet for still some time to come.” (…)

The Bank of England, Europe’s second most important central bank, has already started to reduce its stock of government bonds. In early February, policy makers voted to stop buying new bonds to replace maturing securities, so that by the end of the first quarter the stock of government bonds owned by the central bank stood at £847 billion, equivalent to $1.06 trillion, down from £874 billion at the start of the year. At their meeting earlier this month, policy makers asked staff to draw up a plan for selling government bonds that they will consider at their August gathering. (…)

Apple Raises Salary Budget Amid Tight Labor Market The iPhone maker told employees in an email that the company is increasing its overall compensation budget, a move that comes as it faces store unionization attempts and higher inflation.

Starting pay for hourly workers in the U.S. will rise to $22 an hour, or higher based upon the market, a 45% increase from 2018. Starting salaries in the U.S. are also expected to increase. (…)

Some workers, including those hourly employees in its stores and AppleCare, were told their annual reviews would be moved up three months and that their pay increases would take effect in early July, according to a memo reviewed by The Wall Street Journal. The normal review process coincides with the end of Apple’s fiscal year in the fall.

Those workers were told the company’s increased compensation budget would be in addition to pay increases and special awards already received within the past year.

Facing a war for talent, tech companies have also seen their biggest compensation tools—stock awards—hindered by a downturn in company valuations. Apple shares have fallen 21% this year through Wednesday’s close. (…)

BTW, APPL plans to keep iPhone production roughly flat at 220 million this year, below market estimates of around 240 million, as the year turns increasingly challenging for the smartphone industry. (Bloomberg)

Late on Tuesday evening, the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT) announced that an overwhelming majority of 40,000 rail staff had voted in favour of national strike action in the coming weeks. From the 71pc of those that took part, 89pc voted in favour of strike action and only 11pc voted against it, the RMT said.

China’s Premier Gives Dire Growth Warning in Unpublished Remarks

(…) Li told attendees that economic growth risks slipping out of a reasonable range, according to people familiar with the discussions. He said China will pay a huge price with a long road to recovery if the economy can’t keep expanding at a certain rate. That means growth must be positive in the second quarter, and the unemployment rate must drop, he said, according to the people, who declined to be identified in order to discuss official matters. (…)

Growth is the key to solving all problems in the country, such as creating jobs, ensuring people’s livelihood, and containing Covid, he said. (…)

He told local governments to make sure summer harvesting and stocking is conducted smoothly — meaning the harvest can’t stop even if there is a Covid outbreak. Local officials will be held accountable if they can’t stabilize grain production, he warned, adding that it’s their basic responsibility. (…)

The premier told officials to keep coal mines in operation as long as they meet work safety this summer, adding that energy would be in short supply no matter the state of the economy. Power cuts cannot happen, he added.

Li also highlighted the importance of manufacturing in China, which he said was a mainstay that employs as many as 300 million people, unlike developed countries where service industries make up the lion’s share of the economy. The industrial chain must be protected, he said.

That sounds like the end of “Covid-Zero”.

(…) Analysts said the national housing inventory is at a high level, particularly in tier-three and four cities which face large de-stocking pressure due to slowing demand. (…) Fitch Ratings last month lowered its forecast on the property sales by value, expecting them to fall 25%-30% in 2022, compared to a previous forecast of 10-15% fall.

 Reuters Graphics Reuters Graphics

Reuters Graphics

Guns now kids’ top cause of death

The leading cause of death among American children is now guns.

  • Firearms passed motor vehicles as the top killer of kids in 2020, the most recent CDC data available, Axios’ Caitlin Owens writes.

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Data: CDC. Chart: Thomas Oide/Axios