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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THE DAILY EDGE: 19 MAY 2022: Domino…

Target, Walmart Selloff Spotlights Retail’s Inflation Pains Higher costs on fuel, products and wages prompt some companies to rethink how and when to raise prices further

Investors dumped shares of Walmart Inc., WMT -6.79%▼ Target Corp. TGT -24.93%▼ and other big chains—notching some of the biggest declines since the market crash of 1987—amid fears that the companies wouldn’t be able to pass along higher prices to consumers. It has also stoked concerns through financial markets about the resilience of companies that collectively employ millions of workers in the U.S. and abroad. (…)

The selloff, which began earlier this year with highflying tech companies such as Nvidia Corp. NVDA -6.82%▼ and Meta Platforms Inc., now has investors wrestling with the idea that the economy could be headed for a recession. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Tuesday that the central bank’s resolve in fighting inflation shouldn’t be questioned, even if it requires pushing up unemployment. (…)

Target shares tumbled 25% after the retailer posted weaker-than-expected quarterly earnings and said it would rather absorb higher costs than raise prices on shoppers. Target management said fuel and freight costs will be $1 billion higher this year than it had expected, with little sign of their easing this year.

“While we don’t like the impact to our profitability in the short term, we know it is the right thing to do for our guests and our business over the long term,” said Target Chief Financial Officer Michael Fiddelke on an earnings call Wednesday.

Walmart said Tuesday that higher product, supply-chain and employee costs ate into its profit in the latest quarter, a result that Chief Executive Doug McMillon described as disappointing. The country’s largest retailer by revenue said that while it generally passed along price increases from suppliers to consumers, inflation in fuel costs came faster than it expected and that it would continue working to keep prices on groceries low. After Walmart’s stock shed more than 11% after its earnings report, shares retreated an additional 6.8% Wednesday. (…)

Americans continued to spend briskly in April on products as diverse as cars and clothing, which economists and company executives say is a sign that consumer spending is relatively healthy. But consumers are also showing signs they are less willing to absorb price increases and are trading down to less-expensive items, according to retailers and manufacturers. (…)

“We did not anticipate the rapid shifts we’ve seen over the last 60 days,” Target CEO Brian Cornell said about elevated transportation and freight costs on an earnings call Wednesday.

Mr. Cornell said customers were buying fewer big items—such as bicycles, TVs and kitchen products—than in the past two years. (…)

While the Target chief said the spending shift has been significant, shoppers are continuing to visit the retailer’s stores. The number of transactions rose nearly 4% in the April-ended quarter, the company said.

My narrative:

  • High inflation is masking big volume declines. If WMT, TGT and AMZN report low single digit growth rates when inflation is high single or low double digits, you can be certain that real sales are way down.
  • TGT saying traffic is up 4% while nominal comps are up 3.3%, it is saying many shoppers are just browsing.
  • Retailers are stuck with excess inventory as ships are finally unloading and shipping right when customers are spent out. Competition is rising and pricing power has evaporated. WMT’s inventory jumped 33% in Q1. 33%! Comps are up 3%. This is the largest retailer in the U.S..
  • Investors are finally learning that inflation has real life impact on purchasing power, costs and margins.
  • They will soon learn the ripple effects of excess retail inventory. Retailers will cut/cancel orders and trim costs, labor first.
  • Recession fears will grow.

BTW: U.S. total business inventories (manufacturing, wholesalers, and retailers) expanded 2.0% in March, which comes on top of an upwardly revised 1.8% increase in February (previously +1.5%). This marks the third fastest monthly tally on record. In fact, the pace of inventory accumulation has exceeded that of sales in three of the past four months, allowing the overall inventory-to-sales ratio to rise to 1.28x, from 1.27x previously and 1.26x at the end of last year.

fredgraph - 2022-05-18T145510.433

That was for March. It got worse in April.

In the recent PMI surveys, 61% of purchasing managers said that their customer inventories are too high. Double a year ago.

Goods consumption is slowing/declining fast, goods inflation will slow/decline fast. But core goods are only 21% of CPI. Stickier services inflation is taking over.

Can we have a goods recession without a full fledge recession? We are about to find out.

More Subprime Borrowers Are Missing Loan Payments Strained by the end of pandemic benefits, consumers with limited or troubled credit histories are falling behind on payments for car loans, personal loans and credit cards.

The share of subprime credit cards and personal loans that are at least 60 days late is rising faster than normal, according to credit-reporting firm Equifax Inc. In March, those delinquencies rose month over month for the eighth time in a row, nearing their prepandemic levels.

Delinquencies on subprime car loans and leases hit an all-time high in February, based on Equifax’s tracking that goes back to 2007. (…)

The jump in subprime delinquencies could reduce lenders’ willingness to make loans to riskier borrowers. (…)

Some 11% of general-purpose credit cards held by consumers with credit scores below 620 were at least 60 days behind on payment in March compared with 9.8% a year prior, according to the latest data available from Equifax. Personal loans and lines of credit delinquencies came in at 11.3%, up from 10.4% a year prior. Both categories hit Covid-19-era lows of 7.5% and 8.3%, respectively, in July.

Car loan and lease delinquencies hit a record in February, based on Equifax’s tracking, with 8.8% of subprime accounts behind on payment by at least 60 days. That edged down to 8.5% in March but was still the second highest level on record.

Fewer people are in subprime credit-score brackets than when the pandemic began. Some 18.6% of U.S. adults with credit scores had a score lower than 600 in 2020, compared with 15.5% last year, according to Fair Isaac Corp. , creator of FICO scores.

Lenders say that delinquencies are going up from artificially low levels and that their credit portfolios overall remain strong. Many refer to what is happening as a normalization, where delinquency rates return to levels more in line with prepandemic times. Some say their delinquencies remain below their first-quarter 2020 levels. (…)

That does not include the BNPL crowd…

U.S. Housing Starts Dip in April but Remain Elevated

Housing starts edged down by 0.2% (14.6% y/y) in April to 1.724 million units from 1.728 million in March. The March figure was revised down sharply from 1.793 million. The Action Economics Forecast Survey expected 1.765 million starts in April, which signaled that economists did not think the surprisingly high reported March figure would hold. The downward revision and slight decline recast the starts figures, suggesting they remained at an elevated range in April.

The pattern of housing construction activity seems to be shifting toward multifamily. Initially after the pandemic lockdowns, single-family starts and permits jumped, but have remained in a range for the past two years. Meanwhile, starts of multifamily dwellings, which are about half the size of single-family units, have been rising steadily. In April, starts of single-family units fell 7.3% (3.7% y/y) to 1.100 million following a dip to 1.187 in March. Multi-family housing starts jumped 15.3% (40.5% y/y) to 624,000 in April, which was a 26-year high.

By region, housing starts remain volatile and mixed. After skyrocketing in March, the Northeast gave back a third of that gain (23.2% m/m) in April to 182,000. Starts in the West rose 3.4% (11.6% y/y) to 432,000. Starts in the Midwest dropped by 22.0% (2.2% y/y) to 184,000 in April. In the South, housing starts increased 10.6% (18.4% y/y) to 926,000 units. The South is the only region showing a noticeable upward trend.

Building permits declined by 3.2% (3.1% y/y) to 1.819 million from 1.879 million in March. Permits to build single-family homes declined 4.5% (-3.7% y/y) in April to 1.110 million units. Permits to build multi-family edged down by 1.0% (15.6% y/y) to 709,000.

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Canadian Inflation Hits New Three-Decade High of 6.8% on Housing

The average of core measures — often seen as a better indicator of underlying price pressures — rose to 4.23%, the highest since 1990. (…)

Shelter costs were a leading driver for price gains in April, while prices for gasoline declined slightly. Food costs also continue to rise quickly, gaining 8.8% on an annual basis as the war in Ukraine drives up the price of critical foodstuffs like wheat and farming inputs like fertilizer. Prices for food purchased from stores are up 9.7% from a year ago, the statistics agency said, the fastest gain since 1981.

There were some signs of easing pressure on a month-over-month basis, even as gains continue to be historically high. In April, prices rose 0.6%, versus expectations for a 0.5% gain, after a 1.4% gain in March.

The 6.8% annual reading, though, may not represent the peak of annual price gains, given that gasoline prices have picked up since last month, with some economists speculating inflation could top 7%.

Canadian and US inflation running high

There are also signs that imported inflation continues to spill over into domestic price gains, with the cost of services rising 4.6% from a year earlier, the fastest pace since 1991.

“The key takeaway from April’s CPI release is that inflation is spreading much more broadly, and at clear risk of getting firmly entrenched,” Porter said. (…)

  • CPI +6.8% YoY in April, prior +6.7%
  • CPI-Common +3.2%, prior +3.0%
  • CPI-Trim +5.1%, prior +4.8%
  • CPI-Median +4.4%, prior +4.0%

MoM: CPI: +0.7% after +1.0%

            Core CPI: +0.5% after +0.7%

            Shelter: +1.1%, most since 2006.

The increases in the average of the BoC-preferred core measures over the last two months have been the highest on record except for March 2011.

European Auto Sales Plunge 20% In April, Extending 10 Month Losing Streak
China Stops Reporting Bond Trades by Foreigners After Selloff

Foreigners slashed Chinese government bond holdings by record in March

Stock Market Top-Heavy, Carnage Is Widespread As former highfliers including Microsoft, Apple and Amazon falter, broader market feels pain

Eight companies are to blame for nearly half the stock market’s decline this year—and the pain doesn’t end there.

Apple Inc., Microsoft Corp. , Amazon. com Inc., Tesla Inc. and the parent companies of Google and Facebook swelled to be so big in recent years that they accounted for 25% of the S&P 500 heading into 2022. (…)

Together with Nvidia Corp. and Netflix Inc. , they are responsible for 49.6% of the benchmark’s 2022 losses through Tuesday on a total-return basis, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices.

The S&P 500 has tumbled 18% in 2022, or 17% when accounting for dividends and stock distributions. The stock market’s former darlings have fallen even farther. Netflix has declined 71%, and Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc. and Nvidia are down 43% and 42%, respectively. The other five stocks have dropped between 21% and 36%. (…)

The stocks supporting the S&P 500 this year have been Exxon Mobil Corp. , Chevron Corp. and ConocoPhillips, along with Merck & Co. and AbbVie Inc. , according to S&P Dow Jones Indices. The energy stocks have climbed more than 40% this year, while Merck has added 20% and AbbVie has climbed 13%. (…)

As an example, Kostin cited the weakness in cyclical stocks compared with defensive sectors since January, which he said showed a 17 percentage points decline. “The relative performance of these two factors has closely tracked the level of the ISM index for more than a decade,” Kostin wrote. “The ISM currently stands at 55, but the relative performance of cyclicals versus defensives would imply a level below 50.” (…)

Comparing the S&P 500’s performance across 12 recessions since World War Two, Goldman’s Kostin said the US benchmark contracted from peak to trough by a median of 24%. A similar decline for the index from its January record high would bring it close to 3,650 points — nearly 7% below current levels — while the average decline of 30% would take it to 3,360, Kostin said. (…)

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Bolstering his opinion is a conviction that US inflation has probably peaked, or is about to do so, paving the way for a pullback in price pressures that will eventually allow the Federal Reserve to moderate the pace of monetary tightening. Fed Chair Jerome Powell, in his most hawkish remarks to date, said Tuesday the US central bank will keep raising interest rates until there is “clear and convincing” evidence that inflation is in retreat. (…)

While Kolanovic and strategists like Kate Moore at BlackRock Inc. have suggested that concerns of an imminent recession are overblown, investors are piling into cash as stagflation worries mount, according to a recent Bank of America Corp. fund manager survey.

Kolanovic has maintained a bullish point of view even as stocks have tumbled. Just in the past couple of weeks, he’s advocated adding risk on peak hawkishness, and said markets are overpricing the odds of a recession. In mid-March he said market corrections were almost done, after in February saying bond traders were overpricing a hawkish Fed. (…)

Meanwhile, JPM’s economists are worried. GDP growth:

  • 2022H2 is cut from 3.0% to 2.4%
  • 2023H1 is cut from 2.1% to 1.5%
  • 2023H2 is cut from 1.4% to 1.0%

Worst of Treasuries Rout Is Over For Now, JPMorgan Asset Says Fund sees close to even odds of a US recession next year.

Rise in 10-year Treasury yields has eased

Kohl’s becomes latest retailer to warn of inflation eating into profits “Sales considerably weakened in April as we encountered macro headwinds related to lapping last year’s stimulus and an inflationary consumer environment,” Kohl’s Chief Executive Officer Michelle Gass said.

The company’s net sales fell 5.2% to $3.47 billion in the first quarter ended April 30. Analysts had expected $3.68 billion, according to Refinitiv data.

On an adjusted basis, Kohl’s earnings fell about 90% to 11 cents per share in the reported quarter.

China in Talks With Russia to Buy Oil for Strategic Reserves
China Warns US a ‘Dangerous Situation’ Forming Over Taiwan It remains a major sticking point between the world’s biggest economies.

THE DAILY EDGE: 18 MAY 2022: Retail Warnings!

RETAIL SALES: PICK YOUR NUMBERS

Inflation is tricking retail sales data. There is no official deflator for retail sales. The St-Louis Fed provides a Real Retail Sales Series but it simply uses total CPI as a deflator. Most of the time, this is a valid proxy. This year, however, it is misleading because services inflation, 60% of the CPI, is much lower than goods inflation. There are virtually no services in retail sales data. Deflating with total CPI therefore currently overstates real sales.

This chart plots CPI-services (red, +5.4% YoY in April) with CPI-durables (blue, +14%), CPI-nondurables (yellow, +12.8%) and my own CPI-retail (black, +12.5%), essentially using a CPI-ex-services calculation. This provides a much better reflection of retail price trends since mid-2020. By comparison, total CPI was up 8.3% in April.

fredgraph - 2022-05-17T180517.516

This next chart shows the YoY trends in nominal retail sales (red, +8.2% in April), real retail sales per the St-Louis Fed (blue,-0.03%) and my own version of real sales (black, -3.8%).

fredgraph - 2022-05-17T181754.569

This other chart plots the same series indexed at February 2020 = 100. Nominal sales remain in an uptrend, up a huge 28.8% from their pre-pandemic level. The St-Louis Fed version of real sales has flattened since March 2021 and is up 15.6% while my own version of real sales has been trending down and is up a lesser 10% from its pre-pandemic level. Importantly, it’s back on its long-term trend (dash), meaning that Americans’ splurge on goods is over.

fredgraph - 2022-05-17T183112.640

Americans generally spend their labor income (aggregate payrolls in black below). During the pandemic, particularly since March 2021 (remember the stimmies), they spent much more, significantly overspending on goods which propelled retail sales. The latest data suggest that payrolls are back as the main driver and that savings may not play as big a role as many expect in 2022.

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Now we can better understand the “surprising” poor results from some of the best retailers in the world.

Walmart Flashes a Warning Sign to the Entire Consumer Economy The world’s biggest retailer is known for being careful about costs. But that’s harder to do when prices for everything are going up.

The country’s largest retailer by revenue said sales increased in the most recent quarter, but higher product, supply-chain and employee costs ate into profits, sending the retailer’s stock sharply lower Tuesday. (…)

On Tuesday Walmart said its net income in the April-ended quarter fell 25% from a year ago, and that earnings per share came in below analysts’ forecasts. (…)

“We’re not happy with the profit performance for the quarter and we’ve taken action, especially in the latter part of the quarter on cost negotiations, staffing levels and pricing, while also managing our price gaps,” Mr. McMillon said on Tuesday.

Inventory levels increased over 33% in the quarter from the same period last year. That rise reflects the higher cost of goods due to inflation, the company said, along with Walmart’s choice to buy products aggressively amid supply-chain snarls and rising demand for some goods in past quarters. Product markdowns, when a retailer sells an item at a discount, were $100 million more than expected in the quarter.

Supply-chain costs also came in higher than expected as the war in Ukraine and uptick in Covid-19 globally created delays, said Chief Financial Officer Brett Biggs. “The supply chain didn’t move towards normal as quickly as we thought,” he said. (…)

U.S. comparable sales, those from stores or digital channels operating for at least 12 months, rose 3% in the quarter ended April 29 (…).

Walmart said it expects U.S. comparable sales for the full year to grow about 3.5%, up from a prior estimate of 3%. It expects operating income to decrease about 1%, excluding currency fluctuations, down from a previous estimate of an around 3% increase. (…)

If Walmart is struggling even with its thriftiness and superior scale, then smaller and less efficient retailers are in for a very difficult time — not least because there was another note of caution in Walmart’s first quarter announcement.

The squeeze of inflation on discretionary incomes is starting to affect what consumers buy. Because Americans were having to spend more on food, they cut back on clothing and home furnishings more than Walmart had expected. Unseasonably cool weather, affecting items such as apparel and patio furniture, didn’t help either.

Walmart isn’t the only retailer to feel the pinch of high prices. While Home Depot Inc. reported better-than-expected first-quarter sales and saw an 11% increase in the average amount that each consumer spent in the first quarter, the number of customer transactions fell by 8%. (…)

(…) Comparable sales, including sales from Target stores or digital channels operating for at least 12 months, rose 3.3% from the prior year, the company said. Digital sales climbed 3.2%—its slowest growth since the beginning of the pandemic.

While total revenue increased 4% to $25.2 billion, operating income was $1.3 billion, down from $2.4 billion for the same quarter in 2021. Target reported earnings per share of $2.16, down 48% from a year earlier, and below Wall Street forecasts. (…)

Target’s operating income margin rate was 5.3%, compared with 9.8% in 2021, with the retailer saying it expected a similar level of profitability in its second quarter. For the full year, the company said it continues to expect an operating margin rate in a range centered around 6%. (…)

Target management said fuel and freight costs will be $1 billion higher this year than it had expected, with little sign of their easing throughout 2022. The company said it would try not to pass those cost increases to consumers through higher prices for its goods, trading short-term profit for what it hopes will be longer-term market-share gains. (…)

“Throughout the quarter, we faced unexpectedly high costs, driven by a number of factors, resulting in profitability that came in well below our expectations, and well below where we expect to operate over time,” Target Chief Executive Brian Cornell told reporters. (…)

“These (costs) continue to grow almost on a daily basis and there is no sign right now…that it is going to abate over time.”

Mr. Cornell said customers were buying fewer big items such as bicycles, TVs and kitchen items than in the past two years. Shoppers are “moving from buying small kitchen appliances and maybe replacing that with gift cards to restaurants and entertainment as they return to a more normalized lifestyle,” he said. (…)

“(Pricing) continues to be the last lever we pull,” finance chief Michael Fiddelke said. “While we don’t like the impact to our profitability in the short term, we know it is the right thing to do.” (…)

Contrast these comp sales growth rates in the 3% range (even drops like at Lowe’s) with total CPI up 8.3% in April, let alone of my own CPI-retail at +12.5% in April.

These are HUGE declines in volume, resulting in excess inventories (+33% at WMT!!!) that will lead to more markdowns, cancelled orders and weakening manufacturing activity worldwide.

Pricing power has disappeared!!!

Payrolls are currently rising faster than inflation thanks to rising employment and wages but the gap is narrowing. The Fed needs to slow employment growth to prevent a wage spiral. The hope is that inflation will slow in sync, protecting real income. This is the recipe for a soft landing: don’t squeeze the consumer.

fredgraph - 2022-05-18T055707.349

Mr. Powell is well aware of the challenging odds. We should all be:

(…) “Restoring price stability is an unconditional need. It is something we have to do,” Mr. Powell said in an interview Tuesday during The Wall Street Journal’s Future of Everything Festival. “There could be some pain involved.”

Mr. Powell said he hoped that the Fed could bring down inflation while preserving a strong labor market, which he said might lead the unemployment rate—near half-century lows of 3.6% in April—to rise slightly. “It may not be a perfect labor market,” he said. (…)

Mr. Powell said Tuesday that it was possible that disruptions from the pandemic had changed the labor market in ways that made current levels of unemployment inconsistent with the Fed’s 2% inflation goal.

He said that it seemed the unemployment rate consistent with stable inflation “is probably well above 3.6%.” (…)

The Fed chairman repeated his hope that the central bank can curtail high inflation without spurring a large rise in unemployment. However, Mr. Powell said, there is little from modern economic experience to suggest that outcome can be achieved. “If you look in the history book and find it—no, you can’t,” he said. “I think we are in a world of firsts.” (…)

“We will go until we feel like we are at a place where we can say, ‘Yes, financial conditions are at an appropriate place. We see inflation coming down,’” Mr. Powell said. “We will go to that point, and there will not be any hesitation about that.”

“This is not a time for tremendously nuanced readings of inflation,” Mr. Powell said. “We need to see inflation coming down in a convincing way. Until we do, we’ll keep going.”

Wells Fargo & Co. Chief Executive Charlie Scharf, speaking at the same event Tuesday morning, said it would be difficult to avoid a recession but noted that consumers and businesses remain financially solid.

“The fact that everyone is so strong going into this should hopefully provide a cushion such that whatever recession there is, if there is one, is short and not all that deep,” he said. (…)

Gasoline Tops $4 a Gallon in Every US State for the First Time
U.K. Inflation Hits 40-Year High The U.K.’s annual rate of inflation jumped to 9% in April, the highest level recorded by an industrialized nation since the start of the global price surge last year.

(…) GfK’s measure of consumer confidence slumped to -38, a level last seen in the early 1990s as well as in 2008. Of particular note is the GfK index that tracks how people feel about making a major purchase: The most recent data suggest Brits don’t think this is a good time to buy expensive items such as furniture or cars. (…)

Sales weakened in April, according to the British Retail Consortium and KPMG’s Retail Sales Monitor. Although this figure compares with the period a year ago, when consumers were unleashing pent-up demand after stores reopened, it’s clear that spending is sliding. With total sales falling by 0.3% in April, and inflation estimated at 9.1% that month, this implies a big fall in the volume of goods sold. (…)

Big-ticket items were hit hardest by the slowdown in April, according to the BRC and KPMG. Many Brits refreshed their homes when they were spending much of their time there. Now, furniture sales are suffering. In addition, the sector is seeing price rises, because items are generally bulky and expensive to ship in containers. Made.com Group Plc, the online home-furnishings retailer, warned on profits on Monday after volatile trading, and estimated that the digital furniture market as a whole was down by 30% to 40% so far this year. (…)

Data from Barclaycard showed that consumer credit and debit-card spending rose 18.1% in April, compared with the corresponding period in 2019, marking the highest uplift since October 2021. However, this was largely driven by holiday bookings. International travel had its best month since before the outbreak of Covid-19. In contrast, spending on some other categories, such as nights out, takeaways and subscriptions all had smaller boosts than in March. (…)

U.S. Home Builder Index Took a Steep Drop in May

The Composite Housing Market Index from the National Association of Home Builders-Wells Fargo fell 10.4% m/m (-16.9% y/y) to 69 in May from 77 in April. This is the fifth straight month that builder sentiment has declined and the lowest since June 2020. The decline was significantly steeper than the INFORMA Global Markets survey expectations of 76.

The current sales reading fell 9.3% m/m (-11.4% y/y) in May to 78 from April’s reading of 86 and stood at its lowest level since July 2020. The index of expected sales in the next six months dropped 13.7% m/m (-22.2% y/y) to 63 in May from 73 in April. The index peaked at 89 in November 2020.

The index measuring traffic of prospective buyers fell 14.8% m/m (-28.8% y/y) to 52. The index stood at the lowest level since June 2020.

Regional activity was largely weak in May. The NAHB reported that “growing affordability challenges in the form of rapidly rising interest rates, double-digit price increases for material costs and ongoing home price appreciation are taking a toll on buyer demand”. The index for the Midwest fell 17.7% m/m (-28.2% y/y) to 51. The index for the West declined 13.1% m/m (-19.8% y/y)) to 73. The South posted a decline of 7.3% m/m (11.6% y/y) to 76 in May. The Northeast was the only region posting a monthly rise, up 2.7% m/m (-2.6% y/y). These regional series begin in December 2004.

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Demand has normalized. Traffic has dropped to levels that were on the high side pre-pandemic. The frenzy is gone. The froth will follow.

U.S. Industrial Production Much Stronger than Expected in April

Industrial production increased 1.1% (6.4% y/y) in April following an unrevised 0.9% gain in March. A 0.4% increase had been expected in the Action Economics Forecast Survey. Manufacturing output rose 0.8% m/m (5.8% y/y) in April, the same monthly increase as in March (revised down slightly from 0.9%). Utilities output increased 2.4% m/m (7.5% y/y) following a 0.3% decline in March. Mining output gained 1.6% m/m (8.6% y/y) in April after a 1.9% m/m increase in March.

The increase in manufacturing output in April was once again led by motor vehicle and parts production, which was up 3.9% m/m on top of an upwardly revised 8.4% monthly gain in March (initially 7.8% m/m). Durable goods manufacturing was up 1.1% m/m while nondurable good output rose a more modest 0.3% m/m.

In the special classifications, factory output of selected high technology industries fell 0.3% m/m in April, the first monthly decline since August 2021, after a 1.4% m/m gain in March. Factory production excluding the high technology sector increased a solid 0.8% m/m, the same monthly increase as in March. Manufacturing production excluding both high tech and motor vehicles rose 0.6% m/m in April after a 0.3% m/m increase in March.

Capacity utilization rose to 79.0% in April, the highest level since December 2018, from 78.2% in March (revised from 78.3%). A 78.6% rate had been expected. Utilization in the factory sector rose to 79.2% in April, the highest reading since April 2007, from 78.6% in March (revised from 78.7%).

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Canada Can Boost Oil Output by 900,000 Barrels a Day, Kenney Says

Premier Jason Kenney gave the estimate in testimony before a U.S. Senate committee on Tuesday. It’s about triple the estimate delivered weeks ago by Canadian Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson.

About 300,000 barrels a day of unused capacity exists in the North American pipeline system, which should be filled this year through higher output, Kenney said. Another 200,000 barrels of crude oil could be shipped by rail and “if midstream companies get serious about it, and if regulators approve it,” a further 400,000 barrels could be added through pipeline reversals and technical improvements. (…)

By 2024, the completion of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project to British Columbia will give Canada even more capacity to ship oil to the US, Kenney said in an interview on Bloomberg Television. (…)

Energy producers can raise shipments of crude by 200,000 barrels a day and natural gas by the equivalent of 100,000 barrels by year-end by accelerating planned projects to expand output to help compensate for the loss of Russian supply, Wilkinson said at a March 24 press conference in Paris.

China’s New Home Prices Fall for the First Time in More Than Six Years A monthly measure of new home prices in China fell for the first time in more than six years, offering further evidence of the pain that Beijing’s regulatory campaign is inflicting on the sector.

Average new-home prices in 70 major cities edged 0.11% lower in April from a year earlier, according to Wall Street Journal calculations based on data released Wednesday by China’s National Bureau of Statistics.

The decline, though slight, marks the first such decrease since November 2015 when China was wrestling with a pronounced slowdown. It follows a 0.66% year-over-year increase in March.

When compared with the previous month, Chinese new-home prices declined for an eighth consecutive month, falling 0.3% in April—wider than March’s 0.07% month-to-month decrease.

New-home prices rose in just 30 of the 70 cities last month, compared with the 40 cities that saw increases in March. The declines were generally concentrated in China’s smaller and poorer cities, Sheng Guoqing, an analyst at the statistics bureau, said Wednesday. (…)

“Policies to stabilize home prices and buyers’ expectations need to be issued soon. Otherwise the prices will continue to cool.” (…)

As of Monday, full or partial lockdowns have been implemented in 38 Chinese cities, affecting 271 million people, according to analysts at Nomura, an investment bank. (…)

On Monday, China reported that new-home starts and home sales by value plunged 44% and 47%, respectively, in April from a year earlier.

Mortgage demand also plunged last month, contracting by the equivalent of $9 billion last month, China’s central bank said Friday. (…)

It’s not only new homes:

The share of cities that experienced sequentially higher property prices dropped in April from Marchimage_3 (2)

Hmmm…

image_2 (10)

Source: Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research

Tencent Disappoints After Lockdowns, Crackdown Wipe Out Growth

Sales barely rose to 135.5 billion yuan ($20.1 billion) for the three months ended March, missing the average forecast, after online ad revenue plummeted 18%. Overall growth decelerated for a seventh straight quarter, to the slowest pace since the Shenzhen company went public in 2004. (…)

Net income slid 51% to 23.4 billion yuan, lagging estimates despite a big gain from the sale of stock in Singapore’s Sea Ltd. (…)

Stock Selloff Crunches SPAC Creators An investor stampede out of risky trades is squeezing special-purpose acquisition companies that are running out of time to find businesses to take public.

(…) Because so many SPACs raised money during the frenzy early last year, roughly 280 face deadlines in the first quarter of 2023, figures from data provider SPAC Research show. If the current pace of SPAC deal making continues, analysts estimate that a large percentage of those blank-check firms won’t find mergers. The merger window for many SPACs is closing because it often takes months to find a deal and many companies that previously might have considered such mergers are now electing to stay private, bankers say.

Creators of those SPACs and other insiders together are now expected by early next year to lose $1 billion or more—money known as “at-risk capital” that they have already spent setting up the SPACs and can never get back. (Of course, if the creators do strike deals, they stand to make several times their money on paper because of how those deals are structured.) (…)

Some investors expect many SPACs to pursue low-quality companies to take public at improper valuations to stave off possible losses. They say that possibility shows the incentive problems inherent in such deals. Even with that expected push, analysts say many SPACs won’t find mergers because there simply aren’t enough companies that will want to complete SPAC deals in time. (…)

The recent market collapse is already triggering some SPAC liquidations and throwing a wrench in deal negotiations, bankers say. It also comes as federal regulators are tightening rules on how blank-check companies make disclosures and business projections when taking companies public.

About 90% of the companies that completed SPAC mergers during the boom that started in 2020 now trade below the SPAC’s initial listing price, according to SPAC Research. (…)

(…) The stock prices bear out the analysis. More than 300 companies that have gone public via SPAC mergers since the start of 2018 have averaged a loss of about 33 percent from the IPO price of the SPAC, versus an average loss of 2 percent for the 1,000 other companies that chose to go public through a traditional IPO as of mid-April, according to Renaissance Capital, which tracks IPOs. Compared with the S&P 500, which gained more than 50 percent during that time, the SPAC numbers are little short of a disaster. (…)

SPAC investors who can vote for the merger deals but sell out on the announcements and get their money back are doing just that. Redemptions in 2020 averaged 80 percent and are now at about 90 percent, according to market sources. (…)

The rising level of redemptions leaves the funding for the merger deals almost entirely up to PIPEs. “The PIPEs are a foundational cornerstone of a successful SPAC deal. If you find institutions to validate the transaction and its valuation, then any other investors may choose to leverage that due diligence to get comfortable with committing capital to it,” explains Ben Kwasnick, founder of SPAC Research, which tracks the market.

But there isn’t enough money coming in from PIPE deals to fill the hole. This year, PIPEs have raised only about $2.8 billion, compared with almost $14 billion in the peak month of February 2021, according to data provider SPACInsider. Fidelity, which has done $32.2 billion in PIPE investments in the past three years, made its last one in October, and BlackRock, which committed $24 billion to PIPEs during the same time period, did its last in July. Those two firms account for more than 60 percent of the $88.1 billion of PIPE money that has been raised in the past three years, according to SPACInsider.

PIPE investors have also been losing money. (…)

But though the SEC’s hard line may help stem the flood of shoddy SPACs, it seems unlikely to solve the structural problems that beset the entire sector — which are getting even worse. (…)

In March 2021, when Cembalest looked at SPAC returns, he found that the sponsors had raked in a median 468 percent return since January 2019, even after accounting for all their concessions, forfeitures, and vesting. By August, that number had gone down to 284 percent — still an almost unheard-of gain on a risk-free trade.

Then there are the IPO investors — the so-called SPAC Mafia, or SPAC arb players. They certainly appear to be rational players. From January 2019 to mid-2021, they made a median 16 percent return, according to Cembalest’s calculations. In fact, their gains were the same in August 2021 as in March of that year.

“It was almost like free money to buy the unit and sell the announcement,” says the family office investor. The SPAC yield, he notes, is still greater than the 10-year Treasury bond. “Why buy government bonds when you can just flip SPACs?”

What’s perhaps most astonishing is that to keep the SPAC machine humming, the terms for these investors — as well as for PIPE investors — have only become more lucrative, according to Ohlrogge and Klausner.

“SPACs have been evolving recently in ways that make them even more expensive vehicles to take companies public, and thus in ways that will likely lead to even worse returns for shareholders who hold their shares through SPAC mergers,” the academics wrote in a new paper published in March.

Ohlrogge and Klausner found, for example, that to lure PIPE investors, an increasing number of SPAC sponsors are letting these institutional investors buy in at steep discounts, typically $8 per share. More-complex and opaque terms for private investments make it even harder to know what they are paying — and how much it will end up costing other shareholders in the end. (…)

More-lucrative warrant terms are also being used to entice IPO investors, and the traditional 24-month time frame to find a deal is being shortened to as little as a year, according to the professors.

Another relatively new effort they point to includes overfunding SPAC trust accounts by placing additional funds in them. Instead of $10 per share, the trust accounts now have $10.20, making them still more lucrative for those who paid $10 per share and redeemed, getting $10.20 instead.

But it’s something of a vicious cycle, which could lead to the downward spiral Ohlrogge envisions. Because the sponsors are typically repaid for the overfunding, he explains, “they drain even more value out of the SPAC and they have the potential then to lead to even worse returns for the SPAC at the time of the merger, which then could require even more generous benefits [to be] paid to the IPO-stage investors.”

Says Ohlrogge: “They need to find more ways to entice the IPO-stage investors to buy in, and that’s what they’re doing.” At least they’re trying. (…)

The SPAC model has always been an ingenious, if complicated, way to convince investors and companies alike to hop aboard the gravy train, and now sponsors (and their bankers) are coming up with creative ways to keep it chugging along. But Ohlrogge says some of the new features are only making things worse.

“They have the potential to turn into a death spiral for SPACs.”

Note: the whole Institutional Investor piece is well worth a read. Good stuff for the non-initiated. Also makes you aware that Wall Street does not have your back! Never.