An Airtight Defense
by Sinclair Noe
by Sinclair Noe
DOW + 15 = 16,737
SPX + 3 = 1927 (record close)
NAS + 17 = 4251
10 YR YLD + .01 = 2.60%
OIL - .27 = 102.39
GOLD – 1.30 = 1244.60
SILV - .01 = 18.90
SPX + 3 = 1927 (record close)
NAS + 17 = 4251
10 YR YLD + .01 = 2.60%
OIL - .27 = 102.39
GOLD – 1.30 = 1244.60
SILV - .01 = 18.90
Eight times a year the Federal Reserve gathers economic
updates from the 12 districts and publishes the information about two weeks
before its FOMC meetings. The data is published in a beige folder, and that is
why it is called the Beige
Book, although it might actually refer to the writing style. Anyway,
economic activity expanded all across the country, with most districts
reporting moderate or modest growth. Consumer spending expanded across almost
all districts. Tourism was another bright spot and manufacturing activity
expanded across the country. Home sales were described as “mixed across the
country” even as home prices continue to rise. Labor markets were described as
steady. Inflation was tame, with a slight exception for higher food prices in
some areas.
In other words, when the Fed meets in a couple of weeks,
there won’t be any big changes in monetary policy.
The Institute for Supply Management said its services
index rose to 56.3%, its highest level since August, from 55.2% in April. That’s
the number and they’re sticking with it.
The US trade deficit grew to $47 billion in April, up
from $44 billion in March. Exports slowed in April, down slightly to $193
billion. Imports, meanwhile, surged by nearly $3 billion to $237 billion, mainly
driven by increased spending in consumer goods and cars.
A new survey
from the MacArthur Foundation finds 70% of Americans still feel a housing
crisis remains today and the worst is yet to come; that’s down from 77% a year
ago, but still it doesn’t look like there’s much confidence in a housing
recovery. Half the respondents think housing represents a good long term
investment, while 43% says that’s not the case; two-thirds say it’s harder to
build wealth through home ownership than 20 or 30 years ago. Over half of
Americans, 52%, have had to make at least one major sacrifice in order to cover
their rent or mortgage over the last three years.
In line with the survey on housing, a new poll from CNN
and ORC International finds 59% of adults think the American Dream has
become impossible for most to achieve, up from 54% in a poll conducted in 2006.
What’s more, 63% of those surveyed believe most children in the US will grow up
to be worse off than their parents. While most Americans say they’re better off
than the prior generation, they also feel gains in living standards are
grinding to a halt. One problem is that the survey didn’t define exactly what
the American Dream is supposed to be.
ADP, the payroll processing firm, issues a monthly
payroll report ahead of the Labor Department each month. The ADP report is not
always an accurate predictor of the government report but it is still closely
watched for any hints. ADP says the economy added 179,000 private sector jobs
in May; that’s significantly below the consensus estimate of 200,000 to 215,000
jobs for the Friday jobs report.
According to the latest revisions from the Labor
Department, productivity in the first quarter declined at a 3.2% annual rate,
the worst in six years, as workers spent more time on the job producing fewer
goods during an unusually stormy weather.
A new research study published today from the Economic
Policy Institute shows a sharp disconnect in the late 1970s between the overall
productivity of the US economy and wage gains for the average worker. Normally,
when workers make more things during a work day, they get paid more for that
day’s work. From 1948 to 1979, both hourly wages and productivity roughly
doubled. But from 1979 to 2013, productivity rose 65% while average hourly compensation
rose just 8%; those at the bottom and middle of the income ladder saw little of
those gains.
Wages for everyone at or below the 30th percentile of the
income distribution have essentially been flat, while wages for the poorest 10%
of workers have fallen during that time period. At all income levels, women
earn less on average than men do. Most
wage growth has flowed to the top 1% of earners, posting a 153% increase in
wages. Since wages for the lowest income group have fallen while wages at the
highest income group have grown, income inequality has also increased. Piketty was right.
The S&P 500 index hit another record high close
today, and even at that it’s just up about 5% year to date. The best performing
market year to date is in Dubai; posting a 56% return since the start of the
year and posting a 117% return for the past 12 months. The strongest S&P
500 subsectors this year include oil & gas equipment and services, which is
up 17%; oil & gas exploration and production, up 15%; real estate
investment trusts, up 15%; natural gas utilities, up 21%; and electric
utilities, which have risen 14%, largely on the back of some big mergers.
The top performing stocks in the S&P year to date
include: Forest Labs, up 60%, a takeover target; Nabors Industries, a contract
oil driller based in Bermuda is up 54% year to date; Electronic Arts, the video
game developer is up 51%; Keurig Green Mountain has returned 50% this year,
this is the coffee company that makes those little single serve containers of
coffee; Newfield Exploration, an oil and gas exploration and development
company out of Texas is up 49% since the start of the year; Delta Airlines is
up 47% after rejoining the S&P 500 index; and Pepco, the Washington DC
based utility is up 47% YTD, after agreeing to be acquired by Exelon. Probably nobody
picked those stocks as the top performers at the start of the year.
After the close of trade today, comes word that Sprint is
nearing an agreement price to acquire T-Mobile for about $40 a share, or around
$32 billion, a 17% premium to the closing price today. There will be regulators
to deal with. An announcement and an actual deal are still down the road. If
you are unhappy with the service and price you pay for your mobile phone, this
won’t help.
A federal appeals court has overturned a decision by
Judge Jed Rakoff to reject a federal settlement deal with Citigroup. Judge
Rakoff had considered the Citigroup-SEC settlement to be little more than a
slap on the wrist. The original case accused Citigroup of duping investors into
buying tainted CDO’s, Collateralized Debt Obligations. The bank agreed to pay
$285 million to settle the civil fraud case, without admitting wrongdoing.
Judge Rakoff called the fine “pocket change” for the bank
and said the settlement deprived the public “of ever knowing the truth in a
matter of obvious public importance.” And now the court of appeals decision is
going to rein in judicial discretion even more. The ruling essentially says
that a judges job is not to search for the truth. One small victory for Judge Rakoff: the SEC
last year reversed its longstanding yet unofficial policy of allowing companies
to neither “admit nor deny wrongdoing,” signaling that it would force
admissions in particularly egregious cases.
If only the SEC had the backbone to pursue a particularly
egregious case.
The G-7 or Group of 7 is meeting today and tomorrow; it
used to be the G8 until Putin invaded Crimea, and so Russia was kicked out of
the clubhouse. A draft of the G7 communique calls on Russia to "accelerate
withdrawal of military forces from the eastern border with Ukraine" and
"exercise its influence among armed separatists to lay down their
weapons".
More important is how Europe will deal with energy
security as the continent relies on Russia for about a third of its oil and
gas, a fact that gives Putin considerable leverage over the EU. The G7 draft
communique says: "The use of energy supplies as a means of political
coercion or as a threat to security is unacceptable." Euro leaders say
they are committed to diversifying energy sources away from Russia, but it won’t
happen overnight. Complacency on the energy front seems like a really big
mistake.
As the G7 meeting wraps up, the various leaders will head
to France on Friday to mark the 70th anniversary of the D-Day invasion
at Normandy. Putin will be there. No negotiations or diplomatic level talks are
planned but it should make for some interesting photo ops.
And before the D-Day anniversary there will be an
uncomfortable dinner between President Obama and French President Hollande, who
will make the case that the French bank, BNP Paribas should not be fined $10
billion for money laundering. Naturally, this has BNP clients nervous about
what all this means for business, and the upper echelons of BNP management
nervous about how their employees might respond to questions about money
laundering.
Once upon a time BNP thought they could beat the rap. BNP
showed prosecutors a memo that the bank thought would explain and possibly
mitigate the conduct. The memo, drafted around 2004 by an outside law firm,
essentially authorized the bank to process certain transactions for Sudan, as
long as BNP’s employees in New York were not involved in the arrangement. BNP
argued that it lacked the intent to commit a crime, saying that it followed the
law firm’s directive. That legal argument, known as the “advice of counsel”
defense, prompted prosecutors to pore over the single-page memo and weigh the
bank’s argument. Ultimately the prosecutors concluded that the memo alleviated
only a small fraction of the wrongdoing. Apparently hiring lawyers to tell you
that you can do whatever you want turns out to be a little bit less than an
airtight legal strategy.
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