The Color of the Day is Beige
by Sinclair Noe
DOW + 77 = 17,138
SPX + 8 = 1981
NAS + 9 = 4425
10 YR YLD - .01 = 2.53%
OIL + 1.38 = 101.34
GOLD + 6.20 = 1300.80
SILV + .07 = 20.89
A record high close for the Dow; the 15th record high close of the year for the Dow. The S&P 500 did not take out the old high from July 3rd. We have a few economic reports to cover, plus Fed Chair Yellen continued testimony on Capitol Hill, and lots more.
SPX + 8 = 1981
NAS + 9 = 4425
10 YR YLD - .01 = 2.53%
OIL + 1.38 = 101.34
GOLD + 6.20 = 1300.80
SILV + .07 = 20.89
A record high close for the Dow; the 15th record high close of the year for the Dow. The S&P 500 did not take out the old high from July 3rd. We have a few economic reports to cover, plus Fed Chair Yellen continued testimony on Capitol Hill, and lots more.
Industrial production increased 0.2% in June to 103.9.
This is 24.1% above the recession low, and 3.1% above the pre-recession peak.
For the second quarter, industrial production advanced at an annual rate of
5.5%; so the quarter was good but the month of June was less than expected.
The Commerce Department reports producer prices increased
by a seasonally adjusted 0.4% last month, above forecasts for a 0.2% gain,
after falling 0.2% in May. Year-over-year, the producer price index rose at an
annualized rate of 1.9% in June. The core rate, stripping out food and energy
prices, was up 0.2%.
This afternoon, the Federal Reserve released its Beige
Book, a collection of reports from the 12 Fed districts. The general consensus
is that economic growth was moderate to modest. Most Districts were optimistic
about the outlook for growth. Consumer spending increased in every district.
Retail sales grew modestly in most districts. Auto sales, which have been on
the upswing for more than a year, continued to stand out as particularly brisk
support for the economy, but broader retail sales were more subdued. Labor
market conditions continue to improve with all districts reporting slight to
moderate employment growth. Several districts reported "some
difficulty" finding staff for skilled positions, however there doesn’t
seem to be any pressure on wages. Here’s a hint, if you can’t find skilled
workers, try offering higher wages. The report gave a mixed appraisal of the US
housing market. Conditions "varied" across the country, with some
regions suffering from weak demand.
Fed Chair Janet Yellen returned to Capitol Hill to
deliver her second day of Humphrey Hawkins testimony. The prepared remarks were
the same as yesterday, then they open up for a Q&A. Some of the key points
from today’s hearing:
Yellen said she is optimistic about the economy, “We had
a very surprising negative growth in the first quarter, which is a number that
in a way doesn't seem consistent with the underlining momentum in the economy
and many indicators of spending and production. And I do think the economy is
recovering and that growth is picking up and that we have sufficient growth to
support continued improvement in the labor market."
Yellen said threats to financial stability are moderate “and
not a very high level.” She again weighed in on valuations, saying: "Some
things may be on the high side and there may be some pockets where we see
valuations becoming very stretched but not generally. The use of leverage is
not broad-based, it hasn't increased, and credit growth is not at alarming
levels by any means."
Yellen did not single out specific sectors today. Yesterday
she said biotech and social media looked a bit over-valued. That had some
talking heads complaining; the funniest rant came from Jim Cramer, who said: “Next
time, Fed Chief Yellen, it might pay to point out that there are plenty of
cheap stocks out there, too. At least that way you can help us make money, not
just lose it.” Maybe someone can tell Cramer the Fed is not in business to help
him make stock picks, no matter how much help he needs. The Fed has been
incredibly accommodative to Wall Street, and Cramer still complains. The Fed
doesn’t issue a price target on Twitter. But if you read between the lines,
Yellen was likely saying that there are no plans to raise the margin
requirements on brokers.
There were some questions about a bill in the House that
would require the Fed to follow a mathematical rule for when to raise or lower
interest rates. Yellen didn’t like that idea; she said there is no magic
formula for raising rates. Yellen again expressed confidence the Fed can exit
when the time comes. The Fed has a variety of tools it can use to raise
interest rates. In the distant future, the Fed’s balance sheet will shrink in
size.
The best line from the Fed did not come from Yellen; Dallas
Fed President Richard Fisher was speaking today at the University of Southern
California. Fisher said ending asset purchases this fall isn’t enough; the Fed
should start to taper the reinvestment of maturing securities in October.
Fisher said: "Monetary policy is a bit like duck hunting. If you want to
bag a mallard, you don't aim where the bird is at present, you aim ahead of its
flight pattern. To me, the flight pattern of the economy is clearly toward
increasing employment and inflation that will sooner than expected pierce
through the tolerance level of 2%."
Meanwhile, it’s earnings reporting season. Bank of
America said profit declined 43% as it spent $4 billion to cover litigation
costs, including a mortgage settlement with AIG. There seems to be a trend
developing in banks’ earnings reports; they are making money on investment
banking and some other areas, but results are weak for mortgage originations,
and they are setting aside big chunks of earnings to pay for legal settlements.
Bank of America and the Department of Justice are
reportedly negotiating a mortgage securities settlement, which could cost the
bank around $13 billion.
Intel was up more than 9% after a very strong earnings
report after the close yesterday. Yahoo fell today following weaker than
expected earnings. EBay posted lower than expected 2Q results and even though
sales were up this month, EBay cut its outlook for the third quarter.
Merger and acquisition activity has been wild lately.
Today’s M&A stories revolved around Rupert Murdoch’s plan to buy Time
Warner for $85 a share, or about $75 billion. Time Warner says it isn’t
interested in exploring a sale, but if they sell, there are other potential
suitors. General Electric is in talks to sell its household appliances
business; that’s a part of the company that’s been around since 1905, when they
invented the electric toaster. Yesterday, the number 2 tobacco company, Reynolds
American agreed to buy the number 3 tobacco company, Lorillard for $25 billion.
One of the motivating factors behind mergers lately has
been something called inversion, basically merging with an overseas company to
avoid corporate taxes in the US. Members of the House and Senate have made
proposals to curb the inversion trend in recent months, and the president
included a provision in the budget he presented to Congress this year that
would have effectively banned the move. But none of these efforts have yet
gained traction. Today, Treasury Secretary Jack Lew called on Congress to enact
legislation to halt inversion, effective immediately and retroactive to May. Making any new legislation retroactive
through May could disrupt several megadeals that have already been struck, such
as the Medtronics deal.
Global M&A volume in the first half was the highest
since 2007. One of the side effects of the M&A frenzy back in 2007-2008 was
the frenzy of pink slips that followed. Deals are sold to investors on the
basis of “creating value” with terms like “efficiencies” and “synergies”; code
words for cost cutting and mass-layoffs. Acquisitions, layoffs, and
cost-cutting are the simplest things to do for a CEO, as opposed to inventing
things and boosting sales organically, which is hard. Analysts love M&A,
investors too, and of course the investment bankers promote it as the best
thing since sliced bread, or maybe electric toasters.
Last year, Microsoft acquired Nokia’s mobile phone
business and promised $600 million in cost saving and efficiencies and
synergies. Now, Microsoft employees are bracing for up to 12,000 layoffs, the
biggest ever for Microsoft. The layoff news will come before the company holds
its post-earnings conference call after the market closes July 22.
Leaders of the five BRICS nations agreed on the structure
of a $50 billion development bank by granting China its headquarters and India
its first rotating presidency. The leaders also formalized the creation of a
$100 billion currency exchange reserve, which member states can tap in case of
balance of payment crises. Both initiatives, which require legislative
approval, are designed to provide an alternative to financing from the
International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, where BRICS countries have been
seeking more say.
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