Narrow Decisions Leave the Doors Wide Open
by Sinclair Noe
by Sinclair Noe
DOW – 25 = 16,826
SPX – 0.73 = 1960
NAS + 10 = 4408
10 YR YLD - .02 = 2.51%
OIL - .23 = 105.51
GOLD + 11.80 = 1327.90
SILV + .09 = 21.06
SPX – 0.73 = 1960
NAS + 10 = 4408
10 YR YLD - .02 = 2.51%
OIL - .23 = 105.51
GOLD + 11.80 = 1327.90
SILV + .09 = 21.06
Today’s session marked the end of trading for June as
well as for the second quarter. After a run to record closes, the S&P 500
Index posted a quarterly gain of 4.7%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average had
an increase of 2.2%. The Nasdaq Composite Index had a quarterly gain of 4.9%.
It marks the sixth straight quarterly gain for both the S&P and Nasdaq. With
six straight quarterly gains, the Nasdaq has had its longest streak of advances
since 2000, while the S&P 500 has had its best run since 1998. The Dow,
meanwhile, posted its fifth positive quarter of the last six.
For the first half of 2014, the S&P 500 is up 6%,
with the Dow industrials up 1.4%, and the Nasdaq up 5.4%. Airline,
pharmaceutical, and utilities stocks led advancers during the period, which was
marked by the impact of bad weather, and a 2.9% drop in first-quarter gross
domestic product. Yields on Ten year Treasury notes started the year at 3.03%, dropped
down to 2.71% at the end of the first quarter, then dropped to 2.45% at the
start of June. The S&P 500 has scored 22 record closing highs so far this
year, which has increased concerns among some investors that the market might
be due for a technical pullback. Yet the CBOE volatility index, or VIX, Wall
Street’s fear gauge, has held near multiyear lows.
This week will likely see light trading with a holiday
shortened week. The markets will close Friday for Independence Day. The monthly
jobs report will be issued on Thursday.
Meanwhile, oil prices have advanced steadily from 98.46 a
barrel at the start of the year, to 101.58 at the start of April, to 102.87 at
the start of June.
The precious metals have also shown some recent signs of
life. Spot gold started the year at 1206 an ounce, while silver began the year
at 19.54. Since June 1st, there has been a modest rally from 1252
for gold and 18.91 for silver. This is not a huge rally, and it doesn’t mark a
challenge to old highs, but it might signal a bounce off recent lows.
Let’s start with a couple of cases from the Supreme
Court. You recall that last week we noted the Supremes had been,
uncharacteristically unanimous on several cases; that came to a screeching halt
today in the case of Burwell v. Hobby Lobby and Conestoga Wood. In a 5-4
opinion authored by Justice Alito, the court ruled that the Obama administration
has failed to show that the contraception mandate contained in the Affordable
Care Act is the "least restrictive means of advancing its interest"
in providing birth control at no cost to women.
The Affordable Care Act contains a provision requiring
most employers to cover the full range of contraception in their health care
plans at no cost to their female employees. The Obama administration had
granted an exemption for churches and accommodations for religious hospitals,
schools and nonprofits, but for-profit companies were required to comply with
the coverage rule or pay fines.
Hobby Lobby, a Christian-owned craft supply chain store,
and Conestoga Wood Specialties Store, a Pennsylvania wood manufacturer owned by
a family of Mennonites, challenged the contraception mandate on the grounds
that it violates their religious freedom by requiring them to pay for methods
of contraception they find morally objectionable. The Religious Freedom
Restoration Act says that the federal government may not put substantial
burdens on religious exercise. The
owners of those companies believe certain forms of contraceptives are forms of
abortion, in violation of the religious beliefs of the company’s owners.
So, the court was dealing with a couple of issues. First
is a company like Hobby Lobby considered a person? This is important because
the Religious Freedom Restoration Act protects “persons” but doesn’t mention
for-profit corporations. Justice Alito wrote: "Any suggestion that
for-profit corporations are incapable of exercising religion because their
purpose is simply to make money flies in the face of modern corporate law."
The other issue was whether the mandate for contraception
coverage imposed a substantial burden on Hobby Lobby. Well, it’s a pretty easy
argument that anything the government requires a person to do is a substantial
burden, so…, strike two.
The case is being billed as a battle between women’s
rights and religious rights.
The opinion was written narrowly so as only to apply to
the contraception mandate, not to religious employers who object to other
medical services, like blood transfusions or vaccines. But there is no
certainty the ruling will be interpreted narrowly. What if a company objects to
something the government does, outside the realm of health care? Time will
tell. Another point came when Justice Ginsburg wrote: “One might ask why the
separation [between business and owner] should hold only when it serves the
interest of those who control the corporation.”
The opinion applies to small, closely held corporations,
but what if a big, publicly traded corporation makes a similar claim? As the
majority itself noted, no big, publicly-traded corporation has emerged to make
such a claim. The Court doesn’t have to rule on a question it isn’t asked. And
a closely held corporation can still be pretty big. Hobby Lobby has 572 stores.
“Closely held” refers to a corporation that has more than 50% of the value of
its outstanding stock owned by 5 or fewer individuals. These corporations are
thought to make up 90% of corporations; these corporations account for about
52% of private employment, or a little more than 60 million people. Hobby Lobby
is being described as a narrow ruling but it has the potential to affect tens
of millions of workers.
Now that the court has recognized that corporations have
religious exercise, the door has been opened. All it takes is for the right
plaintiff to walk through it.
The Supremes also issued an opinion in the case of Harris
v. Quinn, ruling 5-4 that some government workers are not required to pay union
dues. In writing for the majority, Justice Alito concluded that there was a
category of government employee, a partial public employee, who can opt out of
joining a union and not be required to contribute dues to that labor group.
What is a partial public employee? In this case it refers to home-care aides who
typically work for an ill or disabled person, with Medicaid paying their wages.
The court declined to strike down a decades-old precedent
that required many public-sector workers to pay union fees, so this does not
apply to employees such as teachers or police officers who work directly for
the government.
The case, Harris v. Quinn, was brought by eight Illinois
workers who provided home health care to Medicaid recipients. Several of the
original plaintiffs were mothers who, helped by Medicaid, were personal
home-care assistants to their disabled children and opposed joining the union
and paying any union fees. Justice Alito wrote in the majority opinion:
“Agency-fee provisions unquestionably impose a heavy burden on the First
Amendment interests of objecting employees.”
The case deals with the “fair share” fees that most
unions charge all employees, including nonmembers, to support collective
bargaining. These fees prevent free-riding. Unions are required by law to
bargain on behalf of members and nonmembers alike, all of whom benefit from
collective bargaining. If some employees could simply decline to pay to support
collective bargaining, all would have the incentive to similarly opt out,
thereby undermining the union and harming all employees. It’s a classic case of
the free-rider problem.
Because the case only deals with partial public
employees, it is being called a narrow decision, however, by giving a
constitutional underpinning to the anti-union “right to work” stance, the court
short-circuited that process, retreating from its decades-long practice of
giving states broad latitude in making economic policy, including labor policy.
In this way, the court became very much involved in economic policy.
So, today the court split on two different cases, and in
those splits they have opened up Pandora’s Box. We are likely to see and hear
much more on these issues over the next few years.
Another court ruling today, didn’t quite make it to the
Supremes, but potentially still important; the New York state Court of Appeals
ruled that towns can use zoning ordinances to ban hydraulic fracturing, or
fracking. Numerous municipalities across the state have either banned fracking
or are considering doing so, and the trend may accelerate because of the
court’s ruling. Of course, a state law in New York does not apply in other states,
but it may be the start of a trend if not necessarily a precedent.
General Motors recalled more than 8.4 million vehicles
worldwide today, bringing its total figures for the year above 28 million cars,
more than the 22 million recalled last year by all automakers combined. GM said
it was aware of seven crashes, eight injuries and three fatalities in the
recalled vehicles, but said that there was no conclusive evidence that a defect
had caused them. The death toll is just
from the latest round of recalls; 13 other deaths associated with other GM
recalls involving ignition switches will result in payments of at least $1
million per family; at least that is the starting point unveiled today by a
compensation expert hired by GM.
In economic data today; the National Association of
Realtors (NAR) said its Pending Home Sales Index, based on contracts signed
last month, increased 6.1% to 103.9, the highest level since September of last
year. Contracts increased in all regions of the country, with the Northeast and
West experiencing the largest gains. The Pending Sales Index looks at contracts
for existing homes, with the anticipation there will be an actual sale in about
2 months; so it looks like there might be a little boost for home sales.
However, signed contracts were down 5.2% from May of last year. Existing home
sales are expected to decrease by 2.8 percent this year to 4.95 million,
compared to 5.1 million sales in 2013.
There is a magazine called “The Banker” and each year
they publish rankings of the profits and capital strength of the 1,000 biggest
banks in the world. They estimate that last year the top 1,000 banks posted a
record $920 billion in profit. This was the industry’s largest-ever annual
haul, comfortably beating the pre-crisis peak of $786 billion in 2007. Last
year's global profits were up 23% from the previous year to their highest ever
level.
China's banks made $292 billion in aggregate pretax
profit last year, or 32% of the industry's global earnings. Last year China
Construction Bank shoved aside America's JPMorgan Chase to become second
largest in terms of tier-one capital. And the total Tier 1 capital of Chinese
banks has also overtaken that of the US for the first time ever, at $1.19
trillion, to make it the largest single banking sector in the world. ICBC
(formerly known as Industrial and Commercial Bank of China) kept the top spot;
with more than $200 billion, and it is also the world's most profitable bank,
with $55 billion last years. Four Chinese banks made the top ten list for
profits, including: ICBC, China Construction Bank, Agriculture Bank of China,
and Bank of China.
Chinese officials have ramped up investment in real
estate through the state controlled banking system to counter weaker than
desired growth. They will likely continue this stimulus, even if it means
construction of buildings that will sit vacant. Then there is the $5 trillion
dollar question of the health of China’s lightly regulated shadow banking
system.
The top US banks in terms of Tier-one capital are
JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo. Banks in the United
States made aggregate profits of $183 billion, or 20% of the global tally, led
by Wells Fargo's earnings of $32 billion. The top 10 US banks in the 2014
ranking have an aggregate capital-to-assets ratio of 7.84%. This compares with
a ratio of just 4.47% for the top 10 banks in the EU. To some extent, the
difference is explained by US Generally Agreed Accounting Principles (GAAP),
which allow netting of derivative positions.
Until 2007, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group was a banking
giant in terms of tier-one capital, now it ranks tenth, and it is the only
Japanese bank in the top ten. In the Top 1000 ranking 20 years ago, all the top
six positions were held by Japanese banks. With 20/20 hindsight we can see that
the Japanese banking boom was unsustainable. And now China’s banking boom seems
to be getting ahead of itself. Chinese banks capital-to-asset ratio is 2
percentage points lower than that in the US, which basically means that if loans
start to default, they have a smaller cushion.
Over the past 15 years, Chinese banks average profit
growth has been more than 50% per year; while assets have risen more than 20%
per year and China’s economic growth has been just under 14% per year. And in
the past 4 years, the Chinese economy has slowed from those double digit growth
levels, even as Chinese bank profits have accelerated. It seems unlikely that
this path is sustainable, and more likely that there is some combination of
lower growth rates in the banking sector or stronger growth rates in the
Chinese economy.
Ten years ago, Europe counted five banks among the
world's top ten. Today there is only one, HSBC, in fifth place. Struggling Eurozone
banks contributed just 3% overall to global profits, down from 25% before the
2008 crisis, as recovery remains slow or non-existent in many countries. There
are no French or Spanish or German banks in the top ten. Italian banks lost $35
billion last year, and occupy four of the top five spots in terms of the
biggest annual losses. And European banks accounted for 24 of the top 25
losses.
Meanwhile, BNP Paribas is in hot water. Today, BNP
pleaded guilty in New York state court, admitting to transferring billions of
dollars to blacklisted countries under US sanctions. The plea to one count of
falsifying business records and one count of conspiracy is part of a broader
settlement deal with state and federal authorities. As part of that deal, BNP
agreed to plead guilty to criminal charges and pay about $8.9 billion.
BNP is the seventh bank to settle a criminal sanctions
violation case but the first to plead guilty; prosecutors consider BNP to be the
worst offender. Like other banks, BNP hid the names of Sudanese and Iranian clients
when sending transactions coursing through its New York operations and the broader
American financial system, but the wrongdoing was more pervasive at BNP, stretching
from at least 2002 into 2012, after the investigation was already in full
swing.
The BNP investigation centered on its commodity-trade
finance business in Paris and Geneva. About 30 executives who worked there have
resigned, gone on leave, been fired or relocated since 2012. Unauthorized
dollar payments were made on behalf of oil companies to Sudanese or Iranian
entities. Prosecutors also reviewed metals and agriculture commodity deals, as
well as non-commodity transactions. In total, the bank is suspected of hiding
about $30 billion in transactions.
BNP will prevent certain units within BNP’s headquarters
in Paris, as well as offices in Geneva, from processing payments in dollar
denominations, also known as dollar clearing, for one year beginning in 2015. The
deal also requires BNP dismiss 13 employees. The deal comes six weeks after
Credit Suisse pleaded guilty to helping American clients evade taxes. Both
banks could have faced the loss of their bank charter in the US, which is
considered to be the Wall Street equivalent of a death penalty for a bank. That
did not happen. Prosecutors have managed to extract a criminal guilty plea but
only a civil penalty, a slap on the wrist, even if it is a nearly $9 billion
slap.
In the months ahead, prosecutors will shift their focus
to several big banks suspected of manipulating foreign currencies; they are
expected to use the Credit Suisse, BNP cases as a template for pulling down
criminal guilty pleas without harsh punishment, proving what we’ve known for a
very long time – the big banks are too big to jail.
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