What Could Go Wrong?
by Sinclair Noe
by Sinclair Noe
DOW + 27 = 16,808
SPX + 4 = 1941
NAS + 16 = 4337
10 YR YLD + .06 = 2.65%
OIL - .30 = 106.60
GOLD un = 1272.70
SILV + .09 = 19.86
SPX + 4 = 1941
NAS + 16 = 4337
10 YR YLD + .06 = 2.65%
OIL - .30 = 106.60
GOLD un = 1272.70
SILV + .09 = 19.86
The FOMC, the Federal Open Market Committee started two
days of meetings today; tomorrow they are expected to announce more of the
same. The FOMC is largely expected to taper its asset purchase program by $10
billion to $35 billion. Effective July 1, the Fed is expected to lower its
asset purchases to $15 billion in agency mortgage backed securities (MBS) and
$20 billion in Treasuries. The Fed is also expected to maintain its current
forward guidance language on federal funds rate support; in other words, they
will keep telling us that rates might increase sometime next year.
The committee is likely to make some upgrades to its
description of the economic outlook in its economic projections. The committee
will probably need to reduce its 2014 real GDP growth forecast to take into
account the Q1 disappointment, and we can probably expect the committee to
reduce its unemployment rate forecast and lift its inflation forecast slightly.
The consumer-price index climbed a seasonally adjusted
0.4% in May from a month earlier. It marked the fastest increase since February
2013 and doubled the pace of economists' forecasts. Excluding food and energy
components, so-called core prices increased 0.3%, the fastest pace since August
2011. From a year earlier, core prices were up 2%, the most since February
2013, and now match the Fed's target.
Another inflation measure closely watched by the Fed, the
core personal-consumption expenditure, has stayed far below 2%. Inflation at
wholesale level unexpectedly dropped by 0.1% in May, but remember the PPI rose
0.6% in April, so this is just a leveling out process. Wage pressure remains
stubbornly low and consequently, the pace of the economic growth remains
uneven. In May, the real average hourly wage fell 0.2%. Real wages have fallen
three straight months even as inflation has picked up slightly.
The average hourly wage for a typical American worker
registered just $10.28 in May, adjusted for inflation and measured in constant
dollars. The real hourly wage totaled $10.31 in June 2009, the last month of
the 2007-2009 recession. This is part of a trend that stretches back about 30
years.
Still, with core prices up 2% on an annual basis, the Fed
will need to address the topic of inflation tomorrow. Let’s hope they also
mention the lack of wage gains.
Another report today shows housing starts posted a bigger-than-forecast
6.5% decline. Housing starts declined to an annual rate of 1 million units last
month from 1.07 million in April. What’s more, permits for new construction
fell by 6.4% in May to a 991,000 annual pace, the slowest in fourth months.
The situation in Iraq is still bad. The ISIS rebels are
about 40 miles north of Baghdad and seem intent on the idea of attacking the
capitol city. Or they might attack the major source of revenue for the ruling
government, and that means oil. One of three major oil refineries has now
fallen under control of ISIS; the other two are in Baghdad and the south and
not considered to be threatened at this time. About 2.5 million barrels of oil
a day are exported from Basra, Iraq’s main port, located in the south.
The world consumes about 92 million barrels a day, so
that would be a major disruption, and it would not be surprising to see prices
jump; with price levels increasing along with the severity of the given
scenario, running anywhere from a few dollars per barrel to a worst case of
$200 a barrel.
Not too long ago, Iraq was claiming that it would be
producing 12 million barrels a day by 2017. That now seems a little too
optimistic. At best, the ISIS rebellion
guarantees that any potential additional Iraqi oil output gains are not going
to materialize in the near future. No oil companies are going to invest in Iraq
until and unless the situation stabilizes.
Although the consequences for Iraqi oil production of
what has happened so far appear to be minimal, all this comes at a time when
the earlier and still ongoing conflicts in Libya and Syria have already
disrupted nearly 2 million barrels a day in world oil production. If Iraq’s
recent 3 million barrels a day was also taken out, we would be talking about a
significant disruption in world oil supplies, and likely an oil price in excess
of $150 a barrel.
The worst case scenario sees a regional conflict break
out that pits the Middle East’s Shiites (Iran) against the Sunnis (Saudi
Arabia), leading to a compromise of the Strait of Hormuz. Forty percent of the
world’s exported oil is transported through this waterway.
And if that isn’t enough, focus you attention on Ukraine.
Yesterday, Russia announced it was cutting off natural gas shipments to
Ukraine; today an explosion destroyed one of Ukraine’s main pipelines for gas
headed to Western Europe.
EU-brokered talks failed to reach a compromise between
the countries, which remain far apart on a “fair” price for gas. Ukraine’s
state-run gas operator filed a suit in an international arbitration court,
claiming $6 billion in overpayment for gas since 2010. Its Russian counterpart
filed a suit of its own, alleging unpaid debts worth $4.5 billion on gas
delivered since 2009. Until these cases are resolved, Ukraine will receive only
gas it pays for upfront, and must not impede the flow of gas destined for the
EU, which gets around 15% of its gas via pipelines that pass through Ukraine.
There is another pipeline running from Russia directly to Germany, but still,
the global energy picture looks less and less stable.
On Friday we reported that Tesla, the electric car company
started by Elon Musk, was freeing up its patents, making its technology
available to competitors. Now Nissan and BMW are considering negotiations for
cooperation on charging networks; basically using and enlarging Tesla’s
existing network of 97 charging stations in the US. Nissan already produces the
electric Leaf and BMW last week unveiled the electric i8 in Germany.
So, why design new chargers and invest in building a
whole new infrastructure for BMW and Nissan drivers? The Tesla network already
stretches from coast to coast and is expected to expand rapidly over the next
year. And Tesla leads in battery technology, with a gigafactory planned to
start production in 5 years, which will be the biggest battery making facility
in the world, producing 500,000 lithium-ion battery packs per year; more than
enough for Tesla and its competition.
SolarCity, the largest US installer of residential solar
panels whose largest shareholder is entrepreneur Elon Musk, announced that it
plans to acquire solar panel maker Silevo and expand into manufacturing with
new panel factories, likely including the world’s largest high efficiency solar
panel plants in New York. At a conference call announcing the move, Musk said: "We
expect to have to install 10 gigawatts [of high-efficiency panels] a year. If
you look at the current capacity in the world, we're not able to do that right
now."
It's not just a supply question. Solar panel prices have
been falling in recent years thanks to a production boom in China; and the
panels getting produced, though cheap, aren't terribly efficient and prices
have begun bottoming out anyway. Prices might start climbing soon. Government
subsidies for renewables start getting phased out in 2016, and the political
environment for rebooting subsidies remains unstable at best. Plus, recent
moves by the US to slap tariffs on Chinese panels likely served as a catalyst
for looking into building the Silevo plant.
According to a
study by two professors at the Stern School of Business at New York
University and one professor from McGill University, a quarter of all public
company deals may involve some kind of insider trading. The professors examined
stock option movements, when an investor buys an option to acquire a stock in
the future at a set price, as a way of determining whether unusual activity
took place in the 30 days before a deal’s announcement. They determined
statistically that the odds of the trading “arising out of chance” were “about
three in a trillion.” [...] But, the professors conclude, the Securities and
Exchange Commission litigated only “about 4.7 percent of the 1,859 M&A
deals included in the sample.”
The study also says: “While the SEC has taken action in
several cases where the evidence was overwhelming, one can assume that there
are many more cases that go undetected, or where the evidence is not as
clear-cut, in a legal/regulatory sense.” Plus another finding from the
abstract: “Historically, the SEC has been more likely to investigate cases
where the acquirer is headquartered outside the US.”
A new survey by
Greenberg Quinlan Rosner, on behalf of Better Markets, finds voters regard Wall
Street and big banks as “bad actors. A 64% majority believes the “stock market is
rigged for insiders and people who know how to manipulate the system. Another
55% believes “Wall Street and big banks hurt everyday Americans by pouring
money into ’get rich quick schemes’ rather than real businesses and
investments. A 60% majority favors “stricter regulation on the way banks and
other financial institutions conduct their business” and just 28% oppose.
Support for stricter regulations inspires bipartisan support; most notably
voters who own stocks are more likely to support stricter regulation than
voters overall. And there is urgency in the issue because 83% of voters believe
another crash is likely in the next 10 years.
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