Showing posts with label Burger King. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Burger King. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Tuesday, August 26, 2014 - A Few Old Sayings

A Few Old Sayings
by Sinclair Noe

DOW + 29 = 17,106
SPX + 2 = 2000.02 (record)
NAS + 13 = 4570
10 YR YLD + .01 = 2.40%
OIL + .55 = 93.90
GOLD - .70 = 1280.90
SILV - .08 = 19.38

The S&P 500 notched its 30th record of the year and closed above 2000 for the first time ever. The Dow also rose but fell short of its record closing high after setting an all-time intraday high earlier in the session.

There are a few old sayings about the market that seem to fit. The first is, “the trend is you friend”; we have seen a few minor pullbacks since the bottom in 2009, but since the start of 2013 there has been a strong and steady uptrend. “A trend in place is more likely to continue than it is to reverse, until it reverses” and today marked a continuation of the trend, not a reversal.

Why is the market going up? Who knows? There are plenty of problems around the world. The US economy looks sluggish, but “stocks climb a wall of worry to march into bullish territory”; that’s a phrase that’s been thrown around for more than 60 years, but was made popular by Joe Granville in the 1980s.  Another financial proverb claims “Worry is interest paid on trouble before it falls due.” And the opposite of the “wall of worry” is “Bear markets slide down a slope of hope.”

And then there is the very, very old saying “buy low, sell high.” Any idiot off the street could repeat this phrase to you as if they had the secret recipe for investing success. Honestly, it’s good advice, because the overwhelming top indicator for investors and traders is price. You can’t spend volume or moving averages or stochastics or relative strength, and eventually, inevitably the trend will change.

If you want to look at a chart of an uptrend, just look at the S&P 500. If you want to see a chart of a downtrend look at the past four months’ worth of charts for wheat and corn and soybeans. As we near the end of summer, farmers are preparing for record crops in the Midwest. Wheat crops are forecast at a record 273 million bushels, up from 235 million last year; this year’s  soybean harvest is also expected to be a record, and corn will be a near record. But there is a problem. In many areas, such as the Dakotas, where agriculture has been a mainstay, the energy boom has taken over, and most of that oil travels by rail, and that means grain shipments have been held up, right as we head to harvest.

Reports the railroads filed with the federal government show that for the week that ended Aug. 22, the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway, North Dakota’s largest railroad, had a backlog of 1,336 rail cars waiting to ship grain and other products. Another railroad, Canadian Pacific, had a backlog of nearly 1,000 cars. Agriculture Department officials estimate that Canadian Pacific would not be able to fulfill nearly 30,000 requests from farmers and others for rail cars before October.

We have a couple of reports on home prices. The Federal Housing Finance Agency’s home price index shows house prices rose just 0.8% in the second quarter of 2014. This is the twelfth consecutive quarterly price increase for the FHFA index, but it also shows a slowdown. The FHFA index is based on home sales prices from conforming mortgages through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Home prices are up 5.2% from the second quarter a year ago. Arizona ranked 5th in annual appreciation.

In another indicator of a housing slowdown, the S&P/Case-Shiller National Home Price Index gained just 6.2% in the 12 months ending June 2014, while the 10-City and 20-City Composites gained 8.1%. That’s a dramatic shift from the double-digit, year-over-year price increases that had become the norm in the second half of 2013 and the first part of this year. All three indices saw their rates slow significantly from last month. To be clear, home prices are not dropping, simply rising at a slower rate.

The 20-city composite rose 1% in June. Phoenix posted a 0.6% gain for June, and a 6.9% gain from June of last year. Nationally, prices are still 17% below their peak. In Phoenix, the peak was measured to June 2006; from that point prices dropped 56%, and although prices have recovered, we are still 35% below peak prices.  

The takeaway from the housing reports is that price gains are slowing, and home supply has increased with higher prices and more people renting; consumers are slowly losing their ability to finance large purchases as home price appreciation continues to outpace wages. Absent a big increase in wages, you might expect home prices to remain flat or even decrease a bit in coming months.

Orders for durable goods jumped 22.6% in July; that is a record move, but much of the increase is because Boeing saw a jump in signed contracts for the 777X; it will take years before those planes are flying. Along with Boeing, automakers also turned in a strong performance. Demand for cars and small trucks climbed by 10.2%. Orders excluding the transportation sector, however, fell 0.8% with widespread weakness. Orders for primary metals, machinery, computers and defense goods all declined. Another key measurement of business investment, a category known core capital goods, dropped 0.5% in July. Orders for durable goods are volatile, and can jump around from month to month. While business investment has fallen in three of the past four months, it’s increased by an annual pace of 9% so far this year.

The Conference Board’s consumer confidence index jumped to 92.4 in August, the highest level since October 2007, from a revised 90.3 in July. Confidence has now increased for four straight months, and consumers remain quite positive about the short-term outlooks for the economy and labor market, even as the future expectations index declined from 91.9 to 90.9.

It’s official, minus the approval of regulators; Burger King will buy Tim Hortons for $11.4 billion and move the corporate headquarters to Canada, except they will keep corporate offices in Miami; and even though the deal would make sense without the tax dodging; it is a tax inversion deal. Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway is providing $3 billion in financing for the acquisition. Berkshire will earn 9% annual interest by taking a preferred equity stake.

The Department of Veterans Affairs says investigators have found no conclusive proof that delays in care caused any deaths at a VA hospital in Phoenix. That may be technically accurate, or not, but a troubled health care system in which veterans waited months for appointments while employees falsified records to cover up the delays, certainly did not serve those veterans with the care they deserved. The inspector general's final report has not yet been issued.

The VA is preparing a whole host of fixes for its healthcare system. Congress approved $17 billion to expand health care resources at the VA. Across the entire VA system, $400 million must be spent on staff overtime or private doctors to ensure veterans are treated quickly. As of Aug. 6, the VA had allocated $128 million in private care costs for 83,000 veterans; 8,248 VA schedulers across the country have been trained in appropriate ways of scheduling patients, including 764 Phoenix workers; an internal investigation board will be created to identify managers at the Phoenix hospital responsible for wrongdoing and what disciplinary actions should be taken; nearly $17 million has been spent in Phoenix to send veterans to private doctors for speedier care.

Also, mental health resources have been expanded in Phoenix by filling all but three of 13 psychiatric vacancies and six of seven psychologist positions and adding four social workers. The hospital's primary care staff has been expanded by 53 doctors, nurses and other caregivers. Twenty-seven temporary examination rooms have been opened, and two new outpatient clinics are planned with an additional 30,000 square feet of space.

President Obama went to Charlotte North Carolina today to address the national convention of the American Legion; and he announced steps to expand veterans’ access to mental health care and an initiative with financial companies to lower home loan costs for military families.

The US has begun surveillance flights over Syria to gather intelligence that might lead to airstrikes against ISIS militants in Syria. Military action inside Syria has not been approved yet. Pentagon officials have been drafting potential options for the president, including airstrikes.

Here’s a thought, before we send any more troops back into Iraq, or approve any airstrikes in Syria, we should make sure the VA has figured out a way to provide the best medical care to veterans. No excuses.

Ukraine has captured 10 Russian soldiers, though it did not state how they were caught. Weapons and fighters are able to cross the porous border freely, but until now there has never been confirmation that serving Russian soldiers were active inside Ukraine, despite repeated claims from Kiev. Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko held one-one-one talks today in Minsk, aimed at defusing the situation, which is positive, but the Russian POWs undoubtedly makes talks a bit awkward.

After 50 days of fighting, Egypt has brokered a ceasefire between Gaza and Israel. Palestinian and Egyptian officials said the deal called for an indefinite halt to hostilities, the immediate opening of Gaza's blockaded crossings with Israel and Egypt and a widening of the territory's fishing zone in the Mediterranean.

The United Nations has produced a new study on climate change; it includes a summarization of hundreds of scientific papers and is considered to present the best scientific and economic analysis on global warming, and is designed to provide policymakers with a scientific foundation for dealing with global warming. Bloomberg says it has received a leaked copy of the report which highlights the dangers from rising temperatures including damage to crop production, rising sea levels, melting glaciers and more pervasive heatwaves. The report mentions the word “risk” more than 350 times; “vulnerable” or “vulnerability” are written 61 times; and “irreversible” comes up 48 times.

The study, called the “Synthesis Report”, says global warming already is impacting “all continents and across the oceans,” and further pollution from heat-trapping gases will raise the likelihood of “severe, pervasive and irreversible impacts for people and ecosystems”. And the longer we wait to address the problems the more it will cost.




Monday, August 25, 2014

Monday, August 25, 2014 - Tax Weasels

Tax Weasels
by Sinclair Noe

DOW + 75 = 17,076
SPX + 9 = 1997.92 (record)
NAS + 18 = 4557
10 YR YLD - .02 = 2.38%
OIL - .27 = 93.38
GOLD – 4.60 = 1277.20
SILV - .05 = 19.45

The S&P 500 crossed above 2000 intraday, closing off the high for the day, but still closing in record territory. We recognize it but we don’t have a big celebration. It’s just a number, a nice big round number. For reference, the S&P 500 topped 1,000 back in February 1998.

Economic data today includes:
Sales of new single family homes dropped for a second month in June. New home sales slipped 2.4%, but data from the past 3 months was revised to show 33,000 more new homes were sold than previously reported. The median sales price increased 2.9% from a year ago. At July’s sales pace it would take 6.0 months to clear the supply of houses on the market, the highest since October 2011. Tomorrow, we’ll see the latest data on existing home sales from S&P/Case-Shiller.

Separately, financial data firm Markit said its preliminary services Purchasing Managers Index dipped to 58.5 this month from 60.8 in July.A reading above 50 indicates expansion.

Last Friday ECB President Mario Draghi delivered the luncheon speech at the Jackson Hole Symposium; Draghi said the ECB had done all it could for now and the governments of the EU needed to step up. Today a survey was published from the National Association for Business Economics and the conclusions show most economists surveyed think the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy is on track but the US needs to enact structural policies in order to stimulate stronger economic growth.  The Fed’s expansionary monetary policy has been at odds with a sharply restrictive fiscal stance that saw budget deficits declining from 11% of GDP in 2009 to less than 3% this year.

Economists overwhelmingly expect the Federal Reserve to hold off raising short-term interest rates until at least 2015. But nearly a third say doing so would mean the central bank waited too long. While many economists appear at ease with the “steady-as-she-goes perspective” from the Fed, “almost 40% say the stimulus policies are no longer necessary and should be curtailed or sunset.” On other topics, business economists say immigration reform is one of their top priorities, and the US needs to let more immigrants in. Meanwhile, the economists surveyed support the idea of lifting the ban on exports of US-produced crude oil and nat gas. The industry is pushing for the right to export more fuel overseas to ease the threat of overproduction, a move that could also help reduce the US trade deficit. The White House moved this summer to loosen restrictions on crude exports, but an outright end to the ban faces higher hurdles, and would require Congressional approval.

A new academic paper from economists from the University of Chicago and the University of Maryland suggest the weakness in employment is not just a result of the Great Recession, but a longer-term structural change in the economy; the share of Americans with jobs has declined because the labor market has stagnated in recent decades; fewer startups creating new jobs; fewer people losing or leaving jobs, fewer people landing new ones. This suggests the US has been headed to higher unemployment even before the financial crisis, and even if we add jobs, we still have problems that can’t be overcome by Federal Reserve monetary policy alone. The paper says that a 1 percentage point decline in the churning of the labor market lowers the employment rate by 0.77 of a percentage point, a huge effect.

It’s Monday, and so we have some mergers to cover. The Swiss drug maker Roche agreed to buy InterMune for $8.3 billion. InterMune is based in California; it has one drug called pirfenidone to treat idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, a fatal scarring of the lungs. It is licensed to sell the drug in Europe, and hopes to get approval in the US later this year. About $87 billion in pharmaceutical acquisitions were made in the first half of this year, eclipsing the total for all of 2013.

If you are Canadian or have ever been to Canada or know Canadians, then you probably know Tim Hortons; it’s a chain of coffee and donut shops; kind of like Starbucks but the coffee is actually good. And it may be the new home of the Whopper. Burger King wants to buy Tim Hortons. If completed, the deal would mean Burger King’s corporate headquarters would move to Canada, where it would qualify for a corporate inversion, with the idea of lowering Burger King’s corporate tax bill. The actual headquarters and the executives go nowhere, but the nominal address changes so the company can avoid US tax rates. Burger King says the deal is not about the taxes, but about the coffee, and the fast food breakfast business. Coffee may be an especially important attraction for Burger King and its majority owner, the Brazilian investment firm 3G Capital. In Tim Hortons, Burger King would be getting a restaurant chain that is essentially synonymous with coffee in Canada. Yea, that’s the reason; it’s the coffee, not the taxes; or maybe they’re trying to create a new donut-burger. Yea, that’s it. They’re just trying to compete with waffle tacos and sausage pancakes.

With the 15% nominal rate in Canada, this is absolutely a move about taxes; rooted in the lie that American corporations pay the highest tax rates in the world, which is not true when you consider the effective rates rather than nominal rates. When it comes to effective rates, what corporations actually pay, the US ranks 17th out of 27 developed countries. Walgreens recently scrapped an inversion deal because of public blowback. Once one of these brands pulls off an inversion deal without blowback that actually hurts sales, it will be a run for the exits.

There are so many companies trying to weasel out of taxes that the inversion trend is the hot new thing on Wall Street, so hot that JPMorgan is backing a new online broker that has bundled up 25 companies seen as inversion targets. The basket of companies is called the Tax Inversion Targets, or TIT; I am not making this up. Count on JPMorgan to go for the most weasely product and then tack on a bit of tacky.

Late Friday, Goldman Sachs agreed to buy back $3.15 billion in mortgage bonds from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to end a lawsuit filed in 2011 by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The FHFA accused Goldman of dumping low-quality mortgage bonds during the run-up to the financial crisis. Goldman is not paying a penalty, but it is estimated the bonds are worth only about $2 billion today. Last month, lawyers for the FHFA presented evidence showing that Goldman was aware of weakness in the subprime mortgage market but did not pass that info to clients buying subprime bonds, even as Goldman was shorting the bonds. Just to be clear, Goldman was selling the bonds and simultaneously betting the bonds would fail.

AP is reporting that a column of Russian tanks and armored cars crossed into Ukraine’s far southeast, which is away from the fighting that has been taking place. The markets have been worried about a Russian invasion of Ukraine; now it looks like it is happening, and the markets seem to discount it.

ISIS, has been fighting in Iraq, and even though US airstrikes are inflicting damage, they are still entrenched. Meanwhile, they have taken over a key government airbase in Syria. BBC says government forces evacuated the airbase. Syrian state television confirmed that government troops had lost control of the base. The US has not been targeting airstrikes against ISIS in Syria.

Twice in the last seven days, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates have secretly teamed up to launch airstrikes against Islamist-allied militias battling for control of Tripoli, Libya. Responsibility for the airstrikes was initially a mystery. After the first set, several American officials initially said that signs pointed to the United Arab Emirates, but clearly American intelligence was surprised.

Workers are assessing quake damage and starting to clean up after a 6.0 magnitude quake in Napa California; it was the strongest quake in the San Francisco area in 25 years. Approximately 172 people were treated for mainly minor injuries; two people had serious injuries; no deaths have been reported. Several building were badly damaged and a mobile home park caught fire. The biggest economic damage may come to wineries.

Meanwhile, a large 6.9-magnitude earthquake has struck a sparsely populated area of central Peru. There were no immediate reports of damage or injuries, and authorities were still surveying the region.

Hackers again showed how powerful electronic attacks can be when they forced Sony's PlayStation Network and Blizzard's Battle.net offline over the weekend. The same group responsible for shutting down the gaming platforms, which calls itself the Lizard Squad, also claimed credit for sending a bomb threat via Twitter that grounded a plane carrying Sony Online Entertainment president John Smedley. The plane was traveling from Dallas to San Diego but was diverted to Phoenix. No bomb was found.

Earlier this month, the computer systems at 51 UPS stores were found to have been infected with malware that could potentially allow criminals to gain access to consumer data. The FBI says that up to 1,000 retailers could have malicious software on their sales systems, potentially exposing sensitive information to identity theft and financial fraud.

And that raises the question of why companies continue to get hacked? The most probable answer is that corporate executives just don’t want to spend the money on security because they consider it a cost without a financial benefit; at least until after the fact.

And finally, John Sperling has died at the age of 93. Back in 1978, Sperling founded the University of Phoenix. The University of Phoenix has a presence in 38 states and in Puerto Rico, and at one point touted 242,000 students, although that number has significantly dropped. Sperling became a billionaire, and he used his wealth on several philanthropic projects, including research into seawater agriculture and anti-aging medicine. He was also an outspoken critic of the government's war on drugs, advocating for treatment instead of criminalization.