Showing posts with label Ukraine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ukraine. Show all posts

Friday, August 22, 2014

Friday, August 22, 2014 - Be Careful Out There


DOW – 38 = 17,001
SPX – 3 = 1988
NAS + 6 = 4538
10 YR YLD un = 2.40%
OIL - .46 = 93.50
GOLD + 4.30 = 1281.60
SILV un = 19.51

All three major indices posted gains for the week, with the Dow up 2%, the S&P up 1.7% and the Nasdaq up 1.6%. It was the strongest week of gains for both the Dow and the S&P since April, and the third straight week of gains for all three indices.

There is a lot to cover before we can wrap up the week. First we go to Jackson Hole Wyoming, where the Fed has been having a friendly get together of economists. Janet Yellen kicked off the event with a speech this morning. She said what you might expect: "There is no simple recipe for appropriate policy," and she called for a "pragmatic" approach that gives officials room to evaluate data as it arrives without committing to a preset policy path. And she backed up her comments with a new tool, the Labor Market Conditions Index, which measures 19 labor market indicators, and it isn’t new data, just combining it all together, but it showed she is monitoring the data.

Yellen referenced the possibility that labor markets may be a bit tighter than they seem and that the Fed may consider having to raise interest rates sooner than expected. At the last FOMC meeting in July, the Fed was still saying there was “significant” slack in the labor market, and today she confirmed that slack remains, saying: “Five years after the end of the recession, the labor market has yet to fully recover.” Another area of slack is wage deflation. Employers cut some wages during the downturn, or eliminated raises, and they aren’t offering raises now. Yellen said: “wages could begin to rise at a noticeably more rapid pace once pent-up wage deflation has been absorbed.”

So, today Yellen didn’t say anything radically different, just a hint less dovish, or at least not as dovish as Wall Street might have hoped for.  

Just in case you were wondering, there have been some protestors at Jackson Hole; one group could be spotted wearing T-shirts printed with graphs showing wage inequality; apparently, an attorney representing the protestors got to talk with Yellen for a minute or two. Meanwhile, investment bankers were noticeably absent from this year’s symposium; the invitation list is mostly devoid of representatives from big private-sector banks. The Fed finally figured out that rubbing elbows and special access wreaks of cronyism.

The Jackson Hole Symposium featured more than Yellen. There was a variety of papers on multiple subjects. A professor from MIT presented a paper detailing how robots and computers don’t steal as many jobs as you might think. Seems the robots are not good at jobs requiring judgment and common sense. So we aren’t obsolete just yet.

Another bit of research says we are less likely to switch jobs, or there is less labor market fluidity, and the reasons are that the workforce is getting older, and there is a shift to older businesses, which means fewer startups, and more startups tend to fail, and more jobs require occupational licensing or certification.

Yet another research paper concluded that the problem of long term unemployment is not necessarily terminal. The thinking has been that if someone loses a job and is out of work for a long time they have a harder time finding work, and eventually they lose their skills and fall out of the labor pool; the idea is called hysteresis, or the idea that cyclical unemployment becomes structural. The new research says it is only a moderate problem. So, the good news is that we are not obsolete and we are adaptable.  

And then European Central Bank President Mario Draghi delivered a speech following lunch. Draghi said European central bankers and politicians each have a role to play in boosting demand and reducing joblessness. For its part the ECB is willing to take more stimulus measures if needed to keep low rates of inflation from becoming embedded in expectations of future price growth but the ECB can't do it alone and governments must join in efforts to reduce unemployment.

For Draghi, this was a bigger shift in policy; for years the ECB has been preaching that governments needed to shrink deficits and undertake economic reforms even during times of economic weakness. The austerity measures did not work; the result has been stubbornly high unemployment, stagnation, and disinflation or low-flation bordering on deflation, with a dollop of double dip recession.

Draghi admitted as much, saying the GDP data "confirm that the recovery in the euro area remains uniformly weak, with subdued wage growth even in non-stressed countries suggesting lackluster demand." And so Draghi called on combining monetary and fiscal policies to stimulate demand with efforts to make labor markets more flexible. He also proposed a significant boost in public investment.

In June, the ECB approved a stimulus package that includes record low interest rates, new 4-year loans to banks, and a step toward large scale purchases of asset backed securities, although no new QE announcement was forthcoming in today’s speech. Draghi said today: "The risks of 'doing too little'" and allowing temporary unemployment to become more entrenched "outweigh those of 'doing too much’, that is, excessive upward wage and price pressures."

So, while Draghi firmly planted an anti-austerity flag, he also felt the ECB’s June stimulus will be all that they can do, and he recognizes the real risk that monetary policy loses effectiveness, and somebody needs to wake up the government.

There is a long tradition of the Jackson Hole symposium giving a little bump to the markets; not today, and the reason had less to do with the doves and hawks on the Fed and more to do with geopolitics.

Ukraine says Russian artillery is being used against Ukraine's forces, both from across the border and from inside Ukraine. In addition, NATO said it has seen "transfers of large quantities of advanced weapons, including tanks, armored personnel carriers and artillery, to separatists." Moscow sent more than 130 trucks rolling across the border in what it said was a mission to deliver humanitarian aid. Ukraine called it a "direct invasion," and the US and NATO condemned it as well.

The trucks, part of a convoy of 260 vehicles, entered Ukraine without government permission after being held up at the border for a week amid fears the mission was a Kremlin ploy to help the pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine. Russia claims the trucks are carrying food, water, and other humanitarian supplies. The city of Luhansk has been largely cut off for weeks and is without water and electricity as Ukraine forces fight rebels. Ukraine wanted the international Red Cross to inspect all trucks, fearful of a Trojan horse; but Russia lost patience and accused Ukraine of stalling. The Red Cross, which had planned to escort the convoy to assuage fears that it was a cover for a Russian invasion, said it had not received enough security guarantees to do so, as shelling had continued overnight.

Ukraine said they would not shell the convoy but rebel forces took advantage of that promise to drive on the roads being used by the convoy.
Meanwhile, Hamas-led gunmen in Gaza executed 18 Palestinians accused of collaborating with Israel. The executions were held in a public square. I suppose that has a certain deterrent effect. The ceasefire, like others before it, did not last long. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu threatened to escalate the fight against Hamas after a four-year-old Israeli boy was killed by a mortar attack from Gaza. Shortly after his remarks, Palestinian officials said Israel had flattened a house in a Gaza City air strike, wounding at least 40 people. More than 80 rockets and mortars shot from Gaza hit Israel. Israeli forces carried out more than 25 air strikes in Gaza. Since the conflict began last month, 2,071 Palestinians, many of them civilians, have now been killed and around 400,000 of the enclave's 1.8 million people displaced. Sixty-four Israeli soldiers and four civilians in Israel have been killed.

Meanwhile, the quagmire in Iraq is sucking us in ever deeper. You will recall that just 2 weeks ago, President Obama announced “targeted airstrikes to protect our American personnel and a humanitarian effort to help save thousands of Iraqi civilians who are trapped on a mountain without food and water and facing almost certain death.” And it seemed to work, sort of. The Yazidis trapped on the mountain got off the mountain, most of them anyway.

And then there was the problem of ISIS controlling the Mosul Dam, and the threat of using the dam to flood the Tigris River valley, and that includes Baghdad; so there was some extra work to do there. And then there was the horrific beheading of American journalist James Foley, and yesterday Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel called ISIS an “imminent threat to every interest we have,” while Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Martin Dempsey conceded that attacks on ISIS could not be limited to Iraq but would also spread into Syria; and Secretary of State John Kerry said ISIS “must be destroyed and will be crushed”.

And now Iraq has a new prime minister, Haider al-Abadi. The hope was that he could forge a new coalition government. Not exactly. Sunni lawmakers quit talks on forming a new Iraqi government after gunmen killed scores of worshipers at a Sunni mosque in a province neighboring Baghdad. Today’s strike took place after three roadside bombs targeted a Shiite political gathering.

Federal authorities today urged law enforcement across the country to be alert for possible attacks inside the United States in retaliation for US airstrikes against ISIS. In a joint bulletin issued to local, state and federal law enforcement, the Department of Homeland Security and FBI said that while they are “unaware of any specific, credible threats against the Homeland” and find most threats to the U.S. homeland by supporters of ISIS “not credible,” they cannot rule out attacks in the United States from sympathizers radicalized by the group’s online propaganda.

Be careful out there.

Retailers have taken a recent hit, with weak earnings reports from the likes of Wal-Mart and Sears. Today Ross Stores posted better than expected second quarter results. The S&P Retail Index gained 0.6%, which doesn’t sound like much but it was the best week since February. The heavy promotional environment has been forcing retailers to offer discounts to stay relevant even as they deal with the growing shift to online sales. The big brick-and-mortar retailers have been trying to adjust to this shifting landscape. The labor market is no doubt improving, but wage growth has been essentially stagnant, restricting households’ buying power. In a nutshell, it has been a tough backdrop for retailers. No doubt the stock-price performance of the retail sector in the S&P 500 has been one of the weakest in the index – up +0.9% vs. a gain of +8.6% for the index as a whole.

Total earnings for the 490 S&P 500 members that have reported already are up +8.1% from the same period last year, with a ‘beat ratio’ of 65.5% and a median surprise of +2.6%. Total revenues are up +4.4%, with a very impressive revenue ‘beat ratio’ of 62.2% and a median surprise of 0.8%. So, this has been a strong earnings season, with the minor exception that guidance has been a little less than satisfying.

Stock prices of small-cap stocks have been underwater this year, with the S&P 600 down -1.2% vs. a gain of +8.6% for the S&P 500 in the year-to-date period. This underwhelming stock price performance is getting confirmed by the group’s mixed results thus far in the Q2 reporting cycle. As of Friday, August 22, we have seen Q2 results from 555 S&P 600 members or 92.5% of the index’s total members. Total earnings for these 555 companies are up +12.1% from the same period last year on +9.5% higher revenues, with 48.6% beating EPS estimates and 38.2% coming ahead of top-line expectations. 

Total earnings in Q2 are on track to reach a new all-time quarterly record, surpassing the last record set in 2013 Q4. That brings a good news/bad news conundrum. Is it just a one-time bounce of the low levels of the first quarter? It’s always difficult to top a record.

The S&P 500 is trading at 18.5x forward earnings, above the historical average of about 16.5x. The Shiller cyclically adjusted P/E ratio is currently about 26x the historical average of 16x. No matter how you manipulate the numbers, stock valuations are closer to the high end than the low end, and then the question is whether those valuations are justified in view of the risks facing stocks.

The biggest risk to stocks is the Fed ending its unprecedented experiment in easy money. Stock market investors have benefitted from ZIRP, zero interest rate policy, far longer than anyone might have imagined, and maybe Draghi was right when he talked today about the risk that monetary policy can lose its effectiveness. Now, maybe the Fed can exit QE and ZIRP and the markets will achieve liftoff; I just don’t know where we’ll find the fuel for liftoff.

The second most significant risk is the geopolitical havoc occurring around the world. And most of that havoc seems to be in or near areas with oil. From the heady days of mid-2008 when it traded at nearly $150 a barrel, crude oil has had quite a rocky ride. After sliding down to the $30s and rallying back around $120, crude has settled in around the $90 to $110 range for the past two years.  Commodity traders have wondered why oil hasn’t gone higher. Geopolitical tensions abound across the world; the Middle East seemingly hasn’t been this unstable in years. There may be reasons why oil prices have moved lower, including the renaissance in oil and gas exploration and development in the US; lower demand brought about by great efficiencies and conservation; also, the big investment banks have exited the oil  trading business and the oil  marketing business, and they have not been replaced by new players. A dip in oil prices could send some smaller exploration companies to the mat. A spike in oil prices could send stock investors to the exits. Geopolitical stability is decidedly bad for stocks, particularly stocks that are trading at very high valuations.



A third risk to stocks is that earnings will not keep pace. Corporations may have squeezed about all of the cost savings they can out of their businesses. While companies continue to "beat" expectations, the truth is that they are more leveraged than they were in 2007 on the cusp of the financial crisis, and they live in fear that interest rates are going to rise and they will not be able to service their debt. Meanwhile, consumers tend to hold onto a dollar until the eagle grins.

And then there is always the possibility of a black swan event, which could pop up almost anywhere, including the financial markets where big banks are bigger than ever, and money markets are now poised to close their vaults rather than risk a run, which is  just the sort of thing that creates a run; or maybe it will be a geopolitical mis-step – a bomb that lands in the wrong place, or a crazy Russian who turns off the nat gas spigot for the Eurozone.

An expensive market is always vulnerable to bad news and sell-offs. And so it is now more important than ever to be diligent, and don’t be afraid to lock in the hard won gains of the past 5 years.





Friday, August 15, 2014

Friday, August 15, 2014 - Don't Worry

Don’t Worry
by Sinclair Noe

DOW – 50 = 16, 662
SPX – 0.12 = 1955
NAS + 11 = 4464
10 YR YLD - .06 = 2.35%
OIL + 1.49 = 97.07
GOLD – 8.40 = 1305.50
SILV - .31 = 19.65

For the week, the Dow rose 0.7%, the S&P 500 gained 1.2% and the Nasdaq climbed 2.2%.

The Federal Reserve said factory production jumped 1.0% last month after rising 0.3% in June. That was the largest gain since February and reflected increases across all major categories. Auto production surged 10.1%, the biggest rise since July 2009. There were also solid gains in the production of machinery and computers and electronic goods; yesterday we talked about the importance of capex and business spending; maybe we’re seeing signs of that.


Or not. In a separate report, the New York Fed said its "Empire State" general business conditions index fell to 14.69 this month from 25.60 in July.

A preliminary August reading on the University of Michigan/Thomson Reuters consumer-sentiment index fell to the lowest level in 9 months, 79.2 down from a final July level of 81.8.

Producer prices, or prices at the wholesale level increased 0.1% in July, with 0.5% growth for transportation and warehousing prices; goods prices were unchanged; food prices rose 0.4%; energy prices dropped 0.6%. Overall producer prices rose 1.7% over the 12 months that ended in July, down from June’s annual-growth rate of 1.9%.

But the economic news carried little weight today, as attention once again focused on geopolitics. That might not be totally accurate; Wall Street looks at geopolitical hotspots but it can’t hold their focus. A new survey of institutional money managers around the world by Bank of America Merrill Lynch has found a sudden surge in worry and fear, and a rise in the number buying “protection” against a crash; which means derivatives such as put options or credit default swaps.

Money managers are worried about the markets and the Fed raising interest rates and geopolitical events and the baggage retrieval system at Heathrow, and so, over the past month they have raised their cash positions from 4.5% to 5.1%. Which doesn’t sound very defensive; in fact, it sounds like money managers are still excessively bullish on stocks.

Yesterday Russian President Putin talked about how he wanted to avoid confrontation in Ukraine. Last night a Russian armored column crossed the border into Ukraine; they started firing artillery at Ukrainian forces, which exchanged shellfire. Ukrainian President Petro said a "significant" part of the Russian column had been destroyed. Russia's government denied its forces had crossed into Ukraine. NATO said there had been a Russian incursion into Ukraine but would not go so far as to call it an invasion.

After Ukraine reported the invasion, Russia's ruble weakened against both the dollar and the euro. Russian shares were also dragged lower. International markets moved lower. European Union governments warned they are ready to expand sanctions against Russia if the conflict in Ukraine intensifies.  US markets initially moved lower. The yield on the ten year treasury dropped 6 basis points to 2.35%; Treasuries are usually considered a safe haven. The yield on German bunds, or 10 year bonds, dropped under 1%. The escalating clash is now haunting the European economy, already on the brink of fresh recession, with a string of southern states in debt-deflation.

All of a sudden, the euro crisis is back, though in truth it never really went away. The latest economic figures from the eurozone make bleak reading. Across the eurozone, which is struggling to get banks lending to businesses, economic growth is expected to be 1.1% this year. All three of the euro area’s biggest economies — Germany, France and Italy — are failing. Germany’s output actually fell in the second quarter. Italy is suffering through a triple dip recession. The French economy has stagnated. Analysts expect it to grow by less than one per cent this year. Italy has dropped back into recession, or maybe it never got out of recession. The closest thing approximating good news was that Spain's dead-cat bounce recovery continued with 0.6% growth. But it still has 24.5% unemployment. The eurozone economy is still far smaller than six years ago, by about 1.9%; unemployment is in double figures and debt burdens in some areas are high.

In June, the ECB cut its key interest rates and introduced a new program of cheap loans to banks that are intended to be passed on to businesses. Some economists say the European Central Bank should go further and engage in large-scale purchases of public and private debt to reduce borrowing costs and add to the money supply. ECB President Mario Draghi is under fire to do more to resuscitate growth. He, in turn, argues that “monetary policy can only achieve so much, with government reform required to do the heavy lifting,” and he is probably right, but there doesn’t seem to be much appetite for reform. Monetary stimulus is simply not remotely an adequate substitute for government spending. Even the austerian IMF has been forced to acknowledge that fact.

The Ukraine crisis has drawn the EU into an economic confrontation with Russia, which is not only the principal supplier of energy to many eurozone countries but is also a significant trading partner and export market for European goods. This is hardly designed to improve the economic outlook, and the eurozone remains too weak to withstand external shocks. And Eurozone weakness was already in place before the most recent economic sanctions against Russia; the unfortunate reality is that nobody really knows how Russian sanctions will play out. There will be costs associated with sanctions; many of them unexpected.

Next week, the Federal Reserve will hold its annual Jackson Hole retreat. Janet Yellen will speak on labor markets. The labor market has improved but still looks weak. Various Fed officials have various theories on the labor markets, but not much in the way of solutions, and so, not surprisingly, they have different views on Fed policy.

Jeremy Stein left the Fed Board of Governors earlier in the year to return to a teaching gig at Harvard. Last week Stein said whatever the Fed does, we can expect less financial stability. Stein says that the process of exiting QE and raising interest rates has “no real precedent”. Yellen devoted an entire speech to the subject of financial stability last month at the IMF, where she said the Fed had devoted “substantially increased resources” to monitoring stability and acknowledged that the Fed’s low-interest rate policy had spurred “households and businesses to take on the risk of potentially productive investments.” But, she went on, “Such risk-taking can go too far, thereby contributing to fragility in the financial system.”

Yesterday, St. Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard said he believes financial markets are probably mistaken if they’re counting on Fed interest rate increases to occur more slowly than policy makers forecast. Bullard says the Fed will raise the interest rate target in the first quarter of 2015. Bullard said: “We’re way ahead of where we expected to be” in terms of the Fed’s employment mandate, and “If that strength continues in the second half of the year here, then the conversation on a little more hawkish direction of monetary policy will heat up.”

Today, Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota offered a contrasting view, saying: “The FOMC is still a long way from meeting its targeted goal of price stability” because of excess slack in the job market, and “progress in the decline of the unemployment rate masks continued weakness in labor markets,” which would keep the inflation rate below the Fed’s 2% target until 2018. Kocherlakota pointed to the participation rate among people between the ages of 25 to 54, the prime working years; another especially significant” measure of slack is the “historically high” percentage of workers who would like full-time jobs but can only find part-time work. The U-6 unemployment rate, a broad measure of unemployment that includes people working part time because they can’t find full-time jobs rose to 12.2% in July after declining one percentage point over the first six months of the year.

One of the biggest changes in the US labor market over the past two decades has been the increasing number of people working over the age of 55. From the end of World War II until the early 1990s, a smaller and smaller share remained in the labor force but since the 1990s that trend reversed. In 1993, only 29% of people that age were in the labor force. The vast majority were retired. But participation has been rising and by 2012 more than 41% of people in that age group were still in the labor force, the highest since the early 1960s. Clearly, something has changed about people’s attitudes toward retirement. A survey from the Federal Reserve last week provided some clues. Around 21% of people said their plan for retirement is simply “to work as long as possible” and the number of people giving this response increases by age.

In addition to the Fed’s get-together in Jackson Hole, next week’s economic calendar includes minutes from the Fed’s July 30th FOMC meeting; on Thursday we’ll get a report on July existing home sales from the National Association of Realtors; Tuesday brings an update on July housing starts. Housing starts tumbled 9.3% in June. The Labor Department will release the consumer price index report on Tuesday; the CPI measures inflation at the retail level; it’s been running near 2%, more or less.


Thursday, August 14, 2014

Thursday, August 14, 2014 - The Circular Capex Spending Problem

The Circular Capex Spending Problem
by Sinclair Noe

DOW + 61 = 16,713
SPX + 8 = 1955
NAS + 18 = 4453
10 YR YLD - .01 = 2.40%
OIL - .39 = 97.20
GOLD + .70 = 1313.90
SILV + .05 = 19.95

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki stepped down today, a surprising reversal for a prime minister who a day earlier had assured his supporters that he wouldn’t step down unless forced out by Iraq’s high court.

President Obama says the US operations have broken the ISIS siege of Mount Sinjar. Thousands of Yazidi refugees were stranded on the mountain. Many of those displaced had now left the mountain and further rescue operations are not planned, however US airstrikes against ISIS will continue for now. And Iraqi and Kurdish forces fighting ISIS will continue to receive US military assistance.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said Russia would stand up for itself but not at the cost of confrontation with the outside world, which sounded like a softer, gentler Putin. Trust him about as far as you can throw him. Intense fighting continues as the Ukrainian military kept up its offensive to retake separatist strongholds in Eastern Ukraine.

A new, five-day truce between Israel and Hamas appeared to be holding despite a shaky start, after both sides agreed to give Egyptian-brokered peace negotiations more time. The second extension of the ceasefire, this time for five days rather than three, has raised hopes that a longer-term resolution to the conflict can be found; maybe.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol will take over the supervision of security in the St. Louis suburb that's been the scene of violent protests since a police officer fatally shot an unarmed black teenager.

Earnings season continued to wind down. WalMart reported earnings and revenue that met expectations, but the company cut its forecast for coming quarters. Last night, Cisco Systems offered a weak outlook for its current quarter and announced massive job cuts despite reporting revenue that beat expectations.

We’ve all heard of jobs offshoring; US jobs that once built the world’s biggest middle class, have been sent overseas, and it’s been going on for quite some time. The idea was heralded as free trade globalism and the argument was that it was merely mutually beneficial free trade; but American jobs have been lost and continue to be lost, not to competition from foreign companies, but to multinational corporations that are cutting costs by shifting operations to low-wage countries.

One result of offshoring is lower labor costs, but that also means lower wages. University graduates in the US are just as likely to be employed as bartenders or baristas as they are to get a job as a software engineer of plant manager. And there’s a good chance that recent grads are still living at home with their parents. More than half with student loans are having a hard time paying down student loan debt; 18% are either in collection or delinquent; another 34% have student loans in deferment or forbearance. And if they do find jobs, they find those jobs don’t pay well. Wages have stagnated.

Even though the economy has been adding jobs, it has not been enough to push a recovery in wages. In July, average hourly wages rose a penny to $24.45, a disappointing result after strong gains in June and May. In 23 of the past 24 months, the yearly increase in hourly pay has ranged from 1.9% to 2.2%, or about one-third less than usual during an economic recovery. The 12-month increase in wages as of July was just 2%; and inflation wiped out about three-fourths of that gain. There’s been no change since the start of 2014. While it might seem counterintuitive that wages are flat while jobs are being added, the likely reason is that there are a lot of poor paying jobs plus a few very good paying jobs. According to revised data from the Commerce Department, employee compensation, including wages and benefits, was lower for each year from 2011 to 2013 than previously calculated.

Jobs off-shoring, by lowering labor costs and increasing corporate profits, has enriched corporate executives and large shareholders, but the loss of millions of well-paying jobs has made millions of Americans downwardly mobile. Between October 2008 and July 2014 the working age population grew by 13.4 million persons, but the US labor force grew by only 1.1 million. In other words, the unemployment rate among the increase in the working age population during the past six years is 91%. Since the year 2000, the lack of jobs has caused the labor force participation rate to fall, and since quantitative easing began in 2008, the decline in the labor force participation rate has accelerated. Clearly there is no economic recovery when participation in the labor force collapses. In addition, jobs off-shoring has destroyed the growth in consumer demand on which the US economy depends with the result that the economy cannot create enough jobs to keep up with the growth of the labor force.

Some people argue that the problem with economic growth doesn’t start with wages and jobs, but rather with credit, and they point to graphs of the recent rise in auto loans; just as mortgages once fueled a housing boom, now, subprime lending is fueling a boom in auto sales. Credit tightened in the wake of the housing collapse and the housing market remains weak, while auto lenders have become aggressively permissive and US auto sales have made a huge recovery, leading some to argue that consumption depends on access to credit. This is wrong. Access to credit is the lubricant for the engine of economic commerce; it is not the engine. The real driver of the economy is good paying jobs.

There have been magnificent innovations in transportation, medicine, communication, and technology as commerce has spread globally. Credit did not create technological advances, people did. Money and credit could always be used to purchase the tools to make money in business, but money could never produce anything by itself; food, clothing, shelter, cars, and thousands of other worthwhile things were always made by the labor of people, not the sweat and intelligence of a coin or a plastic credit card.

The Federal Reserve just released a report showing that two-thirds of American households have no savings set aside for an emergency, and 40% are unable to raise $400 cash without selling possessions or borrowing from family and friends. Offshoring, by lowering labor costs and increasing corporate profits, has enriched corporate executives and large shareholders, but the loss of millions of well-paying jobs has made millions of Americans downwardly mobile. In addition, jobs off-shoring has destroyed the growth in consumer demand on which the US economy depends for expansion. Corporations are borrowing money not to invest for the future but to buy back their own stocks, thus pushing up share prices.

A new report from Morgan Stanley shows the average age of industrial equipment in the US is now almost 10.5 year old. That’s the oldest since 1938, at the height of the Great Depression. Nonresidential capital expenditure; in other words, spending on equipment, nonresidential buildings like factories, and intellectual property, has fallen short of the long-term trend by 15% per year. That means businesses have pumped into the economy $400 billion less than they normally would have every year. That's $1.6 trillion over the past four years, and it's affecting every sector. Spending has been down 14% on buildings, 16% on equipment, and 6% on intellectual property.

Instead of investing that money, corporations have been hoarding cash; by some estimates, corporations are sitting on a pile of almost $2 trillion. Occasionally they dip in for share buybacks. S&P 500 companies bought back an estimated $160 billion in stock in the first quarter; that would lag only the $172 billion in the third quarter of 2007, shortly before the worst bear market since the Great Depression. Repurchases are all the rage, but are all too often made for an unstated and ignoble reason: to pump or support the stock price. Another corporate incentive for buybacks is that a pumped-up share prices make the stock grants and options held by senior executives more valuable. Occasionally they dip into the cash pile for mergers and acquisitions. North American M&A activity stands at $1.2 trillion year to date, up 83% from last year. This year is almost certain to be the best year for M&A since the crisis. Boosting growth and returns through long-term investment in their business hasn't registered nearly as highly.

The problem then becomes circular: weak demand holds back capital expenditures, which drags on growth, which depresses demand. Productivity growth in the United States, the rate of growth in the level of output per worker, is near a 30 year low. Spending on research, development and technology, would surely improve this trend. Productivity alone does not spur capex spending. Rather, spending increases when demand increases. You don’t buy a new factory or new equipment unless your customers are spending. However if your customers are spending, you will happily invest in the facilities to fill their orders. But real median household income fell 10% between 2007 and 2012. And since the financial crisis, demand across the US economy as a whole has been far below trend.

Several of America’s great cities, such as Detroit, Cleveland, St. Louis have lost between one-fifth and one-half of their populations. Real median family income has been declining for years, an indication that the ladders of upward mobility that made America the “opportunity society” have been dismantled. So, now we face a tipping point, where we either start to reinvest in industrial production or watch the infrastructure turn to rust, and the US becomes a third world country.

The good news is that we are making progress in some areas. We add jobs every month, more than 200,000 jobs per month for the past six months. Capacity utilization is now up to 79%. US exports now top $2 trillion, the highest level in history. Despite the numerous false dawns since the Great Recession, analysts still expect capex to pick up. If it does, then the broader economy should benefit. Factories and equipment will have to be replaced, eventually. It might represent an opportunity; if we’re lucky.



Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Wednesday, August 13, 2014 - Oil, At Least in Theory

Oil, At Least in Theory
by Sinclair Noe

DOW + 91 = 16,651
SPX + 12 = 1946
NAS + 44 = 4434
10 YR YLD - .03 = 2.41%
OIL - .04 = 97.33
GOLD + 3.70 = 1313.20
SILV - .11 = 19.91

The economic news today did not point to a positive session for Wall Street. Retail sales for July were flat compared to June. Excluding autos and gas, retail sales were up just 0.1%. Clothing sales increased 0.4% but that was primarily due to extreme discounting. That report was confirmed by an earnings report from Macy’s, which missed expectations on earnings and revenue, and then lowered guidance. In after-hours trade, Cisco reported better than expected earnings and revenue.

The US has deployed 130 Marines and Special Operations forces to northern Iraq to help assess ways to rescue thousands of members of the Yazidi religious group taking refuge on Mount Sinjar. Those military advisers will not have a combat role, but the Defense Department left open the possibility that US troops could help create a safe passage for the Yazidi off Mount Sinjar. That might put US troops in direct combat with the ISIS militants trying to kill the Yazidi, a proposition President Obama has not signed off on, but one the military advisers are exploring.

The US and Iran don't agree on much, but it appears the two countries are backing Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's replacement, Haider al-Abadi. Iran's endorsement on Tuesday means that Maliki, who has indicated he won't go quietly, will have an even harder time holding onto his position. The United States and its allies hope that replacing Maliki, who alienated the Sunnis of Iraq, will undermine support for the militant group the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS). For now, Maliki is trying to cling to power, but his days appear numbered.

There are daily multiple sorties by US fighter bombers flying off a US Navy aircraft carrier in the Gulf, some resulting in airstrikes on advancing ISIS forces that have threatened civilian refugees and the Kurdish capital of Erbil. Unmanned US drones are in the air gathering a constant stream of intelligence which is being fed back to a US-manned operations center in Baghdad and then shared with America's allies.

There are close to 1,000 US military advisors in Iraq, including Special Operations forces, divided between Baghdad and Kurdistan and the CIA is believed to be running an operation to supply Kurdish forces, the Peshmerga, with arms and ammunition. Iraqi Kurds have overtaken 2 northern oilfields.  The two oilfields are said to have a combined daily output capacity of some 400,000 barrels per day. The operations are most certainly not entirely humanitarian. France and Germany both say they will send military equipment to help the Kurds defend themselves. Hercules transport planes have been dropping aid to civilians fleeing from the onslaught of ISIS.

While the case for intervention on humanitarian grounds to save the lives of thousands of fleeing refugees is overwhelming, there is now the risk of what is known as "mission creep"; of a small, narrowly defined operation ballooning out of control, sucking in Western countries into a lengthy conflict with no clear exit. Politicians are fond of saying "there will be no boots on the ground" but in practice there are already growing numbers of US military personnel deployed to Iraq behind the scenes. The ISIS fighters are now embedding in residential areas like Mosul, essentially using civilians as shields. Already Iraqi government airstrikes around Mosul have led to reports of civilian casualties. What if advice and air power alone are not enough to prevent the ISIS from taking more towns in Iraq and Kurdistan? What if Baghdad itself or the cities of Kirkuk or Irbil look threatened?

The militants from ISIS have been causing problems in Iraq and Syria for several months, but then they took control of the area around Kirkuk, a gigantic oilfield; then they captured the Mosul Dam, which controls electricity and might serve as a weapon; and then they encroached on the Kurdish capital of Erbil, an oil boomtown which happens to have a US consulate but also has hundreds of employees of companies like Chevron and ExxonMobil; that’s when the airstrikes against ISIS started. To be fair, it was also when ISIS became especially barbaric, and tens of thousands of Yazidi refugees became stranded. The current US intervention certainly has humanitarian purpose, but it would also be wrong to pretend that oil is totally irrelevant to the larger crisis in Iraq.

Meanwhile, the markets are discounting any disruption in distribution in Iraq; Iraq is currently the world's seventh-largest oil producer, churning out some 3.3 million barrels per day; Kurdistan in the north is only responsible for about 10% of the national production; most Iraqi oil exports come from the southern part of the country, and those oil fields are far away from the current fighting, so it’s highly unlikely that there will be a disruption, at least in theory.

In theory, all oil sales in Iraq are supposed to be handled by the central government in Baghdad, which then splits revenues among the various regions according to an existing agreement. Iraqi Kurdistan has been pushing to sell more of its own oil directly to other countries, bypassing the central government entirely, because Kurdish officials claim that the central government hasn't been sending Kurdistan its promised share of oil revenue.

The United States is officially opposed to Kurdistan's direct sales of oil abroad because it might undermine the unity of the Iraqi government. There's currently an oil tanker filled with about 1 million barrels of Kurdish oil parked about 50 miles offshore from Houston that can't unload its crude. State Department officials have been quietly warning any potential buyers of the Kurdish oil that they could face "serious legal risks." But now, the Kurds are stepping up the fight against ISIS.

Iraq has scheduled to export about 2.4 million barrels per day of Basra Light crude in September, up from 2.2 million in the previous month. Libya has resumed shipments of crude. According to the IEA: "The Atlantic market is currently so well supplied that incremental Libyan barrels are reportedly having a hard time finding buyers." If Iraqi oil goes offline, even for a short time, the rest of the world does not have enough spare capacity to replace that production; that would likely push oil prices over $125 a barrel, and that might then increase the leverage for Putin.

And it had been thought that sanctions imposed on Russia over its support for Ukrainian rebels might cause disruptions in oil distribution. Russia is the largest oil producer in the world, at over 10 billion barrels equivalent per day or 13% of world supply. However, the markets are looking at Russia and saying that Putin needs to sell oil even more than the EU needs to buy it. Russia turning the taps off would cause an oil shock in the West as it would cause a steep rise in prices and significant disruption, however it would also bankrupt Russia. At least in theory.

Ukraine vows to stop Russian-supply convoy unless conditions are met. Wary that the Russians may be trying to move military supplies into their country to aid pro-Moscow separatists, Ukrainian officials said they would not allow a convoy of 280 Russian trucks to cross the border unless the Red Cross took over the delivery. Ukraine says the cargo, which Russia insists is humanitarian aid, must be loaded onto other vehicles by the Red Cross. It will take the trucks about two days to make the 620 mile trip from Moscow to eastern Ukraine.

Ukrainian state-run energy firm Naftogaz said yesterday that the ongoing dispute over natural gas prices between Kiev and Moscow may lead to disruption in Russian gas transit to the European Union (EU) countries. Kiev and Moscow have been locked in a dispute for three years over a 2009 contract under which they agreed to tie the price of gas to the international spot price of oil. In June, Russia's energy giant Gazprom has cut all gas supplies to Ukraine after the two sides have failed to reach an agreement on payments. The dispute between the two former Soviet countries triggered fears that Russian gas transit to Europe may be halted. Currently, around 15 percent of EU gas supplies flow through Ukraine.

Yesterday, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said: "Oil prices seem almost eerily calm in the face of mounting geopolitical risks spanning an unusually large swathe of the oil-producing world." Global oil prices have fallen to their lowest levels in 13 months. Brent crude is trading around $103 a barrel, and WTI is around $97, then 10th straight session with prices under $100. Retail gas prices have dropped about 23 cents a gallon since April.
And you probably remember back in 2008, when tensions with Iran helped push oil prices up to a record $148 a barrel. So, with all the problems around the world now, why are oil prices dropping? The US is pumping the most oil in 27 years, adding more than 3 million barrels of daily supply since 2008. Supplies from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which pumps about 40% of the world’s oil, rose to a five-month high of 30 million barrels a day in July as Libyan output recovered and Saudi Arabia increased production. At the same time, global demand is weak, although it is expected to pick up towards the end of the year. Meanwhile Mexico has privatized its oilfields, at least partially. The state-owned energy group Pemex will lose the monopoly it has held since nationalization in 1938. Mexico’s oilfields had been underperforming and production dropped by more than a million barrels per day in the past few years. So, if we can just hold it together for a couple more years, North America could become energy independent. Until then, it could go either way, at any moment, and send the economy into a tailspin in a heartbeat, at least in theory.



Monday, August 11, 2014

Monday, August 11, 2014 - Dog Days


Dog Days
by Sinclair Noe

DOW + 16 = 16,569
SPX + 5 = 1936
NAS + 30 = 4401
10 YR YLD + .01 = 2.42%
OIL + .20 = 97.85
GOLD – 1.20 = 1308.90
SILV + .10 = 20.11

It was actually a quiet day on Wall Street; not much economic data today; we’re winding down earnings reporting season. It is a Monday, so there was some M&A action, but for the most part a slow day; we used to call them the dog days of summer. On a day like this, you can claim whatever you want for whatever market movement there is.

NATO sees a "high probability" of a Russian invasion of eastern Ukraine as some 20,000 Russian troops massed on the nearby border. Kiev had the number at 45,000 Russian troops. The Kremlin announced it had sent a convoy of humanitarian aid to Ukraine under the auspices of the International Red Cross. Western governments are generally opposing, in advance, any Russian aid missions, which they fear could serve as a pretext for a military incursion to support pro-Russian separatists fighting the Ukrainian Army in the country’s southeast. The European Commission issued a statement warning “against any unilateral military actions in Ukraine, under any pretext, including humanitarian.”

Ukraine, the United States and European nations have repeatedly warned Russia against mounting a stealth invasion under the disguise of humanitarian aid, and have looked on with growing alarm as Russian officials have spoken in ever-stronger terms about the humanitarian plight of eastern Ukrainians.

Meanwhile, the US continues its bombing-slash-humanitarian mission in Iraq. The United States launched a fourth round of airstrikes Sunday against militant vehicles and mortars firing on Irbil as part of efforts to blunt the militants' advance and protect American personnel near the Kurdish capital. Reinvigorated by American airstrikes, Kurdish forces retook two towns from Sunni militants. U.S. warplanes and drones have also attacked militants firing on minority Yazidis around Sinjar, which is in the far west of the country near the Syrian border. The US has begun providing weapons to Kurdish forces; the move to directly aid the Kurds underscores the level of  concern about the ISIS militants' gains in the north.

Iraq's president named a new prime minister to end Nuri al-Maliki's eight year rule, but Maliki refused to go after deploying militias and special forces on the streets of Baghdad. But Maliki's Dawa Party declared his replacement illegal, and Maliki's son-in-law said he would overturn it in court. Washington delivered a stern warning to Maliki not to "stir the waters" by using force to cling to power. Maliki himself said nothing about the decision to replace him.

Maliki's opponents accuse him of  keeping key security posts in his own hands instead of sharing them with other groups, alienating Sunnis in particular by ordering the arrest of their political leaders. Islamic State fighters were able to exploit that resentment to win support from other Sunni armed groups. Maliki's Shi'ite State of Law bloc emerged as the biggest group in parliament in the April election, but does not have enough seats to rule without support from Sunnis, Kurds and other Shi'ite blocs, nearly all of which demand he go. Maliki also appears to have alienated his supporters in Iran. Obama says a more inclusive government in Baghdad is a pre-condition for more aggressive US military support against ISIS.

Israeli and Palestinian negotiators resumed indirect talks mediated by Egypt today, as a 72 hour ceasefire appears to be holding, at least for the first few hours.

So, we still have geopolitical hotspots, but for today, they are smoldering rather than exploding; although that could change in a heartbeat.

Stanley Fischer, who took over as vice chairman of the Fed in June, deliver a speech in Stockholm today.  Fisher says economists and policy makers had been repeatedly disappointed as the expected level of growth failed to materialize: “Year after year, we have had to explain from midyear on why the global growth rate has been lower than predicted as little as two quarters back.”

Fischer said it was difficult to determine how much of the slackness was because of cyclical factors and how much represented a more fundamental, structural change in advanced economies. He warned of 3 headwinds to growth: a weak housing market, cuts in federal government spending and weaker global growth that reduced demand for American exports. Fischer also questioned whether the recent weak growth is a temporary problem or a more long-term structural problem. 

A new report from the US Conference of Mayors looks at the weakness of earnings in the recovery. Jobs growth in the US since the 2008 recession has been undermined by lower wages, with workers earning an average 23% less than earnings from jobs which were lost. The average annual salary in sectors where jobs were lost - particularly manufacturing and construction - during the 2008-9 financial crisis was $61,637; Job gains through the second quarter of 2014 in comparative sectors showed average wages of $47,171, implying $93 billion in lower wage income. The report also showed that 73% of metro areas had households earning average salaries of less than $35,000 a year. American workers, on average, earned $24.45 an hour in July, up only a penny from June. Over the last year, wages have grown just 2%, in keeping with where they have been stuck since late 2009. The study also found a continuing accumulation of wealth among the top 20% of the nation's earners. From 2005 to 2012, the highest income bracket was responsible more than 60% of all income gains in the country.

The pipeline group Kinder Morgan, the biggest of the master limited partnerships, announced yesterday that it would acquire its three associated companies and reorganize as one corporation based in Houston. The new Kinder Morgan will have an estimated enterprise value of about $140 billion, $100 billion of market value and $40 billion of debt, making it the third-biggest energy company in the United States, after Exxon Mobil and Chevron. Kinder Morgan, which encompasses a huge network of oil and gas pipelines across North America, will acquire its two related M.L.P.s ‒ Kinder Morgan Energy Partners and El Paso Pipeline Partners ‒ and a third related company, Kinder Morgan Management, for $71 billion. Kinder Morgan will pay a premium for each company and use mostly stock to finance the purchases, allowing shareholders of the three targets to essentially continue their ownership.

Under the existing structure, Kinder Morgan’s related companies were obliged to pay out a majority of their profits to investors, including significant payments to Kinder Morgan itself. The distributions had grown so large in recent years that Kinder Morgan was lending money back to the related companies so they could fund growth. It was a profitable arrangement, but became overly complex and ultimately constricted the combined companies’ growth. The move is expected to free up cash for the company to invest in new capital expenditures needed to accommodate new reserves of natural gas being tapped across North America. It’s also expected the move will allow Kinder Morgan to become more acquisitive.

Last week, Bank of America reportedly agreed to a settlement deal with the Department of Justice for $16 billion, with $9 billion in cash fines, and $7 billion in soft dollar relief to borrowers. We still haven’t heard confirmation; but that would break the record for the largest bank settlement in history, set less than a year ago by a $13 billion agreement between Justice and JPMorgan Chase.

The numbers that accompany these deal announcements always seem impressive. But how large are they, really? That depends on your point of view. Bankers fraudulently inflated a housing bubble. They became extremely wealthy as a result, but the housing market lost $6.3 trillion in value when the bubble burst. It had only recovered 44% of that lost value by of the end of 2013. That's more than $3 trillion still missing from American households. As of the first quarter of this year,  9.1 million residences - 17% of mortgaged homes - were still "seriously underwater," which means that homeowners owed at least 25% more on the home than it was worth.

And homeowners weren't the only ones hurt by banker misdeeds. When the bubble burst, it took the economy with it. Unemployment and underemployment remain at record levels, even as the stock market surges and corporations enjoy record profits. Payments on those 9.1 million underwater mortgages are a form of wealth transfer from Main Street to Wall Street, as homeowners continue to overpay the bankers who inflated those mortgages in the first place - or risk losing their homes to them. If this added burden harms their credit score, they'll pay banks more for other forms of borrowing as well.

And yet, these settlements do not require banks to provide principal relief for these underwater homeowners. They don't ask banks to return homes that they wrongfully took from their owners. They don't ask banks to forfeit every penny of earnings received through forgery or perjury. They don't even ask them to restore the credit ratings of defrauded customers. What's more, there's very little reason to believe that these large sums will be paid in full. Much of the "consumer relief" in past deals has turned out to be nothing more than gamesmanship with numbers. Banks modify loans in ways that are advantageous to them, offer deals they almost certainly would've offered anyway, and then count them against their "settlement" obligations. What's more, it hasn't been announced whether this deal will be tax-deductible. If so, Americans will get shortchanged at the federal level, too.

Bank of America is a repeat offender with six violations since November 2011, but there have been no criminal prosecutions of big-bank executives, an omission that Federal Judge Jed S. Rakoff lamented in a recent speech. Rakoff called the lack of prosecutions from the Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission "technically and morally suspect" and characterized the excuses they've given for failing to prosecute as "hollow" and "lame."

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Tuesday, August 05, 2014 - Go Firgure

Go Figure
by Sinclair Noe

DOW – 139 = 16,429
SPX – 18 = 1920
NAS – 31 = 4352
10 YR YLD - .01 = 2.48%
OIL - .86 = 97.43
GOLD + .40 = 1289.60
SILV - .39 = 19.84

We start with a couple of economic reports: The Institute for Supply Management’s services index rose to 58.7 last month, the highest level since December 2005, from 56.0 in June. A reading above 50 indicates expansion. Orders jumped to a 9 year high. A sub-index gauging services industry employment also rose as did order backlogs, but export order growth moderated.

In a separate report, the Commerce Department said orders for manufactured goods increased 1.1% in June, more than reversing May's 0.6% decline. Orders for non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft hit a record high; this might indicate a renewal in business confidence and equipment spending plans. Factory orders rose across all categories, with bookings for electrical equipment, appliances and components recording their largest gain since November 2010. In another sign of strength, unfilled orders saw their largest rise in seven months.

So, a couple of good reports on the economy, and the stock market tumbles. Go figure.

The situation in Ukraine appears headed to a tipping point. Ukrainian forces have been pushing back against Russian backed separatists in eastern Ukraine. Meanwhile, Russia is massing troops on the border. Some 20,000 troops are now stationed about 50 kilometers from the border, closer than they had been stationed previously. In April, Russian President Vladimir Putin had briefly deployed about 40,000 troops at the border. The latest troops include Russian Elite forces, armored brigades, artillery and anti-aircraft units. Poland’s foreign minister thinks Russia is preparing to invade Ukraine; he didn’t flat out say an invasion was imminent, just that the Russians are getting ready.

Putin has ordered his government to prepare retaliatory measures against US and European economic sanctions imposed on Russia. We don’t know what Putin means by retaliatory measures. Russia may limit or ban flights over Siberia by European carriers bound for Asia as a response to sanctions levied against the country. Russia has also called for the UN Security Council to hold an emergency meeting on the humanitarian situation in Ukraine. It isn’t a humanitarian situation when the pro-Russian rebels shoot a plane full of civilians out of the sky, but it is a humanitarian situation when the rebels start getting their butts kicked.

One thing that hasn’t happened yet is a disruption in oil and gas supplies from Russia to Europe. Russia derives half its tax revenue from the oil sector; Europe relies on Russian supplies. As the weather changes and winter sets in, Europe’s resolve, which has already been soft, will weaken further. For now, energy prices are moving lower, despite violence in Eastern Europe, Libya, and Iraq. Global oil demand has been running below supply over the last few months, building up a glut of high quality crude oil in the West African, European and Asian markets. The US Energy Information Administration reported last week that gasoline supplies rose by 400,000 barrels at a time when market bulls hoped to see a reduction. Oil prices are at their lowest levels since February.

Yesterday we told you about the collapse of Portugal’s Banco Espirito Santo; today we report on the fallout. The French bank Credit Agricole held a 14% stake in Banco Espirito Santo and two seats on its board. Crédit Agricole's ties to the Portuguese group go back to 1986 when it helped the Espírito Santo Group set up Banco Internacional de Crédito. Over the years, the French bank raised its stake in the Portuguese group, as part of a larger international expansion plan in southern Europe.The French bankers say they never detected any “slip or difficulties” at Banco Espirito Santo. The collapse of the Portuguese bank nearly wiped out all the second quarter profits at the French bank.

Standard & Poors today announced that it was dropping its 10-year estimate of annual GDP growth in the US from 2.8% to 2.5%, which over a decade amounts to a pretty significant reduction. Why are they cutting the growth forecast? Here’s what S&P says: "Our review of the data, as well as a wealth of research on this matter, leads us to conclude that the current level of income inequality in the U.S. is dampening GDP growth, at a time when the world's biggest economy is struggling to recover from the Great Recession and the government is in need of funds to support an aging population... At extreme levels, income inequality can harm sustained economic growth over long periods. The U.S. is approaching that threshold...."

S&P analysts say it basically boils down to the idea that high levels of income inequality cause more affluent households to save more of their increasing income rather than spend it, and as that cash is withdrawn the economy slows. At the other end of the economic scale, as income declines, households go into debt to try to maintain their standard of living, a strategy that is simply unsustainable over time. And when the unsustainable ceases to be sustained, you get a breakdown, much like that of 2008. In fact, S&P notes, as income inequality increases, an economic system becomes more and more vulnerable to a boom-and-bust cycle. It cites research demonstrating that income distribution plays a much more important role in sustaining long-term economic growth than any other factor.

Although the issue of income inequality is often addressed in moral terms, S&P concludes, at its foundation it is really an economic issue, saying: "A rising tide lifts all boats … but a lifeboat carrying a few, surrounded by many treading water, risks capsizing."

Earnings reporting season:
Retailer Target cut its second quarter earnings estimates due to higher promotions and more discounting; they also lost about $148 million related to that data breach, where hackers gained access to customer credit card info; that’s a small number compared to total sales at Target, but it apparently proved a costly distraction. Morgan Stanley reduced its second quarter earnings by 2 cents per share due to increased legal settlements. Disney posted better than expected earnings; shares moved just a smidge higher in after-hours trading. Cablevision cut back on its promotions and subscriber losses doubled in the second quarter. First Solar posted profits that missed estimates by a wide margin; they blamed project delays. Groupon fell in after-hours trading after posting a second quarter loss nearly triple the loss from a year ago. Zillow announced a second quarter loss, even as revenue increased; and they raised their full year revenue outlook. This was Zillow’s first quarterly report since they announced a $3.5 billion deal to acquire rival Trulia.

Time Warner and Fox both report earnings tomorrow, but the big news came today. Fox withdrew its offer for Time Warner. Game over. When Fox made the hostile bid, its stock dropped and Time’s stock soared; meanwhile Time’s board and management opposed the takeover and refused to discuss the offer. Now that Murdoch has dangled a huge windfall in front of Time Warner shareholders, only to take it away, one imagines that some of those shareholders may soon be venting their frustration to Time Warner's board and management.

Several America corporations have found a loophole in the tax code, which allows for a company to acquire a partial interest in a foreign company, and then change the address of its headquarters in order to evade US taxes; it’s called an inversion. There have been 22 such deals since 2011, most have been in the pharmaceutical industry, where overseas sales generate significant income that cannot be brought back to the US without suffering a major tax hit; but there have also been inversion deals in the media, consumer and manufacturing sectors. Some of those deals have collapsed, amid disputes over price and political scrutiny.

Walgreens was next on the list; closing in on a deal to buy the 55% of British pharmacy retailer, Alliance Boots; Walgreens already owns 45% of Alliance Boots. Walgreens will buy out Alliance Boots, but it won’t move its corporate headquarters abroad and it will not change its corporate citizenship to a lower tax country. They say they won’t do the inversion move because they would have had to renegotiate an existing agreement, and Alliance Boots wasn’t willing. There may also have been some political pressure.  President Obama has denounced tax inversions as unpatriotic and has urged Congress to stop them; which is like asking a Kleenex to stop a freight train. So, now the Treasury Department says there may be an executive order to provide a partial administrative fix, you know, until Congress gets back from its 5 week vacation.

As Ebola spreads, pharmaceutical giants are sitting this one out. That's mainly because treating a disease that affects a relatively small number of people who typically don’t have a lot of money doesn’t offer a great return on investment. It's unclear how much profit it would take to get Big Pharma interested in finding an Ebola cure, but right now such a project could well be a money-loser. Instead, small biotech firms, academics and government agencies are leading the search for an Ebola cure. And in a twist of fate, they may have found a way to treat the virus: tobacco.

A tiny San Diego-based company provided an experimental Ebola treatment for two Americans infected with the deadly virus in Liberia. The biotechnology drug, produced with tobacco plants, appears to be working. Mapp Biopharmaceutical produced an experimental drug called ZMapp, an antibody that had been tested only on infected animals; now it’s been given to human patients, and it seems to make a big difference. The antibody work came out of research projects funded more than a decade ago by the U.S. Army to develop treatments and vaccines against potential bio-warfare agents, such as the Ebola virus.

The tobacco plant production system was developed because it was a method that could produce antibodies rapidly in the event of an emergency. To produce therapeutic proteins inside a tobacco plant, genes for the desired antibodies are fused to genes for a natural tobacco virus. The tobacco plants are then infected with this new artificial virus. The infection results in the production of antibodies inside the plant. The plant is eventually ground up and the antibody is extracted. The whole process takes a matter of weeks.



Friday, July 25, 2014

Friday, July 25, 2014 - Hot and Dry

Hot and Dry
by Sinclair Noe

DOW – 123 = 16,960
SPX – 9 = 1978
NAS – 22 = 4449
10 YR YLD - .04 = 2.47
OIL - .13 = 101.94
GOLD + 13.30 = 1308.20
SILV + .35 = 20.82

For the week, the Dow is down 0.8%, the S&P is flat and the Nasdaq is up 0.4% in its second straight weekly rise.

In economic news, durable goods orders were up 1.4% in June, but May’s numbers were revised lower to show a 1.2% decline. Shipments of core capital goods fell 1%. Core capital goods shipments are used to calculate equipment spending in the government's gross domestic product measurement. The government will release its first snapshot of second-quarter GDP next Wednesday. The economy contracted at a 2.9% rate in the first three months of the year, with business spending on equipment falling at a 2.8% rate.

Investors have been selling junk bonds. In the past week investors pulled $2.3 billion from junk bond funds. That marked the biggest outflow since June 2013, when the Fed was hinting about tapering. The high-yield market has pulled back in recent weeks, sending prices lower and yields higher. The bond market is not as liquid as it once was; trading volume is down across the board, and trading desks have been cut back, meaning a big sell-off could look more like a run on bonds.

Yesterday we told you about Amazon.com’s earnings report, or more specifically, a lack of earnings. Amazon has a unique business model where they manage to consistently increase sales without actually turning a profit. If it seems like this kind of model has limitations, you are correct, and today Amazon hit the wall. Yesterday’s non-earnings report went from bad to worse as Amazon announced the current quarter will result in bigger losses than the last quarter. The $126 million dollar loss will swell to a $400 million dollar loss, maybe as much as $800 million.

Breaking down the forward guidance, about $410 million of the current quarter loss will be in the form of stock compensation. What makes this even more interesting is that the company lost about $14 billion in market cap today. Jeff Bezos lost $3.5 billion from his personal fortune; Bezos may be an internet visionary, but lacks some basic math skills.

Also yesterday, Visa reported net income for the quarter ended June 30 rose 11 percent to $1.36 billion, or $2.17 a share, from $1.23 billion, or $1.88, a year earlier. Analysts had expected $2.10 a share. Visa’s losses accounted for about one-third of the decline in the Dow today. So, the earnings side was good but the company reduced its revenue forecast for the rest of the fiscal year. One reason for the reduction – Russia. After the US imposed sanctions on Russia, Putin recommended Russia create its own payment system. Visa said that tensions with Russia may affect earnings by “several pennies,” and that headwinds, in the form of lower cross-border volumes, are likely to continue in the short term in international corridors such as Ukraine, Venezuela and Argentina.


The European Union has been holding meetings in Brussels to find agreement over imposing sanctions on Russia over its behavior in Ukraine. They’ve decided to put together an outline on sanctions and get together again next week; the outline would exclude the crucial gas sector.

Following the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, many Europeans are eager for their governments to do something to punish Putin for fomenting instability in the Ukraine. But the debate over economic sanctions is shining an awkward spotlight on the large and important trade relations between Russia and Europe. Russia is Europe’s gas station, and if Europe decides to stop doing business with Russia, they will have to figure out a new, and likely more expensive way to put gas in the car and to heat their homes.

According to the Energy Information Administration, oil and natural gas accounted for 70% of Russia’s export revenues in 2012; and most of those exports go to Europe; and most of Europe hasn’t figured out how to provide their own energy. Oil reserves in the North Sea are expensive to tap; fracking technology hasn’t happened for a number of reasons; and so Europe depends on Russia for about 30% of its natural gas. Many of Europe’s biggest corporations are directly involved in importing fuel from Russia, and many of Europe’s biggest industries, such as utilities, power-hungry manufacturers, car manufacturers, transportation systems, and anyone else who uses electricity – all rely on fuels imported from Russia.

If the EU were to suddenly grow a spine and just say no to Russian oil and natural gas, it would certainly inflict some short- term pain on Russia, but oil and gas are fungible and the market is global. One of Putin’s first moves was to sign a deal with China to make Russia a major supplier of natural gas. Europe does not have a quick replacement for Russia’s natural gas and winters in Europe can get very cold.

The US does not depend on Russian fuels, however there are a couple of strange side stories coming out of the sanctions. First, is the as-yet-unaddressed need to restart NASA, so we don’t have to depend on Russia for ride sharing to the space station. The other, is that Americans don’t really care much about Russia anyway; last week the US imposed a fresh round of sanctions on Russian companies, including weapons manufacturers. How did patriotic Americans respond? Well, you can no longer buy Kalashnikov AK-47s. Technically you can, you just can’t find any. The move sent American gun buyers into a frenzy, seeking to buy any and all AK-47s on any store shelf.

So, it should come as no surprise that Russia has stepped up its direct involvement in fighting between the Ukrainian military and separatist insurgents, unleashing artillery attacks from Russian territory and massing heavy weapons along the border. So, while the EU considers drafting a new outline of possible sanctions for further possible consideration; Russia may send in the troops.

About 34% of the contiguous United States was in at least a moderate drought as of this week.

Things have been particularly bad in California, where more than 80% of the state is in “extreme” drought, state officials have approved drastic measures to reduce water consumption. California farmers, without water from reservoirs in the Central Valley, are left to choose which of their crops to water. Parts of Texas, Oklahoma and surrounding states are also suffering from drought conditions. East of the Mississippi, rainfall has been rising. But global warming also appears to be causing moisture to evaporate faster in places that were already dry. Researchers believe drought conditions in these places are likely to intensify in coming years.

A new study released yesterday by NASA and the University of California Irvine shows we are losing water at a shocking rate in the West. Using a satellite designed to track changes in groundwater, the research team found that the Colorado River basin—which supplies water to 40 million people in seven states—lost 15.6 cubic miles of freshwater in the last 10 years. From December 2004 to November 2013 the Colorado basin lost nearly 53 million acre feet, or almost double the volume of the nation’s largest manmade reservoir, Lake Mead. (Actually, Lake Mead is no longer the biggest reservoir in the country; a lake in North Dakota takes that honor, as Lake Mead has shrunk.) More than 75% of that loss was due to excessive groundwater pumping. It’s the first study to quantify just how big a role the overuse of groundwater plays in dwindling water resources out West.

How did this happen without anyone noticing it? The answer, basically, is that up until this study, nobody had a good way of measuring how much water is stored underground. And the researchers aren’t certain how much groundwater is left. Water above ground in the basin's rivers and lakes is managed by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, and its losses are documented. Pumping from underground aquifers is regulated by individual states and is often not well documented.

In the last seven years, Lake Mead’s dwindling has accelerated. The lake is now just barely more than 1,080 feet above sea level, slightly below its previous record low set in November 2010. Lake Mead is expected to drop another 20 feet into record territory by summer 2016. The low water level is already affecting hydroelectric power production. If the water level drops below 1050, the Hoover Dam might not be able to produce electricity.

Well before then, perhaps as soon as next April, downstream water rationing will kick in—which has never happened before. A 2007 shortage-sharing agreement sets three elevations for which water restrictions will be imposed on the Lower Basin states of Arizona, California, Nevada, and New Mexico. The first shortage level, 1,075 feet, will likely come into effect in the next several months. It would require a total water use cut of 4.4%, with Arizona taking an 11% cut, Nevada a 4% cut, New Mexico 3.3% and California remaining the same.

Right now, Phoenix has officially recorded just over one inch of precipitation since the start of the year; the normal amount is just under 4 inches. The problem is that when above-ground water supplies run low - which is happening now, and it is common in California, even when there isn’t a drought - water managers use groundwater to meet public and farming needs. The study finds that so much groundwater has been used that it will be impossible to recover it naturally; overall supply of available freshwater will continue to decrease as a result.