Relative Strength Update... Easy Money Edition
China Now Owns Slightly Less than a Ton of Treasuries
Enjoy the weekend!
The Washington Post details:
U.S. employers added 227,000 jobs in February to complete three of the best months of hiring since the recession began. The unemployment rate was unchanged, largely because more people streamed into the work force. The Labor Department said Friday that the unemployment rate stayed at 8.3 percent last month, the lowest in three years.And hiring in January and December was better than first thought. The government revised those figures to show 61,000 an additional jobs.
The Federal Reserve released their quarterly Flow of Funds report today, which for a data nerd like me is just about as good as it gets. Unfortunately, not too much to report in terms of change, but I will highlight a few things that I've touched on in the past.
Marketwatch details:
Credit has risen for 5 straight months and fifteen out of the last sixteen months.
But analysts noted that all of the gain in January came from non-revolving debt, such as auto loans, personal loans and student loans.
These three categories combined for a $20.7 billion jump in January, the biggest gain since November 2001.
Once researchers exclude those loans to more accurately reflect the pool of borrowers who can actually be late, the delinquency rate more than doubled. In the end, 27 percent of the remaining borrowers were late on their payments, totaling about 21 percent of the aggregate loan balance.
Eddy Elfenbein tweeted this fun fact:
Take whatever today's $VIX is. Divide it by 3.46. That's the market's view of the 1 stand dev range +/- for the next 30 days. $$
Bloomberg details:
European retail sales unexpectedly rebounded from four months of declines in January, as growth in France helped to offset a drop in Germany.
Sales rose 0.3 percent from December, when they fell a revised 0.5 percent, the European Union’s statistics office in Luxembourg said today.
In Germany, Europe’s largest economy, retail sales fell 1.6 percent from December, when they advanced 0.1 percent, today’s report showed.
Marketwatch provides detail on a trend that will be important to keep an eye on:
Consumer spending is rising at tortoise’s pace for a very good reason: Incomes aren’t rising very much, especially after you adjust for higher prices.
Despite the good news on the jobs front over the past few months, personal incomes are barely keeping pace with inflation. Over the past six months, real disposable incomes are up just 0.6%, according to data released Thursday by the Commerce Department.
That’s slower than the population’s growth. On a per capita basis, inflation-adjusted, after-tax incomes are down 0.1% in the past year to $32,675 (measured in constant 2005 dollars).
Back on March 4th, 2008 EconomPic came to be with this sorry looking chart of CPI (seriously look at it... it's a joke). The point of the blog was simply to store charts that I regularly created to get a better sense of what was going on in this crazy world (timing couldn't have been better for material as the global economy was just about to blow up).
The blog has since evolved from a source for almost all relevant economic data (not sure how I found the time to post so often) to one that attempts to help digest the major economic data points and to share my 10,000 foot view on asset class valuation. So while my 15-20 post weeks will never return, the blog still hopefully provides readers with a better sense of what is going on in the world, while I more regularly post links and random thoughts over at Twitter.
I am incredibly thankful for the "in" that this blog has provided me to such a remarkable community of other bloggers and an audience of wonderful, thoughtful readers that make traditional media seem flat and out of touch. The fact that EconomPic just passed 2600 RSS subscribers is mind boggling. Giving back to this community is what provides me with the motivation to keep the blog going, despite the limited time a 3 month old son provides (for those that don't recall, I unsuccessfully "retired" last year... I simply couldn't stay away).
So thank you to everyone who has read or contributed, enabling EconomPic to be something more than a storage space for tacky charts.
The WSJ details:
Treasury and gold investors were rocked out of their recent torpor on Wednesday as a series of large trades in the futures markets sent prices tumbling.Not a good day for gold bugs.
At the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, an unusually big sale of more than 100,000 futures on U.S. government debt cascaded across traders' screens shortly after 10 a.m.
The selling spread to the cash markets where 10-year Treasury yields, which rise as prices fall, spiked to 1.99% from 1.93% in minutes.
The trades came just after the release of congressional testimony from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke. Some traders said Mr. Bernanke appeared less focused on the prospect for a third round of asset purchases, known as QE3, than the market expected.
CNN Money details:
Economic growth was stronger than originally thought at the end of 2011 as consumers increased their spending and businesses stocked up their inventories. Gross domestic product, the broadest measure of the nation's economy, grew at a 3% annual rate in the fourth quarter of 2011, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. The government had initially said the economy grew at a 2.8% rate. The Commerce Department estimates the GDP figures three times, and Wednesday's report was its second estimate.
Bloomberg details:
Orders for U.S. durable goods fell in January by the most in three years, led by a slowdown in demand for commercial aircraft and business equipment. Bookings for goods meant to last at least three years slumped 4 percent, more than forecast, after a revised 3.2 percent gain the prior month, data from the Commerce Department showed today in Washington.The expiration at the end of 2011 of a tax incentive allowing full depreciation on equipment purchases may have prompted a slowdown in investment at the start of this year.
A few weeks back I outlined the Ugly Bond Math that an aggregate bond index with a 2% yield to maturity means for investors:
It means that investors should not expect more than 2% annualized from your bond allocation over the next five years, UNLESS you are willing to reach for yield via lower quality credit, non-US exposure, or increased duration.
It also means that if you have a 60% equity / 40% bond allocation, to reach an 8% all-in annualized return your equity allocation needs to return roughly 12% / year over the next 5 years.
Below is an update of a relative strength chart I presented last August, a point which turned out to be right near the bottom of the summer's equity sell-off. At the time I noted that the chart:
Puts the dollar sell-off (commodities and gold are ripping) and risk-off (financials are sliding, Treasuries are rocking) in perspective.This time around we've seen a remarkable recovery in risk assets, especially REITs (from 4th to the bottom to the top) and Financials (from the bottom to 4th from the top). Note also the continued strength in long treasuries (remaining third strongest).
The Mercury News details:
Rising gasoline prices, trumpeted in foot-tall numbers on street corners across the country, are causing concern among advisers to President Barack Obama that a budding sense of economic optimism could be undermined just as he heads into the general election.
White House officials are preparing for Republicans to use consumer angst about the cost of oil and gas to condemn his energy programs and buttress their argument that his economic policies are not working.
In a closed-door meeting last week, Speaker John A. Boehner instructed fellow Republicans to embrace the gas-pump anger they find among their constituents when they return to their districts for the Presidents Day recess.
China was a large seller of US Treasuries in December but sought higher-yielding mortgage securities amid expectations of more policy easing by the Federal Reserve.
Treasury flows were dominated by China selling $32bn in bonds, dropping its overall holdings to $1.1tn and extending a steady decline from July’s peak of $1.173tn, according to official data released on Wednesday.
The UK, a financial centre seen as a proxy for Chinese flows, experienced a drop in Treasury holdings to $415bn from $426bn. Hong Kong’s appetite for Treasuries rose to $112bn from $105bn.
China’s selling of Treasuries was accompanied by the purchase of $9.5bn in US mortgage debt, a sign that analysts said reflected expectations that the Fed would undertake another round of quantitative easing in coming months.
This level of growth will be mathematically impossible to continue at some point (in my view sooner than later). The current $2.85 trillion is a whopping 20% of US GDP and 5% of World GDP, but if growth were to continue at this pace it would grow to 50% of US GDP by 2015 and 125% by 2020 (assuming the US grows at a 5% / year nominal pace).
I've come across a number of forecasts for US Bond returns in the 4.5% - 6% range for the next 5 or so years.
The Sun Times details:
Americans rebounded from a weak holiday season and stepped up spending on retail goods in January. The latest government report on retail sales pointed to a slowly improving economy.
Retail sales rose at a seasonally adjusted 0.4 percent last month, the Commerce Department said Tuesday.
Consumers spent more on electronics, home and garden supplies, sporting goods, at department and general merchandise stores and at restaurants and bars. They also paid higher prices for gas.
A quiet few weeks (unfortunately, get used to it) as I started a new gig in San Francisco (it only took two years to get here!) and I have a two month old that takes up a bunch of my non-work hours (zero complaining, just mentioning that fact).
What I did do this past week was consolidate some articles, posts, and charts that I found interesting and/or may want to revisit. Not sure if they would be of interest to you all, but I thought I would share (found below following my links since the last recap).
Asset Classes
Economic Data
There seems to be lots of confusion surrounding Bill Gross' latest Investment Outlook, Life and Death Proposition. First, some background of what Bill Gross stated...
What perhaps is not so often recognized is that liquidity can be trapped by the “price” of credit, in addition to its “risk.” Capitalism depends on risk-taking in several forms. Developers, homeowners, entrepreneurs of all shapes and sizes epitomize the riskiness of business building via equity and credit risk extension. But modern capitalism is dependent as well on maturity extension in credit markets. No venture, aside from one financed with 100% owners’ capital, could survive on credit or loans that matured or were callable overnight. Buildings, utilities and homes require 20- and 30-year loan commitments to smooth and justify their returns.Investors had been willing to take on this duration risk because they would be compensated with additional yield AND (this is important) because bonds could appreciate if rates fell (i.e. when yields fall, bonds rise).
Because this is so, lenders require a yield premium, expressed as a positively sloped yield curve, to make the extended loan. A flat yield curve, in contrast, is a disincentive for lenders to lend unless there is sufficient downside room for yields to fall and provide bond market capital gains.
Even if nodding in agreement, an observer might immediately comment that today’s yield curve is anything but flat and that might be true. Most short to intermediate Treasury yields, however, are dangerously close to the zero-bound which imply little if any room to fall: no margin, no air underneath those bond yields and therefore limited, if any, price appreciation. What incentive does a bank have to buy two-year Treasuries at 20 basis points when they can park overnight reserves with the Fed at 25? What incentives do investment managers or even individual investors have to take price risk with a five-, 10- or 30-year Treasury when there are multiples of downside price risk compared to appreciation? At 75 basis points, a five-year Treasury can only rationally appreciate by two more points, but theoretically can go down by an unlimited amount. Duration risk and flatness at the zero-bound, to make the simple point, can freeze and trap liquidity by convincing investors to hold cash as opposed to extend credit.Now my oversimplified explanation using two interest rate scenarios...
This is based on my post Equity Valuation Based on GDP Growth with a slight twist.
Bloomberg details:
Consumer borrowing in the U.S. rose more than forecast in December, driven by demand for auto and student loans.
Credit increased by $19.3 billion to $2.5 trillion, Federal Reserve figures showed today in Washington. The gain topped the $7 billion median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News and followed a $20.4 billion advance the prior month.
Consumers “are willing to take on this debt because there is some increasing degree of confidence in the economy,” said Ken Mayland, president of ClearView Economics LLC in Pepper Pike, Ohio, who projected credit would climb by $15 billion, the highest in the Bloomberg survey. “Consumers over the past several years have done a pretty good job of repairing their balance sheets.”
As I detailed yesterday, over the past few years:
the population grew at a much faster rate than previously expected
Good News
The unemployment rate fell for the fifth straight month after a surge of January hiring, a promising shift in the nation's outlook for job growth.
The Labor Department says employers added 243,000 jobs in January, the most in nine months. The unemployment rate dropped to 8.3 percent from 8.5 percent in December. That's the lowest in nearly three years.
Employers have added an average of 201,000 jobs per month in the past three months. That's 50,000 more jobs per month than the economy averaged in each month last year.
The change in total nonfarm payroll employment for November was revised from +100,000 to +157,000, and the change for December was revised from +200,000 to +203,000. The total nonfarm employment level for March 2011 was revised upward by 165,000.
"On the face of it, a lower unemployment rate sounds good,” but the recent declines reflect not only an uptick in job growth but also the exit of thousands of potential young workers from the labor force.
When people stop looking for work, they are no longer counted as part of the labor force or “unemployed.” Evidence suggests that many of the young dropouts, who proved to be instrumental in Mr. Obama’s election in 2008, are continuing their schooling to avoid the tough job market and to increase their skills and chances of eventually securing employment.
Bloomberg details and defines unit labor costs:
Unit labor costs in nonfarm businesses increased 1.2 percent in the fourth quarter of 2011, as productivity grew at a slower rate (0.7 percent) than hourly compensation (1.9 percent). Unit labor costs rose 1.3 percent over the last four quarters. Annual average unit labor costs increased 1.2 percent from 2010 to 2011.
BLS defines unit labor costs as the ratio of hourly compensation to labor productivity; increases in hourly compensation tend to increase unit labor costs and increases in output per hour tend to reduce them.The good news... there is no inflationary pressure whatsoever at the moment in labor. The bad... this is because the labor market is soft (though hopefully we see some more positive signs tomorrow morning).
Companies added 170,000 workers in January, reflecting job gains in services and at small businesses, according to a private report based on payrolls.
The increase was less than forecast and followed a revised 292,000 rise the prior month that was smaller than previously reported, the report from the Roseland, New Jersey-based ADP Employer Services showed today. The median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of economists called for an advance of 182,000.
ISM Outlines:
WHAT RESPONDENTS ARE SAYING ...
- "Still seeing raw materials pricing moving down in general, but expect inflation later in the quarter." (Chemical Products)
- "Year starting a little slow, but customers are positive about increased business in 2012." (Machinery)
- "Once again, business continues to be strong." (Paper Products)
- "Pricing remains in check with the demand we are seeing. Supplier deliveries are on time or early." (Food, Beverage & Tobacco Products)
- "The economy seems to be slowly improving." (Fabricated Metal Products)
- "Business lost to offshore is coming back." (Computer & Electronic Products)
- "Business remains strong. Order intake is great — more than 20 percent above budget." (Primary Metals)
- "Indications are that 2012 business environment will improve over 2011." (Transportation Equipment)
- "Market conditions appear to be improving, with the outlook for 2012 better yet." (Wood Products)