Monday, January 31, 2011

Odd Month

Justification for the below?
  • Risk on / reflation in the developed world (continued dollar sell-off)
  • Brakes thrown on in emerging market world
  • Sell-off in rates across the board
  • Gold and oil off because... who knows


Source: Google Finance

Chicago PMI Points to Heating Economy / Input Prices

Bloomberg detailed:
Businesses in the U.S. expanded in January at the fastest pace since July 1988, indicating the world’s largest economy has momentum at the start of the year.

The Institute for Supply Management-Chicago Inc. said today its business barometer rose this month to 68.8 from 66.8 in December. Figures greater than 50 signal expansion, and economists projected the gauge would slip to 64.5, based on the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey.



Source: ISM

Friday, January 28, 2011

GDP Growth at 3.2% in Q4

Pretty wild release. HUGE positive impact (more than 3%) by improvement in net exports. HUGE positive impact (more than 3%) by consumption (strong demand in durable and non-durable goods). HUGE negative impact (almost 4%) by inventory liquidation to meet final demand vs. new production.



My initial thoughts? I've been looking for a bump in aggregate global demand and the jump in consumption and net exports is a good sign. In addition, the fact that we have met final demand by depleting inventories, once again feeds the cycle that businesses have to ramp up production to meet final demand going forward (which will positively impact future economic growth).

Source: BEA

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

The Bulldog Bubble

Random? Yes, but I like dogs...

The American Kennel Club (hat tip Skip) details:
This year’s list included some shakeups in the top 10 – the Beagle overtook the Golden Retriever for the 4th spot and the Bulldog, who has been steadily rising up in rank, took 6th place away from the Boxer, who dropped to 7th in 2010.

"Not since the early 20th Century has the Bulldog enjoyed such sustained popularity," said AKC Spokesperson Lisa Peterson. "‘Bob’ was the first AKC registered Bulldog in 1886, and today the breed enjoys its highest ranking in 100 years at number 6."


Source: American Kennel Club

Taking a Look at the Cash Hoarders

The Huffington Post details the top 11 cash hoarders.

Instead of building plants or hiring workers, corporate America is clinging to its cash.Companies are sitting on $1.93 trillion in cash and liquid assets, the highest level since 1959, the Wall Street Journal reports.

With high unemployment and families still limiting their spending, corporate America is backing away from expansion. But with interest rates on the heaps of cash so low, that $1.3 trillion might as well be stuffed in a mattress.

Below is a chart of the cash levels for 10 of the 11 (I excluded GM as they don't have 12 month's of positive earnings), the earnings yield of each company (defined as the inverse of the P/E ratio), and the adjusted earnings yield that backs out the cash from the corporation's market value to determine the earnings power of the company less cash (normally you would have to account some earnings to the cash, but in the current environment, that is minimal).



Note that all cash data is directly from Huffington Post and Google Finance (I did not go through financials) and is presented without analysis or determination as to whether any of the figures should be adjusted for any reason. That said, if the cash is returned to investors via dividend or buyback OR the cash is put to good use, corporations appear cheaper than they might first appear.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Dividend vs. Buyback Yield... The Importance of Timing

Professor Damodaran (via World Beta and Abnormal Returns):
S&P's most recent update indicates that US companies, after a pause for about a year after the banking crisis, are back in the buyback game. In the third quarter of 2010, the S&P 500 companies bought back almost $ 80 billion of stock, up 128% from the third quarter of 2009.
The below chart shows the dividend yield (dividends divided by the S&P 500's market cap) and buyback yield (buybacks divided by the S&P 500's market cap) on a quarterly basis (annualized) going back to 2004.



While getting cash back to shareholders is the whole point of investing in stocks (timing of returning that cash is potentially a broader question), the higher buyback yield is not necessarily a great thing; it is a great thing if the cash is buying back stock when cheap... not when expensive. And when were corporations buying back the most? Q2 and Q3 2007 (i.e. the market peak). The lowest? Q1 and Q2 2009 (i.e. the market trough).

Professor Damodaran does provide some rationale / discussion into why the trend has moved to buyback vs. dividend:
  • Manager compensation: buybacks increase the price of stock for manager option grants
  • Uncertainty about earnings: buybacks are a lot more flexible than a steady dividend
  • Changing investor profiles: investors that are more focused on stock price
  • Higher earnings per share: less shares outstanding = more earnings per share (tested here)
Source: S&P

Consumer Confidence Improves in January

Marktetwatch details:
An index of U.S. consumer confidence jumped to 60.6 in January, reaching the highest level since May, with more consumers optimistic about income and jobs, as well as current business conditions, the Conference Board reported Tuesday.
Note that this does not mean consumers are confident, just that their confidence has improved. Taking a look at the details behind the index we see an improvement across the board, but from very low levels.



Source: Conference Board

Monday, January 24, 2011

Europe's Industrial Rebound: The Power of Mean Revision

RTT News details:
Eurozone industrial new order growth quickened in November, led by Portugal, Finland and Germany, official figures showed Monday. Industrial orders rose 2.1% month-on-month in November, after rising 1.4% in October, the European Union Statistical office Eurostat said. On an annual basis, industrial order growth accelerated to 19.9% from 14.8% recorded in the preceding month. The rise exceeded the 17.5% increase economists had forecast.
The below charts show that much of this is purely a rebound off lows, with a relatively strong relationship between those reporting strong results in 2010 off of lower figures in 2009.





Source: Eurostat

Friday, January 21, 2011

China Hearts Silver... Market Top?

FT Alphaville reports (via Bullion Vault dealers):

Looking at China’s latest import data, 2010 saw silver imports (net of exports) rise four-fold from 2009 note analysts at Mitsui in London – a total of 3,500 tonnes.

A heavy seller of silver bullion after lifting the state’s 50-year monopoly in 2000, China was a net export of 3,000 tonnes as recently as 2005.



Is this support for the massive 80% year over year jump in the price of silver under the belief that China will continue to be a huge buyer of silver? Or is this a sign that the price is bubblicious and investors should be concerned that China's economy will be forced into slow down mode (thus less net purchases) following the recent strong print in both growth and inflation?

Source: Yahoo Finance

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Housing Market Drives Leading Economic Indicators?

Bloomberg details:
The index of U.S. leading economic indicators increased in December more than forecast, a sign the recovery will gather steam in the new year.

The Conference Board’s gauge of the outlook for the next three to six months rose 1.0 percent after a 1.1 percent gain in November, the New York-based group said today. The December reading, the sixth consecutive monthly increase, exceeded the 0.6 percent gain in the median forecast of economists surveyed.
And the biggest driver of that growth...
  • The improving job market? Nope.
  • The rising equity market? Nope.
  • The steep yield curve? Nope
So what is it? Building permits.



The level of permits in December, excluding the recent downturn, was the lowest figure since records began in 1960 (when the U.S. population was about 40% smaller), yet this was the biggest driver of the leading indicators.

Why?

Addition by the elimination of subtraction.

In other words, it can't get any worse than this, thus it can only get better (much more detail on this over at Calculated Risk).

Source: Conference Board

The Equity Market is in Trouble... J-E-T-S Edition

Floyd Norris (via The Big Picture):

Consider the performance of the Standard & Poor’s 500 in 1969, the year the Jets won their only Super Bowl. It was down 11.4 percent.

Contrast that to the market’s performance after victories by any of the other teams still in contention. The market has never gone down after any of them won the Super Bowl.



Since:

A) The market has "always" gone down when the Jets win
B) The Jets will win (warning: the last time I was this confident they lost by more than 40)
C) The market will go down

Or something like that...

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Housing Starts Quite Low

Housing market optimists will blame this partially on December weather. Broader optimists will point out that low levels of new construction will help clear the existing inventory. Those looking for the housing market to contribute towards the economic recovery (outside of addition by the elimination of subtraction) will be disappointed.



Source: Census

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

China Still NOT Selling Treasuries

Back in February of last year I detailed that China was NOT selling Treasuries when the "experts" in the media said they were. TIC December 2009 data initially stated Chinese holdings totalled a bit more than $700 billion, down from summer '09 levels. I made the case that these purchases were actually being made through the United Kingdom (more here). They were. The result is that China's December 2009 holdings were revised upward by $200 billion.

"Experts" in the media would have learned their lesson by now right?

To the Financial Times:

China and Russia were the major sellers of US Treasuries in November as bond yields surged sharply higher that month, according to the latest government data.

The US Treasury reported on Tuesday that private investors sought more dollar-denominated stocks and bonds in November than October, offsetting record sales by foreign governments.

The FT was joined by the WSJ, CNN, and Marketwatch amongst others getting it wrong. Bloomberg got it right here, but wrong here.

Facts:

1) Journalist do not read EconomPic
2) China is NOT selling Treasuries



Source: Treasury

Empire Manufacturing Outlook at Seven Year High

Will this be enough for them to spend some of that cash hoard?



Source: NY Fed

Still Too Much Capacity

The below chart shows that capacity utilization in the system is slowly recovering, but remains remain very low.



This in part explains why core inflation remains muted, even with the recent commodity spike.

Source: Federal Reserve / BLS

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Mind the Gap

Real exports rising, while real imports falling = a boost to GDP.



Source: Census

An Even Uglier Federal Debt Chart

In response to my updated More on Federal Debt post, reader dougiefreshhh comments:
for even more "on the street" bang, i'd plot this as a function of percent employed (non-public sector..as the gov't really doesn't produce anything).


Source: BLS / Treasury Direct

PPI Hits Four-Handle

Bloomberg details:
Wholesale costs in the U.S. rose in December by the most in 11 months, led by higher prices for commodities such as fuel and food. The producer price index increased 1.1 percent from November, Labor Department figures showed today in Washington. Economists projected a 0.8 percent gain for a second month, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey. The so-called core measure, which excludes volatile food and energy costs, climbed 0.2 percent, in line with estimates.
Year over year headline PPI hit 4%, but the rise does remain contained in raw material costs.



Source: PPI

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

The iPhone was a Huge Success...

The iPhone is coming to Verizon! The iPhone is coming to Verizon! iPhone users sick of AT&T (i.e. me) have rejoiced. Should stock holders rejoice as well?

Lets rewind and see just how much AT&T has outperformed since that launch. To Wikipedia:
The first iPhone was introduced on January 9, 2007.
Since that time (including dividends)...



The iPhone was a HUGE success. Just not necessarily for AT&T.

Source: Yahoo Finance

More on the Federal Debt

In response to my post on the Federal Debt Spike, reader Todd commented:
Would like to see this in real terms or as a percent of gdp. I bet the exponential increase would be even more pronounced.


Makes the Clinton years even more remarkable, the first 7 1/2 Bush years relatively quaint, and the recent response even more dramatic.

Source: Treasury Direct / BEA

The Federal Debt Spike

Morgan Stanley (via Self Evident)
A statutory limit on the amount of federal debt outstanding has been in place since 1917, when Congress enacted the Second Liberty Bond Act. The current limit is $14.294 trillion. Since 1940, the debt ceiling has been increased on 80 separate occasions.
Current levels are now north of $14 trillion, bringing increase #81 shortly.



What worries me is our ability / desire to get our act together. As can be seen above, the amount of debt is not just rising, but the rate of increase has been rising exponentially.

Source: Treasury Direct

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Employment Picture: Getting There... VERY Slowly

Bloomberg details:

Job openings in the U.S. fell in November from the highest level in two years, signaling a sustained labor market recovery will take time to develop.

The number of positions waiting to be filled decreased by 80,000 to 3.25 million, the Labor Department said today in Washington. The number of people hired dropped from the prior month and separations climbed.

The drop in job openings was led by education and health- service providers, which saw a 91,000 decrease in openings. Retailers had 37,000 fewer jobs available and state and local government agencies saw a 25,000 decrease. Professional and business services, which include accountants, computer systems experts and temporary-help agencies, had the biggest increases in available employment, followed by manufacturers.



Back to Bloomberg:
Compared with the 15 million Americans who were unemployed in November, today’s figures indicate there were 4.6 people vying for every opening, up from about 1.8 when the recession began in December 2007. The number of jobless fell to 14.5 million last month, pushing the unemployment rate down to 9.4 percent, the lowest since May 2009, the Labor Department reported last week.
Source: BLS

Monday, January 10, 2011

China Owns Lots of Paper

Bloomberg details:
China’s foreign-exchange reserves climbed 18.7 percent to a world-record $2.85 trillion at the end of 2010 from a year earlier and domestic lending exceeded the government’s full-year target. The currency holdings, reported by the central bank on its website today, were bigger than the $2.76 trillion median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of nine economists.
How fast have reserves been built? 26.4% annualized since 1978 (reserves crossed $2 trillion in 2009 and $1 trillion in 2006).



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).

So what is much more likely in my opinion? In the years to come perhaps a slower growing China, a much stronger Chinese currency, or a less export driven / more internal demand driven China... or perhaps all three.

Source: Chinability

Bernanke: 2010 Fund Manager of the Year

Back in November I posted that the Fed is Literally and Figuratively "Printing Money". That turns out to be an understatement. The Federal Reserve details:
The Federal Reserve Board on Monday announced preliminary unaudited results indicating that the Reserve Banks provided for payments of approximately $78.4 billion of their estimated 2010 net income of $80.9 billion to the U.S. Treasury. This represents a $31.0 billion increase in payments to the U.S. Treasury over 2009 ($47.4 billion of $53.4 billion of net income). The increase was due primarily to increased interest income earned on securities holdings during 2010.


Ben Bernanke. 2010 Fund Manager of the Year.


Update

More from Felix Salmon:
At the end of 2010, the Federal Reserve system had $2.423 trillion in assets and $2.367 trillion in liabilities, which means that the simplest measure of its total equity — assets minus liabilities — comes to $56.6 billion. The Fed also managed to earn net income of $80.9 billion in 2010. Which means that its return on assets was incredibly high at 3.3%, while its return on equity was an astonishing 143%.

A Strong 2010 for Hedge Funds

Strong performance across hedge fund styles in 2010.



Note that this was a year when most asset classes had strong years, including equities (S&P 500 was up ~15%), fixed income (the BarCap Agg was up ~6.5%), and commodities (DJUBS Commodity index was up ~17%).

Source: Barclay Hedge

Friday, January 7, 2011

Employment Higher, but Disappoints

Overall, this has to be labeled a disappointment following this week's ADP payroll release. It is interesting to note that the household survey was much stronger than the ~100k jobs shown in the non-farm payroll survey (and mirrored the ADP figure). Optimists out there can hope that individuals are finding work in areas not covered by the latter survey (though if you believe that, then why did 400k people drop out of the workforce?).



The marginal improvement is seen in the unemployment rate and the unemployed / underemployed rate (still very high figures however and is skewed by those unemployed dropping out of the workforce).



The real (or should I say other) concern is the sluggish rebound in overall labor as defined by hours actually worked. Following a massive collapse, the minor rebound has stalled.



Source: BLS

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

The History of Corporate Bonds

Long way down....



Soure: Barclays Capital

ISM Services Strong in December

Strong ISM results, but interesting in that it doesn't point to a follow through on this morning's great ADP services employment jump. ISM detailed:
  • "Overall business climate remains reasonably positive." (Management of Companies & Support Services)
  • "Pricing pressures are starting to heat up." (Construction)
  • "Outlook for 2011 is positive with an increase in spending." (Finance & Insurance)
  • "Looks like more budget reductions are coming in the next year." (Educational Services)
  • "Cotton prices are moving upward, but prices are being kept in line as the overall Asian market cools somewhat."(Retail Trade)
  • "Business picking up for holiday — above expectations." (Transportation & Warehousing)


Source: ISM

An Employment Report We've Been Waiting For

Hopefully, this is not a one-time blip and the start of something sustainable. CNN Money details:

Private sector payrolls soared 297,000 in December, payroll processor ADP announced Wednesday.

The gain marks the 11th consecutive month of increases, and was much larger than economists had expected. Economists surveyed by Briefing.com were forecasting an increase of 100,000 jobs.

The increase in hiring was led by the services sector, with employers adding 270,000 jobs in December. That's the highest jump on record, ADP said.




Source: ADP

Realized 20-Day Vol at 39 Year Low

Vix and More details:
Since I haven’t seen it mentioned anywhere else, I thought I should note that 20-day historically volatility in the S&P 500 index hit its lowest level since April 1971, the same month that the Rolling Stones released Sticky Fingers and Charles Manson was sentenced to death.


Source: Yahoo Finance