Posts

Good Economic News

There has been a spate of good economic news over the past week: GDP in the third quarter of 2014 was 3.5%, and jobs growth continues to be steady at over 265,000 per month for the entire year. The GDP number is particularly encouraging, given the 4.6% growth in the second quarter. Keep in mind that we need at least 2% to buffer the economy from outside shocks, and it has been a long while since we sustained anything close to 4% on average.

The jobs number, while encouraging, doesn’t address the participation rate which is now down to 62.7%, the lowest since 1978. That is bad news for a sustained economic recovery as fewer people are participating and wealth continues to be concentrated. For a consumption-based economy to maintain robust growth, all need to experience an increase in wealth to increase spending.

But the flip side to the labor participation figure – from a markets perspective – is that the Fed is likely to continue a very accommodative monetary policy. If there is a real increase in jobs and participation combined, the US economy could be on a good footing for many years ahead.

David B. Matias

Interesting Week

Interesting week:

US employment figures look great, GDP on track, US oil production surpasses Saudi Arabia, Russia and China.  All good data points.

Old news:  Europe isn’t growing, China is struggling, commodities continue a glut.

So what is the new news that causes the market to drop 10%?  From what I can tell, more about perception and changing fears than anything that has happened.

The only exception is Ebola – here in our own country in one of our own towns.  People realize just how vulnerable we are.  Fear is the bane of the markets.

In the end – a good purge.  We needed it…  and it should calm down in time with US growth generation again taking the headline news.

David

Market Snapshot – Volatility is Back

Market Snapshot – August 5, 2011

Volatility is Back

Not unlike the summer of 2010 (or the summer of 2009, or 2008, or 2007), we have seen the markets go back onto the roller coaster.  While the reasons are disconcerting, and the prognosis is still uncertain, we are well positioned to ride through the volatility.  In a brief snapshot of events this week:

 

  • The broader U.S. market lost all of the gains for the year and slipped into negative territory.  When this “slip” occurred on Thursday, it helped to fuel an extensive sell-off late in the day, resulting in nearly a 5% drop by closing.
  • Bond prices have mostly held steady.  Investment grade bonds are up, while high-yield markets have shown a little slippage.  Nothing to cause a disruption in either direction, except for the temporary spike in Treasury prices and the commensurate drop in rates to extreme lows.
  • Gold screams ahead – a traditional safe haven.
  • Individual stock prices have shown more volatility than the index.  Basic names such as Dow are getting hammered, while Apple has retained its short-term gains based on their recent earnings release.
  • The S&P is trading at 12-times projected earnings, well below the historical mean of 16x.

 

The roots of these events, however, are not so obvious:

 

  • The debt-ceiling debate, while resolved for the time being, did serious damage to the national psyche.
  • The debt reduction measures, incorporated into the debt-ceiling legislation, will reduce our overall productions by 1-2% per year based on estimates.
  • GDP growth in the first half of the year was anemic (<1%).
  • All combined there is a real possibility that we could enter a recession again.

 

Through all this, we have not heard from the Federal Reserve Bank.  While Congress is unable to discuss any stimulus given the political climate, the Fed is free to act independently.  Most likely, if there is a serious threat of a double-dip recession they will again act to inflate asset prices through a variation of QE2.

Our portfolios have fared well in this environment.  We took several steps over the past three weeks to hedge against this situation: raising cash, lowering equities and selling potentially volatile bonds.  All of these steps are important to buffer against losses and now we are well positioned to increase positions at some very attractive prices.  The challenge, of course, is to find the bargains that will retain long-term value.

Our work continues.  But in the interim, I want to emphasize that we have stayed ahead of this correction while keeping options open to us.

 

Please write or call with questions.

 

Regards,

 

David

 

David B. Matias, CPA

Managing Pricipal

Vodia Capital

Ben Bernanke ready to act if Economy weakens further

This week was full of economic data releases as well as some comments about the economy from the Federal Reserve Chairman, Ben Bernanke. To start the week, we had existing and new home sales fall well short of the 5 million annual run rate that was estimated.  The July 2010 sales came in at a dismal 4.11 million annual run rate, a 26% decline from the month before. Durable goods orders also missed estimates for the month of July.  It had been a bright spot in the economy but only grew 0.3% versus the estimate of 3.0%. Thursday’s initial jobless claims fell to 473k from last week’s revised 504k, although encouraging, the 4-week moving average edged up to 487k, the highest since December 2009.

Last month Q2 2010 GDP was reported at an annualized rate of 2.4%, today it was revised down to 1.6%, beating more recent estimates of 1.4%.  The markets seemed to cheer the beat since all the other economic reports were misses.  At 10:00Am today the Federal Reserve committee met in Jackson Hole, Wyoming to discuss the state of the economy. With growth being too slow and unemployment being too high, Bernanke indicated that they will provide additional monetary accommodations to make sure the economy recovers.  This sent the market up about 1% and is so far holding onto those gains.  We’ll have to wait and see what’s in store next week to determine if the market will continue its brief rally. Next week’s economic indicators include Personal Income and Spending, Chicago Purchasing Manager Index, Vehicle Sales, and the most significant of all, Change in Non-farm payrolls & the August Unemployment rate. Any surprises in the payroll report will surely increase volatility and consumer sentiment.

Economic data shows economy still struggling

Economic reports due out this week include new and existing housing starts, durable goods orders, and the revised estimate to Q2 2010 GDP.  Housing sales will  show about a 12% drop from June 2010 as the housing credits are now fully out of the system and natural market forces are coming back into play.  The annual unit sales rate will come in close to 5 million, the lowest since March 2009. One bright spot remaining in the economy is durable goods which should show an increase of 3% compared to June. Friday’s GDP report will show the economy grew at a  1.4% annual pace, much less than the 2.4% that was estimated just a month ago. This new information is probably the reason why Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has stated that they will reinvest payments on their mortgage holdings back into long-term treasuries.

The economy continues to show both strengths and weaknesses, which is probably why the VIX is still elevated and the treasury yields are so low right now. People are confused and the conflicting data isn’t helping to ease their fears of another drop in the market. Uncertainty in the economy is still a large factor and until there is clarity, there will be more volatility.

Advance estimate for Q2 2010 GDP due out this Friday

On Friday July 30th the 1st estimate for GDP for the second quarter will be released by the government.  Economists are estimating growth of 2.5% with a range of 1.00% to 4.00%.  This follows the first quarter growth of 2.7% and Q4 2009 GDP of 5.6%.  The economy continues to be sluggish overall and most of the data has been mixed.  Housing, jobs, and consumer confidence have weighed on the economy, but corporate profits and manufacturing have been positive.  We have left the abyss of 2008-9 behind us and the economy has stabilized.  Unfortunately the high growth  that usually occurs after a recession has not materialized yet.  I don’t think we are in store for a double dip recession, but it is very clear that there is a lot of pessimism both in the market and in the consumer.

In addition to the GDP numbers many other economic indicators are due out this week including:

  • CaseShiller Home Prices
  • Richmond Fed Manufacturing Index
  • Consumer Confidence
  • Durable Good Orders
  • Fed’s Beige Book

And if that isn’t enough for you… The commerce department will also be releasing their annual revision to growth figures over the last three years, which might cause even more volatility in the markets if revisions are negative. It should be an interesting week that will hopefully clear out some of the uncertainty in the market, whether good or bad.

Marcus Green

Good Luck, Goldilocks

It has been over two months since my last market update and the stock market is just roaring ahead, repairing all the damage from last year’s financial collapse and indicating that the recovery is in full swing. Or is it? In fact, I feel like a backseat driver in the movie, “Thelma and Louise,” careening towards the cliff with the top down on my vintage convertible. The financial reality is that we are facing some of the greatest uncertainty seen in generations which is starkly exhibited in the markets today.

The stock market change since my last market update is a up 3.6%, not a robust return for anyone who jumped into the market this past September. Gold has beaten the living snot out of the market, up 19.5% and even TIPs are up by 3.8% (TIPs are the Treasury-Inflation Protected Securities, a safe haven that also indexes to inflation). But here is the paradox – there is no inflation and no one is predicting for strong inflation anytime soon, even though Gold and TIPs are traditionally used to hedge against inflation. The only other time there is a flight to these securities is during times of severe financial risk.

Yet the stock market shows no such signs of financial risk. In fact, the main volatility indicator for the stock market, the VIX, touched a low of 20.05 last month, the lowest point we have seen since August of 2008, well before the collapse of Lehman. In a nutshell, the stock market is plunking along as if all is fine in the world while traditional safe havens are seeing enormous inflows of cash. Where is this split view coming from, and what does it mean for the next few months and years?

These stark numbers were reported by Bloomberg last week. In November, the rate on 3-month treasuries went to zero (it even went negative for a brief moment) while the equity indicators are showing minimal risks after a 25% gain this year. This has happened once before in modern financial history. It was 1938: the stock market had gained 25% that year and short-term Treasuries were yielding 0.05% (read: 5/100 of one percent). For the next three years starting in 1939, the stock market lost one-third of its value. Is this where we are headed next? Maybe – it all depends on whether policy makers can get it right this time.

Economy

The biggest battle that the financial markets will face is the improvement of the economy. Almost 70% of our Gross Domestic Product depends on the consumer – their ability to spend money on everything from gel toothpaste to plasma TVs. This consumption has been driven by two factors, disposable income from earnings and the ability to borrow. A key impetus to spurring consumption was home growth – the purchase of a new, larger home and all the items needed to fill that home. Yet today, in every aspect of this dynamic, we are hurting.

The housing market is in the toilet for a while longer. Prices have increased for the past few months, but have done nothing to repair the enormous loss of home value and home equity. As reported last week by the Wall Street Journal, one-in-four homes are underwater (worth less than their combined mortgages) and 5.3 million homeowners are more than 20% underwater. While this collapse has headlined the news for two years now, the reality is that we have many more years before the residential real estate market again becomes an impetus for growth.

Credit is declining commensurate with these events. Credit card reform legislation takes effect in February, and already banks are increasing rates and limiting lines to “buffer” themselves against the changes (in fact, this is an egregious abuse of their banking privileges to be discussed in another article). Combined with the current job market and mortgage delinquencies, it will be years before the consumer credit market again extends credit to consumers to fuel consumption. In fact, expect to see major lenders from Bank of America to Capital One suffer enormous credit losses in the coming year, well beyond their current projections.

Jobs are scarce, and growing scarcer. The “official” unemployment rate has passed 10% this year, months earlier than expected. And while layoffs continue at a clip of over 500,000 per week, the creation of new jobs is stagnant. The reality is that employers are finding ways to do more with fewer employees, and this trend shows signs of continuing. At the current trajectory, we will soon hit an employment level of 57%. That is, roughly 1-in-2 working age Americans are working. That compares to 2-in-3 during a robust economy. The last time we saw these levels was in the 1970s, when far fewer women viewed career as a viable option. For the first time ever, more women than men now have jobs.

(As side note from December 4: this morning’s unemployment figures show an improvement for November. While this could be an encouraging sign, I suspect there is a distortion in the figures that would be revised in January. I don’t believe this marks a sudden change in the employment scene.)

Policy Makers

Simply put, the Great Recession is here and the damage will be felt for years to come. In my view, it will be a decade before we see a return to “normal.” America needs to find a new source of growth. The consumer is not in a position to be the growth driver this time around. They are overextended on credit, underwater on their home, underemployed as a family, and wondering what happened to their 401k plan. In short, things are tough.

For the interim, the government has filled this void. With spending measured in the hundreds of billions of future tax dollars, cheap capital is flowing into the markets. This may in part explain the run-up in equities earlier this year, and the current bubble in gold and other assets. But it also explains the dramatic losses in the value of the dollar as a currency and the rush to inflation-hedging securities. Fiscal stimulus can be a zero-sum gain if not managed well, with future generations holding the “tax bag.”

Back to our parallel crisis in the late 1930s: In response to the situation, the government tightened monetary policy for fear of inflation, with the hopes of stemming it before inflation dramatically eroded the dollar. Turns out that was a bad move – leading to a double-dip economy as inflation never materialized. They may have succeeded in one aspect, but killing off the economy was not the intention.

Ironically, Bernanke did his graduate work on the Depression making him one of the best candidates to take us through this economy. He has repeatedly asserted that monetary policy will remain loose for the next six months, if not longer, allowing for the economy to mend. Many of the current policy makers have also attested to the fact that they can remove the stimulus and tighten policy before inflation roars back – sort of like Goldilocks and her “not too hot, not too cold” foray into culinary arts. The other prospect is that Congress now wants a hand in this process – if that comes to fruition then it might be time to pack you bags.

In the end, it comes down to human judgment. If the Fed gets it right, all is ok. But if they get it wrong, we face two detrimental scenarios – either a stagnant economy or hyper-inflation. Remember these are some of the same folks who thought it would be ok to let Lehman fail (in case you missed it, that was an “oops”). While they will be employing some of the best minds at solving this conundrum, we think it prudent to assume that they won’t get it quite right.

Regards,

David B. Matias, CPA