The enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it’s the illusion of knowledge (Stephen Hawking)

It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so (Mark Twain)

Invest with smart knowledge and objective odds

NEW$ & VIEW$ (16 OCTOBER 2014)

I am writing this in Kyoto, Japan where the more than 1600 temples and 200+ shrines render life much more serene than in financial markets. Not as complete as usual, but I hope this helps.

Deflation Risk Feeds Global Fears Behind the spate of market turmoil lurks a worry that top policy makers thought they had beaten back a few years ago: the specter of deflation.

(…) The deflation concern is particularly pronounced in Europe and Japan, two economies where policy makers are struggling to come up with solutions to counter especially slow economic growth.

However, recent declines in commodities prices suggest that downward pressure on inflation—if not all-out deflation—could become a wider-ranging phenomenon, and one with some mixed implications for economies like the U.S. and emerging markets. (…)

The deflation concerns are particularly acute in Europe, where annual inflation in the 18 nations that use the euro was 0.3% last month, a five-year low that is far below the European Central Bank’s target of just under 2%. (…)

“Market valuations, especially for rich countries, have been well above what was warranted by fundamentals. What kept them up there was a belief that central banks were markets’ best friends,” said Mohamed El-Erian, chief economic adviser at Allianz Group. “Most people now recognize that the ability of central banks to address what ails the global economy is weaker than they believed.” (…)

The U.S. confronts much different circumstances than Europe and Japan. U.S. inflation had been rising toward the Fed’s 2% objective earlier this year but now faces a downward tug amid the weakening global growth and a strengthening U.S. dollar. The Labor Department reported Wednesday that producer prices in the U.S. fell in September. Sharp drops in commodities prices this month could add to downward pressure.

Yet falling commodities prices have silver linings. For one, the decline is being driven in part by a U.S. energy production boom—not just sagging global demand for goods. Moreover, falling gasoline prices are a boon to U.S. consumers: One rule of thumb is that every one-cent drop in the price of gasoline amounts to a $1 billion boost to U.S. household incomes, and gasoline prices have dropped by 13 to 17 cents from a year ago, according to the automobile group AAA. (…)

The U.S. Goods PPI ex-food, ex-energy was actually up 0.2% in September and is up 0.4% in the last 3 months (1.6% annualized). Services PPI declined 0.1% after rising 0.4% in the previous 2 months. Declining food and energy prices will free much money for discretionary spending in coming months. Let’s see how consumers behave. In the past, the U.S. consumer has tended to spend up.

Europe does not benefit as much from falling oil prices since taxes are a much large piece of the retail price than in the U.S..

Consumer Caution Dents Retailers’ Holiday Hopes Spending at U.S. retailers declined in September, raising concerns about the strength of American consumers heading into the holiday-shopping season.

Retail sales fell 0.3% in September, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. The broad-based decline came alongside weakening consumer confidence and minimal wage growth that has weighed on the recovery in recent years.

While spending at retailers is up 4.3% from a year earlier, double the pace of inflation, the September stumble continues a choppy pattern that shows many Americans are cautious heading into the holiday shopping season. (…)

Pointing up A slowdown from strong summer auto sales, falling gasoline prices and the timing of Apple Inc.’s iPhone 6 release all played a role in the latest data. Earlier concerns of a consumer slowdown in July were eased when sales for that month were revised up to a respectable 0.3% gain from an initial flat reading. (…)

Wal-Mart Stores Inc., WMT -3.57% citing what it called a tougher sales environment than it had anticipated, cut its forecast for sales this year and doesn’t see much improvement in 2015. Wal-Mart said it expects sales to grow by 2% to 3% for the current fiscal year, down from the 3% to 5% sales growth it initially expected. (…)

Seasonally adjusted retail sales declined in most categories in September, though sales did jump 3.4% at electronics and appliance stores. Purchases of Apple’s new iPhone, which went on sale Sept. 20, likely contributed. Sales at nonstore retailers, a category including online shopping, fell 1.1% on the month. That could reflect back-ordered phones that were purchased, but not delivered, before Oct. 1.

Motor vehicle and parts sales fell 0.8% in September, the first decrease in the category since January. Still, auto sales, which rose 9.5% from a year earlier, have been a bright spot for the economy as Americans replace aging vehicles.

Sales at gasoline stations were down 0.8% from August. Average gasoline prices fell 40 cents per gallon by the end of September from their spring peak, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

This last line is not to be overlooked as lower gasoline prices are impacting total sales. Gas station nominal sales are falling rapidly and will continue to drop in coming months. While this negatively impacts the overall stats, it frees much money for discretionary spending.

From Haver’s table below, here are the facts: total retail sales are are up 0.6% Q3, 0.3% ex-autos but 0.8% ex gaz and building supplies (+3.3% annualized)

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Amazon to Hire 80,000 Holiday Workers Amazon plans to hire 80,000 seasonal workers for its warehouse network in the U.S., representing a 14% increase from last year as the company brings its massive distribution facilities closer to urban centers.

U.S. Producer Prices Unexpectedly Slip; Core Index Unchanged

U.S. Small Business Optimism Retreats; Pricing Power Deteriorates Further

U.S. Gasoline and Crude Oil Prices Reach New Lows

Saudis prepared for $80 oil in bid to retain market share: sources

(…) Saudi officials have given a different message in meetings with investors and analysts: the kingdom, OPEC’s largest producer, will accept oil prices below $90 per barrel, and perhaps down to $80, for as long as a year or two, according to people who have been briefed on the recent conversations.

The discussions, some in New York over the past week, offer the clearest sign yet that the kingdom is setting aside its longstanding de facto aim of holding prices at around $100 a barrel for Brent crude in favor of retaining market share in years to come.

The Saudis appear to be betting lower prices – which could strain the finances of some members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries – will be necessary to pave the way for higher revenue in the medium term, by curbing new investment and further increases in supply from places like the U.S. shale patch or ultra-deepwater, according to the sources, who declined to be identified due to the private nature of the discussions. (…)

On Sunday, Ali al-Omair, oil minister of Saudi Arabia’s core Gulf ally Kuwait, appeared to be the first to articulate the emerging view of OPEC’s most influential member, saying output cuts would do little to prop up prices in the face of rising production from Russia and the United States.

“I don’t think today there is a chance that (OPEC) countries would reduce their production,” state news agency KUNA quoted him as saying.

Omair said that prices should stop falling at around $76 to $77 a barrel, citing production costs in places such as the United States, where a shale oil boom has unexpectedly reversed dwindling output and pushed production to its highest level since the 1980s. (…)

Oil prices: Saudi slick measures

In April 1986, US jets bombed Libya, George Michael’s “A Different Corner” topped British pop music charts, and Chernobyl’s fourth reactor exploded. Oil prices also fell below $10 a barrel for the first time in a decade. Years before, Saudi Arabia had tried to cut output to counter the rise of North Sea crude and energy efficiency in the west. By 1985, this had failed. (…)

52-Week Lows in the Energy Sector Exceed 40%

No sector of the market has been harder hit in the last several days than the Energy sector, and with its decline, the list of new 52-week lows has been steadily expanding.  In Wednesday’s trading, 42% of the stocks in the S&P 500 Energy sector hit 52-week lows.  As shown in the chart below, the net reading of 52-week highs (percentage of 52-week highs minus percentage of 52-week lows) for the sector is now at its most negative levels in over three years since the aftermath of the US debt downgrade.  We still have a ways to go before getting below those levels, and let’s just hope the days when every stock in the sector trades at a 52-week low simultaneously aren’t seen again for a very long time.

Stocks Swoon in Frenzied Trading Frenzied trading swept global financial markets, with the Dow industrials tumbling as much as 460 points before partially recovering and investors scrambling to buy safe-haven government bonds.

Wednesday’s session briefly saw U.S. Treasury yields plunge to their lowest level in 16 months, in what traders said was the sharpest move in years, and the S&P 500 stock index wipe out its gains for 2014. Then both markets made U-turns. Oil prices continued this month’s deep slide, with Nymex crude falling six cents to $81.78 a barrel, off 24% since June.

While disappointing economic news in Europe and the U.S. provided the backdrop for Wall Street’s most turbulent day since 2011, traders said the outsize moves were magnified by hedge funds and other short-term players bailing out of money-losing investments. Traders expressed amazement at the wild ride, which came on enormous trading volume for both stocks and bonds. (…)

Feeding the gloom Wednesday morning was weaker-than-expected news on U.S. consumer spending, as retail sales fell 0.3% for September from the prior month. In addition, German data showed consumer prices holding at low levels last month, stoking fears of deflation, a damaging cycle of falling prices and spending. (…)

Since hitting an all-time high Sept. 18, the S&P 500 is down 7.4%, thanks in part to its 0.8% slide Wednesday, making for the sharpest pullback for the benchmark since late 2012. Over the past year, however, the S&P 500 remains up 8.2%. (…)

EARNINGS WATCH

From RBC Capital Markets:

    • 14.9% of the S&P 500’s market cap (49 companies) has reported. So far, earnings are beating by 5.6% while revenues have surprised by 1.3%.
    • Expectations are for revenue, earnings and EPS growth of 4.1%, 5.7% and 7.6%, respectively. Assuming an historical beat rate, EPS will likely come in closer to 10%.
Where Do Stocks Go From Here?

(…) “I think we may have seen the worst of the selloff, but I think the market is going to continue to be volatile here,” said Leo Grohowski, chief investment officer at BNY Mellon Wealth Management, which oversees about $190 billion in New York. (…)

Leo really said: “I have no clue where stocks go from here”.

The only way to answer the question is to look at the risk/reward equation. The Rule of 20 P/E is now 18.06, down from 20.0 last June. If it retreats between 16 and 17x like in the last correction, we have another 10% to lose. On current estimates for Q3, we would lose 7%. On the other hand, the current upside to “fair value” is 15% (2106). The last time we had such upside potential was in February 2013.

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Market Tumult Squeezes Big Banks

(…) Bank stocks were hammered Wednesday harder than the overall stock market, as investors, surprised by the sudden plunge in yields, questioned rosy scenarios that had forecast that bank earnings would rise along with interest rates next year.

The KBW Bank Index fell 3.34%, its worst drop since November 2012, compared with a 1.1% drop in the Dow Jones Industrial Average. (…)  For the year, the Dow is off 2.6%, while the bank index has fallen 4.2%. (…)

Banks had been eager for higher interest rates because the rates they charge borrowers for loans would rise faster than the rates they pay out to depositors. (…)

Wells Fargo WFC -2.01% & Co. said Tuesday that its net interest margin had slid to 3.06% in the third quarter from 3.39% in the third quarter of last year and 4.27% in the first quarter of 2010. It was the bank’s lowest net interest margin in at least the past three years.

If the rates continue to stay low, Wells Fargo will take a variety of steps, including being “much more vigilant on expenses,” said the bank’s chief financial officer, John Shrewsberry, on a call with analysts to discuss the company’s third-quarter earnings. (…)

On Wednesday, Bank of America’s Mr. Thompson, said: “We continue to remain positioned to benefit as interest rates move higher, particularly from the short end of the curve,” meaning increases in short-term interest rates.

But in response to an analyst’s question, he said that the bank’s net interest income could fall $100 million below the third quarter under a more cautious rate scenario. Bank of America’s stock fell 4.6% on Wednesday. (…)

Mike Mayo, an analyst at CLSA, said that the fear in the markets now is that the U.S. may be sliding into a deflationary environment, similar to what Japan has experienced. This would slow growth even further and cut bank earnings prospects. (…)

Keefe, Bruyette & Woods said in a recent report that it still expects a two-percentage point increase in the Fed’s short-term rates by 2016.

But Keefe Bruyette added that while bank earnings could rise from 3.2% to 5.4% if rates do still rise, they could drop anywhere from 4% to 9.4% in 2016 if they stay low.

Surprised smile BAC bank funded $11.7 billion in mortgages during the third quarter, down from $22.6 billion a year ago. Results were higher than the second quarter, which had $11.1 billion in mortgages.

Netflix Shares Plunge 25% as User Growth Disappoints

With Stock Prices Tumbling, Investors See Fed Pushing Back Rate Hikes

Stock Market Blowout Isn’t Keeping Dallas Fed Leader Fisher Up At Night

“A market correction doesn’t mean the economy is in trouble,” Mr. Fisher said in an interview on Fox Business Network Wednesday. “Without mentioning any companies in particular, prices are getting more rational and some very good companies are even being mispriced to the down side,” he said.

NEW$ & VIEW$ (6 OCTOBER 2014)

Still on vacation. This is from Panglao Island in the Philippines.

Job Growth Rebounds, but Wages Lag The U.S. unemployment rate slipped below 6% for the first time since the recession as hiring returned to a strong pace, lifting hopes for an economy that continues to show sluggish wage growth and persistent underemployment.

Employers added 248,000 jobs in September, rebounding from a weak August, the Labor Department said Friday. Payrolls have expanded an average 227,000 a month this year, putting 2014 on track to be the strongest year of job growth since the late 1990s.

The jobless rate fell two-tenths of a percentage point to 5.9%, the lowest level since July 2008, continuing a slide that partly reflects a shrunken labor force. Unemployment, nearly five years after surging to 10% in the wake of the recession, is moving closer to the 5.2%-5.5% range the Federal Reserve expects to see in the long run. (…)

The labor-force participation rate—reflecting the share of working-age Americans who have a job or are looking for one—fell last month to a three-decade low of 62.7%. Before the recession it stood at 66%. (…)

Among private-sector workers, average hourly earnings actually fell a penny last month, to $24.53. They have risen 2% over the past year. (…)

Last month’s job growth was broad-based, with professional and businesses services such as accounting and engineering leading the way, followed by construction, retail and health care. Manufacturing was largely flat for the second straight month. (…)

  • U.S. Jobless Claims Fall by 8,000 The number of new applications for unemployment benefits fell again last week, the latest sign layoffs are declining amid a generally improving economy.

Lately, financial media, including the WSJ, have become pretty lazy and superficial in their coverage of the financial news. The WSJ’s piece above on September’s employment report failed to mention that August and July numbers were substantially revised upward, +31k to 243k for July and +38k to 180k for August original dismal 142k number. This is 69k more jobs in two months.

The WSJ also considered inconsequential the fact that the Household survey showed a 671k jump in full-time jobs for a 12-m total of +2.4M vs a 62k drop in part-time jobs over the same 12-m period.

Also significant and not mentioned is that the 25-34 years old Americans are now over the 2007-08 hump and growing nicely in 2014. The U.S. economy needs them working so they can form households, buy new homes, new furniture, new cars, etc. According to the Household survey, this age group saw its employment grow 2.5% Y/Y vs 1.6% for total household employment. In fact, this age group got 33% of all new jobs in the past year! Maybe not the highest salaries, but salaries nonetheless.

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Finally on the little noticed but important stuff, the average workweek finally crossed the 34.5 hours last month. Mrs. Yellen certainly took notice.

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Island with a palm tree This was a very solid, wide ranging employment report. Heck, I’m on vacation, on a beach in the Philippines with slow internet and I’m able to write about these things with content depth and charts. Why can’t other well staffed media do the same?

Challenger Job Cut Announcements Move Lower; Hiring Surges

The outplacement firm of Challenger, Gray & Christmas reported that job cut announcements declined to 30,477 (-24.4% y/y) during September, the lowest level since June 2007. (…) During the last ten years there has been a 62% correlation between the level of job cut announcements and the m/m change in payroll employment.

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Challenger also samples firms’ hiring plans. They surged to 567,705 (27.7% y/y) due to seasonal jumps in the transportation and retail industries, as well as gains in the government, media, automotive, computer and electronics sectors. These were offset by declines in industrial goods, insurance, consumer products, entertainment/leisure, financial, food and health care industries.

Punch David Rosenberg did mention the hiring surge in his daily note Friday, but failed to qualify it with the obvious and very meaningful seasonality…

U.S. Light Vehicle Sales Give Back the August Surge

September sales of light vehicles fell back to 16.43 million units (SAAR) from 17.53 million in August. The decline retraced most of the August jump to the 2006 high, and left unit sales up 5.8% since December.

Auto sales in September declined 8.2% (-0.3% y/y) to 7.74 million units, the lowest level since April. Sales of domestically-produced autos fell 9.2% (+3.8% y/y) to 5.63 million while sales of imports dropped 5.6% (-9.8% y/y) to 2.12 million.

Light truck sales fell 4.5% (+13.6% y/y) to 8.69 million units. Nevertheless, they remained just off September’s expansion high. Sales of domestically-produced light trucks were off 4.5% (+15.0% y/y) to 7.54 million and imported light truck sales fell 4.6% (+4.9% y/y) to 1.15 million.

I continue to suggest that we may well have seen the cyclical peak in car sales (chart from CalculatedRisk)

Manufacturers are turning cautious. Scheduled Q4 U.S. vehicle production is off 6.3% QoQ Annualized after surging 17.2% and 16.5% in Q2 and Q3 respectively.

Factory Expansion Takes a Breather The U.S. factory sector’s expansion slowed a bit in September from its breakneck pace in August, with manufacturers focused on boosting output with only modest hiring.

The Institute for Supply Management said Wednesday its manufacturing index, based on a survey of purchasing managers, slipped to 56.6 last month from an August reading of 59, which had been the highest since March 2011. (…)

The ISM survey said some respondents noted the shortage of labor as a detriment to business. One manager in the machinery industry said in the ISM survey, “Our search continues for good machinists and electrical engineers.”

Rental Rates Tick Up; Vacancy Flat Rental rates at malls and strip shopping centers ticked up slightly in the third quarter, but vacancy rates remained flat.

Asking rents at regional malls rose 0.5% in the quarter to $40.51 a square foot, up 1.8% from a year earlier, according to data released Thursday by real-estate research company Reis Inc. Mall vacancies remained at 7.9% for the fourth quarter in a row.

Strip centers saw rents rise 0.4% in the quarter to $17.06 a square foot, up 1.8% from a year earlier. Third-quarter vacancy remained unchanged from the previous quarter at 10.3%, slightly lower than the average vacancy rate of 10.74% over the past five years.

The numbers are a sign of continued pain in the retail real estate market. Prices have risen quickly for the highest-quality assets, including the largest, most productive malls and boutique spaces on main thoroughfares in big cities, but they remain sluggish for more run-of-the-mill properties in less attractive locations.

The pace of construction of new shopping centers is also close to a record low, Reis said. Retail landlords have added 3.99 million square feet of new shopping centers so far this year, including 1.3 million in the third quarter.

The previous low was set in 2010, when builders added 4.5 million square feet over the whole year.

“We used to build about 2,000 shopping centers a year in this country. Now it’s just a few hundred,” said David Henry, the chief executive of Kimco Realty Corp., a shopping-center owner based in New Hyde Park, N.Y.

Here’s the chart from CalculatedRisk:

U.S. Trade Gap Narrowed in August The U.S. trade gap narrowed in August as exports increased, a sign of stronger foreign demand for American-made goods that could help boost economic growth in the just-ended third quarter.

Exports increased 0.2% from July to $198.46 billion, and imports rose 0.1% to $238.57 billion. Exports rose 4.1% in August from a year earlier, and imports rose 3.7% on the year.

EMU Retail Sales Perk Up

Euro area retail sales in August snapped back sharply, rising by 1.2% after falling by 0.4% in July. The three-month performances boosted the growth rate to 4.9%, up from 0.6% over six months and 0.6% over 12 months. The growth of nonfood items stepped back up in August; its trends, the sequential growth rates, show some acceleration as well. Motor vehicle registrations are quite volatile and fell by 1.1% in August after a 4.6% increase in July and a 4.4% decline in June. The balance of these effects leaves a negative three-month growth rate -2.6%, down from 10.3% over six months and 4.9% year-over-year. Still, because of volatility, it’s hard to conclude that motor vehicle registrations are slipping with any degree of certainty.

Retail sales volume figures across some selected European Union and European Monetary Union members, shows us gains for all those countries listed in the table in August. Germany and Portugal show double-digit gains and reveal that sales acceleration is in place in both countries. Sweden’s growth, at 5.2% over three months, is also part of an ongoing acceleration. Austria’s 1.2% three-month growth rate is also better than its six month and 12-month growth rates, but the pattern is not as reliable as for other countries showing acceleration. In the U.K., three-month growth is at 2.3%, part of a gradual slowdown from 4% over 12 months to 3.2% over six months to 2.3% over three months. In Denmark, the negative growth of 0.4% over three months is also part of an ongoing slowdown from 12 months to six months to three months. However, Denmark also has sales gains back-to-back in July and August that for the moment are being swamped by a 0.7% drop in June; so its deteriorating pattern may not be set in stone.

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Here’s the data. Note that the non-food part remains pretty sluggish.

High five This was for August. Here’s a preview for September from Markit:

Lightning Downturn in eurozone retail sector continues as sales drop for third straight month

September saw a solid and accelerated decrease in eurozone retail sales, the latest PMI® figures from Markit showed. The rate of decline was the sharpest since April 2013, reflecting deepening downturns in trade in both Germany and France. Sales also continued to fall in Italy, though the rate of decline was the slowest in five months.

At 44.8, down from 45.8 in August, the headline Markit Eurozone Retail PMI – which tracks month-on-month changes in like-for-like retail sales – pointed to a third straight monthly decrease in retail sales in the euro area. The rate of was the fastest since April 2013 when measured on both month-on-month and annual bases.

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Like actual sales, retailers’ buying levels decreased for the third straight month in September, and at a faster rate than in August. Inventories continued to build, however, as firms missed their targets. September’s shortfall in sales relative to plans was in fact the most marked in 18 months.

This augurs pretty badly for the all-important Christmas season…

This won’t help either. Europe is not out of the woods.

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Global recovery is stalling, says index IMF expected to cut estimate of 2014 growth to little over 3%

(…) The IMF is expected to cut its estimate of global growth in 2014 from 3.4 per cent to a little over 3 per cent this week as poor second quarter figures from Germany, Japan and other countries weigh on the outlook. As recently as April, the IMF was expecting 3.6 per cent growth this year, faster than the long-term average. (…)

Some other indicators of economic activity are more upbeat. A composite measure of the purchasing managers’ indices for the global economy, compiled by JPMorgan, showed a reasonably high level of growth momentum in September. Rob Dobson, of JPMorgan said if the figures translated into real output, the implied third quarter rise in global gross domestic product was “the best growth outcome since the second quarter of 2010”.

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Fingers crossed Will OPEC save the day for everybody with a big global tax cut right on time for year-end shopping?

OPEC Rifts Set Off Price War Discord at OPEC is turning into a price war, loosening the cartel’s grip on oil markets and exacerbating a recent steep selloff.

(…) “No one is telling anyone what they are up to,” one Gulf oil official said.

Saudi Arabia this week unilaterally lowered the price it charges for crude scheduled for delivery next month—without the typical consultation with other members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, according to OPEC officials. The decision surprised many market watchers, who were expecting the Saudis to cut output to help boost prices, and sent prices hurtling lower. (…)

The Saudi decision followed a similar move by the kingdom and Kuwait to lower prices for delivery this month, without informing other OPEC members, according to OPEC officials, effectively undercutting fellow members. (…)

Recent turmoil across the Middle East has scrambled long-held political alliances among some of the group’s most important members. (…)  Many inside and outside the organization doubt whether the group can do much amid its current disarray.

The drop in prices is particularly worrying for OPEC producers in Latin America and Africa that depend on oil revenue to support high spending, as well as Iran, where trade is crimped by international sanctions.

(…) OPEC members are sitting on unused pumping capacity of some 3.8 million barrels a day, equivalent to 4% of global oil supplies, according to the International Energy Agency—spare capacity that could generally be called upon quickly in a pinch. (…)

Last month, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait both cut their October prices for Asian buyers, according to Gulf oil officials and traders, effectively undercutting the U.A.E., a Persian Gulf neighbor and fellow OPEC member. In the past, such cuts would have been taken collectively among Arab Gulf OPEC members. (…)

OPEC’s recent woes have their roots in an unusually public row in 2011. Faced with tight supplies and rising prices amid the political turmoil of the Arab Spring, Saudi Arabia’s longtime oil minister Ali al-Naimi pushed at one meeting to boost production. Delegates failed to agree, and Mr. Naimi stormed out, telling reporters it was “one of the worst meetings we ever had.”

Riyadh boosted production on its own. Since then, the Arab Spring has deepened fault lines between some member governments and created new fissures.

Arab Gulf OPEC members—Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar and the U.A.E. have long been aligned politically, largely in opposition to neighbor and OPEC colleague Iran. That rivalry has intensified as proxy wars have raged in Iraq and Syria.

At the same time, the Gulf Arab alliance has frayed. Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the U.A.E., for instance, have all backed different factions in the various uprisings that have raged across the Middle East. (…)

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EARNINGS WATCH
Higher EPS Estimate Cuts in Q3 Relative to Recent Averages, But Below Long-Term Average

Over the course of the third quarter, analysts have lowered earnings estimates for companies in the S&P 500 for the quarter. The Q3 bottom-up EPS estimate  dropped 4.2% (to $29.06 from $30.33) from June 30 through September 30.

During the past year (4 quarters), the average decline in the EPS estimate during the quarter has beenv3.2%. During the past five years (20 quarters), the average decline in the EPS estimate during thevquarter has been 2.7%. During the past ten years, (40 quarters), the average decline in the EPS estimate during the quarter has been 4.5%. Thus, the decline in the EPS estimate recorded during the course of the Q3 2014 quarter was larger than both the trailing 1-year and 5-year averages. However, the decrease was slightly below the 10-year average.

In aggregate, earnings for the third quarter for the S&P 500 are expected to increase by 4.6% on a year-over-year basis. The estimated growth rate today is nearly half the expectation at the start of the quarter (9.0%). The decline in the growth rate can be attributed in part to Bank of America, as analysts included the impact of the company’s settlement with the DOJ in their Q3 estimates.The Energy sector has witnessed the second largest dip in expected earnings growth (to 4.0% from
11.9%) since the start of the quarter.  In addition, 82 companies in the index have guided EPS estimates lower for the quarter.

Looking at forward estimates, analysts are projecting much higher earnings growth in Q4 2014 and the first half of 2015 compared to Q3 2014. However, they are not predicting a substantial improvement in revenue growth, which implies that net margins are expected to increase in future quarters as well. (Factset)

I would expect that Energy companies will see further cuts in their estimates as oil prices have collapsed. In fact, EPS will likely decline in Q4 given that prices could be 15% lower in Q4 YoY.image

Automobile companies and most related industries should also see their estimates decline in coming weeks given the reduced production levels.

  • Earnings: The Almighty Dollar The greenback’s strength won’t dent U.S. companies’ earnings for the latest quarter but could dampen their outlooks going forward.

(…) In just the past three months, the greenback has gained 8.4% against the euro and 7.5% against the yen, big moves in the foreign-exchange market.

And some key emerging economies, for different reasons, have seen sharper slides. The Brazilian real and Russian ruble are 11.6% and 16.5% weaker, respectively, over the same period.

The good news: Currency carnage shouldn’t put a big dent in third-quarter earnings, which start trickling in this week. Management guidance may be cautious about future periods, though. (…)

This is the S&P 500 Index after Friday’s rally which brought it back over “the line”.

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Will the MSCI follow? (Chart from the Short Side of Long)

Equity Fund Flows
Gross sparks rate position exodus Turmoil follows exit of former Pimco man

Investors have liquidated hundreds of billions of dollars of positions in interest rate derivatives contracts, an asset class favoured by Bill Gross, in moves that traders suggested showed Pimco cashing in holdings to meet redemption demands.

The massive shift in positions marks the most visible sign yet of the market turmoil that has followed the exit of Mr Gross from Pimco and its resulting efforts to meet redemptions while other investors seek to profit from the dislocation. (…)

After Mr Gross left, Pimco said investors pulled $23.5bn from the Total Return Fund during September, a monthly record. Commodity Futures Trading Commission statistics revealed on Friday that asset managers reduced their long eurodollar futures positions by 868,853 contracts in the week to September 30 – the largest one-week change on record. Each contract has a notional value of $1m. (…)