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$ (10 MARCH 2014)

U.S. EMPLOYMENT:

1- FACTS IN THE MAINSTREAM

Jobs Rebound Eases Fear of Spring Stall Jobs growth picked up in February suggesting resilience in the labor market that should allow the Fed to continue rolling back its bond-buying program.

Nonfarm payrolls grew by a seasonally adjusted 175,000 in February, the Labor Department said Friday, following a two-month stretch of weaker growth. The unemployment rate ticked up to 6.7%, in part because more people joined the workforce.

The Labor Department revised up only modestly its estimates for payroll gains in prior months, with January’s gain now estimated at 129,000 instead of 113,000 and December’s gain at 84,000 instead of 75,000. The average increase of 129,000 over the past three months is far below last year’s average of 194,000.

Average hourly earnings rose 2.2% in the past year, a possible sign of less slack in the labor market that could help many newly unemployed get back to work faster.

Winter weather proved less of a drag than some had feared. Construction jobs, which can be sensitive to weather, rose 15,000 in February on top of a 50,000 gain in January. Retail jobs fell by 4,100, but employers in the leisure and hospitality sector added 25,000 jobs.

The workweek among rank-and-file retail staff dropped to 29.6 hours—the lowest on records back to 1972.

The nation’s labor-force participation rate held steady at 63%, near historical lows. The ranks of the long-term unemployed—those out of work more than 27 weeks—swelled 203,000 to 3.8 million.

The workweek for production retail employees was below 30 hours for consecutive months for the first time since 2009. That could reflect closures of malls and other retail outlets due to weather and disruptions to transit systems that prevented many employees from commuting to work.

However, other factors could also be at play.

Retail sales eased in January and stores may have cut back on hours in response. The hours worked figures have also been closely watched to determine if employers are reducing hours to avoid the health-care law’s requirement for large companies provide health insurance for full-time workers.

Weather appears to be the culprit. The Labor Department data showed 6.9 million Americans worked part time due to the weather last month. That is ten-times the number reported a year earlier and well above the February average of 1.5 million the past decade.

2. imageFACTS NOT IN THE MAINSTREAM

  • The positive view from National Bank Financial:

The February employment report was all the more interesting as it confirmed the continued shift from part-time to full-time employment. According to the household survey, there has been a cumulative gain of 1.5 million full-time jobs in the past six months, the best performance in two years. This development suggests that the U.S. recovery remains on track and that the recent bout of soft economic reports is mostly due to unusual weather. On that point, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that 600,000 people missed some work due to bad weather in February, 50% more than what is normally observed during that month.

  • But different ways of looking at the same data show drastically different trends. Which one is best?

 image image

Here’s why we are all driving blind:

  • December was the weakest month with 84k new jobs. Weather was only partly blamed, supported by the 20k construction jobs lost.
  • Weather got much worse in January and February but employment rose at a faster clip both months. Construction added 65k jobs during the harshest weather in many years (see AND NOW, THE WEATHER REPORT within the March 7 New$ & View$). Must have been inside jobs, or workers got used to the weather…
  • Total employment rose 388k in the 3 months to February 2014. Goods producers produced a mere 70k of these jobs but their 23k average monthly gain was very close to their 26k average of the previous 11 months. The weather seems to have left them cold! On the other hand, private service providers froze in their tracks as they provided only 107k jobs on average between December and February, a significant 40% slowdown from their January to November 2013 average of 183k. Is it only the weather? Or is it a reflection of a consumer retreat due to an income squeeze? For, excluding government transfers, real personal income has been flat since September 2013.

Mrs. Yellen is right, we need more data for more clarity. The hope is that job growth will spring back up with spring scheduled in 10 days. To get back to a 200k three-month average growth rate, employment needs to jump by 296k in March, or average +212k in March and April. The average gains during the first 11 months of 2013 was 204k. We clearly need a good spring break although even spring may be unseasonal. Easter is very late this year.

Or, the BLS may revise all the numbers upward and tell us all was fine. Who knows, they might also revise the weather upward!

Now, lets keep these other stats in mind:

  • Consumption of goods has declined in both December and January.
  • Weekly chain store sales rose only 1.9% YoY in February, less than 1% in real terms.
  • Thomson Reuters’ Same Store Sales Index was up only 0.4% YoY in February, the weakest showing since August 2009.
  • Car sales have declined 6.5% from their recovery high of last November, unchanged YoY in February.
  • Existing home sales have been weak for the past 7 months.
  • [image]New home sales rose seasonally adjusted in January, the slowest (meaningless) month of the year. They have been essentially flat at a low level throughout 2013.
  • While economists and central bankers debate on deflation risks, inflation stats get uglier. Total CPI was +0.9% YoY last October, +1.2% in November, +1.5% in December and +1.6% in January. Core CPI is +1.6% while the median CPI is +2.0%, unchanged for the past 6 months.  Core PPI jumped 0.4% MoM in January following a 0.3% rise in December. This is a 4.3% annualized rate over the last 2 months. Nonpetroleum import prices rose 0.4% in January. House and rent prices have been rising rapidly. Food-at-home prices jumped 0.7% MoM in January and the BLS is now forecasting they will rise 2.5-3.5% in 2014. We shall see how the California drought impacts fruits and vegetable prices. Gasoline prices rose nearly 8% since early November, 5.5% in the last month. Cold weather is certainly at play here but Brent crude is $109/bbl, up 12% from its April 2013 low while WTI is up 20%. Beef and pork prices are supposed to rise shortly.

Let’s hope it’s only the weather.

Pace of Student Lending Shows Signs of Easing

The pace of student borrowing from the federal government slowed for the third straight year in January, an indication that a major driver of overall consumer debt may be decelerating.

The increase in student borrowing in January, typically the top month of the year for education loans, was the smallest gain to start the year since 2010, according to Federal Reserve data released Friday.

The January gain of $28 billion over the previous month was $1 billion below the increase posted in January 2013 and well off the all-time peak of $37 billion recorded in January 2011. The numbers are not seasonally adjusted. The latest figure could foreshadow a slowing pace in federal student lending this year. (…)

Since the government performs no credit checks for most student loans, many Americans resorted to student loans to fund their expenses (Student Loans Used for More Than School).

Surging Home Prices Are a Double-Edged Sword

The U.S. housing market faces a challenge at the start of the spring sales season: higher prices. (…) But those gains have a painful edge, too, especially because prices have bounced back so strongly . The increases have rekindled concerns about affordability, particularly for first-time buyers, and could damp the gains of a housing rebound still in its early stages.

“Prices ran up so fast in 2013, it hurt first-timers’ ability to become homeowners,” said John Burns, chief executive of a home-building consulting firm in Irvine, Calif. “It’s going to be a slower recovery than people had hoped because a number of people have been priced out of the market.”

Home values nationwide are up 11% over the past two years, according to real-estate information service Zillow Inc., leaving values around 14% below their 2007 peak. Mortgage rates, which jumped a full percentage point to about 4.5% in the past year, have sharpened worries over housing affordability.

Even as prices have increased, housing still appears affordable by one traditional gauge. Since 1990, American homeowners have spent about 24% of monthly income on their mortgage payments, according to data from Morgan Stanley. Today, that payment-to-income ratio stands at around 20%, below the long-run average.

The problem with that view of affordability: It assumes borrowers have great credit and large down payments. The ratio isn’t favorable for first-time buyers and others with lower incomes and smaller down payments, which increases their monthly financing costs. The payment ratio for first-time buyers was around 24% at the end of last year, in line with its long-run average, according to the Morgan Stanley analysis. (…)

Making matters worse, home prices are going up fastest in markets that are already expensive, such as San Francisco and Los Angeles. Just 32% of California households at the end of last year could afford the monthly payments on a median-priced home in the state of $431,510, assuming a 20% down payment, according to the California Association of Realtors. That was down from 56% of households that could afford the payments on a $276,040 median-priced home in early 2012.

Rising prices are only part of the problem for first-time buyers. Inventory shortages and tougher mortgage-qualification standards benefit buyers who can make large down payments and those who can forgo a mortgage altogether. Because many markets have low supplies of homes for sale, all-cash buyers have routinely beat out first-time buyers by guaranteeing a quick, worry-free closing for sellers.

Pointing upMeanwhile, federal officials have repeatedly increased insurance premiums on loans backed by the Federal Housing Administration, which serves many first-time buyers because it requires down payments of just 3.5%. While mortgage rates at the end of 2013 reached their highest levels in more than two years, the all-in cost of an FHA-backed loan—due to insurance-premium increases—was closer to a five-year high. (…)

(Related: FACTS & TRENDS: U.S. HOUSING TO STAY COLD)

Manufacturers Blame Expiring Tax Breaks For Restrained Investment More than a third of U.S. manufacturers say they’ll scale back investment plans this year because a pair of federal tax breaks expired at the end of 2013, according to a survey by the National Association of Manufacturers to be released Monday.

(…) The tax breaks, known to insiders as “enhanced Section 179 expensing” and “bonus depreciation,” helped firms write off costs associated with replacing old equipment or adding factory capacity. Almost two-thirds of manufacturers said they took advantage of them in 2012 and 2013, according to the NAM/IndustryWeek quarterly survey.

About 35% of firms responding to the survey said the expiration of those two provisions at the end of last year altered their investment plans this year. Among small and medium-sized manufacturers — firms with fewer than 500 employees — 40% said their plans changed. (…)

The survey of 318 NAM members was taken Feb. 13-28. About 42% said they plan to increase capital investment in the next year, while roughly 13% said they plan to decrease capital investment. About 10% expect to reduce their full-time workforce in the next year, while 42% expect to hire more full-time employees.

About 86% described the outlook for their business as somewhat or very positive, versus 14% who described the outlook as somewhat or very negative. The primary challenge, identified by 79% of companies, was an “unfavorable business climate” in terms of taxes, regulations and uncertainty about government actions. Nearly as many firms, 77%, said the rising cost of health care was a major challenge. (…)

CHINA
China Consumer Prices Rise 2% China’s consumer price index rose 2% in February from a year earlier, slower than a 2.5% on-year rise in January, while the producer price index fell 2% in February from a year earlier.

Consumer prices rose a modest 2% year over year and factory gate prices fell for what now makes two consecutive years of monthly declines, underscoring the weakness of demand.

The consumer price index in February compared with a 2.5% rise in January, according to data released on Sunday. Food prices were up 2.7% and contributed most of the increase. Non-food prices rose just 1.6%.

Meanwhile, the producer price index, which tracks prices for finished goods at the factory gate, fell 2.0% year over year, an even faster pace than in January, when it dropped 1.6% from a year earlier. (…)

China February exports tumble unexpectedly

image(…) combined exports in January and February fell 1.6 percent from the same period a year earlier, versus a 7.9 percent full-year rise in 2013. Imports rose 10 percent year-on-year in the first two months, compared with a 7.3 percent rise in 2013.

Exports to the United States edged up 1.3 percent in the first two months from a year earlier, while sales to the European Union rose 4.6 percent, according to official data. (…)

Ting Lu, an economist at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch in Hong Kong, said that inflated export data in January-February 2013 means that a direct year-on-year comparison can be misleading. Fake trade deals to sneak cash into China past the country’s strict capital controls were rampant early last year before Chinese regulators cracked down.

After adjusting for such distortions, export growth in the first two months of this year could actually be up about 8 percent, he calculated. (…)

China’s crude oil imports in the first two months of the year rose 11.5 percent from a year earlier, while imports of copper jumped 41.2 percent and iron ore shipments rose 21.8 percent, data from the customs administration showed.

Copper Slumps Again on China Worries

Copper for May delivery fell 2.6% to trade at $6,602 a metric ton, taking losses over the past two days to 5%, and the slide this year to 8.8%.

The latest trigger was an industry report Monday showing China’s manufacturing sector activity fell to a seven-month low, potentially damping demand for the metal used in everything from household plumbing to smartphones. (…)

Adding to the worries are concerns that many Chinese companies that have been struggling to raise cash have instead turned to a risky type of funding which involves importing copper and using it as collateral for bank loans. If the price of copper falls then borrowers will be forced to dump the metal to help cover losses, adding more selling pressure to the market.

“The copper plunge is tied to the growing use of the commodity as financing collateral in China—there are fears there that, with many asset valuations marked to copper prices, a continued sell-off could bankrupt those holding too much copper on their balance sheets,” Scott Schuberg, chief executive officer at Rivkin Securities Pty Ltd., said in a report.

China accounts for 40% of the world’s global consumption for copper. Already high level of copper imports in the first two months of the year has raised worries about a supply overhang.

China’s copper and copper product imports rose 27.5% on the year in February to 380,000 tons, but were down 29% on the month, data over the weekend showed.

Copper financing activity too has put a “cloud” over the total supply overhang at the moment, Australia & New Zealand Banking Group ANZ.AU -0.83% said in a report.

“The credit default news (of Chaori) is negative for the market,” which has been plagued by tight credit supply, said Li Yusheng, senior analyst at Beijing Antaike, who estimates that copper supplies in China are 600,000-700,000 tons more than the demand.

However, imports could still hover above the levels seen in the first six months of 2013 in the next month or two, as Chinese buyers likely booked more term imports this year and financing demand is still alive, just weaker, Sijin Cheng, an analyst with BarclaysBARC.LN -0.69% said. She expects copper prices to be under pressure in the short term.

China Auto Sales Gain

China’s auto sales were up 10.7% in the first two months of the year, on the back of strong demand in the world’s largest car market.

Data from the government-backed China Association of Automobile Manufacturers on Monday showed that motor-vehicle sales totaled 3.75 million vehicles in the January-February period, up from 3.39 million vehicles in the year-earlier period.

Sales of passenger cars totaled 3.16 million vehicles, up 11.3% from a year ago, the association said.

Market share for domestic brands in the first two months of the year was 22.5%, down from around 30% in the same period a year earlier.

Car exports from China were down 12% year-over-year to 123,800 vehicles in the combined January-February period, the industry group said.

imageChina Weakens Yuan by Largest Degree Since 2012

The People’s Bank of China set the daily reference rate Monday at 6.1312, 0.18% higher than Friday’s 6.1201, the largest one-day change since July 2012.

Indian Industrial Output Likely Contracted in January

Industrial production, which includes the output of factories, mines and utilities companies, likely shrunk 0.40% from a year earlier, according to the median estimate in a poll of 15 economists by The Wall Street Journal.

In December, it contracted 0.6% after a 1.3% decline in November and 1.6% slide in October.

The weak forecast on the industrial data, which the government will announce Wednesday, underscores the wider slowdown in the economy that has seen growth plummet from close to 9% a few years back to under 5% in recent quarters. (…)

THE LOONIE: WHAT’S GOING ON?

imageTwo views: first, from BMO Capital Markets:

After following commodity prices almost note-for-note in the past four years, the Canadian dollar has gone its own way in 2014. While commodity prices have — to the surprise of most — risen solidly so far this year (up almost 9% for the CRB), the C$ has dropped more than 3% (even with its recent rebound). And this separation is not due to some quirk in the CRB, as other more Canadian-centric commodity price measures have also made solid gains this year on strength in oil, gas and gold.

So, what’s going on?

We would make the case that the C$ was consistently overvalued during much of the past four years, and it has made a level adjustment back down to reality. However, with commodity prices stronger, and the BOC now decidedly neutral, markets are rapidly reassessing the bearish C$ view.

From Palos Management’s Hubert Marleau:

It is generally acknowledged by investors that the course of monetary policy can have serious implications for stock, bond and commodity market returns. What is less well known, is that the different monetary stance between trading nations like Canada and the USA, where money is allowed to freely ebb and flow, can alter the relative exchange value of their currency. In fact, there is plenty of empirical evidence and theoretical validity that when monetary policy is different than it ought to be amongst trading nations, currency markets usually absorb the shocks.

The performance of the Canadian economy ended 2013 on much stronger footing than first thought, surprisingly matching that of the USA. During the last quarter of 2013, the Canadian economy grew at the annual rate of 2.9% compared to 2.4% for the USA. Put simply, Canadian monetary policy should at the very least be similar to the one practiced in the USA.

As a matter of fact, a Canada-US comparison of the Palos Monetary Index, the inflation content of the Misery Index and the contribution of cyclical spending to GDP suggests that the Canadian monetary stance ought to be easier than it is in the USA. Yet, this is not the case. The Canadian yield curve is not as steep as it is in the USA; moreover, the cost of money and real rates are higher in Canada.

In this broad connection, it does not surprise us that the Canadian dollar has found a new trading range between 89 and 92 US cents and that long term Canada Bonds can attract foreign investors with 25bps less in yield than comparable US Treasuries.

It appears to us that the negative sentiment surrounding the Loonie is much more about the application of moral suasion by both the Federal Government and the Bank of Canada than anything else. A reversal of fortune for the Canadian Dollar could emerge if Statistics Canada continues to report improvements in trade balances and/or foreign investors start focusing on Canada’s strong fiscal position and/or Obama was to decide that the XL Keystone is in the interest of National Security. Turmoil in the Middle East, Venezuela and now Ukraine may force the White House to use the abundance of energy in North America to supply natural gas and crude oil to secure US interests abroad and provide energy to those who are hostage to Russian energy supplies.

French Economy Shows No Improvement

(…) The Bank of France’s monthly survey published Monday showed sentiment in manufacturing fell further below the long-term average of 100 to 98 in February from 99 in January. In services, the sentiment indicator was steady at 94 in February.

Based on business activity, the central bank kept its forecast for a 0.2% gross domestic expansion in the first quarter of this year from the end of last year.

Separately, statistics bureau Insee said French industrial production dropped unexpectedly in January, weighed down by a contraction in energy output. Analysts polled by Dow Jones Newswires had expected output to hold at the same level in January.

A steep fall in energy output masked an improvement in manufacturing output, which rose 0.7% in January from December. But analysts warn that combined with other areas of the economy, growth will be overall weak in the short term.

Meanwhile, Italian industrial production jumped 1% in January from December.

ECB’s Noyer Not Happy With Euro Strength

image(…) “It is clear that when the euro starts to strengthen it creates additional downward pressure on the economy and additional downward pressure on inflation. Both cases aren’t warranted at the moment,” Mr. Noyer said in an interview with Bloomberg TV. “We are clearly not very happy at the moment.”

The euro has risen 6.5% against the dollar in the past year, sapping demand for European exports and bearing down on prices in the 18-member currency union. Annual consumer price inflation in the euro zone was 0.8% in February, well below the ECB’s target of just below 2%. (…)

Europe’s Lower-Gear Car Recovery Investors may be too optimistic on a rebound in vehicle sales in Europe, which are well below 2007’s peak.

Registrations of new cars in Western Europe were up 4.6% in January year over year, the fifth monthly increase in a row, notes the European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association. In February, while sales in France contracted, they expanded further in Germany, Italy and Spain, according to their national associations.

The average age of cars on European roads has risen from 7.7 years in 2007 to nine years, estimates Sanford C. Bernstein.

But consensus forecasts for growth of 5% to 6% in Western Europe to just over 12 million new cars this year could prove optimistic.

Sales in economically stronger markets already have improved. Germany is less than 200,000 vehicles below its long-term annual sales average, while sales in the U.K. are close to record levels, notes Nomura. Elsewhere, high unemployment makes recovery more challenging. Sales in Italy, Europe’s fourth-largest market by new-car sales, are still one million units below peak.

Other factors may put the brakes on recovery. Europe’s driving-age population is shrinking overall. The proportion of young adults with a driver’s license has stopped rising in France and Germany and is actually falling in the U.K., according to the Institute for Mobility Research.

Additionally drivers are seeking alternatives to owning their own wheels. Car-sharing programs could have more than 15 million members in 2020, up from 700,000 in 2011, forecasts Frost & Sullivan. That would likely weigh on new-car sales. In the U.S., each car that goes into a company like Zipcar means 32 subsequent purchases are avoided, says Alix Partners.

That could mean that Europe’s car market just doesn’t get back to its precrisis levels. IHS thinks new-car sales in Western Europe will barely reach 13.5 million to 14 million units by the end of the decade, below 2007’s 14.8 million peak.

Did you notice how currencies are back in the limelight? Canada has already acted, the BOC openly encouraging the market to stimulate exports. The Bank of China is now doing the same, by itself. The ECB is getting more and more worried that the strength of the Euro will undermine its efforts.

SENTIMENT WATCH
Are Small Investors a Sell Signal?

(…) Small investors, well known for poor market timing, are flocking back to stocks. Does that mean it is time to sell? (…)

The trend worries some strategists, who argue that small investors are notorious for clamoring to buy just before a market top. An analysis of small-investor sentiment shows that the widely held belief is true, but perhaps not reliable enough to warrant any major buying or selling on its own. (…)

AAII asks its members whether they think the stock market will rise, fall or stay the same over the following six months. The difference between the percentage of bullish investors and bearish investors is seen as a measure of how small investors feel that week. (…)

In the 1,362 surveys since July 1987 that are at least six months old, investors correctly guessed the direction of the S&P 500 slightly more than half of the time.

That isn’t good by any means. If small investors always bet that stocks would rise, they would have been right 72% of the time. (…)

The AAII survey works as a better buy or sell signal at extremes.  After weeks when a net 38% or more of AAII members were bullish, the S&P 500 went on to lose 1.4% over the following six months on average. In weeks when a net 31% or more were bearish, stock prices subsequently climbed 11%. (…)

Lately, some researchers have come up with ways to detect specific emotions and how they affect stock moves. Richard Peterson, founder of MarketPsych, analyzes text in news stories, social media and other sources to estimate whether investors feel, say, “joy” or “trust” about specific stocks and sectors.

In particular, Mr. Peterson has found that anger—for example, a series of tweets about the Apple chief executive that say “Tim Cook is an idiot!”—is a better predictor of good returns than general bearishness. In international stocks, future returns are better when investors feel that a country’s government is unstable, he says.

Right now, the sectors that investors are angriest about on social media include Internet companies, industrials and banks, according to MarketPsych. Individual stocks registering angry sentiment include defense company General Dynamics, tech company Oracle and real-estate developer St. Joe.

Investor bullishness also seems to be a stronger sell signal for stocks with speculative attributes, such as those that deliver low profits or don’t pay dividends, Prof. Baker says. “Stocks that are difficult to value are more prone to sentiment,” he says.

And, right on cue:

Dot-Com IPO Insanity Returns With Coupons.com

This is one of those days where I realize I don’t understand anything about finance or capital markets. I’m a dinosaur. I don’t get it. People are saying things like “this time is different” again in news articles about initial public offerings by Internet companies, and they mean it. All I can do is watch, dumbfounded.

Today a 16-year-old company that loses money called Coupons.com Inc. went public. Had I been paying attention to Coupons.com sooner, I might have guessed after the disastrous post-IPO performance of Groupon Inc. that investors’ appetite for yet another online-coupon company would have been sated. But no, that would have been wrong.

Coupons.com, with Goldman Sachs as its lead underwriter, raised $168 million, selling 10.5 million shares for $16 each. And the stock rose as much as 103 percent to $32.43, making it today’s biggest gainer by far. If that doesn’t remind you of 1999, then you probably weren’t following the stock market back then.

The company has about a $2.3 billion stock-market value, which is more than 13 times its $167.9 million of revenue last year, when its net loss was $11.2 million. But like so many other companies in these golden times, Coupons.com simply told investors to exclude about $13 million of normal everyday expenses and, abracadabra, it claims to be profitable on a nonstandard, cockamamie “adjusted Ebitda” basis. It’s all part of the show.

One of the popular themes during the late 1990s dot-com bubble went like this: “It’s dumb for startups to show profits, because then investors might get some sense for what their limits are. So go ahead, lose money. The worst thing you could do is have a denominator in your price-to-earnings ratio that’s greater than zero, because then your ratio would be positive, assuming your stock hasn’t gone to zero yet. But if you lose money, that’s terrific, because it means the sky’s the limit.”

A lot of people bought into that concept, especially investment bankers and easy marks who signed up to take a flier on the greater-fool theory. But that rule about losing money applied to start-ups. It didn’t apply to companies that had been around for 16 years and still were losing money. Because if a company is still around after 16 years, it’s not a startup. It should be making money if it wants to go public. It should be making money, period. Or at least that’s how it worked in the old days when IPOs were for real companies with real profits.

Coupons.com has incurred net losses since its inception in 1998. It had an accumulated deficit of $168.8 million as of Dec. 31. The money the company just raised is only about $1 million less than that figure. So you have to at least admire the symmetry. Maybe in another 16 years, Coupons.com can come back to the markets for more money and do it all over again?

This is where that first idea I mentioned comes in. There must be something wrong with the way I’m wired. I obviously don’t get this. But Mr. Market does, whether you choose to imagine him as a man of great efficiency or as a hopelessly addicted angel-dust addict who has a habit of running into burning buildings and defenestrating himself every few years.

But at least I’m willing to admit I have a problem. So please allow me to excuse myself while I go check the Coupons.com website for a discount on some Kool-Aid. I have a hunch I’m going to need it.

Back to sanity:

Seth Klarman: Investors Downplaying Risk “Never Turns Out Well”

(…) If you’re more focused on downside than upside, if you’re more interested in return of capital than return on capital, if you have any sense of market history, then there’s more than enough to be concerned about.

(…) on almost any metric, the U.S. equity market is historically quite expensive. A skeptic would have to be blind not to see bubbles inflating in junk bond issuance, credit quality, and yields, not to mention the nosebleed stock market valuations of fashionable companies like Netflix, Inc. and Tesla Motors Inc. (…)

NEW$ & VIEW$ (7 MARCH 2014)

U.S. Household Net Worth Hits Record

The net worth of U.S. households and nonprofit organizations rose 14% last year, or almost $10 trillion, to $80.7 trillion, the highest on record, according to a Federal Reserve report released Thursday. Even adjusted for inflation using the Fed’s preferred gauge of prices, U.S. household net worth—the value of homes, stocks and other assets minus debts and other liabilities—hit a fresh record. (…)

Driving most of the past year’s gains was a record-setting rally in the U.S. stock market, which saw the broad Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index soar 30% last year. The increase in stock prices has disproportionately benefited affluent Americans, who are more likely to own shares. The value of stocks and mutual funds owned by U.S. households rose $5.6 trillion last year, while the value of residential real estate—the biggest asset for middle-income Americans—grew about $2.3 trillion, the Fed figures show.

Holdings of stocks and bonds as a share of overall net worth, at 35%, is at the highest level since the dot-com bubble burst in 2000, Fed data show. That means that even as wealth increases, it’s increasingly going to the affluent.

In addition to the affluent, much of the wealth surge is going to older Americans. Both groups are less likely to spend their gains and more likely to save, Mr. Emmons said. Meanwhile, sheer demographics—the retirement of the baby boomers and America’s aging population—are increasing the ranks of the nation’s savers. (…)

Younger families in particular continue to lag behind in the wealth recovery. The average young family—led by someone under 40—has recovered only about a third of the wealth it lost during the crisis and recession, the St. Louis Fed said in a recent study. By contrast, the average wealth of middle-aged and older families has recovered to roughly precrisis levels.

(…) total U.S. household debt was about 109% of disposable income in the fourth quarter, down from a peak burden of around 135% in 2007, Fed data show. A more manageable debt burden could prompt American households to borrow and spend more at a time when the job market remains sluggish and income growth weak.

Indeed, overall household borrowing rose an annualized 0.9% last year, the biggest percentage rise since 2007. Last year also saw the smallest decline in mortgage debt since 2008, a sign that fewer Americans are entering foreclosure and some more are taking out new mortgages. Other types of consumer credit grew 6% last year, though much of these gains were student loans.

As the housing-market recovery continues, more Americans are regaining equity in their homes, which makes it easier for them to trade up, refinance debts and borrow. A measure of owners’ equity as a share of the value of real-estate holdings hit 51.7% in the fourth quarter, up from 50.6%. (…)

Getting in Financial Shape

RICH PEOPLE GETTING TIRED PULLING ECONOMY

Or is it only the weather?image

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Excluding the drug stores, the Thomson Reuters Same Store Sales Index registered a 0.3% comp for February, missing its 1.9% final estimate. The 0.3% result is the weakest showing since August 2009’s -2.4% SSS result. Including the Drug Store sector, SSS growth rises to 1.8%, below its final estimate of 2.8%. 45% of the retailers missed their estimates. During the first two weeks of February, retailers were severely affected by bad weather. Those that beat expectations, said this was offset by improved weather during the last weeks of February, and tax refunds.

Our Thomson Reuters Quarterly Same Store Sales Index, which consists of 75 retailers, is expected to post 0.9% growth for Q1 (vs. 1.7% in Q1 2014). This is below the 3.0% healthy mark. Moreover, due to the amount of negative guidance for Q1 2014, analysts have become bearish on retailers, and have been lowering both earnings and same store sales expectations since the beginning of the quarter (Feb). Since the beginning of the year (January 2014) the Same Store Sales growth estimate for Q1 2014 was 2.4%. Today, it is 1.3%.

From Rich Yamarone’s Orange Book: Executives Await Spring Thaw as Outlooks Remains Under the Weather

Just as fourth-quarter economic growth was revised downwards, so too have earnings expectations been downgraded. The outlooks for many industries have worsened, especially those with large exposure to the household sector, such as retailers and restaurants, and some of the more commercial businesses in basic
materials and capital goods. The true underlying tone of the economy has been obscured by widespread and economically-compromising snowstorms across the entire U.S. It may take a spring thaw to get a clearer perspective.

The CEO Economic Comments Sentiment Index for the week ended March 7 was 49.59, essentially flat from the Feb. 28 reading of 49.77.

Investors don’t seem to care. After all, spring is coming!

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AND NOW, THE WEATHER REPORT

Courtesy of the Browning Newsletter via John Mauldin:

(…) Ironically, NOAA classified the overall temperature for the Lower 48 in January and early February as near average. This is because the above average warmth in the West balanced out the below-average temperatures east of the Rockies. (…)

For the 48 contiguous states, January was the third coldest January on record and broke more than 4,800 snowfall records. Below-average temperatures have also
dominated much of February as well from parts of the Midwest and Plains to the Northeast. (…)

Now, as spring approaches, the Atlantic warming will increase and we will begin to see a major shift in the overall continental weather pattern. The season will
become even more volatile as Gulf and Atlantic air creeps into the continent. This will create a battle of the air masses with the US particularly the Midwest, as the battleground. In many ways, this will create a break. For short periods, especially toward the middle of March, the jet stream will level out, allowing more warmth to flow into the Southeast and even the Mid-Atlantic states. To the west, this means the jet stream and winter rains will enter the West Coast further south, allowing rainfall to hit the Pacific Northeast and, occasionally, Northern California. This does not mean a “Miracle March” will break the drought – just that the West will get some much-needed precipitation.

imagePrecipitation may not be as appreciated in the Midwest. The region has been so cold that an incredible 88% of the Great Lakes- Superior, Michigan, Huron,
Ontario and Erie—are now frozen over. That’s the largest ice cover the Great Lakes have experienced since 1994, and it means that there is an astounding 82,940 sq. miles (214,814 sq. km) of ice. (To give a sense of perspective, back in 2002, just 9.5% of the Great Lakes froze over. Normally, only 50% of the water surface freezes.) Historically this creates a cooler, wetter springtime, with frequent floods and delayed planting through Eastern Canada and the Midwest.

While the climate factors that are shaping this winter and spring are already surrounding North America, the factors that will shape this summer come from the distant Tropical Pacific. (…)

It is probable that there will be an El Niño this summer and, thanks to Mt. Kelud, it will have a moderate impact on global weather. This is very good news for the US but Australia and Indonesia need to prepare for dry conditions. India, which frequently sees its summer monsoons reduced by El Niños, especially if the Indian Ocean is in a negative phase of the Indian Ocean Dipole as it was in 2009, needs to be on the alert. (…)

Overall, between the extraordinarily cold Arctic air mass, the warming Atlantic and Tropical Pacific and the impact of Mt. Kelud, it looks as if it will be a volatile spring with late planting that will develop into an excellent growing season for most of North America. In years like this, farming is never easy, but the harvests tend to be
very good.

SENTIMENT WATCH
Birthday cake  Happy 5th Anniversary To The Bull Market 
Gift with a bow  Companies Rush to List Shares Companies are launching IPOs at the fastest pace in years to take advantage of booming share prices and investor demand.

In the first two months of this year, 42 companies went public in the U.S., raising $8.3 billion and tying 2007 for the busiest start to a year for initial public offerings since 2000, when there were 77 in the period, according to Dealogic.

In 2013, by comparison—itself a strong year for IPOs—there were 20 such offerings in the first two months. (…)

The pace at which companies are making new public filings for IPOs is at levels not seen since 2000, according to Renaissance Capital LLC, an IPO research and investment firm. In January and February, there were 56 such company filings, topping the 35 in that period in 2007. While still not close to 2000s 159 filings, this year’s number might be even higher if not for new rules that allow companies with less than $1 billion in revenues to initially file for an IPO confidentially, which most eligible firms are taking advantage of.

Investors willing to take a chance on new listings this year have been rewarded handsomely. The average U.S. IPO in 2014 had risen 19% from its debut through Feb. 28 and 5% from where it closed after its first day of trading, according to Dealogic. The S&P 500 index, meanwhile, is up only slightly this year, though it is trading at record levels. (…)

By one key measure, investors are bidding more aggressively for newly minted shares this year than they have in more than a decade, paying a median 14.5 times annual sales, compared with six times in 2007, according to University of Florida finance professor Jay Ritter. At the height of the Internet frenzy in early 2000, they paid a whopping 30 times. (…)

So far this year, nearly three-quarters of companies that have gone public are unprofitable, according to Prof. Ritter of the University of Florida. Just under two-thirds have annual sales of less than $50 million. Both measures are at their highest in any year since 2000, although they don’t approach the levels reached in that era. (…)

(Bespoke Investment)

Draghi calls eurozone ‘island of stability’

(…) He said that although the events in Crimea would have a “severe” effect on Russia’s economy and an escalation of geopolitical tensions risked “great consequence” for the eurozone, the eurozone recovery should survive intact. (…)

Pointing up The euro’s renewed status as a safe haven could, however, complicate the task of policy makers if it led to a further strengthening of the euro. Mr Draghi was uncharacteristically bold in flagging the euro’s strength as a big factor in the bloc’s struggle with disinflation.

The latest forecasts assume that the euro will buy you $1.36. It is now worth two cents more than that and could rise further if tensions to the east of the eurozone intensify. While keeping to his usual line that the ECB does not target the exchange rate, he said currency movements were “very important for growth and price stability.”

He estimated that the strong euro had knocked around 0.4 percentage points off inflation. “That is a significant statement on how the exchange rate might influence our price stability objective,” he said.

Punch Island of stability! Hmmm…Read on:

THE WEST AND RUSSIA PLAY A GAME OF CHICKEN KIEV

(…) Should the situation deteriorate, Russia could halt energy exports through the Ukrainian pipeline leaving just Nord Stream to pick up the slack – but even that could only cope with half the increase in volume that would necessitate. This could lead to significant increases in European energy prices, with potential repercussions for inflation that would further complicate Mario Draghi’s task. To make matters worse some 40% of the European Union’s natural gas imports come from Russia – though this amounts to 30% of total consumption. The gas is delivered through a large network of pipelines mostly crossing Belarus (to the Baltics) and Ukraine (to CEE states like Poland) – the Nord Stream pipeline (through the Baltic and Northern Germany) was meant to be a politically safe alternative but will not suffice. Some of the biggest importers of Russian gas in the EU are Germany and Italy where Russian natural gas imports account for roughly 30% of consumption and Greece where most of the natural gas consumed comes from Russia – cold winters ahead if things do not improve soon.

Fingers crossed The weather could change rapidly in that region…

German Industry Off to a Strong Start An unusually mild winter helped lift industrial output in Europe’s largest economy, signaling that Germany is off to a good start this year, data from the country’s economics ministry showed.

imageIndustrial output increased by 0.8% in adjusted terms in January, beating economists’ expectations of a 0.7% monthly rise. The December reading was also revised significantly higher. The ministry now says that output grew by 0.1% in the final month of 2013, a big improvement from the 0.6% decline originally reported.

The data follow unexpectedly strong manufacturing orders in January, according to figures released by the ministry Thursday, which suggest that Germany’s economy got off to a robust start this year. The overall rise in orders stemmed from both domestic orders and those outside of the euro zone, which increased by 7.2%. By contrast, orders from within the currency bloc fell by nearly 9% on the month.

Among the major categories, construction output increased by 4.4% on the month in January, while capital goods output increased by 0.8%. Manufacturing output grew by 0.3%. The economics ministry attributed the expansion in construction output to the unusually mild winter.

OIL  Confused smile

Thumbs down Speaking with The Wall Street Journal’s Selina Williams this week, Mr. Scaroni predicted a coming fall in the oil price just as the industry is grappling to get costs under control.

New fields coming on stream in Brazil, the Barents Sea off Norway and onshore in the U.S. will lift supply, he said, while a shift from burning oil to gas will see demand drop. The result: $90-a-barrel oil, something that hasn’t been seen with any consistency since 2011.

Thumbs up  Meanwhile in Houston, Chevron boss John Watson told industry gathering IHS CERAWeek that oil companies need triple-digit oil prices. (…)

As companies pursue the ever more challenging oil reserves that they need to increase or merely sustain their production, their costs have risen to the point that the most expensive projects, such as deepwater developments or liquefied natural gas plants, need an oil price of at least $100 a barrel to be commercially viable.

That is why even with internationally traded Brent crude at about $110 per barrel – up from about $20 in the 1990s – this has not been a good time to be an investor in the oil industry.

Now a growing number of oil executives are saying that has to change. As discussions at the IHS Cera Week conference in Houston made clear, cost-cutting is back at the top of the industry’s agenda.

Chevron and ExxonMobil’s shares have both risen 11 per cent in the past three years, and Total’s by 8 per cent, while Royal Dutch Shell’s have fallen 2 per cent. In the same period the S&P 500 index rose more than 40 per cent.

Futures prices show oil is expected to fall further, with five-year Brent at about $91 a barrel, suggesting that the pressure on oil producers’ profits will intensify. (…)

All the large western oil companies have reached similar conclusions. Andrew Mackenzie, chief executive of BHP Billiton, the mining and energy group, suggests the oil companies have reached the same point the miners were at a couple of years ago: facing up to the need to improve productivity in an environment of weaker commodity prices. (…)

In 2000, just seven companies tackled projects that cost $5 billion or more, according to Luc Messier, the head of project development and procurement for ConocoPhillips. Now there are more than 35. All are competing for the same service contractors, engineers and equipment, meaning costs are ballooning.

Even at the less-rarefied end of the market, competition for services will mean higher costs.

Surprised smile Energy business research and consulting firm Douglas-Westwood says the oil and gas industry will need to drill over 670,000 wells between now and 2020 to meet forecasts of demand. In 2013 over 79,000 development wells were drilled, the company says in a forecast paper. In 2020 this number will need to exceed 106,000. (WSJ and FT)