Morning in Arizona

Morning in Arizona
Rainbows over Canyonlands - Dave Stoker

The Headline Animator

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Incredibly Orwellian Record High

PlayPodcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 13:16 — 6.1MB)
 
DOW + 24 = 17,156
SPX + 2 = 2001
NAS + 9 = 4562
10 YR YLD + .01 = 2.60%
OIL – .90 = 93.98
GOLD – 11.70 = 1224.20
SILV – .16 = 18.62

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at a record high of 17,156.85; the first record high for the Dow since July. The Dow set an all-time intraday high of 17,221.11. It was the sixteenth record close for the blue chip index in 2014. The stock market action today was focused on the Federal Reserve. I suppose we could say the same thing about the past 6 years.

Today, the Federal Reserve wrapped up its FOMC meeting. The FOMC stands for Federal Open Market Committee, which sounds incredibly Orwellian. The meeting was a rousing success; we know this because the media coverage can’t quite figure out whether the Fed will raise interest rates sooner or later, or whether the economy is weaker or stronger.

While the much analyzed phrase “considerable time” remained in the FOMC statement, the newly announced scheme for interest rate normalization shows that higher rates are in the cards. The FOMC also said labor market conditions improved but a significant amount of slack remains.

The Fed said it would end the bond-buying program known as quantitative easing in October. The Fed will purchase $15 billion of mortgage and Treasury bonds in October and then make no purchases in November. The Fed shared some details of its exit strategy, which clearly indicate they are preparing to raise rates at some point in the future, but Yellen stressed in her news conference that the exit plan “is in no way intended to signal a change in the stance of monetary policy.”

The Fed updated their economic growth forecasts, revising lower; they now say they expected the economy to grow between 2% and 2.2% this year, between 2.6% and 3% in 2015, between 2.6% and 2.9% in 2016 and between 2.3% and 2.5% in 2017. Most Fed officials continue to expect the central bank to first increase interest rates at some time next year. In the forecast, 14 of 17 officials said they continue to believe the Fed’s first increase in near zero short-term rates will occur in 2015. One official believes the Fed should boost rates this year, while two think the central bank can hold off until 2016.

Fed officials raised their median estimate for the federal funds rate at the end of 2015 to 1.375 percent, compared with 1.125 percent in June. And that sounds like fairly aggressive tightening, but they say the rate guidance is “highly conditional” and remains linked to conditions in the economy. So, you combine aggressive tightening with downward revisions to GDP for the next couple of years, and where exactly does that leave you?

Treasuries fell and the dollar gained. The dollar has been on a tear lately.

Consumer prices fell in August for the first time in 16 months as gasoline prices fell. The consumer price index dropped 0.2% after rising 0.1% in June. In the past 12 months, prices have risen 1.7%. Excluding volatile food and energy costs, price were unchanged, the first time so-called core prices have not increased since October 2010. Core prices are up 1.7% the past year.

In August, energy costs fell by 2.6% to mark the largest decline in 17 months. Lower gasoline prices led the way. The price at the pump has been retreating since midsummer and might fall further in the months ahead. Natural gas also decreased for the fourth month in a row. Food costs rose 0.2%. Beef prices jumped 4.2% to mark the biggest increase in almost 11 years. Beef prices have been surging because the US cattle herd is at its thinnest level in decades. It could take several years to build back up. The cost of housing rose again while alcoholic beverages and new cars also increased in price. Airline tickets, clothing, household furnishings and used vehicles declined. And medical costs were flat. Real wages are only up 0.4% in the past 12 months, but lower inflation gives households a short-term boost by stretching how far their paychecks will go. Real or inflation-adjusted hourly wages jumped 0.4% last month, the biggest gain since late 2012; but that’s because inflation is low, not because wages are higher.

The NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market index rose to 59 in September from 55 in August; the index measures sentiment of homebuilders. It was the fourth straight monthly gain following a lengthy slump in builder sentiment through most of the first half of the year.

The Commerce Department said the current account gap, which measures the flow of goods, services and investments into and out of the country, fell to $98 billion in the second quarter from a revised $102 billion shortfall in the first quarter. The current account deficit has been gradually shrinking, hitting a 14-year low in the fourth quarter of 2013, helped in part by declining petroleum imports as the nation reduces its dependency on foreign oil.

The International Monetary Fund says the global economy faces a growing risk from big financial market bets that could quickly unravel if investors get spooked by geopolitical tensions or a shift in US interest rate policy. The IMF also warned that financial market indicators suggested investor bets funded with borrowed money looked “excessive”.

I don’t think the IMF is just looking at margin debt for Mom and Pop investors. Sales of subprime mortgage bonds have withered since the financial crisis, but fresh concerns are arising as issuance of some other types of securitizations surge. Sales of bonds backed by loans used to finance car purchases undertaken by the least creditworthy borrowers have reached pre-crisis levels in the US, prompting a Department of Justice investigation. While losses on subprime auto asset-backed securities (ABS) remained low during the crisis, there are concerns that new specialized lending companies are making riskier loans which are then being bundled into the bonds.

Also, according to Dealogic data, US sales of commercial mortgage-backed securities, or CMBS, have also staged a recovery with $102 billion worth of the deals sold last year, the highest amount since the $231 billion issued in 2007. At the same time, some market participants have been warning that the quality of the loans that underpin the bonds – typically secured by shopping malls, office buildings and other commercial properties – has been slipping.

And even when the investor bets aren’t funded with “borrowed” money, the bets can look a bit excessive. Bill Gross, the co-founder of Pacific Investment Management Co., sold most of the $48 billion of US Treasuries held by his $221 billion Pimco Total Return Fund in the second quarter, replacing them with about $45 billion of futures. The contracts require small up-front payments, freeing up money for Gross to invest in higher-yielding securities including Brazilian, Spanish and Italian debt. They are taking the cash and buying all these peripheral bonds that have a lot of spread on them relative to Treasuries; this is apparently the new trend that is occurring across the money-management industry.

And the Wall Street debt underwriters are now pitching the idea of the “mega-deal”. With investors clamoring for higher-yielding assets and companies on the biggest acquisition spree since 2007, bankers are talking up the ability of credit markets to fund really, really big acquisitions, even those looking for $100 billion or more of financing. That’s stoking speculation debt investors stand ready to fund potential takeovers such as a purchase by Anheuser-Busch InBev of rival beermaker SABMiller. And this even as investors brace for the 30-year rally in bonds to come to an end. The bankers are flush from $18 trillion in corporate bond sales globally the past six years, and I guess they need to meet their quota this year.

Investors have poured about $49 billion this year into mutual funds that buy taxable bonds after pulling $20 billion in 2013. The added cash has helped shrink the extra yield that investment-grade debt worldwide pays above government securities by 15 basis putting the spread near a seven-year low. Hmmm, what happened 7 years ago?

Meanwhile, the IMF is concerned the whole thing could unravel because of geopolitical tensions. Today, Congress gave Obama the go-ahead to arm and train Syrian rebels. The US House approved the president’s plan to send military trainers and arms to Saudi Arabia to help Syrian rebels fight the Islamic State. Republican Congressional leaders backed the legislation, despite their concerns that the administration’s response to ISIS is inadequate.

The biggest trick might be finding the right rebels to arm and train. Apparently we’re looking for moderates, in a land not known for moderation. I’m not sure having the Saudis serve as the HR department will work. In more unrelated news, the Saudis are cutting production to sustain prices above $100 a barrel; after all, the Saudis can’t be expected to do all this without compensation. In addition to the higher prices on a barrel of oil, the administration wants to put some 5,000 of these moderate, non-jihadist Free Syrian Army personnel through a training program in Saudi Arabia at a cost of about $500 million. My back of envelope calculation puts that training at about $100,000 for each moderate rebel, which brings a new Orwellian understanding of the Free Syrian Army. I just wonder if this is the best and highest use we could find for $500 million.

Meanwhile, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, US Army general Martin Dempsey, told a Senate committee that if this approach doesn’t do the trick, he may recommend that the US send ground forces. A White House spokesman threw water on the idea, saying the US “will not deploy ground troops in a combat role into Iraq or Syria.” (Nobody had the heart to tell him about the 1600 troops already deployed to Iraq.)

No Expectations


PlayPodcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 13:15 — 6.1MB) 
 
DOW + 100 = 17,131
SPX + 14 = 1998
NAS + 33 = 4552
10 YR YLD un = 2.59%
OIL + 1.79 = 94.71
GOLD + 2.20 = 1235.90
SILV + .03 = 18.79

Tomorrow the Federal Reserve FOMC wraps up its meeting to determine monetary policy. Even before the Fed issues a statement, the financial press is dissecting every phrase and utterance of every Fed policymaker, and trying to impart conflated significance to every twitch of an eyebrow or overstuffed briefcase. It’s pretty simple really; not much has changed over the past couple of months; the Fed is on track to end the large scale asset purchases under QE; the Fed will raise rates at some point, unless something drastic changes; the nuances of language are inconsequential. There, I’ve just condensed about 100 articles into about 100 words, and you didn’t miss anything. You’re welcome.

Today, China jumped on the QE bandwagon. The People’s Bank of China will print about 500 billion yuan, which works out to about $81 billion. They will hand out the money to the five largest banks in China. That money will eventually make its way into the financial markets. Considering the cost of printing 500 billion yuan…,

US producer prices were flat in August. The Labor Department said falling gasoline and food prices restrained its producer price index for final demand last month. The PPI moved up just 0.1% in July. For the past 12 months the producer prices increased 1.7%. The PPI last month was dampened by a 1.4 percent decline in gasoline prices, which followed a 2.1 percent fall in July. Food prices slipped 0.5 percent after rising 0.4 percent a month earlier. Prices received for services at the final demand level increased 0.3 percent after rising 0.1 percent in July. A 1.7 percent increase in prices for loan services accounted for more than 20 percent of last month’s increase.

A report from the Census Bureau showed median household income edged up just $180 last year to $51,939, a gain deemed statistically insignificant. This is the second consecutive year that the annual change was not statistically significant, following two consecutive annual declines. Income at the median, meaning half the country earned more and half earned less, has declined nearly $5,000 since 2007. The share of Americans living in poverty fell for the first time since 2006, dropping a half percentage point to 14.5 percent. The Hispanic population registered the biggest decline.

Nevertheless, the poverty rate was still 2 percentage points higher than it was seven years earlier. The small drop in the poverty rate can be attributed to the increase in full-time employment. There were about 60.8 million men and 45.1 million women working full time in 2013. That meant 1.8 million men and 1 million women found full-time jobs. Currently, there are 118.6 million full-time workers in the US, that’s a 2 million increase since August of 2013. There are still big gaps between the races, and also gender inequality; women earn 78 cents per every dollar that men did; that works out to a difference of about $10,800 per year. The nation’s level of income inequality continues to be the highest of any Western industrialized nation and worse than even El Salvador, the Dominican Republic, and India.

About one in five children live in poverty. The US is already ranked 34 out of 35 developed countries for child poverty, according to the UN Children’s Fund. There is some good news, however. The overall poverty rate for US children did fall, to 19.9% in 2013 from 21.8% in 2012.

According to a new survey by Gobankingrates.com, one in three Americans worry about money all the time. The survey found that more people were worried about finances than death or losing a family member. Paying bills and asking other people for money back were the top two most dreaded tasks. Survey respondents age 45 and up, most of them baby boomers and are either retired or planning for retirement, said their biggest financial fear was never being able to get out of debt. Millennials were far more worried about unemployment, according to the survey. About 17.1% of 18-to-19-year-olds are unemployed and 10.6% of 20-to-24-years old are unemployed.

More Americans have health insurance. The latest numbers come from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which polled more than 27,000 people during the first three months of the year. Forty-one million U.S. residents, or 13.1 percent, were uninsured during the quarter when benefits started to kick in for people who signed up for coverage into private insurance or Medicaid via the Obamacare exchanges or elsewhere. That’s the lowest number and percentage of uninsured people since the CDC started using this version of its survey in 1997. It’s also down 3.8 million people and 1.3 percentage points from the end of 2013. The Congressional Budget Office projects 12 million people will gain health insurance by year’s end.

The US military conducted its first airstrike in Iraq yesterday as part of an expanded mission announced last week by President Barack Obama. The new phase of the campaign began with US planes striking a single fighting position set up by ISIS militants that was firing on Iraqi security forces southwest of Baghdad. Now, you’re probably thinking this is not the first airstrike, and it is not; the US has already carried out at least 162 air strikes in recent weeks, unleashing more than 250 bombs and missiles on ISIS targets. Previously, the military was limited to strikes designed to assist with humanitarian missions, such as driving militants from Sinjar, or to defend Iraqi infrastructure, or to protect US personnel and facilities. So, this is the first military airstrike. It won’t be the last.

Pentagon leadership suggested to a Senate panel today that US ground troops may directly join Iraqi forces in combat against ISIS, despite president Obama’s repeated public assurances against boots on the ground. Wow, that was fast. General Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told the Senate armed services committee that he could see himself recommending the use of some US military forces now in Iraq to embed within Iraqi and Kurdish units to take territory away from ISIS.

The Russian ruble fell again today; fallout from the sanctions announced last week combined with lower oil prices. Since then there’s a self-perpetuating dynamic, there’s nothing supporting the currency. Ukraine’s president has offered parts of the country’s separatist east limited self-rule for three years under the terms of a peace plan reached with Russia. Looks like Russia won. They wanted a buffer. They have no interest in owning Ukraine as long as they can control it. The Ukrainian government admits that it does not have enough fuel to heat homes and keep factories running through the winter. Peace sounds better than freezing.

One of the strange sidebar stories on the Russia-Ukraine-sanctions story, is what might happen to the International Space Station. Currently, US astronauts hitch a ride on Russian rockets. NASA has chosen SpaceX and the Boeing Corporation to build spacecraft to ferry astronauts to the International Space Station. The agency will award a combined $6.8 billion to the firms for the first phase of the program.

Governments of all sizes are demanding that Google hand over more and more data about its users; we know this because Google publishes a report on the data it turns over. The report is a tally of all the times a government has used its legal authority to demand that Google hand over internal data about the people who use Google products like Gmail, YouTube or its namesake search engine.

This is the 10th time Google has released numbers on government data requests. Each time, the number of requests has risen sharply, reflecting Google’s growth as a company as well as governments’ increasing use of the company’s data in criminal investigations. The roughly 32,000 requests Google fielded in the first six months of 2014 were up 15 percent from the previous six months, and up 150 percent since the company started publishing its transparency report in 2009. The growth was faster in the United States, with 19 percent growth in the first half of 2014 versus the previous six months, and up 250 percent since 2009.

The world is pumping carbon dioxide into the air at the fastest rate since 1984. Last month was the hottest August on record. The superlatives say it all: We’re running out of time to avoid climate change’s most disastrous consequences. So, why don’t we see more action on the issue? The main problem we are looking at among the leaders of countries and business communities is a general perception that taking action on climate change will reduce economic growth, reduce creation of jobs, and generally speaking it will be expensive.

But a new report from the Global Commission on the Economy and Climate casts doubt on that idea, declaring that the necessary fixes could wind up being effectively free. The commission found that some $90 trillion is likely to be spent over the coming 15 years on new infrastructure around the world. If the $90 trillion that will be spent globally on cities, agriculture, and energy systems in the next 15 years is invested in low-carbon infrastructure and technology, economies actually will save money. The investment would generate $5 trillion in savings from factors like lower operating costs for renewable energy sources (versus fossil fuels) and increased energy efficiency, making this the cheaper option in the long run. And that’s before you calculate the benefits of avoiding disastrously high levels of CO2.

Perhaps the most important overall point of the report is that economic policies around the world are still aligned to favor fossil fuels. The commission cited the more than $600 billion a year spent to subsidize fossil fuels, more than six times the level of subsidies going to renewable energy.