Monday, November 15, 2010

Mid-Cycle Slowdown Ending

US labour market stats suggest that the fairly typical mid-cycle correction will be over soon.  Employment rose, though the unemployment rate was unchanged as was the very sensitive (and reliable) overtime hours series.  More recent weekly data confirm this improvement.

But don't expect a runaway boom.  Unless QE works flawlessly, which it won't.  More of that in another post.

BTW, notice how there was a small double-dip in 2003.  They happen.  What's different this time is not the minor cycles but the huge drag imposed by excessive debt and falling house prices.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Soggy

We're having a double dip in the US.  But it looks very much as if we'll avoid a new recession.  The two ISM surveys for October confirm that the economy isn't going into meltdown.  Both the services and the manufacturing ISMs were up on the month.  Just in case, the Fed announced QE2 last night, which will prevent a new recession, despite the problems caused by far too much debt.  But getting a "normal" recovery will be much harder.

For the world as a whole, things look a lot better.  World GDP growth is 4% plus, because strong growth in the BRIC countries and in Asia outside Japan is compensating for the soggy US economy.




(As ever, click on the chart itself to see it full size)

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Perplexed


(If you click on the charts, you can see them in their original size)

I'm not sure how to read the rally since 5th July in both the S&P500 (up 16.7%) and the All Ords( up 12.3%).  The Ozzie rally is easier to understand.  Most of our exports go to booming Asian economies, our terms of trade have improved dramatically, and our economy is doing very well, so well in fact that the RBA has upped the cash rate again.

But the US economy is growing at half its trend growth, instead of the 2 or 3 times trend typical of a recovery.  So why the US rally?  OK, profits are doing well, but that's because firms are controlling costs by only slowly increasing payrolls.  You'd think that consumer spending would also have been held back because of this, but the big GFC handouts have helped sustain PCE even despite a rising savings rate.  The Tea Party crowd will ensure fiscal tightening intensifies, a good reason to be cautious about both profits and the US recovery.  Yet without government support, consumer spending can't hold up, and already the first signs of weakness are emerging (see the latest monthly PCE data).  So for companies, the top line will cease growing, implying that collective cost cutting will no longer benefit the bottom line, as it has done so far in the recovery.  But it's hard to see it continuing to work.

OK, what else will keep profits rising?  A falling dollar will do wonders, both via a direct effect on profits from overseas subsidiaries but also as a result of higher sales.  But a falling dollar will intensify the headwinds facing Europe and Japan -- unless they also embrace the drug of quantitative easing.  So really, what the market is saying is that it's going up because of QE.  All the same, debt hasn't gone away (more of that in another post) and monetary easing works better when you can get negative real rates, which is very hard when inflation is close to zero.  There's a lot riding on Bernanke's helicopter.

Markets are close to previous highs and are fairly fully valued on trailing PEs (which I use because prospective PEs are doubtful, in all honesty).  They're also fairly overbought.  It may be a typical mid-term correction (though it was sharper than normal) and QE may save the world.  I'm worried, all the same.