Author Topic: US Economy, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies  (Read 519699 times)

Crafty_Dog

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1250 on: August 08, 2017, 09:41:03 AM »
In the words of Scott Grannis, upon my forwarding that to him:

"Yes. And it’s shocking: in 10 years credit card debt outstanding has managed to increase by a whopping $1 billion! In inflation adjusted terms it has fallen by 10%. Relative to nominal GDP it has fallen by almost 25%. The sky is falling!"

Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: Jeff Brown: Are stock prices too high?
« Reply #1251 on: August 11, 2017, 12:57:36 AM »
Are Stock Prices Dangerously High? It Depends How You Look at It
These three P/E measurements are alarming. So why hasn’t it mattered?
Each of the major P/E measures is currently higher than its long-term average. Still, the market hit its latest high on Friday.
Each of the major P/E measures is currently higher than its long-term average. Still, the market hit its latest high on Friday. Illustration: Davide Bonazzi for The Wall Street Journal
By Jeff Brown
Aug. 6, 2017 10:13 p.m. ET
47 COMMENTS

U.S. stocks have set record after record this year, pleasing investors who might have expected a postelection slump. But have prices soared to levels that are too risky?

Just as a 50-degree day is cool in August and warm in January, share prices can look high or low depending on the frame of reference. Still, by almost any standard, share prices are indeed high today—sobering for anyone with a serious stake in the market. Consider the three most popular measures: trailing price-to-earnings ratio, forward P/E ratio and cyclically adjusted P/E ratio.
 

“Each of the measures is currently higher than its long-term average, prompting many market analysts to predict an impending market decline,” says Brandon Thomas, co-founder and chief investment officer at Envestnet , ENV -3.70% a Chicago-based research and advice provider for financial advisers.

Yet some experts make a case that stocks are not overpriced by important measures and will continue to rise. What’s an investor to do?

Here’s a look at what the top barometers are showing—and why stocks continue to defy them—along with the pros’ arguments about what comes next.

• Trailing P/E Ratio: The classic price-to-earnings ratio, or P/E, looks at the current price divided by the company’s total earnings for the past 12 months.

Today, the P/E for the stocks in the S&P 500 index is about 24, meaning investors pay $24 for every $1 in corporate earnings. That’s quite high compared with the historical average of about 15 or 16, but not so high compared with some periods of crisis in the past—more than 40 around the dot-com bubble and above 100 after the financial crisis broke. To return to average, prices would have to tumble or earnings skyrocket.

Some experts note, however, that it isn’t unusual, or particularly risky, for the P/E to be somewhat higher than average when interest rates and inflation are unusually low. If you’ll earn only a tad over 2% on a 10-year Treasury note, paying $50 for every $1 in interest income, why not pay 24 times earnings on a stock? That would be a 4% earnings yield (earnings divided by price). Also, a low earnings yield is easier to stomach if little will be lost to inflation.

Andrew Kleis, co-founder of Insight Wealth Group, a wealth-management firm in West Des Moines, Iowa, says that “in times of incredibly low interest rates, like today and the last several years, investors put their money into the equities markets because they believe that is their best opportunity for risk-adjusted returns. That drives up P/E ratios. It’s happened before, and it’s happening again.”

This view assumes investors own stocks to share in current or future earnings, even though not all earnings are paid out as dividends. Undistributed earnings used for plant expansion, research and development or stock buybacks should boost the share price.

• Forward P/E: For another look, many experts use a P/E based on projected or forecast earnings, usually from company estimates and a consensus among analysts. Because many analysts are predicting earnings will grow in the near and medium term, this view produces a P/E a little less frightening—currently about 19 for the S&P 500, close to its long-term average.

Jim Tierney, chief investment officer for concentrated U.S. growth equities at AllianceBernstein asset management in New York, says “forward earnings are what we care about the most,” and notes that Wall Street analysts expect healthy earnings gains, producing a forward P/E just shy of 19 this year and close to 17 in 2018. “A bit elevated, but not excessive in a world where the 10-year Treasury as at 2.37%,” Mr. Tierney says.

Of course, a forward-looking P/E can be off if earnings later come in higher or lower than expected. Earnings estimates sometimes have a bit of wishful thinking, and experts say many analysts currently assume earnings will be boosted by a big Republican corporate-tax cut.

Craig Birk, executive vice president of portfolio management at Personal Capital, an investment-management firm in San Carlos, Calif., says he prefers trailing P/E because it relies on established facts. “Forward-looking P/E is also useful, but it must be taken in the context that earnings projections tend to change meaningfully,” Mr. Birk says.

• CAPE: Robert Shiller, the Yale economist known for his book “Irrational Exuberance,” which warned of price bubbles in stocks and housing, devised a different approach to reduce distortions from short-term factors. His “cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio,” or CAPE, divides the S&P 500’s current level by the average of 10 years of earnings adjusted for inflation.

That produces a frightening figure—a P/E today around 30, matching the level on Black Tuesday in 1929, and nearly double the long-term average of about 17 (but still below the peak of nearly 45 in 2000).

While CAPE is less volatile than the other two P/E gauges, some experts caution that it can be misleading at times. Right now, the 10-year earnings average is dragged down by the poor results during the financial crisis, pushing the CAPE ratio up.

Steve Violin, senior vice president and portfolio manager, F.L. Putnam Investment Management in Wellesley, Mass., prefers a CAPE using a five-year earnings average instead of 10, feeling it captures the current business climate and avoids distortions from events too far back to matter.

“A five-year CAPE ratio tends to be reasonably stable by avoiding estimates and smoothing out annual fluctuation,” he says. It’s currently at 23.6, compared with about 18 over the long term.
How long will this last?

A look at the S&P’s components shows that P/Es vary, with some stocks riskier than others—and demonstrates that no gauge can provide a simple view by itself of what’s going on.

Mr. Kleis notes, for example, that the average price of the S&P 500 is driven up by the 100 largest stocks in the index, with the remaining 400 trading closer to their historical P/E levels. “We know that investors have invested [their money] largely in the big, popular names they know and love,” he says. Because the index is based on market weight (stock price times number of shares), the top 100 make up 65% of the index’s value and have a disproportionate effect, he says.

Debating what various gauges really mean at any given moment is an endless process that always has some experts screaming that the sky is about to fall and others saying, “What, me worry?”

The important point today is that all the most popular barometers say share prices are high.
   
Mr. Violin notes, though, that valuation measures like P/E ratios are only part of the picture and need to be seen alongside measures of profit growth and financial strength. For that, he recommends zeroing in on individual companies. “It’s hard to use valuation ratios as a timing mechanism on their own,” he says. “Elevated stock-market valuations can persist for extended periods as they are sometimes justified.”

P/E ratios have been above average for years, and investors who dumped stocks as soon as they started to look high would have missed huge gains. “Stock valuations are elevated in aggregate, but economic and profit growth has justified these valuations so far,” Mr. Violin says. “This trend looks like it could persist, especially if interest rates remain low.”

Mr. Thomas says that despite high P/Es, the market is currently a “Goldilocks environment”—just right—due to low inflation and forecasts for higher corporate earnings. Though rising interest rates are traditionally damaging to stocks, Mr. Thomas believes rates are going up slowly enough for the markets to digest without much harm.

“Stock prices are at record highs for a reason,” he says, “and that is an expectation of improving earnings growth going forward. Many analysts are forecasting an acceleration in earnings growth as a result of an expected tax cut.”

Of course, things can go wrong. With the turmoil in Washington, for example, tax cuts are far from guaranteed.

Mr. Brown is a writer in Livingston, Mont. He can be reached at reports@wsj.com.

Crafty_Dog

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August CPI at .4%
« Reply #1252 on: September 14, 2017, 09:54:41 AM »
The Consumer Price Index Rose 0.4% in August To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 9/14/2017

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 0.4% in August, coming in above the consensus expected increase of 0.3%. The CPI is up 1.9% from a year ago.

"Cash" inflation (which excludes the government's estimate of what homeowners would charge themselves for rent) rose 0.4% in August and is up 1.5% in the past year.

Energy prices rose 2.8% in August, while food prices rose 0.1%. The "core" CPI, which excludes food and energy, increased 0.2% in August, matching consensus expectations. Core prices are up 1.7% versus a year ago.

Real average hourly earnings – the cash earnings of all workers, adjusted for inflation – declined 0.3% in August but are up 0.6% in the past year. Real average weekly earnings are up 0.9% in the past year.

Implications: Consumer price inflation in August was the hottest for any month since January, with prices rising 0.4%. But, between Hurricanes Harvey and Irma, we're going to have to wait a couple of months to figure out whether there has been a shift in the underlying trend. The increase in prices in August was led by gasoline and housing costs. We're certain to see more upward pressure from gas prices in September as Harvey hit late in August, and so only affected prices for a small part of the month. In the past year, consumer prices are up 1.9%. This is below the Federal Reserve's 2% target, and so some are saying the Fed should hold off on raising rates in December. But consumer prices were up only 0.2% in the year ending in August 2015 and up 1.1% in the year ending August 2016, so seeing through temporary fluctuations, we think inflation has remained in a rising trend. "Core" consumer prices, which exclude food and energy, rose 0.2% in August and are up 1.7% from a year ago. A closer look at core prices shows a handful of goods that are keeping that measure below the 2% inflation target. Cellphone service prices have declined an unusually large 13.2% in the past year, while major household appliances are down 3.9% and vehicle costs are falling. For the consumer, these falling prices - which are the result of technological improvements and competition – plus rising wages mean increased spending power on all other goods. We still expect inflation to trend towards 2%+ in the medium term, and don't think the gains to consumers from falling prices in select areas are reason for concern or a justification for the Fed to hold off on a steady path of rising rates. A week ago, the futures market put the odds of a December rate hike at only 22%; now those odds are up to 47%. We think they should be more like 65%. The most disappointing news in today's report is that real average hourly earnings declined 0.3% in August. However, these earnings are up 0.6% over the past year. On the jobs front, initial claims for unemployment benefits declined 14,000 last week to 284,000. The recovery from Harvey should keep exerting downward pressure on claims over the next couple of weeks. Unfortunately, Irma will likely exert even more powerful upward pressure in the near term, so next week's report in claims should rise to about 300,000. After that, claims should drop over the following few weeks back to about 240,000, where it was before the hurricanes. In the meantime, continuing claims for unemployment benefits fell 7,000 to 1.94 million. Plugging all this data into our models suggests payroll gains will be muted for September, but then bounce back in the fourth quarter of the year.

Crafty_Dog

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Wesbury GDP growth looking good.
« Reply #1253 on: October 16, 2017, 12:52:23 PM »
GDP Growth Looking Good To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 10/16/2017

Next week, government statisticians will release the first estimate for third quarter real GDP growth. In spite of hurricanes, and continued negativity by conventional wisdom, we expect 2.8% growth.

If we're right about the third quarter, real GDP will be up 2.2% from a year ago, which is exactly equal to the growth rate since the beginning of this recovery back in 2009. Looking at these four-quarter or eight-year growth rates, many people argue that the economy is still stuck in the mud.

But, we think looking in the rear view mirror misses positive developments. The economy hasn't turned into a thoroughbred, but the plowing is easier. Regulations are being reduced, federal employment growth has slowed (even declined) and monetary policy remains extremely loose with some evidence that a more friendly business environment is lifting monetary velocity.

Early signs suggest solid near 3% growth in the fourth quarter as well. Put it all together and we may be seeing an acceleration toward the 2.5 – 3.0% range for underlying trend economic growth. Less government interference frees up entrepreneurship and productivity growth powered by new technology. Yes, the Fed is starting to normalize policy and, yes, Congress can't seem to legislate itself out of a paper bag, but fiscal and monetary policy together are still pointing toward a good environment for growth.

Here's how we get to 2.8% for Q3.

Consumption: Automakers reported car and light truck sales rose at a 7.6% annual rate in Q3. "Real" (inflation-adjusted) retail sales outside the auto sector grew at a 2% rate, and growth in services was moderate. Our models suggest real personal consumption of goods and services, combined, grew at a 2.3% annual rate in Q3, contributing 1.6 points to the real GDP growth rate (2.3 times the consumption share of GDP, which is 69%, equals 1.6).

Business Investment: Looks like another quarter of growth in overall business investment in Q3, with investment in equipment growing at about a 9% annual rate, investment in intellectual property growing at a trend rate of 5%, but with commercial constriction declining for the first time this year. Combined, it looks like they grew at a 4.9% rate, which should add 0.6 points to the real GDP growth. (4.9 times the 13% business investment share of GDP equals 0.6).

Home Building: Home building was likely hurt by the major storms in Q3 and should bounce back in the fourth quarter and remain on an upward trend for at least the next couple of years. In the meantime, we anticipate a drop at a 2.6% annual rate in Q3, which would subtract from the real GDP growth rate. (-2.6 times the home building share of GDP, which is 4%, equals -0.1).

Government: Military spending was up in Q3 but public construction projects were soft for the quarter. On net, we're estimating that real government purchases were down at a 1.2% annual rate in Q3, which would subtract 0.2 points from the real GDP growth rate. (1.2 times the government purchase share of GDP, which is 17%, equals -0.2).

Trade: At this point, we only have trade data through August. Based on what we've seen so far, it looks like net exports should subtract 0.2 points from the real GDP growth rate in Q3.

Inventories: We have even less information on inventories than we do on trade, but what we have so far suggests companies are stocking shelves and showrooms at a much faster pace in Q3 than they were in Q2, which should add 1.1 points to the real GDP growth rate.

More data this week – on industrial production, durable goods, trade deficits, and inventories – could change our forecast. But, for now, we get an estimate of 2.8%. Not bad at all.

Crafty_Dog

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Retail sales
« Reply #1254 on: November 15, 2017, 09:25:23 AM »
Retail Sales Increased 0.2% in October To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 11/15/2017

Retail sales increased 0.2% in October (+0.5% including revisions to prior months). The consensus expected no change. Retail sales are up 4.6% versus a year ago.

Sales excluding autos rose 0.1% in October (+0.2% including revisions to prior months). The consensus expected a 0.2% gain. These sales are up 4.3% in the past year. Excluding gas, sales were up 0.4% in October and are up 4.3% from a year ago.

The rise in sales in October was led by autos, restaurants & bars and food & beverage stores.

Sales excluding autos, building materials, and gas rose 0.4% in October. If unchanged in November/December, these sales will be up at a 2.8% annual rate in Q4 versus the Q3 average.

Implications: Retail sales beat expectations for October and were revised up for prior months, a sign that - if you cut through the volatility due to the hurricanes - the economy is picking up. Retail sales rose 0.2% in October, after being held down by Harvey in August and then surging in September as consumers recovered following the storms. The growth in October was led by autos, which should remain unusually strong through year end as people replace vehicles destroyed in the hurricanes. But sales were also strong at restaurants & bars as well as food and beverage stores. The weakest categories in October were building materials, which should rebound in future months as Texas and Florida rebuild, and gas station sales, due to gas prices falling after the surge in September. Total retail sales are now up 4.6% in the past year. The best news today was the considerable strength for "core" sales, which excludes autos, building materials, and gas. Core sales grew 0.4% in October, and are up 3.4% from a year ago. Although some retail outlets are getting beat up by on-line retailing, the sector looks good from the consumer's point of view. Jobs and wages are moving up, consumers' financial obligations are an unusually small part of their incomes, and serious (90+ day) debt delinquencies are down substantially from post-recession highs. In other news this morning, business inventories were unchanged in September but revised up for earlier in the third quarter. As a result of these figures and the retail revisions, we now expect the government's estimate of Q3 real GDP growth to be revised up to a 3.3% annual rate from an originally reported 3.0%. Meanwhile, early tracking for Q4 real GDP growth in the 3.5 – 4.0% range. If we're right about Q4, this would be the first time we've had three straight quarters above 3% since before the financial crisis. In other news this morning, the Empire State index, a measure of manufacturing sentiment in New York, fell to 19.4 in November from 30.2 in October, suggesting continued strength in the factory sector.

Crafty_Dog

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October Industrial Production
« Reply #1255 on: November 16, 2017, 12:05:32 PM »

________________________________________
Industrial Production Increased 0.9% in October To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 11/16/2017

Industrial production increased 0.9% in October (1.4% including revisions to prior months), easily beating the consensus expected 0.5%. Utility output rose 2.0%, while mining fell 1.3%.

Manufacturing, which excludes mining/utilities, increased 1.3% in October (1.7% including revisions to prior months). Auto production rose 1% while non-auto manufacturing rose 1.3%. Auto production is down 1.6% versus a year ago while non-auto manufacturing is up 2.9%.

The production of high-tech equipment rose 1.2% in October and is up 4.2% versus a year ago.

Overall capacity utilization increased to 77.0% in October from 76.4% in September. Manufacturing capacity utilization rose to 76.4% in October from 75.5% in September.

Implications: Industrial production continued its post-hurricane rally in October, easily beating consensus expectations as the manufacturing sector led the way. But even without the storms, production would have been a solid 0.3%, according to the Federal Reserve. Industrial production rose 0.9% in October and is now up 2.8% versus a year ago. The biggest positive contribution to today's headline number came from manufacturing which rose 1.3%, matching the largest monthly gain since 2010. Auto manufacturing rose 1% in October and is now up at a 27.5% annual rate in the past three months, getting back to pre-hurricane levels of output. Meanwhile, non-auto manufacturing posted its largest monthly gain since 2006, rising 1.3%. This strength was also reflected in manufacturing capacity utilization, which rose to its highest level since 2008. Looking forward, expect further gains in overall production as the economy recovers from the effects of the two hurricanes. The one disappointment in today's report came from mining which fell 1.3%, primarily due to both oil and gas well drilling and extraction. Oil and gas-well drilling has struggled since the storms, but its monthly declines have begun to level off and it is still up a massive 61% from a year ago. Look for a surge in drilling activity in the months ahead once the effects of the storms pass. In other news this morning, the Philly Fed Index, a measure of sentiment among East Coast manufacturers, fell to a still high 22.7 in November from 27.9 in October. On the employment front, new claims for jobless benefits rose 10,000 last week to 249,000. Meanwhile, continuing claims fell 44,000 to 1.86 million. Look for another solid month of job growth in November. Finally, on inflation, import prices rose 0.2% in October while export prices remained unchanged. In the past year however, import prices are up 2.5% while export prices are up 2.7%, both in stark contrast to the price declines in the twelve months ending in October 2016. Yet another reason why the Federal Reserve should and will raise rates in December.

Crafty_Dog

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Wesbury: Economy accelerating
« Reply #1256 on: November 20, 2017, 09:27:22 AM »
The Economy is Accelerating To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 11/20/2017

We've called it a "Plow Horse" economy, which was our metaphor invented to counter forecasters who said slow growth meant a recession was on its way. A Plow Horse is always slow, but that slowness hides underlying strength – it was never going to slip and fall. Now, the economy is accelerating.

Halfway through the fourth quarter, monthly data releases show real GDP growing at a 3%+ annual rate. If that holds, it would make for three consecutive quarters of growth at 3% or higher. Believe it or not, the last time that happened was 2004.

Last week saw retail sales, industrial production, and housing starts all come in better than expected for October, the latter two substantially better.

And while retail sales grew "just" 0.2% in October, that came on the back of a 1.9% surge in September. Overall sales, and those excluding volatile components like autos, gas and building materials, all signal a robust consumer.

Meanwhile factory output surged 1.3% in October, tying the second highest monthly gain since 2010. Production at factories is now up 2.5% from a year ago, and accelerating. By contrast, factory production was down 0.1% in the year ending October 2016 and unchanged in the year ending October 2015. The current revival is not due to the volatile auto sector, where output of motor vehicles is down 5.9% from a year ago while the production of auto parts is down 0.3%.

The last piece of last week's good economic news was on home building: housing starts surged after a storm-related lull in September. Single-family starts, which are more stable than multi-family starts - and add more per unit to GDP - tied the highest level since 2007. Housing completions hit the highest level since 2008.

As a result of all this data, the Atlanta Fed's "GDP Now" model says real GDP is growing at a 3.4% annual rate in Q4. The New York Fed's "Nowcast" says 3.8%.

Of course, if we get anything close to those numbers, some analysts will claim the fourth quarter is just a hurricane-related rebound. But the conventional wisdom has been way too bearish for years, and Q3 is likely to be revised up to a 3.4% growth rate from the original estimate of 3.0%. Put it all together, and things are looking up. It's no longer a Plow Horse economy. In fact, after years of smothering the growth potential of amazing new technologies, the government is finally getting out of the way.

The Obama and Bush regulatory State is being dismantled piece by piece, and spending growth has slowed relative to GDP. Tax cuts are moving through Congress. These positive developments have monetary velocity – the speed at which money moves through the economy – picking up. "Animal spirits" are stirring. We don't have a cute name for it, but growth is accelerating.

This reduction in the burden of government would be easier, and much more focused on growth, if Republicans had fixed the budget scorekeeping process when they first had the chance back in 2015, or even in the mid-1990s, after having gained control of both the House and Senate.

Instead, they took a cowardly pass. As a result, when assessing the "cost" of tax cuts, Congress still ignores the positive economic effects of tax cuts on growth. Oddly, while refusing to "score" better GDP growth, we understand the budget scorekeepers assume tax cuts lead to higher interest rates, which add to the cost of the tax cuts. In effect, the scorekeepers will use dynamic models to count the negative effects of tax cuts on the overall economy, but not the positive ones!

This kind of rigged scoring system is why the current tax proposals don't cut tax rates on dividends or capital gains, and why some of the tax cuts are temporary. It's also why the top tax rate on regular income for the highest earners is likely to end up near the current tax rate of 39.6%.

We were never satisfied with Plow Horse growth, but we always thought it showed the power of innovation. The power of new technology caused the economy to grow since 2009, despite the burden of big government.

Now with better policies, growth is on the rise. We haven't fixed enough problems to get 3% real growth in every quarter, and maybe not even as the average growth rate over time. That would probably take some major changes to entitlement spending programs. But the recent improvement is hard to miss and signals that entrepreneurship is alive and well in the United States.

DougMacG

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Re: Wesbury: Economy accelerating
« Reply #1257 on: November 20, 2017, 10:08:27 AM »
"the Atlanta Fed's "GDP Now" model says real GDP is growing at a 3.4% annual rate in Q4. The New York Fed's "Nowcast" says 3.8%."

Yet we cannot pass meaningful tax reform because budget rules require a 2.6% projection AFTER the incentives to hire, build, expand are restored.  Stuck on stupid.

ccp

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bank interest rates
« Reply #1258 on: November 26, 2017, 11:09:47 AM »
https://nypost.com/2017/11/26/will-the-bank-stop-stiffing-me-on-my-savings-account-rate/

I remember when they paid 5% no matter how little you had in the bank

I watched my hundred dollars go up to 105 in the mid 60s.
checks were free.

DougMacG

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Re: bank interest rates
« Reply #1259 on: November 27, 2017, 08:06:23 AM »
https://nypost.com/2017/11/26/will-the-bank-stop-stiffing-me-on-my-savings-account-rate/

I remember when they paid 5% no matter how little you had in the bank
I watched my hundred dollars go up to 105 in the mid 60s.
checks were free.

I think it is the Federal Reserve and our flawed public policies like monetary policy and deficit spending that is holding interest rates so low, not the banks IMHO.

Note that banking is a cartel, and a public private partnership (cronyism by definition).  They borrow from the Fed more so than reinvest savings.  If you wanted them to be competitive, you would need to allow more banks to compete or allow existing banks to compete in more markets.

The Fed gives them (almost) unlimited money (printed money, pretend money, caveat currency) at zero percent (with rounding) interest.  Given that, how much can they pay savers for their savings?  (near zero)

A whole generation and now maybe two or three will live without knowing the formerly greatest force on earth, the power of compounding interest.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/compound-interest-the-most-powerful-force-in-the-universe/

That same force in now applied in the opposite direction, the declining value of the dollar over time even when inflation is averaging only 2-3%.

Crafty_Dog

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October Personal Income
« Reply #1260 on: November 30, 2017, 09:25:23 PM »
Personal Income Rose 0.4% in October To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 11/30/2017

Personal income rose 0.4% in October (0.3% including revisions to prior months), beating the consensus expected 0.3%. Personal consumption increased 0.3% (+0.2% including prior months' revisions), matching consensus expectations. Personal income is up 3.4% in the past year, while spending is up 4.2%.

Disposable personal income (income after taxes) rose 0.5% in October and is up 3.2% from a year ago. The gain in October was led by private sector wages and salaries.

The overall PCE deflator (consumer inflation) rose 0.1% in October and is up 1.6% versus a year ago. The "core" PCE deflator, which excludes food and energy, rose 0.2% in October and is up 1.4% in the past year.

After adjusting for inflation, "real" consumption rose 0.1% in October and is up 2.6% from a year ago.

Implications: Consumers enjoyed rising wages and healthy spending in October, following a storm-boosted September report. Consumer spending rose 0.3% in October, a slower pace of spending growth than we saw in September, but remember that September spending was boosted by the replacement of vehicles destroyed by hurricanes Harvey and Irma. Spending in October - led by housing, groceries, and prescription drugs – came despite a headwind from slower auto and gasoline sales. Meanwhile incomes rose 0.4% in October, led by private sector wages & salaries as well as interest income. Both incomes and spending have been heating up in recent months, with income rising at a 4.2% annual rate in the past three months, and spending up at a 5.5% annual rate over the same period. We expect to see healthy growth in the coming months, especially if meaningful tax cuts and reform come out of Washington. While some will bemoan that spending has outpaced income growth in the past few months, and has risen at a faster pace in the past year, stories about problems with the consumer are way overblown. Yes, consumer debts are at a record high in raw dollar terms, but so are consumer assets. Comparing the two, debts are the lowest relative to assets since 2000 (and that's back during the internet bubble when asset values were artificially high). Meanwhile, the financial obligations ratio - which compares debt and other recurring payments to income – is still hovering near the lowest levels of the past 35 years. In other words, consumers still have room to increase spending, and steadily rising incomes will continue to boost spending power in the months ahead. On the inflation front, the overall PCE deflator rose 0.1% in October and is up 1.6% in the past year. While that is modestly below the Fed's 2% inflation target, the pace of inflation has been rising in recent months and provides clear backing for the Fed to continue with rate hikes. In other news this morning, the Chicago PMI, which measures manufacturing sentiment in that region, fell in November to a still strong 63.9. Plugging this into our model along with other recent data, we expect tomorrow's national ISM Manufacturing index to show continued robust growth for November. In employment news this morning, new claims for jobless benefits fell 2,000 last week to 238,000. Meanwhile, continuing claims rose 42,000 to 1.96 million. Look for another solid month of job growth in November.

Crafty_Dog

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Wesbury: Don't fear higher interest rates
« Reply #1261 on: December 08, 2017, 09:54:16 PM »
Don't Fear Higher Interest Rates To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 12/4/2017

The Federal Reserve has a problem. At 4.1%, the jobless rate is already well below the 4.6% it thinks unemployment would/could/should average over the long run. We think the unemployment rate should get to 3.5% by the end of 2019 and wouldn't be shocked if it got that low in 2018, either.

Add in extra economic growth from tax cuts and the Fed will be worried that it is "behind the curve." As a result, we think the Fed will raise rates three times next year, on top of this year's three rate hikes, counting the almost certain hike this month. And a fourth rate hike in 2018 is still certainly on the table. By contrast, the futures market is only pricing in one or two rate hikes next year – exactly as it did for 2017. In other words, the futures markets are likely to be wrong for the second year in a row.

And as short-term interest rates head higher, we expect long-term interest rates to head up as well. So, get ready, because the bears will seize on this rising rate environment as one more reason for the bull market in stocks to end.

They'll be wrong again. The bull market, and the US economy, have further to run. Rising rates won't kill the recovery or bull market anytime in the near future.

Higher interest rates reflect a higher after-tax return to capital, a natural result of cutting taxes on corporate investment via a lower tax rate on corporate profits as well as shifting to full expensing of equipment and away from depreciation for tax purposes.

Lower taxes on capital means business will more aggressively pursue investment opportunities, helping boost economic growth and the demand for labor – leading to more jobs and higher wages. Stronger growth means higher rates.

For a recent example of why higher rates don't mean the end of the bull market in stocks look no further than 2013. Economic growth accelerated that year, with real GDP growing 2.7% versus 1.3% the year before. Meanwhile, the yield on the 10-year Treasury Note jumped to 3.04% from 1.78%. And during that year the S&P 500 jumped 29.6%, the best calendar year performance since 1997.

This was not a fluke. The 10-year yield rose in 2003 and 2006, by 44 and 32 basis points, respectively. How did the S&P 500 do those years: up 26.4% in 2003, up 13.8% in 2006.

Sure, in theory, if interest rates climb to reflect the risk of rising inflation, without any corresponding increase in real GDP growth, then higher interest rates would not be a good sign for equities. That'd be like the late 1960s through the early 1980s. But with Congress and the president likely to soon agree to major pro-growth changes in the tax code on top of an ongoing shift toward deregulation, we think the growth trend is positive, not negative.

It's also true that interest on the national debt will rise as well. But federal interest costs relative to both GDP and tax revenue are still hovering near the lowest levels of the past fifty years. As we've argued, sensible debt financing that locks in today's low rates would be prudent. However, it will take many years for higher interest rates to lift the cost of borrowing needed to finance the government back to the levels we saw for much of the 1980s and 1990s. And as we all remember the 80s and 90s were not bad for stocks.

Bottom line: interest rates across the yield curve are headed higher. But, for stocks, it's just another wall of worry not a signal that the bull market is anywhere near an end.

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US Economics,N.Y. Fed raises U.S. fourth-quarter GDP growth view to near 4%
« Reply #1262 on: December 19, 2017, 10:22:19 AM »
Previously thought impossible!  [Like yesterday, by growth haters, 'non-partisan' agencies and jouno-lists]

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-economy-nyfed/n-y-fed-raises-u-s-fourth-quarter-gdp-growth-view-to-near-4-percent-idUSKBN1E9292?il=0
https://www.newyorkfed.org/research/policy/nowcast

N.Y. Fed raises U.S. fourth-quarter GDP growth rate to near 4 percent

This changes everything.

Crafty_Dog

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Wesbury predicts 2018
« Reply #1263 on: December 28, 2017, 01:32:48 PM »
Monday Morning Outlook
________________________________________
2018: Dow 28,500, S&P 3100 To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 12/18/2017

Last December we wrote "we finally have more than just hope to believe that this year, 2017, is the year the Plow Horse Economy finally gets a spring in its step." We expected real GDP growth to accelerate from 2.0% in 2016 to "about 2.6%" in 2017. Our optimism was, in large part, based on our belief that the incoming Trump Administration would wield a lighter regulatory touch and move toward lower tax rates.

So far, so good. Right now, we're tracking fourth quarter real GDP growth at a 3.0% annual rate, which would mean 2.7% growth for 2017 and we expect some more acceleration in 2018.

The only question is: how much? Yes, a major corporate tax cut (which should have happened 20 years ago) is finally taking place. And, yes, the Trump Administration is cutting regulation. But, it has not reigned in government spending. As a result, we're forecasting real GDP growth at a 3.0% rate in 2018, the fastest annual growth since 2005.

The only caveat to this forecast is that it seems as if the velocity of money is picking up. With $2 trillion of excess reserves in the banking system, the risk is highly tilted toward an upside surprise for growth, with little risk to the downside. Meanwhile, this easy monetary policy suggests inflation should pick up, as well. The consumer price index should be up about 2.5% in 2018, which would be the largest increase since 2011.

Unemployment already surprised to the downside in 2017. We forecast 4.4%; instead, it's already dropped to 4.1% and looks poised to move even lower in the year ahead. Our best guess is that the jobless rate falls to 3.7%, which would be the lowest unemployment rate since the late 1960s.

A year ago, we expected the Fed to finally deliver multiple rate hikes in 2017. It did, and we expect that pattern will continue in 2018, with the Fed signaling three rate hikes and delivering at least that number, maybe four. Longer-term interest rates are heading up as well. Look for the 10-year Treasury yield to finish 2018 at 3.00%.

For the stock market, get ready for a continued bull market in 2018. Stocks will probably not climb as much as this year, and a correction is always possible, but we think investors would be wise to stay invested in equities throughout the year.

We use a Capitalized Profits Model (the government's measure of profits from the GDP reports divided by interest rates) to measure fair value for stocks. Our traditional measure, using a current 10-year Treasury yield of 2.35% suggests the S&P 500 is still massively undervalued.

If we use our 2018 forecast of 3.0% for the 10-year yield, the model says fair value for the S&P 500 is 3351, which is 25% higher than Friday's close. The model needs a 10-year yield of about 3.75% to conclude that the S&P 500 is already at fair value, with current profits.

As a result, we're calling for the S&P 500 to finish at 3,100 next year, up almost 16% from Friday's close. The Dow Jones Industrial Average should finish at 28,500.

Yes, this is optimistic, but a year ago we were forecasting the Dow would finish this year at 23,750 with the S&P 500 at 2,700. This was a much more bullish call than anyone else we've seen, but we stuck with the fundamentals over the relatively pessimistic calls of "conventional wisdom," and we believe the same course is warranted for 2018. Those who have faith in free markets should continue to be richly rewarded in the year ahead.
________________________________________

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Grannis
« Reply #1264 on: January 01, 2018, 01:10:09 PM »
Predictions for 2018
Posted: 31 Dec 2017 05:40 PM PST

One year ago I expected to see an improving economy and further gains in equity prices, and I sure got that right. Stocks are up big-time and GDP growth has accelerated somewhat. But I worried, as I have every year for the past 8 years, that the Fed might be slow to react to rising confidence and declining money demand, and that this could set off a bout of rising inflation. Fortunately, I got that wrong yet again, since inflation has remained in a comfortable 1.5 - 2% range. For the past two years I've liked emerging markets, and they have done quite well. Last year I didn't much care for gold or commodities, but they have done well thanks to a weaker dollar—which I didn't see coming. So it's a mixed bag for calls, but last year's 19.4% rise in equity prices goes a long way to making up for a few smaller losses. In any event, take the following with suitable grains of salt. I've been bullish and right (on stocks) for so long now that it makes even me nervous.

All throughout 2017 the world worried that Trump and the Republicans were going to prove incompetent. Was Trump crazy? Could he actually govern? Could the Republicans abolish Obamacare as promised? Could they pass tax reform? Turns out they did a pretty good, if far from perfect, job. Obamacare is being dismantled, beginning with the elimination of the mandate. Tax reform could have been better, but it achieved its main objective: to stimulate investment. Meanwhile, hidden behind the distractions of tweet storms and faux pas, Trump has accomplished a major reduction in federal regulatory burdens. This can really make a difference over the long haul, and it may already be contributing to faster growth.

Thinking back, Obama in his first year got a $1 trillion dollar stimulus package designed to boot-strap the economy by redistributing income (see my analysis here). The result was the slowest recovery on record; Obama ended up borrowing some $8 trillion to no avail, since nothing he did was aimed at increasing the market's desire to invest, work harder, or take risk. Trump in his first year got a $1.5 trillion (CBO-scored "cost") stimulus package designed to boost the economy by increasing the after-tax returns to business investment. I'm betting the results of Trump's tax reform will be much better than expected, but the market is not yet willing to make that same bet, and that is the point of departure for all predictions of what is to come.

If 2017 was about just one thing, it was the ability of the Republicans to pass meaningful tax reform. The market spent most of the year handicapping the odds of tax reform, and it would appear that it is now mostly, if not fully, priced in. The tax reform package boils down to a one-time 20% boost to after-tax corporate profits (by cutting the corporate income tax rate from 35% to 21%), and that's pretty much what we have seen happen to equity prices this past year.

If 2018 is going to be about just one thing, it will be whether boosting the after-tax rewards to business investment results in a stronger economy. Beginning in 2009, Obama and the Democrats gambled that a massive redistribution of income would boost demand and thus boost the economy, but they lost. They ended up flushing $8 trillion down the Keynesian toilet. Trump and the Republicans are now gambling that a significant increase in the after-tax rewards to business investment will boost the economy. Only time will tell, but there are already hints of a stronger economy in the data: e.g., capex is up, industrial production is up, business confidence and the ISM indices are up, and industrial metals prices are up. It's likely that the current quarter could mark the first time we've enjoyed three consecutive quarters of 3% or more growth in over 12 years.

I think the meme for 2018 will be this: waiting for GDP. If the economy shows convincing and durable signs of stronger growth, more investment, more jobs, and rising productivity, then the Republicans' gamble will have paid off. If not, the Democrats will have carte blanche to take control of Congress and oust a sitting president.

From my supply-sider's perspective, we now have the essential ingredients for a stronger economy in place. Tax incentives are correctly aligned to encourage more business investment; regulatory burdens are being slashed, business confidence is high, and the Fed is not a threat for the foreseeable future. Swap and credit spreads are low, as is implied volatility, and that tells us that liquidity is plentiful and systemic risk is low. The fact that the rest of the world is also doing better as well is just icing on the cake.

But, argue the skeptics, won't businesses just use their extra profits to buy back shares and increase their dividends, making the wealthy even wealthier without creating any new jobs? This oft-repeated allegation is an empty argument, because it ignores one key thing: what do those who receive the money from buybacks and dividends do with it? John Cochrane explains it in this brief excerpt (do read the whole thing):

Suppose company 1 gets a tax cut, doesn't really know what to do with the money -- on top of all the extra cash the company may already have -- as it doesn't have very good investment projects. It sends the money to shareholders. Well, what do shareholders do with it? (Hint: track the money.) They most likely roll the money in to other investments. They find company 2 that does need the money for investment, and send it to that company. In the end, they only consume it if nobody has any good investment ideas.

The larger economic point: In the end, investment in the whole economy has nothing to do with the financial decisions of individual companies. Investment will increase if the marginal, after-tax, return to investment increases. Lowering the corporate tax rate operates on that marginal incentive to new investments. It does not operate by "giving companies cash" which they may use, individually, to buy new forklifts, or to send to investors. Thinking about the cash, and not the marginal incentive, is a central mistake.

In other words, what some companies do with their extra cash is immaterial. What matters is that tax reform has increased the marginal incentive to invest—for the entire economy—by reducing tax rates and by allowing the immediate expensing of capex. On the margin, investment now has become more attractive and more profitable in the US, and this will almost certainly result in more investment (some of which is likely to come from overseas firms deciding to relocate here), which in turn means more jobs, more productivity, and higher real incomes. As I explained a few years ago, productivity has been the missing ingredient in the current lackluster recovery, and very weak business investment is one reason that productivity has gone missing. A pickup in investment is bound to raise productivity, which is the ultimate driver of growth and prosperity.

So it's clear to me that tax reform is a big deal, because it's very likely to boost the long-term growth trajectory of the US economy by a meaningful amount. Surprisingly, however, the market does not appear to share that view. Why else would real yields still be miserably low (e.g., 0.3% for 5-yr TIPS)? Why else would the market expect only a modest increase (0.75% or so) in the Fed's target funds rate for the foreseeable future? The current Fed target is 1.5%, while 2-yr Treasury yields, which are the market's expectation for what that rate will average over the next two years, are only 1.9%. As for real yields, the current Fed target translates into a real yield—using the PCE Core deflator—of roughly zero, while the yield on 5-yr TIPS says the market expects that rate to average only 0.3% over the next 5 years. If the economy really gets up a head of steam (e.g., real growth of 3% or more per year), I can't imagine the Fed wouldn't raise rates by more than the market currently expects, and I can't imagine nominal and real yields in general won't be significantly higher than they are today. The last time the economy was growing at 4% a year (early 2000s), 5-yr TIPS real yields were 3-4%.

Yet the Fed is the one thing I worry about, which is nothing new. The Fed has been responsible for every recession in recent memory, because each time they have tightened monetary policy in order to reduce inflation or to ward off an expected increase in inflation, they have ended up choking off growth. They are well aware of this, however, so they are going to be very careful about raising rates as the economy picks up steam. But as I've explained many times before, the Fed's worst nightmare is a return of confidence. More confidence in a time of surprisingly strong growth would almost certainly reduce the demand for money; if the Fed doesn't take offsetting moves to increase the demand for all those excess reserves in the banking system (e.g., by raising the funds rate target and draining bank reserves) the result would be an unwelcome rise in inflation. Inflation is a monetary phenomenon: when the supply of money exceeds the demand for it, inflation is the inevitable result. And higher inflation would set us up for the next recession.

On balance, I think it's quite likely the economy is going to improve, and surprisingly so. Ordinarily that would be great news for the equity market, since a stronger than expected economy should result in stronger than expected profits. But the market is still cautious, so good news is going to be met with increased skepticism: if the Fed raises rates as the economy improves, the market will worry that higher rates will increase the risk of recession. And even if the Fed is slow to raise rates, the market will see that as a sign that inflation is likely to move higher, and that would in turn increase the odds of more aggressive Fed tightening and eventually another recession. In short, we're probably going to see the market climb periodic walls of worry, just as it has for the past several years.

Risk assets should do well in this environment, given time, but there will be headwinds. Rising Treasury yields will act to keep PE ratios from rising further, so equity market gains are likely to be driven mainly by stronger-than-expected earnings. At the same  time, higher bond yields will make it easier to people to exit stocks (very low yields today make being short stocks very painful).

Emerging market economies are so far behind their developed counterparts that they have tremendous upside potential in a world that is increasingly prosperous, but a stronger than expected US economy is likely to boost the dollar, which in turn would put pressure on commodity markets and the emerging economies that depend on them.

I continue to believe that gold is trading at a significant premium to its long-term, inflation-adjusted price (which I estimate to be around $600/oz.) because the world is still risk-averse. So a stronger US economy and a stronger dollar would spell bad news for gold. Who needs gold if real yields and real growth are rising?

In order to judge whether things are playing out in a healthy fashion, it will be critical to periodically assess the status of the world's demand for money—particularly bank reserves, of which there are over $2 trillion in excess of what is needed for banks to collateralize their deposits. If banks' demand to hold excess reserves declines faster than the Fed's willingness to drain reserves and/or raise the interest rate it pays on reserves, then higher inflation is almost sure to rear its ugly head. Signs of that happening would likely be seen in rising inflation expectations, a falling dollar, a steeper yield curve, and/or rising gold and commodity prices.

The world is on the cusp of a new chapter of stronger growth, led by US tax reform. The US economy has plenty of upside potential, given the past 8 years of sub-par growth and a significant decline in the labor force participation rate and lingering risk aversion. Tax reform can and should unleash that underutilized potential and boost confidence. The future looks bright, but there are, of course, lots of things that could go wrong (e.g., North Korea, the Middle East, Trump's ego, the Fed) so if and as the world becomes less risk averse, an investor would be wise to remain cautious, since very few things these days are obviously cheap. On the other hand, Treasuries, and bond yields in general, look very low and should thus be approached with great caution

DougMacG

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Re: Grannis
« Reply #1265 on: January 01, 2018, 04:06:14 PM »
Great analysis by Scott.
http://scottgrannis.blogspot.com/2017/12/predictions-for-2018.html

SG: "I've been bullish and right (on stocks) for so long now that it makes even me nervous."

   -  My interest is in GDP growth; I have no prediction about the stock market.  The market should tend to go up in a good economy but there are other factors which Scott goes on to explain.


"Obama ended up borrowing some $8 trillion to no avail"... "They ended up flushing $8 trillion down the Keynesian toilet."

   -  People intuitively know this and have been electing Obama's opponents for the last 4 cycles, but it seems that no one on the political stage effectively points this out.  R's are risking of about a trillion with tax rate cuts that will cost nothing if they succeed.  They are designed to grow the economy.  Democrats just wasted $8 trillion (above and beyond all taxes collected) on what only could harm incentives and growth.


" If the economy shows convincing and durable signs of stronger growth, more investment, more jobs, and rising productivity, then the Republicans' gamble will have paid off."

"Lowering the corporate tax rate operates on that marginal incentive to new investments. It does not operate by "giving companies cash"... "  (Univ of Chicago economist John Cochrane)

More investment "means more jobs, more productivity, and higher real incomes."  

   -  Now we find out if that is right.
« Last Edit: January 01, 2018, 04:49:04 PM by DougMacG »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Wesbury: Boom!
« Reply #1267 on: January 07, 2018, 03:08:47 PM »


https://www.ftportfolios.com/Commentary/EconomicResearch/2018/1/5/boom

Nice to know I have lived long enough to see Wesbury's predictions be accurate again.

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December Industrial Production
« Reply #1268 on: January 17, 2018, 10:45:47 AM »
Industrial Production Increased 0.9% in December To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 1/17/2018

Industrial production increased 0.9% in December (1.0% including revisions to prior months), beating the consensus expected 0.5%. Utility output rose 5.7%, while mining rose 1.6%.

Manufacturing, which excludes mining/utilities, increased 0.1% in December (0.2% including revisions to prior months). Auto production rose 2.0% while non-auto manufacturing was unchanged. Auto production is up 0.4% versus a year ago while non-auto manufacturing is up 2.6%.

The production of high-tech equipment rose 0.4% in December and is up 3.7% versus a year ago.

Overall capacity utilization increased to 77.9% in December from 77.2% in November. Manufacturing capacity utilization was unchanged in December.

Implications: Industrial production finished 2017 with a bang, beating consensus expectations and posting the largest calendar-year gain since 2010. The headline series rose 0.9% in December and is now up 3.6% in the past year. Further, overall production rebounded 10.7% at an annual rate in Q4 – its fastest quarterly pace since 2009 – after being held back in Q3 by Hurricanes Harvey and Irma. Even though the overall number was strong in December, it is important to note that the details of the report show the strength was primarily due to the volatile utilities and mining components. Manufacturing, which rose 0.1% in December has undergone a major shift. Back in December 2016, automobile manufacturing was up 6% from the prior year while non-auto manufacturing was up 0.2%. Now the leadership has reversed, with auto manufacturing up only 0.4% in the past year while non-auto manufacturing is up 2.6%. This demonstrates that the revival of manufacturing outside the auto sector in the US hasn't been all talk. The biggest source of strength in today's report came from utilities, a volatile category that is very dependent on weather, which rebounded 5.7% in December, after coming in weak in November. Given low January temperatures in much of the country, utilities may have another month of growth in them before reverting to normal. Another bright spot in December came from mining, which rose 1.6% amid broad-based gains in the sector. Notably, after five consecutive months of declines, oil and gas-well drilling rose 0.9% in December. Despite the weakness following the storms, today's gain signals it may have turned the corner. Look for a surge in drilling activity in the months ahead. In other recent news, the Empire State index, a measure of manufacturing sentiment in New York, dropped to 17.7 in January from 19.6 in December. On the housing front, the NAHB index, which measures homebuilder sentiment, fell to a still high 72 in January from 74 in December, signaling continued optimism from developers.

Crafty_Dog

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December '17 Manufacturing
« Reply #1269 on: January 18, 2018, 12:15:47 PM »


The ISM Manufacturing Index Rose to 59.7 in December To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 1/3/2018

The ISM Manufacturing Index rose to 59.7 in December, easily beating the consensus expected 58.2. (Levels higher than 50 signal expansion; levels below 50 signal contraction.)

The major measures of activity were mostly higher in December, and all remain comfortably above 50, signaling growth. The new orders index rose to 69.4 from 64.0 in November, while the production index increased to 65.8 from 63.9. The supplier deliveries index rose to 57.9 from 56.5. The employment index declined to 57.0 from 59.7 in November.

The prices paid index rose to 69.0 in December.

Implications: Optimism in the manufacturing sector soared in December as tax reform moved toward passage. Manufacturing activity closed out 2017 on a high note, with the ISM index hitting 59.7 in December, behind just September for the highest reading of the year and the fastest pace of expansion going back to 2011. And it was not just a short term boom to end the year, in 2017 the ISM manufacturing index averaged the highest readings for a calendar year going all the way back to 2004. In December, sixteen of eighteen industries reported growth (two reported declines), while respondents noted that the pickup is coming from increased customer activity in both the US and abroad. The two most forward-looking indices – new orders and production - led the way in December, rising to very healthy levels. In fact, new orders hit the highest reading going back all the way to 2004. This suggests that the strength shown by the manufacturing sector throughout 2017 should carry over into 2018. And now that Washington has made good on tax reform (and regulatory reform looks likely), the pace of growth could pick up even further. In other news this morning, construction spending rose 0.8% in November (+1.2% including revisions to prior months). A jump in home building and the construction of offices more than offset a decline in work on manufacturing facilities. In housing news from last week, the national Case-Shiller home price index increased 0.7% in October and is up 6.2% from a year ago. By contrast, home prices rose 5.2% in the year ending in October 2016, so we've had some acceleration in home price increases in the past year. In the last twelve months, price gains have been led by Seattle and Las Vegas. The recent tax bill, which trims state and local tax deductions as well as mortgage interest deductibility for new loans, should be a headwind for price gains in the next few years. However, given short housing supplies and an economy gaining strength, we're still likely to see solid national average price gains, just not as fast as the past year and with the gains tilted toward lower tax states.

Crafty_Dog

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EStimate for Q4 growth rate
« Reply #1270 on: January 26, 2018, 10:02:06 AM »
The First Estimate for Q4 Real GDP Growth is 2.6% at an Annual Rate To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 1/26/2018

The first estimate for Q4 real GDP growth is 2.6% at an annual rate, below the consensus expected 3.0%. Real GDP is up 2.5% from a year ago.

The largest positive contribution to the Q4 real GDP growth rate was consumer spending. The largest drags were net exports and inventories.

Combined, personal consumption, business investment, and home building were up at a 4.6% annual rate in Q4 and 3.3% in the past year.

The GDP price index rose at a 2.4% annual rate in Q4 and is up 1.9% from a year ago. Nominal GDP – real GDP plus inflation – rose at a 5.0% rate in Q4, is up 4.4% from a year ago, and up at a 3.9% annual rate from two years ago.

Implications: The headline growth rate of 2.6% for fourth quarter real GDP and 2.5% for 2017 make the economy look like it's still a Plow Horse, but the details of the report show it's not. The parts of GDP that are the most volatile from quarter to quarter – international trade and inventories – were major drags on growth in Q4. We like to follow "core" GDP, which we define as consumer spending, business investment in equipment, structures, and intellectual property, as well as home building. Adjusted for inflation, core GDP grew at a 4.6% annual rate in Q4, the fastest pace since 2014, and rose 3.3% in 2017. Consumer spending was very strong in Q4, in part due to the surge in auto sales late in the year to replace vehicles destroyed in Hurricanes Harvey and Irma. Meanwhile, home building grew at an 11.7% annual rate, the fastest in over a year. Business investment in equipment grew at an 11.4% rate, the fastest since 2014. We expect real GDP to grow at a 3%+ rate in 2018, which would be the first year that's happened since 2005. In particular, the tax cuts enacted in late December and the deregulation coming from Washington, DC are going to help spur faster growth. Meanwhile, today's report makes it even clearer the Federal Reserve is behind the curve. Nominal GDP – real GDP growth plus inflation – grew at a 5.0% annual rate in Q4, was up 4.4% in 2017, and up at a 3.9% annual rate in the past two years. All of these are much higher than the Fed's current target for short-term rates of 1.375%. The Fed has been saying it will raise short-term rates three times in 2018. The investor consensus has recently come around to that view as well, but thinks the odds of two rate hikes is higher than the odds of four. We think the opposite, that if the Fed doesn't raise rates three times in 2018, it will be four hikes, not two.

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US Economics, the stock market, Martin Feldstein:
« Reply #1271 on: January 29, 2018, 11:06:05 AM »
https://www.wsj.com/articles/stocks-are-headed-for-a-fall-1516145624

Mr. Bernanke explained (in 2009) that this “unconventional” monetary policy was designed to encourage an asset-substitution effect. Investors would shift out of bonds and into equities and real estate. The resulting rise in household wealth would push up consumer spending and strengthen the economic recovery.

The strategy eventually worked as Mr. Bernanke had predicted.
...
When interest rates rise back to normal levels, share prices are also likely to revert to previous norms.
--------------------
You have been warned.

Martin Feldstein was chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under President Reagan, is a professor at Harvard and a member of the Journal’s board of contributors.

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1272 on: January 31, 2018, 07:04:20 AM »
Rush was right on.  Said the sell off yesterday was a bunch of crap with people taking profits and to try to make a stink about Trump and it would go right back up the next day on the self made buy opportunity

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1273 on: January 31, 2018, 11:15:19 AM »
I thought it was about the bond market?

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1275 on: February 06, 2018, 06:40:13 AM »
It's now officially Trump's economy. Up until yesterday, it was Obama's. All the bad years when Obama was president? Those were Bush's, of course!

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Wesbury: Just a correction
« Reply #1276 on: February 09, 2018, 11:45:43 AM »
As always, Wesbury is articulate, but is he addressing the spending implications longer term of ending the Sequester and Trillion dollar deficits as far as the eye can see and the effects of all this on interest rates, the cost of servicing a $20+T debt-- now at $400B? per year?!?

=================================
This is Just a Correction...

Last year US stock markets experienced the least volatile year on record, hitting new highs seemingly every day. Then came the tax reform bill to end 2017, and a huge January with the S&P 500 rising 5.6%. Investors, especially individuals who finally became convinced that the rally would go on, piled in. It wasn't massive 1999-style euphoria, but many investors finally succumbed to the fear of missing out.

And as if on cue, sentiment (but not fundamentals) shifted, and stock markets gave up their 2018 gains. The S&P 500 - as of the close on February 8th - was down 10.2% from its all-time closing high set on January 26th.

Everyone wants to find a "reason" for a correction, to explain what happened, especially when it takes them by surprise. And these days the prime culprit, according to the financial press, is interest rates heading higher. Some attribute this increase to rising wage pressures and inflation, some blame ballooning budget deficits. But beneath it all is a widely-held belief that stock market gains have been propped up by easy money and low interest rates – a sugar high.

Our answer to this: No! The stock market has been driven higher by earnings growth. In fact, given the recent downdraft in stock prices and the simultaneous increase in earnings estimates, the S&P 500 is now trading at roughly 16.7 times 2018 earnings estimates. That's not high by historical standards. In fact, that is lower than the 30 year average of 19.4.

More importantly, we have been expecting interest rates to go higher and have urged the Fed to raise rates more quickly. Given the pace of economic growth, the Fed is a long way from being tight. At the same time, economic data has been strengthening and earnings are booming. With 337 S&P 500 companies having reported Q4 earnings as of the 8th of February, 76.9% have beaten estimates, and earnings are up 17.0% from a year ago. This double-digit earnings growth is forecast to continue through 2018, even with higher interest rates. Corporate balance sheets are stronger than they have been in decades, spending is accelerating and the recent tax cut is an unambiguous positive.

Corrections scare the snot out of people. For many, who thought markets only go up, they feel like the end of the world. This is especially true when pundits start trying to explain the drop in stock prices by arguing that there are fundamental problems with the economy. This time is no different. But, in our opinion, this is an emotional correction, not a fundamental one. The US is not entering a recession, and higher interest rates over the next few years do not spell doom for the economy or markets.

In fact, because of better policy, economic growth this year looks set to accelerate to 3%+ (we are forecasting 4% real GDP growth in Q1). That is why interest rates are rising, because of better than expected economic growth. This is a good thing! Not a reason to sell stocks. In this case higher interest rates are a byproduct of a stronger economy, not the unwinding of QE or higher deficits.

Retail sales rose 0.4% in December, are up 9.0% annualized over the past six months and are up 5.5% year over year. January's ISM Manufacturing and Non-Manufacturing indexes just hit the highest readings for a January in seven and 14 years respectively. In January, hourly earnings were up 2.9% from a year ago, the best reading since 2009. At the same time, initial claims have been below 300,000 for 153 consecutive weeks. Private payrolls were up 196,000 in January, and the unemployment rate is down to 4.1% and headed lower. And no, this is not a "part-time" recovery. In the past twelve months, full-time employment has grown by 2.39 million jobs while part-time employment is down 92,000! With 5.8 million unfilled jobs and quit rates at the highest levels of the recovery, there should be little question why the Fed continues to hike rates.

We use a Capitalized Profits Model (the government's measure of profits from the GDP reports divided by interest rates) to measure fair value for stocks. Our traditional measure, using a current 10-year Treasury yield of 2.85% suggests the S&P 500 is still massively undervalued. The model needs a 10-year yield of 3.9% today to conclude that the S&P 500 is already at fair value with current profits. Fair value, not over-valued.

What we focus on are the Four Pillars of Prosperity: Monetary Policy, Tax Policy, Trade Policy, and Spending & Regulation. So, let's see where those stand:

1. Monetary Policy – The Fed is still easy and will be for the foreseeable future. Remember, there are still over $2 trillion in excess reserves!

2. Tax Policy – Tax policy has improved dramatically on the margin, a tailwind for growth and earnings.

3. Trade Policy - The protectionist talk coming from Washington is worrisome, but, so far, there has been much more hot air than substance. In fact, total trade (exports + imports) sits at record highs.

4. Spending & Regulation – This is a mixed, but still positive, bag. On the regulation front, 2017 saw the biggest decline in regulation, at least since the Reagan-era, and possibly in history. That's great news for growth. The spending side is still a concern. The recent budget deal reached in the U.S. Senate boosts spending at least as fast as GDP growth over the next couple of years. That's not a recipe for long-term economic acceleration, but also not an immediate threat to growth.

The bottom line shows that the fundamentals of the economy are strengthening. Higher interest rates are a byproduct of a stronger economy. And, out of the four potential threats to the economy, only one is moderately negative.

It's not often you get a substantial pullback in the market when both economic and earnings growth are strengthening. Stay calm. Stay invested in equities. Don't fight the fundamentals.

Brian S. Wesbury - Chief Economist
Robert Stein, CFA – Deputy Chief Economist
« Last Edit: February 09, 2018, 12:25:00 PM by Crafty_Dog »

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Re: Wesbury: Just a correction
« Reply #1277 on: February 09, 2018, 12:21:48 PM »
http://humanevents.com/2008/02/25/brian-wesbury-sees-no-recession-ahead/



As always, Wesbury is articulate, but is he addressing the spending implications longer term of ending the Sequester and Trillion dollar deficits as far as the eye can see and the effects of all this on interest rates, the cost of servicing a $20+T debt?

=================================
This is Just a Correction...

Last year US stock markets experienced the least volatile year on record, hitting new highs seemingly every day. Then came the tax reform bill to end 2017, and a huge January with the S&P 500 rising 5.6%. Investors, especially individuals who finally became convinced that the rally would go on, piled in. It wasn't massive 1999-style euphoria, but many investors finally succumbed to the fear of missing out.

And as if on cue, sentiment (but not fundamentals) shifted, and stock markets gave up their 2018 gains. The S&P 500 - as of the close on February 8th - was down 10.2% from its all-time closing high set on January 26th.

Everyone wants to find a "reason" for a correction, to explain what happened, especially when it takes them by surprise. And these days the prime culprit, according to the financial press, is interest rates heading higher. Some attribute this increase to rising wage pressures and inflation, some blame ballooning budget deficits. But beneath it all is a widely-held belief that stock market gains have been propped up by easy money and low interest rates – a sugar high.

Our answer to this: No! The stock market has been driven higher by earnings growth. In fact, given the recent downdraft in stock prices and the simultaneous increase in earnings estimates, the S&P 500 is now trading at roughly 16.7 times 2018 earnings estimates. That's not high by historical standards. In fact, that is lower than the 30 year average of 19.4.

More importantly, we have been expecting interest rates to go higher and have urged the Fed to raise rates more quickly. Given the pace of economic growth, the Fed is a long way from being tight. At the same time, economic data has been strengthening and earnings are booming. With 337 S&P 500 companies having reported Q4 earnings as of the 8th of February, 76.9% have beaten estimates, and earnings are up 17.0% from a year ago. This double-digit earnings growth is forecast to continue through 2018, even with higher interest rates. Corporate balance sheets are stronger than they have been in decades, spending is accelerating and the recent tax cut is an unambiguous positive.

Corrections scare the snot out of people. For many, who thought markets only go up, they feel like the end of the world. This is especially true when pundits start trying to explain the drop in stock prices by arguing that there are fundamental problems with the economy. This time is no different. But, in our opinion, this is an emotional correction, not a fundamental one. The US is not entering a recession, and higher interest rates over the next few years do not spell doom for the economy or markets.

In fact, because of better policy, economic growth this year looks set to accelerate to 3%+ (we are forecasting 4% real GDP growth in Q1). That is why interest rates are rising, because of better than expected economic growth. This is a good thing! Not a reason to sell stocks. In this case higher interest rates are a byproduct of a stronger economy, not the unwinding of QE or higher deficits.

Retail sales rose 0.4% in December, are up 9.0% annualized over the past six months and are up 5.5% year over year. January's ISM Manufacturing and Non-Manufacturing indexes just hit the highest readings for a January in seven and 14 years respectively. In January, hourly earnings were up 2.9% from a year ago, the best reading since 2009. At the same time, initial claims have been below 300,000 for 153 consecutive weeks. Private payrolls were up 196,000 in January, and the unemployment rate is down to 4.1% and headed lower. And no, this is not a "part-time" recovery. In the past twelve months, full-time employment has grown by 2.39 million jobs while part-time employment is down 92,000! With 5.8 million unfilled jobs and quit rates at the highest levels of the recovery, there should be little question why the Fed continues to hike rates.

We use a Capitalized Profits Model (the government's measure of profits from the GDP reports divided by interest rates) to measure fair value for stocks. Our traditional measure, using a current 10-year Treasury yield of 2.85% suggests the S&P 500 is still massively undervalued. The model needs a 10-year yield of 3.9% today to conclude that the S&P 500 is already at fair value with current profits. Fair value, not over-valued.

What we focus on are the Four Pillars of Prosperity: Monetary Policy, Tax Policy, Trade Policy, and Spending & Regulation. So, let's see where those stand:

1. Monetary Policy – The Fed is still easy and will be for the foreseeable future. Remember, there are still over $2 trillion in excess reserves!

2. Tax Policy – Tax policy has improved dramatically on the margin, a tailwind for growth and earnings.

3. Trade Policy - The protectionist talk coming from Washington is worrisome, but, so far, there has been much more hot air than substance. In fact, total trade (exports + imports) sits at record highs.

4. Spending & Regulation – This is a mixed, but still positive, bag. On the regulation front, 2017 saw the biggest decline in regulation, at least since the Reagan-era, and possibly in history. That's great news for growth. The spending side is still a concern. The recent budget deal reached in the U.S. Senate boosts spending at least as fast as GDP growth over the next couple of years. That's not a recipe for long-term economic acceleration, but also not an immediate threat to growth.

The bottom line shows that the fundamentals of the economy are strengthening. Higher interest rates are a byproduct of a stronger economy. And, out of the four potential threats to the economy, only one is moderately negative.

It's not often you get a substantial pullback in the market when both economic and earnings growth are strengthening. Stay calm. Stay invested in equities. Don't fight the fundamentals.

Brian S. Wesbury - Chief Economist
Robert Stein, CFA – Deputy Chief Economist


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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1278 on: February 09, 2018, 12:26:40 PM »
That is some wicked snark there GM!

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OTOH
« Reply #1279 on: February 09, 2018, 12:34:32 PM »
By Adam Bell for the Australian Institute of International Affairs

Following Wall Street's lead, this week has seen dramatic plunges across share markets the world over. Seemingly paradoxically, the fall was sparked by good economic news: US wages, and consequently inflation, were finally growing after years in the doldrums. Interest rate rises are likely on the way. Speculation is now rampant as to what is really going on: is this merely a correction amid record stock price highs? Or are we witnessing the beginning of the next big financial crash?
The Birth of the Bubble

Recent growth predictions certainly belie the more pessimistic outlook. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) began the year by announcing it was revising global growth figures upwards. Although the forecasted economic improvement was predicated on a Republican tax bill that the IMF deems damaging to the US economy in the long-run, it nevertheless predicted the tax bill would have a positive immediate impact. In the short run, it was deemed likely to galvanise an already promising global economy experiencing the "broadest synchronised global growth upsurge since 2010".

At face value, such a proclamation does indeed seem justified. Europe is witnessing its best economic conditions in a decade, with GDP growth hitting 2.5 per cent in 2017. The American economy is also proving to be robust, and is facing its lowest level of unemployment in 17 years. China, meanwhile, has continued to confound predictions of economic slowdown by increasing its GDP growth in 2017. Taken together, such news seems to indicate a global economy finally strengthening after years of weak growth following the Global Financial Crisis (GFC).

Unfortunately, as the recent share selloff hints at, a latent crisis lies beneath all the good news. While the return to growth represents the beginning of a long-awaited recovery, it is also a harbinger of the end to an extraordinary era of monetary policy. To understand why, it is necessary to understand what this policy entailed. When financial markets froze and the global economy tanked during the GFC, central banks embraced a little-tested, controversial measure known as quantitative easing to stimulate moribund economies.
Easy Money

Quantitative easing involves the mass purchase of safe assets (mostly government bonds) by central banks to inject liquidity into financial markets and lower the cost of lending. When banks effectively ceased lending and economic activity collapsed during the GFC, quantitative easing functioned to restore confidence and boost demand. It was used in Europe, the US and Japan, and did indeed prove effective; combined with massive government spending programs, the world economy halted its tailspin faster than it did during the most recent comparable financial collapse, the Great Depression.

The problem, however, is that quantitative easing was supposed to be a short-term measure; instead, it has persisted for a decade. The post-GFC era has been one of tepid growth and low inflation. Fearing that withdrawing their exceptional support might undermine already feeble growth, central banks have continued massive bond-buying programs to prop up shaky financial markets. This is most clearly seen via the balance sheets of the American, Japanese and European central banks: their assets grew from just over USD$3 trillion (AUD$3.8 trillion) in 2007 to around USD$15 trillion today.

The consequences of this have been profound. Although it has largely taken until 2018 for a real recovery to get underway, recent years have seen asset and equity prices skyrocket to record highs. This has been most apparent throughout global stock markets, but can also be seen in the booming housing prices of the West and unwaveringly high bond prices. The surge in prices can be explained via economics 101: demand has massively increased as cheap money has sloshed throughout financial systems, while the supply of assets has remained constrained.
A Dangerous Addiction

The reason for this constraint? Look to a phenomenon known as secular stagnation. Recently popularised by former US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, secular stagnation posits that the long-term growth potential for developed countries shifts permanently lower due to a variety of limiting factors. Chief among these today are ageing populations and stagnant productivity. Importantly, lower growth means diminished prospects for profitable investments. This, combined with endless money-printing, has created the dangerous asset price inflation that we see today. More money has gone after less opportunities, leading to what Summers' predicted would be "a prolonged period in which satisfactory growth can only be achieved by unsustainable financial conditions".

Such unsustainable financial conditions were pressingly highlighted by Professor William White, a chief economist at the OECD, during the recent World Economic Forum in Davos. Professor White painted a dangerous picture of global finance. He pointed out that global debt levels have vaulted well beyond the levels seen prior to the GFC, with debt fuelled by quantitative easing in the West flowing into risky investments in developing markets. Furthermore, he asserts that Western credit markets are showing signs of deterioration daily, as repayment problems begin to emerge across a variety of unsustainable debts instruments issued in markets desperate for decent returns. Most disturbingly, he declared that market indicators appeared strikingly similar to just before the collapse of Lehman Brothers at the height of the GFC.

It is not surprising that financial markets caught serious jitters when faced with the prospect of the end to quantitative easing and a rise in interest rates. But while the story of stock market falls is undoubtedly ominous, the more daunting concern pertains to what might happen next. The world's weak recovery from the GFC has seen government debt levels rise almost unanimously throughout the world's economies. Central banks have kept interest rates near zero while feverishly propping up financial markets. If a financial crisis were to emerge, the traditional tools of fiscal stimulus and expansionary monetary policy would be largely unavailable to much of the developed world. Despite good news to start the year, dark clouds loom over the global economy in 2018.

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1280 on: February 09, 2018, 01:16:10 PM »
That is some wicked snark there GM!

Here is the problem. We all know that there are massive, and frankly unfixable problems with our political-economic system. At some point, the distortions and debt won't.be able to be postponed. Trump bought us time, but there is no political will to address the real issues.

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1281 on: February 10, 2018, 07:28:02 AM »
Something positive on Wesbury, imports should be added to exports for economic value, not subtracted and Wesbury does exactly that:  "...total trade (exports + imports) sits at record levels."

But trade protectionism is more than a risk with trump since he promised a lot and has delivered a little so far.  More expensive washing machines helps us how?

Of the other pillars, monetary policy still puts us at high risk.  What we sowed for nearly decades we will someday reap.  Someday might be 2018...   Our insane, short sighted monetary policy of expansionism, zero interest rate policy, etc. gave us artificial stimulus of perhaps little or no value but the consequence of ridding ourselves of that policy abuse could be costly in the extreme.  As interest rates go up and they must, what happens?  Stocks come down?  Wealth effect goes down. Bonds become more attractive. Cost of debt goes up.  Who has a lot of debt?  [America].  Real estate values come down. For every $x/mo a buyer is willing to pay for a certain house at 3% interest, what happens to the purchase price at 6% interest if same buyer is willing to pay or constrained by the same monthly payment?  Price goes down with every quarter point move, all other things equal.  We learned in 2008-2009 real estate is part of the economy. A big part of America's wealth is in real estate values.  The raising of near zero rates is necessary, inevitable and beneficial.  Surviving it will be a tight rope walk.

The other pillars:  Deregulation, yes, Trump has done amazing things but just the low hanging fruit.  Some of the most brutal regulations lie at the state and especially local levels.  Our regulatory state and anti-entrepreneurial mentality is still a dominant force across the fruited plain.  Don't believe me?  Try opening a lemonade stand.

Taxes, yes, partial reform.  But most crucial for the economy tends to be the highest individual rates.  Those dropped from 39.6 to 37%, hardly at all while losing key deductions, not exactly unleashing 'animal spirits'.  Capital gains rates were not lowered and still taxed as ordinary income at the state level.  We still tax inflationary 'gains' as 'gains', talk about distortions!  

Spending, up and up.  And that is before Democrats take back Washington.  Government spending takes resources away from the private economy whether you tax to pay for them or not.

Debt, up and up.  Cost of debt with rising interest rates, up and way up.  

If spending makes the deficit go up, tax rate cuts will be blamed.  Leftism still controls the media, academia, and nearly all messaging, except one loose nut with a twitter account.  Said of George W Bush, he gave supply side economics a bad name - without trying it.

Paying for the $13 trillion direct cost of the Obama Presidency, $9 trillion new debt plus $4 trillion in quantitative expansion... that cost hits the economy when? How?  What about the other damage?  75% of Mexican immigrants are on some kind of welfare, just reported.  A new generation or two of Americans were taught to be recipients in a redistributive economy, permanently out of the workforce.  We have entire communities where 50% of adults don't work.  More Americans than ever dependent on government for healthcare.  And we look to make more voters out of people who came here for benefits.  

There are some good trend lines emerging, but there are some enormous, accumulated problems unaddressed.

GM:  "Trump bought us time..."  Also the Republican majorities in the House and Senate, but how was that time used?  Chasing shiny objects or making real reforms?  Mostly the former and their time of holding majorities could be ending.

What brought the economy down last time?  The election of the Pelosi-Reid congress signaled the shift in policies coming and scared capital to the exits.  The economic damage of anti-capitalism was not at all limited to those invested in the markets.
« Last Edit: February 10, 2018, 07:41:55 AM by DougMacG »

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WSJ: The Bernanke Correction
« Reply #1282 on: February 10, 2018, 09:56:11 AM »
The Bernanke Correction
Asset prices are adjusting as financial repression ends.
By The Editorial Board
Feb. 9, 2018 7:13 p.m. ET


The stock market continued its wild swings Friday, finishing up for the day but still concluding the worst week in nearly a decade. Look for more such gyrations as investors adapt to the return of market-based interest rates.

In his typical way, Donald Trump lumbered into part of the truth this week with a tweet. “In the ‘old days,’ when good news was reported, the Stock Market would go up,” he wrote. “Today, when good news is reported, the Stock Market goes down. Big mistake, and we have so much good (great) news about the economy!”

He’s referring to the paradox that stock prices fell despite a strengthening U.S. and global economy. But Mr. Trump is missing that faster growth requires a fundamental shift in the monetary policy of the past decade. In particular this means the looming end to the financial repression that the Federal Reserve has been practicing since the financial panic. In that sense this is the Ben Bernanke correction, as the Fed and other central banks unwind the former Fed chairman’s unprecedented monetary experiment.

For nearly a decade the Fed has intervened in financial markets to repress the long end of the bond market. It scooped up the bulk of new long Treasury bonds, as the European and Japanese central banks later did in their economies. The idea was to push investors into riskier assets like real estate, junk bonds and stocks as they sought greater returns that they couldn’t get in Treasurys. The policy worked as asset prices rose, though it did far less for the real economy and workers without assets.

Janet Yellen maintained the Bernanke policy as long as she could, and only recently has the Fed started to unwind its asset purchases and raise interest rates. Europe and Japan still haven’t begun, but faster growth suggests the end of the Bernanke era beckons there too. This is what investors are anticipating, even as they see the good news that economic growth is accelerating.

Volatility and interest-rate risk are thus returning to equities. This doesn’t mean all of the stock gains in recent years have been an artificial “sugar high.” Higher earnings have also been important. But it does mean that asset prices will reset based on the anticipation of more normal monetary policy and the return of real interest rates.

Keep in mind that no one really knows how this will turn out because there is literally no precedent for the monetary policy of the past decade. Mr. Bernanke and Ms. Yellen have left new Chairman Jay Powell the difficult task of reversing their Fed policy without tanking the economy. Eventually asset prices will find a new level that reflects economic fundamentals, but the process may be messy, as this week suggests.

The good news is that U.S. economic fundamentals are as strong as they’ve been since 2005, and maybe 1999. And in that sense the Trump -GOP policy mix of tax reform and deregulation is well timed. The Trump policies and faster growth around the world are crucial if we are going to keep the expansion going and live through the end of financial repression. We need supply-side incentives to drive growth to survive the Bernanke-Yellen monetary correction.

One irony of the current moment is that the Keynesians who presided over nearly a decade of secular stagnation are now worried that the economy is “overheating.” Then again, they said faster growth wasn’t possible, so they almost have to dismiss it.

Mr. Trump’s instinct as a real-estate guy is always to want lower interest rates. But the more he demands low rates amid faster economic growth, the higher rates he is likely to see and sooner than he imagines. Faster economic growth and a tight labor market will mean rising wages for the working men and women who elevated him to the White House. Stocks will eventually adjust and follow a growing economy, and Mr. Trump needs to let the Fed continue on its path back to normal.

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Wesbury: Plowhorse lurking in the barn
« Reply #1283 on: February 12, 2018, 10:38:34 AM »
________________________________________
Snatching Slow Growth from the Jaws of Fast Growth To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 2/12/2018

The U.S. economy continues to be lifted by an incredible wave of new technology.  Fracking, 3-D printing, smartphones, apps, and the cloud have boosted productivity and profits.  Yet taxes, regulation and spending all increased markedly in the past decade, raising the burden of government and dragging down the real GDP growth rate to a modest 2.2% from mid-2009 to early 2017.

Then 2017 saw the tides start to shift. Regulation was cut dramatically and the U.S. saw the most sweeping corporate tax reform in history.  Guess what?  Growth picked up to almost 3% annualized in the last three quarters of 2017 and real GDP looks set for about 4% growth in the first quarter of 2018.

But the dream of getting back to long-term 4% growth died this week in a bipartisan orgy of government spending.  Congress lifted the budget caps on "discretionary" (non-entitlement) spending by about $300 billion over the next two years, and spending is now set to rise by 10% this year.

No, this won't kill the economy tomorrow (or this year), but unless the Congress gets control of federal spending, the benefits from the tax cuts and deregulation will be short-lived.

Many argued that making corporate tax cuts temporary would limit their effectiveness because corporations would not change their behavior.  So, what does a corporate CFO do now?  Trillion dollar deficits as far as the eye can see mean Congress has a reason – and an excuse - to raise tax rates in the future.  This doesn't mean they're going back to 35%, but massive deficits will make it hard to sustain a 21% tax rate over time.  In other words, while Congress passed permanent tax cuts, it now makes them almost impossible to sustain. 

Every dollar the government spends must be either taxed or borrowed from the private sector.  The bigger the government, the smaller the private sector.  Not only does increased spending mean higher tax rates are expected in the future, but also a smaller private sector as it's forced to fund a bigger government.  It's the Spending that crowds out growth, not deficits themselves

Look, we get it.  The world is a dangerous place and we are sure there are parts of our military that need better funding.  But the government can't do everything.  If we need more spending on defense, those funds should be found by reducing spending elsewhere. Otherwise, eventually, the country won't be able to afford to defend itself, either. 

But, in order to reach the minimum of 60 votes needed in the US Senate, Republicans capitulated to Democrats demands for more non-military spending.  The result was a budget blow-out.

So, where does that leave us?  Optimistic about an acceleration in growth this year and 2019, which will help lift stock prices as well, but not as optimistic beyond that as we were before the budget deal.  The Plow Horse is not coming back overnight, but unless we get our fiscal house in order, it's still lurking in the barn.                             

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inflation over time
« Reply #1284 on: February 14, 2018, 06:07:08 AM »
I remember in the early 70s when making 30 K per annum was a sold salary and 100K was really wealthy.

This shows why those days are forever gone:

https://inflationdata.com/Inflation/Consumer_Price_Index/HistoricalCPI.aspx?reloaded=true

« Last Edit: February 14, 2018, 06:51:08 AM by Crafty_Dog »

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Wesbury: Inflation, interest rates, and stocks
« Reply #1285 on: February 15, 2018, 10:40:34 AM »
Wesbury has a superior record , , , for a rising market.  But as 2008 showed, he may have a blind spot in his mental map when it comes to recognizing a genuine downturn.

https://www.ftportfolios.com/Commentary/EconomicResearch/2018/2/15/inflation,-interest-rates,-and-stocks

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Wesbury: QE and its apologists
« Reply #1286 on: February 20, 2018, 11:50:10 AM »
Excellent work by Wesbury, but I do think he misses that artificially low rates caused vast capital flows into equities.

QE and Its Apologists To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 2/20/2018

On March 9, 2018, the bull market in U.S. stocks will celebrate its ninth anniversary. And, what we find most amazing is how few people truly understand it. To this day, in spite of massive increases in corporate earnings, many still think the market is one big "sugar high" – a bubble built on a sea of Quantitative Easing and government spending.

While passing mention is given to earnings (because they are impossible to ignore), conventional wisdom has clung to the mistaken story that QE, TARP, and government spending saved the economy from the abyss back in 2008-09.

A review of the facts shows the narrative that "Wall Street" – meaning capitalism and free markets – failed and government came to the rescue is simply not true.

Wall Street was not the driving force behind subprime mortgages. In his fabulous book, Hidden in Plain Sight, Peter Wallison showed that by 2008 Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and other government programs had sponsored 76% of all subprime debt – not "Wall Street." Everyone was playing with rattlesnakes and government was telling them it was OK to do so. But, when the snakes started biting, government blamed the private sector, capitalism and free markets.

At the same time, Wall Street did not cause the market and economy to collapse; it was overly strict mark-to-market accounting. Yes, leverage in the financial system was high, but mark-to-market accounting forced banks to write down many performing assets to illiquid market prices that had zero relationship to true value. Mark-to-market destroyed capital.

QE started in September 2008, TARP in October 2008, but the market didn't bottom until March 9, 2009, five months later. On that day in March, former U.S. Representative Barney Frank, of all people, promised to hold a hearing with the accounting board and SEC to force a change to the ill-advised accounting rule. The rule was changed and the stock market reversed course, with a return to economic growth not far behind.

Yes, the Fed did QE and, yes, the stock market went up while bond yields fell, but correlation is not causation. Stock markets fell after QE started, and rose after QE ended. Bond yields often rose during QE, fell when the Fed wasn't buying, and have increased since the Fed tapered and ended QE.

A preponderance of QE ended up as "excess reserves" in the banking system, which means it never turned into real money growth. That's why inflation never took off. Long-term bond yields fell, but this wasn't because the Fed was buying. Bond yields fell because the Fed promised to hold short-term rates down for a very long time. And as long-term rates are just a series of short-term rates, long term rates were pushed lower as well.

We know this is a very short explanation of what happened, but we bring it up because there are many who are now trying to use the stock market "correction" to revisit the wrongly-held narrative that the economy is one big QE-driven bubble. Or, they use the correction to cover their past support of QE and TARP. If the unwinding of QE actually hurts, then they can argue that QE helped in the first place.

So, they argue that rising bond yields are due to the Fed now selling bonds. But the Fed began its QE-unwind strategy months ago, and sticking to its plans hasn't changed a thing.

The key inflection point for bond yields wasn't when the Fed announced the unwinding of QE; it was Election Day 2016, when the 10-year yield ended the day at 1.9% while assuming the status quo, which meant more years of Plow Horse growth ahead. Since then, we've seen a series of policy changes, including tax cuts and deregulation, which have raised expectations for economic growth and inflation. As a result, yields have moved up.

Corporate earnings are rising rapidly, too, and the S&P 500 is now trading at roughly 17.5 times 2018 expected earnings. This is not a bubble, not even close. Earnings are up because technology is booming in a more politically-friendly environment for capitalism. And while it is hard to see productivity rising in the overall macro data, it is clear that profits and margins are up because productivity is rising rapidly in the private sector.

The sad thing about the story that QE saved the economy is that it undermines faith in free markets. Those who argue that unwinding QE is hurting the economy are, in unwitting fashion, supporting the view that capitalism is fragile, prone to bubbles and mistakes, and in need of government's guiding hand. This argument is now being made by both those who believe in big government and those who supposedly believe in free markets. No wonder investors are confused and fearful.

The good news is that QE did not lift the economy. Markets, technology and innovation did. And this realization is the key to understanding why unwinding QE is not a threat to the bull market.

Crafty_Dog

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February Mfg
« Reply #1287 on: March 01, 2018, 12:12:31 PM »
The ISM Manufacturing Index Rose to 60.8 in February To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 3/1/2018

The ISM Manufacturing Index rose to 60.8 in February, coming in well above the consensus expected 58.7. (Levels higher than 50 signal expansion; levels below 50 signal contraction.)

The major measures of activity were mixed in February, but all remain comfortably above 50, signaling growth. The employment index rose to 59.7 from 54.2 in January, while the supplier deliveries index increased to 61.1 from 59.1. The new orders index declined to 64.2 from 65.4, while the production index fell to 62.0 from 64.5 in January.

The prices paid index rose to 74.2 in February.

Implications: Factory activity is off to roaring start in 2018, with the ISM Manufacturing index rising to 60.8 in February, the highest reading since 2004. And the growth is broad-based, with fifteen of eighteen industries reported growth in February (two reported declines). While the two most forward-looking indices - new orders and production – both ticked lower in February (remember, levels above 50 signal expansion, so these lower readings represent continued growth, but at a slower pace than in recent months), they continue to shine with readings in the 60's and suggest that activity in the manufacturing sector should remain robust in the months ahead. The employment index showed the largest rise in February, moving to 59.7 from 54.2 in January. Pairing this with other indicators on the strength of the labor market suggests that employment growth picked up pace in February, though heavy snow in parts of the country may put a damper on next week's employment report. If it does, no need for concern. Look for a rebound in the employment data in the following months. Prices, meanwhile, rose in February to a reading of 74.2, the highest since mid-2011. A total of twenty-seven commodities were reported up in price, while no commodities showed declining costs. This serves as yet another sign that inflation is picking up pace as economic growth accelerates, and a signal to the Fed that four rate hikes in 2018 are not just appropriate, but warranted. In sum, the strength shown by the manufacturing sector throughout 2017 is carrying over into 2018. In other news this morning, construction spending was unchanged in January (+0.8% including revisions to prior months). A rise in spending on highways & streets and housing offset declines in power projects and commercial construction.

Crafty_Dog

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January personal income
« Reply #1288 on: March 01, 2018, 12:14:10 PM »
second post

Personal Income Rose 0.4% in January To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 3/1/2018

Personal income rose 0.4% in January versus a consensus expected 0.3%. Personal consumption increased 0.2% in January, matching consensus expectations. Personal income is up 3.8% in the past year, while spending is up 4.4%.

Disposable personal income (income after taxes) rose 0.9% in January and is up 4.0% from a year ago. The gain in January was led by a drop in personal taxes and a rise in private sector wages and salaries as well as government transfers.

The overall PCE deflator (consumer inflation) rose 0.4% in January and is up 1.7% versus a year ago. The "core" PCE deflator, which excludes food and energy, rose 0.3% in January and is up 1.5% in the past year.

After adjusting for inflation, "real" consumption declined 0.1% in January but is up 2.7% from a year ago.

Implications: Consumers enjoyed a strong start to 2018, as impacts from the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act begin to materialize. Personal income increased 0.4% in January, led by rising wages and salaries in the private sector, and has seen a healthy 3.8% gain over the past twelve months. This was aided by an estimated $30 billion in one-time bonuses paid out by companies that see the newly lowered corporate tax rates boosting their bottom line. And it's not just bonuses, the Bureau of Economic Analysis estimates that the tax cuts reduced personal taxes by a whopping $115.5 billion at an annual rate, pushing after-tax income higher by 0.9% in January. Government transfers also jumped in January, as the 2% cost-of-living adjustment took effect for Social Security beneficiaries in January. But this is a one-time bump, so while government transfers rose a significant 1.3% in January, month-to-month growth will return to more normal levels in the months ahead. And while government transfers are up 3% in the past year, total income has grown at a faster 3.8% during the same period (and private sector wages and salaries rose 5.0%!), so transfer payments are making up a smaller portion of income than a year ago. On the spending side, personal consumption increased 0.2% in January and is up 4.4% in the past year. Some have bemoaned this rise in spending, suggesting that consumers are digging themselves into a hole. But while consumer debts are at a record high in raw dollar terms, so are consumer assets. Comparing the two, debts are the lowest relative to assets since 2000 (and that's back during the internet bubble when asset values were artificially high), and falling. Meanwhile, the financial obligations ratio – which compares debt and other recurring payments to income – is still relatively low. In other words, consumers still have plenty of room to increase spending. On the inflation front, the overall PCE deflator rose 0.4% in January and is up 1.7% in the past year. "Core" prices, which exclude food and energy, are accelerating, up at a 2.1% annual rate in the past three months versus a 1.5% gain the past year, and provide clear backing for the Fed to raise rates four times this year. On the jobs front, initial jobless claims declined 10,000 last week to 210,000, while continuing claims rose 57,000 to 1.931 million. Initial claims are now the lowest since 1969, so look for another solid jobs report in February, although heavy snow in parts of the country might put some temporary downward pressure on payrolls for the month. If so, don't fall into the trap of thinking the good times are over. Job gains should rebound in the following months.

DougMacG

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Re: US Economics, Feb Job growth beats expectation
« Reply #1289 on: March 07, 2018, 08:37:37 AM »
I thought we were already at "full employment".
https://www.cnbc.com/2018/03/07/adp-us-private-sector-february-2018.html
Private-sector jobs grow by 235,000 in February, vs 195,000 expected

Watching quickly for positive results from the tax rate cuts before new trade laws collapse the economy.  Let's see what happens with federal revenues. https://www.fiscal.treasury.gov/fsreports/rpt/mthTreasStmt/current.htm

DougMacG

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One important stat missing from the previous February economics reports:
"More than 800,000 Americans joined the labor force in February, according to the report, most bypassing unemployment and jumping straight into jobs. It was the largest one-month increase in the labor pool since 1983, outside months that included one-time Census hiring."
http://www.morningstar.com/news/dow-jones/TDJNDN_201803097275/us-hiring-surges-with-313000-jobs-unemployment-flatupdate.print.html

1983? That was the year that Reagan's phased-in tax rate cuts went fully into effect.

Where else is it optional to work?  We were at "full employment" according to credentialled economists, and then 800,000 people entered the workforce in one month.  I thought the people out of the workforce were children, elderly, retired, disabled.  No, welcome to 2018 in the developed world, being out of the workforce on public subsidy is a lifestyle choice.

What policy makers and analysts ignore as they see our deficit and debt as permanent is that disincentives to work and invest are big contributors to the demand for services.  Raise the participation rate in the economy, to invest, to work or to be productively self employed and the number of people on government programs and the cost of those programs can go down.  We will watch and see on that part.



DougMacG

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Re: US Economics, CBO raises 2018 growth forecast to 3.3%
« Reply #1293 on: April 12, 2018, 08:43:08 AM »
Even without dynamic scoring, CBO is starting to admit that growth policies might cause economic growth.

https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/115th-congress-2017-2018/reports/53651-outlook.pdf

3.3% growth, up from 2.4% in Obama's later years, is roughly the breakeven point of what tax reform needs to achieve to pay for itself.  To sustain that growth is another matter.

Growth over 3% is needed for Republicans to have any chance of holding Congress.  Assuming that winter was a bit lackluster, the next two quarters need to be great news and public sentiment coming into the November elections or the House will turn to the other side and the Republican agenda, if there was one, will be ended.

Unmentioned by most pundits is that (lack of) GDP growth determined the last election more than anything to do with either specific candidate.  Lack of growth made it an uphill fight for the outgoing President's party to hold the White House, no matter who the nominees would be.  Nate Silver warned of over-relying on that indicator, but he still lists it first as a factor before all the distractions emerged.
https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/clinton-begins-the-2016-campaign-and-its-a-toss-up/

Real GDP growth in the quarters coming into Reagan's reelection ranged from 4.0 to 9.4%.  We could use a some of that right now.
http://www.data360.org/dsg.aspx?Data_Set_Group_Id=274&count=all


DougMacG

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Re: US Growth rate up, way up?
« Reply #1294 on: April 15, 2018, 09:45:47 AM »
Very, very slowly the MSM will have to start covering what we already had here on the forum.  )  The is IBD, it may take a year to get to NBC, CBS, CNN...

https://www.investors.com/politics/editorials/trump-tax-cuts-revenues-deficits-paying-for-themselves/
It's Official: Trump Tax Cuts Are Boosting Growth And Mostly Paying For Themselves

"Last June, the CBO said GDP growth for 2018 would be just 2%. Now it figures growth will be 3.3% — a significant upward revision."

That is a 65% increase in growth rate in a 19 trillion dollar economy?  Yes, I would say that is significant!

Who knew?  Who even knows now?  With Reagan, they never did widely report it; it was just so apparent that everyone knew, in 49 states at least.
« Last Edit: April 15, 2018, 01:14:49 PM by DougMacG »

Crafty_Dog

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Changewave Alliance: Consumer confidence declining
« Reply #1295 on: April 26, 2018, 07:55:23 AM »
Several Charts in the original- which do not print here:
===========================================

I. Consumer Confidence and Expectations Rapidly Deteriorate

Overall consumer spending had been gaining momentum the past two months, but ChangeWave’s latest survey results show a dip in discretionary spending over the next 90 days. Despite this decline, these are the second-strongest April readings in eight years.

That said, there are two important cautionary signs: both consumer expectations for the overall direction of the US economy and confidence in the stock market are registering strong declines for the third consecutive survey. In addition, we’re seeing a further softening of the jobs market this month and renewed negative pressures from global economic conditions.

ChangeWave’s April Consumer Spending survey consisted of 1,584 primarily North American respondents from 451 Research’s Leading Indicator panel. The survey was conducted April 4-20, 2018.

Dip in Consumer Spending

A total of 31% of respondents report they’ll spend more over the next 90 days than they did during the same period a year ago, while 19% say they’ll spend less – a net 4 point decline from March. For context, our April 2017 survey registered a net 5 point uptick from the previous survey, coming off three consecutive months of expansion in spending.
 
Individual Spending Categories. This pullback is affecting retail spending categories, most of which are unchanged. However, two categories are improved.  Spending on Travel/Vacation is showing a seasonal increase – up 3 points from March as well as year-over-year, while Household Repairs/ Improvements (up 1 point) has improved for the fourth consecutive month.

Expectations and Confidence Continue to Slide

Consumer Expectations. Nearly one-third (32%) of respondents believe the overall direction of the US economy will improve over the next 90 days, while 28% think it will worsen – a net 16 point decline. This is the third consecutive survey with a significant decline in expectations. The picture is considerably more negative compared to a year ago, with a net -20 point change. 
 
Stock Market Confidence. More than half (53%) say they’re less confident in the US stock market now than they were 90 days ago, and only 9% report they’re more confident – a net 20 point drop from previously. As with expectations, this is the third consecutive decline in consumer confidence, and the weakest April reading ever recorded in our survey.
 
The 451 Take

VoCUL’s most recent Consumer Spending survey shows a pullback in spending going forward, following two months of improvements. Overall spending remains positive despite a dip this month. Moreover, these are the second-strongest April readings in eight years.

This downtick in spending is impacting several retail categories, with most unchanged this month. But spending at major retailers remains solid, with many seeing slight upticks. Online giant Amazon continues to lead all competitors, while each month brings news of retail chains closing brick-and-mortar stores.

This month the US Supreme Court is hearing arguments in favor of imposing sales tax on all online purchases rather than only in states where the retailer has physical stores. But it is unlikely this will have a significant impact on online shopping as many consumers will continue shopping online lured by its convenience and easy comparison shopping for the lowest cost. And Amazon continues to dominate, despite the fact that it started charging sales tax a year ago.

It’s been a bumpy few months for the economy, with both expectations and confidence declining for the third consecutive survey. The year started with sweeping new tax reform legislation, and in February, the US stock market experienced a correction. Also in February, the Federal Reserve raised interest rates, but on a positive note, it has not increased concerns over inflation nor has it caused a significant negative impact on discretionary spending.

In other cautionary findings, the current state of the global economy is having a negative impact on spending, as one in five indicate they’ll be decreasing their spending as a result of global economic issues. And there’s been a softening of the jobs market for the second consecutive survey.

DougMacG

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Re: US Economics, 1st Qtr 2018 preliminary results our tomorrow
« Reply #1296 on: April 26, 2018, 07:36:15 PM »
The preliminary number doesn't tend to be very accurate but it will be a big talking point for opponents or proponents of Trump, Republicans and the tax cut.

One estimate is that it will come in at 2% GDP growth 1st quarter.  If so, that will be a big disappointment for some of us and a long wait to see if second and third quarter results come in better before the election. 

We need growth over 3%, it needs to beat estimates and surpass CBO projections. 

DougMacG

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Re: US Economics, 1st Qtr 2018 preliminary results out tomorrow
« Reply #1297 on: April 27, 2018, 05:56:28 AM »
The preliminary number doesn't tend to be very accurate but it will be a big talking point for opponents or proponents of Trump, Republicans and the tax cut.

One estimate is that it will come in at 2% GDP growth 1st quarter.  If so, that will be a big disappointment for some of us and a long wait to see if second and third quarter results come in better before the election.  

We need growth over 3%, it needs to beat estimates and surpass CBO projections.  

www.cnbc.com/2018/04/27/first-reading-on-q1-2018-gdp.html

First reading on first-quarter GDP up 2.3%, vs 2.0% growth expected

Income at the disposal of households increased at a 3.4 percent rate in the first quarter, accelerating from the fourth quarter's 1.1 percent pace. Households also boosted savings during the quarter.
« Last Edit: April 27, 2018, 07:19:30 AM by DougMacG »

Crafty_Dog

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Wesbury begs to differ
« Reply #1298 on: April 30, 2018, 11:23:44 AM »
The-market-has-been-inflated-by-low-interest-rates theory has held attraction for many of us here.  Rather persuasively, Wesbury begs to differ:

3% - Why It Doesn't Matter To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 4/30/2018

Just a few weeks ago, the Pouting Pundits of Pessimism were freaked out over the potential for the yield curve to invert. They've now completely reversed course and are freaked out over a 3% 10-year Treasury note yield.

All this gnashing of teeth is driven by a belief that low interest rates and QE have "distorted" markets, created a "mirage," a "sugar high" – a "bubble."

These fears are overblown. Faster growth and inflation are pushing long-term yields up – a good sign. And, yes, the Fed is normalizing its extraordinarily easy monetary policy, but that policy never distorted markets as much as many people suspect. Quantitative Easing created excess reserves in the banking system but never caused a true acceleration in the money supply. That's why hyper-inflation never happened and both real GDP and inflation remained subdued. Profits, not QE, lifted stocks.

And our models show that low interest rates were never priced into equity values, either. We measure the fair value of equities by using a capitalized profits model. Simply put, we divide economy-wide corporate profits by the 10-year Treasury yield and compare these "capitalized profits" to stock prices over time. In other words, we compare profits, interest rates, and equity values and determine fair value given historical relationships. The lower the 10-year yield, the higher the model pushes the fair value of stocks.

Because the Fed held short-term rates so low, and gave forward guidance that they would stay low, they pulled long-term rates down, too. As a result, over the past nine years, artificially low 10-year yields have caused our model to show that stocks were, on average, 55% undervalued.

In other words, stocks never priced in artificially low interest rates. If they had, stock prices would have been significantly higher, and in danger of falling when interest rates went up.

But we have consistently adjusted our model by using a 3.5% 10-year yield. Using that yield today, along with profits from the fourth quarter, we show the stock market 15% undervalued. In other words, we've anticipated yields rising and still believe stocks are undervalued. A 3% 10-year yield does not change our belief that stocks can rise further this year, especially with our expectation that profits will rise by 15-20% in 2018.

The yield curve will not invert until the Fed becomes too tight and that won't happen until the funds rate is above the growth rate of nominal GDP growth. Stay bullish.

DougMacG

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Re: Wesbury begs to differ
« Reply #1299 on: April 30, 2018, 11:36:47 AM »
"over the past nine years, artificially low 10-year yields have caused our model to show that stocks were, on average, 55% undervalued."

[Now] "we show the stock market 15% undervalued."
---------------------------------
One might also conclude differently from the same data that stocks that were at market value under previous conditions are 30% overvalued now. 

It will take amazing luck and skill to take all of ZIRP, NIRP and trillions of dollars of QE out without a negative consequence. 

This is now the longest bull market in market history.  Where does it go from there?  Wesbury:  Up.  And he is right - every time he says up - except for when it goes down.