Sevens Report 6.10.14

Sevens Report 6.10.14

Sevens Report Analyst Tyler Richey featured on the WSJ’s Market Watch Discussing the Market Forces in Energy Futures

Link to article here.

Sevens Report 6.9.14

Sevens Report 6.9.14

Your Weekly Economic Cheat Sheet – 6.9.2014

Last Week

Last week was a good one for the global economy and risk assets. May economic data confirmed that we are seeing the pace of growth stabilize in China, and accelerate in the U.S. Plus, the ECB basically met very high expectations with regard to stimulating the EU economy and combating dis-inflation.  From a stock market (and risk asset) standpoint, the macro-economic backdrop became more of a tailwind for stocks last week.

Starting with the ECB, by now you know the details of what they did, but more importantly, Mario Draghi and the ECB not only took steps to stimulate growth and inflation in the EU, but also left open the idea of doing more in the future (specifically ABS purchases and again hinted at potential outright QE).

Importantly, this came amid a mixed (at best) week of data for the EU, as manufacturing and composite PMIs missed, and May HICP declined further.  Importantly, though, the ECB appears committed to doing what’s necessary to support the EU recovery. That, over time, will remove the risk of “Japan style” deflation in Europe (assuming they follow through).

In the U.S., economic data were almost universally better than expected.  May ISM manufacturing PMIs were in-line at 55.4 vs. (E) 55.5 (remember this was the release last Monday with the three revisions), while ISM non-manufacturing PMIs were 56.3, and the monthly employment report beat estimates at 217K vs. (E) 213K.  Finally, the four-week moving average for jobless claims fell to its lowest level since June ‘07 at 310K.

So, the data were good, but not too good that they altered anyone’s expectation of Fed policy—so for now tapering of $10 billion per meeting will continue, with rate increases coming next year.

Finally, Chinese data provided more evidence that the pace of growth is stabilizing between 7.0% and 7.5% annual GDP growth, which is what the market expected.  And, while the housing market and “shadow banking system” are potential risks to monitor, for now the risk of a Chinese “hard landing” continues to recede.

Not that I’m a macroeconomic cheerleader, but last week was a good week, and certainly the improving macro outlook is helping stocks slowly rally, as last week:

1) Helped reduce the chances of European deflation, which is a big concern of markets (Tepper’s comments), and

2) Showed the economy in the U.S. and China are meeting current expectations (which is positive for risk assets).

This Week

After a busy week last week, things slow materially this week (which is normally the case).

Domestically it’s going to be quiet, with retail sales and jobless claims being the only notable releases.  It’s pretty much consensus that the economy rebounded strongly in March from the winter weather and then paused in April, so especially in consumer spending, markets will be looking for a resumption of gains.

Internationally, China will be in focus with CPI and PPI coming tonight (although these numbers aren’t as important right now because inflation isn’t an issue in China).  May industrial production and retail sales (out Thursday) will be watched to make sure they confirm the strength we saw in the May PMIs.  These are probably the biggest releases this week.

Finally in Europe, data are also pretty sparse this week, as the UK Labour Market Report (which could send the pound sharply higher if it’s strong) is released Wednesday and the EMU industrial production comes Thursday. Given the moves by the ECB last week to stimulate growth, EU economic data (unless horrid) won’t matter as much as they did previously, until we start to see the effects of the stimulus.

 

 

Sevens Report 6.6.14

Sevens Report 6.5.14

Sevens Report 6.5.14

Sevens Report 6.4.14

Sevens Report 6.4.14

Sevens Report 6.3.14

Sevens Report 6.3.14

Your Weekly Economic Cheat Sheet – 6.2.2014

Last Week

Economic data last week was generally in-line with expectations, and ahead of this critical week, none of the data materially shifted the current consensus expectation for slowly rebounding global growth or Fed policy.

The “highlight” of last week was the revised Q1 GDP report, which missed expectations and showed a 1% annual growth rate—the first negative reading in three years.  But, as usual, the devil is in the details.

Despite the bad headline, the GDP report wasn’t all that bad.  PCE (consumer spending) was revised +0.1% higher to 3.1%, while final sales of domestic product (GDP excluding inventories) was little-changed.

The big drop in headline GDP came from inventory depletion (which will be a tailwind for Q2 GDP as manufacturers have to re-stock) and from increased exports (which obviously isn’t an economic negative, either).

So, while certainly this wasn’t a good report, the market didn’t really focus on it that much because the details were better than the headline, and economic data since Q2 started 2+ months ago has trended better.

Speaking of which, the more timely data points released last week were generally “OK” and reflective of a U.S. economy that is seeing the recovery slowly accelerate.  April durable goods were a mixed bag—the key sub component, non-defense capital goods ex-aircraft, declined slightly. But that was following a sharply revised higher gain in March, which more than offset the decline in April.  So, net-net it wasn’t a bad number.

The other report, April pending home sales, grew at 0.4% vs. 1.0% expectations.  While that was a “miss,” the important thing was that there was further improvement in sales. And, it’s now safe to say that the April housing data implied that housing may finally be joining other parts of the economy in rebounding from the winter dip.

Finally, there was one other number last week that I want to point out.  In Friday’s Personal Income and Outlays report, the “Core PCE Price Index” (the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation) showed a year-over-year increase of 1.4%, up from 1.2% in March.

That number hit expectations and remains well-below the Fed’s 2% “target,” but I point it out because it’s another piece of anecdotal evidence that inflation is slowly starting to tick higher.  And, an uptick in inflation would be a significant shock to the market, as it would have implications for Fed policy that no one is pricing in right now.

So, in an effort to point out what’s in “left field” so we don’t get blindsided, an uptick in inflation remains a potentially surprising occurrence to watch for.

Turning back to the economy at large, the bottom line is nothing last week (internationally or domestically) changed the outlook for U.S., Chinese or EU growth heading into this critical week.

This Week

This is a big week as we will (hopefully) finally have some clarity on what the European Central Bank is going to do about its dis-inflation problem. We’ll also get more data that (hopefully) confirms the market’s expectations for the major economies: stabilization of growth in China, continued slow recovery in Europe and acceleration of the recovery in the US.

The biggest event all week is the ECB meeting—and its announcement on Thursday, June 5—where the market will finally see what the central bank plans to do to help spur growth.

I’ll preview what to expect as we get closer to announcement, but this is critical in regard to the recent bond rally … and for the potential of a bond sell-off to become a tailwind on stocks.

As a preview to the ECB meeting Thursday, we get the “flash” EMU HICP reading tomorrow.  HICP is critical because it’s reflective of the dis-inflation threat in the EU. If this number remains low (well below 1% year-over-year), then it’ll put more pressure on the ECB to act forcefully on Thursday.

Outside of the ECB, it’s also “jobs week” here in the U.S.  So, we get ADP Wednesday, claims Thursday and the government report Friday.  This report isn’t as critical as previous reports have been, because it would take either a huge number or a total disaster to potentially alter the course of Fed tapering. But for a market constantly needing positive reinforcement that the economy is actually getting better, the jobs number matters.

We also get the May final global PMIs this week.  Manufacturing PMIs for Asia and Europe were out this morning, while we get the U.S. ISM manufacturing PMI at 10 AM, and the global composite and U.S. non-manufacturing PMIs Wednesday.

Again, these numbers represent an opportunity for the market (and investors) to become more confident about the global economy, and to confirm the current growth outlook for each region.

Bottom line is this week could be quite critical to the market.  The two large “unknowns” to the market at the moment are “What will the ECB do?” and “Is the global recovery for real?”  Data this week will help to more definitively answer those questions. If things go well, we could see a new tailwind for stocks.

Sevens Report 6.2.14

Sevens Report 6.2.14