Visit us at our new home!

For new daily content, visit us at our new blog: http://www.acrinv.com/blog/

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Daily Insight

U.S. stocks reversed course as a substantial early-session rally fizzled, succumbing to losses within the energy and basic material sectors; driving the broad-market into negative territory by mid-day was deterioration within the tech-sector. With all three of those sectors losing between 1.4% and 4.6%, and no real help from anywhere else save financials and consumer discretionary shares, the market could only go lower.

Energy stocks got drilled, pun intended, as oil prices shed $5.75, or 4.98%, to close the session at 109.71. Crude had been down as much as 8.8% yesterday, but a roughly 5% decline ended up being plenty to clock the sector. Oil is down to $108.32 this morning, the lowest level since early April.

Energy, basic material and information technology shares combine to make up 33.2% of the S&P 500.

Market Activity for September 2, 2008
As the chart below depicts, stocks started the day much higher after Hurricane Gustav’s impact proved to be much less than initially feared, sparing drilling platforms in the Gulf of Mexico and the New Orleans’ levees mostly held. However, things nonetheless fell apart as information technology, industrial and health-care shares erased early gains providing zero offset to the basic material and energy stock woes.

The S&P 500 began the session up 1.6% at the get go, but ended up losing 2.0% from that intraday high. The broad market declined 0.41% relative to the opening price. (The yellow line represents that opening mark.)


This morning, as the day progresses, it will be interesting to see how the oil market prices things in as we get the weekly energy report. Supplies will surely drop as the LOOP (Louisiana Offshore Oil Port) remains closed and Gulf production was shut down. Too, we have Hurricane Ike that looks to be making its way to the area.

On the economic front, the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) reported that manufacturing activity (on a national level) remains right at that dividing line between expansion and contraction. The reading came in at 49.9 for August and has hovered there for six months as the average for this period is 49.5.

The fact that the survey failed to show a pick up is decent proof the large acceleration in the Chicago-manufacturing reading (which we touched on yesterday) was mostly due to an increase in auto production – U.S. auto production is a large component within that regional survey. Normally, this would be fine, but since vehicle sales remain subdued, one shouldn’t expect auto production to have much staying power. That said, it is remarkable the manufacturing sector – from a national perspective -- remains solidly at the 50 level even as housing weighs heavily on the sector. (Again, above 50 marks expansion and below that mark, contraction – a reading very close to 50 on either side is a push.)

In terms of the sub-indices, which are hugely important to watch as they give evidence of future ISM readings, most remain subdued but a couple did improve from the July readings. For instance, the new orders index rose to 48.3 in August from 45.0 in July. Backlogs of orders increased slightly to 43.5 from 43.0.

The production index did slip from the July reading but remained in expansion mode, coming in at 52.1 in August after 52.9 in July. Inventories remained below 50 for the second-straight month, but did rise, coming in at 49.3 after July’s 45.0 – one watches this reading to gauge the effect inventories have on GDP. However, the customer inventory reading hit 54.5 – a 7.5-point jump from July. A reading over 50 for this index shows that respondents believe their customers’ inventory levels are too high. (This illustrates the cautious nature of business more than anything else as we know that inventory levels in a broad-based sense are at historic lows)

New export orders jumped to 57.0 from 54.0 in July.


The prices paid index has decelerated nicely, yet remains elevated.


Bottom line: the report was a decent one as the headline ISM reading remained very near the 50 level, yet it doesn’t give us a sense the manufacturing sector is ready to engage in rip-roaring activity anytime soon. That big increase in new export orders is a great sign though as many have worried economic weakness in Europe will cause export activity to ease. This reading shows other regions of the globe are filling the void.

It is good to see the prices paid reading come lower, but we’ll need to see continued deceleration to ease broad-based inflation concerns.

In a separate report, the Commerce Department reported that construction spending fell 0.6% in July after two months of gains. A 2.3% decline in private residential construction in the month led the overall figure lower. Non-residential private-sector construction (commercial) was also lower, falling 0.7%, marking the first decline for this figure in more than a year. (Private-sector residential construction is down 27.5% year-over-year. Commercial construction is up 16.0% since July 2007, just to mention the contrast)

July marked the first month since January 2007 in which private-sector commercial construction has not helped to offset residential weakness.



The public-sector did help to prop up the overall reading as public-sector residential construction rose 3.4% in July and non-residential (boosted by transportation and schools) rose 1.4%.

I’ll note, however, even though residential construction remains mired as inventory levels are hugely elevated, we have seen some encouraging signs as the degree of decline has waned over the past three months. For instance, single-family new homes sales fell at an 18.5% annual pace over the past three months – about half the 35.3% decline of the past 12 months. Pending home sales – those existing home sale contracts that have been signed, but not yet closed -- have jumped 32.2% at an annual rate since April, compared to the 12.1% decline over the past 12 months.

The pig in the python is foreclosures, as it will take some time still for this figure to peak. U.S. loans past due have increased to 6.35% of the total mortgage market vs. 4.84% a year ago. (These will not all turn into to foreclosures as this reading accounts for all mortgage loans just 30 days past due, but the number is nonetheless higher) Prime loans past due hit 3.71% as of the latest data. Subprime loans past due hit 18.79% for that universe. That is up from 2.58% and 13.77%, respectively.

This morning we get the latest factory orders report, which should show business spending continued to trend higher. This is the big bright spot from a domestic GDP standpoint (outside of trade) as we’ve seen signs that the business side will offset any consumer weakness in the current quarter.

Have a great day!


Brent Vondera, Senior Analyst

No comments: