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Thursday, September 4, 2008

Daily Insight

U.S. stocks ended mixed as the S&P 500 and NASDAQ Composite fell for a third-straight session, while the Dow Industrials managed to close higher helped by shares of Home Depot, United Technologies, Proctor & Gamble and Chevron.

Information technology shares put pressure on the tech-laden NASDAQ and basic material, energy and those tech shares kept the S&P 500 down.

We’ve been trapped in a trading range between 1215 and 1450 on the S&P 500 since the beginning of the year and over the past month stuck between 1250 and 1300. The market doesn’t know what to do. Multiples are not high enough to send us much lower – based on what is currently known – and there are simply too many uncertainties lurking to propel the index out of this range.

The nearest term event will likely be the election. At least then we’ll have a good sense of where tax rates are going as after-tax return expectations on capital, dividends and labor income (small business consists two-thirds of the top federal income tax bracket) are necessary to assess the correct market multiple. Disposable, or after-tax, income growth is also hugely important right now, and the tax-rate uncertainty raises an issue here as well. Until then, we’ll just have to lean on patience.

Market Activity for September 3, 2008

That said, there are many individual stocks that trade at attractive P/E levels, but uncertainty is a terrible thing for stocks and these opportunities often get ignored in such an atmosphere. There are also entire sectors that look cheap in my view, as the S&P 500 index that tracks tech shares trades at 19 times earnings and industrials trade at 15 times. Energy stocks are back down to 10 times trailing earnings and 9 times this year’s profit expectations as many focus on oil’s recent decline and forget that these firms will make a lot of money at $110/barrel oil. The good news is the major indices seem to have found a bottom – knock on wood.

Yesterday we mentioned how all will be focused on the direction oil trades as the weekly energy report will surely show a big drop in inventories due to Gulf-rig shutdowns and closure of the LOOP. In addition, 13 refineries in the area were shut down completely and 10 others ran at reduced rates due to Gustav. The problem is I forgot that due to the holiday the weekly energy report, which is usually released on Wednesday, will be pushed back by a day. So, we’ll have to wait a couple of hours still for that report.

In any event, it does seem that production will resume quickly as the hurricane did very little damage to production infrastructure -- we should see stockpiles rebuilt in short order.

On the economic front, the Commerce Department reported factory orders rose 1.3% in July, beating the 1.0% estimate. This followed a large 2.1% increase in June that was revised up from the initial estimate of 1.7%. That’s a meaningful revision and may push the second-quarter GDP reading a bit higher when we get the final revision at the end of this month.

For this quarter, the July reading puts the period off to a good start and reinforces our view that business spending (capital expenditures) will provide an offset to what will likely be weak consumer activity (in real terms) during the third quarter. For instance, the non-defense capital goods, ex-aircraft, component of this report – which is the business capital spending number – jumped 2.5% in July.

It will be very interesting to watch the trend in capital spending as this is on top of three months of pretty strong growth for this component. I’ll note: the rebound in capital spending corresponds directly to the increase in current-year business write-off allowance and bonus depreciation the president signed into law back in May. Unfortunately, the way I understand the legislation, this will expire in 2009 as he had to drag Congress kicking and screaming to add it to the tax-rebate bill and could only manage a very short-term incentive boost as a result.


In terms of overall factory orders, they have risen for five-straight months now and in dollar terms stand at the highest level since the series began on an NAICS (simply put, a new classification system) basis in 1992.

Importantly, the unfilled orders figures is up 29 of the past 30 months and also stands at the highest level since the series began reporting on an NAICS basis. One would expect, outside of normal fluctuations, orders will remain on an upward trajectory for at least the next few months based on this heightened unfilled orders figure.

The weakness within the report came from high-tech equipment, specifically computer orders -- down 11% in July and 4.8% from July 2007.

In a separate release we received Challenger’s Job Cut Announcement survey (this is comprised by the executive outplacement firm Challenger, Gray and Christmas), which stated that the rate of layoffs slowed in August as they reported 88,730 job cuts were announced -- 103,312 were announced in July. However, while that number was lower than their July figure, job cut announcements were nearly 12% higher relative to August 2007. This is not seasonally adjusted data.

According to this report, one-third of the 88,736 in August came from the automotive and government sectors.

In other news the Fed released its regional economic survey known as the Beige Book. This report is released every six weeks and to be honest is a bit outdated, but is worth a read nonetheless. It found:

  • Consumer spending was slow in most districts and many districts showed a pattern toward discount stores and lower-priced brands. (I think we should expect consumer activity to exhibit a two quarter respite after pretty good numbers over the past few months and inflation has cut into real income growth)
  • Manufacturing was weak and declining in most districts, but improved in KC and Minneapolis (this doesn’t totally match with the ISM reports, which show things are a bit more optimistic within the sector)
  • Residential real estate remained soft in most districts, save KC (no surprise there)
  • All districts reported continued upward price pressures, with Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Atlanta and Dallas indicating businesses have stepped up the pass-through of higher costs. (This matches with what both small and large business price surveys along with the ISM and NAPM (factory surveys) reports have shown. Further, the Cleveland Fed’s Trimmed-Mean CPI, which takes out the most volatile components, and non-energy CPI are both at 17-year highs)
One obviously hopes the large and rapid decline in energy prices will ease price pressures, but the more data one studies the more it paints the picture that the 48.5% rise in crude, the 41.5% in gasoline and the 45% in diesel prices over the past year have become at least partially embedded.

This morning we get a number of data releases, with the final revision to Q2 productivity, weekly jobless claims and the ISM service index for August receiving the most attention.

Have a great day!


Brent Vondera, Senior Analyst

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