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Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Daily Insight: Is Eight Enough, Crude Reversal and Not So Confident

U.S. stocks marched higher on good earnings reports, moving above the 1200 mark on the S&P 500. This puts the broad market within 4% of its pre-Lehman collapse level. The tech-laden NASDAQ Composite has already fueled past its pre-Lehman number of 2300, crossing the 2500 mark for the third time in a week so we’ll see if we can hold it this time.

Profit reports are looking good again this quarter, the second quarter of improvement following nine periods of decline; although the theme among the multi-nationals has been Asian growth, with sales from the Americas weak-to-flat relative to the year-ago period -- IBM and Coca-Cola’s results were the latest examples. Also, corporate cost-cutting via payroll slashing is the primary boost to profits. This massive cost-cutting is both good and bad. While it helps the profit story, it stings personal incomes – exclude the $365 billion in transfer payments over the past 18 months, which cannot be sustained anyway, and personal income is down 4% over the last year-and-a-half.

As we’ve discussed, this profit cycle should extend for a few quarters, but for it to prove the multi-year run that is usually the case we’ll have to see the final demand necessary to fuel top-line improvement; that means several quarters of above-average GDP that is required for strong job growth. The requisite household de-leveraging process once job growth picks up will prove a headwind for consumer activity. If stocks hold these gains, it will make the process easier; if not, then consumers won’t have that relative wealth effect that helps propel spending. For now, the more cars bought (as 0% loans and $0 down is all the rage again) and the more iPhones purchased by generations X and Y that just can’t do without their gazillion apps, the necessary de-leveraging is only delayed.
Click here to read the full Daily Insight

Brent Vondera, Senior Analyst
www.acrinv.com

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