It is simply a perfect confluence of events when yesterday the Federal Reserve told us in the afternoon that things were getting better just after the package delivery giant Federal Express had told us in the morning that the economy was worse than thought. Suffice it to say we trust the Federal that has to deal with the real world. Broadly speaking, with the exception of the euphoric Chinese stock market, equities have lost a lot of momentum and breadth is deteriorating as the year progresses. In particular, transportation stocks and some higher quality equities are off meaningfully from their highs in the U.S. Bond markets, especially in Europe, have suffered big hits in spite of the ECB QE efforts and global currencies are suffering renewed bouts of volatility as investors try to come to grips with the difference between what common sense tells them and what the central bankers doth mandate.
Market participants seem to be quite tired of hanging on every utterance from a central banker and the central bankers are tired of being in charge because that requires them to accept responsibility for efforts that are just not working. Policy failure is causing all of the deciders and their cheerleaders to describe the current soft economic environment as much stronger than the numbers are suggesting so they can deflect criticism and keep the fantasy alive. That is leading to higher rates, hurting rate sensitive sectors like housing.
The strong dollar was already a big enough problem for earnings. The Fed would like to tighten policy just so that it has room to reverse course if the economic situation worsens. Otherwise, it will have completed a cycle without ever really refraining from the emergency measures of zero rate policy. That alone speaks volumes.
We think policy exhaustion has taken over markets and economies globally. Problems ignored are not problems solved. The leadership is turning to familiar as well as stranger antics to try to return a sense of normalcy to a highly abnormal landscape. After being given billions more in debt assistance over the last few years, Greece has failed to make a scheduled payment to the IMF. Deposits at local banks are cratering and the economy remains a basket case. Greek bond prices now suggest a restructuring is nigh, though another extend and pretend is always possible. Even if yet another lifeline is thrown to avert near term drama, the reality is that Greece needs to leave the Euro and lenders must accept more losses on a few hundred billion dollars of debt. Anything else is just gamesmanship and delay.
We are all tired of the “Greece is saved headlines” because we know a painful restructuring will have to occur at some point, but the deciders won’t let it happen because they would have to take more losses. Instead, many of the parties involved would still like to act as if a default and Euro exit would not be a big deal while the ECB quietly slips a few billion more euros to Greece as if doing that might one day magically solve things.
It is a fantasy.
The views expressed on this blog are the opinions of the authors. This information is not intended as investment advice or to recommend the purchase or sale of securities. More information on Strategic Balance, LLC may be obtained by contacting investor relations.
The Peter Pan Fantasy of Central Bankers
Spinning fantasies is catching on globally. Here’s how Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda addressed the audience at a recent conference discussing the state of affairs in that country:
“The issues I have raised so far are all complex, and there are no quick, definitive solutions for them. Nevertheless, I strongly believe that, at this one-and-a-half day conference, we will address the issues we currently face and find our way forward through lively discussions. I trust that many of you are familiar with the story of Peter Pan, in which it says, ‘the moment you doubt whether you can fly, you cease forever to be able to do it.’ Yes, what we need is a positive attitude and conviction. Indeed, each time central banks have been confronted with a wide range of problems, they have overcome the problems by conceiving new solutions.”
Mr. Kuroda is having about as much luck with money printing there as the Fed did here. It is not working to drive the real economy towards sustainable growth and it has also fouled up the functioning of the local bond market. With the pressure building, apparently the BOJ thinks that all the long-suffering Japanese need to do is think “happy thoughts.” It’s not the policy; it’s the mental state of the people who just don’t get the wonders of QE according to Kuroda’s reasoning. His comments suggest exasperation and fatigue to us.
We had mentioned in our prior letter that political winds were blowing against Fed policy and in May it became crystal clear that it too is feeling intense pressure. GDP growth for the first half of this year is looking pretty close to 0-1%. In addition, inflation, according to the Fed’s favorite measure, Core PCE (Personal Consumption Expenditures) is running at a historically low 1.2%. Remember, for whatever reason, the Fed wants us all to pay more for things, so that inflation number does not make it happy.
To combat uneasiness, the powers-that-be have decided to delve further into the absurd to make their angst over QE’s ineffectiveness go away. Last month, the San Francisco Fed, the former home of Ms. Yellen, released research that declared that seasonal adjustment factors were to blame for weak first quarter GDP data. Apparently, that data, which is already heavily massaged to account for the typically lower economic activity during winter months, needs to be seasonally adjusted some more in the researchers’ estimation. Quite soon after that release, the BEA (Bureau of Economic Analysis) said it was re-working the numbers.
GDP data had already been doctored in recent years to include intangibles. Anything for the perception of growth! Over in Europe the deciders have taken to estimating illegal drug and prostitution spending and adding those to GDP. We are not joking. After all, given the wonders of extreme central bank policy, it simply could not be possible that growth was negative in the winter quarter in the U.S now could it? Fed Chair Yellen has not employed a fairy tale analogy yet like Mr. Kuroda, but she does not mind if what many consider to be the most important indicator, the quarterly GDP estimate, turns into one.
Most of the other economic reports across the globe have come in decidedly weak for much of this year. We have looked at a lot of earnings releases the last few weeks and read company comments in many industries. In general, those views are closer to the GDP numbers before the BEA has another “whack” at them. Most retailers not only reported poor sales for the first quarter, they sounded less than optimistic for the second. In addition, capital goods orders are slow and the industrial economy seems softer than the surveys or employment numbers suggest. W.W. Grainger, a leading industrial supplier, just reported that last month’s daily sales were flat versus May 2014. That does not happen very often. It makes sense though because industrial production has grown at only 1.4% over the last year. Elsewhere, wholesale inventories are entirely too large relative to sales.
The Atlanta Fed second quarter GDP estimate is now running at only 1.9%. Rail traffic was down 0.6% for the first five months of this year. True, auto sales were quite strong for May, but that period included an extra weekend and unusual employee discounts for the masses to “move some metal.” Subprime lending and extended loan terms are other big supporting factors, but dealer inventories are now high. You do have to read the fine print or you might think it was real organic sales growth. The May employment report had the typical strong headline number, but only 7,000 manufacturing jobs were added in a continuation of a weak trend. That is not getting it done, yet the Fed wants to “Peter Pan” its way to into its tiresome sustainable growth propaganda mode in spite of the preponderance of evidence that suggests otherwise.
The views expressed on this blog are the opinions of the authors. This information is not intended as investment advice or to recommend the purchase or sale of securities. More information on Strategic Balance, LLC may be obtained by contacting investor relations.