Michael Barton

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Showing posts with label GDP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GDP. Show all posts

Saturday, October 6, 2012

Global Markets rise as American Star Strips Away Wider Gloom


Despite further Eurozone and Asian economic weakness, and sovereign debt issues seemingly increasing not retracting, positive jobs and economic data from the United States and Canada through the week buoyed stock markets around the globe.

Unemployment numbers from the Eurozone continue to reach record highs. September’s rate of 11.4% across the 17 member states masks wide variations, with the worst numbers still seen in Spain, where unemployment has now hit 25.1% with over 50% of under 25’s out of work. A poll of purchasing managers by Markit showed a further economic retraction in the third quarter: if proved correct with official figures then the Eurozone will officially declared in recession.

The ECB waits to activate its bond buying program, announced last month. With the objective of pushing bond yields down and decreasing borrowing costs for the indebted Euro nations, the ECB is waiting for requests for assistance. Main target, Spain, is stalling with its politicians baulking at the requirement to give up even more fiscal and economic control to European central government. Meanwhile, mass protests in the Catalan region – one of the more prosperous regions of Spain – are calling for independence from the rest of Spain. The yield on Spain’s 10 year bonds, which had fallen from above the dangerous 7% level to nearly 5.5% after the ECB’s bond buying announcement, have risen to around 5.9%.

Greece finds its problems deepening, as the so called troika –IMF, ECB, and European Commission – have rejected part of the country’s austerity plans. Greece is due yet another round of financial aid soon, and this action could put that in jeopardy.

Over in Asia, the Asian Development Bank lowered forecasts for growth across the region, including China and India. The downward revision is dramatic, from 6.9% to 6.1% for this year, and 7.3% to 6.7% next year. It sees Chinese growth this year of 7.7%, but falling next year to 5.6%.

As if to prove the Asian Development Bank correct, Chinese service sector numbers came in weaker than expected, though this helped to lower crude oil prices (China’s oil demand is 10% of world total).

The United States, however, is bucking the trend of global weakness. The world’s largest economy has this week seen manufacturing PMI numbers and New Order figures both rebounding to growth from August’s contracting indications. Consumer confidence has risen for six weeks in a row, with sales at store open more than 12-months increasing by 3.9%. Conversely and strangely, US Factory Orders fell by 5.2% in August: something of a conundrum.

The big news came at the end of the week, with massive revisions to previously-released US unemployment figures. August’s number of payroll increase had been reported at 96,000 but has now been revised upwards to 142,000, and July’s number of 141,000 has been upped to 181,000. September’s estimated number has come in at 162,000.

Over the week, the Dow Jones Industrial Index rose by 1.3% to close at 13610.15, and the S&P slipped by 1.4% to 1460.93. The Nasdaq 100 gained a little less, just 0.4% to 2811.94, as Apple and Facebook gave away gains on Friday. In the UK, the FTSE 100 Index rose by 2.2% to stand at 5871.02.

Trading View

Everywhere the economic numbers seem to be pointing to further contraction and slowdown, and rising unemployment, except in the United States.


In fact, the United States is showing remarkable resilience in the face of massive adversity elsewhere. The way markets have reacted indicates a bit of ‘laisez faire’ on the part of investors: a sense of ‘we’ve been here, seen it, done it’.

Though Spanish bond yields are again rising, the country is putting off the inevitable. This indecision by the Spanish may be more political than economic management. Can the country’s leaders really afford to cede so much to the centre, when its own regions are rising up to try to force a breakaway?

Call me a cynic, but this market seems to have gone into political phase. In the United States, economic numbers are improving rapidly and the unemployment rate has fallen from 8.3% to 7.8% as the Presidential election comes ever closer. Of course, we’ve seen revisions and revisions to numbers before: what odds on a downward lurch coming after the election? If a new President is in, it will be his fault. If Obama stays in, then what does he really care – he’ll have another four years.

In Europe, the masses are protesting against further austerity measures and centralised government, and countries like Spain and Greece are holding back the weight of pressure from its people and the European leaders to act in the manner each side wants. It’s a two way pull, which will snap at some time.
My view remains the same, there’s always calm before the storm.

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Eurozone Concerns Rise and Markets Fall


The Eurozone once more found itself at the heart of the matter this week, as concerns over rising debt and falling economic numbers marched front and centre. And marches were the order of the day in both Spain and Greece, where workers demonstrated against further austerity measures. With the honeymoon period after the ECB QE action just four weeks old, markets seem to doubt the long term effectiveness of the measures, and reacted negatively to further poor news from the region, despite China’s central bank joining in the global cash giveaway.

On Thursday Spain announced further austerity measures, confirming some already passed through into the law of the land and adding some new. The spending cuts and tax rises confirmed for 2013 now stand at €13 billion (though mostly part of the €65 billion austerity package announced earlier this year). As the announcement was made, yields on Spanish bonds, which had been falling since the ECB’s promise to buy €40 billion of member countries bonds each month, rose above 6% again. Protestors flooded the streets of Madrid, in scenes that were replicated on the streets of Athens, where a nationwide strike on Wednesday was used to protest against another €13.5 billion of austerity measures currently moving its way through the Greek parliament.

On Friday, the independent audit of Spanish banks confirmed that capital adequacy needs were in the order of €60 billion. The country has already been pledged up to €100 billion from central European coffers earlier this year to recapitalise its banking sector that is struggling under the weight of Spain’s failing property market.

Meanwhile, as Greece and Spain struggle to swim against the tide of their faltering economies and still increasing debt, economic figures from Germany paint a gloomy picture of Europe’s largest economy. Jobless claims rose for the sixth straight month and business confidence fell for the fifth month in succession.
Over in China, the economy continues to falter. From roaring strength a year ago, the pace of slowing growth is gathering. Increasing costs and a tightening export market has now begun to damage corporate profits significantly. For five months now, profits at China’s major industrial companies have been falling, and in August now stand 6.2% below a year earlier. However, China injected around $58 billion into the money market in an attempt to lower rates and spur growth.

In the United States, economic numbers have turned south again. The GDP growth in the second quarter was downwardly revised from 1.7% annualised to 1.3%, and durable goods orders fell by a whopping 13.2% in August, despite a rise in non-defence goods of 1.1%. Business activity in the US declined for the first time in three years, according to the Institute for Supply Management, with its key index falling from 53 in August to 49.7 in September indicating a marked slowdown on its way. Despite this, home prices rose by around 1.5% in July, making a 12 month gain of some 17% for new homes, and new home sales were nearly 28% up on this time last year (though August did see a small retraction from July).

Over the week, the Dow Jones Industrial Index fell by 1% to close at 13,437.13, and the S&P slipped by 1.4% to 1440.67. Technology shares were hardest hit, with the Nasdaq 100 falling by more than 2% to 2799.19. In the UK, shares as measured by the FTSE 100 Index fell by 1.9% to stand at 5742.07 at the close of business on Friday.

Trading View

China’s move in the money markets has followed central bank action by the ECB, Fed, and Bank of Japan in the last few weeks. Despite huge quantitative easing programs to date, the economies of both the US and Europe have failed to show consistent and sustainable progress to growth. Indeed, the announcement of a sizeable downward revision in second quarter US growth figures indicate the precarious situation that the world’s largest economy is in.

QE has, in fact, done little else other than help house prices recover in the US. This has fed through to some better consumer confidence numbers, but the follow through to sales has not been robust enough to promote a marked turnaround. Hence unemployment continues to hold stubbornly high.

Governments – both local and central – around the world will continue to be forced to cut spending and raise taxes in efforts to bring debt under control. QE is merely a ‘papering over the cracks’ exercise that will increase pent up inflation -  already being seen in US housing stats – and delay the inevitable.

The European Finance Ministers’ meeting on October 8th, when Greece’s request to delay the meeting of its budget targets by another two years will be discussed, could prove important in the short term market momentum. I expect the meeting to ratify Greece’s request, with a stern warning of dire consequences should the budget deficit reduction target not be met in two years. Markets may move higher in the short term on the back of any such announcement, but without solid financial proof of an improving debt and economic situation in Europe, the inevitable is just being delayed.

Equity markets have trod water for several years, though the waves have been choppy. I expect they will continue to do so as corporate profits, which have been bolstered by job cuts and cost cutting measures, are squeezed over the coming years. It would not surprise to see dividend growth slowing and equity valuations react accordingly.