By
The
Inflation Trader
:
On Wednesday, I was trapped listening to CNBC because I was at
one of our major consulting clients' offices and it was on. I was
struck by, and thought I would share, their insightful advice about
what to do if the market has a 'scary October.' Their advice,
phrased a number of different ways at a number of different times
during the day, was to "average in," and "take the opportunity to
buy low." So: respond to weakness in stocks by buying.
It would be reasonable to consider whether that is solid advice
- after all, it is much better to buy lower prices and multiples
than higher prices and multiples - except for the fact that it's
the same advice they give when the market is rallying: buy. In
fact, if one were to buy every time CNBC said to buy, and sell
every time CNBC said to sell, over the last 15 years, I am pretty
sure you'd be about 2500% long.
In this case, I don't fault the advice itself, just the track
record of the advisor. If the market actually declines an
appreciable amount (2.5% off the highs does not, I think, qualify),
then it makes sense to buy. Stocks are, after all, real assets.
They don't tend to perform well in inflationary periods, because of
the initial shift in valuation multiples as inflation moves from
low and stable to higher levels, but once valuations have adjusted,
they do just fine. So far, valuations have not in fact adjusted,
and remain high; so also do gross margins and corporate earnings as
a percentage of GDP (which is currently near the highest levels of
the last 60 years). I would buy equities after a 'scary October,'
but not unless it's a lot scarier than it is right now.
Stocks are doing poorly despite the suddenly whiz-bang
employment picture. Thursday's 339,000 print on Initial
Unemployment Claims (versus a consensus of 370k) was the best since
January 2008 (see chart, source Bloomberg).
(click to enlarge)
Now, unfortunately, this number can't be taken at face value.
Unlike with the Employment report, all that you need to massage a
weekly Claims number is for the government workers in a state to
work a bit slower processing unemployment claims that week. As it
happened, the BLS noted in the report that one state was
responsible for most of the drop, which is not what you'd expect to
see if the ranks of the jobless were suddenly thinning due to
economic growth. It looks like one state (the BLS won't say which
one, but it must have been a big one; I'm guessing California,
where some gas stations were closed last week and gasoline prices
shot to near $6/gallon in some places, but I am not sure why the
BLS wouldn't tell which state since they typically do).
But, again, I must admonish readers to remember that the
reported numbers are not as important as whatever is actually
happening in the economy. If the numbers are not a good reflection
of that, the man on the street will know it. They certainly know it
in this case.
Now, there is certainly a possibility that employment has
suddenly accelerated. But I don't consider that a very likely
possibility, since employment (as we are incessantly reminded near
turns in the economy) tends to lag the business cycle rather than
lead it. We haven't seen a sudden surge in Durable Goods or
purchasing managers' reports, and seasonally-adjusted gasoline
demand is the lowest it has been since 2008 (see the busy chart
below, source Bloomberg, that plots the DOE Motor Gasoline Implied
Demand by calendar date for the last five years. The white line
represents 2012).
(click to enlarge)
Total trucking miles are also at the lowest level, not the
highest, since 2009 (see chart, source ATA and Bloomberg).
(click to enlarge)
And, in case that's partly a response to high gasoline prices,
here are US Freight Carloads from the Association of American
Railroads (with the 52-week moving average, in red. Source: AAR and
Bloomberg).
(click to enlarge)
That, and not the weekly Claims numbers, are what Americans
feel. While consumer confidence may improve simply if things don't
get worse, that's not the same as the way confidence will improve
if ever activity - not just stock prices - starts to actually
improve.
Europe continues to be the biggest threat to the global growth
dynamic, but last night's S&P downgrade of Spain two notches
(from BBB+ to BBB-) was ignored by the market. Spanish yields
actually declined. This is the way it should be, because we all
know ratings are fairly useless generally but especially for
sovereigns. As I have written previously, the only circumstance in
which sovereign ratings make any sense is in fact in countries like
Spain that may be unable to pay their debt because they cannot
print their own currency. In any country that can print, it is
impossible for there to be a forced bankruptcy; ergo, the rating of
such sovereigns (such as the US) must be trying to measure not the
ability to pay (which is absolute) but the willingness to pay
rather than to default - even if to do so requires inflating, that
isn't a default. But if ratings have to measure willingness,
they're completely messed up. We have no way to evaluate
willingness to pay.
All of which is a long-winded way of saying that ratings only
matter these days I think because of the risk of ratings triggers,
such as when investors can only hold 'investment grade' paper and
so need to sell bonds if they're downgraded below that level. And I
suspect this isn't a big problem with Spain, as most conscious
investors probably concluded months ago that this is not an
'investment grade' credit.
The election and earnings season remain the foci for the month
of October. (And inflation traders also look forward to the 30-year
TIPS auction, next week, which has started to put mild downward
pressure on BEI already). There are plenty of other global issues
still in play, but I'd expect stocks to continue to drift lower
under the growing pressure of end-of-year selling to lock in lower
tax rates, a weak earnings season, and increasing signs that the
global slowdown is real. Will it get 'scary'? I doubt it will get
scary enough to buy.
See also
Genco Shipping Downgraded: Drybulker Has Negative
NAV And Liquidity Problems
on seekingalpha.com