2018-09-10
U.S. Markets: U.S. stocks retreated from last week’s record highs in the holiday-shortened week, with global markets still on edge amid escalating global trade tensions. The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended the week down -0.2% to close at 25,916. The technology-heavy NASDAQ Composite retraced all of last week’s gain falling -2.6%, or 207 points, ending the week at 7,902. By market cap, mid caps were the relative outperformers falling just -0.9%, while the large cap S&P 500 gave up -1.0% and the small cap Russell 2000 declined -1.6%.
International Markets: Canada’s TSX declined for a second week, down -1.1%, while the United Kingdom’s FTSE followed last week’s -2% drop with a further -2.1% decline. On Europe’s mainland as well, markets finished the week deep in the red. France’s CAC 40 was off -2.9% and Germany’s DAX plunged -3.3%. In Asia, China’s Shanghai Composite was off -0.9%, Japan’s Nikkei declined -2.4%, and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng finished down ‑3.3%. As grouped by Morgan Stanley Capital International, developed markets finished the week down ‑2.8%, while emerging markets were off -3.8%.
Commodities: Energy took a break after back-to-back weekly gains with West Texas Intermediate crude oil falling ‑3% to $67.75 per barrel and Brent North Sea crude down ‑0.9% at $77.04 a barrel. Precious metals also finished the week lower. Gold gave up -0.5%, ending the week at $1200.40 an ounce and Silver closed down ‑2.6% to $14.07 an ounce. Copper, viewed by some analysts as an indicator of worldwide economic health due to its variety of industrial uses, finished the week down -1.8%.
U.S. Economic News: Initial claims for new unemployment benefits fell by 10,000 to 203,000 last week, touching their lowest level since December of 1969. The reading beat consensus estimates for a decline of just 2,000 to 211,000. The four week average of new claims, smoothed to iron out weekly volatility, declined by 2,750 to 209,500. That number is also at its lowest level since December of 1969. Overall, labor market analysts note that times are good. Companies have created more than 19 million new jobs in the past eight years to drive the unemployment rate down to 3.9% from a peak of 10%. In addition, companies are struggling to find skilled workers and they are reluctant to lay off experienced employees. The number of people already receiving unemployment benefits, so-called “continuing claims”, fell by 3,000 to 1.71 million.
Private sector payroll processor ADP reported the U.S. created a seasonally-adjusted 163,000 job in August, but missed expectations for 182,000 new jobs. The reading was down from the 217,000 private sector jobs created in July and its weakest increase since last October. In the details of the report, services payrolls rose 139,000 led by professional and business services, while goods-producing jobs rose by 24,000. Midsized companies did most of the hiring with 111,000 new jobs added. Although the headline number was down from last month, Neil Dutta of Renaissance Macroresearch noted “Considering how low the jobless rate is, this represents a reasonably solid pace of employment growth.”
The U.S. added 201,000 new jobs and unemployment remained at an 18-year low, according to the Labor Department’s monthly Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP) report. The reading exceeded economists’ expectations for an increase of 200,000 new nonfarm jobs. The increase in hiring last month was another solid gain reflecting broad strength in the economy. However, the biggest news from the report was a sharp increase in pay. The average wage paid to American workers rose by 10 cents to $27.16 an hour. The yearly rate of pay increases climbed to 2.9% from 2.7% marking their highest level since June 2009. In the details, white-collar professional firms added 53,000 positions, while health care providers hired 33,000 and transport firms added 20,000. Aside from a shortage of skilled labor, companies say their biggest problem is coping with a spate of higher U.S. and foreign tariffs that have raised the cost of key materials such as steel and lumber and made it harder to obtain supplies.
The Commerce Department reported spending on construction projects rose 0.1% in July, led by the public sector. Public construction spending surged 0.7% while private sector spending slipped 0.1%. Over the past year, construction spending has risen 5.8%. Overall, despite the volatile data the overarching trend in construction spending is up. Through the first seven months of the year, expenditures were 5.2% higher than in the same period in 2017. However, some economists, like Ian Shepherdson at Pantheon Macroeconomics weren’t impressed, calling the reading “…disappointing. For now it appears that construction activity is softening after a very strong first half.”
American manufacturers are on a roll, according to the Institute for Supply Management (ISM). ISM’s manufacturing index jumped to a 14-year high of 61.3 in August, up 3.2 points from July. It was the biggest monthly gain since March 2010 and its highest reading since May of 2004. Economists had expected a drop to 57.9. In the details of the report, all of the ISM’s individual components advanced. The new-orders index climbed 3.2 points to 65.1 while the employment gauge added 2 points to 58.5. Sixteen of the eighteen industries tracked by ISM reported expansion last month, indicating a broad-based expansion. The ISM index is compiled from a survey of executives who order raw materials and other supplies for their companies.
ISM’s survey of services companies also showed rapid growth last month. ISM’s non-manufacturing index rebounded 2.8 points to 58.5 as services activity strengthened. It was the biggest gain since January, and reversed most of the steep decline the previous month. All four of the services index components (new orders, business activity, employment, and supplier deliveries) rose last month, led by a 4.2 point rebound in the business activity index—the most since September 2016. Chief U.S. economist Jim O’Sullivan of High Frequency Economics noted the ISM report was “quite strong, despite ongoing concerns about trade policy.”
So far the imposition of U.S. tariffs on a variety of foreign goods has done nothing to curb the trade deficit. The trade deficit surged $4.3 billion in July to $50.1 billion—its biggest gap since February. The increase in July was the biggest since March 2015 as the strong domestic economy fueled demand for imports, helped by an especially strong U.S. dollar. These two factors appeared to have overwhelmed the dampening effect of the recently enacted U.S. tariffs. Imports climbed 0.9% in July, the most in five months, due to gains in food, vehicles, capital goods ex-autos (predominantly computers and computer accessories) and other merchandise. Exports fell 1%, with the most notable drop being a 6.3% plummet in food exports as China’s retaliatory tariffs hit soybeans and other farm products.
International Economic News: The Bank of Canada took a break from its rate hike cycle at its meeting this week as it braces for the fallout from the country’s trade showdown with the United States. The central bank opted to leave its key interest rate at 1.5% in spite of unexpectedly good economic news this summer. In its statement, the bank said, “The bank is . . . monitoring closely the course of NAFTA negotiations and other trade policy developments, and their impact on the inflation outlook” adding that “elevated trade tensions” remain a key risk to the global economy and are already weighing on some commodity prices. Negotiators from the U.S. and Canada met again this week to resume talks aimed at renegotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement. Key issues continue to separate the two countries including Canada’s dairy market, and Ottawa’s insistence on retaining an independent dispute settlement system.
According to a report from the Britain’s left-leaning Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), the United Kingdom’s economy requires a “fundamental structural shift”. The report specifically mentions giving workers more rights, raising state investment, and empowering regulators to break up monopolies as key reforms. The IPPR states the overhaul is needed to address the U.K. chronic failure to raise the standard of living of millions of workers since the 2008 financial crash. The report argues that the shareholder-driven model of capitalism is outmoded and partly to blame for Britain dropping down international league tables for investment and productivity. The IPPR commission on economic justice includes the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, senior business leaders, and economists.
European Union Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Pierre Moscovici warned that France must keep its public sector budget from breaking through an EU ceiling if Paris wants to retain its fiscal credibility. President Emmanuel Macron’s government is in the process of drafting next year’s budget and has said the deficit is likely to be between 2.6% and 3.0% of economic output. “It’s very important that the France does not overshoot the 3 percent limit in 2019,” Moscovici, himself a Socialist former French finance minister, told l’Opinion newspaper. France brought its deficit under the 3% limit last year for the first time in a decade, boosting its credibility with its EU partners.
Industrial production in Germany stumbled in July as global trade war fears continued to weigh and bottlenecks in the German auto sector caused by new environmental standards. German federal statistics authority Destatis reported German factory output fell 1.1% in July, missing estimates of a 0.2% increase. Production was lower across German manufacturing firms with capital goods makers off 2.5%, producer goods makers down 1.4%, and consumer goods makers down 0.9%. Construction output was the only sector to report an increase. In addition, the Federal Statistics Office reported German exports fell a seasonally-adjusted 0.9% for the month of August, while imports surged 2.8%--their strongest rise in almost four years.
President Trump threatened China with an additional $267 billion of tariffs on Chinese imports, on top of the proposed $200 billion that his administration is in the process of finalizing. President Trump stated the implementation of $200 billion worth of tariffs on products from China “will take place very soon depending on what happens.” Furthermore, he surprised reporters stating, “I hate to do this, but behind that there is another $267 billion ready to go on short notice if I want.” Trump latest tariffs threats, if he follows through, would more than cover the value of all goods the U.S. buys from China, according to U.S. government data from last year. The U.S. imported $505 billion of Chinese products in 2017, Census Bureau figures show.
Government ministries in Japan requested a record 102.8 trillion yen ($930 billion) in the budget for the fiscal year starting next April as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe seeks to get the country ready for higher welfare costs, natural disasters, and possible threats from North Korea. The Infrastructure and Transport ministry is seeking the most aggressive increases, requesting a 19% increase to fund infrastructure improvements to cope with natural disasters such as typhoons, torrential rains, and earthquakes. The Defense Ministry is seeking a 2.1% increase to 5.3 trillion yen so it can buy new ground-based Aegis Ashore radar missile tracking stations to deal with ballistic missile threats from North Korea. The Abe government continues to prioritize economic growth over fiscal consolidation despite the nation's mounting debt.
(sources: all index return data from Yahoo Finance; Reuters, Barron’s, Wall St Journal, Bloomberg.com, ft.com, guggenheimpartners.com, zerohedge.com, ritholtz.com, markit.com, financialpost.com, Eurostat, Statistics Canada, Yahoo! Finance, stocksandnews.com, marketwatch.com, wantchinatimes.com, BBC, 361capital.com, pensionpartners.com, cnbc.com, FactSet; W E Sherman & Co, LLC)