Timing & trends

And the Band Played On

UnknownAfter three months of consistently disappointing jobs numbers, the markets were as keyed up for a good jobs report as a long suffering sailor awaiting shore leave in a tropical port. The just released April jobs report, which claimed that 288,000 jobs were created in the U.S. during the month, provided the apparent good news. But you don’t have to go too far beneath the surface to find some troubling trends within the data. Even this minor excavation was too much for the media cheerleaders and Wall Street pitchmen to handle. 

The dominant narrative held that the prior reports had been so weak because the unusually cold weather (the 10th snowiest in the past 50 years) had prevented consumers from venturing outside to make purchases or employers from hiring workers. Time and again the winter was blamed for the disappointing jobs reports that came in over the 1st quarter. As a result, the consensus of economists predicted a rebound in April with 215,000 net new non-farm jobs. The 288,000 figure that greeted the markets last week – which helped bring down the unemployment rate to a post-crash low of just 6.3% – confirmed the weather hypothesis.

In reality, the desperation in which these tenuous data straws were grasped is a testament to our chronic economic weakness. Far more significant than the number of jobs that were created in April were the far greater number of jobs that were lost (806,000) because chronically unemployed Americans gave up on their fruitless quests to find work. This trend has been ongoing for years. The latest exodus of workers pushed the labor force participation rate down from 63.2% to 62.8%, an unusually sharp monthly drop. Apart from October and December 2013, also at 62.8%, the rate now is at the lowest level since March 1978. Each individual who drops out of the job market creates another lost taxpayer and another individual who is more likely to receive government support. But the media coverage of the jobs data treated this stunning development as a mere afterthought.

What should have been of particular concern, but was not even mentioned, was that more than 80% of the 288,000 jobs came from birth/death assumptions the government makes about the net number of new companies that formed during the month and the number of people those companies would have been expected to hire. For some reason the statisticians always assign a disproportionally high number of these assumed jobs to April and May. The rationale for this is likely buried deep within bureaucratic small print, so we have to take that number with a grain of salt. But what if only 100,000 new jobs were added as a result of birth/death assumptions, as was averaged in February and March? The Labor Department may have been just as convinced as everyone else that the cold weather had restrained hiring during the winter. As a result they may have been inspired to make this year’s April assumption the biggest in the last six years.

The story even gets worse when you consider the types of jobs that are being added. As has been the case for years, the new hires are heavily weighted to the lower end of the spectrum, particularly in low-paying service sector and retail jobs. The drop in the labor participation rate would not be so alarming if those who remained working were finding jobs that could support families. But that is not what is happening. We are replacing good jobs with bad jobs and getting poorer with each passing month.

This trend was confirmed on May 1 when the Bureau of Economic Analysis released its March Personal Income and Outlays report. As is typical, the pundits reacted positively to the .9% increase in consumer spending. But they couldn’t be bothered to look at the other side of the coin to determine how that increase was achieved. With personal income up only .5% for the same period, Americans financed their extra spending with a drop in savings, which dropped to 3.8%, the lowest level since just before the 2008 crisis (with the exception of January 2013 at 3.6%). Contrary to the rhetoric coming from spending-obsessed economists and politicians, savings constitute the foundation upon which economic health rests. 

More bad news arrived recently with the release of first quarter GDP numbers, which showed the economy “growing” at a glacial .1% annualized over the first quarter. The results stand in stark contrast to the optimistic forecasts that continue to hold sway on Wall Street. According to Bloomberg’s April Survey, a consensus of economists expect the US GDP to expand 2.7% in 2014. But so far the horse has stumbled badly from the gate. Just to reach the consensus estimate for the year, the economy would have to average 3.5% annualized growth over the remaining three quarters of the year. The odds of that are slim to none, and Slim has just dropped out of the workforce.

However, as we have seen in recent years, GDP estimates are more likely to be revised downward than upward in subsequent data releases. So there is a very good chance that the first quarter estimates will be revised into negative territory. This means that we may be already half way to a recession (which is defined as two consecutive quarters of negative growth).

As they have done with the recent jobs reports, most economists pin the bad GDP number on the hard winter. This is a dangerous game to play. If GDP now fails to respond strongly to the return of warmer weather, the truth of a fundamentally weakening economy will become that much easier for everyone to see. But with asset bubbles forming across many sectors of the economy, the truth can be a serious hazard. Nothing pricks a bubble quicker than a loss of confidence.

After last year’s stunning 29% rally in U.S. stocks, Wall Street virtually assured investors at the end of last year that the good times would continue. Instead, stocks are virtually flat for the year. If not for the super-charged mergers and acquisitions market, which according to the Wall Street Journal accounted for $638 billion of transactions thus far in 2014 (the highest level of activity in almost 20 years), and the rock bottom long term interest rates provided by the Federal Reserve, markets could be tanking. What’s worse is the fact that the first five months of the calendar are usually the best for market performance (hence the Wall Street adage “sell in May and go away.”) If this is how we have fared in the Spring, beware the Summer doldrums and the time this Autumn when the Fed is scheduled to end its QE program.

While the darkening skies may not be visible to Americans, the foreign exchange markets have taken notice. Today the U.S. dollar hit a five-year low against the British pound, a nearly three-year low against the Swiss franc (notwithstanding three days in March that traded slightly lower). The weakness in the dollar portends a weaker U.S. economy and a strong likelihood for more Quantitative Easing from the Federal Reserve. It also confirms that Europe’s strategy of limited “austerity” did not deliver the catastrophe that many on the left, including Paul Krugman, had predicted.

And so while there are plenty of reasons to be cautious about America’s economic future (the growing geo-political tensions in Ukraine for instance – explored in detail in my latest newsletter), Wall Street has found ways to ignore all of them. My advice to investors is to ignore the swelling crescendo coming from the paid musicians. Take a look at the sheet music instead. They may play it like a fanfare but it is written like a dirge.

Peter Schiff is the CEO and Chief Global Strategist of Euro Pacific Capital, best-selling author and host of syndicated Peter Schiff Show. 


Catch Peter’s latest thoughts on the U.S. and International markets in the Euro Pacific Capital Spring 2014 Global Investor Newsletter!

 

Euro Pacific Capital, Inc.
10 Corbin Drive, Suite B
Darien, Ct. 06840
800-727-7922
www.europac.net
schiff@europac.net

Mr. Schiff is one of the few non-biased investment advisors (not committed solely to the short side of the market) to have correctly called the current bear market before it began and to have positioned his clients accordingly. As a result of his accurate forecasts on the U.S. stock market, commodities, gold and the dollar, he is becoming increasingly more renowned. He has been quoted in many of the nation’s leading newspapers, includingThe Wall Street Journal, Barron’s, Investor’s Business Daily, The Financial Times, The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, The Chicago Tribune, The Dallas Morning News, The Miami Herald, The San Francisco Chronicle, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Arizona Republic, The Philadelphia Inquirer, and the Christian Science Monitor, and has appeared on CNBC, CNNfn., and Bloomberg. In addition, his views are frequently quoted locally in the Orange County Register

Mr. Schiff began his investment career as a financial consultant with Shearson Lehman Brothers, after having earned a degree in finance and accounting from U.C. Berkley in 1987. A financial professional for seventeen years he joined Euro Pacific in 1996 and has served as its President since January 2000. An expert on money, economic theory, and international investing, he is a highly recommended broker by many of the nation’s financial newsletters and advisory services. 

 

The Top 10 DividendRank’ed Canadian Stocks

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#10. Calloway Real Estate Investment Trust (TSE:CWT.UN.CA) — 5.8% YIELD

At #10, Calloway Real Estate Investment Trust is an unincorporated open-ended mutual fund trust. The Trust owns, develops, manages and operates income properties located in Canada. As of Dec 31 2010, Co.’s national portfolio included 119 operating properties and 11 development properties with total gross leasable area of 24,218,389 sq. ft., located across Canada.

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The American Empire vs. Your Retirement Prospects

images“The United States of America is an empire. But it is an empire like no other in history. It is an empire based on giving away money. The general taxpayers are taxed to give the money away, and those who profit from the expansion of the empire are paid by the government to produce the weapon systems which enable the United States government to project power around the world.

The foreign aid system is a system of bribery. It bribes leaders of countries around the world to keep their mouths shut regarding the extension of American power. This extension of power does not benefit the man in the street. It benefits various special interests, especially the military-industrial complex.”

….continue reading HERE

The Truth Behind Janet Yellen’s “Jobs Crusade”

UnknownAt a speech in Chicago in March, Janet Yellen waxed lyrical about the plight of America’s unemployed. 

In preparation for her speech, Yellen talked for more than an hour by phone to three Chicagoans struggling to find work. Then, like a presidential hopeful, she weaved their heartbreaking stories into her speech: 

I have described the experiences of Dorine, Jermaine and Vicki because they tell us important things that the unemployment rate alone cannot. They are a reminder that there are real people behind the statistics, struggling to get by and eager for the opportunity to build better lives.


What’s odd about the Fed’s focus on jobs is that the current unemployment rate of 6.3% is
below the 6.4% average the US economy has experienced since 1970. Never before has the nation’s top central banker delivered such a tear-jerker. And never before has the nation’s top central banker gone to such lengths to personalize the plight of the unemployed to justify Fed policy. 

It’s also below the 6.5% target the Bernanke Fed set for keeping the federal funds rate (the rate at which banks lend to each other overnight and the key interest rate in the country) at the “zero bound.” 

Here’s what the Bernanke Fed had to say last year about its unemployment target: 

In particular, the Committee decided to keep the target range for the federal funds rate at 0-0.25% and currently anticipates that this exceptionally low range for the federal funds rate will be appropriate at least as long as the unemployment rate remains above 6.5%.

We wonder what the market reaction would be if the Fed had kept to its word and started moving the federal funds rate higher once the unemployment rate fell to under 6.5%. 

Would US stocks still be rallying? Would the yield on the 10-year Treasury note be just 2.6%… and the yield on the 2-year note be a mere 0.4%? 

Unlikely. 

The Fed talks a big game on unemployment… and why EZ credit is the key to getting Americans back to work. 

The truth is the Fed manipulates the price of credit as it sees fit. When certain objectives are met, it simply changes them to keep the credit economy booming. 

Dorine, Jermaine and Vicki are useful PR tools. But Janet Yellen’s “jobs crusade” is just a fig leaf to hide the real reason credit needs to stay ultra cheap: Without it, the whole economy is under threat. 

P.S. Don’t forget to check out the latest special report from Diary of a Rogue Economistpublisher Will Bonner. Will recently “spied” on a very elite – and extremely wealthy – group. And he got to see how the richest of the rich make their money… and how they keep it.

Trade to Win

Stockscores.com Perspectives for the week ending May 5, 2014

Screen Shot 2014-05-06 at 6.15.14 AMWEEKLY COMMENTARY

Stockscores Market Minutes Video
Waiting for the news can leave you entering trades too late because the market tends to price in new information before it is made public. This week, Tyler shows two examples where this is the case before he provides his regular weekly market analysis. Watch the video by clicking here.

Trade to Win
Do you invest to win or to avoid losing? The latter has been infamous in great sporting breakdowns. Teams from any sport who played to defend their lead and avoid losing have so often given back their margin of victory, granting them membership status to the Chokers Hall of Fame, that hallowed institution of which Greg Norman is President.

Their emotional attachment to money puts many traders on the defensive, casting their trading decisions to avoid losses. If visualization lends to the achievement of results, then this negative form of myopia certainly leads to long term failure.

Are you afraid of losing money in the market? Do you find yourself making decisions to exit a stock on a minor pull back because you are worried you will watch the profit evaporate? Do you delay entering a position until the market has moved up significantly so that your entry decision is proven correct? 

If so, you are normal. Unfortunately, being normal is a sure way to be a loser in the stock market.

Here are some ways to combat fear and put a focus on making money instead of avoiding losses:

1. Have a plan – writing down your rules for entry and exit gives you something to check your emotional decision making against. Without a written plan you have nothing to guide you through dangerous emotional moments.

2. Don’t take too much risk – the more risk you take on a trade, the more you will feel fear. If you risk less money than you are willing to lose you will make better decisions.

3. Don’t judge your success one trade at a time – in trading, you can be better than your last trade. Losing money is part of trading so judge your performance over at least 10 trades.

4. Plan your losses – before you enter the trade, plan the point that you will exit at a loss. If the stock gets there, take the loss and move on.

5. Trade quality – make sure that you trade stocks that fit the criteria of a proven strategy. If you don’t believe in what you are doing you will go on the defensive and be a loser even before you enter a trade.

6. Think like a winner – be positive, aspire to be great and don’t accept anything less than beating the market. It is you against every other trader, destroy your competition.

7. Trade your plan – when you have a few losses in a row it is easy to start breaking rules and try to trade your way out of pain. When this happens, go back to your plan or stop trading until the emotion subsides.

STRATEGY OF THE WEEK

No feature stocks this week

References

  • Get the Stockscore on any of over 20,000 North American stocks.
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  • Strategies that can help you find new opportunities.
  • Scan the market using extensive filter criteria.
  • Build a portfolio of stocks and view a slide show of their charts.
  • See which sectors are leading the market, and their components.

    Disclaimer
    This is not an investment advisory, and should not be used to make investment decisions. Information in Stockscores Perspectives is often opinionated and should be considered for information purposes only. No stock exchange anywhere has approved or disapproved of the information contained herein. There is no express or implied solicitation to buy or sell securities. The writers and editors of Perspectives may have positions in the stocks discussed above and may trade in the stocks mentioned. Don’t consider buying or selling any stock without conducting your own due diligence.

 

 

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