Brennaman’s Four
Points for the Week
1.
FED Watch – Quantitative Easing III (QE III)
Ending in October – What is next?
The Fed will likely announce this week that they are going to continue
tapering the bond buyback program to $25B in July (from $35B in June) down from
the $85B at the start of QEIII in 2012.
Inflation is tame at 1.9%, running below the 2% target for well over 25
months; with unemployment at 6.1% and improving (albeit at a snail’s
pace). Anemic economic growth as
measured by the GDP remains the point of interest this week as the preliminary
numbers for the 2d quarter should be released Wednesday. Nonetheless, barring a negative number (not
expected) the FED will end QE III in October and the real issue becomes when do
they begin raising short term rates. Our
best guess is still 2d quarter 2015 or later.
3.
The Bull Market – Earnings Announcements Are
Taking Some Wind Out of the Sails – Apple, Amazon, and Visa were among the many
companies announcing 2d quarter earnings this past week. Apple provided fuel for an upward broader market
movement but Amazon disappointed with another quarter of losses even with
strong top-line growth. Visa as well as
General Motors and Starbucks missed earnings.
Anecdotally, these results and others could indicate that that the
consumer is still reticent to return to pre-recession spending levels as they
continue to deleverage and restore savings/investment accounts. The wealth effect expected after five years
of good market returns has not emerged on Main Street. Despite the disappointing earnings news, the markets
were basically flat for the week; trading activity was low maintaining a low
level of price volatility, while the yield on the U.S. Treasury 10-year bond
remains at 2.47% where it began the week.
So the Bull Market? – The number of days since the last correction of
15% or more stands at 678. The average
since 1929 is 752 days. Historical trivia
at its best.
4.
Bond Yields – Do They Indicate Lower
Confidence in the Direction of the Equity Markets? – We are in 20th
quarter of the economic recovery (National Bureau of Economic Research - NBER)
that started in 2010 and the average length of expansions since WW II is 20
quarters. So, are the low bond yields
telling us to beware of investing in the equity markets? As usual I tell clients to be diversified
across the board and to look for risk and be prepared. But I do not think the bond yields are telling
us to head for the exits away from the equity markets. Yields are where they are for many factors
not the smallest of which is that central banks in developed nations continue
to feed liquidity into the markets to stimulate economic growth. Geopolitical risks and strife have put pressure
on yields as well as investors seeking safety with available cash (still high
levels after the market decline and recession).
Finally, low inflation (domestically and abroad) coupled with anemic
economic production (GDP) is also adding to lower yields in nearly all bond
markets (Russia is at 8%). Until the Federal
Reserve (among other central banks) sees inflation as a threat and GDP growth
is healthier than at present, yields here and abroad will be muted.
“History doesn't repeat itself,
but it does rhyme.” Mark Twain
“Those who cannot remember the past are condemned
to repeat it.” George Santayana
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