Thursday, January 26, 2012

Fed opens door wider to QE3

We're not there yet but comments coming out of yesterday's Fed meeting strongly suggested that the Fed will eventually implement a new round of QE3.

None of this should come as a surprise since a majority of Fed voting members have been bemoaning the high rate of unemployment for a while.

Sure we've seen a modest pick up in growth since the summer, but progress on unemployment has been slow, and publicly, that is the Fed's reason for its focus on QE3.

Economic projections are far from rosy
  1. Sluggish GDP growth. In fact, a slight dip in the GDP forecast from Nov.
  2. Slow progress on unemployment.
  3. Subdued inflation within the Fed’s target.

In Bernanke's opening statement of his press conference, he said the Fed is "prepared to provide further monetary accommodation if employment is not making sufficient progress towards our assessment of its maximum level, or if inflation shows signs of moving further below its mandate-consistent rate.”

So if inflation slips some, the Fed has the extra wiggle room to buy bonds. Helicopter Ben couldn't pass up that opportunity!

And he added in a follow up to a question that QE3 is an “an option that’s certainly on the table.”

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Earnings less than impressive, but sun shines on stocks

Let's talk earnings first.

Major bank earnings stung by capital market pressure.  The major banks posted less-than impressive earnings – blame uncertainty in the capital markets and weaker trading revenues.
But there have been positive takeaways:

• Lending growth has started to accelerate, mimicking loan data provided by the Fed
• Credit quality is slowly improving
• Capital ratios remain solid

Earnings, Earnings, Earnings: It’s still early but just 47% of the companies of the less than 10% of the S&P 500 that has reported through Jan 18th have topped estimates, down from 70% in the previous four quarters (Wall Street Journal). And it’s been a much-reduced bar that companies have had to clear.

The earnings season is young. Let's see if we get a shot in the arm from the non-financials.
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Despite the slow start to earnings season, it's RISK ON in the market! Last year's losers, materials and financials are this year's winners, as funds rotate out of last year's winners, utilities and consumer staples.

But let's be clear, despite the massive amounts of liquidity offered by the ECB, troubles in Europe haven't gone away, and we aren't seeing the needed fiscal reforms that would put the continent on a path toward fiscal solvency. But for now the focus has returned to our shores, as the economic data have been generally upbeat.
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Turning to the data,

1-Weekly jobless claims tumble 50k to 352k. That's impressive and strongly suggests the expanding economy is forcing companies to hold onto employees.

But let's wait one more week on this volatile indicator. Yes, it's timely and suggests 2012 is off to a fast start, but quirks in January's data can sometimes dull the value of the report at this time of year.

2-Housing starts - Housing stocks caught fire late last year and yesterday's rise in home builder sentiment to less pessimistic levels (4 1/2-year high) attracted new buyers. And Dec's drop in housing starts is a bit misleading due to a huge drop in multi-family starts.

Both single-family starts and permits advanced. No wonder builder sentiment is improving.
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Stay tuned.