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Economic growth continued to show signs of moderating this week. The ISM manufacturing
index fell 1.4 points to 50.9 in March. There has been a lot of discussion
that the recent weakness in the manufacturing sector was due to an inventory
reduction cycle. According to the recent survey, manufacturers believe this
as well. The index tracking how manufacturers think customers' inventory levels
are dropped five points to 48, it's the first time manufacturers have felt
their customers' inventories were too small since September 2006. The backlog
of orders also dropped back below 50. Unfortunately for manufacturers there
does not appear to be a rush to restock either. The new order index fell 3.3
points to 51.6. Employment slipped below fifty again after a one-month reprieve.
Perhaps the biggest surprise was the surge in prices paid. Prices paid soared
6.5 points to 65.5, the highest level since August.
The non-manufacturing survey also revealed slower growth in March. The ISM
reported that the non-manufacturing survey fell 1.9 points to 52.4, which was
the lowest level since April 2003. New orders fell one point. Employment dropped
1.4 points to 50.8, the lowest level since July 2004. Similar to the manufacturing
survey, prices paid jumped. The 9.5 point jump to 63.3 was the largest increase
since September 2005 when energy prices soared during the aftermath of the
hurricanes that devastated the Gulf Coast.
Last week, the Chicago PMI jumped 13.8 points to 61.7, the largest monthly
gain since the index started in 1968. The Chicago PMI was almost a mirror image
of the ISM survey. Production and new orders jumped 13.7 points and 23.5 points
respectively, while prices paid dropped 4.1 points.
Factory orders increased 1.0% in February. This was below the 1.8% increase
economists predicted. Compared to last year, factory orders were 1.1% lower
and non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft rell 2.2% on a year-over-year
basis. This was the first time this data series declined on a year-over-year
basis since February 2004.
March auto sales fell 1.8% compared to last year to a 16.3% annualized rate.
This was lower than estimates of 16.5 million. All three domestic automakers
posted lower year-over-year sales for March. GM's sales fell 7.4%, Ford sales
dropped 12.4% and Chrysler had an 8.0% drop. Most of the drop in sales was
due to reduced fleet sales. Conversely, Toyota (up 7.7%), Honda (8.0%) and
Nissan (3.9%) all increased the number of autos sold compared to last year.
This caused the market share of the domestic automakers to drop 360 basis points.
Pending home sales unexpectedly increased 0.7% in February. While the news
halted a seemingly continuous decline in the homebuilders, two weeks ago the
National Association of Realtors reported that existing home sales rebounded,
but new home sales remained weak. Investors have used any positive news to
proclaim that a bottom of the housing market is near. While it will be difficult
to pinpoint when the housing market will bottom, recent developments have it
more probable that another shoe will drop before the market rebounds.
Norfolk Southern reported that first quarter earnings were less then analysts
expected. The company said that earnings declined 3% compared to last year.
Volumes declined 4.4% due to weak automotive and housing related shipments.
The company also said operating expenses were higher due to adverse weather.
First quarter earnings are expected to increase only 3.8%, down 60 basis points
from last week and down from 8.7% at the beginning of the quarter. Consumer
discretionary companies are expected to have earnings contract by 10% during
the first quarter. The loss is mostly confined to the automotive and homebuilding
sectors. Of the thirty-two industries included in the discretionary sector,
eleven are expected to post lower earnings. In aggregate, earnings for these
eleven industries are expected to be $3.2 billion lower in the first quarter
than last year. This overwhelms the $1.5 billion increase expected in the other
twenty-one industries. Digging a little deeper, Thomson Financial found that
auto manufacturers and homebuilders account for 83% of the decline, or $2.6
billion. If these seven companies (two auto manufacturers and five homebuilders)
are excluded earnings for the sector jumps to 6% from -11%. Additionally, earnings
growth for the entire S&P 500 increases from 3.8% to 5.9%.
The economic backdrop has started to deviate from the "Goldilocks" scenario
widely disseminated earlier this year. Pricing pressure has started to increase
again and there have been numerous indications that the manufacturing sector
has moderated. The ISM non-manufacturing survey revealed that the service side
of the economy has slowed as well. The slowing growth and continued pricing
pressure has caused some to discuss the possibility of stagflation. David Rosenberg,
economist for Merrill Lynch, put out a note this week saying he started "to
consider stagflation as a serious threat to the inflation outlook." He does
say that he does not foresee a return of the 1970's style stagflation with "negative
economic growth rates, sky-high inflation (total and core) and sharply higher
unemployment rates. Instead, this will be a "modern-day" stagflation with economic
growth near 2%, which would "not be slow enough to put a dent in classic measure
of inflation and inflation expectations.
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