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Weekly Newsletter – Page 10 – Wayne Messmer & Associates, LLC

Weekly Newsletter


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September 5, 2017

Higher, but Quietly (Again)

U.S. equities finished last week and the first trading day of September with a gain Friday, on expectations that a weaker-than-expected rise in August nonfarm payrolls could dull the Federal Reserve’s desire further to raise borrowing costs in 2017. Small caps outperformed large caps for the week and foreign stocks generally outperformed domestic names. Trading was very light all week ahead of the Labor Day holiday weekend, but the S&P 500 did see its first four-day winning streak since July. The European, Asian and gold markets all were higher last week.

 

On Friday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics announced a weaker than expected jobs gain for August with prior month revisions subtracting even more jobs. The unemployment rate rose to 4.4 percent. This disappointing report probably won’t halt the Federal Reserve’s plans to begin reducing its balance sheet soon, perhaps later this month. However, the chances of a December rate from the Fed dropped to 42 percent, according to CME Group fed funds futures. U.S. factories ramped up in August to the fastest pace of expansion in six years, driven by employment gains, figures from the Institute for Supply Management showed, and consumer sentiment climbed to a three-month high amid an improving outlook for household finances and the economy, according to a University of Michigan report.

 

Construction spending unexpectedly declined in July. Sector spending fell 0.6 percent, compounding a 1.4 percent drop in June. Analysts anticipated an increase of 0.6 percent. Private construction dipped 0.4 percent, while public construction slumped 1.4 percent. Oil prices were erratic but mostly lower last week as traders assessed the impact of Hurricane Harvey on drilling and refining activity in the Texas/Louisiana area. Harvey has forced the shutdown of some major refineries along the Gulf Coast. According to some estimates, about a quarter of the U.S. refining industry was shut down.

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August 29, 2017

Higher, but Quietly

U.S. stocks recorded gains last week, mostly due to a solid rally on Tuesday. Trading volumes were light, however, with the number of shares traded on Wednesday falling to the lowest level of the year so far, according to The Wall Street Journal. Trading was choppy as earning season mostly wrapped up and focus began to shift toward the coming budget and debt ceiling battles in Washington.

 

Energy stocks rebounded last week from their losses the previous week, and real estate shares were also particularly strong. Consumer staples stocks – grocers, in particular – were notably weak following Amazon’s announcement that it would soon lower some prices at its recently acquired Whole Foods stores. Advertising stocks also fell sharply after UK-based industry leader WPP lowered its growth forecasts, citing “increasing social, political, and economic volatility.”

 

With the second-quarter earnings reporting season largely complete, economic data and political news continued to drive sentiment last week. One important factor in Tuesday’s rally appeared to be a report in Politico that Republican lawmakers were making progress behind the scenes on tax reform legislation. According to the report, a consensus was emerging among top administration and congressional officials on ways to pay for cuts to individual and corporate tax rates, including capping the mortgage interest deduction and eliminating the deduction for state and local tax payments. Businesses would no longer be able to deduct interest payments, according to the report.

 

Political concerns seemed to weigh on the market later in the week, however. The market’s pullback on Wednesday appeared to be due in part to President Trump’s threat at a campaign rally the previous night to allow a shutdown of the federal government at the end of September if Congress does not approve funding for the border wall he has repeatedly assured voters that Mexico would pay for. Traders may have also reacted negatively to his warning that the U.S. may pull out of the North American Free Trade Agreement. Finally, some appeared to worry about the president’s tweets later in the week, in which he criticized Republican leaders for not having arranged to raise the debt limit as part of recent legislation benefiting veterans.

 

A mixed bag of economic data left longer-term U.S. Treasury yields largely unchanged last week. Surveys indicated slowing growth in manufacturing activity, but the much larger services sector appeared to be gaining strength. New home sales declined in July, but this decline was offset somewhat by upward revisions to numbers for prior months. Existing home sales also fell, due mainly to a decline in sales of condominiums. Conversely, July durable goods orders surprised on the upside, due largely to strong shipments of capital goods, excluding defense and aircraft, suggesting some momentum in business fixed investment.

 

Trading in European markets was also light last week and traders there were seemingly cautious in anticipation of guidance from central bankers attending the annual Jackson Hole symposium hosted by the Kansas City Federal Reserve. The pan-European Stoxx 600 index ended slightly higher. The London benchmark FTSE 100 Index closed the week higher, spurred by a weaker pound, which helps boost shares of multinational companies with earnings in other currencies, and a general uptick in the performance of UK-based companies. However, European equity funds logged their first outflow in seven weeks, according to fund flows tracked by EPFR.

 

In Asia, Japanese stocks posted mixed performance last week, with small-caps outperforming large-caps, while the yen weakened modestly versus the U.S. dollar. In China, the economy will expand more than previously forecast in the next few years, according to the International Monetary Fund, causing Chinese stocks to gap higher last week. However, the growth spurt will be accompanied by a higher-than-expected surge in governmental borrowing that could push China’s debt load to 300 percent of its overall economic output, raising the risk of a sudden downturn. The IMF’s latest outlook on China forecasts economic growth to average 6.4 percent from 2017 to 2021, up from a year-ago forecast of 6.0 percent average growth.

 

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August 22, 2017

 

Volatility Returns

Last week’s news was dominated by politics, and the market turned in an unsteady performance. Stocks rebounded on Monday as North Korean fears eased but then tanked on Thursday due to earnings weakness and more terrorism abroad. The announced departure of White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon came after the close of trading for the week on Friday.

 

Stocks ended last week lower even though the S&P 500 recorded its biggest one-day gain in nearly four months on Monday because the gains were all given back on Thursday, falling the most in three months. For its part, the Dow’s 274-point drop on Thursday put an end to 63 straight trading sessions without a swing of 1 percent in either direction, the longest such streak since 1995, according to The Wall Street Journal. Falling oil prices led energy stocks to suffer the worst declines during the week. It is safe to say that, at least for now, volatility is back.

 

Waning tensions with North Korea (or at least a sense that tensions were waning) provided much of the basis for the stock market’s strong start to the week, as equity gains corresponded with a sell-off in safe haven assets, such as U.S. Treasury paper, the Japanese yen, and gold. Statements by President Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s reiterating their desire to “de-nuclearize” the Korean Peninsula were crucial in this regard. Trading volumes were especially light, however, as is typical during the August vacation season.

 

The political backdrop appeared to darken as the week progressed, however. The controversy surrounding President Trump’s response to the recent violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, appeared to be weighing on sentiment, especially after the disbanding of two CEO advisory councils following the resignations of several members amidst conflicting reports as to whether the president or the CEOs instigated the disbanding. These worries seemed to boil over Thursday morning, when rumors surfaced that Gary Cohn, the president’s chief economic advisor, was also considering stepping down. The White House quickly denied the reports, but the market’s losses accelerated on Thursday afternoon, with news of the terrorist attack in Barcelona, Spain, further weighing on sentiment.

 

On the earnings front, retailers had a lousy week, despite some signs of stabilization from Target and Walmart. In technology, shares of Cisco fell over 4 percent Thursday after the firm announced results suggesting weakness across its legacy hardware portfolio.

 

U.S. Treasuries were mostly flat for the week. Yields inched up early in the week on hawkish statements by New York Federal Reserve President William Dudley, a close ally of Fed Chair Janet Yellen. Minutes from July’s FMOC meeting reinforced expectations for an announcement of the beginning of balance sheet unwinding at the Fed’s September 19-20 meeting, but concerns about stubbornly low inflation were also highlighted. Stronger-than-expected retail sales figures also pushed yields a bit higher. Fears that President Trump’s political controversies would derail his administration’s pro-growth policies pushed yields lower on Thursday, however. The yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note touched its lowest level in several weeks.

 

European equities logged three consecutive days of gains before trading well into the red the remaining two days of the week. Banks and industrials began the week strong as investor appetite for risk recovered from the previous week’s losses. The continued strengthening of the U.S. dollar, which makes products from European companies less expensive for U.S. purchasers, supported European gains.

 

As the week closed, a stark reversal in stock gains reflected geopolitical volatility and tentative trading sentiment over growing doubts that the U.S. might not raise interest rates again this year. Banks in the pan-European Stoxx 600 dropped nearly 2 percent on Thursday, the biggest one-day drop since May. Many large European banks are particularly sensitive to U.S. economic news because they have major operations in the U.S. Moreover, European stocks traded lower after the release of the minutes from last month’s European Central Bank meeting revealed concern about weak underlying inflation and the continued rise of the euro.

 

Spanish stocks fell following a terrorist attack in a tourist-heavy section of Barcelona that killed at least 13 people and injured more than 100 and another attack in Cambrils, a town southwest of Barcelona. In Spain’s IBEX 35 index, airlines, hotels, and other tourism-related stocks bore the brunt of losses. These losses filtered out into the wider European markets too.

 

The broad Japanese stock market declined for the week. After strengthening versus the dollar for five consecutive weeks, the yen was virtually unchanged versus the buck for the week. Elsewhere in Asia, a batch of indicators for July showed that China’s growth slowed from the previous month, suggesting that the economy has entered a broad slowdown after a surprisingly strong first half of 2017. However, Chinese stocks were mostly a bit higher last week.

 

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August 15, 2017

Lower Everywhere

Growing concerns about the risk of conflict on the Korean Peninsula and some disappointing corporate earnings reports sent the major U.S. equity benchmarks lower last week. The Dow’s streak of nine straight record-setting high closes ended Tuesday, as President Trump threatened war with North Korea in response to the DPRK’s nuclear provocations. Greater losses followed on Thursday. Just for that day, the tech-heavy Nasdaq lost more than 2 percent, the broad-based S&P 500 lost nearly 1.5 percent and the blue chip Dow was off nearly 1 percent. Mid and small caps lost even more. However, given the nature of the threat, the losses were very small. Moreover, markets generated mostly positive numbers, albeit small ones, on Friday.

 

Tuesday’s aggressive rhetoric from the president briefly caused the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index to rise as traders finally seemed to expect some volatility. Then the market appeared to remember that it was not reacting to political news anymore, and vol subsided again. But on Thursday, when the president upped the ante, the markets finally started to freak out, at least a little (before mellowing out a bit on Friday):

 

“Stocks fell the most since May on Thursday, extending a decline that began when President Donald Trump warned North Korea over aggression. The S&P 500 fell 1.5 percent, while the CBOE Volatility Index jumped 44 percent to bring its three-day rise to 62 percent. It was the first close above 16 for the VIX since the day of the U.S. election.”

 

The VIX is still below its historical average, but the move represents a clear shift from the months of discussion about how low VIX levels combined with high levels of geopolitical uncertainty and general domestic political craziness meant that the market was complacent. More particularly, Thursday’s sell-off ended a period of record-low volatility during which the S&P 500 had gone 15 days without moving more than 0.30 percent.

 

Equities recovered a bit on Friday. Despite the down week overall, U.S. large-cap stocks and the tech-heavy Nasdaq still have substantial year-to-date gains, while small- and mid-cap shares are holding on to smaller gains. Gold performed well again last week and has been strong in 2017 after years of decline.

 

In name-specific news, Walt Disney traded down after reporting weak second-quarter results that included declines in the number of its cable network subscribers (primarily from ESPN, yet again) and decreasing advertising revenue. Disney’s announcement that it intends to focus on distributing its own content to consumers weighed on Netflix shares. Several major retailers also lost ground after disappointing earnings reports, including Macy’s, which declined more than 10 percent on Thursday. JCPenney suffered an all-time low.

 

Snap and Blue Apron, which were two of the more prominent tech IPOs this year (Blue Apron is typically described as a tech company, but hardly seems like one), both reported earnings last week too. They were lousy (sample headline: “Blue Apron Stock Is Now Worth Far Less Than One of Its Meals”). Blue Apron’s popularity declined in its first quarter as a public company while Snap’s daily active users keep growing, but at declining and disappointing rates. These problems are reflected in their stock prices. Blue Apron is trading at barely half of its IPO price while Snap is trading about 20 percent lower. Of course, IPOs generally underperform, but the market will not look kindly at a run of popular but unprofitable IPOs.

 

Demand for safe-haven securities pushed the yield of the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note down below 2.20 percent by Friday, its lowest level since June. Credit spreads – the additional yield that investors demand for holding a bond with credit risk – widened throughout the week. Geopolitical tensions, new supply, and some disappointing earnings reports contributed to the weakness in both the investment grade corporate and high yield bond markets.

 

According to the latest report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the consumer price index rose only 0.1 percent in July, less than consensus expectations. Over the past 12 months, prices have increased a mere 1.7 percent, which is less than the Federal Reserve’s 2 percent inflation target. Motor vehicle prices continue to fall, as dealers work through new car inventories and deal with a glut of used cars coming from rental car companies, among other factors. Besides vehicles, core goods (which exclude the food and energy sectors) posted a small increase, likely showing some impact from recent dollar weakness. In separate reports, job openings reached a record high in June, while new jobless claims remained near historic lows, although they ticked up from the previous week.

 

European stocks also fell and volatility spiked there as well amidst the rhetorical jousting between the U.S. and the DPRK, overshadowing last week’s upbeat European corporate earnings results. Basic resources stocks led the march downward, further fueled by a commodities sell-off and a cautionary statement from China on iron ore prices. The banking and oil and gas sectors as well as some tech stocks were also weak. The pan-European benchmark Stoxx 600 logged three consecutive days of losses, ending the week nearly 3 percent lower, one of its worst weekly losses this year. The FTSE 100 hit a three-month-low on Friday, and on Thursday Germany’s DAX 30 briefly traded below the 12,000 level for the first time since April.

 

Japanese stocks also suffered losses last week. The widely watched Nikkei 225 Stock Average fell more than a point and is now up barely more than 3 percent YTD, although the broad-based TOPIX is up 6.5 percent and the TOPIX Small Index has advanced more than 13 percent this year. The yen strengthened versus the dollar for a fifth consecutive week.

 

China’s foreign currency reserves increased more than forecast in July to a nine-month high, signaling that Beijing’s efforts to curb capital outflows have been successful. Reserves rose for the sixth straight month to $3.081 trillion, up $23.93 billion from June, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) reported. The recent string of monthly increases in China’s cash stockpile, the world’s biggest, follows measures implemented by the PBOC over the past year aimed at making it harder for Chinese investors and companies to move money abroad, which increases downward pressure on the yuan. The Chinese stock market lost over 2 percent for the week but is still up 21 percent on the year.

 

-rpseawright.com

 

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August 8, 2017

 

Decidedly Mixed

The Dow crossed through the 22,000 level for the first time ever last week to grow 1.2 percent and has now hit new highs on eight straight days, but much of the street talk centered on stock valuations. The S&P 500 was up only marginally – it has now gone 12 days without a move of 0.3 percent in either direction, the longest such streak on record – while the Nasdaq was down 0.4 percent. Small caps lagged even more. Pretty much everyone concedes that stocks are at least a bit overvalued, but (as has been the case for quite a long time) nothing else looks cheap. Moreover, the range of valuations remains wide. Just looking at the 30 stocks in the Dow shows a valuations range from nearly 40 percent overvalued (Caterpillar) to about 20 percent undervalued (GE). A strong earnings report from Apple helped to push the Dow over the line.

 

If you are looking for something more short-term to worry about, recall that Congress has yet to raise the government’s debt ceiling. It is estimated that the U.S. Treasury will run out of money on September 29. A Republican Congress and a Republican president should mean that the debt ceiling will be a non-issue, but the high level of dysfunction in Washington suggests that no deal should be assumed. Traders aren’t using the debt ceiling as a reason to sell just yet, but with stocks trading near all-time highs and valuations also high, few are aggressively buying either.

 

A solid employment report on Friday offered some relief after a week of mostly negative economic news, even if it didn’t bring much of a market pop with it. Car sales remained the biggest downer, with significant sales declines and inventory growth despite some healthy incentives. June consumption data was also unusually disappointing, with almost no growth at all between May and June. Wage and income data from the same report also continued to slump year over year. Pending home sale, construction spending, and ISM Purchasing Manager surveys also managed to disappoint. Jobs, on the other hand, showed another month of growth (209,000 jobs) in excess of the 12-month average and the consensus forecast. July was the 82nd consecutive month of job growth. The unemployment rate fell to 4.3 percent, matching a 16-year low.

 

Bond yields trended lower again, further indication of traders being less than all-in on stocks. Most analysts look for the Federal Reserve to tighten policy, starting the process of shrinking its balance sheet at its September policy meeting and raising its federal-funds rate target another quarter-point in December. The fed-funds futures market remains unconvinced on the latter, however, seeing only a 40 percent probability of such a move, according to Bloomberg.

 

Healthcare reform looks dead, at least for now, but healthcare costs remain. A healthy 65-year-old couple retiring this year can expect to spend $322,000 (in today’s dollars) on Medicare premiums and dental insurance during their retirement, according to Healthview Services. Add deductibles, co-pays, hearing, vision, and dental cost sharing, and that figure rises to $404,000.

 

Foreign stocks continue to outperform as developed nation, emerging market, European, Chinese and Japanese stocks all had good weeks. India continues its spectacular performance, up over 1.5 percent last week and over 30 percent in 2017. Valuations are much cheaper overseas than in the U.S., which is a major point for many.

 

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July 31, 2017

Most of the major domestic stock benchmarks ended the week modestly lower, with the Dow being the prominent
exception. The market received a boost from energy stocks, as oil prices advanced following the promise of
production cutbacks by Saudi Arabia. Real estate-related shares also performed well. Health care stocks fared
poorly, weighed down in part by a steep drop in AstraZeneca shares following disappointing test results for its new
lung cancer drug. Health care service providers also performed poorly for much of the week as uncertainty
persisted about Obamacare’s survival and related changes to health care regulations.

Last week’s trading started slowly, with volumes Monday among the lowest of the year so far. Trading picked up
later in the week, with players paying attention to the Federal Reserve’s statement on Wednesday following its
policy meeting. The statement included no rate hike, as expected, but revealed that the Fed intended to begin
reducing its holdings of mortgage-backed securities and U.S. Treasuries “relatively soon,” which might put upward
pressure on longer-term interest rates and the mortgage bond markets. The Fed had previously outlined its plan to
draw down its holdings by not reinvesting all of its principal payments on these securities, a process expected to
begin this fall.

Market activity spiked further on Thursday, the busiest day for second-quarter earnings releases, as 74 S&P 500
companies reported results and 380 firms reported overall. The AstraZeneca test results also captured attention
and weighed on the market. Traders noted that the biggest driver of sentiment, however, appeared to be a
research note from a JPMorgan strategist, who warned that current low levels of market volatility were reminiscent
of periods just before previous bear markets.

The week’s economic data were mixed and appeared to have minimal impact on stock prices. Existing home sales
declined in June, held back by low inventories, while new home sales and housing prices rose. The Conference
Board’s gauge of consumer confidence defied expectations and increased. Less encouraging news came from the
manufacturing sector, with core (excluding commercial aircraft and defense) capital goods orders contracting
slightly in June. On Friday, the Commerce Department released its initial estimate of second-quarter growth, which
showed GDP expanding at an annualized pace of 2.6 percent, slightly below expectations. The previous quarter’s pace was revised lower, to 1.2 percent. Longer-term U.S. Treasury yields rose last week. Credit spreads compressed due to a combination of light new issuance and strong demand.

Across the pond, the busy week of corporate earnings injected volatility into the major European indexes. Soft
manufacturing data releases, notably in Germany and France, weighed on the market early in the week. However,
by midweek, as earnings season was in full swing, telecom, tech, and utility stocks led the markets higher. With
about one-third of companies having reported, earnings and sales results are tracking slightly ahead of estimates.
Even so, European traders were somewhat disappointed that, so far, second-quarter earnings results compared
poorly with the strong earnings results seen over other recent quarters. By the end of the week, European tech
stocks, hurt by earnings misses and profit taking, were a drag on Germany’s Dax and France’s CAC 40. The pan-
European index Stoxx 600 finished the week lower too. The ruble fell against the U.S. dollar last week after the U.S.
Congress agreed to impose new sanctions on Russia to punish it for its interference in last year’s U.S. presidential
election.

The Japanese stock market benchmarks fell modestly last week while the yen was little changed versus the dollar
and stayed above ¥111 per buck, about 5.0 percent stronger than at the end of 2016. Elsewhere in Asia, China’s
economy is starting to lose growth momentum following recent tightening actions by the government. Forecasts of
slower growth in China for the rest of 2017 have become the consensus as Beijing has issued a slew of surprising
economic reports in recent weeks. Meanwhile, Congress imposed separate sanctions measures against Iran and
North Korea, with little market impact.

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July 25, 2017

After the previous week’s big across-the-board gains, stocks recorded just modest gains last week, but those gains were enough for every major benchmark except the Dow to reach new all-time highs. The tech-heavy Nasdaq performed best, helped by strength among Internet-related stocks following a favorable earnings report from Netflix. A midweek rally in crude oil prices also helped energy stocks, which have been among the market’s weaker performers for the year-to-date.

 

Trading activity was generally subdued throughout most of last week despite the release of a substantial number of important earnings reports. Firms representing roughly one-fifth of the S&P 500’s market capitalization released second-quarter results during the week. Earnings strength has been a driver of the market’s strong gains so far this year, helping to counteract some pullback in multiples (price-to-earnings ratios). Analysts polled by research firm FactSet expect earnings for the S&P 500 to have grown by a little more than 7 percent in the second quarter (versus a year earlier), just over half of their pace in the first-quarter rebound.

 

Strength in the global economy, together with hopes for improved growth in the U.S., has also been a factor driving gains. The previous week brought disappointing news on this front, with the release of soft U.S. inflation and retail sales data, but last week’s data were somewhat more encouraging. In particular, the Commerce Department reported that housing starts rose a robust 8.3 percent in June and new housing permits rose 7.4 percent, both rebounding from prior drops in May. Initial jobless claims fell in the previous week and reached their lowest level in two months, signaling continued strength in the labor market.

 

Intermediate and long-term U.S. Treasury yields declined last week despite the encouraging economic signals. Commercial mortgage-backed securities were better bid during the week as negative headlines about retail commercial real estate subsided. The investment-grade corporate bond market was hit with a flurry of issuance after U.S. banks reported earnings, but this supply was easily absorbed. The high yield market was quiet.

 

European stocks headed lower last week, as a strengthening euro and weaker oil prices acted as headwinds for equities. (A strong euro generally pressures European companies to generate better earnings domestically.) The German Dax 30, which has heavy exposure to exporters, ended the week lower, as did the pan-European index Stoxx 600. Other developed markets overseas had a much better week, however.

 

In Asia, the Japanese equity market posted positive returns. The yen strengthened versus the dollar, ending above ¥111 per U.S. dollar, which is about 4.6 percent stronger than ¥117 per U.S. dollar at the end of 2016. China’s GDP rose 6.9 percent in the second quarter, matching the first quarter’s strong pace and all but assuring it will meet its 6.5 percent annual growth target. The latest quarterly expansion was slightly better than expected, underscoring the Chinese economy’s resilience even as Beijing has tightened policy and taken other steps to reduce financial system risks.

 

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July 17, 2017

Pretty much every sector of the global stock markets was significantly higher last week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 each touched new intraday highs, but the tech-heavy Nasdaq performed best among the domestic indices for the week. Trading volumes were generally subdued through Thursday as traders awaited the start of earnings reporting season, which kicked off Friday with the release of second-quarter results from several major banks. Stocks rallied further into the close of the week, which some attributed to hopes for a repeat of the previous quarter’s upward earnings surprises.

 

The domestic markets were generally flat early in the week, with the S&P 500 suffering only a brief sell-off on Tuesday morning after President Trump’s son released emails showing that, despite repeated strong denials by him and multiple administration officials, he had indeed had contact with a Russian lawyer during the election campaign. Politics were also in focus in terms of the Republican health care bill. The announcement later on Tuesday that the Senate was delaying its August recess to deal with health care helped the market recover from the latest Trump scandal.

 

Attention on Wednesday shifted to the Federal Reserve. Fed Chair Janet Yellen’s semi-annual testimony before Congress struck a generally dovish tone. Yellen signaled that the Fed was in no rush to tighten monetary policy, and offered reassurances on the current state of the economy. Traders may also have been relieved that she avoided repeating the reference she had made in late June to asset prices as being “somewhat rich.”

 

The bank earnings released Friday offered both positive and negative surprises, but the group as a whole moved lower in early trading. Disappointing economic data may have been to blame, with retail sales in June falling for the second straight month. Traders may also have been discouraged by continuing weakness in core (less food and energy costs) inflation, which rose only 0.1 percent for June. What is now four consecutive months of subdued core inflation may complicate the Fed’s plans to raise interest rates, which may have given stocks a bounce into the close. Indeed, in her Wednesday testimony, Yellen referred to weak recent inflation readings and stated that “monetary policy is not on a preset course” but that “the Committee will be monitoring inflation developments closely in the months ahead.” The soft inflation data helped U.S. Treasuries produce positive returns as well last week.

 

Foreign stocks were also higher last week. European stock indexes rose even more than their domestic counterparts, rallying more than two percent while emerging markets stocks were higher still, jumping more than five percent. In Europe, traders moved back into equities following signs that the major central banks would not move as quickly to tighten monetary policy as once thought. Along with Fed Chair Yellen’s comments, Bank of England Deputy Governor Ben Broadbent said he is not ready to vote for higher interest rates, even though he sees building pressure to do so. On the news, the pan-European Stoxx 600 Index ended the week higher, recording one of its biggest weekly gains in two months. The German DAX and the French CAC 40 both ended the week higher as well.

 

In Asia, Japanese equities rallied last week too, recouping almost all of the declines during the prior two weeks. The widely watched Nikkei 225 Stock Average advanced almost one percent. Elsewhere in the Far East, surprisingly strong June trade data from China were the latest indicators pointing to a resurgent global economy. China’s exports rose 11.3 percent in June from a year earlier, marking the fourth straight monthly gain, the government there reported. Meanwhile, China’s imports surged 17.2 percent from a year ago, leaving a trade surplus of $42.8 billion. Both the export and import figures exceeded analysts’ forecasts and May’s gains.

 

June’s trade data showed continued buoyant foreign demand for Chinese exports as well as resilient demand on the mainland for overseas goods, even as Chinese officials have tightened policy and taken steps to reduce debt. Analysts scrutinize trade data from China, the world’s largest exporter, for clues about the strength of global demand, though in recent years Chinese officials have sought to reduce the economy’s dependency on exports. Export declines weighed on China’s growth in the past two years but have recovered this year thanks to strong demand from the U.S. and Europe.

 

The exceptionally strong week for stocks around the world caused some to re-think the rally that has continued mostly unabated since last November. Domestic stocks initially surged after the election on hopes of pro-growth policies such as tax reform, deregulation and infrastructure spending from the incoming administration. However, despite a Republican president and Republican majorities in both the House and the Senate, none of these hoped-for policies have been passed, at least as of yet. Congress has not even been able to pass a health care bill to this point, yet stocks continue to rise.

 

That this positive price action in the markets has continued despite none of the promised political action taking place in Congress may seem counterintuitive, but Ned Davis Research has newly published historical research showing that stocks tend to perform better during periods of political uncertainty. More specifically, when the Philadelphia Federal Reserve’s Partisan Conflict Index — a measure of political disagreement in the United States — rises above 100, the S&P 500 has risen at a 11.7 percent annual rate. By way of contrast, the S&P has risen at an annual rate of just 5.8 percent when the index is below 100, according to analysis published last week.

 

Political conflict alone isn’t enough to drive markets, of course. Most importantly, corporate earnings are expanding at a record pace and economic growth is steady, if not as strong as desired. Perhaps traders like political conflict because they fear legislative changes might derail the strength they perceive today, but that is pure speculation, of course.

 

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July 10, 2017

 

The major domestic equity benchmarks posted mixed performance last week, but were mostly lower. The smaller-cap indexes, which are typically more volatile, declined, while some of the larger-cap benchmarks recorded a modest gain. MarketWatch and the WSJ Market Data Group reported that the Dow and the broader S&P 500 had recently experienced their lowest correlation since 2003, due mainly to the larger representation of tech stocks in the S&P.

Trading volumes were predictably very light early in the week, given the abbreviated trading session on Monday and the Fourth of July holiday on Tuesday. Stocks recorded modest gains on the back of those light volumes, with tech shares, which have recently been exceptionally volatile, bouncing back on Wednesday.

Sentiment soured and prices plummeted on Thursday, which caused the S&P 500 to record its worst daily decline since May, although trading volumes remained moderate. The generally accepted reasons were several. U.S. Treasury yields had been higher for seven of the previous eight trading days and minutes from the Federal Reserve’s June meeting, released the previous afternoon, did little to change expectations that a third rate hike was coming this year. Minutes from the recent European Central Bank policy meeting similarly weighed on markets after revealing some discussion about removing their easing bias (see below). Finally, on the geopolitical front, markets were not receptive to President Trump’s warning of “pretty severe things” that could happen in response to North Korea’s successful intercontinental ballistic missile test.

Friday brought the monthly jobs data and some reassuring news that helped stocks regain a bit of ground. The Labor Department reported that employers had added many more jobs than anticipated in June, helping reverse a string of disappointingly small monthly increases. A rising number of aggregate hours worked suggests that labor income is increasing at a more substantial pace. Even the tick up in the unemployment rate, to 4.4 percent, was seen as good news in that it suggests that job-seekers are returning to the job market.

While payroll gains were broad-based and boosted by the biggest jump in government jobs in almost a year, wages were below forecasts, even with the jobless rate close to the lowest since 2001. Nevertheless, the report marks a relatively strong finish for the labor market in the second quarter that should support continued gains in consumer spending in the coming months. Fed policy makers raised interest rates last month and reiterated plans to start reducing their balance sheet and increase borrowing costs once more this year.

Longer-term U.S. Treasury yields did not move substantially in response to the jobs report but increased for the week. Moves during the short trading week were the result of mixed economic data, the negative influence of European debt issuance, and volatility in oil prices.

European stock markets ended the week in slightly negative territory – a hangover from a global equity sell-off that followed new signs that central banks could be leaning toward tightening fiscal monetary policy. Minutes from the ECB’s June meeting published on Thursday showed that policymakers had considered whether to withdraw the ECB’s pledge to increase the pace of its bond-buying program if needed to boost the economy. Following the release, 10-year German bund yields increased to over 0.56 percent at Thursday’s close. The Pan-European index Stoxx 600 ended flat for the week.

In Asia, Japanese equities also declined last week. However, Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida and European Union Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmström confirmed an outline for an Economic Partnership Agreement. The free trade deal, which stands in stark contrast to President Trump’s promised protectionism, was inked by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and European Council President Donald Tusk on Thursday after having been in the works since 2013. Although the details of the EPA will not be finalized until later in the year, the agreement is expected to remove tariffs over a multiyear period on 95 percent of traded goods among the participants. That result would be a significant boon to the involved economies and to the markets there.

China’s foreign currency reserves rose for the fifth straight month in June, aided by the government’s efforts to stop money from leaving the country and a weak U.S. dollar. The string of monthly gains in China’s cash reserves shows that Beijing has been largely successful in controlling capital outflows and supporting the yuan in the near term, despite expectations for the currency to weaken over time.

 

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