Sunday, April 11, 2004

Charts of the Week

Unit Labor Costs Non-farm Business (1977-2003)

30-Year Treasury Yield (1977-2003)


BOTTOM LINE: It is not a coincidence that interest rates have fallen as unit labor costs fall. 70% of inflation is comprised of unit labor costs, while only 5% is comprised of commodity costs. It is very likely the Fed will begin raising rates in the next few months, however the frequency and magnitude of their subsequent hikes will probably be less than investors currently anticipate. The current slack in the labor market and deflationary forces emanating from developing countries should keep unit labor costs in check for the foreseeable future, thus allowing the Fed to raise rates at a relatively slow pace compared to past periods of Fed tightening.

Market Week in Review

S&P 500 1,139.32 +.63% for the week.

U.S. stocks finished mostly higher on the week as stellar corporate earnings and economic reports were offset by rising energy prices and violence in Iraq. Yahoo!(YHOO), Dell(DELL), General Electric(GE), Genentech(DNA), Research in Motion(RIMM), Cummins(CMI), Black & Decker(BDK) and Cigna(CI) are notable U.S. companies that raised their revenue or earnings guidance. HMO's paced gains for the week as Cigna's strong quarterly report and Oxford Health(OHP) takeover speculation ignited investor interest in the group. The all-time high reading in the ISM Non-manufacturing Index and three-year low in initial jobless claims both painted very positive pictures of the current state of the U.S. economy, thus leading to further strength in commodity-related groups. Finally, small/mid-cap security-related stocks soared as traders speculate demand for their products from government's around the globe will significantly increase on terrorism fears.

With strong economic growth comes increased demand for energy. Crude oil rose 8.3% for the week, its strongest rise in over a year. The very strong economic reports also resulted in speculation that the Fed was falling behind the curve with respect to inflation. This prompted further selling in Homebuilders as investors bet interest rate increases will dampen demand for homes. Retailers also underperformed last week. Rising gasoline prices, harder year-over-year future sales comparisons and declining monetary stimulus all led to weakness in retail shares. Violent headlines from overseas also contributed to a lackluster performance for U.S. stocks. The very positive economic and corporate earnings reports were drowned out by the media's intense focus on all that could go wrong in Iraq.

BOTTOM LINE: It is my optimistic opinion that the burst of violence in Iraq in temporary in nature. This is giving investors a chance to buy U.S. shares at artificially depressed levels. Numerous bell-weather U.S. companies are beating estimates by a significant margin, thus making current valuations even more attractive. Inflation is not currently a problem and won't be for the foreseeable future. Only 5% of inflation is comprised of commodity prices. 70% of inflation comes from unit labor costs. There is still too much slack in the labor market to see any significant pick-up in unit labor costs at this time, thus allowing the Fed to increase rates at a slower pace than most investors currently anticipate.

Saturday, April 10, 2004

Economic Week in Review

ECRI Weekly Leading Index 135.50 +1.19%

The ISM Non-manufacturing Index for March, which accounts for about 85% of the U.S. economy, rose to an all-time record high of 65.8 vs. 60.8 in February and expectations of 61.5. "This is a very strong report -- its confirmation of the big rise in payrolls we saw Friday, and it's a sign that consumers are spending," said Chris Low, chief economist at FTN Financial. Allen Questrom, CEO of J.C. Penney, said that the tax cuts have been a key issue in the last couple of years in terms of restarting the economy's growth engines and biding time for corporations to begin spending again. Penney plans to add more new stores than it has in the past several years, Questrom said. 15 of 17 industries reported increases in business, led by wholesalers, mining, communications, retail and construction. The index of prices paid, a measure of costs for purchased materials and services, surged to 65.7 from 57.3 in February. The survey's employment index rose to 53.9, the sixth straight month of growth. Furthermore, CEO's may be gaining optimism and showing that in their hiring plans, a quarterly survey showed. The NY-based Conference Board's index of business confidence rose to 73 in the first quarter, the highest reading since 1983.

Morgan Stanley and Lehman Brothers said they will cut their U.S. budget deficit forecasts by $40-50B for 04 as strong economic growth, smaller-than-expected tax refunds and slower government spending all contribute to a smaller deficit.

Executives at Starbucks, McDonalds, Microsoft, Coke, Nike, Ford, GE and American Airlines all said they aren't seeing any negative impact on their businesses overseas, notwithstanding the recent geopolitical turmoil. A Harris Interactive poll conducted Feb. 27 to March 4 in Britain, France, Germany, Spain and Italy found that only 13% of those surveyed had a negative opinion of Americans.

Higher energy prices don't threaten growth in the U.S. economy or add much to inflation concerns, William Poole, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis told USA Today. "There is no regular and reliable relationship between inflation in materials prices or goods at an early stage of production and retail price inflation," Poole said. Unit Labor Costs, which account for 70% of inflation have been falling since the early 80's. "As long as there are no threats to the continuation of low and stable inflation, then we have space, to be slower in raising rates than we would if we start to see conditions developing that do show threats to the inflation environment," Poole said.

The National Association of Realtors, raised its estimate for home sales for the fourth time this year, saying stronger jobs growth will offset a rise in interest rates. The Association also expects the average price of a home to rise another 4.5% this year after last year's 7.5% rise.

The Import Price Index rose .9% in March vs. a .4% rise in February and expectations of a .6% rise. Excluding petroleum, import prices have climbed 1% in 12 months, the smallest rise since a similar gain in October. The increase in consumer prices excluding food and energy has remained tame, rising 1.2% over the 12 months through February, close to the smallest gain since 1966.

Initial Jobless claims for the week ending April 3 were 328K vs. 342K the prior week and expectations of 340K. Increasing demand from the strongest economic growth since the early 80's is making it harder for companies to rely on productivity gains from existing workers. Moreover, corporate profits last quarter reached an all-time record high of 8.5% of GDP, thus giving companies the financial ability to increase hiring. A recent survey by the Conference Board showed that over half of all CEO's surveyed planned to increase hiring in the near future. "Companies are hiring and starting to rebuild inventories and that is a sign of confidence," said James O'Sullivan, a senior Economist at UBS Securities. Finally, optimism among U.S. manufacturing executives in March reached an all-time record, Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI said.

Worldwide sales of semiconductor manufacturing equipment rose 10% last year and will surge 40% in 2004 as chipmakers upgrade plants and buy tools for new production techniques, researcher Gartner said. The International Monetary Fund expects the U.S. economy will expand 4.6% this year, the most since the early 80's. The IMF cut its forecast for the 12 countries in the European Union to 1.7% for 04.

BOTTOM LINE: There are several key takeaways for the week. The U.S. service sector, accounting for 85% of the U.S. economy, is on fire. Corporate CEO's confidence is improving dramatically, leading to a rapid improvement in the employment picture. The Fed will likely raise rates at a slower pace than investors currently expect. The first hike will likely come in the next few months, however the magnitude and frequency of the increases will remain subdued until unit labor costs begin to rise substantially. Considering the extent that developing countries are effectively exporting substantial labor cost deflation, it is unlikely U.S. unit labor costs will rise materially in the near future.

The violence in Iraq over the past week will likely result in a modest decline in consumer confidence in the near future. However, I believe the situation is not nearly as bad as it appears. Without going into too much detail, I believe that the spurt of violence was a calculated political move orchestrated by the grand ayatollah of the Iraqi Shia, Ali al-Sistani. He is essentially using al-Sadr as a pawn to "remind" the U.S. that it needs to cater to his demands for the transition on June 30. al-Sistani has the power to put down al-Sadr at any time of his choosing. I believe the U.S. will work out a deal that is acceptable to al-Sistani, thus ending al-Sadr's brief moment of glory. If I am right, the violence has peaked or will peak in the near future. It is highly unlikely that al-Sistani and the U.S. commanders will allow the situation to spiral out of control.

Friday, April 09, 2004

Weekly Scoreboard

Indices
S&P 500 1,139.32 +.63%
Dow 10,442.03 +.66%
NASDAQ 2,052.88 +1.88%
Russell 2000 597.88 +.43%
Wilshire 5000 11,166.06 +.53%
Volatility(VIX) 16.26 -2.34%
AAII Bullish % 58.78 +6.54%
US Dollar 88.98 +2.11%
CRB 282.80 +.48%

Futures Spot Prices
Gold 420.70 -1.89%
Crude Oil 37.14 +8.28%
Natural Gas 5.94 +2.70%
Base Metals 111.52 -3.09%
10-year US Treasury Yield 4.19% +.96%
Average 30-year Mortgage Rate 5.79% +4.89%

Leading Sectors
HMO's +5.09%
Iron/Steel +4.03%
Semis +3.32%

Lagging Sectors
Retail -1.35%
I-Banks -1.65%
Homebuilders -7.02%

*% Gain or loss for the week

Thursday, April 08, 2004

Thursday Close

S&P 500 1,139.32 -.11%
NASDAQ 2,052.88 +.13%


Leading Sectors
Internet +1.85%
Energy +1.09%
Semis +.90%

Lagging Sectors
Airlines -1.14%
Homebuilders -1.62%
Retail -2.18%

Other
Crude Oil 37.14 +2.74%
Natural Gas 5.94 +1.18%
Gold 420.70 -.71%
Base Metals 111.52 -.91%
U.S. Dollar 89.05 +.03%
10-Yr. Long-Bond Yield 4.19% unch.
VIX 16.26 +3.17%
Put/Call .71 +1.43%
NYSE Arms .83 -55.14%

After-hours Movers
SCSS +4.84% after boosting 1Q sales and earnings forecast.
CGPI +22.64% after announcing that it settled a patent infringement case against Mutual Pharmaceutical Co.

Recommendations
Goldman Sachs reiterated Outperform on ACN, MUR and SBC. GS reiterated Underperform on ATI. NPSP may be acquired by a larger rival that's attracted to the drugmaker's line of products, Business Week reported. MWD trades substantially below other brokerages at a time when its profits show "meaningful improvement," Business Week said.

After-hours News
U.S. stocks were mixed Thursday ahead of the three-day weekend, as geopolitical concerns offset strong earnings reports from several bell-weather U.S. companies. After the close, FedEx CEO Fred Smith told CNBC the economy is recovering and concerns about Iraq aren't hurting business. The NASD launched an industry-wide investigation into fee-based brokerage accounts, Dow Jones Newswires reported. The U.S. Senate passed legislation that lets companies struggling with stock-market losses contribute $80B less to their pension plans, sending the bill to President Bush for his signature. Reliant Resources, two employees and two former employees were indicted on criminal charges for shutting down power plants during the California energy crisis in 2000 to drive up electricity prices.

BOTTOM LINE: The Portfolio finished slightly higher on the day as my technology longs rose and homebuilding shorts fell. I added a few new long positions into the afternoon weakness, bringing the Portfolio's market exposure back to 75% net long. I think terrorism/war fears and traders early exits for the weekend resulted in an artificially weak day. I expect Monday will be better for the bulls, barring any new terrorist acts or a worsening of the situation in Iraq.

Mid-day Update

S&P 500 1,142.74 +.19%
NASDAQ 2,061.41 +.54%


Leading Sectors
Internet +2.08%
Energy +1.37%
Semis +1.08%

Lagging Sectors
Gaming -.45%
Homebuilders -1.13%
Retail -1.91%

Other
Crude Oil 37.00 +2.35%
Natural Gas 5.90 +.56%
Gold 420.70 -.68%
Base Metals 111.52 -.91%
U.S. Dollar 89.05 +.87%
10-Yr. Long-Bond Yield 4.19% +.66%
VIX 16.17 +2.60%
Put/Call .69 -1.43%
NYSE Arms .78 -57.84%

Market Movers
YHOO +15.0% after beating 1Q estimates, raising guidance and announcing 2-for-1 split.
IPIX +56.5% after announcing a reseller agreement with Abstract Security.
MAGS +10.2% on increased worldwide concern about terrorist attacks.
ACCL -12.01% after cutting revenue forecast.
INSP +12.91% on YHOO earnings and upgrade to Buy at Wedbush Morgan.
AH -8.1% on lawsuit by Assoc. of Police Organizations relating to faulty bulletproof vests.
FRED -9.4% on weaker-than-expected same-store-sales.
AGU -10.22% after lowering 1st Half earnings guidance.

Economic Data
Initial Jobless Claims for last week 328K vs. expectations of 340K.
Continuing Claims 3010K vs. 3023K forecast.
Wholesale Inventories for February +1.2% vs. +.3% forecast.

Recommendations
JNY raised to Outperform at CSFB, target $42. CHK raised to Outperform at CSFB, target $16. IPAS raised to Overweight at Morgan Stanley. Goldman Sachs reiterated Outperform on YHOO, AMLN, GE, MO, DELL, DNA and ALL. GS reiterated Underperform on POT. GS said strong results at AVT bode well for the semiconductor sector. Citi Smith Barney said FCS, CY, IRF, IDTI, MXIM and XLNX should guide higher on earnings reports, INTC and AGRA may guide lower. GS raised estimates for FD and reiterated Outperform.

Mid-day News
U.S. stocks are mostly higher mid-day as technology shares respond favorably to recent earning reports. The U.S. Federal Communications Commission will deny AT&T's request that it may be exempt from paying hundreds of millions of dollars to local telephone companies for fees related to Internet-based calls, the Washington Post reported. XM Satellite Radio(XMSR) Chairman Gary Parsons told CNBC the company expects to add more than 2.8M new subscribers this year and is working to reduce the cost of acquiring them. Genentech(DNA) President Myrtle Potter told CNBC that physicians haven't overstocked Avastin, indicating sales of the new cancer drug will remain strong. The number of Americans filing initial claims for jobless benefits fell to 328,000 last week, the lowest since President Clinton's last week in office, Bloomberg reported. Crude oil futures rose for a third day after the Energy Department forecast U.S. gasoline prices will increase to a record this summer. Wal-Mart, J.C. Penney and Target said March sales were stronger than expected as shoppers spent higher tax refunds and demand for spring dresses and blouses surged, Bloomberg reported.

BOTTOM LINE: The Portfolio is having a good day as my shorts are lower and tech longs are rising. I took profits in a few positions on the strong open, leaving market exposure at 50% net long. Rising energy prices, Condoleezza Rice's testimony, terrorism/war fears and traders speculation that retail sales are peaking are all contributing to a relatively muted reaction to very good earnings and employment news. I expect U.S. indices will remain under slight pressure until the final hour of trading. Most hedgers and sellers will finish their repositioning by then, allowing the major indices to rise into the close. However, with light holiday volume, downside volatility is always a possibility. Barring a terrorist attack or deterioration in the Iraq situation over the weekend, I expect stocks to rise Monday as investors mull the positive news over the holidays.