Displaying items by tag: recession

الخميس, 04 نيسان/أبريل 2019 13:45

Recession Watch: Positive Data!

(New York)

The whole market has been on recession watch mode lately. The Fed has gone seriously dovish and weak economic data seems to be emerging by the day. However, some good news, at last: US jobless data just clocked in at the lowest level in 50 years, showing that the labor market is still tight. The numbers were in contrast to economists’ estimates for higher claims. Claims have fallen this far recently, but been revised higher later.


FINSUM: This is good news but it may not be indicative of much as this data could be slightly behind the hiring numbers, which have been weak recently.

Published in Eq: Total Market
الأربعاء, 03 نيسان/أبريل 2019 12:28

Recession Watch: More Bad Hiring Data

(New York)

The economic picture is growing increasingly gloomy for the US. While there has been sporadically good data, the general trend is downward across many areas. Today, more information on the labor market is signaling a further deterioration. ADP hiring data has been released and it shows that sector hiring has fallen to an 18-month low. The private sector hired 129,000 new workers, missing expectations. “The job market is weakening”, says Moody’s Analytics, bluntly.


FINSUM: The job market seems like a good leading indicator right now. Company’s may be tightening purse strings, which could be a sign that everything is slowing.

Published in Eq: Total Market
الإثنين, 01 نيسان/أبريل 2019 13:04

Recession Watch: Retail Sales Turn Negative

(New York)

In another sign of a weakening economic landscape, new retail sales data was released for February, and it was not pretty. The data didn’t just slow, it actually reversed, with retail sales falling 0.2% month over month in February. The data was a big shock as economists were expecting a gain, especially after a revised 0.7% increase in January. The numbers suggest the economy may be in line for a contraction in Q1, as December also saw a big 1.6% decline in retail sales.


FINSUM: There are a lot of economic indicators looking negative right now. We are still optimistic, but the signs are getting harder to ignore.

Published in Eq: Total Market
الإثنين, 01 نيسان/أبريل 2019 12:59

Value Stocks Ready for a Resurgence

(New York)

It has been a long time since value stocks had a chance to shine. A LONG time. Growth stocks have handily outperformed their growth cousins, so much so that even some diehard value investors have talked about giving up on the practice. Value stocks took a pounding in March following the Fed’s dovish turn and spreads versus the market’s most expensive stocks are at their widest in 70 years. This means it may be a good time to buy, says Bernstein’s equity research team. If you look away from financial value stocks, the sector did not actually get wounded much last month. The reason why it may be time to buy is two-part: the first is that value stocks tend to outperform when the economy is slowing, but not in outright recession. The second is that high value stock spreads are seen all across the economy, and not just in challenged sectors, which means they are less likely indicative of real challenges and are more likely just a market symptom.


FINSUM: We understand this analysis, but have to disagree. We just don’t think the old precedents for value stocks hold much water at the point. Our view is that as growth slows, investors will buy the stocks with the most growth, not the cheapest ones.

Published in Eq: Value
الجمعة, 29 آذار/مارس 2019 11:35

US Growth is Worse Than It Looks

(New York)

Headline fourth quarter growth got downgraded this week to just 2.2% (from 2.6%). That may not seem like a devastating fall, but if you take a closer look at the figures, they are worse than at first glance. In particular, it becomes clear that growth was actually weakening all throughout 2018 (versus 2017). While the fourth quarter especially showed weakness, it was really only two one-time quirks that kept growth as high as it was for the year: increased military spending and higher spending by non-profits. Neither of those factors are very tied to the underlying economy and consumers.


FINSUM: This is pretty eye-opening and does sap our confidence a bit. Consumer spending also barely rose in January, which is another negative sign.

Published in Eq: Total Market

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