October 2017THE MONTH IN BRIEF
DOMESTIC ECONOMIC HEALTH Three of the latest economic indicators to appear were underwhelming. Consumer spending only rose 0.1% in August, the Department of Commerce noted, with wages up 0.2%. July had seen a 0.3% increase in both categories. Retail sales slipped 0.2% in August, with core sales registering the same monthly decline. 3,4 August payrolls showed a net gain of 156,000 workers – nothing special – and less than the gains of 200,000+ noted by the Department of Labor in the previous two months. The main jobless rate ticked up to 4.4%; the U-6 rate, including the underemployed, stayed at 8.6%. Annualized wage growth remained at 2.5%..5 Other indicators were more encouraging. The Institute for Supply Management’s twin purchasing manager indices both rose for August. ISM’s service sector PMI gained 1.4 points to 55.3, while the factory PMI hit 58.8, climbing 2.5 points to its highest level since April 2011. These readings indicate an atmosphere of fast growth for both manufacturing and non-manufacturing businesses..4,6 The Bureau of Economic Analysis made its final estimate of Q2 growth, bumping the number up 0.1% to 3.1%. Durable goods orders rose 1.7% in August, and core capital goods orders improved 0.9%. Consumer confidence held steady last month in the wake of calamitous storms – the Conference Board index eased down but 0.6 points to 119.8, and the University of Michigan index moved just 0.2 points lower from its preliminary September reading to 95.1. 3,4 Was inflation making a comeback? Maybe, maybe not. The Consumer Price Index rose 0.4% in August, but the Fed’s preferred inflation measure, the PCE price index, showed just a 0.1% gain. The year-over-year gain in the headline CPI was 1.9% through August, just underneath the Fed’s long-stated 2.0% goal; for the headline Producer Price Index, the 12-month advance was 2.4%. 3,4
GLOBAL ECONOMIC HEALTH Factory growth in important Asian economies accelerated in September. China’s official factory PMI reached its highest level in five years; this news came on the heels of 6.9% growth for the P.R.C. economy in the first half of the year, topping government projections. Manufacturing activity in South Korea expanded at the best pace since 2015 last month; factory growth was also indicated by improved PMIs in Indonesia and Taiwan. India, unfortunately, was seeing a dramatic economic slowdown. Its latest growth snapshot showed GDP of 5.7% in Q2, as opposed to 9.1% in Q2 2016; last quarter was the poorest for its economy since Q1 2014. 9,10
WORLD MARKETS Big gains occurred elsewhere. Argentina’s MERVAL climbed 11.24% for the month, and in Tokyo, the Nikkei 225 improved 5.13%. Brazil’s Bovespa rose 4.15%, while Canada’s TSX Composite gained 3.66%. The MSCI World posted a 2.08% advance; South Korea’s KOSPI benchmark went north 1.26%. As for September losers, Mexico’s Bolsa fell 1.89%; Hong Kong’s Hang Seng, 0.76%; MSCI’s Emerging Markets index, 0.55%; China’s Shanghai Composite, 0.48%; India’s Sensex, 0.33%.11,12
COMMODITIES MARKETS There were more gains than losses in the ag sector. Sugar was the only major crop that retreated last month, declining 8.12%. Wheat rose 9.51%; cocoa, 5.54%; corn, 4.24%; soybeans, 3.31%; coffee, 0.47%. 13 While the U.S. Dollar Index improved 0.43% to a month-ending settlement of 93.07, all key metals fell. Gold lost 2.97% for the month; silver, 4.44%; platinum, 8.62%; copper, 4.74%. On the COMEX, gold finished September at $1,282.50; silver, at $16.69.13,14
REAL ESTATE Developers built fewer projects during the summer. Housing starts were down 0.8% in August after a (revised) 2.2% retreat in July, according to the Census Bureau. The Bureau’s August report on new construction activity did show a 5.7% rebound for building permits, more than offsetting the 4.1% July fall. 4 For those who could buy or refinance, mortgage rates were still cheap. They barely budged last month; comparing Freddie Mac’s August 31 and September 28 Primary Mortgage Market Surveys, only the average rate on the 5/1-year ARM showed real movement, up 0.06% to 3.20%. The respective average rates for 30-year and 15-year FRMs ticked just 0.01% higher to 3.83% and 3.13%. 15
LOOKING BACK…LOOKING FORWARD
Sources: online.wsj.com, bigcharts.com, treasury.gov – 9/29/17 18,19,20,21 Indices are unmanaged, do not incur fees or expenses, and cannot be invested into directly. These returns do not include dividends. 10-year TIPS real yield = projected return at maturity given expected inflation. Will we see a fall rally start in October? It could happen. September ended with the dollar at a 33-month low against a basket of other key currencies, a situation that points toward higher, near-term profits for U.S. firms, while also hinting at greater inflation pressure. This may bode well for the S&P 500’s financial sector, and corporate earnings clearing forecasts could lift all boats. As personal finance site NerdWallet notes, stock market analysts are anticipating slightly more than 4% earnings growth for Q3, which is lower than preceding quarterly forecasts, but still solid. Volatility has been on holiday – the first three quarters of this year saw only eight trading days with 1% swings in the S&P. (Over the past 50 years, the yearly average is 52 days.) Low volatility breeds investor confidence. This year, institutional investors have maintained their cool even in the face of the year’s most unnerving headlines. So, absent of black swan events, the market may be poised for more gains.22
UPCOMING ECONOMIC RELEASES: As October unfolds further, investors will await these important news releases: the September Challenger job-cut report (10/5), the Department of Labor’s September employment snapshot (10/6), the September PPI (10/12), September retail sales, the September CPI, and the initial University of Michigan consumer sentiment index for October (10/13), September industrial output (10/17), a new Federal Reserve Beige Book and September groundbreaking and building permits (10/18), September existing home sales (10/20), September durable goods orders and new home sales (10/25), September pending home sales (10/26), the month’s final University of Michigan consumer sentiment index reading and the first estimate of Q3 growth from the Bureau of Economic Analysis (10/27), the September PCE price index and September personal spending report (10/30), and the Conference Board’s latest consumer confidence index (10/31). The Federal Reserve’s next policy announcement occurs November 1.
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The Korea Composite Stock Price Index or KOSPI is the major stock market index of South Korea, representing all common stocks traded on the Korea Exchange. The Mexican Stock Exchange, commonly known as Mexican Bolsa, Mexbol, or BMV, is the only stock exchange in Mexico. The Hang Seng Index is a free float-adjusted market capitalization-weighted stock market index that is the main indicator of the overall market performance in Hong Kong. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index is a float-adjusted market capitalization index consisting of indices in more than 25 emerging economies. The SSE Composite Index is an index of all stocks (A shares and B shares) that are traded at the Shanghai Stock Exchange. The BSE SENSEX (Bombay Stock Exchange Sensitive Index), also-called the BSE 30 (BOMBAY STOCK EXCHANGE) or simply the SENSEX, is a free-float market capitalization-weighted stock market index of 30 well-established and financially sound companies listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE). 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