Monday, August 13, 2012

Pool Dancing

You can have your Usain Bolts, Michael Phelpses and Gabby Douglases; we prefer the anonymous practitioners of synchronized swimming, an athletic art that rivals the music of the spheres for precision and elegance – kinda like the sporting life on this side of the Atlantic.  Not.  Equity prices rose and bonds fell, sending the discordant message that economic growth and rising inflation lies ahead.

Considering the fiscal cliff the U.S. is hurtling toward, financial markets are either blissfully optimistic or whistling past the graveyard.  The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.32% Friday and is up 8.9% so far in the second half of the year.  Meanwhile, the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note has risen 20 basis points since June 1 to 1.65%.
The action came against a skeletal backdrop.  Productivity in the second quarter was reported to have risen 1.6% after falling 0.5% in the first quarter, when hiring was more robust.  The cruelest irony of the soft jobs market is that rising output per worker has meant less pressure for firms to add workers.

Wholesale inventories declined 0.2% in July, signaling either increasing demand or business pessimism – take your pick.  And the federal budget went $70 billion further in the red last month versus a $60 billion deficit in June.
The most encouraging news was the surprising drop in initial jobless claims to 361,000 versus an expectation of 370,000.  Our colleague Rich Bieglmeier was spot on with his call on this high-frequency series.

There will be stronger hooks to hang a hat on this week.  Tuesday brings the biggest number, retail sales for July.  Recall that last month’s report of a 0.5% decline in June kindled fresh speculation that the economy was tipping over and the Federal Reserve would be forced to act.  Economists generally expect a 0.2% increase in sales and 0.3% increase excluding automobiles.
The producer price index for July, also on Tuesday, is seen rising a benign 0.2% including and excluding food and fuel prices.  The consumer price index, to be released Wednesday is seen rising a similar amount.  Also Wednesday, the Empire State Index of August business activity in New York, industrial production in July and the homebuilders index are slated for release.

Also on tap are jobless claims, housing starts and the Philadelphia Fed’s survey on Thursday.
On the earnings front, big retailers are in the spotlight.  On tap to report quarterly results are Home Depot, Wal-Mart, Target and Sears.  The results could be key to setting the tone for the week.

This week, we inaugurate our Houdini Award with a nod to Goldman Sachs for escaping criminal prosecution for touting securities it was betting against, proving once again it’s better to be right and lucky.
And our Laurel Wreath goes to Shakespeare’s “scepter’d isle,” for hosting all the Bolts, Phelpses, Douglases and synchronized swimmers while delighting our teenage daughter with a closing ceremony performance of English boy band One Direction.

Meanwhile, U.S. investors prepare for the post-Olympics fiscal cliff-diving competition in 2013.  Good luck.

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