During
the past number of market sessions, we have seen some profit taking on stocks
and repositioning of bonds, which has moved the stock market down. The result
is confusion on the economic front. The good news, announced on Thursday, was
that in the third quarter the economy grew at a rate of 3.6%, rather than the 2.8%
originally reported. Business inventories, at $116.6 billion--the largest
accumulation of inventories since the first quarter of 1998--accounted for most
of the growth. This growth is in sharp contrast with domestic demand that rose
only 1.8% rather than the expected 2.1%. As a subplot, consumer spending
dropped to 1.4%, the lowest since the fourth quarter of 2009. Retail spending, so
far in the fourth quarter, does not seem to be picking up as we go into the
biggest shopping period of the year. Retailers may have to take major markdowns
before the holiday season is over, to align inventories with consumer spending.
Corporate profits, after tax for the third quarter, dropped to 2.6% from 3.5%
in the second quarter. If heavy discounting of inventories takes place, corporate
profits may drop further. Expectations of advancing corporate profits have kept
the recent stock rally going. The reality of what might happen to corporate
profits is setting in and moving the market downward.
All
is not lost. It appears this will be a correction and not a bear market. One of
my favorite indicators is the number of initial jobless claims. I have not
reported on that in a while. Last week, jobless claims were at 298,000, the
lowest number we have seen in years, and the third weekly drop, which is also
impressive. Not long ago, I was wishing for the claims to drop
below 400,000! With all of this information, I am maintaining my position that
the Federal Reserve will not reduce bond purchases before March of 2014. The
liquidity level of the economy should remain constant, which is good. The
economy surprised experts in the second quarter, growing more than 2% after
original estimates of 1%. Again in the third quarter, the economy grew at 3.6%
after the original estimate of 2.8%. Who knows? Perhaps it will do so again in
the fourth quarter.
Ed
Mallon
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