Housing starts are expected to increase to an annual pace of 999,000 in tomorrow’s update for September, based on The Capital Spectator’s median econometric point forecast for several econometric forecasts. The projection represents a moderately higher number of starts vs. 956,000 for August.
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Monthly Archives: October 2014
Initial Guidance | 16 October 2014
● Risk of Deflation Feeds Global Fears | Wall Street Journal
Falling Commodities Prices Pressures Central Banks
● Bond Yields Worldwide Plunge to Record on Global-Growth Woes | Bloomberg
U.S. 10-year Treasuries rose for an eighth day, the longest winning streak in two years, after yields yesterday slid as much as 34 basis points, or 0.34 percentage point, when retail sales fell more than analysts forecast.
● Falling oil prices shake up global economies | AP
A sudden plunge in the price of oil is sending economic and political shockwaves around the world. Oil exporting countries are bracing for potentially crippling budget shortfalls and importing nations are benefiting from the lowest prices in four years.
● Fed survey finds moderate growth nationwide | AP
The U.S. economy was strengthening in most regions of the country in September to early October, helped by gains in consumer spending, manufacturing and commercial construction, according to the Federal Reserve’s latest survey of business conditions.
● Analysis: Risk Gauges Flashing Warning Signs; Red or Yellow? | MNI
The various instruments the market uses to gauge risk have been flashing warning signs this week, although the jury is out about whether the signals are blinking red for “stop” or yellow “to proceed with caution.”
US Industrial Production: September 2014 Preview
US industrial production in September is projected to increase 0.2% vs. the previous month in tomorrow’s report from the Federal Reserve, according to The Capital Spectator’s median point forecast for several econometric estimates. The expected gain represents a modest revival relative to August’s 0.1% decline.
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Retail Spending Slumps In September
Retail sales fell more than expected last month, according to this morning’s update from the US Census Bureau. Spending dropped 0.3% in September—a sharp reversal from August’s robust 0.6% gain and the first monthly dose of red ink since January. The news arrives in the wake of a hefty wave of selling in the stock market lately and so it’s tempting to see dark signals in today’s release. The weak data on retail spending could be the start of trouble for the macro climate in the US, but it may just as easily turn out to be noise. For the moment, the latter is a reasonable view, based on the year-over-year trend.
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Stock Market Volatility: An Update
The US stock market’s recent turbulence took a breather yesterday, providing a bit of calm to the VIX Index, a measure of the implied volatility of S&P 500. Nonetheless, the VIX closed yesterday at its highest level in more than two years. Since Sep. 19, the VIX has doubled to 22.79 as of Oct. 14. Clearly, volatility has taken a sharp swing higher, raising worries that the so-called fear index is flashing a warning sign for the market. But interpreting the VIX, and market volatility generally, can be tricky. For some perspective, let’s consider how the VIX and several alternative measures of market volatility compare in an apples-to-apples framework via percentile ranking. By that standard, there’s still room for debate for interpreting the latest spike in vol.
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Initial Guidance | 15 October 2014
● US-led air strikes intensify as Syria conflict destabilises Turkey | Reuters
American-led forces have sharply intensified air strikes in the past two days against Islamic State fighters threatening Kurds on Syria’s Turkish border after the jihadists’ advance began to destabilise Turkey.
● Oil Falls to Four-Year Low as Bond Yields Drop to Records | Bloomberg
Crude oil fell to the lowest level in almost four years and yields on government bonds from Germany to Spain dropped to records on evidence growth is slowing.
● U.K. Jobless Rate Lowest Since Late 2008 | RTT News
The jobless rate fell to 6 percent during June to August, the lowest since late 2008 and down from 6.5 percent seen in March to May period.
● German inflation steady but still low | MarketWatch
German inflation remained stable at a very low level in September, Germany’s Federal Statistics Office said Wednesday, keeping the European Central Bank under pressure to add further stimulus boost the eurozone economy.
● China inflation slows to near five-year low | BBC
Inflation in China eased to a near five-year low in September, adding to further evidence of a slowdown in the world’s second largest economy.
US Retail Sales: September 2014 Preview
US retail sales are expected to rise 0.2% in tomorrow’s September report vs. the previous month, according to The Capital Spectator’s median econometric forecast. The prediction reflects a substantial deceleration in growth compared with the previous month’s 0.6% increase.
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Initial Guidance | 14 October 2014
● US stocks end Monday sharply lower on late selloff | MarketWatch
Volatile trading came on the heels of last week’s deep losses that had been triggered by global economic growth concerns.
● Eurozone industrial output falls more than expected in Aug | Reuters
Euro zone industrial production fell more than expected in August, mainly because of a slump in the output of capital goods that are used for investment, data from the European Union’s statistics office Eurostat showed on Tuesday.
● German investor morale tumbles as contraction looms | CNBC
German investor morale sharply in October, new data showed on Tuesday, raising fears that the euro zone engine could contact in the third quarter of 2014.
● IEA Revises World Oil Demand Growth Sharply Lower | NY Times
The world will see much weaker oil demand growth in 2015 than forecast previously, the International Energy Agency said on Tuesday, adding that oil prices may drop further.
● UK Inflation Rate Falls to Five-Year Low of 1.2% | Bloomberg
UK inflation slowed more than economists forecast in September as falling oil prices and a stronger pound lowered the cost of imports.
● Fed’s Evans: Biggest Risk to US Now is Premature Rate Hikes | Wall St Journal
Mr. Evans’s comments stood as a pushback to the rising speculation about the timing of Fed rate increases.
Risk Starts To Look Risky
The crowd is getting anxious after the recent jump in stock market volatility, which typically accompanies falling prices. Last week the VIX Index—a widely followed measure of short-term expectations of market volatility—rose to 21.24 on Friday, the highest level since the spike in February to 21.44. The increase is “a dangerous sign because we’ll have broken through some resistance,” Donald Selkin, chief market strategist for National Securities Corp., tells Bloomberg.
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Initial Guidance | 13 October 2014
● IMF Warns of Global Financial Risk From Fiscal Policies | NY Times
As global leaders sounded the alarm about a slowing world economy, a more immediate concern drew the attention of policy makers at the International Monetary Fund’s semiannual meetings last week: inflated asset prices and increasing levels of debt overseas.
● China Trade Data Exceed Expectations | Wall Street Journal
China’s exports and imports rose faster than expected in September, providing a modicum of good news as the world’s second-largest economy searches for sources of growth to meet its 7.5% annual target.
● Draghi-Weidmann fight intensifies as ECB debates action | Irish Times
Mario Draghi and Jens Weidmann are clashing anew over how much more stimulus the ailing euro-area economy needs from the European Central Bank. As Europe’s woes again proved the chief concern at weekend meetings of the International Monetary Fund in Washington, President Draghi repeated he’s ready to expand the ECB’s balance sheet by as much as €1 trillion to beat back the threat of deflation.
● Fed Officials Say Slow World Growth Could Delay Rate Rise | Bloomberg
Federal Reserve policy makers said a slowdown in the world economy could undermine the U.S. expansion and prompt them to delay raising interest rates.
● Privately, Saudis tell oil market: get used to lower prices | Reuters
Saudi Arabia is quietly telling oil market participants that Riyadh is comfortable with markedly lower oil prices for an extended period, a sharp shift in policy that may be aimed at slowing the expansion of rival producers including those in the U.S. shale patch.
● Lower oil prices | Econobrowser
Thanks to horizontal drilling to get oil out of tight underground formations, U.S. field production of crude was 2 million barrels/day higher in 2013 than it had been in 2011. And the EIA’s new Short-Term Energy Outlook released this week expects we’ll add another 2 million b/d over the next two years. That’s unquestionably enough to start moving the world price.