SMART INVESTING NEWSLETTER
CPI, PPI, Consumer Spending, Housing Prices, Insurance Rates, Qualcomm, Bond Sales, Artificial Intelligence, United Auto Workers, Airfare and RMD's for Younger Spouse
CPI
While headline CPI for the month of August rose 3.7% compared to the estimate of 3.6%, I don’t believe there were many concerns in the overall report. In fact, Core CPI, which excludes food and energy, rose 4.3% which was a smaller gain than last month’s increase of 4.7% and it was the smallest gain since September 2021 when Core CPI rose 4%. Shelter continues to weigh negatively on the report as the index was up 7.3% compared to last year. I continue to say that the shelter index will be a much smaller problem as we exit the year considering the fact that median rents across the country actually fell year over year in the month of August. Unfortunately, the real time data is not incorporated in the shelter index for CPI which creates a lag effect. If shelter was excluded from CPI the annual increase would have only been about 1%. Another negative in the month was energy prices. From July to August, energy rose 5.6% and gasoline increased 10.5%. Compared to last year energy prices were still down 3.6% and gasoline prices were down 3.3%, but in prior months the annual declines around 20% really helped push the headline number lower. This is one area of the economy where I do have some concern. If energy prices continue t
spike it could lead to inflation in other areas which could create problems for the decelerating inflation we are looking for. We will continue to monitor this and believe there should be some stabilization in energy prices which would be beneficial. Overall, we are seeing many areas where prices are growing at a much slower pace which includes food prices only up 4.3% compared to last year and even some areas having price deflation like airfare which was down 13.3% compared to last year or moving, storage, and freight expenses which were down 2.7% compared to last year. We will reiterate that we don’t believe the Fed should raise rates any more at this point and this report should not provide them with any evidence to do so
PPI
The Producer Price Index (PPI) showed an increase of 0.7% in the month of August which topped the estimate of 0.4% and was the biggest monthly gain since June 2022. The big jump can largely be attributed to the jump in the energy price index, which rose 10.5% mainly from a 20% gain in gasoline prices. Looking year over year, the numbers look quite appealing for a continued deceleration of inflation as headline PPI was up just 1.6% compared to last August and core PPI, which excludes food and energy increased 2.1%. This was the lowest annual level for core PPI since January 2021. Like I said with the CPI report, my concern remains energy. If energy prices don’t stabilize and continue to spike it could cause problems for inflation and the Fed.
Consumer Spending
While spending has slowed, the consumer is still spending money. Retail sales in the month of August were up 2.5% compared to last year and if gas stations are excluded they grew an even more impressive 3.6%. Even with the recent rise in energy prices, we are still seeing a benefit compared to last year as spending at gas stations fell 10.3% compared to last August. Areas of strength continued to include food services and drinking places (+8.5%), nonstore retailers (+7.2%), and health and personal care stores (+7.8%). Outside of gas stations, the same culprits are weighing on the retail sales report. This groups include: furniture and home furnishing stores (-7.8%), electronics and appliance stores (-1.8%), and building material and garden equipment and supplies dealers (-4.9%). As we move into 2024, I wouldn’t be surprised to see spending growth at food services and drinking places and nonstore retailers slow as the comparisons become more challenging. On the other side of that, we could see a return to growth in the areas that have been challenged due to easier comparisons. Overall, I believe while the consumer is not on fire there is still enough room in the economy to see continued growth in these retail sales.
Housing Prices
You’ll see the news that housing prices nationwide are still strong as they rose 2.3% year over year in August. But, as we have said before this is because there are very few homes for sale nationwide. In August, listings were down nearly 8% from a year ago and they were down 46% from a more normal market back in August 2019. The other thing that worries me besides the small number of active listings is the National Association of Realtors Housing Affordability Index. This index takes into account such things as family income, mortgage rates, and the sale price for existing single-family homes. This affordability index is now the lowest it has been since the mid-80s. I know the numbers make no sense and that usually means they’ll be problems down the road. As opposed to maybe seeing declining housing prices I am hoping to see over the next 5 to 10 years very little appreciation of maybe only 10 to 20%. That is my best case scenario.
Insurance Rates
We know that insurance rates for homes and autos are on the rise. Based on history, it would appear that the rise is coming to an end. There is something in the industry called reinsurance. These are insurance companies in the background that help insurance companies pay out major claims. In the United States the reinsurance rates are up 50% compared to a year ago, and they have shifted more of the risk to the frontline insurers. It is also important to understand how to measure the insurance industry using what is known as a combined ratio. Anything over 100% is an indication that the insurance company is paying more in claims than it’s taking in from premiums that they receive. At the current time, many big insurers have a combined ratio over 100% but with the increase in premiums that should be reversing in 2024 and premiums should start to stabilize. It is important to note that property and casualty companies did have $990 billion in capital for the year ending 2022. In 2021 the surplus did surpass $1 trillion for the first time ever and in 2019 the capital totaled $891 billion. So while we do have a pullback from last year, we are still nearly $100 billion above 2019.
Qualcomm
I was glad to see that Qualcomm did extend their deal with Apple for another few years. While this was a positive, I noticed something about Qualcomm that concerns me. When we’re investing into equities, we’d like to see a diversified customer base. I was shocked and disappointed to see the revenue contribution for the third quarter of 2023 as 54.3% of the revenue comes from Android, Apple accounts for 23% and the non-handset revenue is just 22.7%. That is a heavy concentration of revenue that Qualcomm receives from those businesses and any change in Apple or the Android relationship could devastate the earnings for Qualcomm. With Qualcomm being a San Diego based company I’ve always liked them, but strictly as an investment I would be a little bit worried.
Bond Sales
Last week we saw investment-grade bond sales for US companies hit $38 billion. This was the largest amount of sales in one day since April 2020. What this could mean is that corporate executives are seeing long-term interest rates continue to rise and they are trying to lock in lower long-term rates now as opposed to waiting any longer. It also means that the yield curve could be flattening out, and perhaps it could even become a normal yield curve. To help with the normalization, we could also see a reduction in short-term rates.
Artificial Intelligence
People are worried that AI, which stands for artificial intelligence, will replace all jobs, and they’ll be no work for anyone to do. History would prove otherwise. The evidence goes back many years. If we look back 100 years, half of the US population was working in the fields and less than 10% were working in the services industry. Today those numbers are drastically different with service workers accounting for over 79% of the labor market and agriculture jobs accounting for just 1.7% of the workforce. Even if we look back as little as 20 years ago, there are jobs today that did not exist then. Here is a partial list: AI engineer, data scientist, cloud architect, automation engineer, mobile app developer, SEO analyst and podcast producer. It is important to remember that technology, including AI, can increase productivity. And with better productivity we can generate more wealth. The future is always scary because of the unknown and people’s emotions will always say this time it is different. But, with hundreds of years of history it has proven change, no matter how scary does produce a more productive society.
United Auto Workers
It is interesting that the United Auto Workers (UAW) President, Shawn Fain, has said that the automakers have negotiated in bad faith, when in reality I don’t believe he ever really wanted to make a deal before the termination of the contact unless it was the outlandish terms they requested. I believe he had the full intention of flexing his muscles and proving the unions worth by striking. I say this because the deals from GM and Ford have been quite fair and there has not been a real sound counter from the UAW. The recent GM deal included a 20% increase over the four-year term of the contract, with a 10% raise in the first year, an unspecified level of cost-of-living protection for maximum wage earners, the promise to not shut down any of its U.S. manufacturing or warehousing facilities over the life of the contract, a faster track of just four years to reach top-level wages compared to the current eight years, and five weeks of vacation and two weeks of parental leave. This all sounds pretty fair to me. Much more of an increase and the Detroit automakers will have a very hard time competing against other auto companies. Even before the strike, the Detroit automakers pay their workers 38% more than Tesla and about $10/hour more than non-union competitors like Toyota and Honda. Reducing the competitiveness of these US companies is good for no one and I hope the union members start to realize that.
Airfare
Here we are in September, and I’m happy to report that domestic airfares have dropped roughly 29% from the summer averages. These numbers could change quickly if oil continues its climb higher. Airlines would then have to raise their ticket prices to cover the rising cost of fuel.
Financial Planning: RMD’s for Younger Spouse
Most people know that in your 70’s, you have to start taking Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) from retirement accounts. The distribution is a percentage of the account balance, and the percentage increases each year. This can cause larger and larger distributions later in
retirement and can result in progressively more taxes. However, in situations where the retirement account owner’s spouse is more than 10 years younger and listed as 100% beneficiary of the account, the owner can use a separate RMD schedule that allows smaller distributions every year and can reduce tax bills by thousands. This is commonly missed by custodians so account owners with younger spouses should double check they are using the appropriate RMD schedule.