SMART INVESTING NEWSLETTER
CPI, Stock Market Volatility, Treasury Yields, Back in the Office, Off Shore Drilling, Stocks, PPI, Deposits, Birkenstocks, National Labor Relations Board and Global Trade
CPI
I was somewhat disappointed by the Consumer Price Index (CPI) as I believed there would be a slower growth in the inflation rate. With that being said, I don’t believe the report is problematic. The headline number for September of 3.7% matched August’s rate and was only slightly ahead of the expectation of 3.6%. The core rate which excludes food and energy came in at 4.1% which
was right in line with expectations and was below August’s reading of 4.3%. This was also the lowest reading on core CPI since September 2021 when the report showed inflation of 4%. Regarding the miss on the headline number, it is important to remember that with the recent increase in energy prices we have lost a major benefit that was pushing the headline number lower for most of this year. In fact, energy prices only fell 0.5% compared to last year and gasoline prices were actually up 3%. This compares to just a few months ago in the month of June when energy prices were down 16.7% and gasoline prices were down 26.5% compared to the prior year. These declines were extremely helpful for the headline number CPI number. One area that remains surprisingly high is the shelter index as it climbed 7.2% compared to last year. I have pointed at many times that this is a lagging indicator, but I am surprised to see how much it is still weighing on the overall inflation front as housing/rent prices have cooled tremendously on a real time basis. With that said, the shelter index accounted for over 70% of the total increase the core CPI. I still believe the shelter index is likely to cool as we end the year which would be very beneficial to both headline and core CPI.
Stock Market Volatility
You may be wondering why there is so much volatility in the markets lately and I will tell you it’s because of too much information. I’ve been managing money for over 40 years and remember back when Alan Greenspan was the Federal Reserve chairman and he was the only member of the Fed who would speak. He also did not speak very often. He spoke so little that financial commentators on TV would make decisions based on the size of his briefcase on what decisions he may make. The FOMC consists of seven members of the Board of Governors and then there are 12 Regional Federal Reserve Bank Presidents. It seems to me that many more of these Governors and Federal Reserve Bank Presidents are
speaking publicly on their thoughts. I do agree that we need information but not the opinions of so many different people who can change their mind when they meet and make decisions on interest rates and policies. I know it will not change, but I think too many people giving their views on what they think will happen is doing nothing more than causing volatility and confusing the investor. In the end it doesn’t matter what they say it is only important what they decide when they meet eight times a year. Everything else is just a bunch of confusing noise.
Treasury Yields
Many investors have been concerned by the move higher in treasury yields, but I believe it has been more a move towards normalization. Sure, rates have climbed rapidly, but if you go all the way back to 1790 the average yield for U.S. government debt is 4.5%. We are slightly above there now and may drift a little higher considering history shows that the fed-funds rate and the 10-year Treasury have tended to peak around the same level. This means we may breach the 5% threshold, but I do believe we would not see rates climb much from there and would mean we are near the top. Over the next few years, I believe we could see rates around the 4% level. Investors need to be realistic and understand the days of one or even two percent rates are in the past and extremely unlikely to occur anytime soon. Higher rates don’t always necessarily mean stocks can’t perform well and in fact from the mid-1980s to 2008, real rates were more than a point higher than now, and stocks returned 15% a year.
Back in the Office
Based on a 10 city average workers are returning to the office at a rate of 50.4% compared to 2019 levels. That’s a post pandemic high and I believe given the current job market we will see more people returning to the office as businesses work hard to maintain and increase profits in a competitive economy.
Off Shore Drilling
I was Surprised to read that there will be three oil and gas lease sales in the Gulf of Mexico over the next five years. I say surprised because President Biden when he was running for office said there would be no new drilling offshore. Well, because of the Inflation Reduction Act,
which was so long and complicated the sales are necessary because of the expansion of offshore wind projects. I’m sure the environmentalists will go crazy over this but it’s a good thing for our energy policy going forward.
Stocks
I continue to hear people say that stocks are expensive. When making this assumption most the time people are referring to the S&P 500 and I would have to agree with that analysis. But the big thing we always point out is that it is not a stock market; it is a market of stocks and within that market there are many companies that look very attractive. We have pointed out that the market has been pushed higher by just seven major tech names this year which has pressured valuations and presented more risk to the overall index considering the concentration in those seven companies. In fact, if you look at the forward P/E for the S&P 500 it is around 20, but the equal-weight index is trading below 16 times this year’s projected earnings. Much of this difference comes from the weighting of those major tech companies and the valuation gap between the equal-weight index and the top seven stocks in the regular S&P 500 is now the widest since the late-1990s dot-com stock bubble. I believe this will not end well for the S&P 500 and those seven major tech companies given their lofty valuations. We continue to believe in our value approach and historically when we see a trough in earnings like we believe we saw in Q2, the recovery part of the cycle tends to favor value stocks. If you hold good quality names, be patient as we believe better times are ahead.
PPI
The Producer Price Index (PPI) showed an increase of 2.2% compared to last year. This was above expectations of 1.6%, but is well off the high we saw last year of 11.7% in March 2022. While some may point to the miss as problematic, I believe that with the PPI being around 2% or lower since February of this year costs for businesses have slowed dramatically and should still be positive for consumers. If we were to see a reacceleration to 4% in PPI I believe there could be some problems, but given the relatively low levels I still believe this should not cause much concern for higher inflation and more interest rate hikes from the Fed.
Deposits
As of June, US banks have seen a decline in deposits of 4.8% to $17.3 trillion. That was the first decline in 29 years which means we would have to go all the way back to 1994. June was still a few months after the regional banking crisis, but rising interest rates are causing some investors to buy short term T-bills or move their money to a money market. I do believe will see a slowdown in this trend and then stabilization in the last quarter of 2023 and the first quarter of 2024.
Birkenstock
There was an IPO today, which stands for initial public offering for Birkenstock holdings. There is a lot of excitement behind it and I personally don’t understand why. I think the shoes are the ugliest on the market. I’m not a fashion expert, but that’s just my own personal opinion. I was not surprised based on my fashion opinion that the stock did not do well today. The IPO price was set at $46 a share, the stock never saw that level of trading and was as low as $40.04 with a high of $42.51. It closed today at $40.20. I fear the stock price could end up being as ugly as the shoes going forward. Even with the slight miss on the headline number, I do not believe there is any reason for the Fed to raise rates at either of its last two meetings this year.
National Labor Relations Board
There’s a proposed rule that could be issued by the end of October from the National Labor Relations Board that franchisors, contractors, and even companies with temporary staffing services could be held responsible for the employees that the franchisee oversee. This could become very expensive for big corporations like McDonald’s or other major companies who could be held responsible for labor law violations and retaliation from workers in lawsuits. If this law does go through, you could see stocks of public companies like McDonald’s take a major hit because of the unknown liability they would face going forward.
Global Trade
Global trade seems to be on the decline. When looking at July of this year compared to one year ago trade was down 3.2%. I have not seen a decline like that since August 2020, which was about five months into the Covid economy.