ABC Buying Climate Index

Yes, one more data point indicating we hit the wall right around year end.

(ISM, car sales, payrolls, redbook sales)

Maybe the stock market scared consumers? Cliff is convinced stock market drops cause consumer retrenchment and recessions. Can’t say I disagree with something like 75% of Americans now holding shares.

But something did change and very quickly. .

comments welcome!

2008-02-05 ABC Buying Climate Index


♥

Whirlpool Results

Anecdotal support for twin themes of declining domestic demand augmented by booming export demand, and rising prices:

Whirlpool’s Maytag buy pays off in 4Q

by James Prichard

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. – Whirlpool Corp. said Tuesday its fourth-quarter profit climbed 72 percent, helped by its Maytag acquisition, an improved product mix and the weak dollar.

Its net earnings for all of 2007 rose 48 percent.

The appliance maker, which bought Maytag in 2006, said earnings after preferred dividends increased to $187 million, or $2.38 per share, compared with $109 million, or $1.37 per share, in the prior year.

Quarterly revenue grew 7 percent to $5.33 billion from $5 billion a year earlier.

Analysts polled by Thomson Financial expected net income of $2.15 per share on sales of $5.27 billion.


The company performed well despite flat domestic sales and continued price increases for raw materials, said Jeff M. Fettig, Whirlpool’s chairman and chief executive.

“Our performance in this environment highlights the strength of our global brands and the geographic diversity of our global operating platform,” he said in a written statement.


Whirlpool North America sales slipped less than 1 percent to $3 billion, while sales in its European segment rose 12 percent to $1.1 billion. Latin America sales surged about 30 percent to more than $1 billion. Whirlpool Asia sales grew 26 percent to $155 million.


Q4 Earnings Really Weren’t Too Bad — Except For Banking

Up 11% ex financials, and if you do it ex financial writeoffs and include financial operating earnings its higher than that.

The risks to 2008 come from perceived risks of a general slowdown that hasn’t happened yet.

They also point to the January payroll number to support their 2008 concerns. Yes, payrolls are a concern which may solidify if the first revision next month isn’t upward by at least 50,000.

http://license.icopyright.net/user/viewFreeUse.act?fuid=NzM4NTU2 .

Q4 Earnings Really Weren’t Too Bad — Except For Banking

by Ed Carson

Corporate profits can be boom or bust. Right now they’re both. With 58% of the S&P 500 reporting results as of Monday morning, fourth-quarter earnings are on track to dive 20.7% from a year earlier, according to Thomson Financial. It would be the worst showing since the fourth quarter of…


3 most important numbers

From Karim:

  1. Index of aggregate hours -0.3%
  1. Diffusion index from 50.0 to 46.2
  1. Median duration of unemployment from 8.4 to 8.8 weeks

So output likely declining, more industries shedding jobs than adding, and l-t unemployed accounting for larger % of total unemployed

Other notes..

  • Unemployment rate falls from 4.97% to 4.925%.

Partially reversing last month’s rise.

  • Temp jobs fall by 9k (good coincident indicator)
  • Average hourly earnings up only 0.2%
  • Net revisions to 2007 -376k
  • NFP decline of 17k first decline since 8/03

This is not the first reported drop in payrolls, as August originally reported down 4,000. It was eventually revised up to 92,000 and then further revised up to 74,000 with benchmark revisions.

December was revised up to 82,000 from 18,000.

November down from 115,000 to 60,000.

This rearranges the sequence with November now possible the bottom, should January get revised up higher than 82,000.

  • Rare decline posted in business services (-11k)
  • Mfg (-28k) surprising in light of weak $
  • Construction sheds another 27k
  • Govt loses a surprising 18k jobs

Yes, these look like the kind of numbers likely to result in the kinds of revisions we’ve been seeing continuously for at least six months.

And the revisions to payroll numbers have put them more in line with the ADP numbers.

ADP was up 130,000 for January.

December durable goods was a blowout number.

Inventories were down substantially in Q4.

While the initial reported payroll numbers have all been substantially revised, markets have continued to respond to the initial reports and not to the revisions.


♥

Claims, ECI

From Karim:

  • True to the past 5yrs pattern, claims seem to be reverting to trend after the first few weeks of January.

Right, good call!

  • IJC climbed from 306k to 375k; the trend before the January drop was around 340-350k; this number was for MLK holiday week, so an adjustment issue here as well; bottom line is I think trend is still around 350k.
  • Continuing claims rose from 2685k to 2716k.
  • ECI (both headline and wage component) up 0.8% q/q

Data below is for Dec, so was largely known in yday’s GDP number.

  • Personal income up 0.5%, with wage and salary component up 0.4%
  • Core PCE up 0.2% m/m (2.2% y/y)

Most meaningful data here was continuing claims (little to no hiring taking place) and ECI (wage gwth still tame).

And Fed still looking at this as an indication of ‘inflation expectations’.


♥

Monoline proposal

Fed by itself or working with AAA counterparty offers to sell supplemental bond insurance to investors. (AFLAC concept)

Maybe charge a point and insure up to a price of maybe 99, or whatever combo works.

Worst case the current insurers are downgraded to AA, so they should still be able to cover losses, so risk is minimal to the new insurer, and fees will likely be profits.

Only investors who care would buy it.

Bonds would remain AAA rated.

The key is the current insurer’s capital is still in first loss position, and the current insurance is probably still money good, or they’d be talking about a downgrade way below AA.

And not all bond holders care about AAA vs AA. Only those who care buy the supplemental insurance.


GDP/ADP

From Karim:

  • GDP slows from 4.9% to 0.6%
  • Personal consumption slows from 2.8% to 2.5%
  • DGO strength in Dec shows up in modest positive in equipment and software (+3.8%)
  • Residential FI (housing) down 23.9%
  • Core PCE up 2.7% annualized for quarter and 2.1% y/y
  • Net exports add 0.4% to gwth
  • Inventories a drag by 1.25%
  • Inventory/shipment ratio still at recent highs, so unlikely that inventory drag is over yet
  • ADP gain of 130k signals upside risk to consensus 65k advance in nfp; while usually reliable, adp has also had some spectacular misses
  • In light of decline in jobs hard to get component of conference board survey and adp, will call for 90k gain in nfp Friday.
  • Pretty long period between jan and march fed meetings (next meeting march 21). So by next meeting, will have 2 nfp reports to look at as well as decent idea on Q1 gwth. Bernanke testimony likely on 2/27.

♥

ISM revised upward

Seems most of Q4 was revised up, and Q3 as well.

TABLE-U.S. ISM non-manufacturing index revised to 54.4 in Dec

(Reuters) The Institute for Supply Management on Tuesday released annual seasonal adjustments to some of its monthly non-manufacturing indexes.

REVISIONS
Dec Nov Oct Sept Aug July June May Apr Mar Feb Jan
Bus Activity 54.4 54.6 55.5 55.7 56.3 55.9 59.7 58.4 56 53 54.9 57.9
New Orders 53.9 52 55.4 53.9 55.8 53.1 56.7 56.7 54.7 54.2 55.2 55.6
Employment 51.8 51.4 52.4 52.5 48.6 51.9 53.5 53.5 51.9 51.3 52.1 52.9
Prices Index 71.5 73.7 66.1 65 60.1 63.1 65.6 64.3 63.2 62.9 53.9 56.1
PRIOR FIGURES
Dec Nov Oct Sept Aug July June May Apr Mar Feb Jan
Bus Activity 53.9 54.1 55.8 54.8 55.8 55.8 60.7 59.7 56 52.4 54.3 59
New Orders 53.5 51.1 55.7 53.4 57 52.8 56.9 57.4 55.5 53.8 54.8 55.4
Employment 52.1 50.8 51.8 52.7 47.9 51.7 55 54.9 51.9 50.8 52.2 51.7
Prices Index 72.7 76.5 63.5 66.1 58.6 61.3 65.5 66.4 63.5 63.3 53.8 55.2

♥