May Monthly Market Commentary

By just about any measure, May was an awful month for investment performance, which is another way of saying that the past 31 days have made stock indices 5% to 10% more affordable than they were in April.  However, after the dramatic (and largely unexpected) runup through the first five months of the year, most of the major indices were still in positive territory after the decline.  The Wilshire 5000 index, which is the broadest measure of all categories of U.S. stocks, lost 6.22% last month, but remains up 5.08% with 30 days to go before 2012's halfway mark.  The comparable Russell 3000 index fell 6.18% in May, but is still in positive territory so far this year, up 5.20%.

The stock market is fundamentally a gauge of optimism or pessimism for investors.  If we think the future is bright, as most shareholders apparently believed until the end of April, there is more demand for more shares and prices go up.  So we have to ask: why did sentiment turn around so dramatically, and does the herd of investors know something important about the future?

The headlines have suggested two reasons for gloom.  The first is jobs.  The latest employment report from the Labor Department shows the first increase in U.S. unemployment in 11 months, as the jobless rate ticked up from 8.1% to 8.2%.  In the simplest possible terms, these numbers are interpreted as meaning that companies aren't hiring new workers as quickly as new workers are coming on the market.  However, buried in the Labor Department report is a statistic on "labor force participation" that shows that more than 600,000 people got off their couches rejoined the work force in May.  Somebody, somewhere, is feeling more optimistic about the jobs picture.

The report also said that the overall economy had added just 69,000 new jobs.  However, a survey from the payrolls processing company Automatic Data Processing (ADP) showed that the American private sector added 133,000 new jobs in May, meaning that much of the job loss was in government and public sector payrolls.

Is this true?  If you look at the chart below, the trend is very different from what you are likely hearing in the news reports.  The red line, which is trending depressingly downward after a brief stimulus-related spike in 2010, is federal government employment, which corresponds with the numbers on the right-hand side.  As you can see, Washington's payroll is declining dramatically, as the country works to restore its fiscal balance.  Since the beginning of 2009, over half a million government jobs have been slashed or eliminated altogether.

The blue line looks a bit more hopeful.  That represents the total number of private sector jobs in the U.S., corresponding with the numbers on the right-hand side.  The Great Recession caused a dramatic freefall in total private employment that bottomed out around January of 2010.  Since then, you can see a steady (and largely unreported) improvement in the jobs picture exactly where we would want it: in the private sector, in the for-profit companies that most of us invest in.


The other reason why investors have become allergic to stocks, according to the press, is the continuing fiscal problems in Europe.  Overall Eurozone unemployment has reached 11%, and economists believe that a recession has either begun or is imminent.  There are worries that Spain and Ireland could fall into the same economic precipice as Greece.  Spain's 10-year bonds are now trading at a 6.7% yield, their highest level since November.

You can see, in the map below, a kind of "cheat-sheet" on where the sovereign debt problems are most acute.  Purple countries are not in danger, the orange countries are facing worrisome conditions, and the bonds issued by countries painted in red are basically downgraded to junk bond status. 

The recent selloff suggests that many investors are expecting widespread defaults in Europe that will spread (the word "contagion is often used) to the U.S. banking system, and from there into the U.S. economy, not unlike the way the collapse of U.S. investment banks caused the Great Recession.

However, if you read the news reports closely, you see that the European governments have a solution at hand, which some are reluctant to put into place.  The new French government has proposed that the European Central Bank be authorized to issue its own bonds.  This would make Europe function more like the U.S. fiscal system, where the states (comparable to the individual European countries) issue bonds, and our government (comparable to the ECB) also has borrowing power to sell Treasuries.  The money raised by those Eurobonds would be used to contain the crisis, and the interest rate to Eurobond investors would be dramatically lower than what the countries in orange and red are currently paying in the open markets. 

Presto!  The ECB would step in as their surrogate borrower, swap their high rates for its lower rates, and eliminate the threat of contagion.  Of course, this would also expose the purple countries to the credit risks of the orange and red ones (this is why Germany is dragging its feet on the idea), but presumably any deal would come with guarantees about future fiscal discipline, and would remove the crushing borrowing costs from countries as they dig out of their debt.  That, in turn, would allow these countries to begin re-growing their economies, which might reduce the size and extent of the expected Eurozone recession.

Armed with this information, pessimistic stock investors might want to take another look at their European fears, and ask themselves: will European leaders eventually accept this way out of the crisis?  Or will they allow the economic crisis to spiral out of control?

Meanwhile, it might be helpful to ask: where, in all the world, do investors feel the safest?  Recently, German government 2-year bonds were issued at auction, where investors were willing to accept a negative yield for the first time in the country's history.  That means that investors, today, are willing to pay the German government for the privilege of lending to it.  This follows a record-setting Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS) auction issued by the U.S. government, which was also priced at a negative yield.  These are unprecedented events, and suggest that you and I are fortunate to be living in a nation whose debt is regarded by investors as one of the safest havens in the history of finance.

To Your Prosperity,

Kevin Kroskey

This article prepared in conjunction with Bob Veres.

April Monthly Market Commentary

THE MONTH IN BRIEF
The Dow gained 0.01% in April – a month in which the impressive bull run of the first quarter moderated and more pessimism crept onto Wall Street. Some domestic indicators were tepid – but others did provide nice surprises. Signals out of Europe flashed hints (or confirmations) of recession. Some key overseas indices suffered notable April losses. Our Q1 GDP was unimpressive, but U.S. consumer spending improved for March. Oil futures rose while gasoline and crop futures retreated. Analysts wondered (again) if the real estate market had at last bottomed out.1

DOMESTIC ECONOMIC HEALTH
Consumer spending advanced 0.3% in March, with wages rising 0.4%. The wage increase doubled the gain forecast by a consensus of economists polled by Briefing.com; that was the good news. The bad news: those analysts expected a personal spending gain of 0.5% in light of the (revised) 0.9% advance in February. Consumer sentiment was holding up reasonably well even with soaring fuel prices. From March to April, the Conference Board’s poll wavered from 69.5 to 69.2; the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment survey went from a final March reading of 75.7 to a final April mark of 76.4.2,3

The initial estimate of Q1 GDP arrived in late April, and it underwhelmed the bulk of economists and Wall Street analysts, who were hoping for something more in line with the 3.0% growth of the preceding quarter. The economy’s 2.2% Q1 growth was by no means horrible; investors just hoped to further justify the winter rally. What kind of inflation was America experiencing? The Consumer Price Index rose 0.3 in March following gains of 0.4% in February and 0.2% in January. Annualized consumer inflation was at 2.7% in March, down from 2.9% in February. The Producer Price Index was flat in March, although core PPI advanced 0.3%.3,4,5

One big positive that surprised nearly everybody emerged. According to the Institute for Supply Management, April 2012 was the hottest month for U.S. manufacturing since June 2011. ISM’s manufacturing PMI jumped 1.4% for April to 54.8. Weeks earlier, ISM’s service sector PMI had read 56.0 for March, down 1.3% from the February mark. Something else that declined in March: durable goods orders. They fell 4.2%, with core hard goods orders down 1.1%. March retail sales rose by 0.8%, far surpassing the 0.3% gain projected by economists surveyed by Bloomberg.3,6,7,8

April also saw solid corporate earnings. The buzz was that this earnings season would disappoint, but as Bloomberg noted, 74% of S&P 500 firms reporting results between April 10 and May 1 beat forecasts. At the start of May, the S&P 500 was trading at 14.3x reported earnings, notably below the average of 16.4 recorded since 1954. The takeaway: stocks were still pretty cheap.9  

The jobless rate ticked down to 8.2% in March. The economy added merely 120,000 jobs during that month, but that brought the net gain in hiring since December to 635,000. While the Federal Reserve indicated it would hold off on further quantitative easing measures, it did state its commitment to keeping the federal funds rate at the current lows through the end of 2014.8,10   

GLOBAL ECONOMIC HEALTH
Was Spain the next Greece? Global investors hoped not, given its comparative magnitude and influence on the European and global economies. April ended with Standard & Poor’s downgrading Spain’s debt from A to BBB with a negative outlook. Spain’s jobless rate had hit 24.4% in the first quarter. Beyond Spain, the EU jobless rate was 10.9% in March with inflation at 2.6% in April. The key Markit purchasing manager index for the EU dipped down to 45.9 last month, marking the ninth straight month of sector contraction. Word also arrived that Great Britain had slipped back into a recession in the first quarter; its last downturn had ended at the start of 2010. In April, a total of 12 European economies were in recession; besides the U.K., the list also included Spain, Italy, Ireland and the Netherlands.10,11,12,13

The Asia-Pacific region offered a different story. China’s official PMI hit 53.3 for April, a 13-month peak. The HSBC China PMI (which tracks mostly private firms) also rose 1.0% to 49.3. Other key PMIs in April: India, 54.9; Indonesia, 50.5; South Korea, 51.9; Taiwan, 51.2; Australia, 43.9. In other news, exports fell in India for the first time since 2009 in April and the Bank of Japan announced a stimulus.12,14,15

WORLD MARKETS
Looking at Morningstar data measured in U.S. dollar terms, we see a mixed month. The Hang Seng (+2.50%), Shanghai Composite (+5.90%) and S&P/ASX All Ordinaries (+ 1.07%) fared better than the FTSE 100 (-0.53%), the CAC 40 (-6.16%), the Nikkei 225 (-5.58%), the TSX Composite (-2.19%), the DAX (-4.05%) and the Sensex (-0.71%). The MSCI World Index (-1.37%) and MSCI Emerging Markets Index (-1.48%) both posted April losses.16,17

COMMODITIES MARKETS
Gold’s allure dimmed just a bit in April. At the close on April 30, the COMEX price was $1,664.20 an ounce (-0.46% on the month). Silver lost 4.52% in April, but copper managed a monthly gain of 0.12%. Oil futures rose 1.80% for the month on the NYMEX to $104.87 per barrel. Heating oil went +0.44% for the month while natural gas went +7.48%. Gasoline futures pulled back: RBOB gasoline lost -5.55% in April. Retail gas prices fell 2.72% as well. It was also a poor month for crop futures, with wheat going -0.95%, corn -1.51%, coffee -2.95% and cotton -4.81%.13

REAL ESTATE
According to the National Association of Realtors, pending home sales rose 4.1% in March. Economists polled by Briefing.com expected a 1.0% gain. That was a bright spot, and others could be found in data that for the short term was mostly negative. The February S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index showed that overall prices actually rose 0.2% - the first advance since the April 2011 edition. (Zillow reported that the median U.S. home value rose 0.5% in March, the best monthly gain since 2006.) As for new and existing home sales, both retreated: the Census Bureau said that the pace of new home sales fell 7.1% in March and NAR noted a 2.6% slip in residential resales. The bright side in existing home sales: NAR also said the median price had risen 2.5% in the past 12 months.18,19,20    

Looking at Freddie Mac’s March 29 and April 26 Primary Mortgage Market Surveys, average interest rates on home loans moved lower as follows: 30-year FRMs, 3.99% to 3.88%; 15-year FRMs, 3.23% to 3.12%; 5/1-year ARMs, 2.90% to 2.85%; 1-year ARMs, 2.78% to 2.74%.21

LOOKING BACK…LOOKING FORWARD
NASDAQ and S&P 500 winning streaks ended in April, but the Dow’s winning streak extended to seven months. At the close on April 30, the Dow was at 13,213.63, the S&P 500 at 1,397.91 and the NASDAQ at 3,046.36.1,13,22

Will May be a decent month for stocks? Looking past the old warning to “sell in May and go away”, we see that the fifth month of the year has been a pretty good month in recent market history. The S&P 500 logged a May gain 71% of the time from 1988-2011; the average monthly gain was 1.22%. The MSCI Emerging Markets index advanced in 58% of Mays in the same window of time, with the average May gain being 1.28%. Also, many U.S. economic indicators have really improved in the past 12 months. ISM surveys have manufacturing up 2% year-over year and nonfarm payrolls have expanded by 29% in that time frame. Our 2.2% Q1 growth is a big improvement over the 0.4% GDP advance of Q1 2011. Our housing sector seems poised for improvement, and maybe it is on the way back already – Credit Suisse analysts note that U.S. building permits are up 35% from a year ago, while housing starts and existing home sales are respectively 3% and 5% improved. Auto sales are at a four-year peak. So while spring and summer have historically brought stock market doldrums, it appears we have some compelling reasons to disregard history again, at least for this month.27   

UPCOMING ECONOMIC RELEASES: The schedule for the balance of May looks like this ... the April jobs report (5/4), March wholesale inventories (5/9), the April PPI and the initial University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey for April (5/11), April’s CPI and retail sales plus March business inventories (5/15), April industrial output, housing starts and building permits and the minutes of the 4/25 Fed policy meeting (5/16), the April Conference Board Leading Economic Indicators index (5/17), April existing home sales (5/22), April new home sales (5/23), April durable goods orders (5/24), the final April University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey (5/25), the March Case-Shiller home price index and the Conference Board’s May consumer confidence poll (5/29), April pending home sales (5/30) and the second estimate of Q1 GDP (5/31). The April personal spending report won’t be released until June 1 – coincidentally, the same day as the May unemployment report and the May ISM services index.


MONTHLY QUOTE 
“You make a living by what you get. You make a life by what you give.”  
 – Winston Churchill

To Your Prosperity,

Kevin Kroskey

This article prepared in conjunction with Peter Montoya.
Citations.
1 - thestockmarketwatch.com/stock-market-news/market-updates/stocks-end-lower-sp-500-and-nasdaq-post-losses-for-april/26012 [4/30/12]
2 - briefing.com/investor/calendars/economic/2012/04/30-04 [5/1/12]
3 - briefing.com/investor/calendars/economic/2012/04/23-27 [4/27/12]
4 - www.nytimes.com/2012/04/14/business/economy/consumer-inflation-up-modestly.html [4/13/12]
5 - www.cnbc.com/id/47027476 [4/12/12]
6 - www.ism.ws/ISMReport/MfgROB.cfm [5/1/12]
7 - www.ism.ws/ISMReport/NonMfgROB.cfm [4/4/12]
8 - www.bloomberg.com/news/print/2012-04-16/retail-sales-in-u-s-increased-more-than-forecast-in-march.html  [4/16/12]
9 - www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-05-01/u-s-stock-futures-are-little-changed-before-factory-data.html [5/1/12]
10 - https://www.mfs.com/wps/portal/mfs/us-advisor-pub/market-outlooks/week-in-review [4/27/12]
11 - epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/portal/page/portal/eurostat/home/ [5/2/12]
12 - www.reuters.com/article/2012/05/02/global-economy-wrapup-idUSL5E8G223R20120502 [5/2/12]
13 - money.msn.com/market-news/post.aspx?post=0552b6eb-e56b-40c6-ad22-0751394ee803 [4/30/12]
14 - blogs.ft.com/beyond-brics/2012/05/02/asia-pmis-mixed-signals [5/2/12]
15 - blogs.ft.com/beyond-brics/2012/05/02/indian-manufacturing-inches-up [5/1/12]
16 - news.morningstar.com/index/indexReturn.html [4/30/12]
17 - mscibarra.com/products/indices/international_equity_indices/gimi/stdindex/performance.html [4/30/12]
18 - www.nydailynews.com/life-style/real-estate/rebuilding-home-resales-highest-2010-article-1.1068578 [4/27/12]
19 - briefing.com/Investor/Calendars/Economic/Releases/newhom.htm [4/27/12]
20 - blogs.wsj.com/developments/2012/04/19/behind-the-numbers-existing-home-sales-fall/ [4/19/12]
21 - www.freddiemac.com/pmms/ [4/2/12]
22 - montoyaregistry.com/Financial-Market.aspx?financial-market=an-introduction-to-the-stock-market&category=29 [4/2/12]
23 - www.usatoday.com/money/index [4/30/12]
24 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=DJIA&closeDate=4%2F29%2F11&x=0&y=0 [4/30/12]
24 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=COMP&closeDate=4%2F29%2F11&x=0&y=0 [4/30/12]
24 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=SPX&closeDate=4%2F29%2F11&x=0&y=0 [4/30/12]
24 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=DJIA&closeDate=4%2F29%2F02&x=0&y=0 [4/30/12]
24 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=COMP&closeDate=4%2F29%2F02&x=0&y=0 [4/30/12]
24 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=SPX&closeDate=4%2F29%2F02&x=0&y=0 [4/30/12]
25 - treasury.gov/resource-center/data-chart-center/interest-rates/Pages/TextView.aspx?data=realyieldAll [5/2/12]
26 - treasurydirect.gov/instit/annceresult/press/preanre/2002/ofm10902.pdf [1/9/02]
27 - www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article34414.html [5/1/12] 

March Monthly Market Commentary

THE MONTH IN BRIEF
March brought gains and milestones. The NASDAQ ended the month above 3,000, which it hadn’t done in nearly 12 years. The Dow pulled off its sixth straight monthly advance, and the S&P 500 and Russell 2000 rose as well. Gas prices continued their march upward, but consumer spending did not fall. The real estate sector flashed some negative signals. Investors and economists alike mulled the effect that potentially decelerating economies in Europe and Asia might have on Wall Street. The U.S. economy, on the other hand, seemed to show further improvement.1

DOMESTIC ECONOMIC HEALTH
Gas prices were putting the clamps on the consumer, right? Wrong. It seemed consumer spending was rising, perhaps partly in response to increased fuel costs. In fact, the Commerce Department said personal spending rose 0.8% in February (the biggest gain in seven months) even as incomes rose just 0.2%. As for that other really important statistic affecting consumers, the nation’s jobless rate had remained at 8.3% for February, although job growth was impressive once again (227,000 positions added to non-farm payrolls).2,3

Consumer sentiment was the proverbial mixed bag. The Conference Board’s survey slipped from February’s revised mark of 71.6 to 70.2. The University of Michigan’s final March survey came in at 76.2, up from the 74.3 reading of late February.4

Consumer prices moved in a pronounced direction – and that direction was up. The federal government’s Consumer Price Index rose 0.4% in February, the biggest monthly gain since April. Producer prices matched that increase. Annualized CPI was running at 2.9%, annualized core CPI at 2.2%. What role did gasoline costs play in all this? A major one. A 6% February rise in retail gas prices represented a significant portion of the advance in the overall CPI. Pump prices have climbed close to 20% since December, and a gallon of unleaded cost $3.93 at the end of the month, up 2o cents from the end of February. Even with this price pressure on consumers, the Census Bureau said retail sales were 1.1% better in February. It also revised January’s gain up to 0.6%. Durable goods orders also rose 2.2% in February.4,5,6,7

The U.S. manufacturing and service sectors were holding up well. The Institute for Supply Management’s March manufacturing PMI rose a full percentage point to 53.4, and its non-manufacturing index read 57.3 in February, an 0.5% gain.8,9

The Federal Reserve conducted its annual stress test of 19 big banks in March, and 15 lenders held up under the “doomsday” scenario (Dow losing half of its value, home prices at 1996 levels, a 13% jobless rate). American Express, Bank of America, Bank of New York Mellon, BB&T, CapitalOne, Fifth Third, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, Keycorp, Morgan Stanley, PNC, Regions, State Street, U.S. Bancorp and Wells Fargo each got a thumbs-up. The Fed felt that Citigroup, SunTrust, Ally and MetLife would lose enough assets under the scenario to pose systemic risk.10

GLOBAL ECONOMIC HEALTH
To what degree would the Eurozone economy slow down? Would Asian economies turn around their manufacturing bases? Looking to Europe, the signs were bleak. The Eurozone jobless rate ticked up to a post-euro high of 10.8% in March. In Spain, the unemployment rate was 23.6%; in France, it was 10.0%; in Italy, it was 9.3%; in Germany, it was just 5.7%. The key Markit purchasing managers index was below 50 for the eighth consecutive month in March, with analysts growing increasingly certain that the EU had slid into a recession.11

As for the key economies of the Asia-Pacific region, factory output was looking better. For March, official PMIs were in reasonably good shape in China (53.1, best since last April), India (54.7), and South Korea (52.0, a one-year high). India’s inflation rate accelerated in March for the first time since October.12

WORLD MARKETS
Many major stock indices pulled back last month. That was not the case for the Nikkei 225, off to a roaring start in 2012 (+19.26% for Q1). The Japanese benchmark rose 3.71% last month. Germany’s DAX was up 1.30% in March and Australia’s All Ordinaries rose 0.73%. Several major indices retreated: the CAC 40 lost 0.83%, the FTSE 100 1.76%, the TSX Composite 2.41%, the Sensex 3.91%, the Hang Seng 5.57% and the Shanghai Composite 6.82%. Despite these losses, all of the above indices posted gains for the quarter. The MSCI World Index rose 1.02% in March and 10.94% for Q1 in USD terms. By the same measuring stick, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index fell 3.52% in March but rose 13.65% for the quarter.13,14

COMMODITIES MARKETS
The hottest marquee commodity of March was (guess what) retail gasoline at +5.20%. Cotton went +3.85% last month. Most other key commodities lost their footing – most notably, natural gas. Those futures slid 18.73% in March, a descent helped by unseasonably warm weather. Oil futures lost 3.78% last month, settling at $103.02 per barrel on the NYMEX; for the quarter, prices rose 4.24%. Gold slipped 2.30% on the COMEX on the month and rose 6.71% on the quarter to wrap March at $1,671.90 on the COMEX. Copper (-1.40%) and silver (-6.23%) retreated after two strong monthly advances. RBOB gasoline futures rose 1.56% in March and the U.S. Dollar Index pulled off its first monthly gain for 2012 (+0.44%). Elsewhere, coffee futures sank 8.98%, corn lost 2.13% and wheat lost 1.09% for the month.6

REAL ESTATE
March didn’t bring much improvement. Interest rates on conventional mortgages did go back under 4% after topping that mark at mid-month. Looking at Freddie Mac’s March 1 and March 29 Primary Mortgage Market Surveys, we see that mortgage interest rates did increase last month: 30-year FRMs went from 3.90% to 3.99%; 15-year FRMs went from 3.17% to 3.23%; 5/1-year ARMs rose from 2.83% to 2.90%; 1-year ARMs went from 2.72% to 2.78%.15

Existing home sales fell 0.9% for the month, while new home sales pulled back 1.6%. Year-over-year, the pace of residential resales had increased 8.8% while new home buying rose 11.4%. The Census Bureau announced that the median new home sale price had risen 6.2% in a year to $233,700. The National Association of Realtors noted the first year-over-year increase in existing home prices since November 2010.   However, the January edition of the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index revealed that existing home prices had essentially reset to early 2003 levels. The index posted its fifth straight monthly retreat and was down 3.8% from 12 months before. The NAR also reported a 0.5% decline in pending home sales for February.16,17,18

LOOKING BACK…LOOKING FORWARD
Fear seemed to take a holiday: the CBOE VIX was at 15.50 on March 30 after diving 15.90% for the month. The Dow ended March at 13,212.04, the S&P at 1,408.47, the NASDAQ at 3,091.57 and the Russell 2000 at 830.30.1

It would be mind-blowing if the market put together consecutive quarters like this, and even the most bullish of analysts don’t expect a repeat. Then again, Wall Street has surprised us many times. Some analysts think the current bull market may be due to run out of steam given the apparent economic sluggishness in Europe and the tendency of investors to “sell in May, go away”. Others think that since the S&P 500 fell 19.4% in October 2011 from an April 2011 peak (actually more than 20%, if you factor in intraday numbers rather than just the market close), we are actually more or less in a new bull market that began last fall. So would that be a baby bull within a secular bear, or something more lasting? Whether you think the glass is half full or half empty on Wall Street, the fact remains that stocks surpassed expectations in the first quarter of the year – and April may bring further gains.23

UPCOMING ECONOMIC RELEASES: Here is the slate of releases for the rest of April: the March ISM service sector index (4/4), the March unemployment report (4/6), February wholesale inventories (4/10), a new Federal Reserve Beige Book (4/11), the March PPI (4/12), the March CPI and the initial University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey for April (4/13), March retail sales and February business inventories (4/16), March industrial output, housing starts and building permits (4/17), the March Conference Board Leading Economic Indicators index and March existing home sales (4/19), March new home sales, the February Case-Shiller home price index and the Conference Board’s April consumer confidence poll (4/24), March durable goods orders and an FOMC policy announcement (4/25), March pending home sales (4/26), the federal government’s first estimate of Q1 GDP and the final April University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey (4/27), and finally the March consumer spending numbers (4/30).

MONTHLY QUOTE
“Humor is just another defense against the universe.”
 – Mel Brooks

To Your Prosperity,

Kevin Kroskey

This article prepared in conjunction with Peter Montoya.
Citations.
1 - money.msn.com/market-news/post.aspx?post=ba5dfb2a-4c91-4d39-aa5e-f3bfb0d9bb5e&_nwpt=1 [2/29/12]
2 - www.cnbc.com/id/46902933/ [3/30/12]
3 - articles.latimes.com/2012/mar/09/business/la-fi-us-jobs-20120310 [3/9/12]
4 - briefing.com/investor/calendars/economic/2012/03/26-30 [3/30/12]
5 - www.usatoday.com/money/economy/story/2012-03-16/February-inflation-consumer-price-index/53561880/1 [3/16/12]
6 - money.msn.com/market-news/post.aspx?post=087cac64-3d67-4737-b94a-31c3ff49ba16 [3/30/12]
7 - www.census.gov/retail/marts/www/marts_current.pdf [3/13/12]
8 - www.ism.ws/ISMReport/MfgROB.cfm [4/2/12]
9 - www.ism.ws/ISMReport/NonMfgROB.cfm [3/5/12]
10 - www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2012/03/16/investopedia77515.DTL [3/16/12]
11 - www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-17582051 [4/2/12]
12 - www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/02/us-global-economy-asia-idUSBRE83104P20120402 [4/2/12]
13 - news.morningstar.com/index/indexReturn.html [3/30/12]
14 - mscibarra.com/products/indices/international_equity_indices/gimi/stdindex/performance.html [3/30/12]
15 - www.freddiemac.com/pmms/ [4/2/12]
16 - www.bizjournals.com/washington/news/2012/03/23/new-home-sales-slow.html [3/23/12]             
17 - articles.marketwatch.com/2012-03-27/economy/31242975_1_david-m-blitzer-index-committee-index-records [3/27/12]
18 - www.latimes.com/business/money/la-fi-mo-pending-home-sales-20120326,0,3632145.story [3/26/12]
19 - montoyaregistry.com/Financial-Market.aspx?financial-market=an-introduction-to-the-stock-market&category=29 [4/2/12]
20 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=DJIA&closeDate=3%2F30%2F11&x=0&y=0 [3/30/12]
20 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=COMP&closeDate=3%2F30%2F11&x=0&y=0 [3/30/12]
20 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=SPX&closeDate=3%2F30%2F11&x=0&y=0 [3/30/12]
20 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=DJIA&closeDate=3%2F28%2F02&x=0&y=0 [3/30/12]
20 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=COMP&closeDate=3%2F28%2F02&x=0&y=0 [3/30/12]
20 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=SPX&closeDate=3%2F28%2F02&x=0&y=0 [3/30/12]
21 - treasury.gov/resource-center/data-chart-center/interest-rates/Pages/TextView.aspx?data=realyield [3/30/12]
21 - treasury.gov/resource-center/data-chart-center/interest-rates/Pages/TextView.aspx?data=realyieldAll [3/30/12]
22 - treasurydirect.gov/instit/annceresult/press/preanre/2002/ofm10902.pdf [1/9/02]
23 - articles.businessinsider.com/2012-03-07/markets/31131044_1_bull-market-new-bull-first-year-bull [3/7/12]

February Monthly Market Commentary

THE MONTH IN BRIEF
Were soaring oil and gas prices threatening the recovery? Was a new European recession exerting a drag on the global economy? In February, these questions barely dented the prevalent optimism on Wall Street. The Dow gained 2.5% for the month and settled above 13,000 on February 28; it hadn’t closed that high since June 2008. Energy futures set the pace in the commodities sector. The housing market offered some hopeful signals. Our economy seemed to be clearly on the mend, although the economies of China and certain EU nations appeared poised for soft landings or mild recessions. It was a strangely calm month, one in which the stock market behaved like a mature bull market.1,2 

DOMESTIC ECONOMIC HEALTH
Consumer spending accounts for around 70% of the U.S. economy, so it was nice to see the biggest rise in that category in four months in January: a 0.2% increase. Consumer incomes were up 0.3% as well. Other Commerce Department statistics showed a 0.4% January gain in retail sales and a 4.0% January drop in durable goods orders (the expiring 2011 tax break on capital investment likely had something to do with that decrease). With consumer spending up, retail sales up and the jobless rate descending to 8.3% for January, the big picture of the economy looked positive.3,4

So how did consumers feel? In a word, better. The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment survey improved for the sixth straight month, coming at a final mark of 75.3 for February. (The gauge has not posted six consecutive months of gains in 15 years.) The Conference Board’s survey also improved in February, coming in at 70.8.3,5

While concerns abounded about foreign manufacturing, our factory sector looked comparatively healthy, even if our premier purchasing managers index decreased in February. The Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing PMI fell 1.7% to 52.4, but it was above 50 for the 31st consecutive month. ISM’s non-manufacturing index had come in at 56.8 for January; the 25th straight month of service sector growth.6,7

The Labor Department noted a 0.2% January advance in consumer prices. This was only the second rise in CPI in four months. Core CPI also rose 0.2% in January. Producer prices rose 0.1% in January with a 0.4% gain in core PPI. All this looked moderate, but one spike in prices got the attention of all Americans: the price of a gallon of regular unleaded gasoline soared 8.36% in February, settling at a national average of $3.73 a gallon on February 29.1,8       

GLOBAL ECONOMIC HEALTH
As February wound down, Greece was in line for a third EU/IMF rescue package of €237 billion to attack the nation’s €350 billion in sovereign debt€107 billion in haircuts to bond investors followed by €130 billion in loans. Was it another temporary fix to a lingering problem? If it was, it wasn’t the only continuing economic dilemma in the EU. In February, Eurozone unemployment hit a euro-era record high of 10.7% (Spain’s jobless rate is currently above 20%). The Markit Eurozone PMI came in at 49.0 for February; it hasn’t been above 50 since July. Many economists believe the EU is now in a recession.9,1o

China’s apparent soft landing was corroborated by its latest PMI readings. Its official PMI was but 51.0 in February, up from 50.5 in January but not far from the 49.0 reading last November. Fresh data showed that Chinese consumer inflation rose 0.4% in January to 4.5% while its GDP lessened to 8.9% in Q4 2011. India’s GDP slipped to 6.1% in Q4 but its PMI remained strong at 56.6 in February; its inflation rate hit a two-year low in February.10,11,12

WORLD MARKETS
Key benchmarks did well. In fact, gains occurred on all continents. The MSCI World Index rose 4.66% last month while the MSCI Emerging Markets Index climbed 5.89%.13,14           

COMMODITIES MARKETS
Oil ended the month at $107.07 a barrel (and it would climb higher to open March). Oil futures posted an 8.72% monthly gain, but that paled next to the 12.67% advance for RBOB gasoline. Natural gas even rose 4.51% on the COMEX in February. Gold actually had a losing month, with futures slipping 1.52% to $1,711.30 at the close on February 29.  The U.S. Dollar Index retreated for a second straight month, going -0.78%.1

REAL ESTATE
Existing home sales had improved again in January, and a slight decline in new home sales was offset by upward revisions to the Census Bureau’s December figures. Residential resales improved by 4.3% in the first month of the year while new home sales were down 0.9%. Both the new and existing home inventories were reduced to a 6-month supply (6.1 months for existing homes, 5.6 months for new homes), which is characteristic of a normal, healthy housing market. The National Association of Realtors said pending home sales rose 2.0% in January. In yet another positive sign, the Mortgage Bankers Association reported that there had been a 28% reduction in foreclosures in 2011. On the downside, it turned out that the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index had dropped 3.8 % for December.15,16,17

From February 2 to March 1, average home loan interest rates shifted as follows in Freddie Mac’s Primary Mortgage Market Survey: 30-year FRMs, 3.87% to 3.90%; 15-year FRMs, 3.14% to 3.17%; 5/1-year ARMs, 2.80% to 2.83%; 1-year ARMs, 2.76% to 2.72%.18

LOOKING BACK…LOOKING FORWARD
The first sixth of 2012 saw the best year-opening advance in some time for the major indices. The year-to-date numbers below represent the Dow’s best start since 1998, the NASDAQ’s best start since 2000 and the S&P’s best start since 1991. At February’s end, the Dow had settled at 12,952.07, the S&P at 1,365.68 and the NASDAQ at 2,966.89.1,2,19

While some analysts think things are weirdly calm on Wall Street, others feel that most of the economic signs hint at a better year for the consumer, the worker and the stock market investor. Q4 GDP was recently revised up to a decent 3.0%; the jobless rate has fallen 0.7% since September; consumer spending rose in January by the most since October; the real estate market is showing signs of improvement. Hopefully, headwinds from overseas will lose some velocity and exert less drag on our economy this spring and summer.24

UPCOMING ECONOMIC RELEASES: Scheduled news items across the balance of March are as follows: January factory orders and the February ISM service sector index (3/5), the February jobs report (3/9), February retail sales, January business inventories and a Federal Reserve interest rate policy announcement (3/13), February’s PPI (3/15), February’s CPI and industrial output and the initial University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey for March (3/16), February housing starts and building permits (3/20), February existing home sales (3/21), a new Conference Board Leading Economic Indicators index (3/22), February new home sales (3/23), February pending home sales (3/26), the January Case-Shiller home price index and the Conference Board’s March consumer confidence poll (3/27), February durable goods orders (3/28), the third and final estimate of Q4 GDP (3/29), and February consumer spending along with the final March University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey (3/30).

MONTHLY QUOTE
“When one door of happiness closes, another opens; but often we look so long at the closed door that we do not see the one which has opened for us.”
 – Helen Keller


To Your Prosperity,

Kevin Kroskey

This article prepared in conjunction with Peter Montoya.

Citations.
1 - money.msn.com/market-news/post.aspx?post=ba5dfb2a-4c91-4d39-aa5e-f3bfb0d9bb5e&_nwpt=1 [2/29/12]
2 - blogs.wsj.com/marketbeat/2012/02/29/data-points-u-s-markets-82/ [2/29/12]
3 - www.businessweek.com/printer/articles/339?type=bloomberg [3/1/12]
4 - www.reuters.com/article/2012/02/28/us-usa-economy-instant-idUSTRE81R0Y820120228 [2/28/12]
5 - www.conference-board.org/data/consumerconfidence.cfm [2/28/12]
6 - www.ism.ws/ISMReport/MfgROB.cfm [3/1/12]
7 - www.ism.ws/ISMReport/NonMfgROB.cfm [2/3/12]
8 - www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-consumer-prices-20120217,0,7037692.story [2/17/12]
9 - www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_world_business/view/1186463/1/.html [3/2/12]
10 - www.reuters.com/article/2012/03/01/global-economy-wrapup-idUSL4E8E13IO20120301 [3/1/12]
11 - www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2012-03/02/content_14735838.htm [3/2/12]
12 - www.aljazeera.com/news/asia/2012/02/201222995446384262.html [2/29/12]
13 - news.morningstar.com/index/indexReturn.html [2/29/12]
14 - mscibarra.com/products/indices/international_equity_indices/gimi/stdindex/performance.html [2/29/12]
15 - www.ft.com/cms/s/0/89e852da-5eec-11e1-a087-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1nvMnI56Z [2/24/12]      
16 - www.cbsnews.com/8301-505123_162-57382754/existing-home-sales-up-inventory-down-for-now/ [2/22/12]
17 - www.charlotteobserver.com/2012/02/29/3054668/housing-slump-continues.html [2/29/12]
18 - www.freddiemac.com/pmms/ [3/1/12]
19 - montoyaregistry.com/Financial-Market.aspx?financial-market=an-introduction-to-the-stock-market&category=29 [11/2/12]
20 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=DJIA&closeDate=2%2F28%2F11&x=0&y=0 [2/29/12]
20 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=COMP&closeDate=2%2F28%2F11&x=0&y=0 [2/29/12]
20 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=SPX&closeDate=2%2F28%2F11&x=0&y=0 [2/29/12]
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20 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=COMP&closeDate=2%2F28%2F02&x=0&y=0 [2/29/12]
20 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=SPX&closeDate=2%2F28%2F02&x=0&y=0 [2/29/12]
21 - treasury.gov/resource-center/data-chart-center/interest-rates/Pages/TextView.aspx?data=realyieldAll [3/2/12]
22 - treasurydirect.gov/instit/annceresult/press/preanre/2002/ofm10902.pdf [1/9/02]
23 - briefing.com/Investor/Calendars/Economic/Releases/employ.htm [3/2/12]

Future Posts at www.TrueWealthDesign.com

Any future blog posts will be done at www.TrueWealthDesign.com . Thank you, Kevin Kroskey, CFP, MBA