The S&P 500 opened 2013 with its best month since October 2011 – and its biggest January gain in percentage terms since 1997. Analysts felt the year might start with a positive month, but few expected a 5.04% breakout for the definitive Wall Street gauge. In fact, stocks around the globe had a great month – and so did oil. A fiscal cliff deal was signed into law, and a battle over the debt ceiling was postponed. Poor monthly indicators didn’t do much to hobble real estate’s rebound. Consumer confidence surveys offered mixed signals and the unemployment rate increased, but data showed households spending, saving and earning more.1
DOMESTIC ECONOMIC HEALTH
While
the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 did extend the Bush-era tax cuts for
the middle class, it also approved a 2% payroll tax hike for all working
Americans. Nevertheless, Wall Street cheered the deal with a big rally on the
year’s first market day, even as the wealthiest households reached for their
aspirin in the face of higher income, investment and estate taxes. The ATRA put
off the federal spending cuts planned for January 2 until March 1. On January
31, the Senate approved a bill authored by House Republicans to temporarily
suspend the federal borrowing limit through May 18.2,3
If
Americans felt relief from this, it wasn’t demonstrably reflected in key
surveys. January’s edition of the Conference Board’s consumer confidence index dropped
8.1 points to 58.6 (the lowest level in 14 months) while the University of
Michigan’s final January consumer sentiment survey rose a mere 0.9 points to
73.8.4
The
jobless rate ticked up to 7.9% in January, even though non-farm payrolls
expanded by 157,000 positions. (The Labor Department simultaneously announced revised
hiring totals from November and December – it turned out that job creation
averaged a solid 221,000 in those two months.) Personal spending rose 0.2% in
December, and early dividend payouts (and other factors) prompted a 2.8% rise
in after-tax incomes. America’s personal savings rate reached 6.5%, a peak
unseen since May 2009.5,6
Retail
sales were up 0.5% in December. Touching on retail prices, the Consumer Price
Index was flat in December, showing just a 1.7% rise for the year – well under
the Federal Reserve’s inflation target. Wholesale inflation fell 0.2% in
December and only rose 1.3% for 2012, the smallest annual advance in the
Producer Price Index since 2008.7,8
January’s
most stunning economic news actually pertained to the fourth quarter. The
initial Q4 GDP estimate from the Bureau of Economic Analysis was -0.1%, with
reduced defense spending, a drop in exports and a smaller-than-expected
increase in inventories being the major factors.5
However,
two globally respected measures of the manufacturing and service sectors – the
purchasing manager indices at the Institute for Supply Management – both showed
expansion for January. Last month’s ISM manufacturing PMI rose to 53.1 from
December’s downwardly revised 50.2 (and backing that reading up, overall
durable goods orders had increased 4.6% in December). Early in January, ISM
released its service sector PMI for December, which came in at 56.1.6,9,10
GLOBAL ECONOMIC HEALTH
Faint
signals of economic improvement could be glimpsed in Europe. The Markit
eurozone manufacturing PMI rose from 46.1 in December to 47.9 in January, and
Germany’s manufacturing PMI climbed to 49.8, on the verge of expansion.
Eurozone
annualized inflation moderated 0.2% to 2.0% last month – a low unseen since
November 2010. Unemployment leveled off at 11.7% in the EU in December. All
this aside, while the International Monetary Fund projects global growth at
3.5% in 2013, it also forecasts an 0.2% contraction in the eurozone economy
this year following an 0.4% contraction for 2012.11,12
A
late-January Reuters poll of 250 prominent economists projected growth in the
Asia Pacific region moderating in 2013, with the economies of Hong Kong,
Singapore, and South Korea all forecast for GDP downgrades of 0.4-0.5%. However,
China’s GDP was projected to improve 0.3% to 8.1% in 2013 – which would still
represent its smallest annual growth since 2000. Looking at the HSBC PMIs for
the region, China’s hit a two-year peak of 52.3 last month while India’s was at
53.2; Taiwan’s was at 51.5, Vietnam’s at 50.1. HSBC PMIs for Indonesia (49.7)
and South Korea (49.9) showed January contraction. Australia’s AIG PMI fell 4.1
points to 40.2, in negative territory for an eleventh straight month.13,14
WORLD MARKETS
Gains were prevalent around the world. In Europe, the DAX went +2.15%, the CAC 40 +2.51%
and the FTSE 100 +6.43%. In Asia, the Nikkei 225 rose
7.48%, the Sensex 1.11%, the Hang Seng 4.40% and
the Shanghai Composite 5.05%; the KOSPI pulled back 2.49%. Looking at other
benchmarks in the Americas, the Bovespa sank 1.95%, the Bolsa gained 3.60%, the
TSX Composite rose 2.02% and the MERVAL soared an astonishing 21.31%.15
Among regional indices, the S&P Asia 50
was flat (actually losing 0.04%), the Euro STOXX 50 gained 2.54%, the MSCI
World Index climbed 5.00% and the MSCI Emerging Markets Index advanced 1.31%.15,16
COMMODITIES MARKETS
Platinum
was the hottest marquee commodity in January, rising 9.0% on the COMEX. Oil and
corn were also hot, both gaining 6.1%. Palladium
futures advanced 6.0%, silver futures 3.7% and copper futures 2.2%; gold
slipped 0.9% for the month. Other January performances: soybeans, +3.5%;
coffee, +2.2%; wheat, +0.2%; natural gas, -0.4%; cocoa, -1.4%; sugar, -3.7%. The
Thomson Reuters CRB Index had its best month since August, showing a 3.0% gain.
A 3.2% January ascent put the U.S. Dollar Index at 79.24 at the end of the
month.17
REAL ESTATE
Shrinking
inventory (the smallest supply of houses on the market since May 2005) contributed
to a 1.0% slip in existing home sales in December. However, residential resales
were up 12.8% for 2012, with foreclosures and short sales accounting for 24% of
transactions (down 8% from a year before). New home sales dropped 7.3% in
December but were up 19.9% in 2012 (the best year for new home buying since 1983).
Pending home sales fell 4.3% for December. November’s Case-Shiller Home Price
Index showed a 5.5% annual gain across 20 cities, beating forecasts.
Construction spending was up 0.9% in December and the NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing
Market Index maintained a 6-year peak last month.9,18,19
Home
loans grew more expensive in January. At month’s end, Freddie Mac had the
average interest rate on the 30-year FRM at 3.53% and rates on the 15-year FRM,
5/1-year ARM and 1-year ARM respectively averaging 2.81%, 2.70% and 2.59%. In Freddie
Mac’s December 27 Primary Mortgage Market Survey, the average interest rates on
those loans were respectively 3.35%, 2.65%, 2.70% and 2.56%.20,21
LOOKING BACK…LOOKING
FORWARD
Bears
all but hibernated last month. The four most-watched U.S. indices all scored
big gains in January, including the Russell 2000, which cracked the 900 ceiling
and ended the month at 902.09. When the Dow has had a positive January, it has
had a positive year 82% of the time. The S&P 500 wrapped up January at 1,498.11,
the Dow at 13,860.58 and the Nasdaq
at 3,142.31.1,22
The
big question for February: can the Dow and S&P reach all-time highs? On
February 1, the DJIA rallied to close above 14,000 for the first time in over
five years. On February 4, the Dow descended nearly 130 points with new worries
about higher sovereign bond yields in Spain and Italy a big factor. The
question analysts have pondered in the wake of the market’s breakout is an old
one: what exactly is validating the rally? Unemployment has not lessened; the
GDP reading from the fourth quarter was a letdown. Still, real estate looks
better, consumer spending has not tailed off, the manufacturing and service
industries seem to be expanding, and the Federal Reserve is doing its part to
provide continuing stimulus to the economy. There is strong anticipation (some
might even call it expectation) that the Dow and S&P will close at all-time
highs in the near term. Some analysts insist a pullback is due, and warranted. Bulls
counter with the argument that if the market retreats this month, the biggest
factor will simply be the psychology that stocks should retreat, that this
advance is simply too good to be true. In the best-case scenario, the Dow
reaches an all-time high this month attributable to market fundamentals as well
as confidence and excitement.28
UPCOMING ECONOMIC
RELEASES:
The February calendar unfolds like so ... ISM’s January
non-manufacturing index (2/5), December wholesale inventories (2/8), January
retail sales and December business inventories (2/13), January industrial
production and the University of Michigan’s preliminary February consumer
sentiment survey (2/15), February’s NAHB housing market index (2/19), the
January PPI, the January 30 Fed minutes, and reports on January housing starts
and building permits (2/20), January’s CPI and existing home sales and the
Conference Board’s January Leading Economic Indicators index (2/21), January
new home sales, the Conference Board’s February consumer confidence poll and
the December Case-Shiller home price index and FHFA housing price index (2/26),
January durable goods orders and pending home sales (2/27), and the second reading
on Q4 GDP (2/28). Reports on January consumer spending and vehicle sales and
the final February University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey arrive
March 1, as does the February ISM manufacturing index. February’s unemployment
rate won’t be announced until March 8 – that is when the Bureau of Labor
Statistics issues its next monthly report.
To Your Prosperity,
Kevin Kroskey
This article prepared in conjunction with Peter Montoya.
Citations.
1 - blogs.barrons.com/stockstowatchtoday/2013/01/31/dow-sp-500-see-best-january-since-1990s/
[1/31/13]2 - www.cbsnews.com/8301-250_162-57561752/obama-signs-fiscal-cliff-bill-into-law/ [1/3/13]
3 - www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2013/01/31/senate-debt-limit-extension-approved/1881191/ [1/31/13]
4 - www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-02-01/u-s-michigan-consumer-sentiment-increase-may-boost-spending.html [2/1/13]
5 - www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-02-01/januarys-strong-jobs-report-trumps-a-decline-in-gdp [2/1/13]
6 - www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-01-31/consumer-spending-in-u-s-climbed-in-december-as-incomes-surged.html [1/31/13]
7 - www.usatoday.com/story/money/business/2013/01/16/consumer-price-index-december/1838907/ [1/16/13]
8 - news.morningstar.com/articlenet/article.aspx?id=581091 [1/15/13]
9 - briefing.com/investor/calendars/economic/2013/01/28-01 [2/1/13]
10 - www.ism.ws/ISMReport/NonMfgROB.cfm [1/4/13]
11 - online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323701904578277370700712726.html [2/1/13]
12 - money.cnn.com/2013/01/23/news/economy/europe-economy-imf/index.html [1/23/13]
13 - www.reuters.com/article/2013/01/23/us-economy-asia-poll-idUSBRE90M0EZ20130123 [1/23/13]
14 - www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/afp/130201/asia-manufacturing-eases-january [1/30/13]
15 - bloomberg.com/markets/stocks/ [1/31/13]
16 - mscibarra.com/products/indices/international_equity_indices/gimi/stdindex/performance.html [1/31/13]
17 - reuters.com/article/2013/01/31/markets-commodities-idUSL1N0B0IBT20130131 [1/31/13]
18 - www.usatoday.com/story/money/business/2013/01/22/existing-home-sales-december/1854563/ [1/22/13]
19 - www.sfgate.com/business/bloomberg/article/New-Home-Sales-Decline-Blemishes-Best-Year-Since-4223610.php [1/25/13]
20 - www.freddiemac.com/pmms/index.html?year=2012 [2/4/13]
21 - www.freddiemac.com/pmms/ [2/4/13]
22 - money.cnn.com/quote/quote.html?symb=RUT [1/31/13]
23 - montoyaregistry.com/Financial-Market.aspx?financial-market=an-introduction-to-the-stock-market&category=29 [1/31/13]
24 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=DJIA&closeDate=1%2F31%2F12&x=0&y=0 [1/31/13]
24 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=COMP&closeDate=1%2F31%2F12&x=0&y=0 [1/31/13]
24 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=SPX&closeDate=1%2F31%2F12&x=0&y=0 [1/31/13]
24 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=DJIA&closeDate=1%2F31%2F03&x=0&y=0 [1/31/13]
24 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=COMP&closeDate=1%2F31%2F03&x=0&y=0 [1/31/13]
24 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=SPX&closeDate=1%2F31%2F03&x=0&y=0 [1/31/13]
25 - www.bloomberg.com/markets/stocks/ [12/31/12]
26 - treasury.gov/resource-center/data-chart-center/interest-rates/Pages/TextView.aspx?data=realyieldAll [2/4/13]
27 - treasurydirect.gov/instit/annceresult/press/preanre/2002/ofm71002.pdf [1/10/03]
28 - www.usnews.com/news/business/articles/2013/02/04/us-stocks-fall-after-dows-rally-to-14000 [2/4/13]