THE MONTH IN BRIEF
Will 2013 go in the books as the best year for
U.S. stocks since the mid-1990s? It may. At the end of November, the S&P
500 was already up 29.12% YTD. November
brought more signals of an improving economy, even with a hot housing market cooling
off by degrees. The eurozone economy still looked tenuous; China’s economy
showed signs of resilience. Prices of gold, oil and other key commodities
dropped. Some foreign stock markets outperformed ours, others lost ground. The
Federal Reserve made no moves, but its October policy minutes hinted at
trimming its monthly bond buying.1
While the S&P 500 is up as much as it is, a diversified 60/40 stock/bond portfolio was up a more modest but still very rewarding 11.42%. Additional index performance shown below.
While the S&P 500 is up as much as it is, a diversified 60/40 stock/bond portfolio was up a more modest but still very rewarding 11.42%. Additional index performance shown below.
DOMESTIC ECONOMIC
HEALTH
Early
in the month, the Labor Department stated that 204,000 new jobs were created in
October, better than the average monthly gain of 190,000 seen during the past
year. The jobless rate did tick up to 7.3%; at least that was 2.9% lower than
the recessionary peak seen in October 2009. Manufacturing and service sectors
appeared healthy judging by the Institute for Supply Management’s purchasing
manager indices. ISM’s factory sector gauge reached 56.4 in October (and 57.3
in November, marking a sixth straight monthly advance). Its service-sector PMI
rose a full point in October to 55.4.2,3,4
November also brought the federal government’s
first estimate of Q3 GDP – a surprisingly good 2.8%. (Analysts polled by
MarketWatch had expected a 2.3% reading.) As for the prime factor in GDP, a
delayed Commerce Department report on consumer spending noted only a 0.2% gain
in September, even as personal incomes increased 0.5%. Retail sales rose a
healthy 0.4% in October, however.5,6,7
Respected consumer confidence polls reached
different conclusions last month. The Conference Board’s index fell two whole
points to
70.4, far underneath the 74.0 reading forecast by Briefing.com. The University
of Michigan’s final consumer sentiment index for the month offered better news,
rising to 75.1.8
Annualized inflation was amazingly tame – just 1.0% as of October, thanks to a 0.1% decline in the Consumer Price Index. As for wholesale prices, October’s Producer Price Index showed a 0.2% retreat, and that meant just a 0.3% gain over the past 12 months – the weakest annual wholesale inflation since 2009. Durable goods orders slipped 2.0% in October.7,8,9
Annualized inflation was amazingly tame – just 1.0% as of October, thanks to a 0.1% decline in the Consumer Price Index. As for wholesale prices, October’s Producer Price Index showed a 0.2% retreat, and that meant just a 0.3% gain over the past 12 months – the weakest annual wholesale inflation since 2009. Durable goods orders slipped 2.0% in October.7,8,9
As for the Fed, Janet Yellen reassured Wall
Street at mid-month with dovish comments at her Senate confirmation hearing,
noting that “supporting
the recovery today is the surest path to returning to a more normal approach to
monetary policy.” Days later, however, the October Fed policy
minutes noted that if indicators affirmed the FOMC’s “outlook for ongoing
improvement” in the labor market, it would “warrant trimming the pace of [bond]
purchases in coming months.”10,11
Lastly,
the White House dealt with the backlash over the launch of HealthCare.gov. Less
than 27,000 people had enrolled in the federal online insurance exchange in
October due to glitches. A November repair effort left the site running much
more smoothly at the start of December; CNN estimates that at the end of last
month, total enrollment at HealthCare.gov and the 14 state-run exchanges
surpassed 200,000, up from 106,000 at the end of October. Individuals have
until December 23 to shop for health coverage effective on January 1.1
GLOBAL ECONOMIC
HEALTH
The EU jobless rate descended 0.1% in October to
12.1%. That was the good news. Annualized eurozone inflation hit 0.9% last
month, rising from 0.7% for October (a 4-year low); retail sales slipped 0.8%
in Germany in October following a 0.2% retreat for September. As for eurozone
manufacturing, Markit’s PMI for the region reached 51.3 in October and a 2-year
peak of 51.6 in November. Great Britain’s factory PMI hit 58.4 in November, the
highest reading since February 2011. Not all was well: manufacturing PMIs
showed contraction in Spain (48.6) and France (48.4).13,14
Indian manufacturing expanded for the first month since July in November, with HSBC’s PMI reaching 51.3. China’s official PMI was flat last month at 51.4 while HSBC’s PMI declined 0.1 points to 50.8. HSBC PMI readings for South Korea (50.4), Taiwan (53.4) and Vietnam (50.3) all showed growth in November. Japan’s official data stream showed yearly consumer inflation at just 0.6% and just an 0.9% annualized rise in consumer spending.13,15
Indian manufacturing expanded for the first month since July in November, with HSBC’s PMI reaching 51.3. China’s official PMI was flat last month at 51.4 while HSBC’s PMI declined 0.1 points to 50.8. HSBC PMI readings for South Korea (50.4), Taiwan (53.4) and Vietnam (50.3) all showed growth in November. Japan’s official data stream showed yearly consumer inflation at just 0.6% and just an 0.9% annualized rise in consumer spending.13,15
WORLD MARKETS
Performances
were quite varied last month. Notable gains: DAX, 4.11%; Nikkei 225, 9.31%;
Shanghai Composite, 3.68%; Hang Seng, 2.91%; IPC All-Share, 3.56%; MERVAL,
10.72%; TSX Composite, 0.26%; Global Dow, 1.65%; Europe Dow, 0.73%; DJ STOXX
600, 0.87%; MSCI World Index, 1.59%. These benchmarks racked up November
losses: MSCI Emerging Markets Index, 1.56%; Asia Dow, 0.21%; Sensex, 1.76%;
ASX, 1.94%; PSE Composite, 5.72%; Jakarta Composite, 5.64%; TAIEX, 0.51%;
Bovespa, 3.27%; FTSE 100, 1.20%; CAC 40, 0.11%; RTSI, 5.23%.1,16
COMMODITIES MARKETS
Oil
ended November at $92.72 as prices fell 3.57% on the month. Other energy
futures posted monthly gains: heating oil, 2.70%; unleaded gasoline, 1.59%;
natural gas, 10.69%. Gold sunk 5.46%, silver dropped 9.21%, platinum retreated
5.39% and copper lost 1.94%. COMEX gold settled at a mere $1,250.60 on November
29. As for crops, coffee rose 4.04%, cocoa 4.76%, cotton 2.81% and soybeans
4.39%; sugar lost 5.77% in November, corn 2.92% and wheat 1.80%. The U.S.
Dollar Index ended November at 80.68 for a 0.60% monthly gain.17,18
REAL ESTATE
The National Association of Realtors announced
that October had seen a 3.2% retreat in the pace of existing home sales – and a
0.6% slip in pending home sales. Countering the news of these declines, September’s
S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index had house prices up 3.2% in Q3 and up 13.3%
YTD.
October also saw a 6.2% rise in building permits; the annualized gain was
13.9%. (As a consequence of the federal shutdown, new home sales figures for
September and October won’t be announced by the Census Bureau until December 4,
and the reports on September and October housing starts won’t arrive until
December 18.)7,19,20
Between Halloween and November 27, Freddie Mac
charted the following mortgage rate movements: 30-year FRMs, 4.10% to 4.29%; 15-year FRMs, 3.20% to
3.30%; 5/1-year ARMs, 2.96% to 2.94%; 1-year ARMs, 2.64% to 2.60%.21
LOOKING BACK…LOOKING
FORWARD
Record
closes seemed commonplace last month as the major U.S. indices pushed toward
these November 29 finishes: DJIA, 16,086.41; NASDAQ, 4,059.89; S&P 500,
1,805.81. The Russell 2000 gained 3.88% last month to end November at 1,142.89;
the CBOE VIX declined 0.36% on the month to settle at 13.70 on November 29.1
The
S&P 500 has advanced in each of the past five Decembers, and with the bulls
seemingly entrenched on Wall Street, there is little reason to think it might
not add to its YTD gain this month. In recent years, December has also been a
terrific month for the small caps: across 2008-12, the Russell 2000’s average
December gain was 5.01%. Then again, Wall Street is a volatile place – and
recent FOMC minutes do raise the possibility of the central bank tapering in
December and taking some of the air out of any Santa Claus rally. It could be
that stocks advance nicely prior to the December 18 Fed policy announcement and
limp through the rest of the month. If the latest bicameral budget reduction
committee can’t agree on a plan by the middle of December, investors will have
more to fret about. Confidence is still prevalent on Wall Street, however, and
the year may end nicely indeed for equities.24
UPCOMING
ECONOMIC RELEASES: The data stream for the
remainder of 2013 is as follows: September and October new home sales, a new
Fed Beige Book and the November ISM service sector PMI (12/4), the second
estimate of Q3 GDP out of Washington, the November Challenger job-cut report
and October factory orders (12/5), the November employment report, October
consumer spending figures and the University of Michigan’s initial December
consumer sentiment index (12/6), October wholesale inventories (12/10),
November retail sales and October business inventories (12/12), the November
PPI (12/13), November industrial output (12/16), the November CPI and the
December NAHB housing market index (12/17), the latest Fed policy announcement
plus data on September, October and November housing starts and November
building permits (12/18), the last estimate of Q3 GDP (12/20), the University of Michigan’s final
December consumer sentiment index and Commerce Department figures on November
consumer spending (12/23), November new home sales and durable goods orders and
October’s FHFA housing price index (12/24), and November pending home sales (12/30)
Best Regards,
Kevin Kroskey, CFP®, MBA
This article adapted with permission from MarketingLibrary.net.
Citations.
1 - online.wsj.com/mdc/public/page/2_3024-m_globalstockindexes.html
[11/29/13]2 - ncsl.org/research/labor-and-employment/national-employment-monthly-update.aspx [12/2/13]
3 - ism.ws/ismreport/mfgrob.cfm [12/2/13]
4 - ism.ws/ISMReport/NonMfgROB.cfm [11/5/13]
5 - marketwatch.com/Economy-Politics/Calendars/Economic [11/8/13]
6 - briefing.com/investor/calendars/economic/2013/11/8 [11/8/13]
7 - news.morningstar.com/articlenet/article.aspx?id=620267 [11/20/13]
8 - briefing.com/investor/calendars/economic/2013/11/25-29 [11/27/13]
9 - marketwatch.com/story/us-wholesale-costs-fall-again-in-october-2013-11-21 [11/21/13]
10 - bloomberg.com/news/2013-11-13/asian-futures-heed-u-s-rally-as-yelen-boosts-treasuries.html [11/13/13]
11 - bloomberg.com/news/2013-11-21/fed-qe-taper-likely-in-coming-months-on-better-data-minutes-say.html [11/21/13]
12 - cnn.com/2013/12/02/politics/obamacare-website/index.html [12/2/13]
13 - investing.com/news/forex-news/dollar-remains-steady-to-lower-in-thin-trade-255784 [11/29/13]
14 - investing.com/news/forex-news/forex---gbp-usd-hits-fresh-highs-after-u.k.-manufacturing-pmi-255844 [12/2/13]
15 - online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304579404579233363367081556 [12/2/13]
16 - mscibarra.com/products/indices/international_equity_indices/gimi/stdindex/performance.html [11/29/13]
17 - money.cnn.com/data/commodities/ [11/29/13]
18 - online.wsj.com/mdc/public/npage/2_3050.html?mod=mdc_curr_dtabnk&symb=DXY [11/29/13]
19 - briefing.com/investor/calendars/economic/2013/11/25-29 [11/27/13]
20 - dailyfinance.com/2013/11/26/case-shillers-housing-index-and-octobers-housing-s/ [11/26/13]
21 - freddiemac.com/pmms/ [12/2/13]
22 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=DJIA&closeDate=11%2F29%2F12&x=0&y=0 [11/28/13]
22 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=COMP&closeDate=11%2F29%2F12&x=0&y=0 [11/28/13]
22 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=SPX&closeDate=11%2F29%2F12&x=0&y=0 [11/28/13]
22 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=DJIA&closeDate=11%2F28%2F03&x=0&y=0 [11/28/13]
22 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=COMP&closeDate=11%2F28%2F03&x=0&y=0 [11/28/13]
22 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=SPX&closeDate=11%2F28%2F03&x=0&y=0 [11/28/13]
23 - treasury.gov/resource-center/data-chart-center/interest-rates/Pages/TextView.aspx?data=realyieldAll [12/2/13]
24 - cnbc.com/id/101235707 [11/29/13]