THE MONTH IN BRIEF
Wall Street had a dramatic October, as investors grew anxious about the big Es: Ebola, Europe and easing (specifically, the end of QE3). Ultimately, stocks climbed higher with help from another big E: earnings. The S&P 500 advanced 2.32% for the month, pushing into record territory again. Many Asia Pacific stock indices posted solid gains; many European indices racked up October losses. It was a rough month for gold, silver, oil and many crop futures. Domestic indicators were mostly positive and made the U.S. look like a bright spot in the global economy. Sales picked up slightly in the housing market, and the stock market seemed to take the wrap-up of the Federal Reserve’s historic stimulus program in stride.1
Wall Street had a dramatic October, as investors grew anxious about the big Es: Ebola, Europe and easing (specifically, the end of QE3). Ultimately, stocks climbed higher with help from another big E: earnings. The S&P 500 advanced 2.32% for the month, pushing into record territory again. Many Asia Pacific stock indices posted solid gains; many European indices racked up October losses. It was a rough month for gold, silver, oil and many crop futures. Domestic indicators were mostly positive and made the U.S. look like a bright spot in the global economy. Sales picked up slightly in the housing market, and the stock market seemed to take the wrap-up of the Federal Reserve’s historic stimulus program in stride.1
Key index performance is shown in the table below.
DOMESTIC ECONOMIC HEALTH
The initial Q3 GDP reading suggested that the economy was now on solid footing. The Bureau of Economic Analysis reported 3.5% expansion in Q3; that and the 4.6% growth of Q2 represented the best six months for the economy in more than a decade. Consumer spending was the question mark: it grew just 1.8% in Q3, and it actually retreated 0.2% in September, a month which also brought a 0.3% decline in retail sales. Some of the Q3 personal spending slowdown could be attributed to limited wage growth; personal incomes had grown by an unspectacular 2.0% in 12 months.2,3
The initial Q3 GDP reading suggested that the economy was now on solid footing. The Bureau of Economic Analysis reported 3.5% expansion in Q3; that and the 4.6% growth of Q2 represented the best six months for the economy in more than a decade. Consumer spending was the question mark: it grew just 1.8% in Q3, and it actually retreated 0.2% in September, a month which also brought a 0.3% decline in retail sales. Some of the Q3 personal spending slowdown could be attributed to limited wage growth; personal incomes had grown by an unspectacular 2.0% in 12 months.2,3
Consumer
confidence, on the other hand, kept improving. The Conference Board’s October
index hit 94.5, and the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment gauge had a
final October reading of 86.9.2,3
Thanks to 248,000 new hires, the U.S. jobless rate fell to
5.9% in September. America hadn’t seen such low unemployment since July 2008. The U-6 rate (unemployed + underemployed) dipped to a 71-month low of
11.8%.4
September saw no real pickup in consumer prices – just
another 0.1%
gain in both the headline and core Consumer
Price Index. The annualized advance for both was just 1.7%.
(Food prices, however, had risen 3.0% in 12 months.) Producer
prices dipped 0.1% in September after being unchanged for August.2,5
Speaking
of production, September brought a 1.0% gain in factory output, although hard
goods orders tailed off 1.3%. The 59.0 reading on the Institute for Supply Management’s
October manufacturing PMI defied the forecast of analysts polled by
MarketWatch, who had predicted a 0.1% decline from September to a mark of 56.5.
(ISM’s non-manufacturing PMI fell a whole percentage point in September
to 58.6.)2,6
Lastly, the month
ended with the American Automobile Association forecasting the average U.S. gas
price to dip under $3 a gallon in early November, a prediction that came true.
On November 3, AAA had a mean nationwide price of $2.98 for regular unleaded,
which had become 36¢ cheaper over a year.7,8
GLOBAL ECONOMIC HEALTH
Just as the Fed halted its monetary stimulus, the Bank of Japan
increased its asset purchase program. On Halloween,
the BofJ said that it would boost its quantitative easing to 80 trillion yen a year
from the current 50 trillion yen. The announcement gave a boost to global
stocks and poised Japan’s currency for depreciation.7
Not
all the news out of the Asia Pacific region was so encouraging. China’s economy
was coming off its poorest quarter since 2008: its official GDP reading for Q3 was
7.3%, down from 7.5% in Q2 and the poorest measurement taken since Q1 2009. The
country’s industrial output rose to 8.0% in September from 6.9% in August,
perhaps a sign of a better number for Q4. The Chinese government’s
manufacturing PMI declined 0.3 points to 50.8 for October, while the
HSBC/Markit PMI for the nation came in at a slightly improved 50.4.9,10
Was
a recession imminent for the euro area? At month’s end, the European Central
Bank had refrained from easing, even with the risk of deflation. Germany’s manufacturing
sector grew slightly in October, but there was contraction in Italy and France
and the overall Markit factory PMI for the eurozone was a tepid 50.6.10
WORLD MARKETS
European stock market investors lacked confidence in October: the month saw the Europe Dow lose 2.98%, the STOXX 600 1.83%, the FTSE MIB 5.30%, the CAC 40 4.15%, the DAX 1.56%, the RTS 2.87% and the FTSE 100 1.15%.1
European stock market investors lacked confidence in October: the month saw the Europe Dow lose 2.98%, the STOXX 600 1.83%, the FTSE MIB 5.30%, the CAC 40 4.15%, the DAX 1.56%, the RTS 2.87% and the FTSE 100 1.15%.1
In Asia, key indices turned in much better
performances. While Korea’s KOSPI retreated 2.76%, the Shanghai Composite
gained 2.38%, the Nikkei 225 1.49%, the ASX 200 4.42%, and the Asia Dow 1.98%;
the Sensex and Hang Seng both advanced 4.64%. In the Americas, the Bovespa
gained 0.95%, the IPC All-Share 0.09% and the DJ Americas 1.98%. Up north, the
TSX Composite slipped 2.32% for October.1
Finally, the Global Dow lost
0.26% last month; the MSCI Emerging Markets Index rose 1.07% and the MSCI World
Index advanced 0.57%.1,11
COMMODITIES MARKETS
For the second straight month, big losses
characterized this sector (select crops aside). Supply again outweighed demand
for NYMEX crude: oil prices dropped 11.63% to $80.54 a barrel by Halloween. Other
energy commodities were hit hard, too: heating oil slipped 5.11%, natural gas
6.35% and unleaded gasoline a whopping 16.94%. While copper moved 1.30% north
on the month, silver retreated 5.44% and gold fell 2.94%; platinum futures lost
5.38%. Silver ended October at $16.11 an ounce, gold at $1,171.60 an ounce. The
U.S. Dollar Index gained a little more in October. On September 30, it had
settled at 85.94; on Halloween, it closed at 86.92 to go +1.14% for the month.12,13
With winter coming to northern climes,
certain ag commodities had a great month. Wheat futures rose 10.04%, soybean
futures 14.31% and corn futures 16.33%. Sugar advanced 3.36%. The major losses
came in warm-weather crops: cocoa fell 11.96%, coffee 3.01%.12
REAL ESTATE
September saw a minor acceleration in purchases of both new and existing homes: the National Association of Realtors reported resales up 2.4% and the Census Bureau found a 0.2% monthly advance in sales of new residences. Year-over-year, new home sales had improved 17.0%. NAR’s pending home sale index rose 0.3% for September after falling 1.0% for August. As for home prices, the yearly gain in the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index continued to moderate, lessening 1.1% to 5.6% in the August edition.2,14
September saw a minor acceleration in purchases of both new and existing homes: the National Association of Realtors reported resales up 2.4% and the Census Bureau found a 0.2% monthly advance in sales of new residences. Year-over-year, new home sales had improved 17.0%. NAR’s pending home sale index rose 0.3% for September after falling 1.0% for August. As for home prices, the yearly gain in the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index continued to moderate, lessening 1.1% to 5.6% in the August edition.2,14
Markedly declining mortgage rates may have
promoted an increase in home buying for October. On October 30, Freddie Mac had
the average interest rate on a conventional home loan at 3.98%. In Freddie’s
September 25 Primary
Mortgage Market Survey, it was up at 4.20%. While the mean rate
that Freddie measured for the 1-year ARM was 2.43% in both surveys, the 15-year
fixed became cheaper in October with average interest rates falling to 3.13%
from 3.36%, and so did
5/1-year ARMs with mean rates falling from 3.08% to 2.94%.15
As
the housing industry said goodbye to another summer, the yearly rate of housing
starts topped the 1 million mark again thanks to a 6.3% September rise
in groundbreaking. The Census Bureau also noted a 1.5% gain
in building permits for that month.16
To Your Prosperity,
Kevin Kroskey, CFP®, MBA
This article adapted with permission from MarketingLibrary.net.
Citations.
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2 - marketwatch.com/economy-politics/calendars/economic [10/31/14]
3 - bloomberg.com/news/2014-10-31/michigan-u-s-consumer-sentiment-index-rises-to-86-9-from-84-6.html [10/31/14]
4 - tinyurl.com/lynbsnf [10/3/14]
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2 - marketwatch.com/economy-politics/calendars/economic [10/31/14]
3 - bloomberg.com/news/2014-10-31/michigan-u-s-consumer-sentiment-index-rises-to-86-9-from-84-6.html [10/31/14]
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13 - online.wsj.com/mdc/public/npage/2_3050.html?mod=mdc_curr_dtabnk&symb=DXY [11/3/14]
14 - csmonitor.com/Business/new-economy/2014/1024/New-home-sales-inch-up-to-a-six-year-high-in-September [10/24/14]
15 - freddiemac.com/pmms/archive.html [11/3/14]
16 - nasdaq.com/article/dollar-gains-ground-on-upbeat-consumer-sentiment-data-cm403255 [10/17/14]
17 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=DJIA&closeDate=10%2F31%2F13&x=0&y=0 [10/31/14]
17 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=COMP&closeDate=10%2F31%2F13&x=0&y=0 [10/31/14]
17 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=SPX&closeDate=10%2F31%2F13&x=0&y=0 [10/31/14]
17 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=DJIA&closeDate=10%2F30%2F09&x=0&y=0 [10/31/14]
17 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=COMP&closeDate=10%2F30%2F09&x=0&y=0 [10/31/14]
17 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=SPX&closeDate=10%2F30%2F09&x=0&y=0 [10/31/14]
17 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=DJIA&closeDate=11%2F1%2F04&x=0&y=0 [10/31/14]
17 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=COMP&closeDate=11%2F1%2F04&x=0&y=0 [10/31/14]
17 - bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=SPX&closeDate=11%2F1%2F04&x=0&y=0 [10/31/14]
18 - treasury.gov/resource-center/data-chart-center/interest-rates/Pages/TextView.aspx?data=realyieldAll [11/3/14]
19 - tinyurl.com/p7stlxc [10/31/14]