BEING STREET SMART
by Sy Harding
Can the U.S. Economic Recovery Overcome Europe's Drag?
January 6, 2012.
In an October column I wrote, “For the first time this year
the trend of U.S. economic reports is potentially bottoming and turning
positive. And after being bearish in the spring and summer, I like what I see in
the technical charts of many markets. If only we could ignore Europe.”
That pretty much still defines the situation as we enter the
new year.
Our indicators did trigger a buy signal in mid-October, and
the Dow is up 16.5% from its early October low.
The U.S. economic recovery did indeed get underway, and has
been gaining momentum impressively.
More importantly, the positive reports are coming from all
the crucial segments of the economy; consumer confidence, home sales, new home
construction, the auto industry, manufacturing, the services sector, and even
more impressive, in the employment picture.
This week’s reports continued the trend. They included that
construction spending was up again in November, its third monthly increase in
four months, rising 1.2% versus the consensus forecast of only a 0.5% gain. Near
record low mortgage rates and rising home sales are encouraging home-builders.
Private construction spending is at its highest level in more than two years. Of
course, that’s not saying a lot since it’s still in a deep hole. But the
four-month trend reversal is encouraging.
It was also reported this week that Factory Orders rose 1.8%
in November, which no doubt contributed to the report that the ISM Mfg Index
rose again in December, to 53.9, its highest level in six months. Within the ISM
report, new orders also rose in December, which had companies boosting
production and employment.
And that no doubt contributed to both the ADP jobs report on
Wednesday, and the Labor Department’s employment report on Friday, which showed
a big increase in the number of new jobs created in December. The Labor
Department report was that 200,000 new jobs were created versus the consensus
forecast of 150,000. And the unemployment rate fell for the fourth straight
month, to 8.5% in December from 8.7% in November, 9.0% in October, and 9.1% in
September.
However, I don’t want to be misleading with my optimism
since October.
It’s not a time for buy and hold investing, still a time to
go after intermediate-term rallies with willingness to take profits at some
point and re-position for periodic corrections. The volatility will continue.
It seems clear the U.S. economy is still on the mend since
the ‘Great Recession’ ended in June, 2009, and the slowdowns in the first half
of 2010 and again in the first half of last year were only temporary pauses in
the recovery.
But while the recovery remains on course it is still anemic,
still not producing jobs fast enough, still not cutting into the glut of unsold
homes fast enough, still not strong enough to have corporations using their
record hoard of cash for investment and expansion, still not on sure enough
footing to assure banks they can lend in confidence of being paid back (instead
of seeing the loans become more bad debts on their books down the road).
There was horrendous damage done in the Great Recession of
2007-2009, and the economy could not possibly bounce back from that much damage
as fast as from previous recessions. It will take more time, and involve more
hiccups along the way.
For instance, there are the record U.S. federal budget
deficits and debt, which will have to be taken care of sometime down the road,
perhaps painfully for the economy and therefore the stock market. A continuing
economic recovery can kick those worries down the road into next year or even
beyond.
But unfortunately, that’s still conditioned on ‘if only we
could ignore Europe’.
It’s no longer a question of whether the U.S. economy can
recover from the first half slowdown on its own without the Fed providing
further economic stimulus. It’s proving that it can, and is.
Now the question is whether the momentum of the recovery can
continue if the eurozone debt crisis and potential for Europe to slide into a
recession remain in the headlines.
In that regard, the market’s muted response Thursday and
Friday to the continuing positive economic reports was a disappointment.
For years I have referred to the monthly jobs report as
‘the big one’ because it is
anticipated with such intensity, has a record for most often coming in with a
surprise in one direction or the other, and for those surprises to almost always
result in a big triple-digit move by the Dow in the direction of the surprise.
That the market ignored Friday’s surprisingly positive jobs
report, and instead focused on the news that the yield on Italy’s 10-year bonds
surged back up above the danger zone of 7%, was a reminder of the continuing
influence of Europe’s problems on the U.S. market, in spite of the impressive
economic recovery underway in the U.S.
For now I’m giving the benefit of the doubt to the U.S.
economy, expecting it will win out as the dominant factor, while watching our
indicators more closely than usual.
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These reports reflect our opinions and are based on our best judgment, but no warranty is given or implied as to their accuracy. Past performance does not guarantee future performance.
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Asset Management Research Corp. -- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.