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Financial Markets Summary For The Week of July 14-18
The week of July 14-18 will see a major five days macro data, earnings and
Fed Talk in the context of a very shaky market. Just a few potential market
moving events upcoming on the schedule are: the two-day testimony on monetary
policy and the economy by Fed Chair Ben Bernanke scheduled for Tuesday and
Wednesday. Earnings statements that may shape the entire trading week will
be published will be JP Morgan on Wednesday and Merrill Lynch, Citi and Thornburg
Mortgage on Thursday. Consumer bellwether Coca-Cola and tech icon Intel will
see releases earlier in the week. The major macro data will kick off with the
Tuesday release of the June PPI and advance retail sales. Wednesday will see
the publication of the consumer price index for June and the following day
will see the release of the housing starts and building permits data for the
same month. Throughout the week the Empire Fed, Philadelphia Fed, TICS flows,
industrial production, jobless claims and leading economic indicators will
all be published.
Fed Talk
The week in Fed talk will be dominated by the two-day testimony by Fed Chair
Ben Bernanke on monetary policy and the economy on Tuesday and Wednesday. Monday
will see a vote by the Fed Governors on mortgage rules in an open meeting.
San Francisco Fed Yellen will speak on the negative effects of foreclosures
on Monday and Kansas City Fed President Hoenig will speak on the US economy
on Tuesday.-

Producer Price Index (June) Tuesday 08:30 AM
The producer price index for June should provide a very clear illustration
of the strains that increasing costs are placing on the already thin profit
margins of producers. Our forecast implies that headline costs should increase
1.5%m/m and 8.7%y/y. Core pricing should increase 0.4% and 3.3% over that same
interval. The major question at this juncture that the market and the Fed are
both awaiting clarification is whether the advancing headline costs will bleed
through to the core. The latest market data inside the PPI indicates an answer
in the affirmative. Total intermediates on a three month annualized basis jumped
27.7% and the core ex-food and energy measure is up 18.5% using that same metric.
Should this trend continue it will become increasingly difficult to ignore
the underlying pricing pressures faced by firms. At one point, businesses will
have to ignore competitiveness issues, seek to preserve profit margins and
begin passing through price increases downstream.
Advance Retail Sales (June) Tuesday 08:30 AM
The well-timed stimulus package provided a much-needed shot of adrenaline
to the economy in May and we expect to see another boost to spending ex-auto
in June. Our forecast implies a 0.7% increase in overall spending and a 1.0%
increase ex-autos. We anticipate that the focus of consumer spending will be
in the food, health/ personal items and the electronics sectors. We do urge
our clients to recall that the mid year surge in personal consumption will
be transitory and that save a second stimulus package, that their will be a
massive payback to the downside in Q4'08.
Empire Manufacturing (July) Tuesday 08:30 AM
The middle of 2008 is proving to be a test by fire for manufactures. The continued
culling of workers and cutback of production schedules in the domestic auto
industry should continue to weigh heavily on industrials. The near robust level
of demand from the external sector can be expected to begin to level off a
bit on the back of higher headline costs globally. Looking forward through
the end of the year, we expect to see a series of very difficult reports out
of the manufacturing sector. Our forecast implies that the NY Fed survey of
manufacturing firms for the month of June will fall to -9.3.
Consumer Price Index (June) Wednesday 08:30 AM
The painful increase in the cost of oil and commodities observed by the market
in June should be on display. Our forecast implies a month over month increase
of 0.9% and 5.0% y/y. The core should see a increase of 0.2% m/m and 2.3% y/y.
Headline costs should capture the stunning move in the oil markets during the
month and that should be expected to be the major narrative in June inflation
data across the board. Our headline forecast is not in agreement with the current
consensus and should the headline arrive near our estimate, the June CPI could
be one of the major market moving events of the week.
Industrial Production/Capacity Utilization (June) Wednesday 09:15 AM
The manufacturing sector can be expected to see further problems throughout
the remainder of the year. The market did not observe the expected pick up
in production after the settlement of the American Axel strike and deterioration
in the labor sector associated with industrial production above market consensus
in June does not bode well for the industrial production series. Our forecast
implies that production will deteriorate by -0.1% and capacity utilization
will remain steady at 79.4%.
FOMC Minutes (June Meeting) Wednesday 2:00 PM
The release of the FOMC minutes from the June meeting of the Federal Open
Market Committee will take a back seat to the Semi-Annual testimony on monetary
policy and the economy by Fed Chair Ben Bernanke. The market over the past
few days has swung wildly from a concern over pricing back to problems with
the financial sector, so the release is not the potential market-moving document
that it might have been just a few days ago. But, the market will nevertheless
pay close attention to the discussion on inflation inside the minutes and concern
over another bout of systemic issues in the financial sector.
Jobless Claims (Week Ending July 5) Thursday 08:30 AM
The weekly claims series took an unexpected decline to 346K due to seasonal
adjustments having to do with temporary plant closings and the irregular reporting
that typically occurs around holiday-shortened weeks. We expect them to move
back towards the four week moving average of 380K. However, the major narrative
that continues to demonstrate a deteriorating labor sector is the continuing
claims portion of the series that has reached 3.2mln. This suggests another
move higher in the overall rate of unemployment and a move back towards 400k
in the headline within the next few weeks.
Housing Starts/Building Permits (June) Thursday 10:00 AM
We expect to see a mixed bag in the starts and permits data in June. Starts
should see a modest decline to 961K in the data and the market should observe
a minimal increase in the demand for permits. Of late, the data across the
housing sector has continued to deteriorate, but at a decreasing rate. This
has buoyed market sentiment that the housing sector is grasping for a bottom.
Whatever the merits of such an argument, we think that the credit crisis has
yet to really enter its insolvency phase that will provide another gut wrenching
period of downturns that will provide the true bottom for the market.
Philadelphia Fed (July) Thursday 10:00 AM
We are quite bearish on the manufacturing sector, given the now clear reduction
in auto assembly schedules among domestic producers and the announcement of
further culling of the labor force. Our forecast for the Philadelphia Fed's
survey of manufacturing firms in the region implies that the headline will
fall to -18.4. We do urge our clients to recall that the headline in the survey
is a single stand-alone question that often is disconnected from underlying
production schedules. However, with the curtailing of current and future production
and the very clear problems ahead in the auto industry, we do think that our
bearish forecast may be a bit on the optimistic side.
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