|
Are Ya' Feelin' Lucky, Punk?...At this point you know that Consumer Confidence
rebounded quite smartly with the December reading. It's probably really no
huge surprise given the liquidity driven levitation act in the equity markets
as of late. Moreover, as we've mentioned, energy prices and consumer confidence
readings move in opposite directions over time. The recent drop in crude probably
helped the cause in terms of raising holiday spirits. But stepping back a bit,
it's important to remember as we look into 2005 that energy prices and interest
rate movements often influence consumer sentiment and the real economy in a
lagged fashion. Usually 6-12 months after meaningful interest rate or
energy price increases we see confidence wane and see tangible evidence of
economic/consumer slowing. The longer term historical relationship is pretty
clear. (WTIC is West Texas Intermediate Crude prices)
But cutting directly to the bottom line, we believe that the most important
subcomponent of the consumer confidence report over the last few months was
simply absent from either the headline financial media coverage or commentary.
And that was the portion of the report that measures forward looking consumer
intentions to purchase cars, homes, and major appliances. Before taking even
one step further, what is ultimately most important is what consumers do, not
what they say in surveys. But having said that, the one month drop in these
subcomponent readings in November was so significant relative to historical
context, that we believe they deserve attention. A few quick pictures of life
in the modern day fast lane.
In each of the following graphs, we've taken the data back to the midst of
the last recession. But we'll give you a bit of further color on history going
back three and one half decades (the complete history of the series). As of
the November consumer confidence report, the consumer response regarding plans
for buying an auto dropped to the lowest level ever recorded in the history
of this data. Responses literally plummeted. Certainly there has been a nice
rebound in December.
The positive response rate for those planning on buying a new home dropped
to a level not seen since 1994 with the November survey. And in 1994, the survey
trend was headed up, not down. Once again, a clear rebound is evident with
the December report.
Lastly, for those planning on purchasing a major appliance, the response rate
dropped to a reading not seen since 1995 in November, with holiday spirits
improving last month.
Just what the heck has been going on here? We're three years into an economic
recovery. Why the sudden and literal plummet in consumer spending plans in
November? Was this some kind of huge anomaly in the reporting or the data collection?
December readings suggest November was possibly a data outlier, but the reason
we bring this up is that November readings have been seen quite infrequently
over the last 30+ years. Most recently, plans to purchase homes, autos and
appliances seen in November were likewise seen during the 1993-94 time frame.
A period of a jobless US economic recovery somewhat analogous to what we are
experiencing at the present. But outside of this, the only other time readings
such as the November survey numbers were seen occurred smack in the middle
of every recession of the last 35 years. From our standpoint, we have one simple
question. Is the "lag time" over, so to speak, in terms of higher energy prices
and interest rates influencing consumer spending decisions? This deserves fastidious
attention looking ahead from our point of view. If indeed higher interest rates
and energy prices are catching up with a plainly over leveraged US consumer
in aggregate, this would have very significant implications for both the domestic
and global economies looking dead ahead. Something the current equity markets
appear not to be seeing at all, at least not through the blinding blizzard
of current liquidity excess.
Another question we need to ask ourselves is just how much near term movements
in the financial markets are influencing the consumer confidence equation.
Did consumer responses to questions regarding plans to purchase homes, autos
and appliances simply perk up because the S&P went to a new high for the
year in December? Although this may sound like a ranting and raving comment,
the fact is that history forces us to examine this question. The following
is the relationship of directional movement in the Consumer Confidence "forward
expectations" component of the report relative to the S&P price itself
since the middle of the last recession in 2001. If this doesn't show strong
directional similarity, then we just don't know what does. We believe this
apparent linkage between directional movement in stocks and subsequent consumer
confidence responses is all the more an important question given the coincidental
plummeting of real world new home sales and permits as of the November readings
for these indicators. Are respondents to the Consumer Confidence surveys taking
their clues from near term equity market movements, or from the real economy?
Just which is it? Unfortunately, from our standpoint, and from the picture
of life you see below, it appears to be the former. See for yourself.
Although we're clearly "theorizing" at the moment, we believe there is a plausible
explanation for what we are seeing in the consumer confidence survey data.
And if we're even near correct about these cause and effect relationships,
we may be approaching a serious tipping point for the US consumer. Here's the
thinking.
ROC and RollOver?...First, we need to set these thoughts against the
context of the global economy. We have been arguing for some time now that
the changing global economy is changing the nature of cause and effect relationships
in terms of both monetary and fiscal stimulus in the US. We are absolutely
convinced that what the Fed has really been stimulating over the past three
to four years is the greater Asian economy, through the mechanism of the US
trade deficit. As you know, in past post recessionary cycles, domestic monetary
stimulus has helped spark domestic employment expansion, wage acceleration,
corporate capital spending, etc. For now, employment, wage growth and capital
spending growth are lagging prior post recessionary experience quite badly
stateside. For all of the really precedent setting stimulus and liquidity the
Fed has pumped into the economy over the last three to four years, we have
very little to show for it in these areas of the real economy. But what has
happened is that our trade deficit has gapped open in cavernous fashion and
the export driven economies of greater Asia have been literally on fire.
Secondly, what we believe has been the further fruit of historic monetary
expansion over the last three to four years has been the appearance of new
age prosperity that is rising stock, house and bond prices. In essence, another
very significant beneficiary of monetary accommodation has been capital - stocks,
housing, bonds. As you know, the Fed can stimulate and create excessive liquidity,
but it really has no control over where that stimulus/excess liquidity ultimately
flows. Stocks have risen over the past few years as cost cutting and outsourcing
have boosted nominal profits (benefiting the Asian economies largely at the
expense of the US labor market) . Housing has been the beneficiary of once
in a lifetime (we think) low cost of credit and ease of (wildcat?) credit availability.
In other words, those who own capital assets - stocks, houses, bonds - now
feel more "wealthy", so to speak. But those who don't own these assets in meaningful
quantity have not felt the "wealth" surge. So, in sum, we see the extraordinary
monetary and fiscal accommodation of the recent past benefiting real foreign
economies and those who own capital assets domestically. For now, the publicly
available economic data directly confirms that this monetary explosion is in
large part bypassing the real domestic economy. At least as is measured by
jobs, wages and domestic capital spending.
Is it really this scenario that is playing out before our eyes? No matter
how much juice the Fed pushes into the economy (and there has been a ton of
juice, especially lately), the in place dynamics of stimulating foreign export
driven economies and domestic non-levered owners of capital continues. Is this
now catching up to the broad US consumer in terms of lagging wages, jobs, and
the lack of additional stimulus that is corporate capital spending? This is
exactly what we think is happening. And this may be exactly what is getting
into the consumer confidence report for November in terms of responses to housing,
auto and appliance purchasing plan surveys. Again, if this is the case, we're
approaching a dramatic tipping point. The US consumer is the lynchpin for the
global economy.
Before leaving this topic, one last anecdote that seems to clearly corroborate
the thinking above. And, of course, it concerns none other than the consumer
related global retailing behemoth that is Wal-Mart. As everyone knows by now,
November sales at Wal-Mart weren't quite exactly what the company was anticipating.
In fact, a good bit far from it. Moreover, Wal-Mart wasn't exactly full of
Christmas cheer regarding their initial outlook for December. We'll see how
December numbers ultimately stack up, but initial indications for large discount
retailers such as Wal-Mart and their brethren have not been full of holiday
cheer. Clearly part of the reason for this is that WMT did not discount as
heavily this year as has been the case in prior years. But weak results at
Wal-Mart in the holiday retail season is certainly not "company specific".
December interim weekly retail sales reports and chain store sales snapshots
improved a bit directly before the holiday while department store sales improved,
but discounters were still having a relatively difficult time.
We believe the following relational chart is telling us something. Something
regarding the concept of accommodation accruing to capital and real foreign
economies as opposed to the real domestic economy. Have a look.
What you see above is the stock price performance relationship between Nordstrom
and Wal-Mart since 2000. These two really traded in a relative performance
band between 2000 and early 2003. But as the Fed and the administration really
stepped on the gas in early '03 in terms of flooding the system with liquidity
and bending over backwards to accommodate, Nordstrom stock price took off like
a rocket relative to Wal-Mart. Clearly, we do not mean to be wealth discriminatory
or elitist in any sense of the word, but we are looking at two retailers whose
clientele are derived from two very differing wealth demographics. What this
chart tells is us is that the lower wealth and income strata in the US have
not benefited from historic Fed and Administration accommodation efforts as
has the upper income strata. And quite naturally, the lower wealth strata own
less "capital" (stocks, houses, bonds) than does the upper wealth demographic.
So, in essence, the Fed is "stimulating" the capital owners that are Nordie's
customers, but they aren't doing a whole lot for the weak or non-capital owners
that are Wal-Mart's clientele. Hence the dichotomy of revenue growth results.
Simple enough?
Without sounding over the top, we believe this anecdotal evidence of change
in the character of the US consumer base deserves much more than a modicum
of attention moving forward. And in the meantime, we expect the Fed to continue "creating" liquidity
like there's no tomorrow. Watch their repo activity, coupon pass activity and
the weekly Fed custodial holdings of US financial assets for the foreign sector
for clues as to liquidity creation intensity. This is what's influencing stock
and housing values over the very short term, but finding very little traction
in terms of goosing the real economy. In terms of Wal-Mart, it appears that
their customers are going to need an improving labor and wage environment.
Almost ironically as of late, the Fed has actually been withdrawing stimulus
and liquidity from the real economy vis-à-vis the Fed Funds rate increases,
but alternatively it has been pouring liquidity into the financial markets
via a very heightened level of repurchase and coupon pass activity over the
past few months. (Has the Fed been doing this recently to potentially blunt
or divert attention from the important goings on at Fannie Mae? After all,
they have somewhere between 9 and 13 billion reasons to be a little bit worried.)
In our minds, the Fed is simply exacerbating the US domestic wealth dichotomy
of the moment. A short term panacea, but a longer term erosion of the broad
economic base.
One last comment regarding Wal-Mart. As we mentioned, at least at the outset
of the holiday season, Wal-Mart did not engage in heavy discounting as they
did last year. This also tells us something about pricing power, or lack thereof,
in the broader domestic economy. Even Wal-Mart, who has the greatest cost containment
program we could possibly think of (it's called China), shows clear trouble
when not discounting heavily.
As we look into the year ahead, we suggest watching for a continued dichotomy
of results in the various wealth delineated sectors of the consumer market
will be important. Important not just for the domestic economy, but for the
global economy that is really being supported by the US consumer to a large
extent. Rising energy prices are absolutely regressive in terms of how they
affect wealth segments. Same deal goes for the influence of rising interest
rates. Again, although it's only one month's data for now, the forward consumption
survey of the Consumer Confidence report in November suggests we be very vigilant
for some type of tipping point in terms of broad domestic consumer activity
in 2005. And for now, the Fed has given us no signal at all that it is about
to stop the "normalization" process of raising the Fed Funds rate in measured
fashion. Yet at the same time it continues to create liquidity flowing into
the US financial markets at a frenetic pace. Analogously, as we look at the
pyramid of consumer wealth demographics in the US, we have to believe that
Wal-Mart's customers account for maybe up to 50% of the bottom of the pyramid.
In other words, they account for a meaningful part of the total US consumer
base as defined by wealth and income segmentation. If we're beginning to lose
momentum at the broad bottom end of the US wealth demographic, can Tiffany's
hold up the US economy? How about Nordstrom's? As always, change at the margin
is a powerful concept both in the financial markets and the real economy. We
suggest that at the moment, the most important ringing sound to listen for
is not that of holiday bells, but rather Wal-Mart cash registers.
Holiday Pictures...Before we leave you, a quick holiday album of pictures
which speak to the commentary above. With the initial reports of sector specific
retail weakness that emerged last month, many a mainstream pundit was quick
to point out that payroll employment has been improving and should support
continued consumer spending into 2005. Here's an update of a chart we have
shown you in prior discussions. It's payroll employment recovery in each of
the last four major post recession economic recoveries presented in an indexed
fashion. Without sounding melodramatic, the proper characterization for anyone
looking at the facts as opposed to simply hoping for better days ahead is "what
recovery?". Do you think the folks at Wal-Mart are aware of this? (Answer:
You bet they are.)
Same deal really goes for wages. As you may know, since September of 2003
(the beginning of the current US payroll employment recovery), the vast majority
of all jobs created stateside have been service sector jobs. Here's a picture
of service sector wage growth during Christmas' past as well as what is happening
in Christmas present.
We now have a good year and one half of solid negative real (below the like
period rate of increase in inflation) wage gains in the US service sector.
At least up to this point, US households broadly have compensated for this
shortcoming in wage growth relative to historical experience by firmly latching
onto the new era definition of wealth and prosperity - debt acceleration. The
following table of data is a little holiday gift to us from the wonderful folks
at the Fed (data taken from the Flow of Funds reports). What you're looking
at below is data from the first eleven quarters of each US economic recovery
of the past half century.
| Period |
GDP Growth ($billions) |
Growth In Household Debt Outstanding ($billions) |
Dollars Of New Household Debt For Each New Dollar Of
GDP Created |
| 2Q 54 - 1Q 57 |
$ 81.9 |
$ 44.0 |
$0.54 |
| 1Q 61- 4Q 63 |
109.9 |
64.8 |
0.59 |
| 2Q 70 - 1Q 73 |
318.2 |
126.7 |
0.40 |
| 2Q 75 - 1Q 78 |
580.0 |
320.2 |
0.55 |
| 4Q 82 - 3Q 85 |
985.1 |
601.3 |
0.61 |
| 2Q 91 - 1Q 94 |
1,023.0 |
577.8 |
0.57 |
| 4Q 01 - 3Q 04 |
$1,674.9 |
$2,258.83 |
$1.34 |
Does anything at all stand out to you in the table above? Of course it does.
We remain convinced that as we move into 2005, the US consumer cannot be monitored
and assessed as a macro entity. Bifurcation of income and wealth, and its resultant
influence on the shape of the real economy (both domestic and global), is set
to be an important investment theme ahead. Lastly, the advent of incredibly
significant global economic change over the past decade is meaningfully distorting
the impact of US monetary and fiscal stimulus during the current cycle. When
will the markets wake up to the fact that the Fed has no "Plan B", so to speak,
other than to continue pumping liquidity and distorting the nature of capital
asset prices (primarily residential real estate and equities) relative to the
reality of the real domestic economy as very simply characterized by employment
growth, wage gains and capital spending? At least for now, unlike the financial
markets, it appears Wal-Mart's customers are waking up. It's just a shame that
the bad dream they've awoken from indeed appears to be reality.
|