Superb analysis!
Submitted by Jeff Snider, CIO of Alhamba Investment Partners
A Final Word On Those "Robust" July Retail Sales
This current weak trend in a broad cross section of economic accounts
and variables has been a big threat to the decouple/muddle through
philosophy. Retail sales figures have been sharply lower in the most
recent months, pointing very ominously to the exhausted state of that
vital US consumer. So it was very heartening to the decouplers to see a
nice, robust rebound in July that was almost totally unrelated to the
renewed soaring cost of energy and food. The broad increase in retail
sales figures, despite trends seen elsewhere however, seemed to be a bit
of an outlier. ZeroHedge created a bit of controversy by noting more
problems in seasonal adjustments (http://www.zerohedge.com/news/mystery-july-retail-sales-beat-solved-it-all-seasonal-adjustment), only to be countered shortly thereafter by Morgan Stanley (http://www.zerohedge.com/news/morgan-stanleys-defends-retail-sales-seasonal-adjustments-crazy-zero-hedge-analysis-bac-upgrade). So were the July figures muddle-worthy or otherwise?
It makes some sense that the difference in the number of shopping
weekends is cause for large seasonal tuning to render a full
apples-to-apples comparison between months. I am not so sure that a
mid-week holiday would cause such a major need for imputations and
extrapolations, but that is the nature of econometrics and the vain
pursuit (and false comfort) of economic precision. Whatever the
rationale, ZeroHedge rightly pointed out the inconsistency of results:
While there may have only been 4 shopping weekends in July 2012 vs.
July 2011, that extra weekend found its way up into June 2012. Compared
to June 2011, there was an extra weekend that did nothing to help the
atrocious results (on a seasonally adjusted basis). Perhaps if we put
the two months together to account for this shiftiness in Gregorian
calendaring we can step outside these seasonal manipulations
altogether. While the mainstream of economics pursues the false sense
of precision that comes from these attempts, there is a much easier
method of getting at what is far more important: the trend.
Using year-over-year changes strips out all of these econometric
interventions into the data. Since these figures are raw, they are not
adjusted for inflation either (meaning there is no argument over what
properly constitutes “real” retail sales growth).
The retail sales figures from that perspective show a couple of very
clear points: 1. Last year's Christmas season was not only weak and
disappointing, it may have marked the inflection point in consumer
spending (at least as far as retail sales measure); 2. The July
"improvement" is far less impressive. June 2012 had an extra holiday
shopping weekend, but registered only a 3.3% improvement over June
2011. Without an extra holiday weekend, July 2012 saw almost identical
year-over-year growth; 3.4%. No matter what or how weekends were
arranged within the calendar context, non-adjusted growth was not really
all that inspiring in either month.
What may be worse is that since March unadjusted retail sales have
consistently been running below the moving average. That demonstrates
conclusively and unambiguously that momentum in the consumer segment is
slowing. Inflections in retail sales, as you would expect given an
economic system dominated by consumption, are followed by recessions.
At this point in the “cycle” (such that there is a cycle outside of the
mini-cycles created by central bank interventions) there is not much
left to reverse the course.
As more and more Americans fall off the 99-week cliff into disability
(best case) or the general abyss of the new structural joblessness, it
is hard to see any monetary dosage or application that would be
beneficial to the real economy. When you step back and try to analyze
why there was an inflection in mid-to-late 2011, the combined impacts of
waning job growth and exhausted government transfers under the umbrella
of monetary-driven commodity pressures make for not just a tough
environment or a muddle, but the reversal of everything that would be
considered necessary for widespread economic health in any meaningful
sense (there might be more dollars circulating but that is not really
the true measure of economic success).
If this inflection in consumption is indeed valid, it makes sense
that the early part of 2012 would then experience economic “volatility” –
revenue pressures at firms cause them to cut back on capex or
re-investment in real projects, including a decrease in the pace of
hiring new workers. Manufacturing falls off (seen in the ISM and
regional Fed surveys) as reduced demand from businesses works its way
back into this vicious cycle of employment malaise where job growth is
consistently and vitally below population growth or labor force
expansion. As government transfers drop off, the segment of the
economy under the gun of stagnation rises in proportion and the
bifurcated economy becomes more so – except that as the troubled half
grows it inevitably pulls down the half doing relatively well. What
looks like a muddle of weak growth is really the rot of monetary
intrusions eating at what should be a free market-driven reset to the
previous dislocation of failures from past monetary episodes. And it is
all in the name of some ephemeral “wealth”.
Stock prices may be higher, but the “wealth effect” is dead without
the ability to turn paper portfolio values or tangible real estate
“wealth” into spending through credit. It has always been about debt.
What might retail sales growth have looked like in the middle of the
last decade without the $4.5 trillion in new mortgage debt and $500
billion in new consumer debt (added between 2003 and 2007)? As we are
about to find out, the number of weekends and the placement of holidays
would have been the least of the concerns.
Saturday, August 18, 2012
July Retail Sales Far Less Robust Than Market Recognizes
Labels:
retail sales,
stock market