Monthly Economic Update for February, 2018
Kathleen Owings Presents:
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MONTHLY QUOTE
“Never apologize for showing feeling. When you do so, you apologize for truth.” - Benjamin Disraeli
MONTHLY TIP
Personal finance apps have come a long way. Besides bill paying, account overviews, and push notifications regarding household budget categories, some let you see all your credit and bank transactions in one view. If you have not previously used one, consider one for 2018.
MONTHLY RIDDLE
Sometimes it is good, sometimes it is bad, sometimes you wait for it, other times you fear it. At times you may make it, or even spread it. What is it?
Last month’s riddle:
Last month’s answer: They rappelled down the cliff. |
February 2018 THE MONTH IN BRIEF
DOMESTIC ECONOMIC HEALTH
Consumer confidence index readings varied from extremely impressive to above average. The Conference Board’s monthly index rose from 123.1 to 125.4 in January. In contrast, the University of Michigan’s gauge of consumer sentiment weakened from a final December mark of 95.9 to 94.4. (It was four points higher a year earlier.)2,3
Businesses hired 148,000 more workers than they let go in December, a figure which disappointed many analysts. Hourly wage growth remained at 2.5%. Unemployment held at 4.1%, with the U-6 rate including the underemployed rising 0.1% to 8.1%. After revisions to November and October numbers, the Department of Labor calculated average monthly job gains of 204,000 in the final quarter of 2017.4
Investors concerned about any weakness in the labor market could find something to cheer about in manufacturing. The Institute for Supply Management’s December purchasing manager index for the U.S. factory sector rose 1.5 points to an impressive reading of 59.7; that PMI dipped to 59.1 in January, which was nonetheless another fine reading. ISM’s non-manufacturing PMI went the other way, losing 1.5 points in December to a still-noteworthy mark of 55.9.2
Just when inflation seemed to be accelerating, it slowed again – at least by the assessment of the latest Consumer and Producer Price Indexes. December’s headline CPI showed a 2.1% annualized gain for consumer prices, compared to 2.2% a month earlier. The core CPI showed a 1.8% yearly advance. Prices ticked up 0.1% in the last month of 2017; core prices, 0.3%. Yearly wholesale inflation had reached 3.1% in November; it dropped to 2.6% in December.2
Did these inflation numbers threaten to make things difficult for the Federal Reserve as it contemplated its next rate increase? Apparently not. On January 31, the Federal Open Market Committee held rates steady (as anticipated) while noting its expectation that inflation should increase in 2018 and that the economy should “warrant further gradual increases” in the federal funds rate. (Some investors took that as a hint of a March rate move.) This was the FOMC’s last meeting with Janet Yellen as chair.2,5
GLOBAL ECONOMIC HEALTH
According to the latest official data from China, the P.R.C.’s economy grew 6.9% in 2017 – its best showing in seven years, surpassing the government target of 6.5%. (Some analysts believe the nation’s GDP number is regularly inflated and contend that China’s true yearly economic growth is 5% or less.) The private-sector Caixin/Markit factory PMI for China remained at a decent 51.5 in January, even as export orders fell slightly. Japan’s Markit/Nikkei factory PMI reached a four-year high last month, South Korea’s went back over the 50 mark (indicating expansion), and Taiwan’s reached its highest level since April 2011.8,9
WORLD MARKETS
More gains to note: India’s Nifty 50, 4.72%; South Korea’s Kospi, 4.13%; Spain’s IBEX 35, 4.06%; France’s CAC 40, 3.19%; Nikkei 225, 2.52%; Mexico’s Bolsa, 2.23%; Germany’s DAX, 2.10%; FTSE Eurofirst 300, 1.60%. Lastly, two benchmarks lost ground last month: Canada’s TSX Composite, which declined 1.59%, and the United Kingdom’s FTSE 100, which dipped 2.01%.10
COMMODITIES MARKETS Many commodities posted January advances; bitcoin was not one of them. The digital currency began January at $13,412.44, but it sat at $10,058.10 at the close on January 31. That descent represented a 25.01% loss. The U.S. Dollar Index lost 3.18% for the month, settling January 31 at 89.19.12,13
Light sweet crude ended January at $64.77 per barrel, up 7.77% for the month. Unleaded gasoline rose 5.78%. The news was also good for some other soft commodities: wheat gained 5.68%; cocoa, 5.30%; soybeans, 4.62%; corn, 2.99%. Sugar had it worst, falling 9.50%; coffee fell 3.33%, while cotton lost 2.03%. Heating oil (-0.12%) and natural gas (+0.10%) were little changed.14
Platinum led the four key metals in January with a gain of 8.21%, and copper trailed with a 2.59% loss. Gold rose 3.22% and silver, 1.58%; gold ended January at $1,344.40 an ounce, silver at $17.32 an ounce.14
REAL ESTATE
Harsh weather was not the only factor in the winter sales slowdown. The 20-city S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller index showed home prices up 6.2% year-over-year through November; moreover, as 2017 ended, existing home values were 6% above where they had been back in 2006.15
Mortgage rates climbed steadily in January, adding to affordability concerns and making some real estate analysts wonder if home prices might level off a bit. Freddie Mac’s Primary Mortgage Market Survey provides a quick illustration. On January 25, it found the mean interest rate on the 30-year fixed at 4.15% – just a touch higher than in late January 2017, but up from 3.99% on December 28. In the same time frame, the average interest rate for the 15-year fixed went from 3.44% to 3.62%, while the mean interest on the 5-year adjustable home loan rose from 3.47% to 3.52%.16,17
Developers had begun fewer projects in December. In mid-January, the Census Bureau announced an 8.2% drop in housing starts in the preceding month, with building permits down just 0.1%. Lastly, the NAR pending home sales index rose 0.5% in the final month of 2017.2
LOOKING BACK…LOOKING FORWARD
The big three had a great month, as demonstrated by the year-to-date gains shown below. Their January 31 settlements: Dow, 26,149.39; Nasdaq, 7,411.48; S&P 500, 2,823.81. As for the small caps, the Russell 2000 advanced 2.57% year-to-date in January to a month-end close of 1,574.98. Volatility was on the rise: the CBOE VIX gained 22.64% in January to wrap up the month at 13.54.1
Indices are unmanaged, do not incur fees or expenses, and cannot be invested into directly. These returns do not include dividends. 10-year TIPS real yield = projected return at maturity given expected inflation.
As January ended, the stock market “melt-up” was in full effect: no one wanted to miss out on such amazing gains, and seemingly everyone was running to direct money into equities. During the first few trading days of February, we did not quite see a meltdown, but we did see a stunning pullback, at this writing possibly heralding a correction. The market has been abnormally calm for many months. Expect February to be a month of ups and downs, the types that may give investors pause. The good news is, the economy’s fundamentals are still strong, even as Wall Street worries that rising interest rates may make fixed-income investments more attractive. Seasoned investors will ride through the volatility and keep an eye on the big picture. The bull market is being challenged, but the two factors that often end contribute to end years of Wall Street advances – the downside of a business cycle and rapid tightening by the Federal Reserve – do not yet seem to be at hand. A correction can lead to a healthier and less speculative investment climate.
UPCOMING ECONOMIC RELEASES: The major news items across the balance of February are: the January ISM service sector PMI (2/5), January’s Consumer Price Index and retail sales report (2/14), January wholesale inflation and industrial output (2/15), the Census Bureau’s latest snapshot of housing starts and building permits and the initial February University of Michigan consumer sentiment index (2/16), the NAR’s January existing home sales report (2/21), the Conference Board’s January leading indicator index (2/22), the final February University of Michigan consumer sentiment index (2/23), January new home sales (2/26), the Conference Board’s latest consumer confidence index and January hard goods orders (2/27), and finally the second estimate of Q2 GDP and the NAR’s report on January housing contract activity (2/28). January consumer spending figures and the January PCE price index are slated to appear on March 1.
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