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Last
week we began a series on data abuse, about how various commentators twist and
torture data to make it say what they want, or fail to look at the details
underneath the headlines. Predictably, there is a lot of fodder this week as we
forge ahead into this ripe territory. The headlines screamed that US income
data went up unexpectedly. Green shoots were everywhere. But if you look at
the actual data, you find something much different. And, I keep hearing the
insistent refrain that the market is telling us that the recovery is around the
corner. Well, the recovery may be,
but can the market really tell us that? I have about 25 windows open in my
computer, with tons of misleading data. Let's see how much we can cover in this
week's letter. But first, I want to focus your
quick attention on a new "Conversation" I will have next Monday. (For those
readers who are new, I have a subscription service where I hold conversations
with friends on a variety of current topics. I am gratified that it's getting
rave reviews.) I have been writing about the New
Normal of late, and for my next Conversation I have invited two of the sharpest
analysts I know to talk about what the New Normal will look like. What levels do we get to? What does
the world economy look like? What will the path to recovery look like? And so
on! David Rosenberg, former chief
economist for Merrill Lynch, one of the few mainstream analysts who got it
right (now with Gluskin Sheff in Toronto) and the brilliant Michael Lewitt of Harch Capital
Management, someone who was writing about the credit crisis long before it happened,
are both deep thinkers, and both have strong ideas about how our future will
unfold. I can't wait to get them at the same table and see if we can flesh out
a few concrete ideas. And if you subscribe today, you
also can get the recently released and widely praised Conversation I did with
Donald Coxe and Gary Shilling on commodities and where those markets are going.
That ended up as a very powerful debate, and one from which listeners said they
really came away with meaty ideas. You can subscribe now at $109
(using code JM70), before we raise the price when we add a new quarterly
Conversation service with good friend and head of Stratfor, George Friedman. He
gets back from Australia this week, and we will schedule a meeting soon! And now to funny-looking data.
Where to begin? There are so many targets of opportunity! The End of the Recession? I
walked into the office yesterday evening and there was someone on CNBC talking
about how the 50-day moving average of the S&P 500 rising above the 200-day
moving average was telling us the market was getting ready to rise and the
recovery had started. I listened to his babbling for another 2-3 minutes and
couldn't take it anymore (and no, it was not my friend Larry Kudlow, who is a
lot more balanced than whoever was on.) We
keep getting told that the market is telling us "something," usually that the
recession is going to end. For some reason, people keep repeating the bromide
that the market looks out about 6 months. To that I politely say, rubbish. Riddle
me this, Batman. Did the market see the recession in October of 2007? We were
already in recession and the S&P 500 (see below) was making new highs!
Where was the market prescience? Did it see the 25%+ drop in January of this
year? And I could go back and cite scores of examples where the market "missed"
the future turning points over the past ten decades. 
What
about the shibboleth that the market turns up 6 months before the end of a
recession? Sometimes that is true. But does it mean anything? The same people
who said it meant something last December and January are saying it means
something now. But now it's June and the recovery is not here, so maybe the
market wasn't telling us something in January after all. Gentle
reader, there will be a recovery. We will talk about what kind in a few pages,
if we have the time. And it is (statistically speaking) likely that the markets
will have turned up before the actual recovery. But does that mean anything
today? Go back to the chart above. Notice
that in 2003, when the market finally turned up, we were already well out of
recession. And the market had a very quick 12% or so drop while we were in
recovery, while later we went on to a 90% run-up! Was the drop telling us
anything, or do we explain it away? "In the short run," St. Graham
said, "the market is a voting machine. In the long run it is a weighing
machine." The voting is based on current sentiment, but what the market weighs
in the long run is earnings. The market tries to forecast future income streams.
And it gets it wrong as often as it gets it right. Let's look at this yet another way.
This is an important concept, and it should be a component of your economic BS
detector. The CNBC host talked in breathless terms about the importance of the
50-day average moving above the 200-day average. It means nothing until it means something, and we won't know what
that something is for some time. Earlier this week (Monday, I think)
the 50-day average moved BELOW the 200-day average. The analysts at Bespoke Investment
Group noted: "Going back to 1928, this is the
25th time that the S&P 500 has declined through both of these levels on the
same day. On page two we have provided a table showing each of these
occurrences as well as the index's returns going forward. Based on those prior
instances, the S&P 500's returns going forward have been notably negative. While the
S&P 500 has averaged positive returns over the next week,
average returns have been negative over the next month, three months, and six
months." (emphasis mine) But 33% of the time, the markets
were up six months later, often by quite a bit. And sometimes down quite a bit,
but on average only slightly. Which means that as a forward-looking indicator
it is interesting but not anything I would put my money (or client money) on! (I saw some reports that differed,
selecting fewer such data points and suggesting that market returns were up
after such an event. Logically, that can't be. Let's be generous and just
assume sloppy research.) Before major market moves down, the 50-day
average will always move below the 200 average. And the reverse is also true.
It is not a sign. It is just what statistically MUST happen. And sometimes they
reverse themselves, and sometimes they don't. We have no way on God's green
earth of knowing whether the two moves (both up and down) this week will be
bullish or bearish six months from now, based simply on the moving averages
crossing. You can make the data say anything you want, but you are still just
guessing. Sidebar note: Trend Following 101.
I spend a lot of time analyzing trend-following money managers of one kind or
another. Basically, they look at data and try to spot trends and then invest in
them. A trader who is right 70% of the time is amazing and very rare. 50% is
more like it for successful traders. But they have sharp risk controls that cut
their losing trades and let their winning trades "ride." Being right 50% of the
time can be profitable over time. (Being right 50% of the time is harder than
it looks!) But in the media you get these
"analysts" who talk a good game, acting as if a 50-70% probability is something
meaningful. "The market has turned. The recession is over." And they say that
when we have the first balance-sheet recession in 70 years, yet they want to
compare garden-variety recessions to what we have now. Again, we can only know
which of the moves (above and below the 200-day moving average) will be the
real "indicator" in six months. It is only an indicator today to the extent
that we can drive our cars forward looking in the rear-view mirror. The New Normal Is Still In Our Future Now let's take that principle a
little further. Last week I detailed how air, trucking, and rail shipping is
down 20% year-over-year. Global trade is down about 30% in the major exporting
countries (see below). 
World trade shrinks: Chart 1: Year-over-year change in total exports from 15 major exporting
countries (1991 to 02-2009) - Chart 2: Year-over-year change in exports from 15 major exporters
between February 2008 and February 2009 (size of circles reflects volume of exports in 2008)
End of the world? Do we just keep
falling? No. At some point, six months or a year from now, the year-over-year
comparisons become easier. If you are at 100 and fall to 80, then a year later
you are at 88 and voila! you have a 10% increase! And the perma-bulls will be
talking it up. The fact that you are still down 12% from the peak is ignored. The point is that we have fallen
quite a bit in a lot of major categories. There is really only so much you can
fall. And then when you reach that new lower level of the New Normal, you begin
to rise. At some point, we will be on the path to "recovery." That does not
mean that we will be back to the halcyon days of mid-2007 within a year. It just
means that we have stopped falling and now have to adjust to the levels of the
New Normal. The Hidden Problem Within Unemployment Data This is going to be most evident
and painful in the unemployment numbers. Last month saw the number of
unemployed rise by 345,000. What was not in the headline data was that 217,000
of those jobs were estimated from the "birth-death" ratio. The US economy
creates new businesses that do not get counted in the data, so the BLS
estimates what that number is, using previous data patterns. When the economy
turns, it overestimates new jobs in recessions and underestimates them in
recoveries. No conspiracy, it is just the best methodology we currently have. But does anyone really think
200,000 jobs were created last month? The real number of lost jobs is worse
than the headline. And next month the birth-death number will likely be over
200,000 again. Add another 100,000 or so to the headline number to get closer
to reality, Again, analysts talked about a
turnaround because job losses were "just" 345,000. That is a higher number than
any month in the 2001-02 recession, and larger than the month after 9/11. That
is a green shoot? Yes, we will see the monthly unemployment numbers fall, but
they are falling from historic highs. And based on some research by the San
Francisco Federal Reserve, it is likely that we will see still higher
unemployment that will persist for a while longer. Let me quote and summarize through
the research at
http://www.frbsf.org/publications/economics/letter/2009/el2009-18.html.
(It is not long, and worth reading.) "Our analysis
generally supports projections that labor market weakness will persist, but our
findings offer a basis for even greater pessimism about the outlook for the
labor market. Specifically, we suggest that the relatively low level of
temporary layoffs and high level of involuntary part-time workers make a
jobless recovery similar to the one experienced in 1992 a plausible scenario." Essentially,
there are always workers moving into and out of employment. What they note is
that the patterns seem to be changing. In the '70s and '80s, job losses were
quick and deep, but the recovery was also quick. In the last two recessions,
job recovery was noticeably slower, giving rise to the term "jobless recovery."
It was the lack of hiring, and not firing, that was responsible for the slow
employment recovery. MY thought is that before 1990 many of the job losses in
recessions were from manufacturing. Businesses were quick to lay off and quick
to rehire. We now have fewer manufacturing jobs, so the rehiring process has
been much slower in recent recessions. "The long and
gradual return to pre-recession unemployment levels implied by the Blue Chip
consensus forecast is consistent with a labor market recovery that is slightly
weaker than that experienced in 1983 and slightly stronger than that
experienced in 1992. However, should labor market conditions instead proceed
along the path taken in the 1992 recovery, the unemployment rate could peak
close to 11% in mid-2010 and remain above 9% through the end of 2011." That is not
in any Congressional budget forecast. Want to run an election campaign at 10%
unemployment levels? "... What does
all this mean for the course of the labor market? We combine data on
involuntary part-time workers with the standard unemployment rate to arrive at
an alternative measure of labor underutilization. We plot this measure in
Figure 3, which shows that the labor market has considerably more slack than
the official unemployment rate indicates. The figure extends this labor
underutilization measure using the Blue Chip consensus forecast for the
unemployment rate as a benchmark and then adding a share of involuntary
part-time workers based on the proportion of workers in that category to the
unemployed during the current recession. This projection indicates that the level of labor market
slack would be higher by the end of 2009 than experienced at any other time in
the post-World War II period, implying a longer and slower recovery path for
the unemployment rate. This suggests that,
more than in previous recessions, when the economy rebounds, employers will tap
into their existing workforces rather than hire new workers. This could
substantially slow the recovery of the outflow rate and put upward pressure on
future unemployment rates." (emphasis mine) 
Was Income Really Up? Now, let's turn our attention to
today's headline. Income is surprisingly up. That has to be a green shoot,
right? Well, not if you look at the underlying data. Personal income from wages and
salaries was down $12 billion in May. So how did income go up? A large increase
in "government social benefits" and a decline in personal taxes accounted for
all the gain, and then some. The increase was the effect from the recent
stimulus package, which is (for now) temporary, and not the result of a
recovering economy. Hardly green shoots. It is just borrowed money from another
(government) source. In principle, it is not much different than home equity
withdrawal, except that taxpayers are on the hook. And those government subsidies are
going to increase. Look at the graph below. What it shows is that the average
duration of unemployment is at a 60-year high, and rising. It is now at 22.5
weeks. Unemployment benefits stop at 39 weeks, temporarily up from 26 weeks.
More and more people each week are thrown into very dire circumstances when
they fail to find jobs and lose the benefits. Care to wager whether, when
Congress comes back from vacation, the time people are allowed to be on
unemployment will be increased? 
And
speaking of the increase in government payments to individuals, what did they
do with them? In aggregate, what is happening to this stimulus? The data came
out today, and I must admit I was surprised. I have been writing for years that
American consumers would start to save in this recession, but I (and nearly
every credible observer I read) thought that we would see a more gradual rate
of increase in the savings rate. The increase in savings has been nothing short
of remarkable. (See graph below.) 
From a negative 3% in late 2005
(the result of massive borrowing, primarily mortgage equity withdrawal and
credit cards), we have risen to a positive 6.9%. That is the highest rate since
1993. The savings rate was less than 1% last August. And totals savings (on an
annualized basis) was $608 billion in April, rising to $768 billion in May.
That is a 30% month-over-month increase! Maybe the American consumer has found
a new religion! But, there is more than just a new
savings fervor at work. Spending rose more than disposable income, so without
that increased level of government transfer payments, it is unlikely that savings
would have risen as much. Before we get too giddy about savings going through
the roof, we need to wait a few months to see if this was the result of new
savings religion or government transfer payments (stimulus), which will soon
wind down That being said, given the sharp
increase in savings, it's no wonder shipping is down 20% and global trade in
the exporting economies by 30%. No wonder retail sales are down, except for
Wal-Mart and other lower-price venues. Final thought for today. The
Congressional Budget Office released another report this week, saying that the
current deficit levels are unsustainable. They suggest that either taxes must
increase by $440 billion or spending must be cut by a like amount, or some
combination. If you assume some of the new health-care and other programs are
enacted, the number comes closer to $700 billion. This is not a Congress that wants
to cut other parts of the budget by $700 billion. Raising taxes by $700 billion
(over 4% of GDP) will dip us back into recession. Not raising taxes will result
in debt that cannot be funded at anywhere close to today's rates. A recent IMF
study is very sobering about the worldwide problem of growing country debt.
Finding a trillion dollars in the market every year, when every other country
is also trying to raise debt is simply not going to happen. It will destroy the
dollar. There are few good choices in front of us, and fewer still good choices
that are likely. OK. One final suggestion for your
weekend reading. Atul Gawande, writing in The
New Yorker, weaves a very sobering picture of the problem of reining in
health-care costs. He contrasts two Texas border cities with similar
demographics, yet one spends twice as much on health care. One town has doctors
who order every possible test and the other doesn't. There is no real
difference in outcomes. And then compare it to other areas, and the problem
facing any health-care policy becomes all too evident. Reportedly, Obama has
had everyone read this, and you should too. It provides a very different angle
on the problem.
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2009/06/01/090601fa_fact_gawande?yrail Tulsa, London, and The Baltics Last
Tuesday I went to an Eric Clapton and Steve Winwood concert. At 64, Clapton can
still play the guitar as well as anyone on this planet. It is always fun to see
a man at the top of his game. I get up early tomorrow, flying
with family to get to Tulsa to be at my daughter Amanda's wedding shower, and
then celebrating the twins 24th birthday tomorrow night. Amanda's
wedding is August 22, right around the corner. If there is a recession going
on, no one in the wedding industry seems to know. This is the second wedding in
two years, and I still have two more unmarried daughters. It's a good thing the
word retirement is not in my
vocabulary. If we can't get the wedding budget under control, I am going to
need about 600 new Conversations subscribers in July.
July
15th I leave for London and will guest host CNBC Squawk Box from 7-9
on Friday the 17th. Then on to Finland, St. Petersburg, and the
Baltic capitals, and ending in Rome. (Why Rome? Because that is where we could
get mileage tickets back to Dallas. But I might as well spend a few days.) Then
I (and my son Trey) will spend one evening and morning in New York August 5-6
before going on to Maine for the regular August fishing extravaganza with David
Kotok and a rather fun crowd of economists and other ne'er-do-wells. It is a
tough ticket to get, and I am glad to be invited. There
are lots of exciting things happening in my business, and we will be making
announcements in the next few weeks. You have a great week. Your going to listen to more hard blues analyst,
 John Mauldin
John@FrontlineThoughts.com
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