On Monday, for the first time ever, the price of oil contracts for future delivery fell below $0 to -$37.63 per barrel. While financial markets have adapted to the unfortunate reality of negative interest rates, a negative price for a physical commodity is another issue.
Back to Basics
With this week’s latest rebound, the S&P 500 has now closed up or down more than 1 percent 27 times year-to-date ‒ this is more than three times the daily volatility that investors experienced in 2017. Accompanying higher stock prices, safe-haven bonds retreated modestly.
Winners and Losers
Buoyed by the best quarterly earnings growth in six years, blue chip equities are forging new highs, with investors disregarding the turmoil in Washington and discounting increasingly lofty expectations for the remainder of 2017.
Milestones
This week, investors recognized the 8-year anniversary of a bull market that is now second only in length to the tech-fueled run of the 1990s. In March, blue chip stocks consolidated a small portion of recent gains, but nevertheless, the S&P 500 has now returned over 250 percent since the bear market lows in March of 2009.
OPEC's Early Holiday Gift
Ferguson Wellman has viewed the energy sector favorably for close to two years. While 2015 was a difficult year in that regard, we started seeing improvements in 2016. Finally, OPEC delivered a nice gift earlier this week which will continue to benefit our stance.
Movin' Along
After another positive week, the S&P 500 finished the quarter up almost 4 percent and is up 8 percent for the year. The 10-year Treasury finished the week in the middle of its recent trading range at 1.59 percent. Mixed economic data kept the Fed on hold for another quarter and put a bid into equities.
The Time Has Come
by Shawn Narancich, CFAExecutive Vice President of Research
Awaiting Lift-Off
Following last week’s solid jobs report, a clear plurality of investors now expect the Federal Reserve to raise short-term interest rates next week. But once the Fed has achieved lift-off, what then? Amid ongoing dollar strength and falling energy prices, corporate profits have stagnated this year and economic growth remains pedestrian, causing concern about more of the same in 2016, but with less monetary accommodation along the way. We expect the path of Fed rate tightening to be gradual because inflation remains nearly non-existent. Even excluding food and fuel prices, so called “core inflation” also remains notably below the Fed’s 2 percent objective.
Mission Partly Accomplished
What we do have, and what is leading to the end of zero interest rate policy, is a state of relatively full employment. Although the labor force participation rate remains near decade low levels, the Fed rightfully sees its full employment mandate as having been achieved. In turn, we have seen stirrings of labor cost inflation, both statistically and anecdotally. The employment cost index is finally nearing 3 percent after having spent a prolonged stretch below that mark. Real life examples include fast food restaurants like McDonald’s and retailers Wal-Mart and TJ Maxx having to boost wage rates to keep employees; the degree to which labor inflation takes hold more broadly will be important to gauge, as this combined with the productivity of labor determine what we believe to be the single most enduring predictor of consumer price inflation – unit labor costs. Perhaps because of muted levels of capital spending later in the economic cycle, workers’ productivity has proven to be disappointing in recent quarters, increasing upward risk to this key measure. As the Yellen Fed achieves lift-off from zero percent interest rates, it will be closely tracking its labor force dashboard in helping to determine how fast and how high rates ultimately go.
OPEC Laissez-Faire
OPEC finished its latest and much anticipated meeting in Austria last Friday much like we expected, acceding to the current level of the 12-member cartel’s production, but apparently not making any plans to accommodate additional liftings from Iran once UN sanctions are lifted, as expected sometime early next year. While some thought OPEC would cut production, this outcome never seemed likely. Lead producer Saudi Arabia’s strategy has come into focus – keep oil prices low enough, long enough, to accommodate its recapture of market share and stimulate enough additional demand to tighten oil markets naturally. In essence, the cartel has ceased to act as one. By all accounts, the meeting was highly contentious and unusually long, the result of discord that saw members Venezuela, Nigeria and Ecuador argue unsuccessfully for reduced liftings.
Black Gold?
Oil prices fell on the news last Friday and have proceeded to breach late August support levels of $40/barrel. Not helping oil bulls’ cause is news this week that Iraqi production gains have boosted OPEC production to fresh three-year highs in November at the same time the El Nino weather phenomenon has warmed the Northern Hemisphere and squelched early season demand for heating oil, an important seasonal product of crude oil. These headwinds notwithstanding, we maintain our belief that oil markets will tighten as U.S. production continues to roll over, non-OPEC, ex-U.S. production stagnates, and oil demand again grows at a faster than anticipated clip. Barring a market share war within OPEC (one that would be fought with limited means given how little excess production capacity the cartel has), Saudi’s de facto strategy appears destined to succeed. We see modest levels of oversupply morphing into undersupply as 2016 progresses. After all, the following adage holds – the best cure for low oil prices is low oil prices.
Our Takeaways from the Week
- The long awaited Fed lift-off from zero interest rate policy is at hand
- Oil prices have fallen anew in the aftermath of OPEC’s highly anticipated meeting last week
Light at the End of the Tunnel
by Shawn Narancich, CFAExecutive Vice President of Research
Retailing Blues
Earnings season has all but wrapped up for another quarter, but department store retailers are adding a problematic book-end to a quarter that has generally come in ahead of expectations. Flat third quarter earnings were weighed down by widespread losses in energy and dampened again by the stronger dollar, factors that many investors thought would spare U.S. centric retailers. Following Wal-Mart’s surprisingly weak earnings outlook in October, both Macy’s and Nordstrom came to the earnings confessional this week to report weaker than expected sales and substantially reduced profit forecasts. For Macy’s, its red star seems to be falling, as elevated inventories are forecast to weigh on margins for the company’s most important holiday sales quarter. Despite recent evidence of elevated merchandise levels in traditional retail channels, the subsequent 15-20 percent declines in both retailers’ share prices speak to the traffic challenges afflicting both Nordstrom and Macy’s. Investors long retailing stocks will hope for better news from home improvement, off-price, and specialty retailers next week.
Sales Falling Flat?
Amid increasing concerns about U.S. retailing, news that October retail sales barely budged cast a further shadow on the industry. In our opinion, weakness for select retailers reporting quarterly numbers speaks more to their distribution strategies and product mix than to any deeper concerns about the health of U.S. consumers. Shoppers are buying more of what they want and need online at Amazon.com, disadvantaging traditional bricks-and-mortar retailers that lack the cars, footwear, and food that consumers still want to see and trial firsthand before they buy. Also at work are the weather and the dollar. A mild fall has hurt department store retailers’ apparel sales and the strong dollar has deterred foreign visitors from taking American shopping sprees. Notwithstanding company specific retailing challenges, we continue to believe that a healthy job market, low gas prices, and low interest rates support domestic consumption and will be a tailwind for the U.S. economy.
Oil -- Down but not Out
In addition to the hit that retailers took this week, energy stocks again took it on the chin as oil prices retest August lows. Refineries are going through what’s called the turnaround season, a time of reduced product output that coincides with a change in product emphasis from summer gasoline to winter heating oil. Refinery throughput slows and with it, crude demand. As investors fret about recent US inventory builds, we would observe that seasonal factors are at play that obscure the tightening of oil markets – tightening that coincides with falling U.S. production and flattening OPEC production. We don’t expect OPEC to cut production at its December 4 ministerial meeting, but we do believe it will acknowledge that markets are coming back into balance and accede to the cartel’s current level of output. With fuel demand continuing to grow at healthy levels and global supply flattening, the slack in oil markets is disappearing. We are bullish on oil and look forward to higher prices ahead.
Our Takeaways from the Week
- Retailers are book-ending third quarter earnings season, causing consternation for department store investors
- Oil prices are retesting late summer lows ahead of the upcoming OPEC meeting, amid increasing evidence that supply and demand are rebalancing