A New Way to Hedge Japanese Exposure

Another new currency-hedged ETF came to market recently, WisdomTree Japan Hedged Dividend Growth (JHDG). We’ll take a look at this new fund this month, and also review when investors should hedge […]

Market Perspective for April 20, 2015

Stocks are headed higher this week thanks to intervention by the Chinese central bank. On Friday, following the close of trading in China, Chinese stocks were down as much as 7 percent in the futures market. The drop was a reaction to new rules restricting the use of leverage and making it easier to short stocks. On Saturday, the securities regulators issued a public statement saying their goal wasn’t to burst the stock market rally. On Sunday, the central bank followed up by slashing reserve requirements by 1 percent, a move that could release about $160 billion into the Chinese economy. The Chinese central bank is also discussing what would effectively be a Chinese quantitative easing plan following slower than expected economic growth in the first quarter.

In Europe, Greece is back in the headlines with a new deadline of May 11. It doesn’t pay to watch the news about Greece though, since there will be a new deadline every few weeks or months depending on how much aid the country receives in the short-term. Greece cannot repay its existing debts and until creditors allow them to restructure or they default, there will not be a solution. Instead of watching the news, keep an eye on the euro. It is trading above its lows for the year and as long as it doesn’t significantly break down again, the situation in Greece is more smoke than fire.

Earnings season kicks into high gear this week. Morgan Stanley (MS) already picked up where the big banks left off last week: the firm beat earnings estimates and shares were climbing in early trading on Monday. Energy services firm Halliburton (HAL) followed Schlumberger’s (SLB) lead from Friday as well: it reported a drop in earnings compared with last year, but earnings came in well ahead of estimates.

After the bell on Monday, International Business Machines (IBM) reports earnings.

Tuesday sees biotech giant Amgen (AMGN), widely held Chipotle (CMG), regional banks Fifth Third (FITB) and Regions Financial (RF) report. Additionally Harley-Davidson (HOG), Illinois Tool Works (ITW), homebuilder NVR (NVR), Verizon (VZ), Yum Brands (YUM) and Yahoo (YHOO) will be releasing earnings.

On Wednesday, Abbot Labs (ABT), AT&T (T), AutoNation (AN), Boeing (BA), DR Horton (DHI), eBay (EBAY), Las Vegas Sands (LVS), McDonald’s (MCD), SunPower (SPWR) and Coca-Cola (KO) deliver earnings reports.

Thursday has 3M (MMM), AbbVie (ABBV), Amazon (AMZN), BB&T (BBT), Caterpillar (CAT), Dow Chemcial (DOW), Domino’s Pizza (DPZ), Dunkin Brands (DNKN), Freeport-McMoRan (FCX), Juniper Networks (JNPR), Microsoft (MSFT) and Starbucks (SBUX) reporting.

On Friday, we get results from American Airlines (AAL), Biogen (BIIB) and Xerox (XRX).

Earnings will have the spotlight over the coming days, while there will be very little in the way of economic data. The two biggest items will be the Markit flash PMI for April on Thursday, flash PMIs for the EU and China and the durable goods orders from March on Friday.

Market Perspective for April 17, 2015

Earnings season started off positively this week with companies across several industries reporting strong results. Some of the biggest winners, in terms of the reaction from investors, were Netflix (NFLX) and Philip Morris International (PM). Other companies beating estimates were Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), Goldman Sachs (GS), Bank of America (BAC), J.B. Hunt (JBHT) and Intel (INTC), a good cross section of the American economy. General Electric (GE) disappointed with a revenue miss, though earnings did beat estimates.

The most important earnings report of the week is probably Schlumberger (SLB), which beat estimates by 15 percent. Coming into earnings season, analysts were looking for energy sector earnings to plunge about 60 percent versus last year’s quarter, mainly due to lower oil prices. This sizable decrease was responsible for pulling the estimate for S&P 500 earnings down to nearly negative 5 percent. SLB’s earnings only declined 10 percent versus last year though. If that’s a harbinger for the energy sector, earnings growth will be much better than expected this earnings season.

Even with the positive news, due partially to the latest inflation numbers, the market gave back all of its gains on the week in early Friday trading. Bonds also reacted poorly to the report, while the U.S. dollar rallied, due to investors interpreting the results as supportive of interest rate increases.

We’ve been talking about a much stronger inflation number in March for several weeks now. The government report actually came in below expectations, which is surprising because the data we follow has been highly correlated with later government reports. However, while the government’s number was a bit lower than expected, the composition of inflation suggests price inflation is firming because it occurred in sectors that are not volatile.

The Federal Reserve concentrates on core inflation because food and energy prices move significantly, as we saw with oil in recent months. Lately, core inflation has firmed, with rents and medical care playing a role in rising prices. The latter may be due to the wider implementation of the Affordable Care Act, which is a healthcare cost inflation machine. The ACA increases healthcare demand and spending (via higher insurance prices and government aid), without increasing the supply of services. Anytime demand rises faster than supply, prices will increase.

Rising medical costs are troublesome because of a lack of market forces. When oil prices go up, people try to consume less oil. At least half of healthcare spending is done by government and consumers must buy health insurance plans, with low cost plans deemed illegal by the law. Politicians won’t respond to higher costs by suggesting spending cuts, in fact they’re more likely to increase spending. Consumers can’t opt for cheaper health insurance plans that no longer exist, and if they can’t afford the plans, the government increases spending to subsidize the cost. Price increases lead to higher spending, which leads to higher prices, which again leads to higher spending. It’s a similar situation that fuels college tuition cost: government reacts to higher prices by spending more money on higher education. However, while college education is a small part of the economy, healthcare is one-seventh of the economy and growing. If inflation takes hold there, it will force up wages in the sector, and eventually the entire economy will be experiencing higher rates of inflation.

Healthcare stocks, led by biotechnology and pharmaceuticals, have been leading the market the past couple of years and it’s also the best sector in 2015. If medical costs inflation does become an issue, this sector is positioned to continue its bull run much longer than anticipated.

Aside from stronger inflation, U.S. stocks reacted to overseas markets on Friday. Chinese stock market futures are down about 7 percent following new regulations in China. Regulators are tightening the use of credit in the market, and they’re also making it much easier for investors to take short positions. The dip follows an almost uninterrupted doubling of the Chinese stock market over the past nine months. Europe is also taking a breather after its quantitative easing fueled rally. The German DAX index lost more than 5 percent this week, about half of that on Friday. Despite this week’s drop, the DAX is up more than 20 percent in 2015.

Investor Guide to Vanguard Funds for April, 2015

Click here to view the April 2015 issue of the Investor Guide to Vanguard Funds Market Perspective: Market Rally Looks to Continue Despite Poor GDP Growth Stocks bottomed out one […]