Deflation, the New Biggest Worry

This week's expected data deluge was a bust, with a lot of the key reports moved a week later, perhaps because of the Veterans Day holiday. Markets in general were up as Fed speakers and Fed chair nominee Janet Yellen's confirmation testimony seemed to suggest that no one was in a great rush to begin tapering bond purchases.

The inverse correlation between tapering prospects and stock market performance continues. Unless the U.S. economy falls apart, I strongly believe that tapering will begin sometime in the next seven months. However, the resulting increase in long-term interest rates is likely to be relatively small compared with the current 2.71% rate on the 10-year Treasury bond. That is especially true as inflation remains remarkably subdued and is pushing uncomfortably close to deflation. As highlighted later in this report, year-over-year inflation dipped to 0.7% in the eurozone for the month of October. The U.S. CPI report is due next week and that is expected to show no change month to month, and even the year-over-year data point looks like inflation will be up only 1.0%. Interest rates are usually a function of inflation plus a spread, and now the base rate seems to be lower than we all imagined just a few months ago.

Other overseas news was not so good this week. Besides the scary-low inflation rate in Europe, GDP growth for the eurozone came in at just 0.4% quarter to quarter, annualized, which is how the U.S. data is reported. This compares to the 2.8% rate reported for the United States for the September quarter. Though this represents the second quarter of sequential improvement for Europe, the pitiful growth rate decelerated instead of accelerated from quarter to quarter.

Earnings news was nothing special, either. Overall S&P earnings growth for the third quarter is unlikely to better the 3% growth rate anticipated at the very end of the quarter, with most of the third-quarter data now in hand. Unfortunately, earnings season didn't approach the finish line on a high note. The weekly lowlights included poor reports in the retail sector, including Wal-Mart (WMT), Kohl's (KSS), and Nordstrom (JWN). On the other hand, Macy's (M) numbers looked good, and even at the underachievers, trends were beginning to look a little better in October compared with a very slow summer and early fall. And then there was the Cisco (CSCO) miss that caught everyone by surprise. Many companies, including Cisco, have been reporting softer sales in China, which also suggests things are not perfect in that market.

U.S. economic data this week didn't tell us much that we didn't already know. The trade deficit turned out to be just a little higher than expected, as iPhone imports and softer exports of mining equipment caused a small miss. The only practical effect of the lower number is that the GDP report for the second quarter is likely to be revised down from 2.8% to 2.5%. On the upside, manufacturing industrial production continued to take small baby steps forward in the month of October, increasing 0.3%, driven by furniture, chemicals, printing, and paper.