Archive for March, 2012
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An Estimate for Friday’s NFP
Eddy Elfenbein, March 7th, 2012 at 11:25 amIt’s hard making an accurate forecast for this Friday’s jobs report but let’s take a look at a way we can make a reasonable guess.
The weekly jobless claims have a strong correlation to the monthly non-farm payrolls report (actually, it’s negative; check out the chart below). I took the four-week moving average and compared it to the last 36 months’ worth of data and here’s what I got. (I excluded May 2010 due to census hiring.)
My regression shows that when weekly jobless claims are 458,000, the NFP for the month is zero.
For every 10,000 that jobless claims are below 458,000, there are 34,000 new jobs for that month. The r-square of the regression is 0.875.
The current four-week moving average is 354,000 so that translates to (oddly enough) 354,000 net new jobs for February. That’s far more than the current Wall Street consensus of a 250,000 gain. I should add that there’s one more jobless claims report coming out tomorrow.
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Mylan Sees Profit Doubling By 2018
Eddy Elfenbein, March 7th, 2012 at 10:43 amOne of the great open secrets of investing is to listen to what companies have to say about their own projections. The hitch is that you should only pay attention to what credible companies have to say.
That’s why I took notice when Mylan ($MYL) recently said that it expects to double its earnings by 2018. That’s a bold forecast. Mylan is a generic drug maker and it has a remarkable track record. Over the last 34 years, MYL has clobbered the S&P 500 by a margin of 160,000% to 1,370%.
Mylan said its sees EPS for this year ranging between $2.30 and $2.50. That’s a growth rate of 13% to 23%. It also means the stock is going for less than 10 times earnings. For next year, Mylan sees earnings of $2.75 per share. For 2018, Mylan said that its goal is earnings of $6 per share.
Is that possible? Sure. But projecting that far out is a dangerous game. Just compare anything that was happening economically six years ago to today. Still, I’m impressed that Mylan made this forecast publicly. If it holds up, the stock should do very, very well.
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ADP + 216,000
Eddy Elfenbein, March 7th, 2012 at 9:03 amWe got a preview of Friday’s jobs report today when ADP ($ADP), the private payroll firm, said that employers added 216,000 jobs in February. This came in above economists’ expectations of 208,000.
It looks like this news will give the market a lift this morning.
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Morning News: March 7, 2012
Eddy Elfenbein, March 7th, 2012 at 5:55 amSocGen, Generali Join Greece Debt Swap
Spain Lags Italy as Growth Concern Halts Rally
An Architect of a Deal Sees Greece as a Model
U.K. Banks Group Backs Away From Libor
Red Sea-Negev Rail May Spur China Trade
Oil Rebounds on China Demand Outlook
Refinancing Fees Are Reduced for Some F.H.A. Borrowers
House Passes Bill to Address China Subsidy
Dividends Emerge in Pressing Apple Over Working Conditions in China
Pandora Loss Widens As Costs Rise, Outlook Disappoints
HSBC Sells General Insurance Business for $914 Million
Web Sites Shine Light on Petty Bribery Worldwide
World’s Richest Lose $11.3B, Mittal Falls Off Index
Stanford Guilty of Bilking Investors of Billions
Cullen Roche: Gary Shilling’s 6 Favored Asset Classes
Jeff Miller: Weighing the Week Ahead: How Worried Should We Be?
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Follow-Up on Community Health Systems
Eddy Elfenbein, March 6th, 2012 at 4:48 pmLast month, I tweeted:
$CYH is looking very attractive here at $20. Earnings due out on Feb 21. $$
So far, I’m looking pretty smart. CYH is Community Health Systems. At the time, the stock was at $19.85.
The earnings report I mentioned turned out to be good. Community Health earned 85 cents per share, two cents more than estimates.
The stock did very well after the earnings report. Last week, CYH got as high as $25.74. It pulled back today and closed at $23.30. That’s 6.5 times this year’s earnings estimate.
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Finally, Some Volatility
Eddy Elfenbein, March 6th, 2012 at 11:31 amThis may come as a shock, people, but we actually have some volatility today. Unfortunately, it’s the bad kind. The market is again worried about concerns from Europe. (Will 2011 ever end?)
The S&P 500 is currently down 17 points or 1.3%. If that holds up, it will be the biggest fall all year and it will be nearly twice as big as the second-biggest fall this year.
There’s also a major divide in this market and it closely resembles the opposite of what we’ve seen most of this year. (Today is the opposite of what’s been happening this year which was the opposite of what happened late last year. So today resembles much of last year.)
So far, 2012 has been characterized by low volatility, rising stocks prices led by cyclicals and small-caps. Today, cyclicals, small-caps, financials and gold are getting hit the hardest. Financials are the worst-performing sector. AFLAC ($AFL) is down about 4%.
The only areas that are doing well are the defensive stocks. This means staples, utilities and many dividend stocks. On our Buy List, Reynolds American ($RAI) is slightly up while Sysco ($SYY) is slightly down.
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Morning News: March 6, 2012
Eddy Elfenbein, March 6th, 2012 at 5:45 amGoldman Secret Greece Loan Reveals Two Sinners
Large Private Sector Investors Agree to a Swap of Greek Debt
Automakers Prepare for Deepening Slump in Europe
IMF Sees Portugal Market Return in 2013
In China’s Annual Assessment, Wen Is Optimistic
In China, Sobering Signs of Slower Growth
India’s Farm Minister Seeks Lifting of Cotton Exports Ban Citing Surplus
Brent Crude Holds Above $123, Oil Creeps Toward Top of Asia’s Worry List
Billionaires Buy Gasoline Ships as Cargoes Expand
Camp David, Not Chicago, to Host G-8
Fed Study of Student Debt Outlines a Growing Burden
After Ratings Drop, Ford Reworks Touch Screens
AIA Shares Slide After $6 Billion AIG Selldown
German Utility Giant RWE’s Profit Slumps 34% on Nuclear Phase-Out
Epicurean Dealmaker: Chesterton’s Fence
Phil Pearlman: Setting Portfolio Stops for Shorter Term Traders
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Expect a Strong Jobs Report This Friday
Eddy Elfenbein, March 5th, 2012 at 1:51 pmWall Street is gearing up for the Labor Department’s next report on the jobs market which is due out this Friday. As I’ve discussed, the jobs market has become unusually closely tied to the fortunes of the stock market. Profit margins have gone as far as they can. What this economy needs is more consumers.
The jobs report normally comes out on the first Friday of the month but due to February being temporally challenged, this report will come out on March 9th.
The question is: Will we see another 200,000+ non-farm payrolls report? The current consensus expects a gain of 213,000 jobs which is a very good number.
My take is that we should expect to see a strong report this Friday. There are a few reasons why. The first is that the initial jobless claims reports have been very good recently. Also, and this may sound odd, higher gasoline prices may indicate that the economy is doing better at the ground level. We’ve also seen decent reports on housing and retail sales.
The last few jobs reports have been pretty good. The December report showed a gain of 203,000. We gained another 243,000 in January. I expect to see those numbers revised in Friday’s report.
Still, we shouldn’t get too excited. Over the last 23 months, the U.S. economy has created 3.165 million jobs. That sounds good, but in the 25 months prior to that the economy lost 8.779 million jobs. In other words, as well as we’ve done, we’ve only gained back roughly one-third the number of jobs lost.
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Stocks Love Gridlock (But Only One Kind)
Eddy Elfenbein, March 5th, 2012 at 9:56 amThis is already the best year for the Dow since 1998. At the WSJ, E.S. Browning finds some interesting facts:
Since 1900, the Dow has averaged a 7.8% annual gain under Democratic presidents, compared with a 3% annual gain under Republicans. With a Democratic president and a Republican Congress, the Dow has gained an average 9.6% a year.
The worst mix has been a Republican president and a split or Democratic Congress, which on average has produced little or no gains.
Bespoke Investment Group, in Harrison, N.Y., has uncovered another fact: Only four presidents elected since 1900 have seen the Dow rise 50% or more during their first three years. One is the current president. For the other three—Franklin Roosevelt, Dwight Eisenhower and Bill Clinton—the Dow’s average gain during the fourth year in office was 19.7%. All three were re-elected.
According to InTrade, it’s quite possible that we’ll see President Obama re-elected and Republicans gain control of both houses of Congress.
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China Cuts Its Growth Rate to 7.5%
Eddy Elfenbein, March 5th, 2012 at 9:26 amI’m happy to report that I’m back at the helm and I’ve fully recovered from whatever it was. Thanks for the get-well emails.
The stock market looks like it’s going to open lower this morning due to poor economic news from Europe. Also, Wen Jiabao, the Premier of China, said that China’s economy will grow by 7.5% this year. That kind of growth sounds great to us but it’s actually an eight-year low.
There’s some kinda good news from American International Group ($AIG). AIG said it’s going to sell a big chunk of holdings in AIA Group Ltd., the Asian life insurance company, in order to pack back the U.S. Treasury.
AIG currently owns about one-third of AIA and they’re planning to sell a bit less than half of their position. This deal will send about $8 billion the government’s way. Not including this deal, AIG still owes the government about $50 billion.
The U.S. Treasury’s break-even point on AIG is $29 per share and the stock is just above that right now. I would have to think that the Obama Administration would enjoy privatizing AIG just before the election.
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