Future Looks Bright for This Little-Known Niche Market

By Mitchell Clark, B. Comm.

Acuity Brands, Inc. (AYI) manufactures lighting, and business is really good. The Atlanta-based company just reported an excellent quarter and the stock blasted higher after handily beating consensus on earnings and revenues.

The stock has been a powerhouse, up five-fold since its 2009 low, and has been especially strong over the last 12 months, like so many other positions.

Acuity Brands provides all kinds of indoor and outdoor lighting and its products are sold all over the world. Any application you can name, this company likely makes a light for it. The company’s products are mostly for industrial/commercial use in offices and buildings, but the company also produces lighting for sports facilities, underwater applications, garages, emergency exits, decorative and landscape applications, and parking lots, along with some residential lighting.

Then there are all the controls and components required to make the lighting work. Acuity Brands manufactures these as well.

In its fiscal first quarter of 2014 (ended November 31, 2013), the company said it achieved all-time records in first-quarter sales, earnings, and diluted earnings per share.

Total sales for the quarter came to $574.7 million, representing a solid 20% gain over the first quarter of 2013.

Earnings were $44.5 million, representing a substantial 70% gain over the comparable quarter (including a $5.0 million insurance recovery gain).

Acuity Brands finished its fiscal first quarter with cash and cash equivalents of $398 million, for a gain of $39.0 million over the previous quarter. Management said it expects demand for its lighting products to improve and become more broad-based. The renovation and tenant (improvement) markets are expected to be growth areas.

On the stock market, Acuity Brands jumped 15% on the day of its earnings report. The company’s one-year stock chart is featured below:

            Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

 

The fact that this position is richly priced did not deter investors from bidding the stock after its latest earnings on a down day for the broader market. The company surpassed Wall Street’s expectations by a wide margin and once again demonstrated just how good a business it is. (Read about another stock that’s excelling in its business in “Why This Company Should Be a Case Study in Business Schools.”)

I view Acuity Brands’ results as a positive economic indicator and I give credit to the company for filing its SEC form 10-Q commensurate with its earnings press release.

With the exception of a one-percent unfavorable impact to sales due to currency translation, all of the company’s increased sales during the latest quarter were due to stronger volume. The company cited North American sales were increasing especially significantly. LED-based lighting, which represented just over one-quarter of the company’s total first-quarter sales, saw sales more than double comparatively.

Management estimates that the North American lighting market, which is helped by new construction, renovation, and retrofitting, should grow by the mid-single digits in fiscal 2014. Wall Street currently expects the company’s fiscal 2014 total sales to grow approximately 10% and nine percent in fiscal 2013.

I suspect the Street’s revenue and earnings estimates for Acuity Brands’ future periods will creep higher over the coming weeks. The company’s fiscal first quarter was very solid.

Other than monetary policy, the most important data for equity investors is what corporations say about their businesses. For industrial lighting, business conditions are improving.

 

This article Future Looks Bright for This Little-Known Niche Market was originally published at Profit Confidential

Thoughts from the Frontline: Forecast 2014: The Killer D’s

By John Mauldin – Thoughts from the Frontline: Forecast 2014: The Killer D’s

It seems I’m in a constant dialogue about the markets and the economy everywhere I go. Comes with the territory. Everyone wants to have some idea of what the future holds and how they can shape their own personal version of the future within the Big Picture. This weekly letter is a large part of that dialogue, and it’s one that I get to share directly with you. Last week we started a conversation looking at what I think is the most positive and dynamic aspect of our collective future: The Human Transformation Revolution. By that term I mean the age of accelerating change in all manner of technologies and services that is unfolding before us. It is truly exhilarating to contemplate. Combine that revolution with the growing demand for a middle-class lifestyle in the emerging world, and you get a powerful engine for growth. In a simpler world we could just focus on those positives and ignore the fumbling of governments and central banks. Alas, the world is too complex for that.

We’ll continue our three-part 2014 forecast series this week by looking at the significant economic macrotrends that have to be understood, as always, as the context for any short-term forecast. These are the forces that are going to inexorably shift and shape our portfolios and businesses. Each of the nine macrotrends I’ll mention deserves its own book (and I’ve written books about two of them and numerous letters on most of them), but we’ll pause to gaze briefly at each as we scan the horizon.

The Killer D’s

The first five of our nine macro-forces can be called the Killer D’s: Demographics, Deficit, Debt, Deleveraging, and Deflation. And while I will talk about them separately, I am really talking threads that are part of a tapestry. At times it will be difficult to say where one thread ends and the others begin.

Demographics – An Upside Down World

One of the most basic human drives is the desire to live longer. And there is a school of economics that points out that increased human lifespans is one of the most basic and positive outcomes of economic growth. I occasionally get into an intense conversation in which someone decries the costs of the older generation refusing to shuffle off this mortal coil. Typically, this discussion ensues after I have commented that we are all going to live much longer lives than we once expected due to the biotechnological revolution. Their protests sometimes make me smile and suggest that if they are really worried about the situation, they can volunteer to die early. So far I haven’t had any takers.

Most people would agree that growth of the economy is good. It is the driver of our financial returns. But older people spend less money and produce far less than younger, more active generations do. Until recently this dynamic has not been a problem, because there were far more young people in the world than there were old. But the balance has been shifting for the last few decades, especially in Japan and Europe.

An aging population is almost by definition deflationary. We can see the results in Japan. An aging, conservative population spends less. An interesting story in the European Wall Street Journal this week discusses the significant amount of cash that aging Japanese horde. In Japan there is almost three times as much cash in circulation, per person, as there is in the US. Though Japan is a country where you can buy a soft drink by swiping your cell phone over a vending machine data pad, the amount of cash in circulation is rising every year, and there are actually proposals to tax cash so as to force it back into circulation.

A skeptic might note that 38% of Japanese transactions are in cash and as such might be difficult to tax. But I’m sure that Japanese businesses report all of their cash income and pay their full share of taxes, unlike their American and European counterparts.

Sidebar: It is sometimes difficult for those of us in the West to understand Japanese culture. This was made glaringly obvious to me recently when I watched the movie 47 Ronin. In the West we may think of Sparta or the Alamo when we think of legends involving heroic sacrifice. The Japanese think of the 47 Ronin. From Wikipedia:

The revenge of the Forty-seven Ronin (四十七士 Shi-jū-shichi-shi, forty-seven samurai) took place in Japan at the start of the 18th century. One noted Japanese scholar described the tale, the most famous example of the samurai code of honor, bushidō, as the country’s “national legend.”

The story tells of a group of samurai who were left leaderless (becoming ronin) after their daimyo (feudal lord) Asano Naganori was compelled to commit seppuku (ritual suicide) for assaulting a court official named Kira Yoshinaka, whose title was Kōzuke no suke. The ronin avenged their master’s honor by killing Kira, after waiting and planning for almost two years. In turn, the ronin were themselves obliged to commit seppuku for committing the crime of murder. With much embellishment, this true story was popularized in Japanese culture as emblematic of the loyalty, sacrifice, persistence, and honor that people should preserve in their daily lives. The popularity of the tale grew during the Meiji era of Japanese history, in which Japan underwent rapid modernization, and the legend became subsumed within discourses of national heritage and identity.

The point of my sidebar (aside from talking about cool guys with swords) is that, while Japan may be tottering, the strong social fabric of the country, woven from qualities like loyalty, sacrifice, and diligence, should keep us from being too quick to write Japan off.

“Old Europe” is not far behind Japan when it comes to demographic challenges, and the United States sees its population growing only because of immigration. Russia’s population figures do not bode well for a country that wants to view itself as a superpower. Even Iran is no longer producing children at replacement rates. At 1.2 children per woman, Korea’s birth rates are even lower than Japan’s. Indeed, they are the lowest in the World Bank database.

A basic equation says that growth of GDP is equal to the rate of productivity growth times the rate of population growth. When you break it down, it is really the working-age population that matters. If one part of the equation, the size of the working-age population, is flat or falling, productivity must rise even faster to offset it. Frankly, developed nations are simply not seeing the rise in productivity that is needed.

As a practical matter, when you are evaluating a business as a potential investment, you need to understand whether its success is tied to the growth rate of the economy and the population it serves.

In our book Endgame Jonathan Tepper and I went to great lengths to describe the coming crisis in sovereign debt, especially in Europe – which shortly began to play itself out. In the most simple terms, there can come a point when a sovereign government runs up against its ability to borrow money at reasonable rates. That point is different for every country. When a country reaches the Bang! moment, the market simply starts demanding higher rates, which sooner or later become unsustainable. Right up until the fateful moment, everyone says there is no problem and that the government in question will be able to control the situation.

If you or I have a debt issue, the solution is very simple: balance our family budget. But it is manifestly more difficult, politically and otherwise, for a major developed country to balance its budget than it is for your average household to do so. There are no easy answers. Cutting spending is a short-term drag on the economy and is unpopular with those who lose their government funding. Raising taxes is both a short-term and a long-term drag on the economy.

The best way to get out of debt is to simply hold spending nominally flat and eventually grow your way out of the deficit, as the United States did in the 1990s. Who knew that 15 years later we would be nostalgic for Clinton and Gingrich? But governments almost never take that course, and eventually there is a crisis. As we will see in a moment, Japan elected to deal with its deficit and debt issues by monetizing the debt. Meanwhile, in Europe, the ECB had to step in to save Italy and Spain; Greece, Ireland, and Portugal were forced into serious austerities; and Cyprus was just plain kicked over the side of the boat.

There is currently a lull in the level of concern about government debt, but given that most developed countries have not yet gotten their houses in order, this is a temporary condition. Debt will rear its ugly head again in the not-too-distant future. This year? Next year? 2016? Always we pray the prayer of St. Augustine: “Lord, make me chaste, but not today.”

Deleveraging and Deflation – They Are Just No Fun

At some point, when you have accumulated too much debt, you just have to deal with it. My associate Worth Wray forwarded the following chart to me today. There is no better explanation as to why the current recovery is the weakest in recent history. Deleveraging is a b*tch. It is absolutely no fun. Looking at this chart, I find it rather remarkable and somewhat encouraging that the US has done as well as it has the past few years.

As I’ve outlined at length in other letters and in Code Red, central banks can print far more money than any of us can imagine during periods of deleveraging and deflation. For the record, I said the same thing back in 2010 when certain hysterical types were predicting hyperinflation and the end of the dollar due to the quantitative easing of the Federal Reserve. I remain actively opposed to the current level of quantitative easing, not because I’m worried about hyperinflation but for other reasons I have discussed in past letters. As long as the velocity of money keeps falling, central banks will be able to print more money than we would have thought possible in the ’70s or ’80s. And seemingly they can get away with it – in the short term. Of course, payback is a b*tch. When the velocity of money begins to rise again for whatever unknown reason, central banks had better have their ducks in a row!

Deflationary conditions make debt worse. If you borrow money at a fixed rate, a little inflation – or even a lot of inflation – helps a great deal. To think that even conservative Republican leaders don’t get that is naïve. Certainly it is understood in Japan, which is why the success of Abenomics is dependent upon producing inflation. More on that below.

For governments, there is more than one way to deleverage. You can default on your payments, like Greece. We’re going to see a lot more of that in the next five years – count on it. Or you can get your central bank to monetize the debt, as Japan is doing. Or get the central bank to convert your debt into 40-year bonds, as Ireland did. (Brilliant move, by the way, for tiny Ireland – you have to stand back and applaud the audacity. I wonder how much good Irish whiskey it took to get the ECB to agree to that deal?)

Inflation is falling almost everywhere today, even as central banks are as accommodative as they have ever been. Deflation is the default condition in a deleveraging world. It can even create an economic singularity.

Singularity was originally just a mathematical term for a point at which an equation has no solution. Then, in astrophysics, it was proven that a large-enough collapsing star would become a black hole so dense that its own gravity would cause a singularity in the fabric of space-time, a point where many standard physics equations suddenly have no solution.

Beyond the “event horizon” of the black hole, the physics models no longer work. In terms of general relativity, an event horizon is a boundary in space-time beyond which events cannot affect an outside observer. In a black hole it is “the point of no return,” i.e., the point at which the gravitational force becomes so large that nothing can escape.

Deflation and collapsing debt can create their own sort of black hole, an economic singularity. At that point, the economic models that we have grown comfortable with no longer work. As we approach a potential event horizon in a deflationary/deleveraging world, it can be a meaningless (and extremely frustrating) exercise to try to picture a future that is a simple extension of past economic reality. Any short-term forecast (less than one or two years) has to bear that fact in mind.

We Are in a Code Red World

We need to understand that there has been a complete bureaucratic and academic capture of central banks. They are all run by neo-Keynesians. (Yes, I know there are some central bankers who disavow the prevailing paradigm, but they don’t have the votes.) The default response of any present-day central banker faced with a crisis will be massive liquidity injections. We can argue with the tide, but we need to recognize that it is coming in.

When there is a recession and interest rates are at or close to the zero bound, there will be massive quantitative easing and other, even more creative injections of liquidity into the system. That is a reality we have learned to count on and to factor into our projections of future economic possibilities. But as to what set of econometric equations we should employ in coming up with accurate, dependable projections, no one, least of all central bankers, has a clue. We are in unknown territory, on an economic Star Trek, with Captain Bernanke about to turn the helm over to Captain Yellen, going where no reserve-currency-printing central bank has gone before. This is not Argentina or Zimbabwe we are talking about. The Federal Reserve is setting its course based on economic theories created by people whose models are demonstrably terrible.

Will we have an outright recession in the US this year? I currently think that is unlikely unless there is some kind of external shock. But short-term interest rates will stay artificially low due to financial repression by the Fed, and there will be an increased risk of further monetary creativity from a Yellen-led Fed going forward. Stay tuned.

To continue reading this article from Thoughts from the Frontline – a free weekly publication by John Mauldin, renowned financial expert, best-selling author, and Chairman of Mauldin Economics – please click here.

© 2013 Mauldin Economics. All Rights Reserved.
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Pathetic December Job Numbers Proof 2014 to Be Challenging Year

By Michael Lombardi, MBA

What happened?

The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported this morning that only 74,000 jobs were added to the U.S. economy in December. Most economists were expecting 200,000 jobs to be created in December—way off reality. The December increase in U.S. payrolls was the slowest pace in almost three years.

But it gets worse…

The underemployment rate, which I consider the “real” measure of the jobs market in the U.S. economy, was unchanged in December at 13.1%. The underemployment rate includes those people who have given up looking for work and those people who have part-time jobs but want full-time jobs.

The table below shows the official unemployment rate versus the underemployment rate for 2013.

U.S. Official Unemployment Rate vs. Underemployment Rate, January-December 2013

Month

Revised Official Unemployment Rate (U3)

Underemployment Rate (U6)

January

7.90%

14.40%

February

7.70%

14.30%

March

7.50%

13.80%

April

7.50%

13.90%

May

7.50%

13.80%

June

7.50%

14.30%

July

7.30%

14.00%

August

7.20%

13.60%

September

7.20%

13.60%

October

7.20%

13.70%

November

7.00%

13.10%

December

6.70%

13.10%

% Change
Jan.-Dec.

-15.19%

-9.03%

Data source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis web site,
last accessed January 10, 2014.

What the above chart shows is that despite what we heard about the U.S. economy improving in 2013 and despite the Federal Reserve creating over $1.0 trillion in new money in 2013 to help the economy, the “real” unemployment rate declined by less than 10% in 2013, from 14.4% at the beginning of the year to 13.1% by the end of the year. The number of unemployed people in the U.S. stands at a still-staggering 10.4 million.

Of the 74,000 new jobs created in December in the U.S. economy, 55,000 jobs were in the low-paying retail trade. Despite what they tell us about the housing market rebound, construction jobs in the U.S. economy declined by 16,000 in December.

I have been warning my readers with the same message for months: I’m very suspicious of this economic recovery. If we take out the rising stock market, there would be no recovery for the U.S. economy. The Federal Reserve has kept interest rates artificially low for five years and printed trillions of dollars in new money, and the U.S. economy is still on life support. 2014 will be a very difficult year for the economy and the stock market.

This article Pathetic December Job Numbers Proof 2014 to Be Challenging Year was originally posted at Profit Confidential

 

 

Australian Dollar Climbs 5-Week High on Jobs Data Forecast

By HY Markets Forex Blog

The Australian dollar began the trading week higher, touching a month-high on Monday as the US dollar dropped following the release of the jobs labour data last week; which came in below analysts’ forecast.

The aussie gained 150 pips after the jobs data released on Friday revealed the report missed estimates. The Australian currency gained against 14 out of 16 major currencies, supported by the report which revealed home loans advanced in November.

The aussie came in above the $0.90 mark, adding 50 pips to $0.9042, the highest since Dec 13. The Australian dollar jumped 0.45% higher at $0.9032 at the time of writing.

Australia’s ten-year bond yield dropped four basis points to 4.23%.

Australian Dollar – Australia Data

November’s home loans climbed by 1.1%, slightly higher than analysts forecast of a 1% rise and also supports the recent data which shows the strength in Australia’s construction sector.

“Home loan and job ads data were both in line with recent trends,” the RBC analysts wrote in a note on Monday. “A solid pace of activity in the housing market but as yet little sign that the broader economy is in a position to meaningfully add to headcount.”

Australia’s employment figures are expected to be released next week as analysts predict an additional 10,000 jobs were added in Australia’s employment sector, following November’s 21,000 rise. In the US, jobs increased by 74,000 in December, below forecasts of a 197,000 rise.

While the US unemployment rate dropped 6.7%, dropping from November’s record of 7%.

Fed Tapering

The disappointing jobs report released last week set off speculation over the Federal Reserve (Fed) monthly bond purchases. Traders are predicting the Fed officials to delay the expected further-reduction in the banks stimulus.

 

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The post Australian Dollar Climbs 5-Week High on Jobs Data Forecast appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

Gold Extend Gains to One-Month High on Fed-Taper Speculation

By HY Markets Forex Blog

Gold futures rose to the highest level in a month on Monday, rising for a third straight session on speculations the Federal Reserve will slow down further cuts to its bond purchases after the US payrolls came in lower than forecasted.

Gold deliveries for February rose 0.17% higher to $1,249.10 an ounce at the time of writing on New York’s Comex, while silver futures dropped 0.42% to $20.140 an ounce. At the same time platinum climbed 0.4% to $1.442.21 an ounce.  Prices for the metal were also driven by the weakened US dollar, while the US dollar index declined 0.10% lower to 80.63 points at the time of writing.

Spot gold rose for a third week, the longest since August, while jobs in the US increased by 74,000 in December, below forecasts of a 197,000 rise.

The net-long position for the yellow metal increased by 18% to 40,229 futures and options in the week ended Jan; US Commodity Futures Trading Commission data reveled.

Gold – Fed Tapering

In the US, the non-farm payroll data that was released on Friday showed that jobs were increased by 74,000 in December, below forecasts of a 197,000 rise and dropping from the revised 241,000 positions added in November.

The report also showed that the world’s largest economy’s unemployment rate dropped 6.7%, dropping from November’s record of 7% and the lowest since Oct 2008.

Traders are predicting the Fed officials to delay the expected further-reduction in the banks stimulus due to the recent macroeconomic data. Last month, the Federal Reserve (Fed) announced it will begin to reduce its $85 billion monthly bond purchases by $10 billion.

 

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The post Gold Extend Gains to One-Month High on Fed-Taper Speculation appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

Violence Threatens to Thwart Iraqi Oil Resurgence

By OilPrice.com

A wave of violence has swept parts of Iraq at the start of 2014 as the central government fights back against Al-Qaeda aligned militants in Anbar Province. The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) reportedly took control of Ramadi and Fallujah, bombing police headquarters and killing dozens. On New Year’s Day Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki sent in reinforcements to take back control of Anbar Province’s two largest cities. The clashes kick off 2014 in much the same way as 2013 ended – a return to violence in a country that had seen important security gains in recent years.

Over 7,800 civilians were killed in Iraq in 2013, the bloodiest year over the past five. The latest violence occurred in Anbar Province, a region that dogged the U.S. military during its decade-long war. ISIL is also engaged in fighting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, and the latest string of events indicates that the violence of the Syrian civil war is spreading deeper into Iraq.

The conflict has yet to affect Iraq’s oil fields, and production hit 3.2 million barrels per day (bpd) in December, the most since August 2013, according to Bloomberg. To be sure, the violence does not pose an immediate threat to Iraq’s oil output, as three-fourths of the country’s production comes from the South, and much of the rest from Kurdistan in the North. In fact, according to the EIA, a majority of Iraq’s oil production comes from three fields – Kirkuk, and the North and South Rumaila fields near Basra. The latest violence is not located near these areas.

Still, the instability and the loss of control of key cities by the Iraqi government underscores the intense security challenge facing the country as it seeks to ramp up oil production in the coming years. Iraq has a stated goal of tripling oil production to 9 million bpd by 2020. In a 2012 special report on Iraq, the IEA estimates a slightly less rosy figure of 6.1 million bpd by the end of the decade in its central scenario.

With the immense challenges facing Iraq’s oil sector, even doubling today’s output over the next six years looks rather ambitious. Iraq still has not agreed on a hydrocarbons law that would outline oil governance. Kurdistan is making brazen moves aimed at increasing its independence from the central government in Baghdad. This may help to boost Kurdish oil production, but political conflict between the semi-autonomous region and the Maliki government casts a shadow of uncertainty over the country’s oil industry. Most importantly, however, is the violence that threatens the stability of Iraq, which is now the second largest OPEC producer after Saudi Arabia.

While Iraq’s failure to meet its ambitious oil production goals may seem to be a problem solely for Iraq, oil consumers around the world may be more dependent than they realize on the oil fields of Rumaila and Kirkuk. Over the next 20 years, according to the IEA’s latest World Energy Outlook, Iraq will account for the largest source of additional oil production to global markets. Yet, its failure to live up to those hopeful projections – and given the latest reports of violence, that seems entirely plausible – will send prices much higher than the 2035 price of $128 per barrel that the IEA predicts, as supply does not keep pace with demand.

Source: http://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/Wave-of-Violence-Threatens-Ambitious-Iraqi-Oil-Goals.html

By. Nicholas Cunningham of Oilprice.com

 

 

 

EURUSD Elliott Wave Analysis: Corrective Rally

EURUSD moved higher on Friday which should not be a surprise as we know that after every five waves correction follows. We can count impulse down in red wave 1) so current upward reaction is normal. We are tracking wave 2) that represents a contra-trend reaction that should be made by three legs. We will be tracking A-B-C waves up to 1.3700-1.3750 region from where pair could turn down again, back to 1.3543. Critical, or invalidation level remains at 1.3891; as long it will hold, trend is down.
EURUSD 4h Elliott Wave Analysis
eurusd elliott wave analysis
Written by www.ew-forecast.com
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Warning: Cheesepocalypse is Upon Us!

By WallStreetDaily.com Warning: Cheesepocalypse is Upon Us!

Analysts and economists can’t resist fretting over the potentially terrifying impact of the Fed’s taper, which begins this month. I’m here to tell you that a more dire crisis is unfolding – an imminent shortage of everyday Americans’ most beloved commodity.

“We want you to hear directly from us that it’s true,” reads Velveeta’s official Tumblr page. “We are experiencing a temporary scarcity of our nation’s most precious commodity: Liquid Gold.”

At the start of the NFL playoffs? Say it isn’t so!

Sadly, it is so, my fellow Wall Street Daily readers.

Kraft (KRFT) blames the shortage on “a combination of minor manufacturing challenges.”

After last year’s hysteria over a potential shortage of chicken wings, you’d think companies providing the most popular football-season food items would take precautions. Apparently not.

While Kraft swears that it’s a “short-term issue,” I wouldn’t trust them. If you’re having a Super Bowl party, stock up!

Now, as far as what impact the appropriately dubbed “Cheesepocalypse” will have on Kraft’s overall business and stock price, I can’t tell you. Not until February 13. That’s when the company is slated to report fourth-quarter results.

And that brings us to the next issue I want to address today – earnings. Because this time around, there are two things we should be extremely concerned about as the reporting activity kicks into high gear…

Where it’s At

Forget having “two turntables and a microphone” like the Beck song suggests. When companies start reporting earnings en masse in a few weeks, earnings growth is “where it’s at.”

Why? Because stock prices ultimately follow earnings. But lately, they’ve been advancing on the backs of multiple expansions. So investors are paying more and more for the same penny of earnings.

Case in point: In the last 12 months, the price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio on the S&P 500 Index expanded almost 20% – from 14.7 to 17.3.

That’s not a sustainable situation. When P/E ratios soar uncontrollably, the end of the bull market is nigh.

Now, there are two ways to keep multiple expansions in check. Either the denominator in the calculation (earnings) increases or the numerator (prices) decreases.

It goes without saying, of course, that we want the former to happen. After all, declining prices are only good for short sellers.

With that in mind, here’s what’s troubling me…

At the end of September 2013, analysts estimated that S&P 500 companies would grow earnings by 9.6% in the fourth quarter.

Over time, analysts always revise those estimates downward as they get more data. In fact, during the last five years, the average decline in estimates has been 5.8%, according to FactSet’s latest Earnings Insight report.

However, this go-round, they didn’t lower expectations as much as usual. They now expect fourth-quarter earnings to grow by 6.3% – a drop of only 3.3%.

That means either the underlying data driving their calculations strengthened – or analysts are way too optimistic.

If it’s the latter, the stage could be set for major disappointments. Investors don’t tend to take kindly to companies reporting lower-than-expected profit growth.

So, like I said before, companies better bring it when it comes to reporting growth results. Otherwise, stock prices could start dropping – quickly.

Why So Glum, Chum?

Guidance promises to be another critical factor this earnings season.

Why? Because an obvious disconnect currently exists between the underlying economic data and company outlooks…

You see, the latest economic reports, most notably the recent GDP figures, point to an economy that’s accelerating. And more economic activity on the horizon should translate into more sales and profits for companies.

However, the overwhelming majority of S&P 500 companies that provided guidance so far don’t reflect such a reality. Of the 107 companies in the S&P 500 that have issued fourth-quarter earnings guidance, 88% issued negative guidance.

Granted, companies love to underpromise and overdeliver. Hence, the five-year average percentage for negative guidance of 64%, according to FactSet. But we’re talking about an abnormally high level of pessimism right now.

If companies don’t start issuing upbeat guidance, there could be trouble on the horizon that has yet to show up in the economic data.

Bottom line: It’s common for bull markets to climb proverbial “walls of worry.” But at this stage in the bull market, slowing growth and overly negative outlooks aren’t worries we can simply overlook.

So keep an eye on the data. Because the implications could be far more disastrous than a Cheesepocalypse.

Ahead of the tape,

Louis Basenese

The post Warning: Cheesepocalypse is Upon Us! appeared first on Wall Street Daily.

Article By WallStreetDaily.com

Original Article: Warning: Cheesepocalypse is Upon Us!

EURUSD – Short Term Rectangle Pattern

Article by Investazor.com

eurusd-short-term-rectangle-pattern-resize-13.01.2014

EURUSD bounced back from the top hit on Friday and retested a local low at 1.3654. The price has drawn a Rectangle pattern right after a clear up move. Statistics shows that from here the probability is higher for the price to break above the resistance of the pattern (1.3685) and continue the previous move. Any bounce, or false breakout, can be a good bullish signal. The upside targets for the continuation of the rally is at 1.3720 and 1.3750.

Don’t stick with only one direction. A close under 1.3654 could mean that bears are putting some pressure and the price might fall back to retest 1.3630/10. From here I am tented to say again long, but the price action should be read again at the given moment.

The post EURUSD – Short Term Rectangle Pattern appeared first on investazor.com.