Tuesday, September 1, 2009

U.S. Economy: Companies Cut More Jobs Than Forecast in August


Bloomberg reports

By Timothy R. Homan and Shobhana Chandra

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. companies cut more jobs than forecast in August and boosted their workers’ productivity the most since 2003 in the second quarter, signaling employers are seeking to cut costs further even as the economy stabilizes.

A survey by ADP Employer Services showed businesses reduced payrolls by 298,000 after a 360,000 decline in July. The Labor Department in Washington said productivity, a measure of employee output per hour, rose at a 6.6 percent annual rate in the three months through June.

With labor costs declining and employment continuing to deteriorate, today’s reports buttress the case for the Federal Reserve to complete its plans to buy $1.75 billion of bonds and forego raising interest rates until next year. Slack in the job market helps reduce any inflationary pressures stemming from the central bank’s record liquidity injections.

“Inflation risks are minimal and the key issue they should focus on is spurring growth,” said Michael Moran, chief economist at Daiwa Securities America Inc. in New York, who accurately forecast the gain in productivity. “There’s a turn under way in the labor market, though it’s a very slow turn.”

Stock-index futures dropped after the ADP report’s release, and the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index opened lower; it was up 0.2 percent to 999.66 at 11:33 a.m. in New York. Treasuries erased losses, leaving yields on benchmark 10-year notes little changed from late yesterday at 3.35 percent.

Factory Orders

A separate report today showed factory orders advanced in July by the most in a year as companies sought to rebuild inventories after a record draw-down in the first part of 2009. The Commerce Department said orders increased 1.3 percent after a 0.9 percent gain in June.

The Fed later today is scheduled to release minutes of its August policy meeting, when the Federal Open Market Committee decided to complete its planned $300 billion of Treasuries purchases by the end of October. Officials in recent days have differed in their outlook for the larger $1.25 trillion program to buy mortgage-backed securities.

Following the last two recessions, the central bank waited for at least a year after the unemployment rate peaked before raising rates. The Labor Department in two days is forecast to report the jobless rate rose to 9.5 percent in August from 9.4 percent in July; economists project it will reach 10 percent in early 2010.

The ADP report, forecast to show a decline of 250,000 jobs, underscores the danger that the consumer spending that accounts for 70 percent of the economy may be slow to gain traction in coming months.

ADP Details

The report showed a drop of 152,000 workers in goods- producing industries including manufacturing and construction, while service providers cut 146,000 workers. Financial firms trimmed jobs by 19,000, ADP said, the 21st consecutive monthly drop for the industry.

Whirlpool Corp., the world’s largest appliance maker, said Aug. 28 that it will close its Evansville, Indiana, manufacturing plant, resulting in the elimination of 1,100 jobs, or 1.6 percent of the company’s workforce.

“Considering the severity of the recession and uncertainty over the strength and sustainability of the recovery, the labor market’s recuperation will be slow and painful,” said Ryan Sweet, a senior economist at Moody’s Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania, which forecast a drop of 290,000.

Worker Productivity

Productivity of U.S. workers rose in the second quarter at the fastest pace in almost six years, the Labor Department’s data showed, as companies squeezed more out of remaining staff to boost profits. Labor costs, adjusted for the gain in efficiency, fell by a revised 5.9 percent annual pace, the most in nine years.

Lower expenses helped boost profits last quarter by the most in four years, a necessary first step in slowing firings. Productivity gains also help curb inflation.

Makers of durable goods from Intel Corp. to Rockwell Collins Inc. are among those seeing demand stabilizing as customers here and abroad, buoyed by growing profits and more accessible credit, begin to invest in new equipment.

The gain in factory orders was restrained by a decline in non-durable goods such as oil and food that masked a jump in demand for new equipment.

A rebound at automakers resulting from the government’s “cash-for-clunkers” plan may give orders an added boost in coming months as dealers restock.

‘Very Lean’

“Inventories are very lean and businesses are now going to have to increase production given the gain in orders,” said Michelle Meyer, an economist at Barclays Capital Inc. in New York.

Leaner workforces allowed companies to protect earnings while the economy shrank at a 1 percent annual rate last quarter. Corporate profits rose 5.7 percent from the prior three months, the biggest gain since the first quarter of 2005, Commerce Department data showed last week.

Dell Inc., the world’s second-biggest maker of personal computers, topped second-quarter profit and revenue estimates after slashing costs. Chief Executive Officer Michael Dell, on a quest to save $4 billion a year, has farmed out 40 percent of the Round Rock, Texas-based company’s manufacturing.

To contact the reporter on this story: Timothy R. Homan in Washington at Thoman1@bloomberg.net; Shobhana Chandra in Washington at schandra1@bloomberg.net

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Quote of the Week


"Current events form future trends." Gerald Celente

Celente is the President and CEO of the Trends Research Institute
http://www.trendsresearch.com/

Economic Update


Bloomberg:
Dollar May Surpass ‘Established Lows,’ Goldman Says

Aug. 27 (Bloomberg) -- The dollar may weaken through “established lows” as signs of a global economic recovery drive gains in equities and oil, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said.

“That kind of shift could easily be prompted by continued good news from the macro front and the persistently negative dollar-equity and dollar-oil correlations,” Thomas Stolper, an economist at Goldman Sachs in London, wrote in a report yesterday. “Dollar bulls could well end up disappointed. Even a short-term move beyond our three- and six-month forecasts of $1.45 per euro is getting increasingly likely.”Read the full story here

Associated Press:

Bank insurance fund down 20 percent in 2Q

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The agency that guarantees bank deposits said Thursday there are no immediate plans to borrow money from the government to bolster its insurance fund, which has shrunk under the weight of collapsing banks.

The fund fell 20 percent to $10.4 billion in the second quarter as U.S. banks overall lost $3.7 billion, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said. That's the fund's lowest point since 1992 at the height of the savings-and-loan crisis. Some analysts have warned that the fund could fall below zero by year's end. read the full story here

San Francisco Chronicle:

Bleak financial picture at UC Berkeley

Forced to cut $150 million from his campus budget this year, Chancellor Robert Birgeneau of UC Berkeley painted a grim picture of employee layoffs and pay cuts, fewer courses and likely fee increases as thousands of students returned to school on Wednesday.


Thursday, August 20, 2009

Eye on the Economy


Stories today from Bloomberg that caught my eye:









Pension Plans’ Private-Equity Cash Depleted as Profits Shrink

Aug. 20 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. pension funds contributed to the record $1.2 trillion that private-equity firms raised this decade. Three of the biggest investors, state pensions in California, Oregon and Washington, plunked down at least $53.8 billion. So far, they only have dwindling paper profits and a lot less cash to show the millions of policemen, teachers and other civil servants in their retirement plans. Read the full story here

Mortgage Delinquencies Rise to Record as U.S. Home Prices Fall
Americans fell behind on their mortgage payments at a record pace in the second quarter as job losses and falling real estate prices thwarted government efforts to stabilize the housing market.
Read the full story here

U.S. Initial Jobless Claims Rose by 15,000 to 576,000
More Americans unexpectedly filed claims for jobless benefits last week, indicating companies are trying to cut costs further even as the economy stabilizes.Applications rose to 576,000 in the week ended Aug. 15 from a revised 561,000 the week before, the Labor Department said today in Washington. The number of people collecting unemployment benefits the week earlier was little changed at 6.24 million. Read the full story here

Philadelphia Area Manufacturing Unexpectedly Expands
Manufacturing in the Philadelphia region unexpectedly expanded in August for the first time in almost a year, a sign the economy is pulling out of the recession. Read the full story here

Corporate Defaults Soar to $453 Billion, S&P Reports
Corporate defaults worldwide rose in 2009, surpassing the number for the whole of 2008, Standard & Poor’s said in a report today.A total of 201 issuers defaulted through Aug. 12, affecting $453.1 billion of debt, S&P said. That’s up from 126 defaults totaling $433 billion for all of last year, the report said. Read the full story here

From Reuters:

Getting ready for the dollar’s fall, It just won’t go away, this needling worry about the U.S. dollar losing its coveted top-dog status.

No matter that there are plenty of reasonable arguments to support the dollar as the world reserve currency — namely there’s just no alternative — for perhaps decades to come.Yet, in a world where once-rock-solid assumptions quickly turn to dust, investors should keep an eye on the dollar since changing perceptions are chipping away at its cherished status as currency to the world. Read the full story here


New York Times reports:
A Surprise Increase in U.S. Jobless Claims
WASHINGTON (AP) — The number of newly laid-off workers filing claims for unemployment benefits rose unexpectedly for a second consecutive week, an indication that jobs remain scarce.
Read the full story here

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Wednesday, August 19, 2009

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Eye on the Economy:With Few Exceptions, Retailers Remain Weak

With consumers keeping a firm grip on their wallets, many of the best-known names in retailing said they suffered another quarter of earnings declines and were planning new ways to lure shoppers back to their stores.

Results posted by several chains in the last week beat analysts’ low expectations, but that was largely because the stores had cut costs, not because consumers had filled up their shopping carts.

Second-quarter earnings declined year over year at Home Depot, Target, Lowe’s, Nordstrom, and Macy’s. Saks, Dillard’s, J. C. Penney and Abercrombie & Fitch posted losses. And Wal-Mart, one of the most resilient chains in this economy, reported results that were about the same as last year.

A notable exception was TJX, which owns big-box discount chains, including T. J. Maxx, and reported record second-quarter sales and earnings.

Discounters continue to fare better than their midtier competitors as consumers trade down and buy only essentials. That trend, of course, has been especially troubling for luxury retailers.

Saks, the upscale department store, said Tuesday that its year-over-year loss widened. For the three months ended Aug. 1, Saks lost $54.5 million, or 39 cents a share, compared with a loss of $32.7 million, or 24 cents a share, for the period a year ago. Sales at stores open at least a year, a measure of retail health known as same-store sales, sank 15.5 percent.

To cope, Saks cut costs, shrank its inventory and made changes to its merchandising and marketing strategies. Nowadays the chain’s emphasis is on value and exclusivity.

In an example of retailers’ new plans to get consumers shopping again, Saks is introducing a private label men’s clothing collection and expanding its Off Fifth outlet business.

“Growing Off Fifth makes even more sense in this environment as customers focus on value,” Stephen I. Sadove, the chairman and chief executive of Saks, said in a call with investors on Tuesday. “There’s less than 10 percent overlap between Saks Fifth Avenue and Off Fifth customers. So we’re essentially reaching an entirely different customer base with these stores.”

In addition to opening more Off Fifth stores, Saks plans to fill them with more merchandise made exclusively for the stores, rather than fashions from earlier seasons.

The new private label menswear collection will be in Saks Fifth Avenue stores this month. Until now, Saks’s private label program included mostly sweaters and other basics, Ronald L. Frasch, Saks’s president and chief merchandising officer, told investors on Tuesday. The chain is also working with its existing designers and brands to add new products at lower prices.

Target, the chain known for chic design at low prices, has also been tweaking its strategy, offering more grocery items to lure struggling consumers. The chain said on Tuesday that its second-quarter earnings fell 6.3 percent compared with the period a year ago, though that was better than analysts expected. For the three months ended Aug. 1, Target earned $594 million, or 79 cents a share, down from $634 million, or 82 cents, last year. Sales fell 2.7 percent, to $14.6 billion.

Jason Asaeda, a retailing analyst with Standard & Poor’s Equity Research, told investors in a research note to buy Target stock because the chain is “strengthening its business with a growing assortment of value-priced consumables.”

Home Depot, the big home-improvement retailer, reported a 7 percent earnings decline for the quarter on Tuesday, also better than analysts’ expectations. The chain has focused on offering customers new repair and maintenance items, which they have been buying instead of higher-priced discretionary goods.

“This is the second consecutive quarter of positive transactions for tickets under $50,” Craig Menear, Home Depot’s executive vice president for merchandising, told investors in a conference call.

For the three months ended Aug. 2, Home Depot earned $1.1 billion, or 66 cents a share, down from $1.2 billion, or 71 cents a share, in the same quarter a year ago. Sales for the quarter fell 9.1 percent, to $19.1 billion, compared with last year. Same-store sales declined 8.5 percent for the quarter.

Bucking the trend, TJX, which owns T. J. Maxx, Marshalls and HomeGoods stores, reported on Tuesday its best-ever second quarter earnings. For the three months ended Aug. 1, the company made a profit of $262 million, or 61 cents a share, up 27 percent from last year when the company earned 48 cents a share. Same-store sales rose 4 percent.

“Our extreme values on exciting brands and fashions continue to resonate with consumers and drive extraordinary increases in customer traffic counts,” Carol Meyrowitz, the company’s president and chief executive, said in a statement.

More than a dozen retailers plan to report their earnings results in the coming days. But analysts are not expecting many of them to repeat the performance of TJX. Ken Perkins, president of the research company Retail Metrics, expects the nation’s stores to turn in a ninth consecutive quarter of declines.

And the weak sales trends are likely to continue into the third quarter. As Mr. Sadove told investors: “I don’t see the consumer appreciably changing in terms of their behavior.”

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Bottled water: industry must react to Bundanoon ban; The Australian town of Bundanoon has banned sales of bottled water


Datamonitor CommentWire, July 10, 2009 Friday 4:14 PM GMT

An Australian town situated approximately 100 miles south of Sydney in New South Wales is believed to be the first community in the world to have banned sales of bottled water. A gathering of 350 Bundanoon residents voted almost unanimously to ban sales from September 2009. Proposed replacement schemes include shops selling reusable containers that can be filled at public water fountains or, for a nominal fee, with filtered water at stores. Controversy surrounding local bottled water operations in Bundanoon may well have influenced the move.

Plans were announced to build a water extraction plant in the town, which would have taken water from Bundanoon to Sydney for processing and bottling, before some bottles would have inevitably been returned to the town for sale. The proposals provoked much anger among residents and a court battle is still being waged to determine the fate of the plant. Meanwhile, New South Wales premier Nathan Rees has also banned government officials in the state from buying bottled water, declaring that all New South Wales government departments would be switching to tap water. Bottled water has proved extremely popular in Australia, with an estimated $390m spent on the industry in 2008. For a country with a population of just under 22 million people, this represents a substantial business, and gives any bans on sale an increased significance. These recent events may not signal the death of the bottled water industry just yet, but they do serve to showcase the depth of feeling among some consumers with regards to bottled water. Other establishments could now follow the precedent set in Bundanoon, and a domino effect would be catastrophic. The industry must react to stories such as these and ensure that its operations can become cleaner and greener in the near future, in order to ensure that these incidents remain isolated. For more information on the growing sustainable packaging trend, see Datamonitor's report entitled Sustainable Packaging Trends: Consumer Perspectives and Product Opportunities, which was published in April 2009