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Strategies & Market Trends : Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: yard_man who wrote (9677)7/22/2004 9:19:14 AM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
Sears warns earns to miss forecast on sales decline (S) By Emily Church
LONDON (CBS.MW) -- Dept. stores Sears, Roebuck (S) warned its earnings for the third quarter and the year are expected well below the market forecast amid declining sales. Sears expects earnings per share from 0 cents to 10 cents, including 3-5 cents per share of negative carrying cost on the company's remaining legacy debt. Analysts surveyed by Thomson/ First Call are projecting earnings per share of 44 cents. "The outlook assumes third quarter domestic comparable store sales to be down low single-digits," Sears said. The retailer expects earnings per share, before the cumulative effect of change in accounting principle, but including 24 cents per share related to the second quarter special charges and additional depreciation, to be between $2.66 and $2.86. The outlook reflects "the year-to-date results and a reduced revenue outlook based upon first-half trends." Sears posted a decline in second quarter revenue eased to $8.78 billion from $10.2 billion. Net income declined to $53 million from $309 million in the second quarter of 2003. The 2003 year results include businesses divested in the fourth quarter of 2003. Like much of the industry, we experienced weak demand in June," said Chairman and CEO Alan J. Lacy. "That, combined with the overhang of our spring apparel assortment and inventory issues, resulted in a disappointing quarter," Sears said.



To: yard_man who wrote (9677)7/22/2004 9:21:30 AM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
Caterpillar Q2 earns miss forecasts, but ups 2004 view (CAT) By Tomi Kilgore
NEW YORK (CBS.MW) - Caterpillar (CAT) reported second-quarter earnings of $552 million, or $1.55 a share, up from $1.15 a share in the same period a year ago. The results fell short of the average analyst estimate compiled by Thomson First Call as higher expenses, resulting from increased material costs due to material availability issues, higher product development spending and increased employee incentives, offset higher sales volumes. Revenue rose 28 percent to $7.56 billion, topping analyst forecasts of $7.19 billion. Looking ahead, the earth moving equipment maker raised its 2004 earnings growth outlook to 80 to 85 percent from 65 to 70 percent, and its sales growth projection to 25 percent from 20 percent. The stock, a component of the Dow industrials ($INDU) , traded down 5.1 percent in pre-open trading to $73.



To: yard_man who wrote (9677)7/22/2004 9:25:58 AM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
U.S. weekly jobless claims fall 11,000 to 339,000
Thursday, July 22, 2004 12:46:46 PM

WASHINGTON (AFX) - Initial claims for state unemployment benefits fell last week as seasonal plant shutdowns continue to muddy the picture of the labor market

First-time claims dropped by 11,000 to 339,000 in the week ending July 17 from a revised 350,000. Initial claims had gyrated lower and then higher in the previous two weeks due to the timing of seasonal layoffs

The four-week average of initial claims, meanwhile, fell by 2,500 to 336,250. The four-week average is considered a better gauge of layoffs, since it smoothes out distortions caused by extreme weather or other one-time effects

The average number of workers receiving state benefits dropped to a fresh three-year low of 2.894 million in the four weeks ending July 10. Continuing claims dropped by 167,000 to 2.797 million in the week ending July 10

The insured unemployment rate - the percentage of claimants among those eligible for benefits - fell to 2.2 percent from 2.4 percent. It's the lowest since May 2001

After plunging by about 60,000 in the last six months of 2003, the level of initial claims is largely unchanged over the past three months Initial and continuing claims are now at levels consistent with job growth of about 150,000 to 250,000 a month, economists say. The monthly employment surveys are conducted during the week that includes the 12th of each month. During the June survey week, the four-week average of new claims was at 343,250

Continuing claims have fallen by about 400,000 since the beginning of the year

The steady decline in the continuing claims figures could be a sign of increased hiring. Or it could merely mean that workers are exhausting their benefits before finding work. It's likely a combination of the two factors

In June, nonfarm payrolls increased by 112,000, bringing the average gain over the past three months to 224,000

Long-term unemployment has been particularly insidious during this business cycle. In June, 1.8 million, or 21.6 percent, of the 8.2 million workers classified as unemployed had been out of work longer than six months. The average duration of unemployment remained high at 19.9 weeks



To: yard_man who wrote (9677)7/22/2004 9:30:17 AM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
CFC post by Rodger on the FOOL
==================================================
Provisions for bad debt is up 173% from last year.
Total loan production down 23% from last year.
Interest income up 33%.
Gain on sale of loans and securities down 25%.

A sign of times to come.

I've been building up a nice short position in it over the last month.
The stock is down 4% pre-market. (CFC)

thestreet.com



To: yard_man who wrote (9677)7/22/2004 10:06:43 AM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
U.S. leading indicators fall 0.2% in June By Rex Nutting
WASHINGTON (CBS.MW) - U.S. economic momentum slowed in June, the Conference Board said Tuesday. The index of leading economic indicators fell 0.2 percent in June, the first decline since March 2003, the board said. Five of the 10 leading indicators declined. Economists surveyed by CBS MarketWatch were expecting, on average, for the index to rise 0.1 percent. May's index was revised lower to 0.4 percent from 0.5 percent. "The data reflects a strong economic environment, but one with less momentum than last month," said Ken Goldstein, economist at the board. The coincident index increased 0.1 percent in June while the lagging index was unchanged.



To: yard_man who wrote (9677)7/22/2004 10:21:57 AM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
Faber on Short positions
gloomboomdoom.com



To: yard_man who wrote (9677)7/22/2004 10:30:11 AM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
Global: The Job-Quality Debate

Stephen S. Roach (New York)
Not surprisingly, the jobs debate is heating up in the United States as we move into the heart of the political season. My interest in this issue bears more on the economic and financial market implications of underlying trends in the US labor market. A jobless recovery puts pressure on consumer purchasing power and challenges the sustainability of an economic upturn. It also forces income-short consumers to rely on riskier sources of support—namely, outsize tax cuts, which blow up the budget deficit, and equity extraction from homes, which pushes debt loads into uncharted territory. By contrast, in a hiring-led recovery, the economy draws support from internal, or organic, growth—thereby avoiding the imbalances and other stresses and strains that have long concerned me.

Most have drawn great comfort from recently improved trends on the US hiring front. With jobs on nonfarm payrolls up 1.024 million over the past four months (March to June 2004), it is tempting to conclude that the long drought of the jobless recovery is over. I have argued to the contrary—maintaining that the recent improvement on the hiring front is skewed decidedly to the low end of the quality spectrum (see my July 9 dispatch in the Global Economic Forum, “America’s Job-Quality Trap,” and my Op-Ed piece in the July 22 edition of the New York Times, “More Jobs, Worse Work”). If I am correct, that means the recovery remains in precarious shape.

Several have challenged this conclusion, slicing and dicing the employment data with a different set of tools. The first such effort showed up in the form of a July 9 article posted on www.factcheck.org, a Website sponsored by the non-partisan Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania. In the interest of full disclosure, I should note that several senior government officials have brought this article to my attention—implicitly urging me to rethink my conclusions. A recent article in Business Week has elevated the debate over job quality to the national stage. The following letter to the editor of that publication is a direct response to this critique:

The Editor

Business Week

Dear Sir:

In “Another Look at Those Jobs Numbers” (Business Week, July 26, 2004), Peter Coy takes issue with my conclusion that the recent upturn in hiring has been concentrated at the low end of the quality spectrum. However, there is a serious shortcoming to his analysis: It is based on unpublished data taken from the government’s smaller and less reliable survey of US households—the so-called Current Population Survey. My conclusions are based on the far more comprehensive and accurate survey of workers on payrolls in business establishments—the Current Employment Statistics Survey.

There is really no comparison in the sampling accuracy of these two surveys. According to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, the “active sample” of some 400,000 establishments in the payroll data covers about one-third of the total universe of such workers. By contrast, the monthly sample of only 60,000 households covers just 0.06% of the universe of more than 106 million households in the United States. There is no doubt in my mind as to which of these two surveys should be trusted more. Other experts, including Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, have come to similar conclusions.

Moreover, it is a real stretch to glean such finely calibrated insights—by industry as well as by occupation—from this tiny survey of households. The data are unpublished for good reason—much of the granular detail in the 154 job categories that Mr. Coy has analyzed is simply not statistically significant. If you divide 60,000 households into 154 cells, then each cell contains an average of only slightly less than 400 households—a tiny sample for an economy the size of the US. Moreover, to the extent that some categories are populated by a greater-than-average number of households, that leaves a miniscule representation in the remaining cells. In my view, that seriously compromises the integrity of the statistical analysis. That's why I gave up years ago using the household survey to do industry analysis—I was getting nonsensical results. I am afraid that is still the case. In other words, the household data should not be trusted as the ultimate arbiter of job quality.

Nor is this finely calibrated detail of the household survey reliable enough to seasonally adjust. That further complicates an accurate analysis of underlying trends in the US labor market. This latter shortcoming should not be minimized. Lacking in seasonally adjusted data, Mr. Coy examines trends on a year-over-year or 12-month trailing basis. That misses a key aspect of this debate—a decomposition of job trends over the past four months, March to June 2004.

Overall, the main problem with using the household survey for detailed industry analysis is that it was never designed for that purpose. It was mainly intended to get a good sample of unemployment. The industry and occupational detail that can be gleaned from the household survey is largely an after-thought—a statistical by-product of how individuals view their role in the business sector. That stands in sharp contrast with how companies may see it. While nothing is ever perfect in the realm of statistical analysis, my strong recommendation in attempting to measure job quality is to stay with the establishment survey.

For those reasons, I stand by my own detailed analysis based on the far more reliable survey of business establishments. By industry, restaurants, temporary hiring agencies, and building services were the leading sources of hiring over the past four months. Accounting for only 9.7% of total nonfarm payrolls, these three low-quality segments of the US work force contributed fully 25% to the cumulative growth in overall hiring from March to June 2004. Disproprtionaely large hiring contributions also occurred in other industries at the low end of the job hierarchy—namely, clothing stores, couriers, hotels, grocery stores, trucking, hospitals, social work, business support, and personal and laundry services. All in all, lower-end industries, which employ 22% of the work force, have accounted for 44% of new hiring—or twice their fair share—over the past four months.

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics does an excellent job in providing a rich body of data that can be used to analyze trends in America’s labor market. But like all statistics, the data must be used with care. In contrast to the headline in the Business Week article on jobs creation, the BLS has not put any spin on newly revealed employemt detail by recommending one conclusion over another. That task, according to Mr. Coy’s reporting, apparently has fallen to the White House’s Office of Management and Budget. Now why would they be interested in painting a rosy picture of one of America’s toughest problems?



Sincerely,

Stephen S. Roach

Chief Economist

Morgan Stanley
===================================================
morganstanley.com
There is no doubt who is right on this issue.
Crap jobs have led this "recovery"
People are taking them because they have to.
There is nothing else there.
Mish