Drum roll please… NO
Today the media (and others) have proclaimed that the bear market may have
ended. The reasoning behind this claim is today’s revised GDP data for Q2 which
went from 1.9% up to 3.3%.
The Q2 GDP was revised up on two main components. The first was the
Governments claim that final sales (GDP less inventories) increased at a 4.8%
rate, and the second being exports rose significantly from the last quarter.
The GDP is a backward looking indicator, not forward. Or if you wish to think
of it in technical analysis terms it is a trailing indicator, not leading. In
order to put some sense of forward looking guidance for the GDP we only have to
look at what caused the GDP to be revised in the first place, as well as other
economic conditions that exist now.
What impacted the Q2 GDP:
The Government stimulus checks started to hit the mailboxes in the second
quarter. Any increase in consumer spending can be attributed directly to the
Government handout.
Exports rose on the very weak US dollar. American goods were ‘on sale’ for
the rest of the world.
What do we know about future GDP numbers:
The stimulus checks was a one time event. That money has already been
exhausted and flushed through the economy.
Global economies have begun to deteriorate noticeably in the past few months.
And in doing so other currencies have begun to fall. Now the advantage of the
cheap US dollar has been taken away as the difference between the dollar and
other currencies is no longer so one sided anymore. Weaker foreign economies
equates to lower US exports going forward.
Corporate profits continue to decline. The raw data for the Q2 GDP says that
corporate profits declined and we know that since the quarter ended corporate
profits have continued to decline further.
Retail spending continues to slow. Regardless of what the Government
statistics show, we continue to see on average lower sales figures from the US
retailers. Additionally, the outlook for future sales continues to guide
lower.
US Mortgage rates are moving upwards. In spite of the Federal Reserve’s
aggressive rate cutting, the mortgage rates in the United States have continued
to move in an upward path and the US housing market continues to worsen. Even
FOMC member Mr. Lockhart expects housing prices will decline another 15% from
their current levels.
Unemployment in the United States continues to increase. As corporate profits
have been shrinking so to have the number of employees at many firms. In the
recently released June figures from US courts, corporate and personal bankruptcy
filings have risen 29% from the same period one year ago. And it is anticipated
to increase further.
Availability of credit has continued to shrink.