“Markets make opinions,” says the old Wall Street adage. Perhaps what this means is that when stocks are going up, many consider the economy to be going great. Conversely, when stocks tank it must be because the economic sky is falling.
For both scenarios the opinions range far and wide. A rising NASDAQ may compel a tech aficionado to proclaim we’re on the cusp of a new digital revolution. Falling manufacturing stocks may compel a protectionist to proclaim it is NAFTA’s fault.
So if markets make opinions, do opinions make markets?
Over the last decade or so, Fed dithering has midwifed a new opinion based form of market forecasting. From what we can tell, it involves taking economic data reports, interpreting how this will impact Fed policy, and then projecting out how this will influence the stock market. If we’ve pieced it all together correctly, the relationship between economic reports and markets goes something like this:
Good news is bad news. So, too, bad news is good news. Indeed, this is always true, except, of course, the unexpected occasion when good news is really good news or bad news is really bad news.
These relationships are always obvious, some of the time. And as might be expected, there are many exceptions to the rule. That’s why one should not use their brain; but rather, use their gut. That way, even when you’re wrong, you’re always right.
How to Invest Accordingly
For example, one government department reports the economy stinks. Stocks go up. Why?
Bad news is good news, of course. The popular wisdom says that slack in the economy will compel the Fed to hold rates lower for longer. Stocks and other assets should balloon out even further, goes the thinking.
Do you follow the logic? Should you front run your investments accordingly?
This week, for instance, the Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index was reported to have increased 4.4 points to 101.1 in August. Consumers haven’t been this confident in the current business and labor market in nearly a year. Additionally, the Commerce Department reported this week that consumer spending rose for the fourth straight month in July.
Consumers, if you recall, account for 70 percent of the GDP. Increases in consumer spending should, conceivably, translate into higher GDP. Perhaps this means the Fed will raise rates when they meet later in September.
According to the new logic that means you should sell stocks, right? For if the Fed raises rates, there will be less liquidity pushing up stocks. Therefore, you should sell, right?
Shrewd Financial Analysis in the Year 2016
Naturally, the answer is never as clear cut as it seems at first glance. What we mean is things don’t always work out the way one thinks they should. For instance, rising consumer spending, it would seem, should result in rising price inflation. The demand pull of more money chasing fewer goods should pull up prices.
Yet, according to the economic reports, this isn’t happening. Specifically, the personal-consumption expenditure price index, the Fed’s preferred inflation measure, was flat in July. What’s more, over the last year, the index was up only 0.8 percent.
Inflation of just 0.8 percent doesn’t come close to the Fed’s 2 percent target. Maybe this will mean the Fed will hold off on raising rates until December. In this case, it’s risk on, and you should buy.
Alas, here we have two apparently contradictory economic reports. One says consumers are spending money. The other says there’s no price inflation. So which report it right? Which is wrong?
Obviously, this line of thinking is rooted in hogwash. Yet, somehow, it passes for shrewd financial analysis by the talking heads on CNBC in the year 2016.
We merely bring it up to highlight the fact that 99 percent of popular market analysis – which makes inferences from economic data reports, and draws conclusions of how this will impact Fed policy, and, hence, the stock market – is merely an exercise in the esoteric. The other half ain’t much better either.
Sincerely,
MN Gordon
for Economic Prism
Return from Shrewd Financial Analysis in the Year 2016 to Economic Prism
Pingback: Shrewd Financial Analysis in the Year 2016 - Monetary Watch