REMINDER: All investment, economics, and finance related material now appears at the new IaconoResearch.com. For the time being at least, this has become a personal blog covering a variety of mostly unrelated topics.

U.S. Investors Do Not ♥ U.S. Stocks

Here’s another chart using data collected by the Investment Company Institute following yesterday’s look at the surge in bond buying and the net outflows from stock funds.

Though the $100+ billion in cumulative inflows for foreign stock funds is still dwarfed by the nearly $700 billion that went into bond funds over the last three years, it’s quite a bit better than the net outflows of almost $300 billion for domestic stocks.

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Stocks Do Not ♥ September

The stock market seems to like what it sees in September. So far…

The cruelest month of them all for equities is barely underway but, given the economic backdrop here in 2010, the odds of seeing a ‘+’ sign in front of the month-end result seems quite unlikely, though the ‘-’ sign in front of the August number might increase those chances just a bit. Mark Hulbert at MarketWatch files this report on some of the statistics behind September’s well deserved reputation for being a miserable month for stocks.

I have good news and bad news when it comes to slicing and dicing the historical data as it pertains to September.

The good news is that it is possible, by carefully reading the statistical tea leaves, to get advance insight into whether any given month is likely to do better or worse than average.

The bad news: Those tea leaves provide no such hope that this September will be able to beat its historical reputation as being awful for stocks.

Let me begin by reviewing the dreadful details of September’s record. Since 1896, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average was created, the Dow has lost an average of 1.15% in September. The average gain for all other months is 0.71%. That spread of 1.86 percentage points is statistically significant at the 95% confidence level that statisticians often use to determine if a pattern is most likely genuine.

So much for the theory that a bad August could see a bounce in September. Over more than a century of trading, the data shows that stocks lose an average of 2.7 percent in September when they declined in August and entered the new month with a year-to-date loss.

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Surprise Increase in ISM Manufacturing Index

Apparently, those production managers who responded to survey questions from the Institute for Supply Management last month didn’t get the memo about a weakening U.S. economy and the bevy of recent regional reports portending a sharp slowdown in the year-long manufacturing expansion. The ISM reported that their manufacturing index rose from 55.5 in July to 56.3 in August and the stock market is downright giddy.

The bad news, however, is that all the gains came in lagging indicators – production, employment, and inventories – whereas, leading indicators still point to slowing growth, the new orders component falling from 53.5 to 53.1, the lowest reading since May of 2009.

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The Worst May Not Yet Be Over

Those of you looking for some good bedtime reading might be interested in perusing the papers that were presented at the Federal Reserve’s Economic Symposium at Jackson Hole last weekend as summarized in this item over at FT Alphaville. Much to the dismay of economists around the world, the papers that are presented at the conference are not released to the general public until a few days after the conference is over, so the legions of dismal scientists who were not invited to the Fed confab are now having to play catch up.

While the last paper on the list, Eric Leeper’s Monetary Science, Fiscal Alchemy, makes a good argument for hubris being alive and well in Fed circles as one aspiring maker of monetary policy looks down his nose at those responsible for making fiscal policy (e.g., “monetary policy tends to employ systematic analytics, while fiscal policy relies on unsystematic speculation”), the  most important paper is most likely atop the list.

From half of the duo that produced “This Time Is Different” comes After the Fall by Carmen and Vincent Reinhart, a sobering view of how lost decades typically follow extended periods of reckless credit expansion and unchecked leverage. In this Financial Times op-ed, they commented on the goings on in Wyoming and how the worst may not yet be over.

Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve, painted a sober but reassuring picture of US prospects. The basis for sustained recovery is in place, and canny Fed officials are now alive to the dangers of both deflation and inflation. Similarly Jean Claude Trichet, head of the European Central Bank, spoke about how the dust had begun to settle on the crisis. Policymakers and financial markets seem to be looking at what comes next.

Such optimism, however, may be premature. We have analysed data on numerous severe economic dislocations over the past three-quarters of a century; a record of misfortune including 15 severe post-second world war crises, the Great Depression and the 1973-74 oil shock. The result is a bracing warning that the future is likely to bring only hard choices.

They go on to detail what history says about the aftermaths of credit crises, arguing that what we’ve seen over the last decade was anything but “normal” and that anyone thinking we can return to something resembling that “normal” will be disappointed.

ADP Data Bodes Ill for Friday’s Labor Report

A short time ago, ADP reported that U.S. private sector employment fell by 10,000 in August, the first monthly decline since January. Shown below are the changes in employment for goods-producing industries where job losses have accelerated since the spring.

This bolsters the case that Friday’s nonfarm payrolls report from the Labor Department is likely to produce a six figure number with a minus sign in front of it after laid off Census workers and cutbacks in state and local government jobs are included in the mix.

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Wednesday Morning Links

MUST READS
Tax Cuts Weighed to Spur Economy – WSJ
Bernanke Out Of Bullets But Not Bombs – Pento, Forbes
Home owners face four years of negative equity – Telegraph
Federal spending rises a record 16% in 2009 – Washington Post
Daily foreign-exchange turnover hits $4 trillion – MarketWatch
REO held by FDIC-insured banks increases 45% in Q2 – REO Insider
California Lawmakers Reject Budgets as Impasse Persists – Bloomberg
Schwarzenegger to top California officials: Stop hiring – SacBee
The Backward Slide Into Recession – Whitney, Counterpunch
A Termite-Riddled House: Treasury Bonds – Gonzalo Lira
The Jackson Hole papers (finally) – FT Alphaville

MARKETS/INVESTING
Oil creeps above $72 after big fall on weak demand – AP
Gold Testing All-Time High, Again – ForexYard Blog
In September, Will S&P 1040 Hold As Market ‘Support’? – CNBC
Little hope that stocks will beat September’s bad reputation – MarketWatch
DoubleLine’s Gundlach Cuts Treasuries as Yields Begin `Bottoming Process’ – Bloomberg
Silver and gold showing upside promise and still the best safe havens – Mineweb
Equities: The shift from active to passive – Salmon, Reuters
Following the Real Money – Pragmatic Capitalist
Japan goes for gold – Commodity Online

ECONOMY/WORLD/HOUSING/BANKING
New Job Means Lower Wages for Many – NY Times
Back-to-School Shopping Bust Heralds Holiday Woes – WSJ
Australian economy grows more than expected in Q2 – MarketWatch
China manufacturing picks up, India going strong – Reuters
Bank regulator to curb speculative property investment – China Daily
Home prices rose in June, but gains not expected to last – USA Today
Home Price Reports Don’t Show Declines (Yet) – WSJ
Policy tools to lower interest rates further – EconBrowser
Fed officials discussed further stimulus steps – AP
A helicopter drop for the Treasury – voxeu

 
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