Podesta Files Part 17: Wikileaks Releases Another 3,400 Emails, Bringing Total To Over 30,000

With just 2 weeks to go until the election, today Wikileaks continued its ongoing Podesta files release when it unveiled another 3,432 emails in the latest Part 17 of its release, bringing the total emails released so far to 30,235 total emails, over 60% of the total set for publication ahead of the elections.

Yesterday’s release provided data on oversampling of minorities in internal polls, a memo from George Soros exposing Obama’s secret TPP negotiations, ongoing discussions of Bill Clinton’s sex scandals, and much more.

More as we see it.

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Key Events In The Coming Week

Looking at the week ahead, the US election enters the home stretch and politics will likely dominate the headlines, especially the closer races in Congress. Despite data being overshadowed by politics, there are some key US releases coming up, with the first estimate of Q3 GDP, the employment cost index and durable goods the main focus.

Some of the key global events in the coming week:

  • In the US, we have a busy calendar, with a first look at Q3 GDP, durable goods, trade balance, housing data, the employment cost index and final Michigan sentiment survey. We also hear from several Fed speakers at the start of the week before the blackout period begins on Tuesday.
  • In the Eurozone, we get PMIs and money supply as well as German inflation numbers and IFO. We also hear from several ECB members throughout the week, including President Draghi.
  • In the UK we get the advance release of Q3 GDP, and the S&P rating decision at the end of the week. BoE Governor Carney will also be questioned by the House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee on the economic consequences of the vote to leave the EU and the BoE’s response
  • In Australia, the focus in the week ahead will be the inflation release, with increased weight put on the outcome given the recent weak run of employment data. A quiet calendar for New Zealand, with trade balance the only release of note.
  • In Japan, the main focus will be the inflation print, though we also see employment data.

Here is the daily breakdown:

It’s a busy start to the week today with the release of the flash October PMI’s this morning in Europe including the services, manufacturing and composite prints. In the UK we’ll also get the October CBI selling prices data. Over in the US this afternoon we’ll also get the flash manufacturing PMI, along with the Chicago Fed national activity index.

Kicking off Tuesday will be France where the latest confidence indicators will be released. Over in Germany we’ll also get the October IFO index readings. Across the pond in the US on Tuesday the highlight is the October consumer confidence reading, while the Richmond Fed manufacturing survey, IBD/TIPP economic optimism print, FHFA house prince index and S&P/Case-Shiller house price index will also be released.

Wednesday starts in Asia where we’ll get the latest consumer sentiment reading in China. In Europe consumer confidence readings are expected in Germany and France while it’s a busy session scheduled in the US on Wednesday with the remaining flash PMI’s (services and composite), wholesale inventories, advance goods trade balance and new home sales. We’re in Asia again on Thursday with the latest industrial profits data in China. In Europe we’ll get M3 money supply data for the Euro area, along with the advance Q3 GDP report for the UK.

The important data in the US on Thursday is the September durable and capital goods orders data. Also due out will be initial jobless claims, pending home sales and the Kansas City Fed manufacturing survey.

We end the week on Friday in Japan with the September CPI report and also the latest household spending and jobless rate data. During the European session we’ll get CPI reports for both France and Germany, along with the advanced Q3 GDP reading for the former. Euro area confidence indicators will also be released. In the US it’ll be all about the advance Q3 GDP report, while the final University of Michigan consumer sentiment reading for October is also due.

A snapshot of just the US events alongside expectations courtesy of BofA:

And the detailed breakdown of US events, courtesy of Goldman:

Monday, October 24

  • 09:00 AM New York Fed President Dudley (FOMC voter) speaks: New York Fed President William Dudley will deliver opening remarks at the second annual conference on the Evolving Structure of the U.S. Treasury Market at the New York Fed. Last week, President Dudley said he does not see an “urgency to tighten monetary policy aggressively”.
  • 09:05 AM St. Louis Fed President Bullard (FOMC voter) speaks: St. Louis Fed President James Bullard will give a speech on the U.S. economy and monetary policy at the Association for University Business and Economic Research’s fall research conference in Fayetteville, Arkansas.
  • 09:45 AM Markit Flash US Manufacturing PMI, October preliminary (consensus 51.5, last 51.5): Details from the Philly Fed and Empire State surveys showed mixed signals in October, following mostly stronger reports from regional manufacturing surveys in September. We find that the flash Markit PMI does contain some predictive power for the ISM.
  • 01:30 PM Chicago Fed President Evans (FOMC non-voter) speaks: Chicago Fed President Charles Evans will hold a discussion on current economic conditions and monetary policy at an event held by the Civic Affairs Society of the University Club of Chicago. Q&A is expected.
  • 02:00 PM Fed Governor Powell (FOMC voter) speaks: Fed Governor Jerome Powell will give a moderate a discussion on “The Future of Treasury Market Settlement” at the New York Fed conference on the Evolving Structure of the U.S. Treasury Market. Q&A is expected.


Tuesday, October 25

  • 09:00 AM FHFA house price index, August (consensus +0.4%, last +0.5%): Consensus expects a 0.4% gain in the FHFA house price index in August, which has risen 5.8% over the past year. FHFA home prices increased 0.5% in July, a quicker pace than expected. The FHFA house price index has a wider geographic coverage than the S&P/Case-Shiller housing price index, but is based only on properties financed with conforming mortgages.
  • 09:00 AM S&P/Case-Shiller home price index, August (consensus +0.1%, last flat): The Case-Shiller home price index appears to have been influenced by seasonal adjustment challenges recently. Consensus expects a 0.1% increase after the index was little changed in July. Over the past year, the 20-city index has increased by 5.0%.
  • 10:00 AM Conference Board consumer confidence, October (GS 100.8, consensus 101.0, last 104.1): We expect consumer confidence to edge down in October after the index rose to a post-crisis high in September. The University of Michigan’s preliminary estimate of consumer sentiment for October declined unexpectedly, but we expect the final estimate to move higher in the report this week.
  • 10:00 AM Richmond Fed manufacturing index, October (consensus -4, last -8)
  • 01:20 PM Atlanta Fed President Lockhart (FOMC non-voter) speaks: Atlanta Fed President Lockhart will deliver a speech on the topic of “Lending and Investing in Community Development” at a conference held by the Opportunity Finance Network in Atlanta, Georgia.

Wednesday, October 26

  • 08:30 AM Advanced goods trade balance, September (GS -$60.2bn, consensus -$60.8bn, last -$59.2bn): U.S. Census Bureau Report on Advance Economic Indicators;  Last month, the Census Bureau’s Advance Economic Indicators report showed a smaller than anticipated trade deficit, offset by softer inventory accumulation. We expect the goods trade deficit to widen slightly in September.
  • 08:30 AM Wholesale inventories, September preliminary (consensus +0.1%, last -0.2%)
  • 09:45 AM Markit Flash US Services PMI, September preliminary (consensus 52.3, last 52.3)
  • 10:00 AM New home sales, September (GS -2.5%, consensus -1.5%, last -7.6%): We expect new home sales to decline by 2.5% in September, after a 7.6% decline in August that only partially reversed outsized gains in July. New home sales are highly volatile on a month-to-month basis. Single-family housing starts rose, while multi-family housing starts weakened substantially in the September report. Building permits rose by more than expected, driven largely by an increase in the multi-family category.

Thursday, October 27

  • 08:30 AM Durable goods orders, September (GS flat, consensus +0.1%, last +0.1%): Durable goods orders ex-transportation, September (GS +0.1%, consensus +0.2%, last -0.2%); Core capital goods orders, September (GS -0.3%, consensus -0.1%, last +0.9%); Core capital goods shipments, September (GS +0.1, consensus +0.4%, last -0.1%): We expect durable goods orders to be flat and core capital goods orders to increase 0.1% in September, following a mixed report in August. September industrial production data came in a bit below consensus expectations, while regional manufacturing surveys improved across the board. We also expect core capital goods shipments to increase 0.1%. Over the last year, core capital goods orders declined by 2.8%, while core capital goods shipments declined by 5.9%.
  • 08:30 AM Initial jobless claims, week ended October 22 (GS 260k, consensus 255k, last 260k): Continuing jobless claims, week ended October 15 (last 2,057k); We expect initial jobless claims to remain at 260k. Last week, claims increased from very low levels, likely partially reflecting the effects of Hurricane Matthew and a spike in claims in Kentucky.
  • 10:00 AM Pending home sales, September (consensus +1.1, last -2.4%): Consensus expects pending home sales to move up in September after a 2.4% decline in August. We have found pending home sales—based on contract signings rather than closings—to be a decent leading indicator of existing home sales with a one- to two-month lag.
  • 11:00 AM Kansas City Fed manufacturing index, October (consensus +3, last +6)

Friday, October 28

  • 08:30 AM Employment cost index, Q3 (GS +0.6%, consensus +0.6%, last +0.6%): We expect the ECI to hold steady at 0.6% in Q3, or up 2.6% (from 2.5% in Q2) on a year-over-year basis. Our Q3 wage tracker—a weighted average of the ECI, average hourly earnings, nonfarm compensation per hour, and the Atlanta Fed’s wage growth tracker—stands at 2.6%.
  • 08:30 AM GDP (advance), Q3 (GS +2.7%, consensus +2.6%, last +1.4%): Personal consumption, Q3 (GS +2.4%, consensus +2.6%, last +4.3%): We expect that Q3 GDP rose at a pace of 2.7% (quarter-over-quarter annualized), up from our preliminary tracking estimate of 2.5%. We expect a moderate boost from inventories after a 1.2pp drag last quarter. Consumer spending growth is likely to soften modestly following a very strong Q2. According to our estimates, PCE is tracking +2.4% (qoq ar) in Q3.
  • 10:00 AM University of Michigan consumer sentiment (final), October (GS 88.3, consensus 88.2, last 87.9): We expect the University of Michigan consumer sentiment gauge to climb to 88.3 in the final October report, after the index unexpectedly declined to 87.9 in the preliminary report.

Source: BofA, DB, GS

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‘Impossible’ & ‘Inevitable’ – The Only 2 Solutions As The Status Quo Crumbles

Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

We are about to start a painful learning process about what is "impossible" and what is inevitable.

Two charts illustrate Why Our Status Quo Failed and Is Beyond Reform: this chart of the S-Curve of financialization, leverage, debt, central planning, regulatory capture and globalization–that is, the engines of modern "growth"–depicts the inevitable stagnation and decline of these dynamics as overcapacity, debt saturation and diminishing returns take hold.

This chart illustrates the status quo's insistence on doing more of what has failed spectacularly: since all this worked in the boost phase, the central planning Cargo Cult's "leadership" is convinced it will all work magically again, if only we do more of it.

Alas, this is magical thinking. One might as well paint radio dials on rocks and expect the rock to magically turn into a functioning radio.

The chart of the Seneca Cliff illustrates how the S-curve of "growth" can continue expanding even as the foundation weakens. As the foundations of real growth weaken– productivity, collateral, social mobility, etc.–the system become increasingly fragile and brittle. But this fragility is masked by the appearance of stability until a crisis cracks it wide open.

Normalcy crumbles into instability, and people and systems accustomed to stable supply chains and political stability struggle to maintain their grip on income streams and resources as abundance slips into scarcity and dependence on central planning becomes a liability of learned helplessness.

The S-curve:

Seneca Cliff:

There are two sets of solutions as stability and financialized "growth" slide into instability and DeGrowth.

1. Acquire skills that will be increasingly scarce and a network of collaborators, customers and suppliers who value/make use of these skills.

2. Create a new mode of production that doesn't rely on central banks, states and global finance to function: in effect, a decentralized, localized networked system that exists in parallel with the centralized hierarchies of the current mode of production which is centralized, industrialized, globalized, financialized, neofeudal, neoliberal, neocolonial, and dependent on ever-expanding leverage, debt, central planning, regulatory capture and fossil fuel consumption.

I describe the first set of solutions in my book Get a Job, Build a Real Career and Defy a Bewildering Economy.

The second set of solutions are the subject of my book A Radically Beneficial World: Automation, Technology & Creating Jobs for All.

Ultimately, these two sets of solutions are two facets of the only solution: a more sustainable, just, efficient, decentralized, transparent and opportunity-for-all mode of production.

Naysayers love to claim that these solutions can't possibly work for the usual array of reasons, which boil down to 1) my identity is dependent on poking holes in others' solutions or 2) my status and livelihood are dependent on the status quo continuing exactly as it is now or 3) an unexamined faith that the current mode of production is the only possible mode of production.

Note to naysayers: the "solution" that can't possibly work is the continuation of the status quo. There are only two pathways as the status quo arrangement destabilizes, decays and decoheres: 1) a doomed nostalgia for "solutions" that are no longer attainable (for example, Cargo Cults of "endless growth") or 2) an alternative set of solutions that are sustainable because they are localized, networked, democratized, opt-in and self-funded.

We are about to start a painful learning process about what is "impossible" and what is inevitable. Once it becomes self-evident that the current mode of production is not sustainable, we'll have no choice but to try more sustainable modes of production that are not just more efficient but that offer greater stability, opportunity and social mobility.

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‘Impossible’ & ‘Inevitable’ – The Only 2 Solutions As The Status Quo Crumbles

Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

We are about to start a painful learning process about what is "impossible" and what is inevitable.

Two charts illustrate Why Our Status Quo Failed and Is Beyond Reform: this chart of the S-Curve of financialization, leverage, debt, central planning, regulatory capture and globalization–that is, the engines of modern "growth"–depicts the inevitable stagnation and decline of these dynamics as overcapacity, debt saturation and diminishing returns take hold.

This chart illustrates the status quo's insistence on doing more of what has failed spectacularly: since all this worked in the boost phase, the central planning Cargo Cult's "leadership" is convinced it will all work magically again, if only we do more of it.

Alas, this is magical thinking. One might as well paint radio dials on rocks and expect the rock to magically turn into a functioning radio.

The chart of the Seneca Cliff illustrates how the S-curve of "growth" can continue expanding even as the foundation weakens. As the foundations of real growth weaken– productivity, collateral, social mobility, etc.–the system become increasingly fragile and brittle. But this fragility is masked by the appearance of stability until a crisis cracks it wide open.

Normalcy crumbles into instability, and people and systems accustomed to stable supply chains and political stability struggle to maintain their grip on income streams and resources as abundance slips into scarcity and dependence on central planning becomes a liability of learned helplessness.

The S-curve:

Seneca Cliff:

There are two sets of solutions as stability and financialized "growth" slide into instability and DeGrowth.

1. Acquire skills that will be increasingly scarce and a network of collaborators, customers and suppliers who value/make use of these skills.

2. Create a new mode of production that doesn't rely on central banks, states and global finance to function: in effect, a decentralized, localized networked system that exists in parallel with the centralized hierarchies of the current mode of production which is centralized, industrialized, globalized, financialized, neofeudal, neoliberal, neocolonial, and dependent on ever-expanding leverage, debt, central planning, regulatory capture and fossil fuel consumption.

I describe the first set of solutions in my book Get a Job, Build a Real Career and Defy a Bewildering Economy.

The second set of solutions are the subject of my book A Radically Beneficial World: Automation, Technology & Creating Jobs for All.

Ultimately, these two sets of solutions are two facets of the only solution: a more sustainable, just, efficient, decentralized, transparent and opportunity-for-all mode of production.

Naysayers love to claim that these solutions can't possibly work for the usual array of reasons, which boil down to 1) my identity is dependent on poking holes in others' solutions or 2) my status and livelihood are dependent on the status quo continuing exactly as it is now or 3) an unexamined faith that the current mode of production is the only possible mode of production.

Note to naysayers: the "solution" that can't possibly work is the continuation of the status quo. There are only two pathways as the status quo arrangement destabilizes, decays and decoheres: 1) a doomed nostalgia for "solutions" that are no longer attainable (for example, Cargo Cults of "endless growth") or 2) an alternative set of solutions that are sustainable because they are localized, networked, democratized, opt-in and self-funded.

We are about to start a painful learning process about what is "impossible" and what is inevitable. Once it becomes self-evident that the current mode of production is not sustainable, we'll have no choice but to try more sustainable modes of production that are not just more efficient but that offer greater stability, opportunity and social mobility.

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China’s HNA Group Acquires 25% Stake In Hilton For $6.5 Billion

Last night when we discussed the latest acquisition by the Chinese financial conglomerate China Oceanwide of Genworth we said that “Should the deal close, it will likely unleash a surge of more Chinese acquisitions of questionable US companies, leading to even more short squeezes on concerns that the “Chinese are coming.” We didn’t have long to wait: moments ago another Chinese conglomerate, HNA Group, announced it had acquired a 25% equity stake in Hilton Worldwide Holdings from Blackstone for $6.5 billion, or $26.25 in cash.

The deal represents a ~15% premium to HLT’s last close $22.91 and reduces Blackstone’s interest in Hilton to ~21%. Blackstone will keep 2 seats on HLT board, including Jon Gray who will remain chairman. According to Bloomberg, HNA will enter into a stockholders pact with HLT, and into similar agreements with Park Hotels & Resorts and Hilton Grand Vacations, effective upon closing. The deal allows HNA to appoint 2 directors (1 HNA member, 1 independent member) to HLT’s board, bringing total to 10 members.

Furthemore, HNA agrees to some restrictions on selling stake for 2 yrs, and will vote shares in excess of 15% proportionally with holders.

This is the latest major transaction by HNA in the US: the Chinese conglomerate owns Hainan Airlines, China’s fourth-largest airline. This year, in a flurry of dealmaking, the company unveiled transactions to buy Ingram Micro, a US information technology group, Carlson Hotels, the US owner of the Radisson brand, and a 13% stake in Virgin Australia, the Australian airline. Another HNA deal this year to buy Gategroup hit a snag on Monday after the conglomerate said in a preliminary statement that investors holding 61 per cent of the Swiss aviation catering company’s stock had  tendered their shares. HNA, which had said its offer was conditional on a 67 per cent acceptance level, is due to issue a final statement on Thursday.

As the FT reported previously,  HNA’s deals have helped boost Chinese M&A to a record $121.1bn in the first six months of 2016 — a record for a single year.

“With such a good opportunity now in M&A if we’re provided the chance of global good quality assets that benefit our core business, of course we have to do M&A,” says Mr Chen. “Otherwise it’s a lost opportunity.”

Absent Congressional intervention, expect China’s money-laundering purchases of flagship US companies to accelerate in the coming months.

 

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Is China About to Go “Scorched Earth” on the US Dollar?

China's currency, the Chinese Yuan, remains pegged to the US Dollar. So when the US Dollar strengthens, the Chinese Yuan strengthens to.

For an economy as rife with garbage debt as China (shadow banking debt is over 200% of GDP), this is a DISASTER.

With that in mind, consider that the US Dollar is now at 99.

Whenever the US Dollar reaches these heights, China fires a warning shot at the Federal Reserve by aggressively devaluing the Yuan.

And this in turn causes a stock market MELTDOWN.

Buckle up, because as I write this Monday morning, China just began to aggressively devalue the Yuan AGAIN.

Over 99% of investors have missed this. They continue to focus on what stocks do in the day to day. But a big move is about to hit the markets.

Gold has picked up that something MAJOR is afoot. It's exploding higher against EVERY major currency.

Below is Gold’s chart prices in $USD, the Japanese Yen, and the Euro. Gold has BROKEN OUT big time in $USD and Euros. It’s about to do the same in Yen.

Gold has figured it out. SOMETHING MASSIVE IS COMING. And it's coming from Every. Major. Central. Bank.

Over 99% of investors have missed this. They continue to focus on stocks. They're missing a once in 30 years event that has begun in the metals markets.

HUGE money will be made from this trend going forward.

On that note, we just published a Special Investment Report concerning a secret back-door play on Gold that gives you access to 25 million ounces of Gold that the market is currently valuing at just $273 per ounce.

The report is titled The Gold Mountain: How to Buy Gold at $273 Per Ounce

We are giving away just 100 copies for FREE to the public.

To pick up yours, swing by:

http://ift.tt/1TII1fq

Best Regards

Graham Summers

Chief Market Strategist

Phoenix Capital Research

 

 

 

 

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This Is The Chinese Firm Whose Cameras Took Down The Internet On Friday

Last Friday many American’s woke up to extremely slow or nonexistent internet services after a cyber attack “of unknown origin” on DNS service provider DYN took down much of the internet in the North East.  As the day wore on, the attack spread across the country taking out numerous large websites including Twitter, Spotify, Reddit, eBay and the New York Times (we wrote about it here:  “DNS Cyber Attack Returns As Northeast Internet Traffic Grinds To A Crawl For Second Time“).

Some immediately accused Putin of taking down the US internet in retaliation for accusations of cyber attacks on the Democratic party and Hillary Clinton, although there was no official statement from the US.

Now, while the origin of the attack is still unknown (even though we’re sure that Hillary’s “17 intelligence agencies” have their suspicions), we’re getting a better idea of how the attack was executed.  According to Bloomberg, Internet-connected CCTV cameras made by a Chinese firm, Hangzhou Xiongmai Technology Co., were infected with malware that allowed hackers to takeover “tens of millions” of devices to launch the distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks.

A Chinese security camera maker said its products were used to launch a cyber-attack that severed internet access for millions of users, highlighting the threat posed by the global proliferation of connected devices.

 

The attackers hijacked CCTV cameras made by Hangzhou Xiongmai Technology Co. using malware known as Mirai, the company said in an e-mailed statement. While Xiongmai didn’t say how many of its products had been infiltrated, all cameras made before September 2015 were potentially vulnerable.

 

The attack, which took down sites including Twitter, Spotify and CNN for long stretches, underscored how hackers can marshal an increasing number of online gadgets, collectively known as the Internet of Things, to disrupt the internet on an unprecedented scale.

 

“Mirai is a huge disaster for the Internet of Things. XM have to admit that our products also suffered from hacker’s break-in and illegal use,” Xiongmai said in its e-mail.

 

Security professionals have anticipated an increase in attacks from malware that target connected gadgets. In Friday’s instance, hackers launched a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack using tens of millions of malware-infected devices connected to the internet, according to Kyle York, Dyn’s chief strategy officer.

Seems the “internet of things” has it’s downsides.

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Goldman Cuts S&P500 Earnings Forecasts For The Next Three Years

With Q3 earnings season looking unexpectedly strong after the first 2 weeks of reporting, which granted have focused on the otherwise strong banks and tech companies with energy and retail still to come, with some 80% of companies beating expectations and hope returning that this may be the quarter when the 1+ year long earnings recession find ends, moments ago Goldman’s David Kostin poured cold water over the S&P’s earning prospects when earlier this morning the strategist announced that he is “trimming our S&P 500 earnings forecasts” for the next three years.

To wit:

  • We cut our S&P 500 earnings estimates for each of the next several years. Our revised operating EPS forecasts now equal $105 (2016), $116 (2017), and $122 (2018) reflecting annual growth of 5%, 10%, and 5%, respectively. Low interest rates and peaking margins constrain profit growth in Information Technology, Financials, and Telecom and drive the reduction in our index-level EPS forecast.
  • Our earnings model projects 5% sales growth and 8.5% margins for the S&P 500 in 2017 with margins peaking next year and starting to decline in 2018.
  • We maintain our S&P 500 price targets of 2100 for year-end 2016, 2200 at the end of 2017, and 2300 at the end of 2018, implying price changes from the current market level of -3%, +2%, and +6%, respectively.
  • From a valuation perspective our unchanged year-end 2016 target of 2100 represents a forward P/E multiple of 18x our 2017 top-down operating EPS estimate of $116 and 17x our 2017 top-down adjusted EPS estimate of $123, ranking at the 85th percentile relative to the past 40 years.
  • Key issues for investors in 2017: (1) secular stagnation and (2) peaking margins.

Summary of Goldman Sachs US Portfolio Strategy forecasts, 2015-2019E

 

Some more details explaining the reasoning behind Goldman’s trimming of future growth prospects, driven primarily by reduced expected growth, peaking margins and the risk of secular stagnation.

We lower our 2016 and 2017 S&P 500 operating EPS estimates by $5 and $7, respectively. Our reduced 2016 forecast of $105 (from $110) reflects annual growth of 5%. For 2017, we expect operating EPS will rise by 10% to $116 (down from $123). Looking further into the future we expect earnings will rise by 5% to $122 (from $130) in 2018 and by 4% to $127 in 2019 (see Exhibit 1).

 

Lower expected growth in three sectors explain the majority of our forecast reductions. Financials and Information Technology, the two largest S&P 500 sectors based on EPS contribution, have both registered disappointing operating EPS growth in 2016 YTD. We now expect Financials EPS will rise by just 1% in 2016, down from our previous forecast of 9% growth. Low long-term interest rates have crimped Financials earnings and comprise $2 of the aggregate $5 reduction in our overall S&P 500 EPS forecast. We also slashed our Information Technology and Telecom Services 2016 EPS estimates by roughly $2 each. Information Technology EPS will fall by 4% in 2016 as net margins decline by 170 bp. We expect Telecom operating EPS will decline in 2016 as low interest rates increase pension liabilities. Information Technology and Financials are also the major contributors to the reduction in our 2017 S&P 500 EPS forecast.

 

Following the recent recovery in oil prices, we now expect Energy sector losses will subtract only $1 from S&P 500 EPS in 2016, compared with the -$3 contribution that we had previously forecast. A rebound in crude oil prices mean that Energy write-downs, which have plagued S&P 500 EPS for more than a year, should fade in the second half of 2016. Earnings for the Energy sector will be less negative this year than in 2015 (which was the first time in 48 years the sector posted an operating loss). In fact, overall S&P 500 operating EPS growth of 5% in 2016 is almost entirely attributable to Energy. We forecast just 1% EPS growth outside of Energy this year.

 

For 2017, we expect modest EPS growth in most sectors will lift overall S&P 500 operating EPS by 10% to $116. Financials EPS (+6%) should benefit from higher rates at both the short-end and long-end of the yield curve. The futures market currently implies one hike in fed funds during 2017 and an average 10-year Treasury yield of 1.9%. Goldman Sachs economists forecast the 10-year Treasury yield will end 2017 at 2.5%. We expect Information Technology earnings will grow by 8% in 2017, the strongest rate of any sector. Information Technology earnings will benefit from market-leading sales growth of 7% coupled with a slim 10 bp rise in profit margins.

 

For 2018 and 2019 we forecast annual sales growth of 5% and a 10 bp annual decline in net margins will result in S&P 500 operating EPS growth of 5% and 4% to $122 and $127, respectively.

Exhibit 1: Goldman Sachs top-down and consensus bottom-up S&P 500 EPS forecasts, 2016E-2018E

 

Exhibit 2: S&P 500 annual year-over-year EPS growth, 1972-2019E

 

Exhibit 4: Sensitivity of Goldman Sachs 2017E S&P 500 operating EPS to macro variables

 

Looking at next year, Goldman focuses on two key earnings issues for the S&P 500 in 2017, namely the admission that the “above trend” growth thesis preached by Jan Hatzius over and over over the past three years is now over:

 Steady but unspectacular profit growth will be a hallmark of 2017 earnings. While we forecast that S&P 500 operating EPS will rise by a strong 10% next year, outside of the Energy sector, earnings will grow at a modest 6% pace, below the average annual S&P 500 EPS growth rate of 7.5% since 1980. Looking under the surface, we expect two issues will drive the earnings discussion next year: 

 

1. The US economy will remain stuck in a slow secular growth regime

 

Our economists forecast that real GDP growth in the US will persist at a roughly 2% annual pace through 2019. Our earnings model assumes real GDP growth averages 2.1% in 2017 but the estimated trend growth rate has been trimmed to just 1.75%. Increased infrastructure spending represents a source of potential upside to our estimate. However, the benefit from increased government spending is unlikely to kick in until 2018, when new budget deals would go into effect. We estimate that every 100 bp change in 2017 US GDP growth relative to our baseline assumption equates to a $5 change in 2017 S&P 500 EPS, or 5 percentage points (pp) of EPS growth.

 

2. S&P 500 margins will increase slightly next year, but remain well below the peak

 

We expect S&P 500 margins, excluding Financials, Real Estate, and Utilities, will rebound by 53 bp to 8.5% in 2017. A continued recovery in Energy fundamentals will lift sector margins from -0.6% to +3.7% and will push overall S&P 500 margins up in 2017, but margins will remain considerably below the peak of 9.2% in 3Q 2014. Information Technology margins will be in the spotlight after a significant compression in 2016. We forecast that Information Technology margins will fall by nearly 170 bp in 2016 and then rise by 10 bp next year. At the S&P 500 index-level, every 50 bp change in margin impacts EPS by $5 per share. Macro headwinds that will affect margins in different sectors include pricing power, capacity utilization, and labor costs.

Not helping the upside case is Goldman’s expectations that  S&P 500 margins will remain well-below the peak, something which others may be tempted to call “stagnation” especially if inflation were to finally break out.

S&P 500 margins have declined by nearly 150 bp since peaking at 9.2% in 3Q 2014. The precipitous decline in Energy sector margins, largely as a result of asset write-downs, accounts for the majority of the fall in S&P 500 margins. However, declines outside of Energy have weighed on S&P 500 margins during the first half of 2016, particularly in the Information Technology sector. Trailing four-quarter margins for the S&P 500 ex-Energy have declined by 25 bp since December.

 

We forecast S&P 500 operating margins will expand by 10 bp to 8.0% in 2016 before rising to 8.5% in 2017. A rebound in Energy margins will fuel most of the overall margin expansion during the next two years. S&P 500 margins ex-Energy have already peaked. We expect margins outside of the Energy sector will fall by 50 bp to 8.8% in 2016 before rising to 9.0% during 2017. Consensus bottom-up forecasts imply that adjusted margins will decline by 34 bp in 2016, before increasing by 42 bp in 2017.

Exhibit 9: S&P 500 net margin will reach 8.5% in 2017 but fall to 8.4% in 2018

* * *

So what does all this mean for Goldman’s S&P500 price targets? Apparently, not much as Hatzius expected multiples to expand sufficiently to compensate for the dip in earnings:

Despite trimming our S&P 500 EPS projections, we continue to forecast the S&P 500 index will trade at 2100 by year-end 2016. The trajectory of the S&P 500 index will track in-line with adjusted earnings growth, rising to 2200 (+5%) in 2017 and 2300 (+5%) in 2018.

 

Both Goldman Sachs Economics and the futures market expect the Fed will hike rates by 25 bp in December 2016. For 2017, our economists expect 75 bp of rate increases starting in June while the futures market implies 25 bp of hikes next year. Rising interest rates and tighter financial conditions suggest further valuation expansion is unlikely.

 

We expect the forward P/E multiple will remain at roughly 17x adjusted EPS through 2018 (see Exhibit 32). Our forecast for S&P 500 adjusted earnings suggests growth of 5% in both 2017 and 2018 followed by 4% in 2019, representing adjusted EPS levels of $123, $129, and $134, respectively. Our 2016 target of 2100 represents a forward P/E multiple of 18x our 2017 top-down operating EPS estimate of $116 and 17x our 2017 top-down adjusted EPS estimate of $123, ranking at the 85th percentile relative to the past 40 years. Forward P/E will remain steady at 17x adjusted EPS as S&P 500 rises alongside modest EPS growth, increasing from 2100 at the end of 2016 to 2200 (+5%) by the end of 2017 and to 2300 (+5%) by year-end 2018.

Exhibit 31: S&P 500 operating EPS forecasts and index targets, 1996-2018E

Exhibit 32: S&P 500 aggregate and median forward P/E ratio: We expect forward P/E of 17x

via http://ift.tt/2e3leJh Tyler Durden

Frontrunning: October 24

  • The CEO Behind AT&T’s Huge Time Warner Deal (BBG)
  • AT&T-Time Warner deal sparks calls for scrutiny in Washington (Reuters)
  • Wall Street’s $40 Billion AT&T Pledge Offers Fees and Risks (BBG)
  • Bernie Sanders: Obama Administration “Should Kill” The AT&T-Time Warner Deal (Deadline)
  • Oil prices under pressure as Iraq resists joining output cut (Reuters)
  • Europe’s Stocks Rise With Bonds on Earnings, Ratings, Politics (BBG)
  • Battle for Mosul can shape or break Iraq further (Reuters)
  • Suriname Said to Win Better Terms in $550 Million Overseas Sale (BBG)
  • Calais migrants: France begins to clear ‘Jungle’ camp (BBC)
  • Venezuela congress presses for Maduro trial in rowdy session (Reuters)
  • Bankers Prepare for Brexodus From London (BBG)
  • In battleground Florida, tough stance on felons may sap votes for Democrats (Reuters)
  • Clinton, Kaine concerned over AT&T, Time Warner merger (Hill)
  • Major banks mark first-ever international trade using blockchain tech (Reuters)
  • Fake Divorce Is Path to Riches in China’s Hot Real Estate Market (BBG)
  • Rockwell broadens its reach with $6.4 billion purchase of B/E Aerospace (Reuters)
  • Name Now Awash in Controversy, Trump Readies New Brand (BBG)
  • Bundesbank Says High-Frequency Trading Can Enhance Volatility (BBG)
  • Putin’s Long Shadow in U.S. Campaign Fuels New Red Scare (BBG)
  • America, land of opportunity? Not for young people, study says (McClatchy)
  • China’s Dealmakers Are on a $207 Billion Spree (BBG)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

– AT&T Inc’s blockbuster $85.4 billion deal to buy Time Warner Inc promises to reshape the media landscape-if the companies can navigate a series of obstacles, including possible opposition from U.S. antitrust authorities and objections by lawmakers and media and telecom rivals. http://on.wsj.com/2dNs87N

– Thirteen people were killed and 31 injured early Sunday morning when a bus returning to Los Angeles from a casino trip slammed into the back of a semitrailer truck on a highway near Palm Springs, California. http://on.wsj.com/2ewlxzM

– South Korea’s Hanjin Shipping Co Ltd said Monday it plans to close its European operations, in the latest sign that the troubled company is heading toward liquidation. Hanjin, South Korea’s largest shipping company, has applied for court approval to close all 10 of its business operations in Europe, including its regional headquarters in Germany, according to a company spokeswoman. http://on.wsj.com/2elKEoy

– Rockwell Collins Inc agreed to pay $6.4 billion to buy B/E Aerospace Inc in a deal that would unite two of the biggest suppliers to airlines and plane makers. The proposed deal, confirmed by the companies on Sunday, continues the consolidation of the aerospace industry over the past two years as suppliers adjust to pressures from Airbus Group SE and Boeing Co to cut costs. http://on.wsj.com/2euFIhu

 

FT

– Rockwell Collins has agreed a $6.4 billion bid for B/E Aerospace. Rockwell will pay $62 per share, representing a 2 per cent premium to B/E’s closing share price of $50.61 on Friday.

– Paul Tucker, former deputy governor of the Bank of England, has been interviewed by the Serious Fraud Office as part of a criminal investigation of the bank’s actions during the financial crisis.

– From a ban on daytime television to reduced betting machine stakes, gambling companies could face new curbs, as the government prepares to launch a review of the UK bookmaking industry.

– The Melbourne Mercer Global Pension Index’s annual analysis of worldwide pension systems ranked the UK at number 11, which showed that UK has slipped down the global pensions rankings two places lower than a year ago. It warned that the British system now contains “major risks and shortcomings”.

 

Britain

The Times

– Big banks are expected to take another 2 billion pound hit on payment protection insurance this week because of the longer time allowed for new claims. Lenders will make the provisions with quarterly results that will be scrutinised for the impact of Brexit on the economy, while the weakening pound and heightened market activity will also have an affect on results. http://bit.ly/2e1Pl3J

– Deutsche Bank is set to declare a bumper loss for the third quarter with tougher capital requirements for banks deemed to be of global importance to the world’s financial system threatening to add to its woes. It is expected to announce a net loss of 610 million euros ($663.56 million)for the quarter, according to analysts, an average forecast loss for the year of 1.4 billion euros. http://bit.ly/2e1OQXc

The Guardian

– A consortium made up of private-equity firms and the Church of England has received at least 180 million pounds ($219.94 million)from Royal Bank of Scotland for backing the bailed-out bank’s aborted attempt to float off 300 branches on the stock market. The bank has already admitted that the attempt to carve out the 300 branches under the Williams & Glyn <IPO-WILL.L> brand has cost 1.5 billion pounds. http://bit.ly/2e1PQea

– Office for National Statistics is expected to say growth more than halved from 0.7 percent in the second quarter to 0.3 percent between July and September. This would be the slowest rate of growth since the third quarter of 2015, but would rule out the prospect of a technical recession. http://bit.ly/2e1OlfM

The Telegraph

– Microsoft is to increase its prices by as much as 22 percent in the UK because of sterling’s recent decline, a rise that is likely to affect thousands of businesses and could cost the Governments tens of millions of pounds. http://bit.ly/2e1RtID

Sky News

– French insurance giant Axa is in advanced discussions to sell Bluefin, one of the UK’s biggest insurance broking networks, to Marsh, the US-headquartered giant. http://bit.ly/2e1Pnsw

– Britain’s biggest banks are preparing to move out of the UK amid growing fears over the ramifications of leaving the European Union. The head of the British Bankers’ Association, Anthony Browne, said “many smaller banks” are planning to move their operations overseas before Christmas. http://bit.ly/2e1NJH3

The Independent

– British American Tobacco has offered to buy the shares of Reynolds American that it doesn’t already own for $47 billion in a bid to create the world’s biggest tobacco company. http://ind.pn/2e1OFeP

 

via http://ift.tt/2eg5V1x Tyler Durden

Fed Risks Lehman Crisis As US Recession Storm Gathers

The Telegraph’s Ambrose Evans Pritchard reports that “the risk of a US recession next year is rising fast” and that “the Federal Reserve has no margin for error”.

AEP is quite well connected and very well informed on such matters and hence the need to consider what he is saying and more importantly prepare:

“Liquidity is suddenly drying up. Early warning indicators from US ‘flow of funds’ data point to an incipent squeeze, the long-feared capitulation after five successive quarters of declining corporate profits.

Yet the Fed is methodically draining money through ‘reverse repos’ regardless. It has set the course for a rise in interest rates in December and seems to be on automatic pilot.”

“We are seeing a serious deterioration on a monthly basis,” said Michael Howell from CrossBorder Capital, specialists in global liquidity. The signals lead the economic cycle by six to nine months.

“We think the US is heading for recession by the Spring of 2017. It is absolutely bonkers for the Fed to even think about raising rates right now,” he said.

The article can be read in the Telegraph here

 

Gold and Silver Bullion – News and Commentary

Gold steady as markets await Fed rate hike clues (Reuters)

Mobius Says Gold to Gain in 2017 as Fed Goes Slow on Rate Hikes (Bloomberg)

Gold trades in narrow range in Asia with India domestic demand eyed (Investing)

Sixth tranche sovereign gold bond issue opens (EconomicTimes)

Palladium Slumps to Lowest in Three Months Amid Demand Concerns (Bloomberg)

It’s time to invest in gold: Haywood (Mining)

Gold offtake at Comex explodes (TFMetalsReport)

The Boredom Before The Storm (DollarCollapse)

Politicians must grasp the difference between free market and corporate stitch-up – or face popular rage (Telegraph)

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Gold Prices (LBMA AM)

24 Oct: USD 1,267.00, GBP 1,034.89 & EUR 1,163.61 per ounce
21 Oct: USD 1,263.95, GBP 1,033.79 & EUR 1,160.69 per ounce
20 Oct: USD 1,269.20, GBP 1,034.65 & EUR 1,156.75 per ounce
19 Oct: USD 1,269.75, GBP 1,031.29 & EUR 1,154.97 per ounce
18 Oct: USD 1,261.65, GBP 1,031.15 & EUR 1,145.33 per ounce
17 Oct: USD 1,252.70, GBP 1,029.59 & EUR 1,139.58 per ounce
14 Oct: USD 1,256.15, GBP 1,028.79 & EUR 1,140.08 per ounce

Silver Prices (LBMA)

24 Oct: USD 17.64, GBP 14.41 & EUR 16.19 per ounce
21 Oct: USD 17.51, GBP 14.34 & EUR 16.08 per ounce
20 Oct: USD 17.60, GBP 14.35 & EUR 16.03 per ounce
19 Oct: USD 17.69, GBP 14.38 & EUR 16.11 per ounce
18 Oct: USD 17.65, GBP 14.37 & EUR 16.03 per ounce
17 Oct: USD 17.40, GBP 14.30 & EUR 15.83 per ounce
14 Oct: USD 17.47, GBP 14.28 & EUR 15.86 per ounce


Recent Market Updates

– Silver Eagle Demand ‘Returned with a Vengeance’
– Cashless Society – War On Cash to Benefit Gold?
– “Higher Gold Prices” On Global Trade Slowdown – HSBC
– Euro “Will Collapse” As Is “House of Cards” Warns Architect of Euro
– Property Bubble In Ireland Developing Again
– “Gold Is A Great Hedge Against Politicians” – Goldman
– Sell Gold Now – Time To Liquidate Gold ETF, Pooled and Digital Gold
– Gold In GBP Up 43% YTD – “Massive Twin Deficits” To Impact UK Assets
– Ron Paul Says “Gold Going Up” Whether Trump Or Clinton Elected
– Gold Trading COT Report “Means Lower – Then Much Higher – Prices Coming”
– Currency Shock Sees Sterling Gold Surges 5% In One Minute “Flash Crash”
– Top Gold Forecaster: “As Quickly As Gold Fell” May “Rally Back” on Global Risks
– Gold Buying ‘Opportunity’ After Surprise 3.4% Drop

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