Published On
February 3, 2016

The Month in Brief

After a miserable January, the Dow Jones Industrial Average managed to gain 0.30% in February. While stock markets around the world struggled to advance, gold and oil rallied to a remarkable degree. U.S. economic indicators offered some bright spots, but also some disappointments. Housing indicators were mixed. Still, Wall Street seemed to show a tiny bit of optimism by month’s end (or maybe it was simply reduced pessimism). Investors hoped there would soon be less correlation between oil prices and stock prices.1

Domestic Economic Health

Judging from January’s personal spending report, it appeared consumers were finally starting to spend some of the money they had been saving thanks to lower gas prices. The Bureau of Economic Analysis reported that consumer spending improved 0.5% in the first month of the year, as did consumer wages. January core retail sales rose 0.6%, though the headline advance was only 0.1%.2,3

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the core Consumer Price Index rose 0.3% in January; the core Producer Price Index ascended o.4%. The headline number was smaller in each case (0.1% for the PPI, 0.0% for the CPI), but the real story was the 2.2% annualized rise for core consumer prices. The core PPI was even up 0.6% in 12 months.4

Hiring did moderate a little in January. Employers added 151,000 jobs in that month, the Labor Department noted; the jobless rate dipped to 4.9% with the U-6 rate including the underemployed at 9.9%. America had not seen unemployment at less than 5% since February 2008. Across the year ending in January, the economy had created an average of more than 200,000 jobs per month.5

The Conference Board’s January index fell 5.6 points and hit 92.2, a 7-month low. The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index fell just 0.3 points month-over-month to 91.7.2,6

Unexpected improvement took place in the Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing PMI. Economists polled by MarketWatch forecast a February reading of 48.5 for the indicator; instead, it came in at 49.5. In related good news, the Federal Reserve said U.S. industrial output had increased 0.9% in January.7,8

As for the services sector, ISM’s most recent non-manufacturing PMI (January) declined 2.3 points to 53.5%, still indicating sector expansion. (The reading, however, was a 23-month low.) Durable goods orders were up 4.9% in January, 1.8% minus transportation orders.2,9

Global Economic Health

Judging from January’s personal spending report, it appeared consumers were finally starting to spend some of the money they had been saving thanks to lower gas prices. The Bureau of Economic Analysis reported that consumer spending improved 0.5% in the first month of the year, as did consumer wages. January core retail sales rose 0.6%, though the headline advance was only 0.1%.2,3

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the core Consumer Price Index rose 0.3% in January; the core Producer Price Index ascended o.4%. The headline number was smaller in each case (0.1% for the PPI, 0.0% for the CPI), but the real story was the 2.2% annualized rise for core consumer prices. The core PPI was even up 0.6% in 12 months.4

Hiring did moderate a little in January. Employers added 151,000 jobs in that month, the Labor Department noted; the jobless rate dipped to 4.9% with the U-6 rate including the underemployed at 9.9%. America had not seen unemployment at less than 5% since February 2008. Across the year ending in January, the economy had created an average of more than 200,000 jobs per month.5

The Conference Board’s January index fell 5.6 points and hit 92.2, a 7-month low. The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index fell just 0.3 points month-over-month to 91.7.2,6

Unexpected improvement took place in the Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing PMI. Economists polled by MarketWatch forecast a February reading of 48.5 for the indicator; instead, it came in at 49.5. In related good news, the Federal Reserve said U.S. industrial output had increased 0.9% in January.7,8

As for the services sector, ISM’s most recent non-manufacturing PMI (January) declined 2.3 points to 53.5%, still indicating sector expansion. (The reading, however, was a 23-month low.) Durable goods orders were up 4.9% in January, 1.8% minus transportation orders.2,9

World Markets

In Europe, major indices had a tough February. The STOXX 600 lost 2.44%, the DAX 3.09%, the CAC 40 1.44%, the Europe Dow 1.75%, the FTSE MIB 5.54%, and the IBEX 35 4.02%. Two notable exceptions were Russia’s RTS, which rose 3.15%, and the United Kingdom’s FTSE 100, which eked out a 0.22% gain.1

Two Asia Pacific benchmarks also had a rough go of it: the Sensex fell 7.51%; the Nikkei 225, 8.51%. The Shanghai Composite lost 1.81% on the month; the Hang Seng, 2.90%; the S&P/ASX 200, 2.49%; the Asia Dow, 0.73%; On the other hand, Korea’s Kospi posted a 0.24% February gain and Indonesia’s Jakarta Composite rose 3.38% for the month.1

There was better news over in the far west. The Bovespa advanced 5.91%; the IPC All-Share, 0.19%; the TSX Composite, 0.30%; the Dow Jones Americas, 0.02%. Looking at three of the key global benchmarks, the MSCI World index lost 0.96% last month and the Global Dow, 0.94%; the MSCI Emerging Markets index held its February loss to 0.28%.1,14

Commodities Markets

WTI crude rallied 30% in 11 trading days to close out the month, and yet its monthly advance was still only 0.47%. On February 29, it settled at a NYMEX price of $33.90. Heating oil futures rose 2.98% in February. Those movements were minor compared to the huge monthly swings for unleaded gasoline and natural gas: the former rallied 18.81% while the latter sank 26.03%.15

Gold futures soared 11.00% for the month to end February at $1,239.30 on the COMEX, and silver wrapped up the month at $14.90 thanks to a 4.45% gain of its own. Copper finished the month 3.13% higher, platinum 4.84% higher. Turning toward the greenback, the U.S. Dollar Index gave back 1.38% for the month.15,16

Sugar and cocoa stood out among major crop commodities last month. Sugar futures advanced 8.07%; cocoa futures, 6.65%.  Losses hit corn (4.78%), wheat (7.20%), soybeans (3.18%), cotton (3.84%), and coffee (2.66%).15

Real Estate

February saw two unexpectedly positive real estate developments: news that existing home sales had maintained their pace in January despite low expectations, and a significant decline in home loan interest rates. A National Association of Realtors report showed resales up 0.4% for the first month of the year, putting their seasonally adjusted annualized pace near a 6-month high at 5.47 million. NAR’s pending home sales index, however, fell 2.5% in January. Census Bureau data showed a 9.2% January slump for new home sales, taking their year-over-year advance down to 5.2%.17,18,19

A glance at Freddie Mac’s February 25 Primary Mortgage Market Survey shows average interest of 3.62% for the 30-year FRM, 2.93% for the 15-year FRM, and 2.79% for the 5/1-year ARM. Compare these numbers to the results of the January 28 survey: 3.79% for the 30-year fixed, 3.07% for the 15-year FRM, and 2.90% for the 5/1-year ARM.19

Home prices rose 5.7% in 2015 by the barometer of the 20-city S&P/Case-Shiller home price index, which was unchanged in its December edition. January saw declines in both housing starts (3.8%) and building permits (0.2%) according to the Census Bureau.2,8

Looking Back…Looking Forward

On February 29, the Dow closed at 16,516.50, the S&P 500 at 1,932.23, the Nasdaq at 4,557.95, and the Russell 2000 at 1,033.90. Across February, the Dow was the lone gainer, up 0.30%; the Russell lost 0.14%, the S&P 0.41%, and the Nasdaq 1.21%. February brought another advance for the CBOE VIX, which gained 1.73% to a month-end close of 20.55. The standout February performance came from the PHLX Gold/Silver index, which jumped 39.07% as precious metals prices climbed.1

EconUpdate_316

Sources: wsj.com, bigcharts.com, treasury.gov – 2/29/161,20,21
Indices are unmanaged, do not incur fees or expenses, and cannot be invested into directly. These returns do not include dividends. 10-year TIPS real yield = projected return at maturity given expected inflation.

In January and February, the correlation between oil prices and stock prices seemed remarkably pronounced. In March, we will hopefully witness it weaken. We have seen signs that the economy is gaining momentum, or at least not stalling out: the recent half-percent rise in personal spending, the improved Q4 GDP reading, the resilience in existing home sales, the February ISM manufacturing PMI that came in above expectations. Saudi Arabia’s recent pledge to try and stabilize the oil market may have helped oil find a bottom. China’s reduction of capital ratios for its banks may have stimulated a bit greater appetite for risk among institutional investors. So, with these encouraging developments in place, March might turn out to be a calmer and more bullish month on Wall Street.11

Upcoming Economic Releases

The roll call of major economic indicators for the rest of the month is as follows: the February Labor Department jobs report (3/4), January wholesale inventories (3/9), February retail sales, the February PPI, and January business inventories (3/15), a Federal Reserve interest rate decision, the February CPI, and also February industrial output, housing starts, and building permits (3/16), the preliminary University of Michigan consumer sentiment index for March (3/18), NAR’s report on February existing home sales (3/21), February new home sales (3/23), February durable goods orders (3/24), the BEA’s last assessment of Q4 GDP (3/25), February personal spending and pending home sales (3/28), the Conference Board’s March consumer confidence index and the January S&P/Case-Shiller home price index (3/29), and then, arriving a little early, both the March ADP employment change report (3/30) and March’s Challenger job-cut report (3/31). The University of Michigan’s final March consumer sentiment index appears relatively late on April 1.

Disclosures & Sources