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Showing posts with the label First Trust

IB Net Payout Yields Model

Was The Jobs Report Really Better Than Expected?

Prior to the market open today, the BLS released April jobs numbers that apparently largely disappointed the stock market with the SP500 down 1.5% as I'm writing this post.  Below is a summary provided by First Trust. Non-farm payrolls increased 115,000 in April and were up 168,000 including revisions to February/March. The consensus expected a gain of 160,000. Private sector payrolls increased 130,000 in April. Revisions to February/March added 66,000, bringing the net gain to 196,000. April gains were led by retail (+29,000), professional/technical services (+28.000), employment services, including temps (+28,000), bars/restaurants (+27,000). The weakest sector was transit & ground transportation (-17,000). The unemployment rate ticked down to 8.1% from 8.2% in March Average weekly earnings – cash earnings, excluding benefits – were unchanged in April but are up 1.8% versus a year ago. As noted by First Trust in that article, the interpretation of whether the number...

Capitalized Corporate Profits Model

As corporate profits continue to hit all time highs, thought it was time again to review market valuations. While most investors expect higher year end stock valuations, most only expect modest gains from current levels because the market has run to fast since the March 2009 lows. As we've said on the this blog for the last couple of years, its not wise to use that panic low as a basis for historical measurements and average returns. The market collapsed like never before and should also rebound in a like manner. The SP500 is still considerably below its October 2007 high even though corporate profits have already surpassed those levels. Of course, valuing a market in the vacuum of a single data point can be dangerous. This is why the capitalized profits model factors in the 10-year Treasury Yield to calculate the estimated market valuation. Naturally lower rates should mean higher valuations as stocks become more attractive then bonds. Ironically from the chart below, the SP50...

Dow Worth 15,000?

Does the Dow trading at 15,000 sound crazy? That's probably the general consensus in the market these days. The Dow currently trades at 11,201 at the close today.  A 3,800 point jump to get to 15,000 amounts to a 34% gain. What's interesting about he concept of the market currently being worth X amount higher or the future value hitting X in a year is that the market commentary is almost completely void of future predictions with the market higher. It's very bullish to turn on the TV or pull up a blog and see the latest prediction of the SP500 plunging to 900 or 600 or even lower. After a decade of the market being basically flat (ok it was very volatile in that period), most market pundits seem fixated that the market won't ever go higher. Corporate earnings have peaked if you listen to them. Heck, if you had listened to the pundits corporate profits would've never rebounded so sharply. This brings us to one of our favorite economists, Brian Westbury at First T...

Can the Media Be Any More Negative?

Brian Westbury from First Trust appeared on Fox Business Network's Varney & Co. this morning and defended his optimistic view of the economy. I'll be the first to admit that Brian has been a little too positive, but to me his main flaw is that he hasn't accounted for the negativity of the media. Varney and his gang are so negative that they even question who is going to get consumers spending when they themselves have just scared everybody into hiding. Even though as Brian points out consumer spending in Q2 was up 4% to an all time record high. Though Varney is right to point out that Brian might be too optimistic, he himself claims that 1% growth is no growth. That 90K private jobs a month equuals no jobs. Come on Fox Business, its less then desirable. Its less then optimum, but isn't 'NO' growth. Your not helping by spinning everything more negative then the reality. Watch the latest video at video.foxbusiness.com

Will Rapid Productivity Growth Lead to Profitable Expansion?

With all the doom and gloom in the markets today (SP500 dropped 3.1%), it's easy to think that the global economic recovery is about to turn into a double dip recession. After all the jobless claims came in higher then expected at 480K and surely that means growth has stalled? Possibly but Brian Westbury - Chief Economist at First Trust - has a different twist on the numbers reported today. Specifically that the productivity numbers are not only making companies more profitable but those profits are going to lead to expansion and more hours worked. Clearly the job creation spiget hasn't been turned on yet, but we're on the tip of the iceberg as corporate profits are soaring. Job growth likely depends on whether the government will get out of the way or instead force the US to crash into the iceberg. Last night Cisco (CSCO) talked about boom times ahead with record profits and the hiring of 2-3K employees in the next few quarters. The market wants to move a head and it cle...