Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Weekly Market Commentary

Policy Week
Monetary and fiscal policy may dominate headlines this week, even as market participants absorb more than 128 fourth quarter earnings reports from S&P 500 companies and a busy slate of economic data. In addition, several major central banks meet to set policy including the Bank of Japan, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and Norway's central bank, Norges Bank. Both Norway and New Zealand have already raised rates in this cycle, and no rate increases are expected this week. There is no economic data due in China this week, as the country approaches its Lunar New Year holidays, which begins on February 2. The next key economic release in China is the Chinese Purchasing Managers Index for January 2011, due out on Monday, January 31.
This week’s economic data in the United States is an eclectic mix of reports on housing, consumer confidence, labor costs, and manufacturing activity as 2010 ended and 2011 began. Although “old news” at this point, the financial media is likely to focus on Friday’s release of gross domestic product (GDP) data for the fourth quarter of 2010. The consensus is looking for a 3.5% quarter-over-quarter gain in real GDP in the fourth quarter of 2010 relative to the third quarter, a marked acceleration from the 2.6% rate of growth in the third quarter. Estimates range from a low of 2.9% growth to a high of 5.9% growth in the fourth quarter.
We estimate GDP growth accelerated to 4.0% in the fourth quarter, after averaging about 2.5% over the first three quarters of 2010. One highlight of the GDP report is likely to be that consumer spending in the fourth quarter of 2010 is on track to outpace business spending for the first time since early 2009. In addition, a growth rate of real GDP faster than 2.6% in the fourth quarter will push the level of real GDP back above its pre-recession peak, hit in late 2007, after adjusting for inflation. The level of nominal (i.e., non-inflation adjusted) GDP moved past its prior peak in mid-2010. As highlighted in our 2011 Our view for economic growth in 2011 is that real GDP growth will be near the long-term average at 2.5–3%.

State of the Union Address May Reignite the Budget Battle
President Obama’s State of the Union address on Tuesday, January 25 will help to usher in the budget season in Washington and could reignite talk of a battle of the debt ceiling and a potential government shutdown sometime in late winter or early spring 2011. While the State of the Union speech is the unofficial start of the budget season and the timeline for the budget process over the next several months is set, the only deadline investors are going to worry about is the debt ceiling limit deadline, which may occur anytime between mid March and mid May 2011.
President Obama will release his proposed budget for fiscal year (FY) 2012 in mid-February and shortly thereafter, the house Republicans will release their own vision for the nation’s finances for fiscal year 2012, which begins on October 1, 2011. This week, just after the President’s State of the Union address, the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) will release its 2011 budget and economic outlook on Wednesday, January 26, and in March 2011, the CBO will release its analysis of the President’s budget.
One thing is for sure, neither the President’s budget nor the House Republicans’ version will be passed into law anytime soon. While there was a flurry of healthy conversations in Washington in late 2010 as several bi-partisan commissions released deficit reduction plans, talk of balanced budgets faded soon thereafter, as the President and House Republicans agreed to a deal that:
·         Extended the Bush tax cuts for two years
·         Extended unemployment insurance benefits for a year
·         Cut payroll taxes by 2 percentage points
·         Provided tax incentives for businesses to make purchases of capital equipment in 2011
According to the non-partisan CBO, that deal also raised deficit estimates for FY 2011 (which ends on September 30, 2011) by close to $400 billion and did little or nothing to address the nation’s long-term deficit problem, which is too much spending on mandatory programs like Social Security, Medicaid and especially Medicare, and not enough revenue. And while we applaud recent efforts by some members of Congress to focus attention on “waste, fraud and abuse” and political “pork” in the Federal budget, the fact is that “waste, fraud and abuse” along with pork barrel projects (earmarks) together account for only a small portion of the $3.5 trillion budget. Recent non-partisan studies pegged waste, fraud and abuse in the Federal budget at anywhere between $75 billion and $100 billion per year. Earmarks are close to $20 billion per year.
While waste, fraud, and abuse, along with earmarks total an enormous sum ($100 to $125 billion) on an absolute basis, relative to the total federal outlays of close to $3.5 trillion dollars, they are literally just a rounding error. Again, we applaud the effort to root out waste from the Federal budget process, but in order to make any real progress on bringing the budget back into balance, many difficult choices lie ahead.
We expect the debt-ceiling limit to be an almost daily topic of conversation in the markets and in the financial media between now and the spring of 2011. Normally, the raising of the limit on the debt ceiling is a non-event for markets, but because deficits are in the news (here and abroad) and because the newly elected House GOP ran on deficit reduction, there is a risk that the debt ceiling debate could lead to a government shutdown. On the positive side, a government shutdown could pave the way for a more substantive discussion of the debt and deficit, and prompt some significant action. On the downside, the debate may unnerve some foreign investors, who hold half of our federal debt.
However, we do not expect the debate on the raising of the debt limit to lead to actions that significantly reduce entitlement spending and the deficit anytime soon, although the odds are not zero. The best guess is that the 2012 election cycle will provide the platform for a more substantive discussion of entitlement reform and what its consequences for taxes and spending, so that some progress can begin to be made in 2013.

Dissent Drives the Debate
While the outcome of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting is not in doubt—the FOMC will leave interest rates unchanged and continue its program of quantitative easing—the details of the meeting could attract attention. Even though Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has more than enough votes on the 12-member FOMC to continue QE2, there is likely to be discussion that is more heated and dissent at this FOMC meeting. Despite the increased rhetoric around in the Fed, our view remains that the hurdle for the Fed to end QE2 early is high, and the hurdle to start QE3 in June 2011 is even higher.
During his one-year tenure as a voting member on the FOMC in 2010, Thomas Hoeing, the president of the Kansas City Fed, voted against the second round of quantitative easing, QE2, and keeping rates near zero at each of the eight FOMC meetings. While Hoeing will rotate off of the FOMC as a voting member this week, two new members of the FOMC, Philadelphia Fed president Charles Plosser and Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher—who are noted inflation hawks and critics ofQE2—are potential “dissenters” that will move on to the committee as voting members. Thus, we would not be surprised to see at least one, and possibly two dissents in the statement accompanying the FOMC decision on Wednesday, January 26.
The FOMC also prepares economic forecasts four times a year, and will be preparing a forecast at this week’s meeting. The FOMC is likely to upgrade its view of the economy and express some optimism about employment, but continue to note that while raw materials costs have risen, businesses have in large part been unable to pass these increases on to consumers. The bottom line is that the FOMC is likely to note that while the economy has improved since the last FOMC meeting in December, it is not growing quickly enough to push the unemployment rate down meaningfully or the core inflation rate up meaningfully. The forecast made at this week’s FOMC meeting will be released along with the minutes of that meeting on February 16. The release of the minutes of this week’s FOMC meeting will precede Fed Chairman Bernanke’s high-profile monetary policy testimony to Congress in mid to late February. Bernanke is likely to face withering questioning from House members on both sides of the aisle who oppose QE2 and Fed intervention in the economy.

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IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES The opinions voiced in this material are for general information only and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual. To determine which investment(s) may be appropriate for you, consult your financial advisor prior to investing. All performance reference is historical and is no guarantee of future results. All indices are unmanaged and cannot be invested into directly.
Investing in international and emerging markets may entail additional risks such as currency fluctuation and political instability. Investing in small-cap stocks includes specific risks such as greater volatility and potentially less liquidity.
Stock investing involves risk including loss of principal. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.
This research material has been prepared by LPL Financial.
The LPL Financial family of affiliated companies includes LPL Financial and UVEST Financial Services Group, Inc., each of which is a member of FINRA/SIPC.
To the extent you are receiving investment advice from a separately registered independent investment advisor, please note that LPL Financial is not an affiliate of and makes no representation with respect to such entity.
Not FDIC or NCUA/NCUSIF Insured | No Bank or Credit Union Guarantee | May Lose Value | Not Guaranteed by any Government Agency | Not a Bank/Credit Union Deposit

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Weekly Market Commentary

Competing For Attention
Housing, the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) monetary policy, and the manufacturing sector in early 2011 are likely to compete for market participants’ attention this week. This data comes amid a flurry of corporate earnings reports for the fourth quarter of 2010 and guidance for 2011. Overseas this week, another round of Chinese economic data for December, more hand wringing about the European fiscal situation, and interest rate decisions from no fewer than seven central banks are on tap. In addition, markets will continue to digest and debate last week’s full slate of economic data in the United States, which helped to boost expectations for real gross domestic product (GDP) growth in the recently completed fourth quarter of 2010. GDP growth is likely to accelerate to 4.0% in the fourth quarter, after averaging about 2.5% over the first three quarters of 2010.

Manufacturing, Housing and the Fed On the Docket This Week in the United States
The Empire State (released as this report was being prepared) and Philly Fed (Thursday, January 20) manufacturing surveys for January offer the first look at the manufacturing sector in 2011. As market participants digest these reports, the key question will be: Can the manufacturing sector continue to accelerate into 2011, or are we due for a deceleration soon? Business capital spending, and exports (both driven in large part by manufacturing) have grown faster than consumer spending in every quarter since the second quarter of 2010. That string may have been broken in the fourth quarter of 2010, although we continue to expect manufacturing, along with business spending and exports, to continue to add to GDP in 2011.
Housing, which has added to real GDP growth in just one quarter (the third quarter of 2010) in the past four years, is big news this week. Reports on homebuilder sentiment in January (released as this report was being prepared), housing starts (Wednesday, January 19) and existing home sales (Thursday, January 20) for December are due out. As noted above, housing construction — although a small part of GDP — has been a drag on GDP growth in 16 of the past 17 quarters. The good news is that unassisted by any government programs, the housing market seems to have found a floor. But the question is: Can the housing market reaccelerate on its own, and can it do so with only modest job and income growth and still stringent bank lending standards? Our best guess is that housing will continue to muddle along, not significantly adding to (or subtracting from) GDP growth in 2011.
In the last public appearance by a Fed official ahead of next week’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, the president of the Philadelphia Fed, Charles Plosser, is scheduled to deliver a speech this week in Chile. While Fed officials do not often break any new ground when speaking overseas (let alone a first time voter on the FOMC speaking the week before the FOMC meeting), Plosser’s speech will be closely monitored. Plosser is a well-known inflation “hawk”, and will likely cast a vote against continuing the Fed’s program of quantitative easing. There will likely be other dissenters at the January 26 FOMC meeting as well, but our view is that despite the political pressures, the hurdle for the Fed to end QE2 early is high, and the hurdle to start QE3 in June 2011 is even higher.
Elsewhere, bad weather will dominate the weekly data on claims and retail sales this week. With more wintry weather along the East Coast this week, market participants are beginning to ask: How long will it be before we can get a clean reading on the economy in early 2011? The Martin Luther King holiday, along with persistently harsh winter weather — that continued into mid January — are likely to disrupt the economic data for the next several weeks, especially the weekly readings on retail sales and initial filings for unemployment insurance. As a result, market participants may have to wait until early February to get a better gauge on the underlying health of the economy in early 2011.

Several Surprise Rate Increases Last Week as Emerging Markets Combat Domestic Inflation Worries
There were many signs in last week’s batch of economic data for late 2010 and early 2011, that the United States economy gathered steam as 2010 ended and 2011 began, although more wintry than usual winter weather made some of the data even more difficult to interpret than usual. Last week’s economic data in China for December continues to point to more policy tightening in China in the coming weeks and months. Several central banks around the globe did actually raise rates last week, including South Korea, Chile, Serbia and Thailand. All four have been raising rates for some time now to combat domestic inflation, although the rate hikes in Chile and South Korea were unexpected. The data released in the United States last week included reports on retail sales, inflation, jobless claims and the Beige Book. In addition, the data released in China last week continues to argue for more tightening there.

A Strong Finish to 2010, and a Solid Start to 2011
A quick recap of last week’s key data in the United States and China is below:
The United States government’s tally of December retail sales suggested that overall December retail sales were soft, but that holiday and overall consumer spending in the fourth quarter of 2010 were quite strong. As noted above, consumer spending in the fourth quarter of 2010 is on track to outpace business spending for the first time since early 2009.
Perhaps impacted by bad weather right before and right after Christmas, retail sales in December fell short of expectations. However, the strength in sales in November indicates that holiday shopping may have started earlier this year than last. Over the final two months of the year "holiday" sales posted a 7% gain over the final two months of 2009, the best performance since 1999. Overall, retail sales have now climbed all the way back to their pre-recession, mid-2007 peak. In addition, the growth rate of all major categories of retail sales accelerated between Q3 2010 and Q4 2010, suggesting much stronger consumer spending in the fourth quarter of 2010 than the third quarter growth rate of 3.2%. Finally, the level of core retail sales in December 2010 was higher than the fourth quarter 2010 average, imparting some upward momentum to spending as 2011 begins.
December consumer and producer prices were driven higher by energy and tobacco prices, but core inflation remains subdued. Both producer price and consumer price indices for December were pushed higher by surging gasoline prices, but behind the headlines on higher raw materials, energy, and grocery prices, inflation remains tame.
The overall consumer price index (CPI) rose 0.5% between November and December, pushed higher by gasoline (+8.5%) and tobacco (+0.8%) prices. The 0.5% month-over-month increase in the overall CPI was the strongest since June 2009, and may raise concerns about a spike higher in inflation. However, a quick look behind the headlines suggests a much more benign price environment, as consumer prices excluding food and energy (core CPI) rose just 0.1% month-over-month in December and were up just 0.8% from December 2009. At 0.8% year-over-year, core inflation remains well below the lower end of the Fed's unofficial comfort zone for core inflation of 1.5% to 2.0%. The benign December core CPI data provides the Fed with more support to continue QE2.
How can prices at the grocery store be rising so quickly (prices for meats, poultry, fish and eggs in December 2010 were 6% higher than December 2009, while prices for milk and dairy products were 4% higher) and overall inflation be so tame? Core inflation accounts for 78% of overall CPI, and includes, among other items, measures of housing prices and rents (42% of CPI), computers, cell phones, apparel and household furnishings including televisions, appliances and furniture.
Taken together computers, cell phones, apparel and household furnishings account for nearly 15% of the CPI, while items like groceries (8% of the CPI) and gasoline (4% of CPI) account for an ever-smaller (around 12%) portion of our spending. In general, prices of computers, cell phones, apparel, appliances, and furniture are falling, and that decline in prices helps to offset the big increases in food and gasoline prices over the past year. But since our purchase of groceries and our trips to the gas station to “fill ‘er up” are more frequent than our trips to the appliance store or the furniture store or the clothing store, it sure does seem like inflation is rising faster than it actually is.
Initial claims for unemployment insurance spiked higher last week, but weather and holidays are the likely culprit, not a deteriorating labor market. More people filed for unemployment insurance in the week ending January 8, 2011 (445,000), an increase of 35,000 from the prior week. The consensus called for just 410,000 individuals to file. As we have noted in recent weeks, the weekly jobless claims data between mid-December and mid-January are always difficult to interpret. Severe winter weather makes the data even more suspect. While we cannot dismiss the latest reading entirely (there is a chance that the labor market deteriorated in late December and early January), we would like to see a few "clean" readings on claims before reaching that conclusion. Unfortunately, the latest round of foul weather in some parts of the country along with the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day federal holiday will continue to distort the data in the coming weeks.
The Fed's Beige Book, a qualitative assessment of economic activity in each of the 12 regional Federal Reserve districts (Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Atlanta, Dallas, etc.), found that the economy continued to expand between the December 14 FOMC meeting and early January 2011. Business and banking contacts reported better hiring, very good holiday sales, and some improvement in commercial real estate. Bank loan demand and lending activity was mixed, while residential real estate remained weak. On the price front, while there was more evidence of higher input prices impacting some businesses, there was little evidence that these were being passed on to the end user. Wages, which account for 70% of business costs, continue to be quite subdued, suggesting that widespread consumer inflation is unlikely any time soon. The Beige Book was prepared ahead of the next FOMC meeting, which is set for January 26.
Chinese authorities released money supply and bank loan data for December last week. December money supply growth (one of the most reliable and least politically influenced economic data points in China) unexpectedly accelerated in December and while new loan growth decelerated between November and December, loans exceeded expectations. The economic data in China has been slowing (albeit from a very rapid pace of growth) since early- to mid-2010, and more deceleration is likely into 2011. Real GDP growth in China is expected to be near 9.5% year-over-year in the fourth quarter of 2010, and is expected to grow at that pace in 2011 as well. Real GDP growth began the year at 12.0%. We continue to expect more tightening of policy in China in

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IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES The opinions voiced in this material are for general information only and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual. To determine which investment(s) may be appropriate for you, consult your financial advisor prior to investing. All performance reference is historical and is no guarantee of future results. All indices are unmanaged and cannot be invested into directly.
Investing in international and emerging markets may entail additional risks such as currency fluctuation and political instability. Investing in small-cap stocks includes specific risks such as greater volatility and potentially less liquidity.
Stock investing involves risk including loss of principal Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is a measure of the average change over time in the prices paid by urban consumers for a market basket of consumer goods and services.
The Philadelphia Fed Survey is a business outlook survey used to construct an index that tracks manufacturing conditions in the Philadelphia Federal Reserve district. The Philadelphia Fed survey is an indicator of trends in the manufacturing sector, and is correlated with the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) manufacturing index, as well as the industrial production index.
Empire State Manufacturing Survey is a monthly survey of manufacturers in New York State conducted by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
Quantitative Easing (QE) is a government monetary policy occasionally used to increase the money supply by buying government securities or other securities from the market. Quantitative easing increases the money sup­ply by flooding financial institutions with capital in an effort to promote increased lending and liquidity.
This research material has been prepared by LPL Financial.
The LPL Financial family of affiliated companies includes LPL Financial and UVEST Financial Services Group, Inc., each of which is a member of FINRA/SIPC.
To the extent you are receiving investment advice from a separately registered independent investment advisor, please note that LPL Financial is not an affiliate of and makes no representation with respect to such entity.
Not FDIC or NCUA/NCUSIF Insured | No Bank or Credit Union Guarantee | May Lose Value | Not Guaranteed by any Government Agency | Not a Bank/Credit Union Deposit

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Weekly Market Commentary

A Busy Start to 2011
Financial market participants return to their desks this week reflecting on a mixed end, data-wise, to 2010 and are bracing for a full slate of key U.S. economic reports. The Federal Reserve (Fed) will also be in the headlines this week, as will China’s battle against inflation.
The economic reports likely to command most of the attention this week are The Institute of Supply Management’s (ISM) report on manufacturing for December (released on Monday, January 3) and the U.S. Department of Labor’s employment report for December, due out on Friday, January 7. Markets will also be mulling over the 2010 holiday shopping season this week (chain store sales are due out Thursday, January 6), after initial reports suggest that the 2010 holiday shopping season was the best in many years.

December ISM, Jobs Report Bookend the Week
The various regional surveys of manufacturing activity in December (released over the last two weeks of 2010) hinted at the strong reading on the December ISM report. Indeed, the ISM rose to 57.0 in December 2010, a slight acceleration from the 56.6 reading in November 2010. The December ISM reading matched consensus expectations. The ISM averaged 57.3 in 2010, consistent with real gross domestic product (GDP) growth of 5.1%. However, we should point out that the ISM has only been above 57.0 in 49 of the 492 months since 1970 (i.e. 10% of the time), and rarely stays close to the 60.0 level for too long. Thus, a dip back toward 50 in the coming months would not be unusual and would not necessarily signal a double-dip recession.
In the Weekly Economic Commentary dated December 6, 2010, we noted that “the November jobs report, released on Friday morning, December 3, 2010 was both weak and disappointing, but the market did not necessarily believe the report.” We also noted that “the weak November jobs report puts even more weight on the December jobs report to shine. That report is due out on Friday, January 7.”
Well, the day of reckoning is nearly here, and expectations for the December 2010 jobs report are relatively lofty, with the consensus looking for a 155,000 gain in nonfarm payroll jobs following the disappointing 39,000 gain in November. If the consensus is correct, the economy will have created 1.3 million private sector jobs in 2010, just over 110,000 per month. As noted in our 2011 Outlook, our view is that the job market will stage a comeback with nearly twice the pace of job creation experienced in 2010. What would that pace of job growth mean for the unemployment rate?
On average over the last 40 years, roughly 150,000 people enter the labor force each month, so in order for the unemployment rate (which is calculated by dividing the number of unemployed by the labor force) to fall, employment has to increase by at least 150,000 per month. In the short run, however, the business cycle can have a big impact on how many people join (or leave) the labor force. Generally, in good times, more people come into the labor force, attracted by better job prospects. Thus in the long, robust economic recovery in the 1990s, an average of 160,000 people per month entered the labor force. Even in the shorter and less powerful economic expansion in the mid-2000s, an average of 145,000 people entered the labor force each month.
However, during and just after recessions, labor force growth typically slows to a crawl. For example, during the “jobless recoveries” in 2002 and 2003, just 55,000 people per month entered the labor force. Similarly, during the Great Recession and its immediate aftermath, an average of 33,000 people per month dropped out of the labor force, discouraged by poor prospects for finding work. As the economy improved over the course of 2010, an average of 86,000 people per month joined the labor force, as the unemployment rate rose slightly from 9.7% in January 2010 to 9.8% in November. The consensus is looking for a 9.7% unemployment rate in December 2010.

The Fed Returns to the Hot Seat This Week, While China’s Attempts to Cool Its Economy Met With a Collective Yawn
The release of the minutes of the December 14 Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) on Tuesday, January 4 and testimony from Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke before the Senate Budget Committee on Friday, January 7 are likely to reignite the debate over the Fed’s role in the economic recovery. It is probably too early for the Fed (or markets) to assess the effectiveness of quantitative easing (QE2). By the end of the first quarter of 2011, both the Fed and the markets should have a better read on whether QE2 was successful and if another round of quantitative easing will commence in June 2011, when QE2 ends. The Fed’s Beige Book (a qualitative assessment of economic conditions in each of the 12 regional Federal Reserve districts) is due out on January 12 and the next FOMC meeting is January 26. We reiterate our assessment that the while the hurdle for ending QE2 remains high, the hurdle for the Fed to begin QE3 in June 2011 is even higher. The market is not expecting the Fed to raise rates until early 2012.
Overseas this week, market participants continue to fret over China’s interest rate policy, in the wake of the 25 basis point rate hike by Chinese monetary authorities on Christmas Day and the lower-than-expected reading on the Chinese ISM for December, which was reported on December 31, 2010. The rate hike was the second in ten weeks, and has been accompanied by no fewer than six increases in reserve ratio requirements for Chinese banks over the past 12 months. Thus far, market reaction to the latest round of interest rate hikes in China has been muted, especially relative to early 2010, when China’s early attempts at tightening policy were met with a severe downdraft in both global commodity and equity prices. The economic data in China has been slowing (albeit from a very rapid pace of growth) since early- to mid-2010, and more deceleration is likely into 2011. We continue to expect more tightening of policy in China in the coming weeks and months as policymakers attempt to cool inflation. The next round of economic reports (for December) in China are due out the week of January 10 – 14.

Economic Data Mixed Over Final Two Weeks of 2010, but Holiday Shopping Looks Strong
The economic reports released over the final two weeks of 2010 included:
·         New, existing and pending home sales for November
·         New orders for, and new shipments of, business capital equipment
·         Regional reports on manufacturing activity in Chicago, Dallas, Richmond and Milwaukee
·         Personal income, personal spending and the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation the personal consumption deflator excluding food and energy
·         Consumer confidence and consumer sentiment for December
·         Weekly reports on retail sales, mortgage applications and initial claims for unemployment insurance
Taken together, the data released over the final two weeks of 2010 were mixed, at best, a sharp contrast to the strong run of data released in the first half of December. The data on home sales and home prices was mixed, with sales increasing between October and November, but by less than expected. Pending home sales — a good leading indicator of future existing home sales — bucked the trend in housing, beating expectations and accelerating between October and November. Unsupported by government programs, the housing market is still bouncing along the bottom, above the lows hit in early 2009, but still barely able to stand on its own. The good news here is that the labor market is improving, housing affordability — the ability of the household with a median income to afford the payments on the median-priced house — is at an all-time high, and housing construction itself only accounts for around 2% of GDP. The bad news on housing is that loans are still difficult to get, foreclosures remain high, inventories of unsold existing homes are elevated, and prices are still falling in many parts of the country.
Most of the manufacturing data released over the final two weeks of 2010 came in above expectations and accelerated between November and December, raising expectations for the December ISM report. The weaker US dollar, strong corporate balance sheets, and a robust export market are still supporting business capital spending and exports. Sure, Europe (1.4% GDP expected in 2011) and the United Kingdom (1.9%) are beset with fiscal issues, but 50% of U.S. exports head to emerging market economies, where real GDP growth in 2011 is expected to be well north of six percent.
Although the final tally is not in yet, most of the data in hand suggests that the 2010 holiday shopping season was the best since at least 2006. On December 28, the International Council of Shopping Centers (ICSC) raised its forecast for holiday spending for the second time in less than a month, noting that retail sales in the Christmas week rose 4.8% from the same week in 2009, the strongest Christmas week gain in sales since the 5.5% year-over-year gain in 2003. The solid performance of the U.S. equity market (more than 20.0% as measured by the S&P 500) from early September through mid-December was a good indicator of how sales were likely to track. Historically, equity market performance between September and December is one of the most accurate predictors of holiday shopping.

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IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES The opinions voiced in this material are for general information only and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual. To determine which investment(s) may be appropriate for you, consult your financial advisor prior to investing. All performance reference is historical and is no guarantee of future results. All indices are unmanaged and cannot be invested into directly.
Investing in international and emerging markets may entail additional risks such as currency fluctuation and political instability. Investing in small-cap stocks includes specific risks such as greater volatility and potentially less liquidity.
Stock investing involves risk including loss of principal Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.
Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) is an indicator of the economic health of the manufacturing sector. The PMI index is based on five major indicators: new orders, inventory levels, production, supplier deliveries and the employment environment.
The ISM index is based on surveys of more than 300 manufacturing firms by the Institute of Supply Manage­ment. The ISM Manufacturing Index monitors employment, production inventories, new orders, and supplier deliveries. A composite diffusion index is created that monitors conditions in national manufacturing based on the data from these surveys.
Quantitative Easing is a government monetary policy occasionally used to increase the money supply by buying government securities or other securities from the market. Quantitative easing increases the money supply by flooding financial institutions with capital in an effort to promote increased lending and liquidity.
This research material has been prepared by LPL Financial.
The LPL Financial family of affiliated companies includes LPL Financial and UVEST Financial Services Group, Inc., each of which is a member of FINRA/SIPC.
To the extent you are receiving investment advice from a separately registered independent investment advisor, please note that LPL Financial is not an affiliate of and makes no representation with respect to such entity.
Not FDIC or NCUA/NCUSIF Insured | No Bank or Credit Union Guarantee | May Lose Value | Not Guaranteed by any Government Agency | Not a Bank/Credit Union Deposit