The Wizards Of Awe

 | Nov 16, 2014 12:25AM ET

It seems like a good time to repeat an old stock market adage, one I often like to cite: The tape makes the news. Though stocks were little changed during the week, it was nonetheless another record weekly close for the S&P 500, and so the inescapable conclusion must be – as evidenced by the AAII poll , the latest consumer sentiment readings, CNBC effusiveness, headlines in the business press – that all is well with the economy, profits and whatever else one might think of. Well, maybe apart from the weather.

The rarefied air up here seems to have cut off a certain amount of oxygen to a certain number of brains. It’s a common symptom of a late-stage bull market – sometimes all of the oxygen gets sucked out before the end, leaving nothing but buy-every-dip zombies wandering the fields, waiting for the inevitable cull.

While I do note the usual minority trying to call some attention to the fact that things aren’t really quite so rosy, the recent steep rebound from the suddenly fierce correction seems to have mostly converted the doubters of mid-October to a new level of mid-November fidelity. In turn, that spurs a surge in the brisk wizard’s trade of all-is-well talismans, presumed to be authentic and organic, usually man-made and well, not so authentic.

A piece of wizard’s gold I’ve already called attention to in the recent past and one that is probably not done roping in its quota of dopes is the “four quarters in five” gem that seems to have convinced much of the investing public (or maybe just the investing paparazzi) yet again that domestic growth is finally taking off in the good old U.S. of A.

“Four quarters in five,” in case you’re wondering, refers to the fact that four of the last five quarters have printed annualized, seasonally adjusted GDP rates of 3.5% or higher. The slogan distilled thereof is considered to be proof that the US economy is finally lifting off. The depth of naiveté necessary to both acolyte and proselyte of this latter-day fragment of scripture is not only impressive, at times I even find it startling. Woven into the credo is the notion that the sharp drop in the first quarter of 2014 (-2.1%) was some kind of weather freak, and but for this rotten trick of nature it would be five in five.

It’s utter nonsense. Four-quarter nominal GDP growth – that is to say, gross domestic product for the trailing four quarters, not adjusted for inflation – was 3.9% at the end of the third quarter of 2014 (and if anything, will be lower after all revisions are in). The average for this rate over the last 12 quarters is 3.9%. The compound growth rate for nominal GDP over the last five years is 4.0%. Exactly what change are we supposed to be talking about here?

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That’s not all (you knew it wouldn’t be). I have written in the past that since the recovery began, the economy has periodically thrown up a quarter with a four-handle on it (i.e., > 4%). Mostly due to inventory builds, these are then followed by two or three quarters of deceleration to something with a one-handle; rinse and repeat. I would estimate that the first quarter of 2014 was headed for about a 0% rate when the bad weather intervened and dragged it deeper to its eventual resting place of (-2.1%).

So yes, the weather did indeed pull the rate down in the first quarter. But without the winter trench dug by the weather, there is no 4.6% spring rebound that will ease to 3.2%-3.3% after revisions in the third quarter and perhaps to a two-handle in the fourth quarter. The weather didn’t change the underlying strength, as the Fed and others would also tell you, it just squeezed some of the business out of one quarter and into the two subsequent ones. The average real GDP rate for the first three quarters of 2014 is still 2.0%, and may well end up there – again – at the end of the year. Nine in ten fund managers will not tell you this.

There are other junk stones in circulation (and no, I’m not talking about Twitter’s (NYSE:TWTR) holiday sales promo in the Wall Street Journal.

The Financial Times has some junk for sale too. Thursday’s edition had a piece on how the drop in the price of oil is going to save us all, a theme I certainly do not trust. The piece took economists to task for not updating their forecasts: “we do not see any evidence that the growth rate is slowing down. There has been some slowdown in the eurozone, but this is offset by a rise in the growth rate in the US, while China has been fairly stable.” But the U.S. growth rate hasn’t risen, as I just showed above, and China’s production does continue to fall, as last week’s data releases showed.

The improvement in consumer sentiment is meaningless as an indicator of what may happen, but not so for the AAII investor survey. It has a reliable contrarian track record, as even the survey will tell you. Historical data suggests that AAII readings as bullish as this week are invariably followed by prolonged periods of little to no gains in the stock market.

One other meme that puzzles me – though I admit, maybe it shouldn’t – is the steady parade of exclamatory stories about things like jobless claims being at their lowest level since the summer of 2000, or sentiment being its highest since the summer of 2007. In other words, those prior levels came just before the ends of their concomitant business cycles – and bull markets. Now that relationship may be something that should awe you, but somehow the wizards never mention it.

The Economic Beat

It feels a bit awkward to say so, but the message from the week’s releases of U.S. economic data was that nothing has changed. It’s awkward because after spending hours poring over the September wholesale data, September labor turnover (JOLTS) and October retail sales, I don’t know that any of it is telling us anything new and different about the economy, or at least something we didn’t already know.

Wholesale inventories came out of September a bit higher than expected, and that will add a little back to third-quarter GDP estimates, which took a hit after the September trade balance was released (exports down + imports up = GDP down). As the chart below shows, sales growth weakens in the post-recovery stages of the business cycle, but then seem to build up rapidly just before the end, perhaps a contributing factor to the end of the cycle (i.e., too much inventory). The current gap between year-on-year sales growth and inventory growth suggests that the latter could start to tail off soon. Whether or not that happens in time for fourth quarter GDP I couldn’t say, but there doesn’t look to be any urgency about building them further. The seasonally-adjusted inventory-to-sales ratio is on the high side coming into the last quarter.