US Equity And Economic Review For August 17-22

 | Aug 24, 2015 02:33AM ET

For the last several months, I have expressed three concerns regarding the markets. The high current and forward PEs of the major averages were the first. This was followed by the declining top line revenue of the S&P 500 companies. And third were deteriorating market technicals; a weakening advance/decline line, fewer stocks participating in rallies and various averages (the transports, iShares Micro-Cap (NYSE:IWC) and iShares Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM)) declining. All of those factors came home to roost this week as the markets sold-off in a fairly sharp manner.

However, foreign, not domestic, events are behind the sell-off. It arguably started in early June when the Chinese markets sold-off sharply. The impetus for the drop was a horribly over-valued market. But fundamental issues also contributed as the Chinese economy has slowed to ~7% annualized GDP growth. Recent statistics point to a continued slowdown.The negative impact of a slowing Chinese economy has rippled to other countries, from those that supply raw materials to Asian trading partners.All have seen a combination of capital flight and depreciating currency. Exacerbating the latter development is the prospective first rate hike from the Fed, which has put a sell order on any emerging market currency. The US equity markets have been caught in a larger wave of a global equity market sell-off.

The US markets are most definitely in a correction now. But it’s just a correction after a long rally.While the US economy isn’t growing at a gangbusters rate, it’s still expanding. And that should be the main takeaway from recent events. Yes, the economy is moving in slow motion. But that’s the very definition of a debt-deflation recovery. And so long as that remains, the correction has a floor.

The Fundamentals

Let’s start with this overarching macro-analysis from the latest Fed Minutes:

The information reviewed for the July 28-29 meeting suggested that real gross domestic product (GDP) rose moderately in the second quarter after edging down in the first quarter, and that labor market conditions continued to improve. Consumer price inflation continued to run below the FOMC's longer-run objective of 2 percent, restrained by earlier declines in energy prices and further decreases in non-energy import prices. Survey measures of longer-term inflation expectations remained stable, while market-based measures of inflation compensation were still low.

There is nothing new in the minutes’ analysis; the economy is grinding forward. PCEs and income are up. Housing is recovering slowly. Industrial production recently rebounded, but that should be seen as an aberration due to the strong dollar and weak overseas economies. The labor market continues healing.The slight upward trajectory of the numbers is confirmed by the coincident economic indicators, released last week:

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