Michael Lebowitz | Aug 26, 2021 02:46PM ET
Most equity markets are opening flat this morning, appearing unfazed with Chairman Powell's important speech tomorrow. On the contrary, the VIX volatility index is showing some concern, up 4%, and worth keeping an eye on today.
Post-market
Politics
Courtesy of Yahoo
“In the years before the COVID-19 pandemic, one of the biggest sources of buying power in the stock market were the companies themselves.
At the post-crisis buyback peak of March 2018, members of the S&P 500 had spent a collective $823.2 billion repurchasing shares of their own company over the prior 12 months, a pace of more than $200 billion per quarter. During the second quarter of last year, in contrast, S&P 500 members spent a mere $88.7 billion repurchasing their shares.
But as the economy has improved, the stock market has rallied, and management teams can reward shareholders rather than hunker down to survive a recession, corporate buyers have returned as a force in the stock market.
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Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.Get The AppData from Bank of America Global Research published Tuesday showed that last week corporations spent the most repurchasing their own shares in more than five months.
‘Buybacks by corporate clients accelerated from the prior week to the highest level since mid-March, driven by Financials,” the firm said in a note to clients. “Financials has now overtaken Tech as the sector with the largest dollar amount buybacks so far this year.'” – Yahoo
Using Shiller’s monthly inflation-adjusted data from 1900-Present, the S&P 500 is more extended from the long-term exponential growth trend that at the peak of the markets in 1903, 1929, and 1999.
This time is truly different.
Markets jumped earlier this week upon the announcement the Fed’s Jackson Hole conference is virtual. The market’s assumption being the Fed is worried about the variant and therefore likely to downplay taper given new vulnerabilities to the economy. The reality is that new Delta cases appear to be falling. The graphs below from IHME/University of Washington show confirmed infections are stabilizing or declining and IHME’s estimates are also moving lower.
The graph below, highlighting President Biden’s declining approval rating, is an important macro factor emerging on the horizon. There are two points in regards to his ratings worth keeping an eye on.
First, Biden will try to improve his ratings. Will he push legislation for even more fiscal stimulus or other economic boosting measures to win approval? In a similar vein, will he back off on tax increases?
Second, will some Democratic Senators and Representatives, especially those facing tight reelection campaigns in a year, start to shy away from the President? If so, winning their votes for infrastructure, the budget, or anything else will become tougher.
The savings rate spiked early in the pandemic due to the abundance of fiscal stimulus sent directly to individuals along with less consumption as important segments of the retail economy were shut down. Since then, additional savings and further rounds of stimulus boosted consumption and nominal economic growth to levels last seen in the 1950s. Both sources of economic activity are coming to an end which helps partially explain why consumer confidence fell sharply last month and retail sales have been weak. The economy is slowly but surely being left to stand on its own legs. Will the Fed hold of tapering QE as economic reality emerges?
The graph below from Arbor Research provides a clue for the recent decline in consumer confidence. Based on Google search data, the term stagflation is now the leading ‘flation search word. Stagflation entails weak economic activity coupled with inflation. Stagflation results in higher unemployment and negative real wage growth.
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