Turning the Corner: GDP, Housing and Cash for Clunkers

Friday’s news of the “less worse” second quarter GDP was received as another piece of good news by the stock market as further evidence of the end of the recession. It capped a week of improving economic news on housing. But the real economic sweetener that offers a tangible boost to the economy in the near term was the announcement on Friday that the government’s “Cash for Clunkers” program was extended by the House of Representatives and augmented by a further $2 Billion in government funds.

Of all of the various government schemes and bailout programs to stimulate the economy over the past two years, the government finally got it right with this one. We have stated repeatedly, the economy was not going to recover until the consumer started moving “goods off the shelves”. Well goods are moving off the shelves or rather cars are flying off of car dealers lots. OK  the U.S. government is buying the cars but the end result is dealers are emptying their inventories and will soon reorder from the factories as long as the government program is in force. The Senate needs to also approve the program’s extension or it will expire by the end of this week. We are optimistic the Senate will vote to continue the program before they adjourn this Friday. This will in turn start the manufacturing replacement cycle. The “Cash for Clunkers” program is expected to increase retail sales beginning in July, increase industrial production by the fourth quarter and even help factory employment due to the higher production rates. Higher auto production will have a widespread positive impact on manufacturing and distribution sectors. It is our belief this program will insure a positive growth in U.S. GDP in both the third and fourth quarters of this year. Now let’s be clear. This is artificial consumption and will deflate when this program expires which we assume will be at year end. We don’t think Congress will ante any more money for this when the current funding is used up. By that time, the rest of the economy may be starting to fill in the void .

To that end, we are seeing for the first time a trend of positive news on housing that would support our long standing forecast of a bottoming in the housing cycle in the second half of this year and obviously remove a major depressant to the economy. This past week both new and existing home sales rose for the third month in a row. And for the first time since the housing market imploded, home prices showed a monthly increase according to the widely followed Case-Shiller Home Price Index. In addition, inventories of existing and new homes are now getting down to normalized levels. Here again, the recovery process is not widespread and is largely centered in homes in the $150,000-$300,000 price range as home buyers take advantage of bargain prices, ample supply and willing sellers in the deflated housing market.

Lastly, the second quarter GDP was reported with a contraction of 1%. While this was better than consensus economic forecasts including our own, it is the first of three readings on the quarter and the one subject to the most revision as more data is processed over the next month. The second reading on the quarter will be reported at the end of August and will be more definitive. While the report was mixed with continuing depressants in consumer spending and business fixed investment, the quarter saw the beginnings of increased government spending which helped offset the weakness in consumption and business investment. Nonetheless, the quarter fulfilled our forecast of a decidedly “less worse” performance than the severe contraction of the first quarter. Importantly, the huge decline in business fixed investment appears to have bottomed in the second quarter and will not be the huge depressant on the economy going forward.

So for the following reasons we now believe the third and fourth quarters of this year will show positive growth though we are not forecasting an economy embarking on a full recovery. Unemployment is still too high and there is a great deal of unutilized production capacity that will keep private sector spending suppressed. However, the bulk of the government stimulus spending will hit the economy in the next four quarters providing a strong plus for GDP growth and exports are picking up from rising economic growth in Asia led by China. These pluses along with reduced minuses from consumption and business fixed investment should equate to positive GDP growth in the second half. The question is can the private sector recover on its own without the huge and finite pull of the federal government. The answer remains the level of unemployment and consumer incomes.

As the macro economic environment improves, the outlook for corporate profit growth also improves providing further stimulus to rising stock markets here and abroad. The likelihood of a sizable correction in the equity markets is diminishing the further we go through this year and into next. We have long been bullish on equities over the 2010-2012 period and increased equity allocations in our capital markets strategy this past spring once a bottom in the recession was perceptible. We have hit that bottom and reaffirm our longer term capital markets strategy of getting fully invested in U.S. and overseas equities with a strong allocation to commodities, including gold.

Morris R. Segall, CFA, CIC

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Aug
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