Tuesday, November 29, 2011

On Strategy

Déjà Vu? Eurozone Crisis Today vs. 2008 Subprime Crisis

November 28, 2011

Key Points

  • News flow on the eurozone debt crisis is speedy, and the latest news of a fiscal pact brings cheers by stock investors… for now.
  • There are many similarities between the 2011 and 2008 crises—but even more differences.
  • The end of the "Debt Supercycle" has ushered in a period of heightened risk and shortened economic/market cycles.
Before we get to a compare-and-contrast between the eurozone debt crisis of today versus the subprime crisis of 2008, let's first summarize (no easy feat) where we are today with the former.

Single currency experiment goes awry

At its most basic, the problems in the eurozone are nothing new: too much debt, from eurozone member countries to over-leveraged European financial institutions. Adding to the woes is the lack of global competitiveness among many of the zone's members, thanks to the tying of 17 vastly different economies and policies to one (too-strong) currency. The lack of a single fiscal authority within the eurozone that's capable of enforcement or supervision has allowed the problems to fester and the can to be continually kicked down the road.
Exacerbating the crisis recently has been spiking yields on sovereign debt of the most heavily indebted counties (Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain, commonly referred to as PIIGS). The fiscal austerity now being demanded is adding to economic woes, making a eurozone recession all but inevitable. Greece remains the most beleaguered of the eurozone nations, but Italy and Spain have come into the crosshairs more recently.
Turmoil in the European banking sector is raising fears of bank runs and/or failures. Thanks to the "haircuts" placed on Greek debts that didn't trigger credit default swaps (CDS), concerns have elevated about further contagion among global banks. If similar haircuts are applied to other countries in the zone, the problem grows. All of this has greatly raised fears of rating-agency downgrades and further spikes in yields, suggesting a vicious cycle of debt, instability and uncertainty.

Germany plays chicken

This is unsustainable longer-term, and policy makers know this. Many believe (as we do) that Germany is presently playing a game of brinkmanship: saying publicly it's against European Central Bank (ECB) initiating quantitative easing (QE) and balking at the issuance of common eurozone bonds. Both are seen as the only viable solutions to stem the crisis longer-term.
Germany's reluctance is understandable: If it rescues its most profligate eurozone neighbors, its own credit standing gets hit. If Germany does not come to the rescue, a eurozone collapse becomes likely. But a groundbreaking fiscal pact may be in the works, whick helps to explain today's market rally.
As reported in the November 28 Wall Street Journal, the fiscal pact aims to prevent the euro currency block from fracturing by tethering its members more closely together. Although not yet agreed to, the pact would make budget discipline legally binding and enforceable by European authorities, and would "mark a seminal shift in the governance of the 17-nation eurozone," according to the WSJ.
One of Germany's biggest concerns regarding QE by the ECB was that it didn't have the ability to control the finances of any country. This pact may be the "out" Germany needs to eventually support QE or eurobonds. QE and/or eurobonds would likely represent the "bazooka" needed to stem the crisis, akin to what the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) was to the US crisis in 2008.

2011 versus 2008

This brings me to the comparisons between today's crisis and 2008's. I enlisted the aid of several colleagues on Schwab's Investment Strategy Council for this section, so thanks go to Kathy Jones, Brad Sorensen, Michelle Gibley, Rob Williams, David Kastner and Tatjana Michel. In fact, many of our discussion occurred on Thanksgiving Day (though it didn't spoil my appetite!)
The eurozone debt crisis is not distinct from 2008's, because what we're really dealing with is the finale of the global "Debt Supercycle" that took decades to brew. A breaking point was reached in the United States in 2008, and more recently in Europe.

The top five list of similarities between the two phases:

  1. Perception: When Greece's troubles erupted, policymakers and investors downplayed it because of its size—similar to the initial perspective about Lehman Brothers' problems.
  2. Liquidity: Eurozone policymakers initially assumed Greece's problems were about liquidity, not solvency, and blamed them on "speculators." This was similar to the initial reaction to the subprime crisis in late 2007; ultimately investors demanded a more comprehensive solution.
  3. Reality: Investors are now faced with the reality that assets previously considered risk-free now carry much more credit risk. Financial engineering then and now had magically and falsely transformed the most-dodgy loans and bonds into highly rated securities. Banks holding eurozone sovereign debt can no longer be sure that the CDS contracts they used to hedge against defaults will be honored, so they've been selling bonds, causing yields to spike.
  4. Contagion: Consistent over the period is a complex web of interconnections among global banks and limited transparency on credit-derivative exposure. Short-term funding risks today also mirror those in 2008, though so far to a lesser degree. The structure of the eurozone system has encouraged its financial institutions to become heavily reliant on short-term funding. The 90 banks covered by the recent European Banking Authority stress tests need to refinance debt in the next two years equivalent to 45% of EU gross domestic product.
  5. Moral hazard: If there are policy options available, how far do you take them to ensure that the parties involved solve their fundamental problems? Bond markets and the cost of short-term borrowing, and/or the evaporation of short-term liquidity in both cases, were factors that exacerbated the crises.

A top-10 list of differences between the two phases:

  1. Origins: The crises had different origins, with the 2008 US crisis spreading from the bottom up: starting with home buyers, through Wall Street's mortgage securitization and asleep-at-the wheel credit rating agencies, to the global economy. The global recession was triggered by the breakdown of the financial sector.

    Europe's crisis today started from the top: fiscally profligate governments and weak economic growth led to a loss of faith by the financial and business communities, which crushed private-sector spending and investment. In this case, one could argue that markets and financial institutions were not the criminals, but the victims.
  2. Direction: The US private and financial sectors gorged on debt prior to 2008, and the subsequent (and forced) deleveraging caused a massive economic shock. Europe's crisis began with weak eurozone peripheral economies, prompting the private sector to hoard cash.
  3. Solutions: The solution(s) to the 2008 crisis required government and central-bank interventions to provide liquidity via record-low interest rates and bank bailouts. The response was swift and coordinated, with the really big gun coming via TARP, which essentially took a massive chunk of private debt and made it public.

    Today, that response is hoped for in Europe, but it's been slow in coming (if it ever does). The primary problem today is a virtual absence of confidence among financial players of every variety in eurozone governments' and policy-makers' ability to stem the tide and stimulate growth. In addition, the bad debt at the heart of the eurozone crisis is already public.
  4. Geography: In 2008, the epicenter of the crisis was the United States, a single nation. Today's the crisis is spread among 17 countries, with surplus economies pitted against deficit economies.
  5. Speed: The crisis in 2008 hit quickly and fiercely with the collapse of Lehman Brothers, even though there had been previous warning signs. The eurozone crisis is moving much more slowly. Although kick-the-can effects are in play, they do give leaders and financial institutions time to make adjustments.
  6. Bullets: Global central banks had more bullets in their guns in 2008 than they do today. Monetary policy in the United States is as close to loose as it can get. Both the Federal Reserve and the ECB have injected massive liquidity into their financial systems, but there are limits to these strategies' effectiveness. This means stimulus is more likely to come from politicians today as compared to central bankers in 2008.
  7. Stress tests: Unlike in the United States, where regulators built a credit stress test for the systemically important financial institutions, European regulators used much less rigor. No write-downs were taken on sovereign debt in held-to-maturity accounts and funding pressure has become more acute. With no credible plan, European banks are forced to sell non-core assets, which will exacerbate the global deleveraging cycle.
  8. Health and liquidity: US Banks are far better capitalized, with much lower leverage than in 2008. Regulation is likely to keep leverage ratios lower going forward, which, although bad for earnings, is good for bondholders and the stability of the financial system. You can see this below in key charts of the Tier 1 Capital Ratio of US banks, US banks' earnings, the Bloomberg Financial Conditions Index and the TED Spread.
  9. Inflation: Commodity inflation was on a tear in 2008, putting significant pressure on emerging-economy central banks to adopt tight monetary policies, which fed into the negative global growth loop. Today, inflation pressures have eased and many global central banks (including the ECB) have moved toward looser policies.
  10. The US economy: Unlike in 2008, when the economy and jobs were imploding, the US economy is much healthier today (if not healthy in an absolute sense). Corporate earnings are on a tear whereas they were pummeled in 2008. Pent-up demand among the household and business sectors should support growth over the next few years.

Tier 1 Capital (as Percent of Risk-Weighted Assets) Much Improved Since 2008

Teir 1 Capital Much Improved Since 2008

Banks' Operating Income Has Surged Since 2008

Banks' Operating Income Has Surged Since 2008

Key Measure of Financial Conditions Much Healthier Than 2008

Key Measure of Financial Conditions Much Healthier Than 2008

Key Measure of Banking System Stress Well Off 2008's Crisis Level

Key Measure of Banking System Stress Well Off 2008's Crisis Level

Conclusion … if there is any to glean

There's no shortage of worries for investors, and when it seems like the negatives begin piling up, the market takes a hit and moves into risk-off mode. But, as we're seeing today, with any sign of good news, the market can shift to risk-on and stage an impressive rally. It's frustrating for investors, but is illustrative of why taking an all-or-nothing approach to being invested in stocks can be dangerous.
These are difficult and somewhat dangerous times. Rolling crises are likely inevitable, leading to shortened economic and market cycles. We're in a period of history with challenges that are new and more powerful than what have been dealt with in the past. But it's also helpful to remember what Warren Buffet once wrote in a shareholder letter: "…we have usually made our best purchases when apprehensions about some macro event were at a peak."

Important Disclosures

Monday, November 28, 2011

Weekly Economic Update
November 28, 2011

A TINY INCREASE IN CONSUMER SPENDING
Personal spending advanced by just 0.1% in October, the smallest gain in four months, as measured by the Commerce Department. Hopefully a strong Black Friday and Cyber Monday will make November a different story. In better news, personal incomes rose 0.4% last month, the best month for that statistic since March. America’s savings rate increased 0.2% to 3.5%.1
                                        
HOUSEHOLD CONFIDENCE RISES
Americans seems to be feeling less pessimistic about the economy. The final November Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey came in at 64.1, much better than the final October mark of 60.9.1

HOME SALES, DURABLE GOODS ORDERS ENCOURAGE
The National Association of Realtors reported a 1.4% increase in existing home sales in October and a 2.2% monthly reduction in the backlog of unsold properties, taking the inventory down to 8.0 months. Overall hard goods orders declined 0.7% in October but were up 0.7% with transportation orders factored out; economists polled by Bloomberg News had expected a 1.2% overall monthly retreat.2,3,4
                                 
GOLD DIPS UNDER $1,700
The precious metal slipped2.27% last week, and it is down 5.71% in the past two weeks; prices settled at 1,685.50 an ounce. Oil lost 0.92% last week on the NYMEX to settle at $96.77 at closing. 5

BUYERS CROWD THE MALLS, BUT NOT WALL STREETStocks were hit hard during a short trading week by two developments: the failure of the “super committee” on Capitol Hill and a German bond auction at which 35% of the 10-year notes offered went unsold. The numbers for the week: DJIA, -4.78% to 11,231.78; S&P 500, -4.69% to 1,158.67; NASDAQ, -5.09% to 2,441.51.6

THIS WEEK: On Cyber Monday, the numbers on October new home sales come out. Tuesday, the latest S&P/Case-Shiller home price index is released along with the Conference Board’s November snapshot of U.S. consumer confidence; also, Tiffany issues 3Q results. Wednesday, we get data on October pending home sales from the National Association of Realtors and a new Federal Reserve Beige Book. Thursday brings the latest initial claims numbers, November’s ISM manufacturing index, data on auto sales from the Commerce Department and earnings from Kroger, Barnes & Noble and H&R Block. Friday, the October unemployment report is released and Big!Lots announces 3Q earnings.

% CHANGE
Y-T-D
1-YR CHG
5-YR AVG
10-YR AVG
DJIA
-2.99
+1.26
-1.71
+1.25
NASDAQ
-7.97
-3.67
-0.15
+2.58
S&P 500
-7.87
-2.58
-3.46
+0.0001
REAL YIELD
11/25 RATE
1 YR AGO
5 YRS AGO
10 YRS AGO
10 YR TIPS
0.05%
0.75%
2.27%
3.50%


Sources: usatoday.com, bigcharts.com, treasury.gov, treasurydirect.gov - 11/25/117,8,9,10
Indices are unmanaged, do not incur fees or expenses, and cannot be invested into directly.
These returns do not include dividends.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

On the Market

Beyond the Supercommittee

November 22, 2011
by the Schwab Center for Financial Research

After months of negotiations, the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction (the "supercommittee") announced that it could not reach agreement, stating: "we have come to the conclusion today that it will not be possible to make any bipartisan agreement available to the public before the committee's deadline."
The supercommittee had a deadline of November 23 to make recommendations to trim at least $1.2 trillion from the budget deficit, but the law required that the supercommittee post publicly any recommendations at least 48 hours before the deadline, or on Monday, November 21.
What's beyond the supercommittee? Schwab answers the key questions.

Why did the supercommittee fail?

The 12 members of the supercommittee struggled to bridge a huge philosophical gap between the two parties in an effort to come up with a plan. The main issue has been the desire of the panel's six Republicans on the committee not to increase taxes, while the panel's six Democrats have opposed significant entitlement cuts without tax increases. This is the same fundamental disagreement that led to the near-shutdown of the government in March, and to the debt ceiling crisis in August. The two sides were never able to come to any agreement.

In the event of a supercommittee failure, automatic spending cuts are supposed to take effect starting in 2013. How large are those cuts and which programs are affected?

Under the law, automatic, across-the-board spending cuts totaling $1.2 trillion will take effect on January 2, 2013, and will be spread out evenly over the next nine years. About $200 billion of that figure comes from savings on interest on the debt, so the total amount of cuts over the nine-year period is about $1 trillion. Half of that amount will come from defense spending and half from non-defense spending. In the latter category, a number of programs are exempt from the cuts, including Social Security, Medicaid, veterans' benefits, children's health programs, and the Earned Income Tax Credit.

Will these spending cuts actually happen, or is there a mechanism for either Congress or the President to intervene?

Because the cuts do not take effect until January 2013, there is more than a year for Congress to undo the cuts. Legislation to exempt more programs could be introduced, approved by both chambers of Congress and signed by the President. A number of members of Congress from both sides of the aisle have said that they will make attempts in the coming year to reduce or eliminate many of the planned cuts. The President has indicated that he would veto such efforts, but no specific proposals have been put forward yet.

A significant number of tax cuts are due to expire in 2011. What are they, and will they be extended?

Over the next several weeks, Congress will have to scramble to extend tax cuts that are set to expire at the end of this year. Lawmakers were waiting to see what the supercommittee did with some of these tax items, and now that nothing has happened, they must be addressed.
Topping the list is the 2011 payroll tax cut. In 2011, the amount of payroll taxes an employee saw taken out of each paycheck was reduced from 6.2% to 4.2%, but that amount is set to revert to 6.2% on January 1, 2012. President Obama has proposed reducing the payroll tax further, to 3.1% for both employees and employers. That proposal has not yet been considered by Congress, and its price tag—about $245 billion—may make it impossible to get through a divided Congress. Just extending the current law for a year would cost about $100 billion. Congress is expected to consider some kind of payroll tax cut extension in December.

Are there other important provisions of the tax code that must be addressed before the end of 2011?

Yes, there are a host of other tax provisions expiring at the end of this year.
Businesses are particularly concerned about the expiration of the research and development tax credit, and several other expiring business tax provisions.
On the individual side, among the items set to expire are the deduction for state and local sales tax, the deduction for college tuition and the IRA charitable rollover. Also expiring at the end of this year is the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) "patch." For more than a decade, Congress has passed a series of patches that increase the amount of income exempt from the AMT. Without this fix, the exempted amount would tumble, potentially exposing an estimated 20-30 million Americans to higher taxes. However, the provision is in place for the 2011 tax year (for which taxpayers will be submitting returns in April 2012), so this does not need to be addressed until sometime before the end of next year.

The Bush-era tax cuts are due to expire at the end of 2012. When will their fate be addressed?

This is the biggest issue. These tax cuts include the reduced income tax rates, the 15% tax rate for capital gains and dividends, the estate tax, and other provisions.
Congress will need to deal with those before the end of 2012. There is a good chance that Congress will wait until after the 2012 elections to address the issue, in what is known as a "lame duck" session of Congress in November/December 2012. That's what happened in 2010, when Congress waited until December 17th before passing a two-year extension of the tax cuts.

The 2012 election is less than a year away. Did either party's chance for gaining ground benefit from the supercommittee failure?

It's hard to say, but our first reaction is that neither party will benefit from this failure. Public reaction is very negative, and there appears to be plenty of blame for both sides.

What are implications of the supercommittee's failure for the stock market overall?

The market action on Monday was grim, but we believe it may have had as much to do with the ongoing eurozone crisis as it did with the failure of the supercommittee to come to an agreement.
It does add to the confidence crisis that's been pervasive, however, and the market will remain attuned to the payroll tax cut, which is due to expire at year-end. Failure to extend that cut could cut shave as much as 1% from gross domestic product in the first half of 2012.
In the meantime, the market continues to resemble a see-saw, moving from risk-on to risk-off mode, depending on news flow. After a nearly 10% rally in the first four months of the year, the market suffered a near-20% correction over the next five months, before rallying a big 17% in October. Since then, the market has been consolidating some of those gains.
We continue to believe the market is in a trading range, but with an upward bias—because although the picture is mixed, there are plenty of positives going for both the economy and the market.

What's the bullish case for US stocks?

We believe there are many positives for US stocks right now, including better economic news from the United States and recent moves on the part of global central banks.
  • Better US economic news:
    • Recent weekly unemployment insurance claims below 400,0001; layoff announcements down; and job postings up (strong Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey report).
    • Bank lending up, both among consumers and businesses.
    • Business and consumer optimism ticking back up after the summer swoon.
    • Inventories have been cut to the bone, taking growth from the third quarter, but are set to be additive in the fourth quarter, as they are now too low relative to sales growth.
    • Leading Economic Indicators (LEI) up sharply in latest report, with positive contributions from nine of the 10 sub-components2.
    • Core inflation moving lower, which should boost "real" gross domestic product (GDP); gasoline prices near their lowest levels of the year.
    • Much better housing news: building permits, new home sales and recent National Association of Home Builders housing index all exceeded expectations.
  • Global central bank and eurozone political leadership capitulations. Although decisive plans to stem the crisis are lacking, the European Central Bank (ECB) and other global central banks have moved into loosening mode, which should help boost growth.
  • Eurozone recession likely underway, but trade with Europe only accounts for 1.3% of US GDP.
  • Strong third-quarter corporate earnings: 18% year-over-year growth in the S&P 500, with companies beating expectations by an average of 6%3.
  • Cheap stock valuations: The S&P 500 has a forward price-earnings ratio of 12 vs. a median of 16.8 since 1990 (the period through which we have data)4.
  • Paltry bond yields: If they begin to rise (while bond prices fall), money could re-allocate from bonds to stocks.
  • Over the past five years, outflows from equity mutual funds of over $400 billion and inflows to bond mutual funds of over $800 billion: $1.2 trillion spread is by far an all-time record flow in favor of bonds.
  • Still-pessimistic investor sentiment, suggesting the "wall of worry" markets like to climb is intact.
  • Market has consistently bounced back quickly after sell-offs, suggesting market players are underinvested and worried about missing out.

What's the bearish case for US stocks?

We believe the bearish case rests on a number of factors.
  • Spikes in yields have moved from the eurozone's periphery to core countries like Italy and Spain.
  • Germany and the ECB are (so far) rejecting calls to bail out struggling countries by buying bonds and acting as lender of last resort.
  • Eurozone is likely already in a recession.
  • Consumer confidence taking another hit from the supercommittee's failure.
  • Oil prices are climbing on Middle East tensions flaring again.
  • Ongoing debt deleveraging by private sector with public sector just starting.
  • Rampant market volatility is keeping individual investors on the sidelines.
  • "Stall speed" of economy means recession risk is not eliminated: downward revision to third quarter GDP adds fuel to that view.
  • The Federal Reserve is pushing on a string; if another round of quantitative easing is coming, it brings unintended consequences, including commodity inflation.
  • Concerns about a hard landing in China, the world's second largest economy.

Are we more persuaded by the bulls or the bears?

The bulls. Admittedly, the bearish case is the more intellectually powerful and will continue to put pressure on the US economy and markets. But we believe much of it is already built into expectations (and prices). When the expectations bar gets set as low as it has been, the ability for results to hurdle that bar becomes easier. As the market's huge rally in October attests, you don't need a rash of exceptionally good news—just marginally better news than the consensus expects—to pull some of the massive sidelined money back into the market.

Are specific sectors or industries at greater risk in the event the automatic cuts happen?

By far the largest industry at risk is in the defense area, which could see up to $900 billion in cuts over the next decade, according to Strategas Group in their report dated November 21, 2011. Highly placed officials inside the military and members of both parties have criticized the cuts, but the President has said he would veto any attempts to "undo" the automatic cuts triggered by the failure of the supercommittee. Should the cuts go into effect, revenues, profits and ultimately the share prices of companies that are heavily dependent on US defense contracts would likely be impacted negatively.
While not as severe, health care companies that deal with the government, especially with Medicare, also stand to be hurt should nothing be done. In the same report, Strategas estimates $120 billion in cuts for those companies that provide Medicare services.
Obviously, there is a long way to go, but we advise investors to keep an eye on the negotiations and monitor their holdings in the above-mentioned industries, as the impact could be substantial if the cuts proceed as planned.

Is there a chance that Moody's will downgrade US debt as a result of the supercommittee's failure?

There's always a risk, but for now the rating agencies appear to be waiting for further developments. After the supercommittee announcement, all three of the major rating agencies—Standard & Poor's, Moody's Investors Service and Fitch Ratings—reaffirmed their current ratings. S&P, which downgraded longer-term US sovereign debt last August, affirmed its AA+ rating, indicating that the imposition of automatic spending cuts is enough to keep the rating unchanged for now. In our view, Moody's, which has the United States still rated Aaa but on negative outlook, could downgrade the US debt if the automatic spending cuts are canceled. Fitch indicated that it is reviewing its AAA rating with a stable outlook in light of the committee's failure to come up with an agreement. Regardless of the debt rating, Treasury yields continue to trade near 40-year lows and the United States continues to see inflows of foreign capital. Even with downgrades, the market action suggests that the US Treasury market remains the benchmark for global investors. We believe that the market will determine interest rates on US debt, not the rating agencies.

What would happen if there were another downgrade of US debt?

If Moody's does downgrade the United States, we doubt it would have a major impact on the market. Rates fell sharply after the S&P downgrade, showing that the focus is more on economic growth, inflation expectations and the safe-haven status of US Treasuries. Some institutional buyers may need to change investment guidelines to hold US Treasuries if two out of three agencies lower the rating, but it is likely these guidelines have already been changed as a result of the S&P move.

Are US Treasuries still a safe-haven investment?

We continue to view the US Treasury market as the benchmark safe-harbor rate even if there is another downgrade. Most tellingly, Treasury yields fell on Monday, which suggests a greater concern about Europe than the supercommittee's failings.

Important Disclosures

Monday, November 21, 2011

Weekly Economic Update
November 21, 2011

CONSUMER PRICES RETREAT IN OCTOBER
For the first month since June, consumer inflation decreased. The biggest influence on the 0.1% decline in the Consumer Price Index? Falling retail gasoline prices. New car prices also saw their biggest one-month drop in nearly two years. Core CPI rose 0.1% in October; annualized inflation lessened to 3.5% with annualized core CPI at 2.1%. Producer prices declined last month as well, going -0.3% after a +0.8% September showing; core PPI was flat in October.1,2
                                        
RETAIL SALES, HOUSING STARTS, LEI ALL ENCOURAGE
The Commerce Department said U.S. retail purchases increased by 0.5% in October – the fifth consecutive monthly gain. While overall housing starts declined 0.3% last month, single-family home construction improved by 5.1%. October housing permits were 17.7% above year-ago levels. The Conference Board’s index of leading economic indicators rose a striking 0.9% in October, with the boost in home construction a key factor.2,3,4,5

GOLD & OIL PRICES SLIDE
In fact, gold had its roughest trading week since September, with prices pulling back 3.5% to $1,720.10 at Friday’s COMEX close. Oil prices also descended: crude settled at $97.41 per barrel on the NYMEX at week’s end.6,7
                                 
STOCKS LOSE SOME GROUND
Investors weren’t buying much last week, what with one eye on Europe and another on the “super committee” impasse in Congress. The Dow, S&P 500 and NASDAQ all pulled back for the week as follows: DJIA, -2.94% to 11,796.23; S&P 500, -3.81% to 1,215.67; NASDAQ, -3.97% to 2,572.50.8

THIS WEEK: Monday, the National Association of Realtors tells us about October existing home sales and Hewlett-Packard and Tyson Foods issue 3Q results. Tuesday brings the second estimate of 3Q GDP, the most recent Federal Reserve policy meeting minutes and earnings from Campbell Soup and Hormel Foods. Wednesday is big indeed: the day before Thanksgiving is the deadline for the Congressional “super committee” to approve a deficit-trimming plan. Wednesday will also see the release of data on October consumer spending and October durable goods orders, plus the latest initial claims figures and the final University of Michigan consumer sentiment poll for the month. Thursday being Thanksgiving, all U.S. financial markets will be closed. This Friday will be Black Friday, of course; the NYSE will have a shortened trading day.

% CHANGE
Y-T-D
1-YR CHG
5-YR AVG
10-YR AVG
DJIA
+1.89
+5.50
-0.89
+1.82
NASDAQ
-3.03
+2.31
+1.04
+3.30
S&P 500
-3.34
+1.59
-2.65
+0.56
REAL YIELD
11/18 RATE
1 YR AGO
5 YRS AGO
10 YRS AGO
10 YR TIPS
0.05%
0.83%
2.33%
3.50%


Sources: cnbc.com, bigcharts.com, treasury.gov, treasurydirect.gov - 11/18/118,9,10,11
Indices are unmanaged, do not incur fees or expenses, and cannot be invested into directly.
These returns do not include dividends.