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June 2009
Place
Your Wagers
Place
Your Wagers…To the point, we want to take a very quick look in this discussion at
the complexion and rhythm of US household wages and salaries, and
broader personal income circumstances of the moment.
The important issue to our forward investment actions and
thinking being, in a world where corporations have taken a literal
machete to employment costs all in the interests of preserving
nominal profits and profit margins, are they essentially
destroying the very source from which future aggregate demand will
be driven within the context of a macro household balance sheet
deleveraging environment that we believe continues for some time
to come? Moreover,
have we entered a bit of a vicious cycle in terms of labor market
pressure feeding into wage pressure, feeding into consumption
pressure that further constricts corporate profits, ultimately
leading to even further pressure on labor costs?
We’ll be suggesting to you that current circumstances are
very much unlike any prior US economic cycle of the last thirty to
forty years at least. We
want to try to tie together a number of broader themes we have
been discussing for a while now.
We’ve
been hammering home the concept that deleveraging is a big macro
construct of the moment. We
see it directly, as we have shown you and discussed many a time
recently, at the household, corporate and financial sector levels.
As a counterpoint, it’s the government who is leveraging
up to try to maintain price and broader economic stability as an
offset. Directly to
the point, in an economy very much dependent on consumer spending,
absent households releveraging their balance sheets (which is
absolutely not occurring, nor do we expect it to ahead), the character of wages, salaries and broader personal
income growth becomes the key driver of a potential forward
consumer spending and broader economic recovery.
US economic recoveries in recent decades have shared three
identical character traits – pent up demand for houses goosing
purchases and ultimately new construction, pent up demand for autos goosing
purchases and ultimately new production, and consumer credit balances taking off
northward in an environment of renewed optimism.
For now, these three character traits are missing from the
broader economic equation. The
deleveraging process occurring directly before our eyes at the
household level tells us that the character of wages, salaries and
personal income takes center stage in the potential for a consumer
led US economy recovery, or not.
Could this very set of facts and the eventual broader
realization of these facts be the basis upon which another
potential leg down in the economy and markets occurs? For
now the financial markets have a head of steam.
Momentum and the gravitational pull of the markets upon those
underweight their asset allocation mandates is driving the short
term. Important to realize just what we are looking at.
Before
taking even one step further, in all sincerity, we ARE NOT walking
through this discussion to incite pessimism.
Far from it. As
we have been trying to hammer home in recent discussions, we very
much need to respect the power and magnitude of money being thrown
at the US economy and financial markets at the current time.
As we’ve documented to you, if the
Fed/Treasury/Administration make good on their current promises of
borrowing, printing and guaranteeing (forward liabilities),
we’re talking about roughly $13 trillion dollars here.
Make no mistake about it, there simply is no precedent at
all in the entirety of US experience for this type of stimulus as
a percentage of GDP being thrown at the financial sector, credit
markets, economy and financial markets.
Will it have a positive impact on both the economy and
financial markets for a time, both in real terms and
perceptually? Without
question. Our interests are to look past through stimulus at the
then underlying sustainable character of the economy, or otherwise.
We
believe that in the importance of looking ahead and trying to
anticipate and develop a game plan for all potential outcomes, we
need to at least address the scenario of a failed consumer
response to stimulus. How
would that come about and what would it mean to the markets?
The financial markets appear to be responding just fine to
stimulus, but what about the heart of the US economy that are
consumers? Further, we
believe it’s important to at least think about potential
outcomes with a bit more seriousness right now given that the
equity markets have come an incredible way in terms of price
appreciation based on the conceptual ideas of “less bad” and
“green shoots”. We
fully expect macro economic stats to continue to get less bad
ahead as the stimulus money increasingly presses into the real
economy and financial markets over the summer and fall of this
year. But, as is
always true in our investment thinking at all points in time, we
also need to be on the lookout for what could hurt us.
What might change the trajectory of consensus thinking?
Secondly, as we have also been suggesting as of late, the
equity market will soon transition from celebrating conceptual
“less bad” toward beginning to actually assess the quality and
character of supposed “good”.
It’s in this transition period to come where we’ll
really need to keep our eyes and minds wide open.
Although
we fully acknowledge that both labor market conditions and
employment, salary and benefit trends have been lagging indicators
in past economic cycles, it’s the nature of the US credit cycle that is the
big “it’s different this time” issue” in our minds.
While the world seems obsessed with focusing on the supply
and availability of credit, we strongly suggest it’s the demand
side of the equation for credit in aggregate that is the key focal
point in a household balance sheet deleveraging environment.
So if indeed we are correct in that deleveraging at the
household level has just gotten started and is in no way even
close to a conclusion, then that leaves the character of wages and
salaries as a key forward driver for aggregate demand (and clearly
by definition retail sales). Has
the green shoots crowd thought this one through?
Could this set of dynamics, or the perceptual realization
of these dynamics be potential catalysts for further pressure on
the real economy and financial markets ahead?
Again, stimulus will have its day and produce some type of
results. But in terms
of the non-stimulus character of the real economy, we believe the
wage and salary issue is simply critical as we try to anticipate
forward demand. In an
environment of deleveraging and deflation, employment trends and
monthly labor numbers become leading indicators as opposed to
lagging. The more folks that lose jobs, the lesser the
potential for forward consumption when the need of households to
pay down debt still exists. Less forward consumption means
lower corporate profits, which means more forward pressure on
wages and employment counts. And that cycles right back into
further subdued consumption. We'll explain more below and look at
supporting data. Our current circumstances are so unlike any
period in recent US history that economic signposts and markers of
the last three to four decades may be quite misleading in the
current cycle. Although it may sound crazy, part of our
thinking must at least allow for some possibility that everything
we've learned about past economic cycles of the last half century
will be wrong in this.
And
to try to intelligently guess at what may be to come in terms of
financial market perceptual turning points ahead, let’s have a
quick multi-decade look at the history of the US employment cost
index. We have not
shown you this is maybe four or five years now.
But certainly given what we have described, it’s time.
Please remember that the Employment Cost Index (ECI) that
comes to us courtesy of our wonderful friends at the Bureau of
Labor Stats (yes, the same folks responsible for the payroll
numbers) is made up of two key components – wages and benefits.
As you can see below, the current (as of 1Q) year over year
change in the ECI is the lowest number in the history of the data.
Again, we should not be expecting fireworks, especially in
the midst of a deep recession. But in the absence of
household credit acceleration, what you see below is the key to
future reacceleration of aggregate demand, or otherwise as the case may be.

Very
quickly, the history of the two components of the ECI (wages and
benefits) is seen below. The
year over year change in wages has never been this low in the
records of the data. And
in terms of growth in benefit costs, we’re pushing historical
lows as we speak. What
does all of this mean? It
tells us labor is under serious total compensation pressure.
And since benefit costs to employers are falling rapidly,
this tells us one of two things is correct.
Either employees are simply losing employer sponsored
benefits they will need to make up on their own out of wages or
total household resources, or their personal participatory costs
in employer sponsored benefits are climbing rapidly (think
co-pays, etc.). Either
way, labor is under serious wage and benefit pressure, really
unlike anything seen over the prior three decades at least.

One
last corroborative chart. This
is the history of the year over year change in US wages and
salaries from the personal income numbers.
We’ve drawn with red bars all of the recessions since 1960 to show
you that the year over year change in wages and salaries has
actually been quite the tell tale sign of official recession
conclusions over this time. Will
it be so again? One
more time, never over the history of the data have we seen this
type of pressure on wages.

IF
you believe, as we do, that the credit cycle for households is
clearly in the reconciliatory repair shop at the moment and not
about to reemerge any time soon, then by default wages and
salaries become the key to potential forward recovery in macro US
economic final demand. Employers
have acted swiftly and strongly to attempt to maintain profits and
profit margins by attacking labor costs.
But it’s these very labor costs that will theoretically
allow their and other employees to buy their production.
The ultimate Catch-22 in a post credit cycle bubble
environment? That’s
exactly how we see it. And
we have the sneaking feeling that if there is to be any next leg
down for the financial markets, it’s this realization that may
be the driver of the perceptual shift, or disappointment in the
rate of level of economic liftoff.
But certainly as per the character of the financial markets
recently, this perceptual shift is not yet upon us. Again, we’re simply trying to anticipate forward outcomes
over the remainder of this year and into early next amidst the
celebratory environment of the moment.
We’ll
make this quick, but we want to walk through the remaining
components of “household financial wherewithal” outside of
wages and salaries to get a broader sense of the current
circumstances surrounding the character of personal income.
As a quick punch line, as we showed you last month in the
“Of Finger And Dikes” discussion, we believe it’s the Fed
and Treasury that are in good part acting to hold up the US credit
markets in the current environment.
In part although it’s really always this way in
meaningful recessions, the Government is also the key support
mechanism in upholding personal income as of now.
Quite the dual roles – holding up the US credit markets
and the character of personal income as it now presents itself.
And at least as of yet, Atlas has not shrugged.
We’ll roll through these components in rapid-fire fashion
to give you a sense of what is going on.
Since
we looked at wages and salaries above, no need for extended
commentary. Point
being, on a year over year rate of change basis, wage and salary
growth is negative as of recently monthly data.
This has not been seen over the history of the data.
Wage and salary growth
is not contributing positively
to personal income, at least not now.
Next
up in the personal income roster of possibilities is
proprietor’s income. Simply,
non-wage categorized income of folks who own businesses.
A good read on the smaller business community?
Indeed. As of
now we’re at a rate of change contraction low not seen since the
early 1980’s recessions. Not
a positive contributor to personal income flexibility for now.

Above
we looked briefly at employer benefit costs in the employment compensation data numbers.
Employers have been cutting back on benefits.
Not a wild new revelation by any means and pretty darn easy
to do in the current labor market.
Within the personal income data, employer “supplements”
to wages and salaries also in part measure the issue of benefits,
but there are some differences.
Included in the supplements data are things like pension
contributions. To be
honest, we believe employers contribute to pensions only when they
HAVE to. As you look
at the chart below, the moves up in the rate of change numbers
have coincidentally come after declines in general equity market
values. In other
words, employers needed to reseed underfunded pension obligations.
Anyway, in broad terms the year over year change in
employer supplements isn’t exactly doing a Herculean job of
adding to personal income character at the moment. Plus, as
is intuitively clear, "supplements" to wages are not
cash in the pockets of households. So regardless of positive
or negative rate of change levels, these numbers really never find
their way into immediate spendable cash flow.

Quite
noticeably the next PI component has reached a record low in terms
of now being a rate of change drag on household personal income
circumstances of the moment. Below
we’re looking at income from assets, virtually 100% driven by
household interest, dividend and rental income streams.
As described, a record rate of change contraction for the
entire history of the data is what characterizes the present.

So
in a bit of quick summation, at the current time we have the year
over year change in wages and salaries, proprietors income and
income from assets all in negative rate of change territory.
They are ALL contracting year over year.
For now, employer supplements are registering a 2.5% year
over year gain, but again this is not current cash in employee pockets
(and can even represent higher unemployment insurance payments,
which would not surprise us at all as being a current driver of
theoretical strength). So
just what the heck is a positive when it comes to personal income
as these key fundamental components of personal income are all
heading south coincidentally?
Positives?
Look no further than the final two components that join in
the mix of characterizing the totality of bottom line personal
income – government social transfer payments and personal taxes.
And guess who has the most influence over both of these?
You bet, the Government.
You can see the longer-term history of the year over year
change in government social benefit payments in the chart below.
We’re now as high as anything seen since the early
1990’s, excluding the one shot tax rebates under the Bush
stimulus plan a while back.

Remember,
it isn’t that this is something bad.
Increased social benefits need to occur during recessions,
as has exactly been the history of the US for five decades now.
We just want to make sure that we are aware of just what
personal income character consists of in order to hopefully look
ahead and make intelligent judgments regarding the true drivers of
the real economy, equity sectors and corporate earnings.
Of
course rounding out the field is the character of personal taxes
right about now. First,
it should be no surprise at all that they are down given the
initial effects of the Obama stimulus plan in terms of immediate
tax relief at the household level.
Secondly, the decline in corporate taxes with the drop in
earnings is a given, but that’s not shown below.
As you can see in the chart that follows, the year over
year decline in personal only income taxes is pushing toward the
lows seen over the entire history of this data.

As
we see it, the prior cycle drop in the rate of change in personal
taxes during the 2001 downturn was all about the vanishing act put
on by capital gains taxation in the wake of the tech/dotcom stock
implosion. At the
moment, we believe the current impact of the loss of capital gains revenues is minor
compared to the loss of non-cap gain related personal income taxes.
The current cycle is all about folks losing their jobs,
seeing a reduction in interest and dividend income, and the
softening in rents due to the home foreclosure issue forcing
rental inventories to near historic highs.
This is real people losing fundamentally real income that
is translating into the big year over year drop in personal taxes.
But to the bottom line of the equation that is pretax
income less taxes, this is an academic benefit to net after-tax
personal income.
By
now we’re pretty darn sure you get the picture, so we will not
belabor the point. As
we stated last month in “Of Fingers And Dikes”, we believe the
Fed/Treasury/Administration has had a huge hand in supporting and
anesthetizing the US credit markets (inclusive of LIBOR).
Without governmental/Fed/Treasury support, there is no way the
headline credit market data would be showing us as much perceptual
healing as has been the case up to this point.
Of course the key question remains, just when can these
folks take their collective fingers out of the multiple holes in
the US credit market dike. For
that, we have no answer. In
like manner, at least as per the data above, it sure appears as if
the US government is now a major infrastructural support to the
character of personal income circumstances of the moment.
Again, this is not wrong and this is not bad.
This pattern repetition is seen in EVERY recession of the
last five decades at least. It’s
just that never have we had the annual rate of change in wages and
salaries, proprietor’s income, and income from other assets all
in negative rate of change territory on a simultaneous basis over
the prior five decades.
That highlights and reinforces the role of the US
government in holding up the current character of personal income.
So
as we step back and contemplate the relationship of labor market
conditions, consumer confidence, retail sales trends historically
and what the equity market is discounting in price in terms of an
economic recovery to come, we need to ask once again, just who (or
whom) will fund higher household consumption ahead at the margin
absent renewed household balance sheet releveraging?
Will it be government transfer payments and lower taxes?
Moreover, households have shown us they have begun to
increase their savings rates.
How can we have much higher consumption ahead accompanied
by higher savings rates when the key core components of personal
income are all in year over year contraction mode?
As we have in so many discussions recently, we keep coming
back to the consumer. We
continue to believe the financial markets are trying their best to
discount a typical consumer and/or corporate demand led economic recovery of the type seen over the
past half century. Yet
when we look at things like the credit markets, personal income
circumstances and the complexion of household balance sheets
crying out for deleveraging, current conditions are quite
different than any recession of the prior half-century, with the
government acting as Atlas holding up the world of
"demand", per se, for now.
Just what type of a valuation multiple do we put on a
financial market under these character circumstances?
We believe this is a very important question the financial
markets will be facing head on during the second half of this year
and early next. For
now, the key recovery fingerprints of every single economic
recovery of the last half century are missing from the current
puzzle (housing demand, auto demand and reacceleration in consumer
credit growth). Standing
in for these classic drivers is the US government.
For how long will this be the case and what should
investors be paying for this stand in role?
Yes, we know the old market saw is hokey, but we can’t
get this one out of our minds.
First price, then optimism…then earnings.
There can be no break in the chain in cyclical bull market
character, and the first two have already gone a long way in terms
of playing out. Absent
household balance sheet reacceleration in leverage it sure seems a
good bet forward corporate earnings are now as dependent on
household wages, salaries and broader personal income as at any
time in recent memory.
And corporations to protect margins and nominal profits are
pressuring wages and salaries downward.
Time
to place your wagers as we look ahead?
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