Eric Ludwig is a Certified Financial Planner in Sun Prairie, WI primarily for a select group of successful professionals and business owners, who aspire to a work-optional lifestyle. Stockbridge has developed and refined a process to put all the pieces of the financial puzzle together and we call it the Stockbridge D3 Process, which stands for Discover, Design, Deploy.
Updates
November 2018 Market Update
In this video we discuss:
• How rate changes and Federal Reserve Jay Powell’s comments have impacted markets in November.
• Current Market Valuations and expectations of US Stock market returns over the next 10 years
• Current Investor Sentiment readings, and what they mean
• A big IF from the G20 summit IF something positive happens on trade with Trump and China
Stock and bond market update provided by Eric Ludwig CFP®, CEO of Stockbridge Private Wealth Management.
View historical PE ratios: http://www.multpl.com/shiller-pe/
AAII Investor Sentiment ratio: https://www.quandl.com/data/AAII/AAII…
Investors Intelligence Advisor’s Sentiment Report: http://www.investorsintelligence.com/…
Mid-term elections 2018. What stocks will do next
Is 2020 the Year for Recession?
Is 2020 the Year for Recession?
According to former Fed Chair Ben Bernanke, the U.S. economy will get a Wile E. Coyote surprise in 2020. You know, just when everyone thinks he caught the Roadrunner, Wile notices he has run straight off a cliff, plummets seemingly forever before hitting the bottom in a cloud of dust, and then, just for spite, an anvil lands on his head.
In other words, Bernanke sees a 2020 recession looming. Other analysts are saying it, too. And whenever they do, they get their name in the headlines. Scaremongering attracts attention.
But there is good news here: The Pouting Pundits of Pessimism don’t think the crisis starts tomorrow. No longer does some exogenous crisis event – say, Brexit, or Grexit, student loan defaults, etc., – threaten imminent collapse. Now, the recession doesn’t happen for another two years.
Another interesting detail: the new problem is that the economy is growing too fast. Remember when analysts used to say, “since the economy is growing less than 2% annually, it means a recession is coming”? Now, Bernanke says the U.S. applied stimulus (in the form of a tax cut) “at the very wrong moment,” with the economy already at full employment. In other words, real GDP growth is too strong, so the Fed will over-tighten and a recession is inevitable.
Now we agree that a recession is coming – someday. Guess what happens after Summer? Winter! What happens after expansion? Recession! Recessions are a fact of life, like death and taxes. But predicting one in 2020 – and being right about it – is like reading tea leaves, it’s pure chance. No one, and we mean no one, can honestly see that far in the future – not with the clarity expressed by these forecasts.
No one knows exactly what the Fed will do, not even the Fed. Let’s say they follow their forecasts, raising fed funds to 3.5% in 2019. That alone doesn’t tell us if policy is “tight.”
While most recessions are caused by an excessively tight Fed, we don’t think the Fed is too tight until it drives the federal funds rate close to, or above, the rate of growth in nominal GDP. Over the past five years, nominal GDP has averaged about 3.9%. Which means if the Fed were to raise the funds rate by 0.25% three more times in 2018 and four times in 2019 (reaching 3.5%), and if nominal growth slowed to 3.5%, the Fed would be tight at that point. A recession would be possible.
However in the past year, nominal GDP growth has accelerated to 4.7%, and next year it could be as high as 6%. That means a 3.5% federal funds rate would not be restrictive. The Fed would have to raise rates faster and farther than any forecast we have seen in order to be “tight” going into 2020. At the same time, there are still at least $1.9 trillion in excess bank reserves. Until those reserves are eliminated, no one knows if raising rates can actually cause a recession.
We do have one major worry. Government spending is rising rapidly, and the deficits this spending creates will put pressure on politicians. If they were to raise tax rates, this could cause potential problems for U.S. growth.
But the bottom-line remains: the U.S. is not facing an imminent threat. That’s why doom and gloomers have shifted to forecasting future recessions, not looming crises. But we think it’s not going to be the economy that gets an anvil on its head in 2020. More likely, it’ll be investors who believe in the recession forecast.
May Unemployment Looks Great
May Unemployment Looks Great
In over thirty years of watching the economy we’ve seen recessions, recoveries (both slow and fast), panics, lulls, and boomlets. But we’ve rarely seen a job market this strong.
Everything is hyper-politicized these days, and we get accused of playing politics all the time. But what we care about deeply, what drives our focus, is the growth that creates opportunities for individual skills to shine in service to others. The development of assets – both physical and intellectual – to build for the future. But it all starts with work, and there are now more Americans working than ever before – over 148 million, to be precise.
Nonfarm payrolls grew 223,000 in May and are up 2.4 million in the past year. Civilian employment, an alternative gauge of jobs that better measures small business start-ups, grew 293,000 in May and is up 2.3 million in the past year.
And, importantly, it’s the private sector driving growth, not government. Government jobs are up a total of 21,000 in the past year. Meanwhile, manufacturing payrolls are up 259,000 in the past year, the fastest twelve-month increase since 1998. If technology is supposed to be killing employment in manufacturing, I guess they didn’t get the memo.
No matter how you slice it, things look good.
But we’re not done. The unemployment rate dropped to 3.8% in May, tying the lowest reading since 1969. We think we’re headed lower, forecasting a 3.2% rate by the end of 2019 with a chance for a 2-handle on the unemployment rate sometime in 2020.
May also saw the black unemployment rate fall to 5.9%, the lowest reading since record keeping started in the early 1970s. Black employment is up 3.5% per year in the past two years, versus a 0.9% per year gain for whites. As a result, the gap between the black and white unemployment rates is now only 2.4 percentage points, the smallest gap on record.
Let’s keep it going. In the past twelve months, the average jobless rate among those without a high school degree is 6.0%, also the lowest on record (going back to the early 1990s).
Still, people bemoan wage growth. We’ve never thought average hourly earnings (which do not include irregular bonuses, commissions, or tips) are a good measure of living standards. “Real” (inflation-adjusted) average hourly earnings are up just 0.2% from a year ago and up 7.2% from the start of the last recession. But, again, this does not include the one-time bonuses many companies paid after the tax cut was enacted late last year.
In addition, there’s evidence that the Labor Department’s measure of wage growth is being held down by the retirement of older, more highly paid Baby Boomers, while new-hire Millennials are just beginning to climb the compensation ladder. So while average hourly earnings for all workers are up 2.7% (not adjusted for inflation), if you take out new entrants and retirees, wage gains are up 3.3% in the past year. We expect this to accelerate, pushing overall wages higher as well.
It’s a tight labor market, with initial claims at the lowest level ever as a percent of total employment and wages rising fast enough to pull people off the disability rolls and back into the job market.
This will help improve the low labor force participation rate. Participation among prime-age workers – those 25-54, who are either working or looking for work – was 81.8% in May, the same as the average for the past year.
To put that in perspective, that’s higher than it ever was before 1986. The averages by decade are 67.4% in the 1950s, 70.0% in the 1960s, 74.2% in the 1970s, 81.1% in the 1980s, 83.7% in the 1990s, and 83.1% in the first decade of the 21st Century. Even the all-time high for any twelve-month period, back in 1998-99, was 84.2%, not substantially higher than it is today.
So, while participation is down from when the U.S. population was younger on average, it’s way up compared to the 1950s-60s, which many view as a strong period for the labor market.
Back in the 1950s and 60s, redistribution of income was well below today’s levels. If the U.S. really wants more people in the labor force it must either reduce government benefits for not working or wait for the private sector to raise wages enough to pull people off government programs. With the recent strength in the labor market, the latter seems more probable. Tax cuts and deregulation will keep the job market strong.
Labor Market Strength
Labor Market Strength
The US labor market has rarely been stronger.
Recent figures from the Labor Department show US businesses had a total of 6.550 million job openings in March versus 6.585 million people who were unemployed. That’s a gap of only 35,000 workers. By contrast, this gap never fell below 2 million in the previous economic expansion that ended in 2007, and stood at 638,000 in January 2001, at the end of the expansion that started in mid-1991 and ran through early 2001.
Of course, these figures have to be put in context. The measure of unemployed workers doesn’t include “discouraged” workers, for example, nor does it include part-time workers who say they want full-time jobs. And it’s not like all the unemployed have the skill sets needed for the job openings that are available.
Still, the negligible gap between the number of job openings and the number of unemployed who are pursuing work shows that the demand for labor is intense.
Reports on jobless claims show companies are clinging to their workers. In the past four weeks, the average pace of initial jobless claims has been the lowest since 1969; meanwhile, continuing claims have averaged the lowest since 1973.
And new jobs continue to be created. In the past year, nonfarm payrolls are up an average of 190,000 per month, matching the pace of the year ending in April 2017. As a result of this continued job creation, the jobless rate has dropped to 3.9% in April, the lowest since the peak of the internet boom in 2000.
Assuming a real GDP growth rate of 3.0% this year and next, we think the jobless rate will finish 2018 at 3.7%. That would be the lowest rate since 1969.
Then, in 2019, the jobless rate should drop to 3.2%, the lowest since 1953. Beyond that, continued solid growth could realistically push the jobless rate below 3.0%.
Maybe it’s optimism about the labor market that’s behind President Trump’s recent tick upwards in popularity and the GOP’s better performance in the “generic” ballot, which measures whether potential voters are inclined to support Republicans or Democrats in House races this November. Either way, it doesn’t seem like an environment that favors a tidal wave of change for the Democrats this fall. The odds of the GOP keeping the House are rising, and the GOP looks more likely to gain Senate seats than lose them.
Although some still bemoan slow growth in wages, April average hourly earnings were up a respectable 2.6% in the past year. And that doesn’t include the kinds of one-time bonuses that have become more widespread since the tax cut was enacted in late 2017.
The biggest blemish on the labor market is that the participation rate – the share of adults who are either working or actively looking for work – is still low by the standards of the last forty years. After peaking at 67.3% in early 2000, the participation rate has declined to the current reading of 62.8% in April.
This drop is mainly due to three factors: the aging of the Baby Boom generation into retirement years, overly generous student aid (which has reduced the willingness of young Americans to work), and disability benefits that are too easily available. Hopefully, the coming years will see policymakers find ways to tighten rules on disability while limiting student aid to truly needy students who are taking economically useful coursework.
But even if these changes don’t happen, look for more good news – and an even stronger labor market – in the year ahead.
Eric Ludwig is a certified financial planner in Madison, WI primarily for a select group of successful professionals and business owners, who among other things aspire to a work-optional lifestyle. Stockbridge has developed and refined a process to put all the pieces of that puzzle together and we call it the Stockbridge GPS process. GPS stands for Goals, Planning, Strategy.