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Morning Commentary

Rallied Jolted

By Charles Payne, CEO & Principal Analyst
9/10/2015 8:39 AM

Yesterday, the market came out the gate with a fair amount of gusto only to watch the early rally fizzle in short order.    The blame was laid squarely on the Federal Reserve and a potential rate hike. Yes, a hike next week rather than later this year or later this millennium.  What was the reason for the sudden shift in sentiment?

Apparently, a knee-jerk reaction to the “strong” JOB OPENINGS AND LABOR TURNOVER – JULY 2015 (JOLTs) report was enough to turn the tide and spark an (orderly) rush for the exits.

Here’s the rub.  The report was a tale of strength and a reality check all at the same time.

The headline was a record 5.8 million (series began in 2000) total job openings up 430,000 in a single month.  Wow, that means the United States economy is on fire!  Not really, as there’s the issue of the quality of the jobs and the pace at which they are getting filled. In addition, there’s the issue of people quitting their jobs because they’re so confident a new job will be easier to find and will probably pay them more money.

On that note, it’s curious that 122,000 good-paying professional services jobs opened in the last month but 57,000 fewer people in those industries quit their jobs.  In some ways, it’s totally illogical. These are the in-demand high-paying jobs where people should be wooed and quitting in droves.

Reluctant to Hit the Bricks

Openings

Job Quits

Total

5.8 million

2.7 million

Professional Services & Business

+122,000

-57,000

Food Service

+82,000

+30,000

Retail

+77,000

-37,000

 
On the other hand, restaurant workers are feeling embolden with all the openings they are quitting more, although retail workers seem reluctant to make a move even as opportunities mount.

Jobs and Skills Disconnect

Then there’s the hiring component of the report- it dropped month over month and year over year.   In July, 4,983,000 hires were down from 5,182,000 in June and 5,003,000 a year earlier. Once again, that strong professional services segment was down while food services enjoyed the biggest increase.

The other issue is the so-called “skills gap,” which confounds the employment picture throughout a variety of industries.  There is a dearth of wielders, truck drivers, plumbers and computer coders.   It points to a terrible primary education system and a misguided higher education process.

Janet Yellen has mentioned she watches the JOLTS report closely but her focus is on how many people are quitting as a sign of confidence that typically underpins a strong economy. People aren’t quitting their jobs even in the hot employment niches.

With that in mind, maybe the knee-jerk reaction should have been the Fed to be on hold even longer than anticipated. Honestly, I’m tired of the game, but in a strange way, appreciate the shakeout of weaker hands and the price discovery process even if it’s skewed.

Apple

Apple’s big event was as expected, so the stock which rallied into the event, sold off into the close. That’s not surprising and not necessarily an indictment against company.   I’m struck by two things.

The iPad Pro is 12.9 inches, very light and thin with optional smart keyboards and pencils. The device can be used like old school clipboards in a variety of businesses.

Apple TV sports a new smart remote that connects to SIRI along with other neat features. Has the company finally lived up to TV hype?  I’m not sure, but the pricing speaks volumes (read: it ain’t cheap) when you consider the last version cost $99.00 now:

The iPhones have a ton of bells and whistles as well and should sate the need for the Apple cult to buy the latest.   I think the news was great and the market simply reacted on cue.  I think the company will continue its dominance and ride out overall dips in demand by craving out greater market share.

Tax Policy- We Should all Pay

They say that at the end of the day, elections are about pocketbook issues which should mean we all root for plans that will generate a wave of prosperity that everyone can ride.   Instead, over the years, not only have voters become fixated on how they will be rewarded specifically but more recently many have settled on the idea of simply punishing others as if somehow it will make things better.

Sure, it’s schadenfreude, but it does nothing to make your paycheck go farther, help little Johnny learn to read or stops the post man from ringing twice.

It’s early, and details are still to come, but what I’m hearing so far on tax policy is more of the same. Punish certain people and reward others in ways that deter success.  The latest comes from Jeb Bush whose tax plan promises 15 million fewer payers and increases the earned income tax credit. President Obama pushes the notion the federal government should make work pay with tax credits.

This intrusion provides cover for the bigger ruse of higher taxes and encroaching deeper into corporate coffers.

While the same tide would lift all ships during economic good times, there should also be a policy of all hands on deck. Every adult American should have skin in the game and pay taxes. Right now, that’s not the case. The bottom fifth income range earn 13.8% of the income but have a negative 3.2% share of income tax.

Pay Your Share

Real Tax Picture

Upper End of

Income Range

 

Shares of Total

US Income

Share of Total

Income Tax

Bottom Fifth

$24,200

4.5

-2.2%

$47,300

9.3

-1.0%

Middle Fifth

$79,500

14.8

5.9%

$134,500

20.0

13.4%

Top Fifth

$134,500+

51.3

83.9%

 
For this reason, I think it’s time Americans consider a flat or fair tax system that removes all the gifts and freebies and get us all into the game. I understand it makes buying votes harder, but it’s patriotic, fair and smart.

Today’s Session

The market bias has shifted to the downside, big time, underscored by yesterday’s session which saw an early 190 point rally fly away like dandelion spores.

This morning, the bulls were back ready to give it another shot when one of the most powerful Pharaohs of Wall Street began to talk about market risk.  As David Tepper spoke, the Dow gave up its 150 point pre-opening gain and was on the cusp of a total freefall until he made some positive comments about long term investing.  Tepper’s concerns about the one-two punch of foreign reserves being dumped at the same time the Fed is hiking rates is well taken.   Yet, the reason there are gigantic FX reserves in the first place is the fact it acts as insurance, and if the Fed hikes rates, it will bend over backwards to calm worries of additional action for quite some time.

There wasn’t a noticeable reaction to the import prices for last month which were released this morning, but its big news.  Imports prices were down 1.8%, slightly more than consensus of 1.6%, but it was the largest decline in seven months.  Moreover, import prices have been down in twelve of the last fourteen months.  I recall the Fed minutes voicing concern about the risk of importing deflation.

 


Comments
Agree completely, Charles. 2nd Bush made the mistake that zeroed out taxes on lower income people. Everyone should pay in even if it is just small percent. Keep everyone's skin in the game.

Scott on 9/10/2015 9:41:50 AM
Could you perhaps ask Donald Trump to use his connections to pinpoint the locations of large clusters or concentrations of Muslim males of military age in the USA?

Al M. on 9/10/2015 12:15:26 PM
If someone is making 24K a year and not paying taxes and then a flat tax of 14% starts, that would be over $3,300 less money they will have to survive. This might not sound like much for someone making over 200K but it is a very large amount for those living on a very limited income.

Ed on 9/10/2015 12:20:31 PM
What makes you think we don't all pay taxes? Ever heard of sales taxes? property taxes? gas taxes? capital gain taxes? municipal "fees" , special assessment fees? etc. Taxes come in many forms.

frank dicostanzo on 9/10/2015 5:11:23 PM
Oh for crying out loud you people telling us "poor people pay sales tax..." Gimme a break. State sales tax DOES NOT pay for the military, EPA, FDA, DOE or ANY of the other alphabet soup that is the $4 trillion FEDERAL budget. Are you really that naive ?? As for a flat tax, everyone would get a write off. The $24K example would likely pay about $1900 or about 8%. Sounds fair to me.

David on 9/10/2015 9:50:44 PM
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http://www.hexder.com/


Novan on 9/11/2015 1:28:02 AM
The earned income tax credit is not a tax refund. The most one can get back is 100% of what they paid. It is welfare and should be named as such. I am not saying some poor people don't need help, but don't call it earned income tax ..., call it welfare, and pay it as such.

Joseph Tucciarone on 9/12/2015 12:00:40 PM
 

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