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During the last few weeks and certainly the last few days, we’ve seen uncertainty come roaring back into the stock market. Leading the uncertainty brigade was the now seemingly drawn-out Greek drama, which has the European Union (EU) and Greece back at the negotiating table. Next up were Puerto Rico’s debt woes, and now we’ve got concerns about the Chinese stock market and a potential deal with Iran that could leave the global economy awash in excess oil.
Initially, it may seem as though all of the problems plaguing us are outside of the United States, but I’m afraid to say that’s simply not the case. For the last several months, we’ve had report after report that pointed to a slowing industrial economy here at home. Looking past official government statistics for confirmation, we find it in monthly and weekly truck tonnage and weekly railcar traffic data. Railcar loadings continued to slide in June and finished the month down 7.7% year over year. Even after year-over-year growth in intermodal shipments, total rail shipments (carloads and intermodal originations) were still down 2.3% year over year. Taking a step back reveals the weakness was not just in June, as total U.S. carloads fell 3.8% year over year for the first six months of 2015. With total carloads up modestly during the first quarter of 2015, sandbox math tells us the bulk of the year-over-year decline came in the second quarter.
If we are not careful to look at data sources outside the government, we could be lulled into a false sense that everything is “just grand.” That was certainly the message from the White House last week when it announced a 5.3% unemployment rate. I always say you need to go beneath the headlines to understand what’s really going on, and the June Employment Report was no exception.
Where to start?
The bottom line is much like it has been during the last few years: the unemployment rate continued to fall in June for all of the wrong reasons. That same simple sandbox math I used a few paragraphs above shows us that when the number of people outside the labor force continues to grow faster than the number of jobs created, the unemployment rate will appear to be falling faster than what is really going on in the economy.
Amid all of this, we have to keep our investing wits about us and know which way is up and when to act.
As subscribers to the Growth & Dividend Report know, I tend to keep a list of contenders at the ready for just such situations. In the August 2015 edition of the Growth & Dividend Report newsletter, I’ve shared an updated iteration of that list.
Of course, any and all action that we take hinges on the data. Now, I don’t mean to sound like Fed Chair Janet Yellen here, but it’s the context and perspective offered by intersecting data points that has separated PowerTrend investing from traditional Wall Street research. It also means asking a lot of questions. At times like this when the market is full of uncertainty, I ask questions such as the following:
Each position in the Growth & Dividend Report has similar questions that I ask time and time again to check and double check the underlying premise behind them. As longtime subscribers know, I’m not shy about recommending we take advantage of pullbacks in the market to sweeten our position for the long term. Amid the current bout of market uncertainty and bracing for the strong U.S. dollar impact on upcoming corporate earnings, I’m already eyeing which candidates may become Growth & Dividend Report recommendations in the coming weeks.
I hope you’re thinking that as well. If not, you should be. Here’s how to get started.
Thematic headlines of the week. Each week, I digest a smattering of reports, surveys and other articles to make sure the tailwinds behind each of my PowerTrends, as well as my Growth & Dividend Report recommendations, are intact. As my subscribers know, when the thesis changes, we take action, which usually means booking profits. But every so often, it means limiting losses. Here are some of the items that caught my attention during the last week:
In case you missed it, I encourage you to read my e-letter column from last week about how the U.S. economy fared in Q2 2015. I also invite you to comment in the space provided below my commentary.
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