Consumer Confidence Slides, Misses By Most In 8 Years

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ConsumerConfidenceSlides, MissesByMostIn 8 Years

// ZeroHedge

Following December’s biggest-surge-in-4-years for UMich consumer confidence (though a miss), UMich data has fallen backto 80.4 – missingexpectationsbythebiggestmarginin 8 years. This is the 4th miss in the last 5 months as hope for moar multiple expansion begins to fade. Both current conditions and the outlook indices fell (for the first time sicne October). As UPSwouldsays, confidencedroppedbecausetherewastoomuchconfidence…

Following Bernanke’s "hope" strewnfarewellspeechyesterday, gaining the confidence of the market (and main street) seems his big plan…

As a gentle reminder, as wehavenotedpreviously – this move in confidence is key…

But, it’s all about confidence… investors will not be willing to pay increasing multiples unless they are confident that the future streams of earnings are sustainable and forecastable… And simply put, thecurrentlevelsofConsumerSentimentneedtoalmostdoublefortheUSequitymarkettpapproachhistoricalmultiplevaluationlevels…

and the cycle appears to be shifting…

ViaCiti,

Isconsumerconfidencesettoturn?

Consumer Confidence is once again following a dynamic where we see it move higher for 4 years and 4 months before beginning to collapse

Moves higher from 1996-2000 with a smaller dip halfway through in October 1998Moves higher from 2003-2007 with a smaller dip hallway through in October 2005Moves higher and so far tops out in June 2013. Also sees a small dip halfway through in October 2011.

Higher yields do not help confidence…

A sharp rise in mortgage rates has a negative feedback loop to consumer confidence. For those families and individuals that were now looking/able to enter the housing market, the recent spike in rates acts as a headwind.

In addition to the economic backdrop, there is plenty of tail risk as we head into the end of the year. Oil prices have been rising since the summer began (and in reality since the Summer of 2012), partially due to geopolitical risks which are very much “top of mind.” A bigger spike due to a supply shock would choke the economic recovery.(In our view)

In the US, the appointment of a new Fed Chairman and the upcoming budget/debt ceiling debates are likely to bring added volatility. Tapering itself can also induce concern as the “Bernanke put” is being removed from markets.

In Europe, many of the structural problems related to the single currency union have not actually been addressed and the peripheral countries could still create turmoil going forward (see Fixed Income section focusing on Italy in particular for more on this). There has also been little concern with both the German elections and the German Court decision on the constitutionality of the OMT program. A surprise in either of these could be cause for concern.

Emerging Markets are still not out of the woods yet as growth has been weak relative to expectations and countries with current account deficits are beginning to feel pressure in their FX and Bond markets. This is an issue we believe is only starting to develop which we will continue to expand on at later dates.(We have also looked at this in our EM FX section this week)

Overall, the weak economic backdrop, poor housing recovery and potential for tail risk events over the next few months suggest that we have topped out in Consumer Confidence, a warning sign for equity markets.

The relationship between Consumer Confidence is clear, and IF June did mark the high and Confidence continues to decline, then we would expect to see that translate to weakness in the equity markets. The removal of the “Bernanke put” only adds to this concern.

A major turn has taken place in equity markets on average four months after Consumer Confidence turns, which would point to a decline beginning around September-October. As we have previously expressed, we remain of the bias that a correction in equity markets on the order of 20%+ is likely this year/ into 2014 and the current dynamics support such a move.

Should we see a decline of that magnitude, it is almost certain that yields would move lower in a rush to safe assets.

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