Markets Enjoy First Week As Retail Slumps

When you are the parent of a growing child, the holiday season is one of excitement.  Kids eagerly anticipate what treasures may be in store for them and create wish lists for their loving (gullible?) parents in order to provide ‘guidance’ about what kinds of things they might enjoy. However, there are youngsters who don’t necessarily take it so well when they anxiously unwrap the hard to tear wrapping, and then grapple with those impossible covers, only to be bitterly disappointed with the well intentioned book.  Heaven help you if you are the parent in this circumstance.  Tears, crying, self pity, you name it, the academy awards don’t produce better shows.  Fortunately, it only happens once in a while as most kids eventually accept that their parents are trying to do their best for them.  With families with more than one child, if one is happy with their gift and the other is not, sometimes you can contrast the unbridled joy with abject misery.  Essentially, you have the essence of a zero sum game, if I win, you lose, or vice versa.  Well, it certainly does apply in the financial markets as well, especially in the retail sector.

On Wall Street this week, investors continued the trend of feeling positive about equities as the equity markets enjoyed a nice gain.  However, the one area which detracted from the week of good feeling was in retail as Macy’s (M) and Kohl’s (KSS) warned, as did plenty of other companies in the sector.

When you look at the figures in retail, the results are ugly, uglier, and ugliest as comp store sales are trending -6% to -9% year over year. Not good. Conversely, over at Amazon, (AMZN) the voice controlled hardware of the Echo and Dot are all sold out, shipping over 5 million units.  With voice activated televisions being previewed at this weeks Consumer Electronics Show here in Las Vegas, you have to make Mr. Bezos the leader in the artificial intelligence race. The reasons include the large installed customer base of Amazon Prime, the success of Alexa, Echo, and Dot, and the vast experience of using algorithms to increasingly figure out what customers want on each successive order, you know, if you like this, you might like that kind of suggestion.  

More relevant to the topic du jour is if the large retail chains are suffering, some entity must be benefiting, and that would be the behemoth in Redmond. It certainly fits the classic definition of a zero sum game, and increasingly looks to be playing out that way.  

Elswhere, the December jobs report showed a gain of 156 thousand jobs, right in line with the 2% GDP growth we have become accustomed to under the outgoing O administration.  Average hourly earnings finally rose (2.9%) as workers had a little bit more scratch in their pockets for the holidays, though the results from the retailers apparently don’t indicate that.  

The CES show is agog over the various inroads being made in autonomous vehicles and how chip makers will potentially benefit (NXP, Nvidia, MobileEye).  Earnings season will start in earnest next week as Alcoa usually kicks off the parade, followed by the banks. Oil has been holding steady as has gold, both rising a tad, helped by a weaker dollar.

In the political world, Mr. Trump keeps dinging the car manufacturers and rumors of potential appointments to the Federal Reserve Board suggest a banking executive with plenty of experience and a slant towards the gold standard. I am sure Mrs. Yellen is taking note.   

Disclaimer: Thanks for reading the blog this week and if you have any questions or comments, please email me at information@y-hc.com. more

How did you like this article? Let us know so we can better customize your reading experience.

Comments

Leave a comment to automatically be entered into our contest to win a free Echo Show.