Demand Decimation Out of Dallas
Manufacturing data has continued to cool with the Dallas Fed’s monthly survey showing further deterioration in the month of June. The reading on General Business Outlook dropped another 4.9 points month over month to -22.6; the worst reading since the spring of 2020. Expectations are similarly at some of the lowest levels in over two years, but July did see a modest rebound.
The individual categories of the report were mixed. While most remain in expansionary territory, some of the more important categories like New Orders are in deep contraction. The month-over-month moves were even more mixed as just over half of the components fell. As we have seen across other regional Fed reports recently, expectations broadly sit at much more depressed levels, although July did see some big rebounds across categories.
Even though demand has slowed, production expanded at a slightly accelerated rate in July. At only 3.8, though, the index is in the bottom quartile of its historical range and capacity utilization is only slightly stronger.
Manufacturers reported the worst slowdown in demand since the spring of 2020 as the index for New Orders fell to -9.2. The 1.9 point sequential decline was actually much smaller than the 10.5 point and 8.9 point declines in June and May, respectively, however that nonetheless expresses demand has been weakening materially. As new demand is a fraction of what it once was, Unfilled Orders experienced a peculiarly large uptick of 14.9 points. That ranks in the top 2% of all monthly moves on record resulting in the index to flip from a historically weak to a more solid reading.
The Dallas Fed report added to the list of indicators pointing to alleviation on the supply chain front as well. The Delivery Times index experienced its second-largest one-month decline on record. Even though that brings the index to a barely expansionary level, the move heavily contrasts with expectations. Future Delivery Times recorded the largest month-over-month gain on record. Given that reading brings the index only to 2.4, it does not mean manufacturers expect delivery times to begin to surge to unprecedented levels as they did earlier in the pandemic. Rather, they no longer expect the rapid improvement that has been observed over the past several months.
As for other metrics that have fallen off a cliff, likely thanks to the easing of supply chain bottlenecks, both Prices Paid and Received are plummeting across both current and future conditions.
In addition to the decline in prices paid and received, the indices tracking the growth of wages and benefits has also been pulling back sharply. Both current conditions and future expectations saw some of their largest one-month declines on record, although, at current levels, they remain more elevated within their historical range than prices paid and received. The employment index peaked well over one year ago, but it has not experienced that same sharp decline as wages in benefits. In fact, there was a modest rise in the reading in July meaning firms increased hiring at an accelerated rate. Contrasting with that higher spending on employment, the capital expenditures index has been consistently grinding lower with this month marking the fourth monthly decline in a row, and at 4.2, it has fallen to the lowest level since October 2020. Click here to learn more about Bespoke’s premium stock market research service.
B.I.G. Tips – Mega-Cap Earnings
Chart(s) of the Day – Downtrends Entrenched But Some Green Shoots
4th Longest Streak of Declines in Prices at the Pump
The price of a gallon of gas, while still up YTD and relative to most other periods in the past, has pulled back considerably and consistently over the last six weeks. While a gallon of gas topped $5 in early to mid-June, over the weekend, the average price was back down to $4.36. The decline in prices has also been consistent as prices have now declined for 41 straight days. Going back to 2005, when AAA began tracking the daily national average price, this current streak now ranks as the fourth-longest on record after surpassing the 39-day streak from September 2006 over the weekend. In order for this current streak to move into the top three and oust the 62-day streak from the COVID crash, we’ll need to see another three weeks of daily declines, and in order to move into first place overall, we’d need to see the current streak nearly triple in length to 118 days and stretch out to early October!
While the current streak of declines is the fourth-longest on record, the magnitude of gasoline’s decline over the last 40 days hasn’t been quite as extreme. At -13%, there have been seven other periods where average prices at the pump experienced a larger decline over the same time period. What is notable, however, is that back in March the 40-day rate of change was the second highest on record trailing only the 33% increase that came in the wake of Hurricane Katrina in September 2005.
In order for prices at the pump to keep declining, we’re going to need oil prices either to stay around current levels or continue declining. Oil prices have obviously been weak for the last month or so, but over the last two weeks have shown some stabilization above the 200-DMA, including two different days when the price dropped below the 200-DMA intraday but bounced. If the 200-DMA holds in the near-term, gas prices are likely to stop declining, so this will be a key level to watch for what will ultimately determine the health of the consumer. Click here to learn more about Bespoke’s premium stock market research service.
Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – 7/25/22 – The Week We’ve All Been Waiting For (Or Dreading)
See what’s driving market performance around the world in today’s Morning Lineup. Bespoke’s Morning Lineup is the best way to start your trading day. Read it now by starting a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium. CLICK HERE to learn more and start your trial.
“It’s a recession when your neighbor loses his job; it’s a depression when you lose yours.” – Harry Truman
Below is a snippet of content from today’s Morning Lineup for Bespoke Premium members. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium now to access the full report.
The weather has been hot across much of the country the last several days, and that heat will move to the markets this week with a busy schedule of economic data, peak earnings season, and the FOMC announcing its latest policy decision.
Ahead of the kickoff of trading, equity futures and bond yields are modestly higher along with crude oil and copper. On the downside, Bitcoin is down over 3% while gold is flat. Over in Europe, Germany’s ifo index tracking the business climate fell more than expected as a recession looks increasingly likely.
Today’s Morning Lineup discusses earnings news out of Europe and the Americas, economic data from around the world, and much more.
With all the earnings and economic data on the calendar this week, investors will likely have a much better read on the economy and its direction on Friday. Several indicators have already pointed to the increased likelihood of a recession, and the yield curve has also been indicating a more precarious economic picture. While the spread between the yields on the 10-year and 2-year US Treasuries has been negative for three weeks now, the spread between the 10-year and the 3-month yields has yet to move to inverted levels. A few months ago, the relative steepness of the Fed’s preferred yield curve measure was cited as a reason why a recession was not in the cards. However, after flattening by nearly 200 bps to just 40 bps in the last three months, even this part of the curve (light blue line) looks much less comforting.

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Bespoke Brunch Reads: 7/24/22
Welcome to Bespoke Brunch Reads — a linkfest of the favorite things we read over the past week. The links are mostly market related, but there are some other interesting subjects covered as well. We hope you enjoy the food for thought as a supplement to the research we provide you during the week.
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Human Resources
The job market is beginning to show cracks by Abha Bhattarai and Lauren Gurley (MSN/WaPo)
As financial markets take a header, spending on high-end goods and services is starting to slow and the result is a weaker job market; layoffs are also being announced across mortgage lenders, auto manufacturers, convenience stores, and more. [Link]
With Few Able and Fewer Willing, U.S. Military Can’t Find Recruits by Dave Philipps (Yahoo!/NYT)
Enlistments have plunged thanks to COVID-19, strong labor markets, and less cultural interest in the military, leading to higher enlistment bonuses and more aggressive recruiting tactics. [Link]
Cost of Living
People Are Losing It Over These $90 Chicken Tenders In Montauk… (Guest of A Guest)
Hamptons life has always been an expensive proposition, but one menu item in a Montauk haunt caught social media attention this week as a particularly egregious bit of price gouging. [Link]
Inflation for Americans at each age (USA Facts)
A fascinating infographic that re-weights CPI to show how inflation impacts people with different ages, since consumer spending patterns vary across the age spectrum. [Link]
America’s favorite family outings are increasingly out of reach by Zachary Crockett (The Hustle)
Widely-accessible leisure activities that used to be par for the course are now completely out of reach for most families: baseball games, movies, and Disneyland trips have all more than doubled in cost. [Link]
Life Science
Blots On A Field? By Charles Piller (Science)
A short seller-funded tear-down of groundbreaking science tying protein plaques to Alzheimer’s disease has turned out to be little more than a mirage and may even rise to the level of fraud. [Link]
New York reports 1st US polio case in nearly a decade by Mike Stobbe (AP)
An unvaccinated person has been paralyzed by the polio virus in New York, with the virus originally coming from a live-virus vaccine that is not available in the United States and must have been transmitted to the patient by someone visiting the US. [Link]
‘Holy grail’ of blood tests could diagnose any type of cancer years in advance (Study Finds)
Many cancers appear to release a protein marker in the early stages of a tumor’s development, when the disease is much easier to treat. [Link]
Politics
A guide to Chile’s constitutions, old and new by Ana Lankes (Medium)
Chile’s constitution has been re-written and will go to a plebiscite later this year. Some history on why the re-write took place and how it looks like it might fare in the approval vote. [Link]
Black Districts Gutted as Suburban Flight Reshapes Congress Maps by Gregory Korte (Bloomberg)
Once a staple of multiracial democracy in the United States, majority-Black Congressional districts have started to disappear in the wake of the Supreme Courts paring-back of the Voting Rights Act. [Link; soft paywall]
Energy
BlackRock Is Buying Renewable Natural Gas Producer for $700 Million by Amrith Ramkumar (WSJ)
While natural gas produced from manure and food waste is still expensive, the market is growing as investors and customers look for gas that is produced from a closed loop rather than extracted from the ground. [Link; paywall]
Sizewell C nuclear plant gets go-ahead from government (BBC)
The UK is moving to expand existing nuclear facilities in Suffolk, with French utility Electricite de France leading the project which will cost tens of billions and see 3.2 GW of electricity supplied with a useful life of 60 years. [Link]
The curious incident of the gas and the turbines by Alexandra Scaggs (FT Alphaville)
A fascinating dive into a financial markets rumor that spread like wildfire and proved to be deeply misleading in terms of actual government policy. [Link; registration required]
Weird News
Final DIY Project: Build Your Own Coffin by James R. Hagerty (WSJ)
It’s one thing to pick your coffin out before you go, but entirely another to build it by hand and have it ready when you kick off this mortal coil. [Link; paywall]
JPMorgan Trader Spoofed So Fast Colleagues Urged Ice on Fingers by Eddie Spence (Bloomberg)
A trader working at Bear Stearns and JPMorgan in the 2000s reportedly spoofed orders so aggressively that colleagues suggest he ice down his hand. [Link; soft paywall]
Media
Media Confidence Ratings at Record Lows by Megan Brenan (Gallup)
Gallup’s tracking of confidence in newspapers and television news has fallen to record lows over the last few years, with only 11% of people reporting “a great deal” or “quite a lot” of confidence in television and 16% for newspapers. [Link]
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Have a great weekend!
The Bespoke Report – 7/22/22 – You Ain’t Seen Nothing Yet
This week’s Bespoke Report newsletter is now available for members.
This week’s Bespoke Report covers everything in the markets this week from the weaker economic numbers to the early indication for this earnings season. We also looked at the significance of some key technical events this week as well as what to expect from the FOMC ahead of next week’s FOMC meeting. To read all about it these events as well as the latest Technical, Sentiment, Historical, and Fundamental trends make sure to check out this week’s report.
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Daily Sector Snapshot — 7/22/22
Charts of the Week from Bespoke — 7/22/22
Below are some of our favorite charts from our work this week. Try Bespoke’s premium research service today to receive our unique stock market charts and analysis in your inbox daily. Click here to start a one-month trial now!
We started the week noting the steep drop in gas prices that we’ve seen from highs made in mid-June. While gas prices are indeed down, they’re still up much more than usual year-to-date. From a seasonal perspective, this is normally a time of year when gas prices are trending lower, so this year’s drop is not out of the norm. In the chart below, the red line shows this year’s change in gas prices, while the blue line shows the average pattern that gas prices have taken throughout the year going back to 2005.
Gas prices are of course driven by the price of crude oil, and in Friday’s Morning Lineup, we noted that crude oil prices have now fallen back to the level they were at when Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine back in late February:
On Wednesday we wrote about weekly mortgage data that continues to show steep drops in activity. As shown below, with mortgage rates rising sharply to levels not seen in more than a decade this year, refinancing activity has fallen to its lowest level since November 2000!
Less activity and much higher costs have caused homebuilders to sour on housing. As we noted in a post on Monday and as shown below, the NAHB’s housing market sentiment index has fallen sharply in recent months to its lowest level since May 2020 just after the pandemic began.
There’s plenty of negative sentiment to go around throughout both the economy and the investment community. In our weekly post on investor sentiment, we highlighted the chart below that shows streaks of weeks where there have been more bears than bulls in the weekly American Association of Individual Investors survey. At 16 consecutive weeks, this is the third longest streak over the past 35 years!
We publish detailed analysis of the CFTC’s weekly Commitment of Traders report in our Closer report every Monday (the Closer is only available to Bespoke Institutional subscribers). The Commitment of Traders report shows how long or short futures traders are on various asset classes based on their positions in the futures market. As shown below, speculator positioning recently turned extremely bearish on the S&P 500. These types of indicators are typically viewed from a contrarian lens, but you can read more about this specific indicator in our blog post from earlier in the week.
In good news, the “prices paid” component of this month’s Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing survey saw another sharp drop for July. While it’s still elevated, this inflation reading has fallen sharply since peaking in April, and signs that inflation has peaked are a key reason why stocks have managed to bounce a bit over the last month or so. You can read more about this month’s Philly Fed report in our post on the subject from Thursday.
Our Morning Lineup is one of our most popular reports for subscribers. We’re biased, but we think it’s the best daily pre-market report in existence! (See for yourself with a one-month Bespoke Premium trial.) The chart below was highlighted in our Morning Lineup on Wednesday after the Nasdaq ended a streak of over 60 trading days below its 50-day moving average. Since the Nasdaq was created in the early 1970s, there have only been 18 other streaks of 60 or more trading days below the 50-DMA. It’s not common, but at least it’s over!
As we close out another hot summer trading week, below is a look at where key US index ETFs stand in their “trading ranges” after the recent surge we’ve seen for stocks. Usually, after an ETF sees a gain of more than 5% in a one-week span, it’s trading well into “overbought” territory. But given how depressed the US stock market had gotten heading into July, most of the index ETFs we follow are still trading in “neutral” territory.
Bespoke Premium and Institutional subscribers can use our interactive Trend Analyzer tool that looks similar to the graphic below. It’s helpful for monitoring indices, sectors, stocks, baskets of stocks, and custom portfolios. We also cover the concept of “overbought” and “oversold” in our work regularly, so if you’d like to learn more about how we monitor price movements, start a one-month Premium trial today!
Later today we’ll be sending subscribers our weekly Bespoke Report newsletter, so be on the lookout for that in your inbox if you’ve already signed up for your trial. We hope you have a great weekend!
Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – 7/22/22 – The Calm Before the Storm
See what’s driving market performance around the world in today’s Morning Lineup. Bespoke’s Morning Lineup is the best way to start your trading day. Read it now by starting a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium. CLICK HERE to learn more and start your trial.
“The impossible could not have happened, therefore the impossible must be possible in spite of appearances.” – Agatha Christie
Below is a snippet of content from today’s Morning Lineup for Bespoke Premium members. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium now to access the full report.
Major US equities are heading into the last day before the weekend holding strong gains for the week. In addition to breaking above their respective 50-day moving averages, the S&P 500 is up 3.5% week to date while the Nasdaq is up over 5%. Futures for both indices are modestly lower this morning, but it could have been worse given some of the weak tech earnings since the close yesterday. Outside of equities, crude oil is lower while US Treasury yields are plunging with the 10-year yield down to 2.8% and the 3m10y treasury yield curve down to just 35 basis points (bps). It’s not inverted yet, but it’s moving quickly in that direction.
Things are pretty quiet given the Summer Friday, but enjoy the calm while it lasts. With earnings season ramping up next week, including reports from the four largest companies in the S&P 500, things could get rocky.
Today’s Morning Lineup discusses earnings news out of Europe and the US, the latest ECB decision, events in the Ukraine and Italy, and economic data from around the world including UK home prices and weekly US mortgage application data.
Crude oil is trading down over 1.5% this morning putting it on pace for the third straight day of declines of over 1%. That would be the longest streak of 1%+ daily declines since mid-March. As we type this, WTI is barely trading above its 200-DMA which is a level it has not closed below since last December. Current levels also coincide with where it was trading right before Putin invaded Ukraine back in late February. After briefly surging above $130 per barrel right after the invasion, crude oil has now declined nearly 28% from that peak. Look for these declines to start showing up in the monthly inflation numbers in the months ahead.

Energy stocks live and die by the price of oil (and natural gas), so it should come as no surprise that with crude oil down by over a quarter and natural gas still down from its early June high (although it has rallied sharply in the last two weeks), energy stocks have been under pressure. After peaking above $90 in early June, the Energy Select Sector SPDR (XLE) has pulled back more than 20%, and like WTI, is trading just above its 200-DMA and right around levels it was trading at prior to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. For both energy commodities and the stocks in the sector, their future direction will depend on the push of geo-political tensions and supply concerns versus the pull of increasingly weaker economic growth.

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