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Weekly Economic and Financial Commentary

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Neither Deflation Nor Inflation Will Be A Problem In 2009

Mon, Feb 23 2009, 06:53 GMT
by Wachovia Research Team

Wells Fargo Investments, LLC


U.S. Review

Is There A Silver Lining?

This week saw another run of rotten economic news. Housing starts plummeted, industrial production fell sharply, the Philadelphia Fed index hit its lowest level in more than 18 years, and first-time unemployment claims increased. Even the Fed minutes had a weaker tone. With this much crummy news, we wonder if there is a silver lining somewhere.

An apparent bright spot was a rise in the index of leading economic indicators. Though January marks the second consecutive monthly rise for the LEI, it does not likely mark a turn. Most of the improvement in recent months has come from the money supply and interest rate spread. Consumer expectations also improved in January. Expectations turned back down in February, however, and many other indicators also look like they will decline this month as well.

The January price data are both good and bad news. Both rose more than expected in January. Larger-than-expected rises in both indices would normally be bad news. But with so many folks worried about deflation, a little more heat in the PPI and CPI is not all that bad.

Neither Deflation Nor Inflation Will Be A Problem In 2009

January’s slightly larger-than-expected rise in the PPI and CPI does not impact our inflation outlook at all. The PPI for total finished goods rose 0.8 percent in January and prices excluding food and energy rose 0.4 percent. Most of the increase in the headline index was due to sharply higher gasoline prices, which rose 15 percent in January, following twenty percent plus plunges in each of the three previous months. The bounce back in energy prices is not that surprising given how sharply they declined last fall. Energy prices are expected to remain low for the foreseeable future, which should lead to further declines in the year-to-year PPI figures.

Prices outside the energy sector also perked up a bit, with wholesale prices for consumer goods rising 1.0 percent. Here too, prices had declined for some time and a bounce back is not totally unexpected. Consumer goods prices fell 2.5 percent in December and were down 3.2 percent in November. Even with January’s increase, prices are down at a startling 17.7 percent annual rate over the past three months. Moreover, prices continue to tumble further back in the production pipeline. Prices for intermediate goods and services fell 0.7 percent in January and are down at a 31.5 percent annual rate over the past three months. Core intermediate goods prices, which have historically shown the strongest relationship to the CPI, fell 1.1 percent in January and are down at a 22.2 percent pace over the past three months.

The Consumer Price Index rose 0.3 percent in January, which was right in line with expectations. As with the PPI, rising gasoline prices accounted for most of the increase. Prices excluding food and energy items rose a larger-than-expected 0.2 percent. The increase was broad based but once again, most of the categories posting increases had been down sharply in recent months.

Rent of primary residence and owners’ equivalent rent both rose 0.3 percent. The increases seem to fly in the face of the obvious oversupply of housing present throughout the country. The Census Bureau’s quarterly survey shows rental vacancy rates at 10.1 percent nationwide. High and rising vacancy rates, along with growing competition from single-family homes and condominiums now being put out for rent, should be driving rents lower.

January’s rise in rent of primary residence may be a statistical fluke. Many rental agreements include utilities. Since rents are usually fixed for one year terms, a drop in utility costs actually raises the computed rent. This seems to have been the case in January, when prices for fuel oil and other fuels declined 2.7 percent and prices for gas and electricity declined 0.8 percent.


Global Review

Global GDP Tanked Last Quarter

GDP data for foreign economies have trickled in over the past few weeks, and the outturns have been universally bad. As we reported previously, the British and the Euro-zone economies each contracted roughly six percent (annualized rate) in the fourth quarter. It was Asia’s turn this week and the news was even worse. As shown in the chart at the left, real GDP in Japan plunged at an annualized rate of 12.7 percent. Moreover, the 4.6 percent year-over-over contraction in Japanese GDP in the fourth quarter was the sharpest decline since records began in 1955. Japan appears to be in its worst downturn since the end of the Second World War.

The sharp drop in Japanese economic activity in the fourth quarter was due at least in part to the eye-popping 45 percent decline in exports. Japan is an important supplier of capital goods to the rest of the world, especially to other Asian economies, and the global recession that is underway is clearly having a very negative effect on the Japanese economy. Domestic spending in Japan is very weak as well. Personal consumption expenditures declined 1.6 percent at an annualized rate in the fourth quarter, and fixed investment spending dropped 11.3 percent.

Taiwan did not fare much better last quarter. As shown in the top chart, Taiwanese GDP in the fourth quarter fell 8.4 percent on a year-over-year basis, surpassing the previous record decline that was set during the “tech” collapse in 2001. As in the case of Japan, the rest of the world contributed to the weakness in the Taiwanese economy. As shown in the middle chart, the volume of exports nosedived in the fourth quarter. However, domestic demand in Taiwan, which hasn’t been very strong over the past few years, weakened even further in the fourth quarter.

Unfortunately, it appears that global economy has continued to contract at a sharp rate thus far in the first quarter. As shown in the bottom chart, the manufacturing and service sector PMIs in the Euro-zone, which both edged higher in January, set new lows in February. Manufacturing indices in the United States also weakened further in February.

Although there is not much good news at present, there are a number of forces that sooner or later will stabilize global economic activity and eventually lead to recovery. First, short-term interest rates in most countries have declined significantly. Although the usual channels of monetary transmission may be impaired somewhat at present, lower interest rates should eventually help. Most countries have also announced fiscal stimulus plans that will kick in over the course of the year. In addition, lower energy prices will help. If oil prices average $50/barrel this year (WTI is below $40/barrel at present), then roughly $1.5 trillion worth of purchasing power will be transferred from oil-producing nations, which tend to have relatively high propensities to save, to oil-consuming nations, which tend to have higher propensities to consume. This transfer of purchasing power should help to eventually stabilize global economic activity. In the meantime, however, the global economy remains mired in a very deep slump.


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A real-time quote for a fast moving stock may be more indicative of what has already occurred in the market rather than the price you will receive. Your Execution Price and Orders Ahead In a fast market, orders are submitted to market makers and specialists at such a rapid pace, that a backlog builds up which can create significant delays. Market makers may execute orders manually or reduce size guarantees during periods of volatility. When you place a market order, your order is executed on a first-come first-serve basis. This means if there are orders ahead of yours, those orders will be executed first. The execution of orders ahead of yours can significantly affect your execution price. Your submitted market order cannot be changed or cancelled once the stock begins trading. Initial Public Offerings may be Volatile IPOs for some internet, e-commerce and high tech issues may be particularly volatile as they begin to trade in the secondary market. Customers should be aware that market orders for these new public companies are executed at the current market price, not the initial offering price. Market orders are executed fully and promptly, without regard to price and in a fast market this may result in an execution significantly different from the current price quoted for that security. Using a limit order can limit your risk of receiving an unexpected execution price. Large Orders in Fast Markets Large orders are often filled in smaller blocks. An order for 10,000 shares will sometimes be executed in two blocks of 5,000 shares each. In a fast market, when you place an order for 10,000 shares and the real-time market quote indicates there are 15,000 shares at 5, you would expect your order to execute at 5. In a fast market, with a backlog of orders, a real-time quote may not reflect the state of the market at the time your order is received by the market maker or specialist. Once the order is received, it is executed at the best prices available, depending on how many shares are offered at each price. Volatile markets may cause the market maker to reduce the size of guarantees. This could result in your large order being filled in unexpected smaller blocks and at significantly different prices. For example: an order for 10,000 shares could be filled as 2,500 shares at 5 and 7,500 shares at 10, even though you received a real-time quote indicating that 15,000 shares were available at 5. In this example, the market moved significantly from the time the "real-time" market quote was received and when the order was submitted. Online Trading and Duplicate Orders Because fast markets can cause significant delays in the execution of a trade, you may be tempted to cancel and resubmit your order. Please consider these delays before canceling or changing your market order, and then resubmitting it. There is a chance that your order may have already been executed, but due to delays at the exchange, not yet reported. When you cancel or change and then resubmit a market order in a fast market, you run the risk of having duplicate orders executed. Limit Orders Can Limit Risk A limit order establishes a "buy price" at the maximum you're willing to pay, or a "sell price" at the lowest you are willing to receive. Placing limit orders instead of market orders can reduce your risk of receiving an unexpected execution price. A limit order does not guarantee your order will be executed -" however, it does guarantee you will not pay a higher price than you expected. Telephone and Online Access During Volatile Markets During times of high market volatility, customers may experience delays with the Wells Fargo Online Brokerage web site or longer wait times when calling 1-800-TRADERS. It is possible that losses may be suffered due to difficulty in accessing accounts due to high internet traffic or extended wait times to speak to a telephone agent. Freeriding is Prohibited Freeriding is when you buy a security low and sell it high, during the same trading day, but use the proceeds of its sale to pay for the original purchase of the security. There is no prohibition against day trading, however you must avoid freeriding. To avoid freeriding, the funds for the original purchase of the security must come from a source other than the sale of the security. Freeriding violates Regulation T of the Federal Reserve Board concerning the extension of credit by the broker-dealer (Wells Fargo Investments, LLC) to its customers. The penalty requires that the customer's account be frozen for 90 days. Stop and Stop Limit Orders A stop is an order that becomes a market order once the security has traded through the stop price chosen. You are guaranteed to get an execution. For example, you place an order to buy at a stop of $50 which is above the current price of $45. If the price of the stock moves to or above the $50 stop price, the order becomes a market order and will execute at the current market price. Your trade will be executed above, below or at the $50 stop price. In a fast market, the execution price could be drastically different than the stop price. A "sell stop" is very similar. You own a stock with a current market price of $70 a share. You place a sell stop at $67. If the stock drops to $67 or less, the trade becomes a market order and your trade will be executed above, below or at the $67 stop price. In a fast market, the execution price could be drastically different than the stop price. A stop limit has two major differences from a stop order. With a stop limit, you are not guaranteed to get an execution. If you do get an execution on your trade, you are guaranteed to get your limit price or better. For example, you place an order to sell stock you own at a stop limit of $67. If the stock drops to $67 or less, the trade becomes a limit order and your trade will only be executed at $67 or better. Glossary All or None (AON) A stipulation of a buy or sell order which instructs the broker to either fill the whole order or don't fill it at all; but in the latter case, don't cancel it, as the broker would if the order were filled or killed. Day Order A buy or sell order that automatically expires if it is not executed during that trading session. Fill or Kill An order placed that must immediately be filled in its entirety or, if this is not possible, totally canceled. Good Til Canceled (GTC) An order to buy or sell which remains in effect until it is either executed or canceled (WellsTrade® accounts have set a limit of 60 days, after which we will automatically cancel the order). Immediate or Cancel An order condition that requires all or part of an order to be executed immediately. The part of the order that cannot be executed immediately is canceled. Limit Order An order to buy or sell a stated quantity of a security at a specified price or at a better price (higher for sales or lower for purchases). Maintenance Call A call from a broker demanding the deposit of cash or marginable securities to satisfy Regulation T requirements and/or the House Maintenance Requirement. This may happen when the customer's margin account balance falls below the minimum requirements due to market fluctuations or other activity. Margin Requirement Minimum amount that a client must deposit in the form of cash or eligible securities in a margin account as spelled out in Regulation T of the Federal Reserve Board. Reg. T requires a minimum of $2,000 or 50% of the purchase price of eligible securities bought on margin or 50% of the proceeds of short sales. Market Makers NASD member firms that buy and sell NASDAQ securities, at prices they display in NASDAQ, for their own account. There are currently over 500 firms that act as NASDAQ Market Makers. One of the major differences between the NASDAQ Stock Market and other major markets in the U.S. is NASDAQ's structure of competing Market Makers. Each Market Maker competes for customer order flow by displaying buy and sell quotations for a guaranteed number of shares. Once an order is received, the Market Maker will immediately purchase for or sell from its own inventory, or seek the other side of the trade until it is executed, often in a matter of seconds. Market Order An order to buy or sell a stated amount of a security at the best price available at the time the order is received in the trading marketplace. Specialists Specialist firms are those securities firms which hold seats on national securities exchanges and are charged with maintaining orderly markets in the securities in which they have exclusive franchises. They buy securities from investors who want to sell and sell when investors want to buy. Stop An order that becomes a market order once the security has traded through the designated stop price. Buy stops are entered above the current ask price. If the price moves to or above the stop price, the order becomes a market order and will be executed at the current market price. This price may be higher or lower than the stop price. Sell stops are entered below the current market price. If the price moves to or below the stop price, the order becomes a market order and will be executed at the current market price. Stop Limit An order that becomes a limit order once the security trades at the designated stop price. A stop limit order instructs a broker to buy or sell at a specific price or better, but only after a given stop price has been reached or passed. It is a combination of a stop order and a limit order. These articles are for information and education purposes only. You will need to evaluate the merits and risks associated with relying on any information provided. Although this article may provide information relating to approaches to investing or types of securities and investments you might buy or sell, Wells Fargo and its affiliates are not providing investment recommendations, advice, or endorsements. Data have been obtained from what are considered to be reliable sources; however, their accuracy, completeness, or reliability cannot be guaranteed. Wells Fargo makes no warranties and bears no liability for your use of this information. The information made available to you is not intended, and should not be construed as legal, tax, or investment advice, or a legal opinion.

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