This morning’s solid retail sales report is emboldening the Trump trade as the Dow Jones and Russell 2000 benchmarks soar at the expense of popular technology names. American consumers are certainly flaunting their shopping bags, fresh kicks and Amazon gift cards, but domestic homebuilders have extended their leases at nearby storage units where they’re parking their hammers, screwdrivers, tape measures and circular saws as they await better conditions in the real estate sector. Indeed, this morning’s sentiment data was the worst of the year, as an unfavorable price/rate mix continues to dent affordability.
Shoppers Splurge Across Most Categories
Consumers picked up their spending pace on core categories last month, with transactions reflecting broad-based strength despite acute weakness isolated to automobiles and gasoline. Dealership cyberattacks are to blame for the former category. Indeed, declines in those two areas contributed to a flat month over month (m/m) reading, in-line with projections and slower than May’s 0.3% increase. June’s transactions excluding automobiles rose 0.4% m/m, meanwhile, and increased 0.8% m/m when omitting automobiles and gasoline. Both figures accelerated from May’s 0.1% and 0.3% while surpassing expectations for 0.1% and 0.2% growth.
Despite the stagnant headline figure, ten of thirteen major components sported gains. The leading growth categories and their m/m increases included the following:
- Ecommerce, 1.9%
- Building materials suppliers, 1.4%
- Health and personal care retailers, 0.9%
- Furniture showrooms, 0.6%
- Clothing, 0.6%
Electronics shops, general merchandise retailers, miscellaneous stores, dining establishments and food markets experienced smaller upticks of 0.4%, 0.4%, 0.3%, 0.3% and 0.1%. Weighing on overall results were gasoline stations, automobile dealerships and sporting goods boutiques with declines of 3%, 2% and 0.1% m/m.
Gloom Heightens Among Homebuilders
Homebuilder sentiment tanked this month as the gap between sellers’ asking prices and buyers’ spending limits remained historically wide. The NAHB/Wells Fargo National Housing Market Index fell to 42, beneath the median projection of 44 and June’s 43. The pace of single-family sales and traffic of prospective buyers weighed on the headline figure, with this month’s numbers arriving at 47 and 27, each a point lower than June’s level. Encouragingly, the outlook for single-family sales over the next six months improved marginally from 47 to 48 during the period. From a regional perspective, top-line results for the Northeast, Midwest and West declined from 62, 40 and 38 to 47, 39 and 37. The South remained steady at 43.
Wall Street Feasts on Investment Banking
Investment banking continues to be a sweet spot for second-quarter earnings while other forms of non-interest income are also helping to boost financial firms’ results. In the medical industry, however, UnitedHealth Group reported growing expenses. Consider the following earnings highlights:
- Bank of America’s second-quarter earnings and revenue exceeded analysts’ expectations despite profits dropping 6.9% year over year (y/y). For the recent quarter, investment banking fees grew 29% from the year-ago period, partially offsetting a decline in net interest income (NII), which is the difference in the cost of capital and the interest received from loans. The metric weakened due to the bank paying customers higher interest rates on deposits. Wealth management also supported results, with strong stock market performance causing a jump in asset-based fees. Bank of America shares climbed 2% in early trading, a result of the bank guiding for an increase in NII during the final quarter of this year.
- Morgan Stanley reported a 41% y/y jump in profits with strong investment banking and asset management fees powering results. The firm’s earnings and revenue both exceeded analyst consensus expectations. Regarding fixed-income underwriting, gains were driven primarily by non-investment grade companies. Morgan Stanley also experienced significant increases in equity and fixed-income trading with revenues from those services surging past analysts’ expectations.
- PNC Financial Services wasn’t immune from higher deposit costs, causing its second-quarter NII to sink 6% y/y, a deceleration from the 9% decline in the preceding three-month period. While its earnings beat the analyst consensus estimate, revenue missed expectations. On a positive note, non-interest income increased y/y across categories with capital markets and advisory services gaining in the double digits. Income from residential and commercial mortgages also climbed significantly. Relative to the first quarter of this year, nonperforming loans increased 5% to $2.5 billion due primarily to problems with commercial loans. Net loan charge-offs totaled $262 million, up $19 million, with the lion’s share of the category associated with commercial real estate. PNC stock gained nearly 3% in early trading.
- State Street, a custodial bank, reported a 3% y/y increase in the fees it collects, and its overall revenue that beat expectations. As of the end of the second quarter, assets under custody and administration set an all-time high for the firm following vibrant equity market performance. Additionally, assets under managed leaped 16%. The firm also bucked a trend of weakening NII with the revenue source climbing 6% y/y. Higher expenses, however, caused profits to contract 7%. The company’s share price climbed approximately 3% in early trading.
- UnitedHealth Group posted results that were hurt by higher medical expenses and a cyberattack. Analysts expected the company to report a medical-loss ratio, or the amount of premiums paid out to for medical expenses, of 84.5%, but the second-quarter metric was 85.1%. UnitedHealth also said its medical-loss ratio will be at the higher end of its full-year guidance. It cited aggressive billing practices among healthcare providers and higher Medicaid costs. However, after adjusted for one-time expenses, such as a February cyberattack on the company’s Change subsidiary and the upcoming sales of South American assets, UnitedHealth Group exceeded earnings expectations.
Investors Flock to Domestically Focused Companies
Markets are tilted bullish today as investors scoop up value and small cap stocks, which tend to be domestically oriented and perceived to benefit disproportionately from a Trump victory in November. The dollar is higher, though, despite steady yields, a result of stronger consumption data and brighter economic prospects relative to global counterparts. All major US equity indices are pointing north with the Russell 2000, Dow Jones Industrial, S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite baskets higher by 2.5%, 1.6%, 0.5% and 0.1%. All eleven sectors are loftier except for technology, which is down 0.4%. Leading the bulls are industrials, materials and healthcare, which are up 2%, 1.4% and 1.3%. The Dollar Index is higher by 15 basis points to 104.41 as the greenback appreciates versus all of its major peers, including the euro, pound sterling, franc, yen, yuan and Aussie and Canadian dollars. Treasurys are rather steady, with the 2- and 10-year maturities changing hands at 4.46% and 4.20%. Commodities are mixed, as silver and gold gain 2% and 1.5% while lumber, copper and crude oil lose 1.8%, 1.1% and 1%. Domestic real estate sluggishness is weighing on lumber, and Beijing’s lighter-than-anticipated GDP print of 4.7% is concerning oil watchers of possible demand weakness from the world’s largest importer. WTI crude is being offered at $81.06 per barrel against this backdrop.
Markets Brace for Protectionism
With former President Trump’s odds of recapturing the White House roaming north of 70% in most surveys, market participants are certainly rushing to stocks that could benefit the most from his proposed policies. Investors are perceiving that industrials, materials, financials, healthcare and energy will thrive from Trump tax cuts 2.0, increased tariffs and a deregulatory agenda. Technology, however, is lacking momentum because the category has a disproportionate reliance on China, and segregated manufacturing hubs may hurt the sectors’ performance if US protectionism strengthens. Furthermore, Trump’s selection of J.D. Vance as his running mate is also concerning investors because the senator is a strong supporter of increasing regulation of the industry, including imposing antitrust measures. Finally, the success of Trump’s plans will be heavily dependent on Congressional election results, as odds of a red wave, unlike the general election, are closer to a coin-flip.