The Path We’re On

DOW + 5 = 17,060
SPX – 3 = 1973
NAS – 24 = 4416
10 YR YLD + .01 = 2.54%
OIL – .74 = 100.17
GOLD – 13.20 = 1294.60
SILV – .19 = 20.82

We’ll start with a couple of quick economic reports.

The Commerce Department reports retail sales increased 0.2% in June. The sales figures from May were revised from a 0.3% increase to a 0.5% increase. The increase in June was below consensus expectations of a 0.6% increase; however sales in April and May were revised higher, so it all levels out and was fairly strong report. Sales were up 4.3% year to year.

The Empire State Manufacturing Survey for July was up 6 points to 25.6, a four year high.

The state of California released its monthly cash report for June; the state’s General Fund ended the fiscal year with a positive cash balance for the first time since 2007, so the state won’t have to borrow to meet all of its payment obligations.

Federal Reserve chairwoman Janet Yellen delivered her semiannual Humphrey Hawkins testimony before the Senate Banking Committee today. Tomorrow, Yellen will repeat the process with the House. Yellen said progress has been made to restore the economy to health and strengthen the financial system, yet too many Americans remain unemployed and inflation remains below targets and there hasn’t been enough financial reform.

After prepared remarks, Yellen fielded questions from the senators, and this is where it gets a little interesting. Yellen said, “equity valuations of smaller firms as well as social media and biotechnology firms appear to be stretched.” Some folks felt this was an “irrational exuberance” moment for Yellen. Social media and biotech stocks declined immediately after her comments. Yellen has a good reputation on forecasting. Back in 2006, when she was president of the San Francisco Fed, she gave a speech pushing back against former Fed Chair Alan Greenspan’s claim, with respect to the housing crisis, that the “worst of this may well be over.” Greenspan was wrong, Yellen was right, or at least not as bad as Greenspan.

Yellen said the Fed is still concerned about the housing market: “While this sector has recovered notably from its earlier trough, housing activity leveled off in the wake of last year’s increase in mortgage rates, and readings this year have, overall, continued to be disappointing.”

The housing market slowed last year when mortgage rates spiked on the possibility of taper. Yellen said that while the rise in rates is “the most obvious explanation for the weakness in the housing market over the past year,” it “seems unlikely that interest rates are the whole story.”

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