Karl Denninger writes a blog called the Market Ticker. He is quite a bear recently on the economy as-a-whole, as well as a believer in "The Bezzle" - a theory where he says the government is basically lying its butt off regarding how bad off things are, in order to 1) keep peace and 2) keep things the way they are. Without delving too much in the bezzle, I'll simply say he pulls in some good data to support his positions; he's a muckraker in the style of ZeroHedge.
This post quite convincingly argues that profit margins in Q4 will NOT be as good as projected.
http://market-ticker.org/akcs-www?post=174922
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The two "gotchas" in here are gasoline, which has had gross sales down even though gas prices are up, and dining and drinking, which were down despite the holiday season during the Black Friday weekend when they should have been up due to all the people shopping.
The problem remains cost-push. I've noted that restaurants have been sneakily-increasing prices. They're pulling add-ons into ala-carte (e.g. sides that used to be included with the main course) and ratcheting up prices a bit. Gasoline has been on a tear comparatively, yet gross spend on gasoline is down. This strongly implies that we've reached the point where price influences behavior.
The PPI was also out this morning and confirmed:
The Producer Price Index for Finished Goods rose 0.8 percent in November, seasonally adjusted, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. This increase followed a 0.4-percent advance in both October and September. At the earlier stages of processing, prices received by manufacturers of intermediate goods climbed 1.1 percent in November, and the crude goods index moved up 0.6 percent.
Great. More than 9% annualized. But there is no inflation, right?
And where is it? Food and energy, as I've been talking about.
...[graph]
That's nice. Now extend that 1% monthly change in foods out a year. More-importantly, look at the prices in energy - straight up since August. That's all about The Fed and it's BS QE2 games.
Worse is the crude goods price change less food and energy - core:
...[graph]
These changes are ridiculous on a 12-month basis. Ex-food and energy they're even worse, as there have been some substantial negative numbers there. I have discussed the problem with these input costs extensively - there is no pricing power to pass them through the chain of production, as is shown by the much lower escalation in intermediate goods.
This means margin collapse folks.
Betting that it won't show up in final profit numbers is flat-out insane.
These costs have to show up somewhere. If you can't pass through costs to the consumer then you have to eat it, and ultimately this results in margin - and profit - collapse.
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