Timing & trends

Brick-Laying Robots: Full Sized House in 2 Days

Seeking Alpha – MACRO VIEW

 

Flooding The ZoneComment! 

The Fed’s top officials have been flooding the zone during the last two weeks…

Charts That Make Me Go HmmmComment! 

“Here’s a chart from the latest Merrill Lynch Fund Managers Survey showing the number of asset managers who have taken out protection against their portfolio. The Greek “crisis” appears to have put the fear of Lehman into asset managers because we’re now seeing higher levels of protection than there was during 2008.”

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….more charts & analysis HERE

Tin Price Forecast, July 2015: A (Not) Very Good YearComment! 

The Rand Will More Than Likely Fall; But May Just Find A Friend In ChinaComment! 

The ‘Greek Debt Deal’ Is Already Starting To Fall ApartComment! 

With Oil Prices Range Bound, E&P Security Selection Is ParamountComment! 

 

 

 

Sinking Ships, Train Wrecks, and Empty Trucks: My Case Against Transportation Stocks

You can gnash your teeth over the Greek debt crisis or the Chinese stock meltdown, but one economic sure-thing you should be watching is the collapsing fundamentals of the transportation industry.

Check out this headline:

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More problematic for the stock market is that the profit outlook for transportation stocks, particularly ocean shipping companies, is horrible.

The story was about container ships facing the business-killing environment of expenses exceeding revenues. According to the Wall Street Journal, the container-freight rates on the Asia-to-Europe route have sunk like rocks and are now below the cost of fuel. And that doesn’t even include all the other fixed and variable costs.

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The Shanghai Containerized Freight Index—the cost of shipping a container from Shanghai to Rotterdam—fell to $243 per TEU (twenty foot

equivalent unit), a new all-time low and below the cost of fuel, estimated to be $300 per TEU.

That’s right: For every container an Asia-to-Europe ship transports, it will lose $57. Ouch!

There are a lot more costs to operating a ship than just fuel, which is estimated to account for 40% of operating costs. Drewry Maritime Research estimates that the break-even rate for most container ships is $800 per TEU on that route.

Global demand is weak, but the real culprit is a massive increase in the number of container ships that have come online, mostly ULCSs (Ultra Large Container Ships).

Braemar ACM Shipbroking reported that the industry has added enough capacity to carry 500,000 containers in just the first quarter of 2015. To put that number in perspective, a total of one million containers were shipped in all of 2014!

That’s a 50% increase in capacity.

That supply is going to get even larger. There are backorders for 55 more container ships, 30 of them with a capacity of 18,000 TEU, 12 in the 10,000-11,000 TEU range, and 13 in the 1,400-4,000 TEU range.

Maersk Lines, the largest container shipping company in the world, ordered 11 ULCSs capable of carrying 19,600 TEU, with options for six more from South Korea’s Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering.

“Unless by a miracle demand grows, we are up for heavy losses in the next quarter and maybe the rest of 2015,” moaned one industry executive.

Hey, this is exactly the type of misallocation of capital you see when the cost of money is taken down to zero.

This oversupply isn’t going to get worked off for years, and while the transportation industry is in trouble, the sickest part of the transportation food chain are the ocean-going shippers.

The Land-Based Transporters Aren’t Doing So Hot Either

Truck and rail are the dominant forms for moving freight in the United States and are crucial parts of the US economy. Billions of dollars of freight is transported across our nation’s highways and railroads every day. In fact, roughly 90% of the value of all goods moved in the US is transported by trucks and trains.

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Especially by trucks. In 2014, trucks hauled just under 10 billion tons of freight and collected $700.4 billion, or 80% of total revenue earned by all transport modes.

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That’s why I pay close attention to what the American Trucking Associations (ATA) has to say about the state of its industry, and according to the ATA, business isn’t very good.

The association reported that its For-Hire Truck Tonnage Index, which represents the actual tonnage hauled by trucks, fell 3% in April (most recent reporting period) and is definitely trending down.

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“Like most economic indicators, truck tonnage was soft in April,” said ATA Chief Economist Bob Costello. Yes, the April numbers were down, but the above chart clearly shows that truck shipments have been down all of 2015.

There is no doubt in my mind that transportation stocks of all kinds are headed lower. As always, timing is everything—so don’t rush out and short a bunch of transportation stocks tomorrow morning.

Being bearish can pay big, though. To see how I’m playing the downtrends, check out my Rational Bear newsletter risk-free for 3 months.

It’s a good time to get started. I have several airlines, railroads, and trucking companies in my sight and expect to place bets against them—using puts or inverse ETFs—in the very near future.

Tony Sagami
Tony Sagami
Mauldin Economics

30-year market expert Tony Sagami leads the Yield Shark and Rational Bear advisories at Mauldin Economics. To learn more about Yield Shark and how it helps you maximize dividend income, click here. To learn more about Rational Bear and how you can use it to benefit from falling stocks and sectors, click here.

Opinion: Bear Market May Wait For Equities to Extend Gains

MW-DP969 worry  20150713140247 ZH“That’s what contrarian analysis is saying at the moment”

“The so-called wall of worry that stock markets like to climb appears to be alive and well.”

“Even though the Dow has fought its way back to within 2% of its all-time closing high, the average short-term market timer is still almost completely out of equities.”

….read analysis and chart HERE

Battery-Electric Vehicles Power Up

Say what you will about “green cred” — the social brownie points awarded in certain areas of the country for driving a battery-powered Nissan Leaf or Toyota Prius plug-in — but electric vehicles outside the Tesla Model S have a dowdy image. I mean, you can’t imagine James Bond pulling up to a casino in a Chevy Volt.

In an industry that is built on horsepower braggadocio and sexy sheet metal, that image has limited electric vehicles’ market penetration.

Last month, plug-in vehicle sales (less the Tesla) totaled just 7,565 nationwideCompare that with the 55,171 Ford F-150 pickups that were sold or the 37,408 Toyota Camrys that found buyers. Overall, 676,627 cars and 800,048 light-duty trucks were sold last month.

Electric cars are just an ion in the bucket. For an industry that needs unit volume to lower battery costs, increase range, and widen their market penetration, these numbers need to get better. The good news is: There are signs another wave of excitement for battery EVs is coming.

Screen Shot 2015-07-14 at 5.31.17 AMDid you see the wild battery-powered racecar Honda used to win the Exhibition class at the Pikes Peak Hill Climb race? The wining overall time was set by an all-electric prototype — a first for the event. The event marks a turnaround for Honda, which had been hesitant to develop battery-electric vehicles due to cost concerns. They’ve turned their opinion around; with company chief exec Takahiro Hachigo saying they will “evolve products that use electricity as a core technology.”

Honda has announced it is working on a new lineup of vehicles including an all-new battery-electric model and an all-new plug-in hybrid model by 2017.

New models of the iconic Nissan Leaf and Chevy Volt are coming — with extended ranges as battery technology improves pushing down cost-per-kilowatt — while General Motors is working on bringing the 200+ mile Bolt concept into production. Tesla’s been busy too, with the upcoming SUV Model X expected to double the company’s sales according to CEO Elon Musk, who with the help of the $35,000 Model 3 is hoping to move 500,000 cars by 2020.

A new study by Navigant Research predicts that overall plug-in EV car sales will hit a 1.1 million annual rate in 2024, up from 133,000 in 2014.

Not only will this be great news for Tesla, which has recently moved to test its record high from last summer near $290, but other companies in the EV ecosystem like Johnson Controls (JCI), which makes lithium battery packs; Kandi Technologies (KNDI), which makes mini EVs in the Chinese market; and Delphi (DLPH), which makes chargers, battery-pack systems and voltage-wiring systems. Put these stocks on your radar.

Best wishes,

Jon Markman