Buy Microsoft Products with us and Save upto 60%

World Indices

refresh
WidgetBucks - Trend Watch - WidgetBucks.com

Live Stock Quote/Stock Analysis

refresh
Showing posts with label Consumer Spending. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Consumer Spending. Show all posts

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Japan Consumer Prices Rise 0.1%, First Gain This Year

Japan's consumer prices unexpectedly rose for the first time since last December as oil and raw materials costs surged.

Core consumer prices, which exclude fresh food, climbed 0.1 percent in October from a year earlier, the government's statistics bureau said today in Tokyo. The median estimate of 40 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News was for no change.

The gain probably won't prompt the Bank of Japan to raise interest rates because falling wages are curbing consumer spending and economic growth. Deputy Governor Toshiro Muto said this month that the U.S. housing recession and market turmoil make it difficult to decide when to raise the key rate from 0.5 percent, the lowest among major economies.

Mounting risks for the economy are already reducing the chance of a rate hike, said Azusa Kato, an economist at BNP Paribas Securities Japan Ltd. in Tokyo. The improvement in core prices won't provide much support for the central bank's attempt to raise rates.

The jobless rate was unchanged in October after rising in each of the two previous months, the bureau said, matching the median estimate of economists. The rate has risen from a nine- year low of 3.6 percent in July. The number of jobs available for each applicant slumped to 1.02 in October from 1.05.

The yen traded at 109.71 per dollar at 8:44 a.m. in Tokyo from 109.84 before the reports were published.

Interest Rates

Expectations of a rate increase are already receding. Yields on the benchmark 10-year government bond fell to a two- year low last week.

Investment banks including Mizuho Securities Co., UBS AG and Goldman Sachs & Co. this month postponed predictions for the next rate increase from the first quarter of 2008 to at least the third quarter.

Financial markets will keep gyrating, probably more frequently than we've seen, said Yasunari Ueno, chief market economist at Mizuho Securities. It'll take time before fears about a credit crunch and economic recession ease and markets regain a more optimistic outlook.

Rising prices of crude oil, wheat and aluminum are squeezing profits and prompting more companies to pass on costs to customers.

Overcoming Deflation

Japan's central bank raised the benchmark overnight lending rate in July 2006 after holding it near zero for more than five years to overcome deflation. Policy makers doubled the rate to 0.5 percent in February and have kept it on hold since.

Excluding energy as well as food, consumer prices fell 0.3 percent in October. By that measure, prices have failed to rise for nine years.

Excluding oil, the momentum of consumer price increases is pretty weak, said Kato at BNP Paribas.

Tokyo's core prices, a harbinger of the nationwide index, rose 0.1 percent in November from a year earlier, the first increase in 10 months.

Crude oil prices touched a record $99.29 a barrel last week. Japan's regular gasoline prices averaged 150.2 yen a liter ($5.25 a gallon), the highest since the Tokyo-based Oil Information Center began collecting the data in 1987.

Source - Bloomberg

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Retailers brace for gloomy holidays, gloomier '08

Penney joins Macy's and Wal-Mart in setting disappointing expectations for crucial seasonal sales and seeing more problems next year.

Penney expects fourth-quarter same-store sales to decline in the low-single digits.

Following Wal-Mart and Macy's, J.C. Penney on Thursday became the latest retailer to warn that housing, gas prices and credit woes will dent 2007 holiday sales and stifle discretionary spending in 2008.

Penney's warning is especially troubling because retail analysts had picked the chain to be one of the standouts during the holiday season, citing its unique merchandise and competitive prices.

We're in a very difficult selling environment, J.C. Penney CEO Myron Ullman told analysts Thursday in a conference call to discuss the company's third-quarter results. Ullman said he expects a weakening sales environment to continue into 2008.

J.C. Penney's stock fell more than 5 percent Thursday after the department store chain reported a 9 percent drop in its third-quarter profits.

We came out of September expecting a strong start for early fall. That didn't happen. This is the first time that we're seeing a real change in consumer sentiment, Ullman said.

He blamed weak housing conditions, mortgage and credit market concerns, and what he called the psychological effect of fuel prices for eroding Penney's profit and sales last quarter.

More importantly, the retailer warned on its full fiscal-year profit, saying that it expects crucial fourth-quarter same-store sales, which measures sales at retail stores open at least a year, to decline at a low single digit percentage.

Fiscal year profit is now forecast to be between $4.63 and $4.78 a share, down sharply from the previous guidance of $5.50 a share. Analysts had expected the retailer to earn $4.85 a share for the year ending in January.

The fourth quarter typically accounts for more than half of merchants' annual profit and sales.

Earlier this week, Home Depot and Wal-Mart both signaled their concern about a spending slowdown in the months ahead and into 2008. Penney's rival Macy's cut its fourth-quarter same-store sales estimate Wednesday.

The outlook expressed by Penney and earlier by Wal-Mart and Macy's signals that consumer spending is slowing relative to the beginning of the year, said Wayne Hood, analyst with BMO Capital Markets.

Based on these weak holiday sales forecast and more to come, Hood said he's almost written off the holiday season.

The holiday shopping season will be over in three weeks. I'm more concerned about what the guidance from retailers for next year, he said.

Most retailers will have a very guarded outlook for 2008. I expect conservative sales and inventory guidance for next year. If retailers cut back on spending on IT (information technology) projects, cut travel budgets and tightly control their discretionary budgets, then that could have a direct impact on the economy, Hood said.

To his point, Ullman said Penney was planning very conservatively on expenses for next year. We won't be aggressive on spending in discretionary projects, he said.
Holiday season in peril?

Ullman said Penney's mall-based stores were particularly impacted by a steep drop in traffic during the quarter.

Ullman said having great merchandise and prices wouldn't matter if consumers curtailed their spending in the months ahead. Besides economic factors, Ullman said unseasonable warm weather hurt cold-weather apparel sales in the third quarter.

The gloomy forecast cast a chill on the retail industry.

After hearing one of the more dramatic reductions in earnings and cash flow forecasts we've seen in some time, we no longer expect Penney's credit profile to improve, Carol Levenson, analyst with bond research firm GimmeCredit, wrote in a note Thursday. The firm downgraded Penney's debt to stable from improving.

We still expect [Penney] to outperform its peers, but clearly its market segment is getting hit inordinately by the consumer environment, she said.

Marshal Cohen, chief retail analyst with NPD Group, agreed that consumers were hesitating with their spending. I don't think consumers will pull the plug on spending but they're not seeing anything new this year that they have to have, Cohen said.

Ullman said Penney will offer deeper holiday discounts in order to boost fourth-quarter sales, adding that he expects gross margins to decline as a result of increased promotions.

We have to maintain a flow of fresh merchandise through the season, he said. It's still early in the holiday season. The weather is more seasonable now so we'll see how consumers respond to that.

Going into next year, Ullman said Penney still intends to stick to its growth plan of opening 50 stores a year.

But we will look at each year based on market conditions and opportunities in real estate, he said. He also said Penney would modify its inventory orders for next spring based on sales trends.

Bernard Sosnick, analyst with Oppenheimer & Co., hasn't changed his buy rating on Penney despite the warning.

Relative to Macy's performance and other mall-based retailers, Penney's results weren't terrible, Sosnick said. Penney's apparel sales are good, it had a 6 percent jump in back-to-school sales. Where it took a hit was in sales of big ticket items and home goods.

How much weather was a factor, we don't know. It's also hard to determine how much a consumer spending slowdown was a factor, Sosnick said. Yes, retailers are speaking cautiously about the holidays. Retailers respond quickly to trends. They will batten down the hatches to ride through the coming storm.

For his part, NPD's Cohen believes retailers are more optimistic about the holiday season than they are letting on.

I think we are being set up for lower expectations. Revenues will see low growth, but it's still growth. Profits will suffer because everyone will cuts prices to get sales going. But that's OK because companies will just blame the economy for why profits didn't come, Cohen said.

Source - CNN Money