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The consumer price index was lower than expected on both the headline and core levels. This would indicate that profit margins are being squeezed at the corporate level, as the producer price index has been running at a higher rate than the CPI. Those higher prices to producers are not being passed through. But keep in mind that over 70% of the costs of goods sold is labor, not materials, so rising producer prices affect margins to a lesser extent that you might at first think.
The standard definition of recession is two negative quarters of GDP. A recession can also be described as a prolonged and protracted downturn in economic activity. The high priests who determine recession (usually well after the fact) may well describe this period as recessionary by using the latter definition. But we haven't had a down quarter yet, and the quarter that just passed will be revised up from +0.6 to probably +1.0% or more, as I have mentioned several times in recent letters. With the rebate checks in the mail (whether you like the concept or not), the current quarter is likely to show a positive reading of over +1.0%. Sluggish, to be sure, but not recessionary. The oil market continues to be buffeted by news and rumors. Yesterday, there was a report that Iran was thinking about a production cut. Why Iran would do that at $125 oil is a mystery, but the rumor contributed to the rise in the price of crude. Today, Dow Jones Newswires reports that the country's departing OPEC governor says Iran is storing 25 million barrels of oil in tankers in the Persian Gulf, as there are no buyers. The stored crude is "the main proof the market is oversupplied" and that price and fundamentals are disconnected (thanks to Bear Stearns for the info).
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Vincent Farrell Jr. is a principal of Scotsman Capital Management. Prior to joining Scotsman in April 2005, Farrell was chairman of Victory Capital Management of Cleveland and chairman of Victory SBSF Capital Management in New York. He was a founding partner of Spears Benzak Salomon & Farrell, which was acquired by KeyCorp in 1995. Vince held a variety of positions in his 23 years at SBSF, including chief investment officer, and he served as the portfolio manager on a number of the firm's largest client relationships. He is a regular guest on CNBC as well as other national print and broadcast media. Prior to joining SBSF, Vince spent nine years at Smith Barney as a vice president, sales. Vince graduated from Princeton University in 1969 and received his MBA from the Iona College Graduate School of Business in 1972.
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