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FYI: Bloomberg News: Corporate U.S. Healthiest in Decades Under Obama
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http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-10-02/corporate-u-s-healthiest-in-decades-under-obama-with-lower-debt.html
Corporate U.S. Healthiest in Decades Under Obama on Debt
By Thomas Black and Matt Robinson Oct 2, 2014 3:55 PM ET
675 Comments
<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-10-02/corporate-u-s-healthiest-in-decades-under-obama-with-lower-debt.html#disqus_thread>
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Oct. 2 (Bloomberg) -- President Barack Obama comments on the state of the
U.S. economy during a speech at Northwestern University in Evanston, IL.
(Source: Bloomberg)
Steve Wynn <http://topics.bloomberg.com/steve-wynn/>, founder of the Wynn
Resorts Ltd. (WYNN) <http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/WYNN:US> casino empire,
once called President Barack Obama
<http://topics.bloomberg.com/barack-obama/>’s administration “the greatest
wet blanket to business and progress and job creation in my lifetime.”Barry
Sternlicht <http://topics.bloomberg.com/barry-sternlicht/>, chief executive
officer ofStarwood Property Trust Inc. (STWD)
<http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/STWD:US>, said Obamacare was driving down
wage growth and “affecting spending and the desire to buy houses and
everything else.”
They are among a chorus of corporate executives and lobbying groups that
regularly assail Obama for policies that they say are stifling investment
and hurting companies.
Corporate and economic statistics almost six years into his administration
paint a different picture. Companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 (SPX)
<http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/SPX:IND>Index are the healthiest in
decades, with the lowest net debt to earnings ratio in at least 24 years,
$3.59 trillion in cash and marketable securities, and record earnings per
share. They are headed this year toward the fastest average monthly job
creation since 1999, manufacturing is recovering and the U.S. has returned
as an engine for global growth. The recovery, which stands in contrast to
weak growth in Europe and Asia, has underpinned an almost threefold gain in
the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index since March 2009.
<http://www.bloomberg.com/photo/barack-obama-/-iEmXRgRq9b8o.html>Photographer:
Nicholas Kamm/AFP via Getty Images
U.S. President Barack Obama acknowledges applause as he arrives to speak at
the Global...Read More
<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-10-02/corporate-u-s-healthiest-in-decades-under-obama-with-lower-debt.html#>
Wynn has been part of that recovery. Since Obama first took the oath on
Jan. 21, 2009, theshares <http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/WYNN:US> of his
luxury hotel company have surged fivefold while the S&P 500 Index more than
doubled. Starwood Property Trust, Sternlicht’s Greenwich, Connecticut-based
real estate company, has risen <http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/STWD:US> 36
percent since its August 2009 initial public offering, while an index of
real estate investment trusts declined.
Accelerating Growth
“The U.S. is leading the way -- we’re the only major economy with
accelerating growth,” saidMark Zandi
<http://topics.bloomberg.com/mark-zandi/>, chief economist in West Chester,
Pennsylvania, for Moody’s Analytics Inc. and a registered Democrat who has
advised both the Obama administration and Senator John McCain
<http://topics.bloomberg.com/john-mccain/>, a Republican. “Obama deserves
some credit for that, but he probably won’t get it.”
*Related:*
- Obama Makes Case for Economy at Home by Pointing Overseas
<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-10-02/obama-makes-case-for-economy-at-home-by-pointing-overseas.html>
- Jobless Claims in U.S. Unexpectedly Decreased Last Week
<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-10-02/jobless-claims-in-u-s-unexpectedly-decreased-last-week.html>
Tom Johnson <http://topics.bloomberg.com/tom-johnson/>, a spokesman for
Sternlicht’s closely held Starwood Capital Group who works for Abernathy
MacGregor Group in New York, and Michael Weaver, spokesman for Las
Vegas-based Wynn, declined to comment. Wynn gets about 70 percent of its
sales outside the U.S.
With Democrats fighting to hold control of the Senate in the November
elections, Obama highlighted the recovery in a speech
<http://www.northwestern.edu/newscenter/stories/2014/09/president-barack-obama-to-visit.html>
today
at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management in Evanston,
Illinois.
<http://www.bloomberg.com/photo/rockwell-automation-ceo-keith-nosbusch-/-i0.votaOVld4.html>Photographer:
Christopher Goodney/Bloomberg
Keith Nosbusch, chief executive officer of Rockwell Automation Inc., speaks
during an...Read More
<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-10-02/corporate-u-s-healthiest-in-decades-under-obama-with-lower-debt.html#>
“By every economic measure we are better off now than when I took office,”
Obama said.
Parsing Credit
While Zandi lauds Obama’s $787 billion in stimulus spending and auto
bailouts as “textbook” responses to the recession, one question for history
is whether the Federal Reserve should instead get the credit. The Fed’s
decision to drive down interest rates to zero allowed companies to
refinance debt at lower costs, helping spur corporate growth, said Todd
Lowenstein, a fund manager with San Francisco-based HighMark Capital
Management Inc.
Barring any major disruptions, the economy is setting up for Obama to leave
office on a high note, said Douglas Brinkley
<http://topics.bloomberg.com/douglas-brinkley/>, a presidential historian
and professor at Rice University in Houston.
“History will eventually show that Obama inherited the Great Recession and
resuscitated the economy,” Brinkley said in an interview. “He’s going to be
seen as much more centrist and even friendly to business.”
Corporate Earnings
Profits are showing that. In the second quarter, S&P 500 companies reported
adjusted earnings that exceeded $30 a share
<http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/SPEQACTL:IND> for the first time, soaring
from a 16-year low of $5.55 at the end of 2008 as Obama prepared to assume
office. Earnings for those companies rose about 5.1 percent in the third
quarter from a year earlier, according to average estimates compiled by
Bloomberg.
In total, S&P 500 profit as measured by Ebitda -- earnings before interest,
taxes, depreciation and amortization -- increased to $1.84 trillion for the
12 months through the end of last quarter from $1.2 trillion in 2009.
The jump in earnings has meant that companies can service their debt more
easily. In the six years since Obama became president, corporate debt as
measured against earnings has fallen to the lowest point since at least
1990. For companies in the S&P 500, the ratio of net debt to Ebitda is
currently 1.6, down from a high of 4.9 in 2003, according to data compiled
by Bloomberg.
General Motors
That ratio, a marker of corporate health, has also been helped by the cash
that companies are piling up. Those holdings for S&P 500 companies have
jumped to $3.59 trillion from $2.28 trillion four years ago, a build-up
that lowers their net debt.
One example is General Motors Co. (GM)
<http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/GM:US>, which last week regained its
investment-grade debt rating from Standard & Poor’s only five years after
the government-backed bankruptcy. S&P cited GM’s $28 billion of cash and
“meaningful” cash generation even with the extra cost of recalls this year.
Detroit-based GM is predicted to post its 16th straight profitable quarter
<http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/GM:US> since emerging from bankruptcy in
2009.
Obama’s $49.5 billion bailout of the automaker in exchange for taxpayers
owning 61 percent of the company kept it from being liquidated, an outcome
that could have crippled parts suppliers and economies throughout most of
50 states, not just the Midwest.
To be sure, not all companies have been able to improve their balance
sheets. The riskiest firms are adding debt, according to a Sept. 24 report
by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Net debt for speculative-grade companies, which
are rated below BBB-at S&P, climbed to 2.77 times operating income before
depreciation last quarter, up from 2.65 times a year earlier.
Economic Conditions
In the broader economy, consumers are buying again and homebuilding is
increasing. The unemployment rate has declined to 6.1 percent, the lowest
since 2008. The economy expanded at a 4.6 percent annualized rate in April
through June, after a 2.1 percent contraction in the first quarter marred
by poor winter weather conditions. The last time the economy was growing so
fast was in the first quarter of 2006.
Meanwhile, the economies of Europe and Japan are sluggish. The recovery for
the euro area -- including the countries France and Italy -- stalled,
with gross
domestic product <http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/EUGNEMUQ:IND>unchanged
from the first quarter to the second, according to Eurostat, the European
Union’s statistics office in Luxembourg. Japan contracted by the most in
more than five years, with GDP shrinking an annualized 7.1 percent, data
from the government Cabinet Office in Tokyo show.
Obama Comments
In the recovery, the U.S. has put more people back to work than Europe,
Japan and every other advanced economy combined, Obama said during his
speech today. An energy boom, manufacturing revival and economic growth
have convinced business leaders around the world that the U.S. is the most
attractive country for investment, he said.
“America is better poised to lead and succeed in the 21st century than any
other nation on earth,” Obama said today. “We’ve got the best cards.”
Obama may leave his eight-year presidency with the resurgence of the U.S.
as an oil producer and the reversal of a decade-long manufacturing decline,
helping buff his legacy, according to historian Brinkley.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration projects oil production will
jump to 9.53 million barrels of oil per day next year, a 45-year high and a
28 percent increase over 2013, as a combination of horizontal drilling and
hydraulic fracturing has unlocked resources trapped in shale formations
from the Bakken in North Dakota to the Eagle Ford in Texas.
Energy Impetus
Critics say it’s unfair to credit Obama with the oil boom. The private
sector drove the expansion over hurdles erected by his administration, such
as delaying the Keystone XL oil pipeline from Canadian crude to the U.S.
Gulf Coast, retaining limits on crude exports and imposing stiffer
regulations on offshore drilling, said Joseph LaVorgna
<http://topics.bloomberg.com/joseph-lavorgna/>, chief U.S. economist at
Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. in New York.
Still, the drilling is translating into cheap and abundant energy in the
U.S. that will spur manufacturing, said Keith Nosbusch, CEO of Rockwell
Automation (ROK) <http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/ROK:US> Inc., a
Milwaukee-based company that sells factory software to companies including
Nestle SA and Ford Motor Co.
Manufacturing Growth
Manufacturing jobs <http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/USMMMANU:IND> rose to
12.16 million in August from a low of 11.45 million in 2010.
“The U.S. is in the middle of an accelerated growth in manufacturing,” said
Nosbusch, whose company’s cash and marketable securities
<http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/ROK:US> have more than doubled to $1.75
billion in about three years and are now larger than its total debt.
The rebounding economy and record profits haven’t been enough to win over
some business leaders still upset by overhauls of the health-care and
financial systems -- the source of much vitriol toward Obama over the
years. John Mackey, the co-chief executive officer of Whole Foods Markets
Inc. (WFM) <http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/WFM:US> who has described
himself as a free-market libertarian, referred to Obamacare as socialism in
2009 -- and in 2013 likened it to “more like fascism.”
Mackey promptly wrote a blog post in which he said he regretted using the
word fascism, said Kate Lowery, a spokeswoman for Austin, Texas-based Whole
Foods.
Rising corporate profits are due mainly to cost cutting that came amid
added expenses from new health-care, environmental and banking regulations,
said Martin Regalia, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s chief economist and
senior vice president for economic and tax policy.
Medicare Costs
After doubling in the past two decades, medical expenses rose 2 percent
last year, the least in 65 years, helped by Medicare reimbursement cuts,
according to data compiled by the U.S. Labor Department. Obama’s 2010
health-care program will hold down consumer prices for years to come as
millions of Americans obtain coverage, BNP Paribas SA and Credit Suisse
Group AG said.
The “Medicare cost miracle” resulted at least in part from Obama’s Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act, Nobel-Prize winning economist Paul
Krugman wrote in a Sept. 1 New York times article.
While large cash holdings often are viewed as a sign of financial health,
they reflect companies’ lack of confidence to invest, said Michael Englund
<http://topics.bloomberg.com/michael-englund/>, chief economist at Action
Economics LLC in Boulder, Colorado.
“We’re not making the risky investments needed to achieve a higher level of
growth,” he said. “So to a certain degree the rebuilding of corporate
balance sheets has come at the expense of growth.”
Fed Policies
Companies have also refinanced debt at lower cost thanks to the Fed, not
Obama, said HighMark Capital’s Lowenstein. Corporate bond issues in the
U.S. this year have exceeded $1.2 trillion, topping 2013’s record pace,
according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The central bank has kept its target for the overnight interbank interest
rate at zero to 0.25 percent since December 2008.
“That’s been a huge benefit to their margin structure in terms of lowering
the cost of debt,” Lowenstein said. “It’s been one of the pillars of peak
profits.”
Ending his tenure with a strengthened economy would put Obama more in line
with Republican Ronald Reagan <http://topics.bloomberg.com/ronald-reagan/> and
Democrat Bill Clinton <http://topics.bloomberg.com/bill-clinton/> than
other recent predecessors.Jimmy Carter
<http://topics.bloomberg.com/jimmy-carter/> was shackled with stagflation
while a slump marred George H.W. Bush’s bid for a second term. George W.
Bush <http://topics.bloomberg.com/george-w.-bush/>’s presidency, scarred by
the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, ended with the deepest recession in six
decades and a global financial crisis.
Presidential Legacy
John Carey <http://topics.bloomberg.com/john-carey/>, a Boston-based fund
manager with Pioneer Investment Management Inc. and a Republican, gives
Obama a B+ grade on the economy and business environment. Growth is steady,
financial markets are robust and deficit spending has come down, he said.
“I don’t think they’ve done a terrible job,” said Carey, whose firm
oversees $230 billion. “My main issue with President Obama is that he just
doesn’t seem to be enough of a booster -- an enthusiastic advocate of
America and our economy.”
Such comments reflect how some business executives are likely to see the
gains as being in spite of Obama instead of spurred by the president,
Moody’s Zandi said.
“The perceptions have been solidified in that regard,” Zandi said. “It’s
going to be pretty hard for him to shake that.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Thomas Black in Dallas at
[email protected]; Matt Robinson in New York at [email protected]
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