Unemployment claims less than predicted? How many people on Friday decided to go do something else other than file unemployment? 1% of 630,000 is 6300, which is about where the number came in. They spin this like the figures peaked at 900,000, but from what I can remember the 650,000 range was pretty much the peak, so week after week we are having claims come in within 5% of the peak, with the better numbers I have seen come in on weeks surrounding hollidays. This next week will contain Memorial Day. I don't know how many of you have been to an unemployment office, but you have to be unemployed to have the time to go. I don't believe they are geared to process 5 days of business in 4 days.
The other news was the durable goods orders, up 1.9%. The decline in March was more than doubled to 2.1% from what I can't find without looking. Point here is that the increase was created in part off a decline that was over 1% more than stated for last month. Expectations were up .5%.
This whole matter, not just these figures, but the expectations for autos and other stuff is some of the biggest bullcrap I have seen in years. I saw yesterday where SPX earnings were actually worse than expected coming into the quarter, but the news has been about so many companies that have beaten expectations. They missed in the fall. Point is that Wall Street was trying to sell no recession in the fall, then the board that calls recessions said it started in December 2007, meaning in Wall Street statistical terms, they missed it. So since then they have been trying to sell recovery because statistically, the recession had been going on so long. But, up until it was called, Wall Street was trying to sell us on the idea we were going to miss it. Which end of this donkey does the truth come out of. It appears both ends are the rear.
My point is that I think Wall Street was right up to September, that indications were we could miss the recession. Of course, us bears would have no part of that idea because most of us were banking on this financial mess, though few of us had a clue how it was going to play out, being none of us had ever seen it. What we are looking at started September 7, not December 2007 or with the subprime crisis. This is when the unemployment claims went to the 600K mark and have stayed there. It is when the price of commodities collapsed. It is when the Treasury started crying. It is when the real depression started.
Bulls mine these figures because they have this golden fleece called consumer spending. They can't really figure out the difference between green shoots and green puke. The rest of us are at the mercy of Goldman Sachs officials appointed to government positions, where numbers can be spun. My feeling is the consumer isn't only not coming back, if that is what we are waiting for, then we might need to spot Santa Claus for evidence.
The bulls are trying to use an old horse to pull a large plow. I am reading Rothbards book, "The Mystery of Banking" and from what I can gather, their capacity to steal with credit has dried up to the point that they get the bill back now. Of course, everyone has to die except the big NY and London financial institutions, so they have the government give the bill to us, in order that they try the game again.
Thursday, May 28, 2009
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Love the rally then sell it
There is a recovery going on. It is a recovery like life support is a recovery for a stroke. This is a NY banker manufactured story recovery, started by our commander in chief Ben Bernanke and carried forward by our emperor, Barach Obama. I am wondering what modern economic statistics are about? I am also wondering how many years they think we can put it on the account we can't pay in ever increasing amounts and actually call it a recovery? It is kind of like pumping blood in faster than it leaks out is called getting well.
The latest story is pending home sales have gone up. What is a pending sale? I spent a few years in real estate and I recall a pending sale is one that is under contract, but hasn't closed. From what I have been told by a sister that is a mortgage broker is that the staffs at the mortgage wholesales like Well Fargo, Chase, Citi and others have been cut so much that underwriting times are weeks now instead of hours as they were. This means there isn't any buying a home today and getting it closed in 3 days, which is Friday, but instead maybe 2 or 3 weeks. There is a mile of difference between preapproval of a mortgage and a closable loan package, which is necessary to have a closing. Thus saying there are more pending sales now is like saying there is more water because the river has been dammed. There is no more water coming down the river until is starts spilling over the spillway. In this sense, if you don't follow me, it is quite likely pending sales would go up if another week is added to the typical transaction.
There are other things that make a recovery in housing a lie. For one, barebottom sales in foreclosure aren't normal sales in a market. They could very well be the area that marks the market price of housing when all is said and done. Also, 4.5 million sales on an annual pace is hardly a housing bust, but instead a pre-bubble record. Thus we have seen a market go bust while rampant speculation has continued. There is more. The Fed and the government have manufactured a mortgage rate that is probably 1.5% below that the market would normally settle at. Also, there is the recent massive tax credit given first time homebuyers. Credit, under historical terms, isn't tight. It is probably still easier than it was in the 1980's here.
Next, we get into autos. I would guess that if autos get back to a 12 million to 14 million level, this is going to be called a boom. Thus a bust level of auto sales is a boom while a boom level of housing sales is a bust. How many thousands of dollars of US subsidy are we going to see per unit in the auto industry in order that Obama keep one of his pets, the UAW, in business? You can bet it will be enough that to pull the plug on this operation is going to be a big blow.
Then we have the banks. Has there ever been a bigger smokescreen in history? The US economy will be irrepairably ruined when this fiasco is done. Charlie Munger of Berkshire Hathaway fame has called for the end of credit default swaps. I wonder how we ever begin to float enough credit to keep the world afloat without the risk sharing added with default swaps, which are really nothing more than insurance, like PMI insurance or bond insurance for municipals. Who is to say that the depression didn't start in 2000 because of these instruments?
There is much more about the banks. For one, all the money the tax payers have given the banks is now owed back to the banks. Capital equals bonds and t-bills. It will never be extinguished. There is more, as they have done away with mark to market accounting. Plus it is plain to all that pay any attention that the big NY banks and Wall Street firms openly flaunt the capacity to manipulate the markets. Look at GE, a near bank riding a AA rating while being carried on lifesupport by the Fed? The whole thing is a farce and the ones that know it the best are the banks, who want nothing to do with other banks paper.
This is a different recession or depression or whatever one likes to call it. The game collapsed on its own. Few realize the long side speculation that has gone on all the way down. Sales of existing homes have never fallen below what were previous records. The price of oil is driven up with every rumor there might be a recovery, even though supplies are near 20 year records and growing. Copper is beyond $2 a pound, likely driven to that level by Chinese hoarding in light of the mechanizations of the Fed and the US government deficits. We are not looking at a demand shut down collapse, but an oversupply collapse where much of the oversupply is still subject to speculation.
There is not a lot being done for the reduction of debt. The US government has instead guaranteed the repayment of trillions of dollars that otherwise would be in default in markets that would be otherwise totally insolvent. Exports in Asia have collapsed, yet we are told every day how good these economies which depend on exports to run are doing and how they will lead the recovery. They aren't leading much of anything and if the US government didn't have the power it still possesses, I highly doubt they would be functioning. This is a collapse of the capacity to service debt along with a misalignment of assets and liabilities in the area of financial intermediation. Bank loans need bank credit to be paid and the credit represented by deposits rests in the hand of those that don't owe. At the same time, fed policy literally forces some to speculate to earn anything on their savings.
There are 2 avenues that we face. One is a slight recovery followed by the second dip of a recession. I think this is a manner of lying that we had a recovery, aka 1980, when the perception we were falling into a recession was interupted by some cloudy statistics. I don't buy the idea that 1980 was a double dip recession, but instead an easing of a Fed induced slowdown for political purposes. This wasn't a Fed induced slowdown as was 1980. This was a collapse.
The great secret is there aren't any Asian miracles. There are only excessive US credit expansions that Asian use to expand their own economies. US credit expansions have been inflation of home prices along with equity extraction for the past 40 years. The equity extractions are a done deal and there really isn't anything to drive demand in the US now with much of the excess equity gone. Absent a new equity driven recovery, we are to languish, much as the Japanese did once their real estate bubble burst.
There is one difference between the US and Japan. Japan had a huge export economy that was kept afloat for a long time out of the credit expansion in the US. Once that credit expansion ceased, exports in Japan collapsed close to 50%. The same happened in Germany, another country that had a rough 1990's. Countries have not been able to print credit for long and survive, which is about what surplus government spending amounts to. There are plenty of theories, but there is only one truth and the truth is the world is in for a long period of credit liquidation.
In the meantime, if you own stock, enjoy the rally. It could end tomorrow or it could go to 10,000 and above 1000 on the Dow and SPX. I believe in the end it will be compared to the rally that followed the 1929 crash. Many were looking for a crash, but I don't know what you call a move from roughly 11,000 to 8,000 in a matter of day if it is not a crash?
The latest story is pending home sales have gone up. What is a pending sale? I spent a few years in real estate and I recall a pending sale is one that is under contract, but hasn't closed. From what I have been told by a sister that is a mortgage broker is that the staffs at the mortgage wholesales like Well Fargo, Chase, Citi and others have been cut so much that underwriting times are weeks now instead of hours as they were. This means there isn't any buying a home today and getting it closed in 3 days, which is Friday, but instead maybe 2 or 3 weeks. There is a mile of difference between preapproval of a mortgage and a closable loan package, which is necessary to have a closing. Thus saying there are more pending sales now is like saying there is more water because the river has been dammed. There is no more water coming down the river until is starts spilling over the spillway. In this sense, if you don't follow me, it is quite likely pending sales would go up if another week is added to the typical transaction.
There are other things that make a recovery in housing a lie. For one, barebottom sales in foreclosure aren't normal sales in a market. They could very well be the area that marks the market price of housing when all is said and done. Also, 4.5 million sales on an annual pace is hardly a housing bust, but instead a pre-bubble record. Thus we have seen a market go bust while rampant speculation has continued. There is more. The Fed and the government have manufactured a mortgage rate that is probably 1.5% below that the market would normally settle at. Also, there is the recent massive tax credit given first time homebuyers. Credit, under historical terms, isn't tight. It is probably still easier than it was in the 1980's here.
Next, we get into autos. I would guess that if autos get back to a 12 million to 14 million level, this is going to be called a boom. Thus a bust level of auto sales is a boom while a boom level of housing sales is a bust. How many thousands of dollars of US subsidy are we going to see per unit in the auto industry in order that Obama keep one of his pets, the UAW, in business? You can bet it will be enough that to pull the plug on this operation is going to be a big blow.
Then we have the banks. Has there ever been a bigger smokescreen in history? The US economy will be irrepairably ruined when this fiasco is done. Charlie Munger of Berkshire Hathaway fame has called for the end of credit default swaps. I wonder how we ever begin to float enough credit to keep the world afloat without the risk sharing added with default swaps, which are really nothing more than insurance, like PMI insurance or bond insurance for municipals. Who is to say that the depression didn't start in 2000 because of these instruments?
There is much more about the banks. For one, all the money the tax payers have given the banks is now owed back to the banks. Capital equals bonds and t-bills. It will never be extinguished. There is more, as they have done away with mark to market accounting. Plus it is plain to all that pay any attention that the big NY banks and Wall Street firms openly flaunt the capacity to manipulate the markets. Look at GE, a near bank riding a AA rating while being carried on lifesupport by the Fed? The whole thing is a farce and the ones that know it the best are the banks, who want nothing to do with other banks paper.
This is a different recession or depression or whatever one likes to call it. The game collapsed on its own. Few realize the long side speculation that has gone on all the way down. Sales of existing homes have never fallen below what were previous records. The price of oil is driven up with every rumor there might be a recovery, even though supplies are near 20 year records and growing. Copper is beyond $2 a pound, likely driven to that level by Chinese hoarding in light of the mechanizations of the Fed and the US government deficits. We are not looking at a demand shut down collapse, but an oversupply collapse where much of the oversupply is still subject to speculation.
There is not a lot being done for the reduction of debt. The US government has instead guaranteed the repayment of trillions of dollars that otherwise would be in default in markets that would be otherwise totally insolvent. Exports in Asia have collapsed, yet we are told every day how good these economies which depend on exports to run are doing and how they will lead the recovery. They aren't leading much of anything and if the US government didn't have the power it still possesses, I highly doubt they would be functioning. This is a collapse of the capacity to service debt along with a misalignment of assets and liabilities in the area of financial intermediation. Bank loans need bank credit to be paid and the credit represented by deposits rests in the hand of those that don't owe. At the same time, fed policy literally forces some to speculate to earn anything on their savings.
There are 2 avenues that we face. One is a slight recovery followed by the second dip of a recession. I think this is a manner of lying that we had a recovery, aka 1980, when the perception we were falling into a recession was interupted by some cloudy statistics. I don't buy the idea that 1980 was a double dip recession, but instead an easing of a Fed induced slowdown for political purposes. This wasn't a Fed induced slowdown as was 1980. This was a collapse.
The great secret is there aren't any Asian miracles. There are only excessive US credit expansions that Asian use to expand their own economies. US credit expansions have been inflation of home prices along with equity extraction for the past 40 years. The equity extractions are a done deal and there really isn't anything to drive demand in the US now with much of the excess equity gone. Absent a new equity driven recovery, we are to languish, much as the Japanese did once their real estate bubble burst.
There is one difference between the US and Japan. Japan had a huge export economy that was kept afloat for a long time out of the credit expansion in the US. Once that credit expansion ceased, exports in Japan collapsed close to 50%. The same happened in Germany, another country that had a rough 1990's. Countries have not been able to print credit for long and survive, which is about what surplus government spending amounts to. There are plenty of theories, but there is only one truth and the truth is the world is in for a long period of credit liquidation.
In the meantime, if you own stock, enjoy the rally. It could end tomorrow or it could go to 10,000 and above 1000 on the Dow and SPX. I believe in the end it will be compared to the rally that followed the 1929 crash. Many were looking for a crash, but I don't know what you call a move from roughly 11,000 to 8,000 in a matter of day if it is not a crash?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)