Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Not According to Plan

Not According to Plan

hindenburg

 The market fell again Tuesday and although three down days in four is nothing for central banksters to truly worry about (and there is plenty of lower support in the S&P) – it nevertheless is not going according to plan.  The Fed’s QE1 plan did work – it saved the markets from total annihilation.  However QE2, QE Lite, ZIRP, the Twist, secret loans, unlimited swap lines, etc has done little if anything.  Moreover, the market is right back to where it was when the Fed announced its latest bid-rigging scheme with multiple other central banking mafia heads in tow.  
 
So I’d say that overall it simply isn’t going as they had planned and Bill Bonner of the Daily Reckoning agrees in a recent article.  
 
http://dailyreckoning.com/when-a-great-correction-doesnt-stick-to-the-script/
 
12/13/11 Baltimore, Maryland – Darkness without a dawn…
 
The Dow down 167 yesterday. Gold down $48. Nothing to get excited about.
 
The excitement is still ahead. When the Dow cuts through the 10,000 mark and heads to 6,000. Stay tuned…
 
In the meantime, yesterday’s Financial Times told us that the industrialized nations will borrow $10 trillion this year. Next year, the figure should be higher.
 
Where does all that money come from? It’s more than the world’s total savings. Not that we know exactly, but total world GDP is about $50 to $60 trillion. Savings should be about 10% of that — or only about $5 to $6 trillion.
 
So how are the developed nations able to borrow so much?
 
With so much debt turning over, it makes the world financial system extremely vulnerable to inflation…or just a change of sentiment in the bond market. Which makes us wonder. What would happen if the lenders balk?
 
We are, as all Dear Readers know, in a Great Correction. And in a great correction asset prices fall…along with a general fall-off in employment, consumer spending, investment, GDP growth and all the other things that make a robust economy. Demand drops…which typically causes prices to fall (or at least not to rise as quickly as before). There is less demand for credit as for everything else. So, the pool of available bonds falls…forcing up bond prices and forcing down bond yields.
 
Got that?
 
Well, don’t worry if you don’t. Because there’s at least a 50/50 chance it won’t happen that way.
 
So far, the Great Correction has followed the usual script. Bond yields have fallen. Price inflation has generally come down. But demand for credit — as evidenced by the aforementioned $10 trillion government financing costs — is running hot. ‘Typically’ may not matter. Because this is no typical downturn. And it wouldn’t be too surprising if all this demand for credit pushed up bond yields.
 
Wouldn’t that be a drag?
 
And here we find ourselves with a grim, but philosophically amusing, insight. Typically, every cloud has a silver lining. Every glass that is half empty is also half full. And dawn follows even the darkest night. That’s just the way the world works. But what if the cloud has no lining, neither of silver nor of anything else that reflects light? And what if the glass is completely empty?
 
In the normal economic world, low interest rates are the half-full part of the correction glass. A correction comes. Asset prices go down…along with all the other things mentioned above. But interest rates go down too…which make it easier for new projects to clear the “hurdle rate.” At 6% interest, for example, a new project has to return at least 6% to breakeven. Any new investment that won’t produce more than a 6% minimum gain is quickly abandoned. But as the correction drives down yields, to say 3%, all of a sudden a lot more investments begin to make sense. Dawn comes.
 
Lower inflation rates…and lower asset prices…help too. As prices fall, shrewd investor and careful businessmen can put their money to work again. Employees are re-hired. Household earnings recover. 
Soon, the downturn is over.
 
Both booms and busts are, normally, self-correcting.
 
But leave it to the feds to stop the sunrise. This huge demand for credit from the industrialized governments could drive up interest rates. Imagine what that will do. Already in a slump, households, businesses and investors could find their borrowing costs going up, not down. They could find prices rising, too, especially the prices of energy and food. What a world…a major slump, but with rising prices and rising interest rates!
 
And then, consider what happens next. The feds will err again. They will feel obliged to finance government borrowing themselves. Here’s the Bank of International Settlements, giving us the heads up:
The Bank for International Settlements Sunday issued an oblique endorsement of coordinated action by the world’s largest central banks to ease funding conditions for banks. “A freezing of interbank markets in major funding currencies, as during the recent crisis, may require the ability to supply official liquidity in major currencies in an elastic manner,” the BIS wrote in its regular quarterly report.” — MarketWatch
 
It was only a week ago that 6 major central banks announced a coordinated rate cut — expected to juice up the markets. And now all major central banks seem ready and willing to sacrifice the integrity of their currencies in order to protect their bond speculators.
 
This is what we expected all along. But we didn’t expect it so soon. It causes us to revisit our “long, dark road to Tokyo” forecast. You remember our prediction: the US has already followed Japan through one “lost decade.” We figured it would lose another one as the Great Correction drags on.
 
But things could happen faster…and worser. Japan financed its own deficits with its own money. Now, everybody is running deficits. And the amounts to be refinanced are staggering. Bond buyers may balk…or simply be unable to swallow so much debt.
 
Which will cause the central banks to come into the picture — with coordinated money-printing. Instead of going down, bond yields and consumer prices could go up.
 
Think things are bad now? Wait until the economy has to deal with a Great Correction and inflation.
 
Trade well and follow the trend, not the so-called “experts.”
 
Behold the age of infinite moral hazard! On April 2nd, 2009 CONgress forced FASB to suspend rule 157 in favor of deceitful accounting for the TBTF banksters. 


Thursday, November 17, 2011

Martial Law

Are we seeing a  preview of martial law?

Yields Soar

Before US equities opened Tuesday, markets were roiled by soaring bond yields in Italy, Ireland, Spain, France, and Belgium. What’s this? I thought Ireland was fixed? I thought Spain was no problemo? And France; doesn’t it have an AAA rating? Belgium? Seriously; the contagion is spreading to Belgium now?




Mike Shedlock gives us a quick rundown here http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2011/11/sovereign-debt-yields-and-spreads-soar.html



The ECB, IMF, EMU, and EU are on the verge of multiple emergency meeting, if indeed meetings are not already underway. A quick check of the following bond spread tables and today's yield action will explain.



Across the board, yields and spreads widened significantly today. Note in particular the jump in the 2-year bond yield of Belgium. Also note the inverted spread situation for Belgium.



The spread to German 2-year bonds is 3.49 while the spread to 10-year bonds is 3.13.









Belgium has been off nearly everyone's radar, but not for long. The EFSF is underfunded for Spain and Portugal alone. It's now time to add Belgium to the major problem list.



On second thought, the major problem list now includes every country but Germany.



Trade well and follow the trend, not the so-called “experts.”



Behold the age of infinite moral hazard! On April 2nd, 2009 CONgress forced FASB to suspend rule 157 in favor of deceitful accounting for the TBTF banksters.









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Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Rally Time



Rally Time 

free-money

There was quite a rally in the markets today.  The Dow closed up over 300-points, with all the other indices up an equivalent percentage. The news must have been great so without further ado, let’s have a look. 
 
The first economic data that hit the tape was the New Home Sales report and it, ahh, wasn’t good. It stunk.  Bloomberg said the following “Bad news is building out of the housing sector. Last week's report on existing home sales showed surprising contraction as does today's report on new home sales where the annual sales rate fell to 298,000 units, down 0.7 percent in the month. The report includes significant downward revisions of 12,000 to June, now at 300,000, and of 6,000 to May, now at 315,000. Prices of existing homes contracted in July as they did for the median price on new homes, down a steep 6.3 percent in the month to $222,000.
 
“The outlook for the new home market and for home builders remains very difficult. Low interest rates may be a big plus but are being more than offset by heavy supply of low priced existing homes, by appraisal uncertainties, and by continuing tightness in the credit market.”
 
Well THAT report didn’t go well.  Let’s have a look at The Richmond Fed data.  
 
In the Richmond Fed’s report we read “In August, the seasonally adjusted composite index of manufacturing activity — our broadest measure of manufacturing — declined nine points to -10 from July's reading of -1. Among the index's components, shipments lost sixteen points to -17, and new orders dropped six points to finish at -11, while the jobs index inched down three points to 1.
 
“Other indicators also suggested additional softening. The index for capacity utilization declined eight points to -14 and the backlogs of orders fell seven points to end at -25. Additionally, the delivery times index moved down twelve points to end at -4, while our gauges for inventories were virtually unchanged in August. The finished goods inventory index held steady at 17 in August, while the raw materials inventories index added one point to finish at 19.”
 
Since the incompetent Fraud Street economists missed both reports by a wide margin, with the latter report being 100% worse than expected and the worst data since 2009, one would expect a negative reaction in equities.  Ohhh, but this is Fraud Street, not the Wall Street hype of supply and demand that you have been told about over the decades.
 
Apparently the news was so bad that the hyenas of Fraud Street went into a feeding frenzy – eating as many short sellers as the pack could tear apart.  And why would the nasty hyenas do such a thing?  The answer lies with Ben S. Bernanke and the J-Hole symposium of the central banking mafia.  
 
“What’s not to like in these reports?” says the banking mafia.  “This now cinches the response we want from our puppet Bernanke: more free money for us via QE3.”
 
Boo-YA, baby!  More horrific economic data and the markets take off like a rocket shot.
 
Trade well and follow the trend, not the so-called “experts.”
 
Behold the age of infinite moral hazard! On April 2nd, 2009 CONgress forced FASB to suspend rule 157 in favor of deceitful accounting for the TBTF banksters.
 

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

ZERO

zero

 
ZIRP is “zero interest rate policy” and what Ben Bernanke announced today was that the banking mafia will enjoy at least two more years of free money.  But I don’t believe that; I deem today’s FOMC statement to mean ZIRP is here forever.  Said another way, we are following the path of Japan.  The country is in such a mess that the Fed’s prior TRILLIONS of “liquidity” has done absolutely nothing – but they’ll keep doing it anyway.
 
When the FOMC statement was released there was the usual back and forth trade; however, the market did not like the lack of a direct QE3 comment - initially.  The S&P was slammed to a new daily low but didn’t stay there for long.
 
Once the low was in, Goldman Sachs gave its trading desk and all who listen to it the “buy signal” it wanted.  In a note to clients Goldman said…
 
The committee adopted an even easier policy stance than expected. First, the committee now anticipates that economic conditions are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate "at least through mid-2013" instead of "for an extended period." Although some form of strengthening of the guidance language was expected and the new guidance remains conditional on the economic outlook, we see this step as a dovish surprise. Three members--Fisher, Kocherlakota and Plosser--dissented from this decision, the largest number of dissents since November 1992.
 
Moreover, the committee effectively signaled an easing bias saying that it discussed "the range of policy tools necessary to promote a stronger economic recovery" and that it "is prepared to employ these tools as appropriate." In our view, this leaves open the possibility of further asset purchases ("QE3") should the economic outlook deteriorate further from here.
 
When this was released, the S&P was roughly at 1107.00 and immediately went up.  By the close the S&P exploded an additional 69.00-points!
 
Although the Fed is constantly saying the economy is on the mend (read: lying), it apparently sucks so badly that we need ZIRP for at least two more years.  Additionally, you will find these uplifting comments in the FOMC release…
  • “moderated” (the economy)
  • “flattened out” (spending)
  • “considerably lower” (growth)
  • “deterioration” (economic indicators)
  • “downside risk” (to the future)
  • THREE DISSENTERS – first time since 1992

 
No but really, it’s all good!
 
Trade well and follow the trend, not the so-called “experts.”
 
Behold the age of infinite moral hazard! On April 2nd, 2009 CONgress forced FASB to suspend rule 157 in favor of deceitful accounting for the TBTF banksters.
 
   

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Liquidation



Liquidation

volcano

 
Given the US debt downgrade late Friday night, a Monday sell-off wasn’t terribly surprising.  The mass liquidation by the close, however, was surprising. 
 
As I write this, the indices are down sharply on Globex because of global domino effect and more downgrades.  After Monday’s close the expected downgrades of muni-debt hit the tape.
 
From Bloomberg http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-08-07/muni-market-prepares-for-loss-of-aaa-ratings-as-s-p-downgrades-u-s-credit.html
 
Standard & Poor’s cut the AAA ratings of thousands of municipal bonds tied to the federal government, including housing securities and debt backed by leases, following its Aug. 5 downgrade of the U.S.
 
The rating company assigned AA+ scores to securities in the $2.9 trillion municipal bond market including school- construction bonds in Irving, Texas; debt backed by a federal lease in Miami; and a bond series for multifamily housing in Oceanside, California. Olayinka Fadahunsi, an S&P spokesman, said he couldn’t provide a dollar figure on the affected debt.
 
S&P also cut ratings on securities backed by Fannie Mae andFreddie Mac, prerefunded issues and munis repaid by using federal assets, also known as defeased or escrow bonds. No state general-obligation ratings were affected.
 
Chris Mier, a managing director at Loop Capital Markets LLC inChicago who follows the municipal bond market, said the downgrades made sense, given the federal rating cut.
 
“In order to keep the system logical and coherent, there are going to be a lot of downgrades,” Mier said in a conference call with reporters and clients.
 
Matt Fabian, a managing director of Concord, Massachusetts- based Municipal Market Advisors, a financial research company, said in a telephone interview that he expected “hundreds and hundreds of municipal downgrades,” which may hurt investor confidence.
 
“Treasuries may be able to shake off a real impact from the downgrade,” he said. “Munis, I’m less sure about.”
 
In an effort to calm the markets, president Obama held a news conference today…and continued to play the Blame Game.  Apparently the market was expecting him to act like a leader; a statesman; a president.  Instead he acted like a typical politician and the market tanked further.  Moreover, as the market continues to tank on Globex, he is pressing the flesh at a $15,000 per plate fund raiser and is surely telling the crowd that without his short speech today “the market would have been 300 points lower. So I saved or created 300 points today.”
 
The FOMC meets Tuesday with a statement at 2:15pm EST. Will Bernanke announce QE3?
 
 
Trade well and follow the trend, not the so-called “experts.”
 
Behold the age of infinite moral hazard! On April 2nd, 2009 CONgress forced FASB to suspend rule 157 in favor of deceitful accounting for the TBTF banksters.