Archives: August 2008

More jawboning and bottom-calling

Published on: 08/26/2008
Comments: 4 Comments

The minutes from the last FOMC meeting indicated the Fed’s next move in interest rates will be higher. I can see it now: the dirty dozen sitting at their big table, with all their fingers and toes crossed as they made perhaps the most ridiculous utterance of all time. There is no way the Fed is going higher on rates anytime soon. If anything, they are likely to be forced to go even LOWER than the 2.0% current Fed funds rate. Reasons include an economy that is now almost entirely dependent on cheap money, an ongoing financial crisis, and the biggest reason of all – the housing market. The statement on raising rates was made entirely as an excuse to keep the staged rally in the Dollar going a bit longer. Remember, the mainstream press announced the upcoming rally back in April. We’re just following their playbook here.

In other news, housing bulls are excited that new home sales picked up just a tad this past month. This news came as prices fell at a record pace. Makes sense guys. However, mortgage rates really aren’t cooperating at this point, with 30 year money going in the mid 6% range for prime borrowers. This ties directly into the Fed’s course of action. They must keep the spread between borrowing costs and lending costs as high as possible in order to try to save banks. However, if mortgage rates are too high, then defaults and foreclosures will get worse. If the PPT buys the long end of the yield curve to bring down mortgage (bond) rates, they kill the banks by cutting the interest rate spreads – UNLESS they go lower on the short-term rates to try to maintain the spread. No my Dear Watson, the Fed is not raising rates anytime soon.

The more things change…

Published on: 08/22/2008
Comments: 5 Comments

..the more they stay the same. I returned from a 5 day respite to find that government officials are still telling us inflation will subside, oil is still being hammered based on the aforementioned assertion, and we will have a strong Dollar ad infinitum.  

Despite the happy talk, markets had a down week following what appears to be the conclusion of the bear market rally. We discussed the termination of this rally in depth in our last issue of the Centsible Investor and positioned our Model Portfolio accordingly. 

Interestingly enough, while away, I had the pleasure (or displeasure) of being able to get CNBC. In the interests of relaxation, I tuned in 3 times per day for about 5 minutes each time. I did this to watch the major markets, precious metal prices, energy, and interest rates. Oddly enough, almost every time I tuned in, there was a guest on stating 1001 reason why everyone should now own financial stocks. The blatant pushing of these stocks when the worst economic conditions clearly lie ahead would be humorous if so many people weren’t falling for it. 

Treasury Deficit blows out to Record

Published on: 08/13/2008
Categories: Current Events, Economics
Comments: No Comments

The June deficit for the US Treasury pushed to near $103 Billion in June alone as the government sent out rebate checks to taxpayers. I am hoping that now everyone will see the folly in these giveaways. The tab for that will now have to be borrowed or monetized by the Treasury/Fed and will result in an increased burden for our children moving forward. Tax ‘rebates’ from an insolvent Treasury are only another way to forego future consumption in favor of current consumption. Because it is today what matters; not tomorrow.

Now imagine what the deficit will look like when the Treasury starts buying Fannie/Freddie debt and has to bailout FDIC (which is coming). The monthly deficit might be $200 Billion. Or maybe $500 Billion. Is there any limit to the amount of money these people think they can borrow and spend? Or more importantly, is there any point at which Americans will wake up from their collective slumber and start demanding some sort of accountability from our elected officials? We always talk about wanting the best for our children. Yet we’ll allow our government to bury our kids and grandkids under a mountain of debt without nary a whimper of protest.

Dollar benefits from bad news

Dollar bulls beware; the buck is benefitting from bad news around the globe much more than it is returning to prominence. Take a minute and return to fundamentals. The economy is in recession. Unemployment is rising. Consumer prices are up sharply. Foreclosures continue to mount. Home values are falling. Banks are failing. The only thing that has remained the same is the Fed is allowing the money supply to continue to grow at a double-digit rate. The Dollar is being devalued before our eyes, yet we hear an almost endless line of commentary about our ‘strong Dollar’ policy.

In other news, oil continued to exhibit weakness which has fueled world equity markets to pare 2008′s losses slightly. Consumers may benefit from lower gasoline prices for a while during this correction, but don’t count on too much. Lower prices will increase demand as people, eager to return to life as usual ,take to the roads for late summer trips. Regardless of what happens in America, Asia continues to grow. Absent a significant decrease in growth in the Orient, demand will continue to exceed supply.  Another possible nasty side effect is that lower prices might discourage further investment, just at the time we need it most.

The Do-Nothing Fed

Published on: 08/05/2008
Categories: Current Events, Economics
Comments: 4 Comments

Inflation is running at multi-decade highs and today the Fed chose to do nothing; a clear demonstration of their inability to control neither the economy nor the financial system moving forward. Their (un)official position continues to be to print enough money to bail any major institution that requires it and let the chips fall where they may.

One would have expected asset markets to react accordingly, yet gold sold off, the Dollar rallied, oil continued its recent slide, and the stock markets headed for the moon. Counterintuitive moves have been the fare of the past few months, and that has caused many believers to become wary of the fundamentals. While Big Ben and his pals would love for you to believe that they are the Keeper of Bubbles and the Masters of the Universe, they are nothing of the sort. Once again, prevention is the name of their game and the prescription for prevention on their part is patience on ours.

GDP growth exposed as a fraud

Published on: 08/01/2008
Categories: Current Events, Economics
Tags: , ,
Comments: 4 Comments

Thursday announcement that GDP grew at a 1.9% pace in the second quarter was largely discredited today as job losses continue to mount with non-farm payrolls dropping by 51,000 jobs. First time unemployment applications were up over 400K and the unemployment rate shot up to a 4 year high of 5.7% in July. This underlines the fact that economic conditions continue to worsen despite the GDP ‘growth’, much of which was derived by virtue of people taking their economic stimulus checks and spending them on goods and services. Unfortunately, for the most part, the checks are now spent and consumers are no better off than they were before. Their debt is still there, their home prices are still falling and their cost of living keeps increasing. Those are the drivers of this recession. When these conditions improve, then it will warrant a step back and a new look. Until then, the song remains the same.

Our contraryinvestorscafe.com ‘Soap Box’ interview on bailouts has been posted – Click the link below to listen to this thought-provoking monologue:

Listen Here

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