It was a cold November morning as I took my first step into the dark canyon. The challenge of running to the north rim and back awaited; but this journey was greater than the 50 miles before me. This was about discovering the greatness that lies within us. We all have dreams, desires to achieve what others say cannot be done. With passion, hard work and the willingness to suffer, our success awaits.
"Life is either a daring adventure or nothing" - Helen Keller
Monday, February 28, 2011
We've Moved
Fed's Bullard Hints At End To QE Early
"Policy is a continuous process," he said. "I would see it as possibly finishing the program a little bit shy of where we intended initially then go on pause for a while, let more information come in on the economy, see how things develop.
"If things continue to go as well as I think they will in 2001 then we can start the process of getting the balance sheet back to normal and getting interest rates up there eventually."
Fed's Bullard Hints At End To QE Early
USD Testing Multiyear Support
USD Testing Multiyear Support
Sunday, February 27, 2011
Coming Soon
Coming Soon
Interesting Commentary From China Regarding The RMB
The choices for China are rather difficult. Inflation, especially in the face of the global unrest that has developed recently threatens instability within their country. Rice has now started to move up in price as well adding further pressure. Tiananmen Square was partly a result of inflation concerns and the last thing China wants as they try to become a more dominant player in the world are pictures of tanks rolling in the street at protesters.
Should China decide to raise the value of the RMB they can fight inflation, to some extent but they risk losing jobs. Is there much of a difference between higher inflation with a job or lower inflation without a job? Additionally China is trying to slow down its own economy to manage what many see as a bubble in asset prices. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao seems somewhat concerned with the precarious situation China finds itself in a recent speech (from Reuters).
"Rapid price rises have affected the public and even social stability," Wen said.
Wen said maintaining social stability was also central to the country's foreign exchange policy, requiring a step-by-step increase in yuan flexibility so that Chinese businesses could adapt to the changes.
"If the yuan saw a one-off large appreciation, that would cause many closures of our processing enterprises and make many export orders shift to other countries and many of our workers will lose jobs."
"Let them think about that: if businesses go bankrupt, workers become unemployed and rural migrant workers go home, then what do we have to expand domestic consumption, where will increased consumption come from?"
"I have in fact said before that if price rises become linked to the problems of graft and corruption, that will be enough to spark public discontent, and even create serious social problems," Wen said.
Wen also said the official GDP target was 7 percent per year for the 2011-2015 developmental plan. That rate is significantly below the average annual 11.2 percent growth during the last five-year period, but growth targets tend to undershoot actual performance.
Interesting Commentary From China Regarding The RMB
Saturday, February 26, 2011
COT Report Week Ending 2/22
COT Report Week Ending 2/22
Irish 2011 Elections And The Winner Is...
The Irish Times released the following poll results last night.
According to the poll, Fine Gael is on 36.1 per cent, Labour is on 20.5 per cent, Fianna Fáil has slumped to 15.1 per cent, Sinn Féin is on 10.1 per cent, the Green Party were on 2.7 per cent and Independents and Others were on 15.5 per cent. The poll of 3,500 voters was carried out yesterday. The margin of error was 2.5 per cent.
Irish 2011 Elections And The Winner Is...
Friday, February 25, 2011
This Market Is All Long
When this market corrects and it will happen someday, there will literally be no one to squeeze. The bulls will have to rally the market themselves and not the bears for a change.
This Market Is All Long
GDP Q4 2010 Revision
Below is a summary of the original GDP versus the revisions. Overall, for an economy two years out of recession having experienced trillions in stimulus, this is not a good report. The data reported by BEA is real GDP and to convert from nominal to real the BEA uses two different inflation measures. They use a less aggressive number on the overall report yet on the import component which per the formula is a drag on GDP a more aggressive number. This questionable number many would argue easily overstates real GDP and in fact growth is far lower than reported.
GDP Q4 2010 Revision
Irish Elections Begin Polls Close At 10PM Local Time
Opinion polls have put Fine Gael well in the lead to head the next government, securing as much as 40pc of the popular vote - potentially allowing for a single-party government propped up by independents.
Bloomberg
Fine Gael leader Kenny, 59, said this week his priority will be to renegotiate the 5.8 percent interest rate on the bailout. The party has said it may seek European agreement to share the burden of rescuing the country’s financial system with senior bank bondholders.
Irish Elections Begin Polls Close At 10PM Local Time
Thursday, February 24, 2011
The Fed And DC's Next Move
Anyone who has traded long enough knows the worst thing that can happen to you when starting out is to make money. You begin to think things are easy and ignore the warning signs. As Bill Fleckenstein says, "nonsense becomes knowledge." Those who have not participated in this market or worse tried to short this market are frustrated beyond words right now. We spend our days studying why the market is wrong and arguing with those who are "right."
I truly believe we have an amazing opportunity ahead of us. The fiat currency based, debt fueled, rampant fraud financial system is near collapse. The ponzi scheme has outlived its shelf life. As investors, the opportunity is to make a lot money. As a society, the opportunity is to reset our moral and financial compass. Recession is a normal part of the economic cycle. It is no different than a forest fire that results from excessive, unsustainable growth. Not until the excess is removed, can new life form.
Depressions are to a society, what recessions are to an economy. Talk to anyone from the great depression and you see someone who values money, hard work, the little they have in their lives. Our society has lost its moral and financial compass. We need a reset. Since the 2008 financial crisis we have not removed the excess in our economy. Consumers have not learned how to live within their means. We are literally using debt to pay debt. We may have finally run out of a greater fool to hold up the system.
If you are in cash and not participating I think time is better spent understanding the world we truly live in. I suspect in the not so distant future we will look back at this time as the quiet before the storm. We know about the headwinds. We know the banks are insolvent. We know the economy is on life support. The question is though, what course does the Fed and Federal government choose to take us on. As hated as Bernanke is, he understands the tough choices facing him. As political as DC is, they understand their endless budget deficit game is coming to an end. Those in power do not go down without a fight, without deceit, without one last effort to hide the truth. Every week we witness a different regime in the Middle East being brought down, yet their strategy to hold onto power is no different.
Gold and silver are the new flight to safety trade. They have replaced the USD and possibly US Treasuries. The Fed and Federal government must face the threat of losing reserve currency status and higher, uncontrollable interest rates beyond one year maturity. The printing press cannot be removed. Bernanke and DC are capable of anything to retain power. Keynes believed "gold was a barbarous relic." The demand for gold and silver is so strong that future markets are in historic backwardation. The Comex is literally ready to blow up and JPM is massively short silver.
The Middle East is erupting right now. Regimes are changing and the threat to oil, the fuel of the global economy is rising. Every passing day countries are slowly moving military assets into the region. The global economy will do all it can to protect the flow of oil. Iran will not sit and watch the world move in while their own people revolt. Al Qaeda is losing importance in the region and desperately wants another base to operate out of. Israel is facing renewed threats from Hamas and Hezbollah.
The US is experiencing its own revolution. Although peaceful, that can change fast. Wisconsin was the beginning but protests have spread to other states. The global revolution started in Tunisia and very quickly grew throughout the Middle East. Never underestimate the power of those with nothing. They will fight to the end for they have nothing else to lose.
China is fighting massive inflation and eventually another Tiananmen square. Bernanke is exporting inflation and hoping that will pressure the Chinese to strengthen the RMB. Their choice is either high inflation or weaker growth. Bernanke wants jobs back from China.
- If the Fed continues QE they risk pushing bond yields to unsustainable levels.
- If the Fed ends QE, who will buy treasuries? Ending QE will take pressure off China to revalue the RMB something neither Bernanke nor DC wants.
- If the Fed continues QE they will strengthen gold and silver which will put more pressure on those like JPM and on the future of the fiat currency system.
- If Fed ends QE there will be no stimulus left for the economy and it will double dip just like it was going to last summer.
- If the Fed continues QE they will raise interest rates putting more pressure on bank balance sheets, on the 500 trillion interest rate derivative market and choke off what little demand is left in the economy.
- If the Fed ends QE they will no longer be able to inflate the US economy.
This post has become far too long as this is no easy question to be answered. Do we see war in the Middle East? Are gold and silver the best long term investments? Will the global revolution move fast enough to stop more reckless moves by world leaders? I'll leave you with Hank Paulson's quote about the 2008 financial crisis for comfort on our leaders ability to make the right decisions.
"We had no choice but to fly by the seat of our pants, making it up as we went along."
The Fed And DC's Next Move
SPX Update
SPX Update
The Moment Of Truth Approaches
The Moment Of Truth Approaches
Oil Is NOT The Only Headwind
Oil Is NOT The Only Headwind
SPX Number To Watch
SPX Number To Watch
USD Ready To Test Long Term Support
It has failed to bounce significantly off the prior test. Considering the fact that the fear trade is no longer denominated in the USD this coming test does not bode well for success. The Fed has killed the USD and is killing the treasury market. Mind boggling how one man (sure it's a committee but you really don't vote against your boss) controls in many instances global monetary policy and answers to nobody nor is subject subject to an audit.
As Bernanke tries to increase inflation to stimulate demand, he runs the risk of demand being offset by a consumer barely able to buy food to feed their family and gas to drive to work (or the unemployment office). The race to stimulate or choke the economy is on.
USD Ready To Test Long Term Support
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
AAII Investor Sentiment - Week Ending 2/22
The SPX has correlated very well with the AAII data as shown below. The divergence between the two is pretty large right now. Time will tell if the red line or blue line is wrong.
AAII Investor Sentiment - Week Ending 2/22
Bank Profitability Rises FDIC Report
"The banking industry continues to recover from the 2007-2009 financial crisis but lending will need to pick up if progress is to continue, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp Chairman Sheila Bair said on Wednesday.
Industry profits were up considerably from a year ago standing at $21.7 billion in the fourth quarter of 2010, which compares to a net loss of $1.8 billion a year ago, according to the quarterly banking report released by the agency.
Most of the increase was due to banks putting aside less to guard against loan losses.
Banks put aside $31.6 billion in the fourth quarter for losses, about 50 percent less than a year ago."
- BAC just restated goodwill impairment and credit card losses retroactively from 2009 through 2010 by an additional 10 billion.
- The CFO of WFC abruptly left in the midst of an internal review of their credit quality. Is there a reason he could not finish the review and sign off on the audit. I mean he is only 60 and makes north of $5 million. He actually took an unpaid sabbatical for a few months at which point retirement is more financially beneficial.
- Home prices have begun double dipping, meaning higher strategic defaults.
- The volume of homes to go from delinquent to REO is growing.
- Second tier credits still have yet to be marked down.
- Didn't the Fed just tell all banks to stress test against a GDP decline and unemployment at 11%?
Bank Profitability Rises FDIC Report
SPX 1296 Test
SPX 1296 Test
Quantitative Easing and The Treasury Market
There is no shortage of people calling for endless QE (easily 80% of those voices truly don't even understand QE). The environment now though has changed making the options to Fed monetary policy more limited. Probably the biggest headwind facing the Fed is rising interest rates. The federal funds rate is at 0-25 bp and QE was intended to push down rates further out on the curve and it did work for a while. The Fed conditioned all of us for low rates with their continual use of "extended period" with each FOMC statement.
The Fed needs to be careful moving forward. The bond market has clearly signaled they are concerned about inflation, loss of confidence in the Fed and US fiscal policy. The US is competing with other sovereign nations for capital at the same time they are increasing their supply with growing deficits. Imagine a shock even to the US economy. The US is in no position to use emergency stimulus without risk of truly blowing out yields.
Two Year Treasury
After catching a little bid last week the two year has given up all its gains and looks to test the lows again. The shorter end of the curve had stayed relatively low in yield but has risen more than any other maturity recently causing a bear flattening (higher rates and a flatter curve). Not favorable for banks or those on the wrong side of interest rate swaps (which is a $458 trillion market).
Quantitative Easing and The Treasury Market
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
Tuesday's Market
Today's market action was nice to see for a change. As always, down days have massive volume versus up days. Anything is possible, and this market may set new highs in a few days again but the risk / reward is getting far more skewed to the risk side of the equation.
The bond market caught somewhat of a bid today but still is not showing any real bullish tendencies. The 2 year auction today saw a bid to cover around 3.03 versus the 3.40 trend of late so that does not bode well for treasury demand, especially with the recent run up in yields. The implications to risk sensitive assets (swaps, housing, CRE, etc) are huge and the Fed has to be careful how much they push future QE.
The USD is done, put a fork in it. Precious metals are the new reserve currency, flight to safety. I won't call them a flight to safety trade, because they really are not a trade. They are another form of currency. When you go all cash in your trading account, that is not considered a trade, nor should owning precious metals. Ever hear anyone talk about how their cash balance takes a hit when the USD is weak or rejoices when the USD is strong? For some precious metals is a trading vehicle but for most it is a hedge against a dying fiat currency system.
Copper has really begun to roll over as are emerging markets, DOW Transports, Utilities. The VIX was up huge today and the AD line was heavily in the declining category. The only thing catching a bid is oil and the headwinds from rising prices will hurt the cash strapped consumer.
Libya is only going to grow in violence with Gaddafi now preparing to be a martyr. Bahrain is continuing to boil over and I read reports that Iran may see protests as early as Tuesday or Wednesday of this week. The global revolution is even happening in the US. First Wisconsin now Ohio and Indiana. Expect many other states to protest just how the budget gaps will be filled.
Ireland elections are on Friday and no one seems to be talking about it. Angela Merkel was handed quite the set back in this weekend's elections as well. Neither bode well for senior bondholders staying whole. Italy had to close its stock market today, Japan has been put on credit watch negative, Spain is acknowledging how bad their banks are finally, The UK is contracting (oh yeah, Japan too), Korea is a seeing a bank run (oh yeah Ireland too). I am sure I missed something but you get the point.
If this market is going to turn, don't think the dip buyers will give up without a fight. A majority of traders and investors have made money for two years by literally doing nothing but holding stocks. It was an easy way to make money and they won't give up without a fight. They will pour money into any weakness as they have been conditioned. They will focus on the Bernanke put which in reality expires soon unless QE3 is hinted at in the next few weeks. Today had the sign of a buy the dip trade working yet again but failed. It may still work but one thing is for sure, one day it won't work. Stay focused on the issues that the media is not covering. The issues are real and the opportunities to profit from them are very large indeed.
Tuesday's Market
Bank Of America Credit Quality Deteriorating
Feb. 22 (Bloomberg) -- Bank of America Corp., the biggest U.S. lender by assets, almost doubled a goodwill impairment for its credit-card unit to $20.3 billion to reflect increased defaults and an almost 2-year-old change in rules.
The bank restated federal regulatory filings to record the writedown to its FIA Card Services unit in 2009’s first half, the firm said yesterday in a statement. The non-cash charge, which replaced a $10.4 billion impairment booked on the unit last year, doesn’t affect “the financial results, safety and soundness or the capital position” of the Charlotte, North Carolina-based parent company, said Robert Stickler, a spokesman.
Bank Of America Credit Quality Deteriorating
Monday, February 21, 2011
Oil Production By Country
The global revolution is moving so fast and government responses have been as illogical as their style of government. No one really understands the Middle East and Iran plays a large role in destabilizing the area. Saudi Arabia is now surrounded by protests which cannot be a positive for stability in that country. One also has to wonder where Al Qaeda is right now. What role will they play in shaping the future of the Middle East? Will they attempt to overthrow a weakened government or fill a power vacuum? Israel is possibly more isolated now than ever before. Hezbollah has declared they are ready for a new war with Israel and the ability of the US to maneuver in the region has been weakened.
The future of the US and global economies right now are in the hands of the global revolution. If oil production is impacted in Iran and or Saudi Arabia the shock to the system will be massive. Consumers already squeezed from rising food prices will spend any remaining discretionary income to heat their homes, fuel their cars. Treasuries so far are failing to rise in the face of geopolitical risk which will only put greater pressure on the US economy (a 100 bp rise in yields equates to an additional $140 Trillion in interest expense annually). There are so many moving parts right now all of which are intertwined.
It's quite possible the Fed injects greater levels of QE to offset any shocks. They may be forced to do all they can to hold up asset prices but that very action will further weaken the USD and treasuries. The Fed may have entered a negative feedback loop they cannot get out of unless they wish to finally confront the structural issues facing the US economy.
Watch Iran for signs of the 2009 revolution awakening.
Oil Production By Country
Data Overload And The Global Economy
- South Korea is experiencing a run on their banks.
- On Tuesday Iran will send two navy ships through the Suez canal for the first time since 1979, while Israel views this move as provocative.
- Ireland elections are on Friday which threaten to force senior bondholders to incur a loss. Irish banks are experiencing an accelerating bank run and have resorted to issuing debt to themselves and then using that debt as collateral for additional funding.
- Libya is falling into civil war which puts about 2% of oil production in jeopardy.
- Revolutions continue in Bahrain, Algeria, Yemen. Saudi Arabia is now surrounded by revolutions.
- Iran is facing their own very serious revolution since the 2009 uprising. Iran will not fall like Egypt fell. It's been very quiet in Iran the past few days and one has to wonder when that country will erupt. It's quite possible Iran sending ships through the Suez canal is meant to deflect attention from their own efforts to suppress the pending protests.
- The USD is falling while gold and silver rally. The USD reserve currency and fiat currency as a whole are dying.
- Oil has risen over 10% in the past 48 hours. If oil moves higher or at least holds these levels, the impact to the global economy will be devastating.
- Moody's just downgraded Japan to credit watch negative from stable.
- China is raising reserve requirements to slow growth.
- Equity markets have seen a parabolic rise on dwindling volume and rising margin. Margin debt now stands at pre Lehman levels.
- Food and energy inflation is rising to an unsustainable level worldwide.
- The US is experiencing its own revolutions in Wisconsin and now Ohio as the reality of massive budget gaps is realized.
- The US appears to be headed for a government shutdown as the debt ceiling fight lingers and the clock ticks.
Data Overload And The Global Economy
USD Relative Weakness
- Futures down 13 handles
- Oil up 5%
- Gold over $1,400
- Silver approaching $34
The days of the USD being the flight to safety appears to be coming to an end. Bonds as well are not catching much of a bid. The Fed is in quite a pickle here. US Fiscal policy and Fed Monetary policy had a big assumption, that being low interest financing of debt would always be readily available. If they don't stop the QE nonsense soon, that will be yet another failed Fed assumption. Imagine if Saudi Arabia and or Iran sees more protests.
USD Relative Weakness
Sunday, February 20, 2011
Middle East, Ireland and Rick James
The world has quite the week ahead of itself. What is evolving in the Middle East is inspiring, sad and extremely explosive. Tunisia was truly a microcosm of the global revolution now taking place. Tunisia and Egypt fell far faster than anyone imagined and the same will be true with the coming Middle East revolution. It is truly sad though to see the level of brutality governments will use to maintain power. Hundreds have been killed this weekend and unfortunately that number will probably grow quickly.
Few, if any truly understand the Middle East. With each passing day it is becoming even more complex. On Monday we will see the Iranian navy pass through the Suez canal, Israel has threatened a response and Saudi Arabia is now surrounded by protests. In Egypt even though the Mubarak regime has been toppled, banks still cannot open nor can the stock market. The global economy cannot handle a shock event and should the Middle East explode as it appears it is headed, the effects on oil prices could be devastating.
The global equity markets are completely ignoring geopolitical risks right now. Just like the global revolution has evolved faster than anticipated, so to may be the repricing of risk in the capital markets.
Rick James
With all due respect to the late "super freak," what western star do you think Gaddafi, the modern "super freak" has modeled himself after?
Middle East, Ireland and Rick James
Saturday, February 19, 2011
COT Report Week Ending 2/15
Oil V Copper
The past few weeks copper has continued to show far greater strength than oil, setting new highs almost regularly. Oil appears to be rolling over and then another Middle East country erupts causing a spike, that is subsequently sold off. I present this chart below to simply show how the two have begun show a larger divergence than normal.
COT Report Week Ending 2/15
Friday, February 18, 2011
The Fear Trade
The Fear Trade
Philadelphia Fed Survey
The first part of the survey (section a) asks who has raised prices on finished good. 56.5% report a price increase from 0-10%. Looking at the second part (section b) the trend continues with 59.2% expecting to further raise prices over the next three months.
Bernanke tells us that price increases are due purely to supply and demand but his argument is not supported by the third part of this survey. When asked "are you currently experiencing shortages or delayed delivery of any critical raw or intermediate products" 67.1% reported NO. Input costs continue to rise very quickly, yet supply is keeping up with demand. This would imply costs are being driven more by speculation than a strengthening global economy.
Philadelphia Fed Survey
Thursday, February 17, 2011
Future Bank Earnings
The volume of foreclosure sales has stayed relatively flat yet the serious delinquent category has grown much faster. Foreclosure inventory has not kept up with the growth in delinquency either.
I've heard reports of people not paying a mortgage for months, in some cases over a year. That would be a delinquent credit, yet the banks in those instances are ignoring this non-performing credit. Unless notice is given, the credit is performing and not delinquent. Why do that? Why would a bank let someone not make a mortgage payment for months? Why does the foreclosure process take up to 19 months for the top banks?
It's all part of extend and pretend. When a credit is delinquent, the bank is still accruing interest on that note even though the probability of collecting that accrued interest is very low. Additionally the asset is marked at full value. When a bank finally seizes a property it becomes an REO (Real Estate Owned) and that is when the hit to the balance sheet for the value of the asset and the income statement for the accrued interest happens.
What we have seen the past few reporting seasons is banks reducing their reserves for credit losses when in fact there is a mismatch between their realized losses and future losses. They claim improving credit quality and perhaps that is true but they still are under reserved. Should housing take another leg down, strategic defaults will occur and this problem will grow. For now banks are balancing their dwindling profit with balance sheet write downs. This, is why the US economy is being held hostage by the TBTF banks. The last thing they want to do is extend credit to anyone without a perfect credit score and very low LTV .
Future Bank Earnings
MERS Is Slowly Going Away
If memory serves, MERS is involved in about 50% of all mortgage transactions. This means that half of land transactions in the US have not been recorded at the state level and therefore only MERS knows who owns what. I'm not making this stuff up. MERS has been ruled against a number of times during foreclosure proceedings and as a result has issued a 90-day comment period ahead of a stoppage of foreclosure under MERS.
"Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, or MERS, told its members Wednesday not to foreclose on residential mortgages in its name."
During judicial state foreclosures (about half the states in the US), MERS was shown as holder of the title and not the note which is a problem in itself. Equally problematic that the courts will not allow is lack of endorsement of title and note. MERS is now asking to not be involved in any future foreclosure proceeds. This begs the question then, who holds the mortgage? Are the true holders in theory unsecured creditors? The problem facing the industry is very simple in eyes of the law, there is no sign of who sold what and therefore who owns the note and the mortgage. As to how this is remedied, no one really knows. But one thing for sure, this action by MERS today has made the solution even more confusing.
MERS Is Slowly Going Away
Consumer Prices - CPI
Look at the increases in "Food at Home," groceries. January saw a month over month increase of .5% versus an average month over month increase the prior six months of .1%. Here's a quote from the report.
"The index for food at home posted its largest increase in over two years with all six major grocery store food group indexes rising."
"All items" continues trending higher as well, registering a .4% increase (MoM) in January as in December.
Lastly, motor vehicles continue to have no pricing power as prices continue to deteriorate.
Consumer Prices - CPI
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
AAII Investor Sentiment - Week Ending 2/15
The SPX continues to ignore prior correlations and the AAII sentiment data is yet another. The charts below speak for themselves as the divergence over the past few months continues to grow new levels.
AAII Investor Sentiment - Week Ending 2/15
Treasury, USD And The Fed
Treasury, USD And The Fed