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Browse: Home / debt problem

debt problem

457,000, Again

By Ray on June 24, 2010

Initial claims came in at -457K this morning, this is not good, and last week’s figures were revised from -472K to 476K, really not good. This has little to do with the oil leak in the Gulf and anyone making that claim disqualifies themselves from the conversation. This has to do with a weak economy, pure and simple. We are entering a double dip recession and as the stimulus is pulled back it is going to get worse, much worse.

Your first warnings came from Best Buy and Fedex, but no one listened to what they had to say. Frankly, the real warnings were always in the weekly claims reports, but everyone dismissed them as a “lagging indicator” which is simply not true in a post credit collapse economy. If we were in a normal inventory recession I would agree that employment is a lagging indicator, but when the economy blows up because people cannot pay their bills, well, employment is a leading indicator. That is where economists missed the mark and failed to adjust their models, those that fail to change will go the way of the dinosaur, it is inevitable that natural selection weeds out the weak and that is what is happening now.

To top off the situation we did the worst thing possible, we tried to cure a debt problem with more debt. You cannot do that, it just doesn’t work. Take a look at Greek bonds, the 10 year is over 10% again, why? They have austerity measures in place. They have access to special funding, etc. yet their bonds are yielding over 10%. That is telling you there is no fix for the problem as the smart money is always, I cannot stress this enough, always in the credit markets. We have treasuries climbing with 2 year yields pushing .64%! Are you kidding me? This is not normal and while I bought when yields hit 1.10% on the 2 year, taking much flak from friends and family I might add, I figured the yield would drop to .77% or so, within the trading range, but they broke out. This is a sign that things are not as they seem and extreme caution is merited. Where treasury yields can go is the big question, certainly zero is not out of the question and negative yields have happened before, watch the credit markets.

Europe is a problem and will continue to be a problem, remember that the EU is China’s biggest market and the EU is responsible for 30% of the S&P 500’s earnings, not an issue for 2Q, but 3Q I would not be long in 3Q. Unemployment in the U.S. will climb higher, I am sad to report, especially as Europe deteriorates and much to Mr. Krugman’s chagrin forcing the EU members to increase their deficits is not a good idea. Their deficits are the problem and making them bigger will not solve their problems. Europe could lead to much higher unemployment in the U.S. and one has to remember that Europe did make the Depression much worse in America in the 1930’s as well, history does repeat itself.

To top it all off we do have the moratorium for drilling in the Gulf, it may get overturned again, but assume it will not. What does that mean? That means at least 10,000 jobs will be lost within the first few weeks. After that it could get worse as it creates a negative feed loop and the loss of one job means others will lose their jobs over time. From my lens the moratorium is insane. The leak is horrible, we all know that, but this is the first oil leak we have had in the region, ever, out of how many wells? Perhaps if the government puts a safety inspector on each rig that may solve the safety concerns, but that idea was rejected. Instead, let’s halt the entire industry and watch them all go to Mexico or Brazil instead so we can lose those jobs for years to come in the best case scenario or forever in the worst case scenario.

Employment is indicating things are mildly better, but merely stabilized at “less bad” which is not good overall. Housing, the release yesterday, solidified that we will have a double dip as housing is about 21% of GDP and we just saw the worst housing data since they started recording the data series. How much more evidence do we need to have? We also created false demand which means we had distorted housing data for the past year. How in the world are we supposed to know how far forward we pulled demand? Months? Years? This is the problem with Keynesian economics especially when it is used wrong, which we certainly did.

The bottom line is this, unemployment is going to grow outside of government rolls, period. Housing is going to go lower meaning GDP is going to be bad in the second half of this year, if not negative. The employment report, due out soon, will show more government jobs which will not be positive for the markets. The ISM surveys are rolling over. The leading indicators are pointing down, hard. Inflation is nil right now. Treasuries are telling you something big is going to happen. Europe is in major trouble. How you can believe the long only permabulls being paraded on the TV is beyond me. They get paid to have your money in their funds whether it goes up or down. I get nothing whether you invest or not. Frankly, the facts at this point are irrefutable.

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Posted in Main | Tagged austerity measures, best buy, collapse, credit markets, debt problem, double dip recession, Economy, extreme caution, fedex, greek bonds, initial claims, jobless claims, lagging indicator, leading indicator, oil leak, permabull, stimulus, treasuries | Leave a response

China demands release of Bernie Madoff

By Ray on February 2, 2010

In an unusual twist from the US’s largest creditor China is demanding the release of Bernie Madoff and want him appointed either as Federal Reserve Chairman or Treasury Secretary immediately. The Chinese demand this to be done because it is becoming increasingly concerned that the current US government is unaware on how to properly run a Ponzi Scheme properly. It seems Beijing is perplexed on how US administration officials and the US media does not seem to understand the difference between annual budget deficits, which is the annual funding gap, versus the reduction of total national debt.

Obviously I am kidding, but there is a chance that the Chinese or other foreign creditors might actually feel this way. Considering the administration started talking about debt reduction and fiscal restraint only to come out with a spending freeze, after they increased those same budgets the year before essentially locking in the budget increases, which will only reduce the annual budget deficit by $250B over 10 years. Notice I said annual budget deficit? That means we are still bleeding red as far as the eye can see and we are doing nothing to reduce the national debt problem we have, which is the largest the world has ever seen, throughout history.

While the administration is at least acknowledging the problem and doing more than Bush ever did they are still doing what politicians do, playing with the words. When regular people hear budget deficit reduction many think this is great, we are paying off our national debt! Wrong. What our wonderful leaders are doing is telling us that they are still going to have to borrow hundreds of billions or trillions a year, but they are reducing the amount of their shortfall on an annual basis. Basically, it means nothing because we are still spending way more than we have. The biggest expenditure that we have is on entitlement programs which everyone admits we cannot cut, but Obama did reduce funding to elderly and disabled housing subsidies which may actually give some credence to the “death panel” argument during the health care debate. I mean if you’re willing to throw grandma out of her home or nursing home than why not have death panels, I am just saying now.

Regardless, what we know is that there is no way any politician will do what is necessary to cut the annual deficit down for real, which means higher entitlement taxes, longer waiting periods for benefits or reduced benefits in general. Instead they will merely grandstand against each other while they slowly, or not so slowly is some projections are correct, destroy the entire country. I do not mean this to be partisan, most know I blame both parties for this mess and pray for a real third party to create some competition in politics, come on 2 parties is not a democracy it is a choice between dumb and dumber. Well, technically we actually live in a Republic anyhow so this basically shows us how limited our politicians are in their actually knowledge when they claim we have the greatest democracy in the world.

The bottom line is that we are adding to the national debt everyday and there is no way to stop it without serious action. The action I speak of will never be taken, not yet at least, but eventually they will happen, if we make it that far. The numbers are simply staggering when you think about it, $14T debt ceiling, $107T in unfunded liabilities and the numbers just get bigger and bigger. The entire US mutual fund industry is $15T so the government could confiscate every mutual fund asset in the US and we would barely payoff our debt, think about that for a minute. In a couple of years that $14T will be much bigger and a large reason that the debt ceiling will have to continually be increased, before the repeal the debt ceiling language that is, is to pay the interest on our debt. The crazy thing is we actually have to borrow money to pay the interest on our debt, talk about insolvency?

To steal a line from Dick and Jane; “Dick, I think were in a bit of a pickle” is completely appropriate right now. We are in the midst of the greatest debt bubble ever created and I have no idea how it will end, but I do know it will end and it will more than likely be very ugly. On an interesting, slightly off-topic, have you noticed the public-private lending facilities being set up with the TARP proceeds? I predicted that would happen a few months ago, I just wanted to say I told you so. Anyhow, there have been lots of interesting happenings lately in politics which I will be writing about very soon. I was incredibly sick for the past 5 days so I apologize for not humoring you with my tasteless jokes, or whatever you call them. In the meantime I am still very bearish, expecting unemployment to be particularly ugly and GDP, well we knew it would be huge, but 5.7%? Expect revisions down to 3%, but if you believe the 5.7% please contact me about fabulous leasing opportunities in Pakistan.

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Posted in Main | Tagged bernie madoff, budget deficit, budget deficits, budget increases, debt problem, deficit reduction, federal reserve chairman, fiscal restraint, national debt, ponzi scheme, treasury secretary | Leave a response

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