Initial Claims

Posted by Ray on June 17, 2010 under Main | Be the First to Comment

Unreal, it is just unreal, here we are 2.5 years into this recession and we are still seeing initial claims well over 450K a week, how? The pundits told us that employment had turned the corner months ago and we are in a strong “V” shaped recovery, but employment is a lagging indicator and should show real strength by March 2010. Well, it is half way through June and the only sector showing strong job growth is temporary government jobs, some recovery.

The 4 week moving average of initial claims is at 464,000 people, this is unbelievable and is not a good sign. To put this into perspective every month 1,856,000 are filing for initial jobless claim benefits, that is twice the amount of people that live in the entire state of Montana or two thirds of the population of Las Vegas, three times the amount of people that live in Boston Ma, you get the picture now? That is a lot of people. This is not a sign of job creation or job growth so it is beyond me how the President could have stood on that podium a couple weeks ago and proclaimed there is proof that the economy is getting stronger everyday when so many people are losing their jobs every day, not getting jobs.

I may be bearish and all, but this is beyond what I would call bad news and downright scary. People are not leaving their jobs for greener pastures, they are being laid off because business stinks. The proof was n the CPI which shows clear lack of pricing power or deflation dropped .2%, even taking out energy prices were only higher by .1% which shows zero pricing power except for iPads. What this means is the market is severely overvalued as it deserves to be trading at much lower price multiples based on deflationary pressures. We are not in 1930’s type deflation, but we are certainly heading in that direction, especially with Europe in turmoil right now.

To say there was any strength in today’s figures is simply lying to yourself and trying to spin bad news. I am sure the market will head higher because, well, the market sees no bad news until it is sitting on its chest, but it is clear as day that GDP is rolling over and employment is worsening, not improving. Would I short the market? Yes, but if you do not want to go short sell into rallies and buy bonds or stay in cash because when the market realizes it needs to compress P/E multiples we will move from 1,100 on the S&P to 900 in the blink of an eye. The market is not the discounting mechanism everyone tells you it is, just remember September of 2007 we hit all time highs when the crisis was hitting full steam, so higher stock prices is not indicative of a healthy economy.

One final thing, the parade of bulls on CNBC are long only mutual fund asset managers, where is their bread buttered, by having your assets in cash or in their funds? Think about that when listening to them dish out their “timely advice.”

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