Recap

Posted by Ray on July 7, 2010 under Economy, Main | Be the First to Comment

Today was interesting to say the least, a massive rally on the back of no real news, I guess stress tests that really don’t stress banks balance sheets were the primary driver along with a technical bounce, but other than that all the other news was negative. Let’s review the bullish news that moves the markets 3%. Dallas Fed President Fisher calls out Congress and the President by saying they are inhibiting growth by creating confusion, no surprise there. Delinquencies on homes are stabilizing at extremely high levels, CNBC.com. Reis Inc. released a report showing that retail shopping center vacancies are rivaling all-time highs at 10.9% and rents are dropping, they should recovery by 2016, somehow that must be bullish. Lindsay Lohan is going to jail, I guess, for 90 days, now that really is bullish for whoever makes the drugs to sober people up.

I guess on the heels of all that bullish news it is little wonder that the market rallied so hard today. The only other piece of news that would have sent us to 11,000 for sure is if we declared war on Iran, based on this track record.  We blew through several layers of resistance on the SPY, which I am short and yes today did hurt, thank you for asking, and we could reach as high as $107.12 on the SPY, but overall it is still in a bearish trend, sorry. The volume was nothing to write home about today either and, frankly, yesterday’s mammoth reversal speaks volumes about the condition of this market, it is structurally unsound. However, we have some pretty big news coming up Thursday morning, retail sales and initial claims data will dominate the headlines.

First, if you watched CNBC this morning and caught El-Erain from PIMCO he said something you might have heard before. He said; “Unemployment is no longer a lagging indicator, but a leading indicator.” Any idea where you would have read that? I have been saying that for months now and many have said some pretty nasty things to me about making that claim. What El-Erain and PIMCO have figured out and the people who have no clue that a “V” shaped recovery does not exist have not figured out is that in a post credit collapse world unemployment is not a symptom of the cancer, but part of the actual cancer itself. If the credit collapse occurred because people could not pay their bills it would stand to reason that the more people who are unemployed the worse the problem will get. Perhaps this is why mortgage modifications are failing and defaults are picking up on credit products, depending on how a default is actually measured nowadays. It is just nice to have a high profile person repeat what you have been saying even though he has no clue who I am.

As for the initial claims tomorrow, my guess is that they will be ugly, again, as in +450,000, but less than the 472,000 from the week before because of the July 4th holiday. Employers tend not to fire people before the holidays, but they will be elevated in my opinion. If, for some reason, initial claims are above 470,000 that will be horrible news and my guess is that will merit a reversal of fortunes in the markets. It is just amazing that we are coming up on 3 years into this thing and we are still seeing initial claims coming in at well over 400K a week. I know the President likes to make the claim that when he came into office over 750,000 people were filing for initial claims a week, but that was for only a few weeks during the peak of the crisis and, frankly, the fact that we have stabilized at 450K a week is nothing to really brag about, sorry.

To make matters worse the emergency extension of unemployment benefits were not passed before Congress went home for the holiday. That left almost 2M people without unemployment benefits and, in my opinion, that will have an impact on retail sales. How much of an impact? I do not know, but more than most people think. The other major thing people have to remember about retail sales is that many retailers closed a ton of underperforming stores so you are looking at retail sales numbers from the top performing stores they have to offer. No longer can we say that these figures include the dogs of the industry which means the figures you see can actually be much weaker, or stronger, than they initially appear. Regardless, credit is still contracting, unemployment is still sky high and that means retail sales are probably not going to be as strong as most people think, but analysts knew this and started heavily revising estimates lower. Not to mention that retailers have zero pricing power so even if sales are good their margins are going to be miniscule.

There is little to be bullish about out there as all the data has been bad and should not be read any differently than being bad. The ISM was bad, the employment report was bad, the housing data is horrible, the political picture is uncertain and the charts are certainly bearish, just look at the RUT. I am not saying don’t own stocks, but be careful what you own, strong balance sheets and dividends are key. Anyone outright bullish on this market is either selling you a fund or is simply out of their mind. Patience is key and there is no need to jump into any stock for any reason as we are in for a bumpy ride. I don’t even think earnings season will do much for us, sure 2Q10 earnings will be good, but the outlook will be not so bullish.

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I was wrong on the employment report, but right

Posted by Ray on July 5, 2010 under Economy, Markets | Be the First to Comment

I was wrong on the numbers on the employment report, kind of, take out the temporary hires and birth/death adjustments and I was very much right. Contrary to popular belief, the birth/death adjustments do matter as those adjustments are responsible for underestimating unemployment by 880,000 people last year and, in my opinion, that rate is probably way underestimated at that. Even Dave Rosenberg lambasted the birth/death adjustment as “fantasy” which means I am not alone in my thinking. Regardless, that employment report was clearly not priced into the market and was very bad news.

We had wages drop and the work week shrink which is very deflationary to say the least. I also believe that the full impact of the Gulf oil leak has not made the rolls either yet which means more bad news ahead. There is also the ban on offshore drilling making its way through the court system which could have some profound implications in the Gulf region adding thousands to the if not temporary unemployed at least the medium term unemployed area of the report. The icing on the cake was the initial claims report of Thursday which came in much higher than anticipated at 472,000 which is not good at all.

Mix that in with the ECRI slipping further and I am comfortable with the double dip scenario, if we were ever really out of the recession to begin with. I am hard pressed to believe any of this is priced into the market even after this massive slide we have seen in equity prices. From my point of view the equity markets had some 4% GDP priced in and flawless earnings with endless positive guidance. So far we have seen some firms pre-warn about a slowdown in the economy and their earnings. This means some of this is priced into equities, but not a 1% GDP print or a negative print which is possible at this rate. Housing is telling us that we have serious problems and the slide in all the housing data means that a full fifth of the economy is in negative territory. We also see that hiring in the manufacturing area, which was giving economists a sense of comfort, is slowing down dramatically. Can we all say this together please, inventory rebuild, but that is now over.

There is simply no end demand for products at this point which is not good. I had called this a depression last fall and received tremendous heat for using that term, but make no mistake about it, this is a depression. Unemployment is telling us that it is a depression and we are, as history seems to be repeating itself, looking at acts that mimic what we did pre-1929 crash, Smoot-Hawley, now called Schumer-Graham for the currency manipulator tariff act. None of this is priced into the equity markets which mean we will have much to worry about on the downside. Be sure, there will be sharp rallies, but you should not buy the dips on this one. I sold everything except for biotech, high yielding stocks with strong balance sheets, high grade bonds, treasuries and I own a tiny position in high yield bonds, I sold 80% at the end of 1Q after the stellar performance. I hold large short positions, which is relatively unchanged from the end of 1Q except I rolled put options out until September and began building a position in some leveraged and unleveraged short ETF’s, TZA, SH, SDS, BGZ to name a few, some I will hold and some I trade.

I expect a rally up to the 104-105 area in the SPY which should prove to be a nice entry point into a short position, if you are aggressive and believe growth will be weak as I do. However, I believe tomorrow we open lower since we could not hold $102.50 on Friday in the SPY, but we should reverse up since everyone is so negative. Depending on what happens, everything always depends, I will more than likely cover my shorts tomorrow and play the long side for that rally and reenter my short positions at higher levels. Volatility is your friend, but we are dominated by certain carry trades, news events and other macro items that one needs to monitor so be careful and don’t just trust the charts, look at everything to make your decisions. My target for the S&P is still at least 900, but it can go as low as 860 and retest the March 2009 lows without any problem whatsoever. I am not even sure quantitative easing can fix this problem since treasury yields are heading lower already. We are in a very bad position and there are no more bullets left from the government. This could get very, very bad.

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The employment report will be bad, worse than you think

Posted by Ray on July 1, 2010 under Economy, Markets | Be the First to Comment

Everyone is expecting a bad employment report, especially after the ADP report on Wednesday and the initial claims data this morning, but I think it will be worse than most people believe. Estimates are for modest private payroll growth, meaning poor of course, but given the weak data that came in waves this month it is bound to be less robust than we think. I am one of the few who believe there is a very strong possibility of private payroll losses tomorrow, not merely a weak report, but a disastrous report.  I am not referring to the census workers being laid off either.

I expect huge losses in construction jobs which will offset any manufacturing gains we have. The housing, initial claims and extended jobless benefit data points are what lead me to believe that we will see a train wreck tomorrow. It is clear that the economic indicators are rolling over, from the ISM to the ECRI all the way to housing, which should not shock anyone. What most people fail to realize, but not economists, is that housing represents some 20% of GDP and the data we saw is telling us that the construction industry must have been shedding jobs, in the residential market, like crazy. This is also why the home buyer tax credit is going to get extended as well, of, and it is also an election year.

Overall, I do not believe a bad employment report is priced into the market and that is certainly not good news for the bulls. I am also curious to see what the birth/death model adjustment is going to add to the mix, while many in bobble head says the B/D adjustment is not a big deal, well, they are wrong. As I have said many times, the B/D model underestimated unemployment by 880,000 jobs last year, that is a big deal so these adjustments do matter, sorry Mr. Liesman. I also believe we will see wages stagnate with the work week getting slightly longer, why hire more people when you can have existing employees work more hours? It is unclear whether or not the unemployment rate will increase, I suspect it will, because the unemployment benefits were not extended by the Senate leaving 1.7M unemployed without a check. In other words, 1.7M people might have all of a sudden decided to look for a job, any job, which will increase the unemployment rate. The rest of the report will reflect what we know, it will merely confirm it for us.

The $60,000 question is whether a really bad employment report is priced into the market or not. I am inclined to believe that nothing is really ever priced in especially if the report is worse than expected. The market is due for a bounce and I actually thought we would get it today, it looked like we were at some points throughout the afternoon, but it did not happen. The market is definitely oversold, but markets can remain oversold or overbought for long periods of time, heck we were overbought for how long and no one complained. The market is in bad shape from a technical perspective and there are enormous headwinds in front of us from a weakening economy to the troubles in Europe. The one thing I am confident about is my 900 price target for the S&P is intact and we are well on the way to that level or lower. One hedge fund manager I spoke to has a Dow target of 3,800 and thinks we will reach new lows on the S&P 500 so next to him I am a raging bull.

If the report is bad it is possible we will trade higher to retest that 1040 – 1048 level which would be an ideal level to consider looking at short positions, depending on conditions at that point and your investment objectives, there are never any sure things. The other unknown about tomorrow is the 3 day weekend that is in front of us. I am fairly confident few will want to be short into the long weekend, but I am equally as confident that few will want to be long either. Many traders may not be around which could mean a low volume indecisive day altogether. However, if I am right and it the report is a negative number I am fairly confident we trade lower, but this market is full of surprises, both up and down.

There is one item that makes me a bit more bearish than usual and that is the way AAPL has been trading. I realize it has been plagued with some rumors or truths, I do not own Apple products, happily, so I do not know what is true or not true, but it certainly has not been able to catch a break lately. This was supposed to be the ‘safe’ stock with $50 per share in cash and THE product to own and it has fallen sharply off of its highs. Everyone loves AAPL and everyone owns AAPL, I am using AAPL as most used GS at the beginning of the year, as the canary in the coal mine. What AAPL is saying is there is a gas leak as the stock has fallen 30 points from its all-time high and it cannot shake off bad news. The weakness in stocks like AAPL are telling me that investors are treading lightly in risk assets, not to mention that they were overvalued, oh the emails I will get for that comment.

The bottom line is that even if I am wrong and the employment report is ‘good’ with a +150K private employment print, unlikely in my opinion, it really isn’t good news, just less bad. With unemployment officially at about 10% and underemployment pushing 16% we have a real structural employment problem in America. It is so bad that Vice President Biden admitted that many of the 8M jobs lost will never come back, this is the same guy who said we would be swimming in hundreds of thousands of jobs every month ‘very soon’ a couple of months ago. This is deflationary and the fact that wages are basically stagnant is deflationary. The credit markets are telling us that deflation is the immediate risk at this point. Retail sales show that there is no end demand, running at a mere 1%, all of this mixed with high unemployment is if not actual deflation disinflation which is very bearish for stocks. We will continue to have a P/E multiple compressions because of this disinflationary force and earnings estimates will come down, a lot. In short, even if we have a good day tomorrow, unless we see some real inflation equity prices are heading lower.

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CNBC just doesn’t understand the markets

Posted by Ray on June 29, 2010 under Main | Be the First to Comment

At 9:50 AM Erin Burnett and Mark Haines were talking about what was driving the selloff in equities today. Erin Burnett says; “If it is the LEI number in China driving the markets, which is a number that was only created in May and just revised down, that shows how pathetic the global markets are.” Well, I hate to be one of those bloggers that the Fed says not to listen to, but the reason we are selling off is because of a failed sanitizing ECB bond offering and the banks in Europe are in trouble. Combine that with horrible housing data, high unemployment, record deficits, bond yields reaching new lows, deflationary forces, slower economic growth, ECRI numbers rolling over and the technical’s of the market being bearish I think you can see why equities are selling off.

This, more or less, proves that CNBC is a cheerleader devoid of understanding what is really happening in the equity markets and they simply do not know how to do basic research. This is what happens when you parade all bulls on your program and shout down their opposition, who have been far more accurate. The situation in Europe is serious and China’s economy is slowing because of a stronger Euro, how no one is putting this together yet is beyond me, and there is simply less end demand for products. The only area where pricing power really exists is in food stuffs and most other industries have zero pricing power. Why? Simple, there is no demand which is why we have deflation right now!

Besides the reporters being completely inept and derelict in their duties, they fail to see the most basic issues confronting us today. As I said before, initial claims data has been a leading indicator, right now, of what is happening out there, again, how this was not seen is beyond me, and showed that the economy is extremely weak and really never recovered.  It is insane that they keep talking about the Chinese LEI versus the real issues surrounding the equities markets, it is part of it, but it is the other issues I pointed out. How they kept on the bandwagon of the ‘recovery’ story is a wonder that helps mark the death of the old media outlets where bias is tried and true and a pretty face is worth more than actual knowledge of what is going on in the world.

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457,000, Again

Posted by Ray on June 24, 2010 under Main | Be the First to Comment

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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