Are we at the end of the line?

Posted by Ray on March 16, 2011 under Main | Be the First to Comment

I rarely wear my beliefs on my sleeve and I do not mean to start doing so now, but I have been doing a lot of thinking and praying for the people in Japan. The images we are seeing and the reports we are bombarded with are horrifying to say the least. It also proves that we are all interconnected and what happens abroad does indeed impact us here in the US, even earthquakes and tsunamis. I hope that all who read this will take a minute to at least think a few kind thoughts of well being for the people if not outright say a prayer, donations to the Red Cross would not hurt either.

With all that said it is shameful for many of the pundits to hop in the TV and talk about how good this tragedy is for the Japanese economy. It is not a good thing and it will not bring prosperity to anyone let alone to the US. First and foremost, Japan likes to keep its business local so I can assure you Caterpillar will not win out on contracts versus its local competitors. Over and above that this horrible event will create a huge drag on global GDP as the number 3 player is out of the game and who knows how the nuclear situation will turn out. That means Apple should have saved its $200 on its press release announcing its plans on postponing the launch of the iPad 2 in Japan since everyone knew that already and, frankly, who really cares about the iPad launch in Japan when the locals are being exposed to radiation.

With the number 3 player out of the game the economy in the US, China and the world will slow, I am sure of this. It also means QE 3 is a given and the next one will be a fairly sizable easing program. I am so sure about more QE because the Japanese will have to sell treasuries at some point to cover the rebuilding effort. Their central bank have added an astounding 55 trillion Yen, $700B USD, of extra liquidity, but not even the Japanese can print their way out of this thing. They will have to sell and there is no one to pick up the slack for US treasuries right now, to the level of selling that will come. On top of that I believe Japan selling may be the trigger for China to unload some holdings as well, we will see about that. The Fed is the only one around to pick up the slack and give the US Treasury interest free loans, since earnings must be repaid to the treasury department.

Even before this tragedy I was perplexed about the Fed’s QE 2 program. It was not needed, in my opinion, as rates were low already and capital was flowing again. The only reason I could see QE 2 being needed for was to prop up the stock market and by Bernanke’s own admission that is what it did since bond yields have only gone north since the start of the program, the opposite of what Ben wanted to happen. Besides the markets needing a boost the only other reason I could think of for this type of easing program was that the end of the line was here. What I mean is that the Fed may have known that the market was going to want higher interest rates from the US since we have piled on the debt in the last few years.

Basic mathematics tells you that the US cannot handle higher debt servicing costs which is why the treasury rolled out over 50% of our debt to mature in less than 7 years. On top of that every 1% increase in debt servicing costs adds about $120B a year to the budget which is also known as the debt death spiral. However, with QE 2 the Fed can jump in and buy up this higher yielding paper and kick back 95% of the interest back to the treasury department, almost an interest free loan, which explains why the Fed is monetizing, sorry, buying just issued higher yielding paper. This signals to me that the US government may have reached a breaking point in its debt load.

I am not saying the US cannot issue more debt, not at all, what I am saying is people will want higher rates to hold the paper. No one believes that there is no inflation out there and the only time we see any interest is when things really hit the fan like right now. Think back a couple of weeks ago when the Middle East was revolting treasuries sis nothing and the dollar sank. Compare that to now treasuries are going up but only on the short end of the curve and the dollar, what you really should be watching, is not doing well at all. It is very odd because as treasuries rally the dollar should be seeing some decent strength and here we are sitting below 77 on the DXY still.

This all signals trouble to me as we have seen many revolutions combined with a major economy stopped due to a tragedy and the only thing going up is the short end of the treasury curve. The dollar is not the safe haven it once was and I am not sure what is anymore. I believe gold and silver offer a better alternative than the dollar at this point, but there is volatility there as well. At the end of the day though, precious metals are still the place I would rather be as I see no end in sight for easing and I see higher inflation. I believe this is the end of the line and the Fed has no choice but to monetize more debt. The sad thing about all this is that rates will continue to climb anyhow because it is just too risky to loan money to the US government at this stage of the game.

Annuity Blog FeedSubscribe to Annuity IQ's Feed
Blog Directory
LS Blogs


Sphere: Related Content

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.”

Annuity Blog FeedSubscribe to Annuity IQ's Feed
Blog Directory
LS Blogs


Sphere: Related Content

The Good Times are Here Again!

Posted by Ray on March 9, 2010 under Main | Be the First to Comment

A new report was released today showing significant improvement in the labor market today. As you know, there were 6 people unemployed for every 1 job opening not too long ago, but that has changed. Now there are only 5.5 people for every 1 job opening, let the good times roll! While this is good news it is not at all very promising considering the government is hiring thousands upon thousands for the census.

Does anyone even ask themselves if the recent positive data is only indicative of a low quality unsustainable recovery? From my point of view that is all it is, a low quality unsustainable growth spurt. How a negative 36K job report last week was considered good is beyond me as most bulls predicted positive job growth now. What I found very interesting is the fact that all the pundits were blaming bad weather for a bad jobs report when there were no or limited snow storms when the survey was conducted. Furthermore, snow really does not cause a huge decline in payrolls, a statistically significant impact anyhow, but let’s not let the facts get in the way of a recovery story.

There have also been many large firms still forewarning of layoffs coming in the near future. While this may make for higher profit margins it is not good news for a country that is over 2 year into a recession, or whatever we want to call it now, and we are still losing jobs, albeit at a lower rate. Less bad is not good, but that is how the data is being spun which is ridiculous. It is not that I want the market to crash or that I want things to get worse, quite the opposite in fact, I just want an honest take on what is happening out there. Telling people that they have lying eyes is just crazy, but that is what everyone is doing.

This is true of the government data which has conveniently reduced the workforce in order to reduce the unemployment number. I just saw a report which shows that if you add in all the people the government takes out, because they are discouraged, the unemployment rate jumps to 11-11.5%, but even that is low. If we go by the U-6, which we should, as that is the equivalent of what we used during the 1930’s, the rate is sky high. We just came off of a low quality recovery from the 2000-2003 recession which spurred the current recession and clearly the further we kick the can the worse the problem becomes. Stop kicking the can and let people know how bad it is, stop the government intervention (we are now paying people to short sell their homes!) and let the bad debt get cleaned away by the system.

If we do this the problem may not just get kicked down the road, but it might get fixed. Of course, health care is now taking the spot light so who cares about jobs or what is happening in the real world. While I do not favor political intervention in the economy I want Congress to really pass a jobs bill, i.e. a comprehensive bill that provides employers tax cuts, what can I say, I am optimistic.

Annuity Blog FeedSubscribe to Annuity IQ's Feed
Blog Directory
LS Blogs


Sphere: Related Content


Learn  basics of stock market from   bettertrades , a company founded by Freddie Rick . Learn  options trading   to make money through buying and selling options.
home top



website statistics Site Meter