Posted by Ray on July 8, 2010 under cnbc, Economy, Markets |
It is official, bad news is now permanently good news. I am not sure how this happened or why this happened, but this is the case as CNBC just confirmed that 454,000 initial claims were below expectations and continuing claims declined by 224,000. This sounds like great news until you realize that, well, continuing claims fell off because Congress did not reauthorize extended unemployment benefits, which has happened before I might add, and initial claims came in light because of the holiday week, just as I thought. Nevertheless, how we can be 3 years into this thing and think a print of -454,000 on initial claims with over $1T in stimulus spending is a good thing is disingenuous and, in all honesty idiotic. However, this is what we are being told by the talking heads, 454,000 initial claims are a good thing in the new normal.
One must trade the market that is in front of them regardless of what the data says, even though one knows the data smacks of a double dip or at least a massive slowdown at the least. Retail sales figures came in as well and if you were paying attention only the nice figures were making headlines, like JW Nordstrom +14.1% vs. 9% est. and Abercrombie +9% vs. 2.8% est., but these numbers were not encouraging as total expectations were for retail sales to come in at 3.2% and they came in at 2.8%. The really sad news is that these numbers were reduced in recent weeks because analysts knew the figures would be weak and the stores had pretty good sales as well. Consumers just are not buying the way they were used to and I know the argument is going to be, well this is June and the numbers are always weak in June. Sure, I will give you that, but the analysts know this and adjust accordingly and, more importantly, the chains know this and run deeper discounts to drive traffic. Look what happened, not very encouraging.
The discounters were even a mixed bag, Target missed estimates by 1% to the downside, Kohl’s missed by .5% to the downside, TJX missed by 1.2% to the downside, BJ’s Wholesale was off by 1.2%, the Gap was off by 3.4% and Costco was off 2.6%. I guess the bright spot was the high end retailer who had some solid numbers, Macy’s beat by .4%, Saks beat by .5%, Nordstrom’s beat by 4.5%, the Limited beat by 2.8% and Dillard’s, not really high end, but throwing it in, beat by 3%. This is a pretty big disparity between the discounters and the higher end retailers which raises the question of why the difference is so large.
The answer is pretty simple, first the wealthy shoppers are still wealthy and are more than likely taking advantage of deeper discounts at the high end stores. Don’t kid yourself, the high end retailers are cutting prices to drive traffic, everyone is including Walmart. Second, the discounters customers who were relying on their unemployment benefits had the rug pulled out from under them in some cases or knew it was coming so they cut back even more. The wealthy shopper can spend more and the less wealthy are still tightening their belts and this trend will continue for the foreseeable future.
Overall, this was one month of data, but the trend is on track, frugality. Same store sales did disappoint and I am a little surprised, actually I am not, that no one is mentioning the overall miss of .4% (overall expectations of 3.2% versus actual of 2.8%). Instead expect to hear about Nordstrom’s all day long today as the beacon of light in the retail world as the consumer comes flooding back to the stores as if they don’t have a care in the world. Even though some 454,000 just got their pink slip last week before our nations fabled birthday, for the record, last week’s claims were revised UP to 475K and the 2 week total for Americans receiving their pink slips were 929,000. So, congratulations all you lucky people, the world is turning around because apparently you being fired is great news for the economy, or just Wall Street. We officially live in Bizarro World now.

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Tags: bullshit, cnbc, cnbc idiots, double dip, Economy, honesty, initial claims, retail sales figures, stimulus, talking heads, unemployment benefits
Posted by Ray on May 27, 2010 under Main |
Dennis Gartman carries significant weight in the trading world and many people listen to him. I do not know his track record in stocks, I assume he must be OK, but I do know his track record on gold and it is terrible. When Dennis says to buy or sell gold, do the opposite and you will do very, very well.
Last summer when gold was in the low $900’s Dennis was on Fast Money, a CNBC show, and said he was shorting gold and said it was terribly overpriced. He went on to say the technical’s said it should go to the mid $800’s or lower. He must have lost a bundle on that trade because gold quickly ran higher to the $980 level never to return to the low $900’s again. Ever since then he has been more negative on the metal than positive as it marched higher, until it was in a clear breakout above $1,000 – $1,100 and he bought it in Euros.
I stopped listening to what he had to say a long time ago because he was proven wrong on every call he made and I rarely listen to what the talking heads say on TV anyhow, they are always talking their book. Anyhow, I happen to caught a story on CNBC.com were Gartman said to “run to the exit on gold,” get out before it is too late or you will lose your shirt was the case he was making a week or so ago. Why was he making this call? Because gold was selling off because of a global liquidation and it sank to sub-$1200 and the momo’s were getting out of it, so what. Investors rarely care what is happening right now, they are about what will happen in the future and gold is still a good long-term investment and Gartman knows it because he has changed his mind, again!
This means you should probably sell if you are a trader or prepare to buy if you are an investor because prices are about to get cheaper, if Gartman’s record holds true. According to CNBC.com Gartman said this: “On Monday, Dennis Gartman reversed his call for gold investors to rush to the exits, saying the precious metal was no longer overbought, but also warned that it was a technical call and he is “not a gold bug.” This guy changes his mind more than most people change their socks and is wrong more than most I might add.
I get that people do not know how to value gold that maybe a clue that one should not trade it and rather invest in it instead. Buy some nice pretty coins and stick it in your sock drawer and after Helicopter Ben prints us into the new Zimbabwe you can then cash them in, that is what owning gold is all about, protecting your buying power and wealth. However, the pundits will never get it and one should use their calls as a contrarian indicator of when to buy at better prices since they never seem to get the forecasts right. For the record, I have no real forecast on the price of gold except it goes much higher from here, but I am the type of bug who buys some every month and when there is a big dip I buy more than usual, depending on the reason why. When central banks are talking about printing a trillion here and printing another trillion there it is impossible to believe paper currencies are worth anything at all. Paper currencies need confidence to succeed and what little confidence is left is quickly disappearing which should scare everyone.

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Posted by Ray on April 27, 2010 under Main |
Apparently the markets, that wonderful forward looking discounting mechanism, did not see or have fear what is happening in Greece. It is safe to assume that this proves that the markets are not efficient and it fails to see potential problems. What is interesting is that Greece and Portugal were not or should not have been a surprise to the markets since we have all known about the issues with the PIIGS for months now. How anyone could have been surprised by this news today is beyond me. I guess the junk rating on Greece may have been a surprise, but come on, when the 2 year note was yielding 11% how in the world can it be anything other than junk?
The market has gone up for 8 weeks in a row and while the talking heads thought this perpetual “tortoise rally” was normal anyone who has even a little investment experience knew it was not. I still remember Dennis Kneale, last week, calling people who held cash “fraidy cats” because the market is back and it will be a bull market forever. The world does not work like that and the risk trade has been, frankly, out of whack. Money has been pouring in to everything from high yield to emerging markets in the expectation of a steady 1-2% a day. This was verified from mutual fund flow data reported last week which showed investors moved more money into equity funds, for the first time in a longtime, and, in my mind, confirmed we must be near a top, dumb money always moves in after fantastic rallies.
Whether or not this was a top remains to be seen, but it certainly looks like it from my lens. I have been wrong before and might be again, which I admit. However, even though I was wrong it doesn’t mean that the markets were right either. Earnings are better, I still see some misses in revenue though, but the underlying macroeconomic data has merely gone from very bad to just plain bad. When we cheer a 57% confidence reading that is a problem because that it is a horribly low number. The housing data is not verifiably strong when you have, like in October, a rush of people buying for the tax credit right before it expires. If the housing numbers stay “strong” for May then you may say housing is rebounding, but I highly doubt we will see such strong numbers at that time. Housing is a key indicator because it employs so many people and homes were the collateral that were the bad debt sitting on bank balance sheets.
Unemployment remains incredibly high, use the U-6 data not that foolish headline number, which is a severe problem. Given that weekly claims have stabilized at -450K is horrendous at best. That number shows that private employers are still shedding jobs and I am confident that the employment report next week will show “stellar” job creation in the government sector and in the temporary help area, those are not good areas to see growth in. I am a believer that the temporary help is just that, temporary and will not convert into fulltime employment, we would be seeing that conversion by now, but we are not. Housing problems plus high unemployment will keep the economy down for some time.
On top of the squishy soft economic data being heralded as a full blown recovery, don’t get me wrong less bad is a welcomed improvement, we have a sovereign debt crisis. People claim that Greece is only 2% of Europe’s GDP and dismiss their troubles. That is a bad idea because while they are right about Greece they conveniently forget that all the PIIGS account for some 13% of Europe’s GDP and they are all in trouble. Spanish and Italy’s bonds have been trading lower pushing their yields up over 4% and Portugal was officially downgraded, that is all really bad news. Each country, individually, is not a big deal, but combined we are talking about the potential to default on hundreds of billions of dollars worth of sovereign debt.
To put this into prospective, France owns some $781B of PIIGS debt, if they all default what will happen to France? They will be in trouble, of course. Then there is Germany, how much PIIGS and French debt do they have? I do not know, but I assume a lot. What will happen to Germany if they get stuck with declining value of all that paper? They will have to bailout their banks, I assume France would have to do the same for their banks as well. That, basically, puts the banking system in jeopardy again, in less than 2 years. What I am explaining, probably in a horrible way, is what contagion looks like and it doesn’t end there either. The U.K. has exposure to all these countries and they are already in horrible financial shape and the series discussed above makes the U.K. susceptible to the contagion.
U.S. banks have exposure to both European banks and sovereign debt which means out fragile banking system could face another challenge. Let us not forget that the U.S. is also heavily indebted, along with Japan, and people may start to question the safety of U.S. Treasury debt, as they should I might add. From my lens, in a worst case scenario, meaning this all happens, it would be a coin toss as to which country goes next, either Japan or the U.S. given their immense debt loads. This scenario is unlikely or has a low probability of happening, but it is possible and it could trigger a global currency crisis.
This explains why gold went up today in the face of a stronger dollar and a rush of selling from the market. Even silver held its own today in the face of dollar strength. This shows that gold is still a flight to quality, it is also in a bull market as well, and it is a trusted currency. In fact, gold’s rally today is why I think it is possible for a global currency crisis because if this was another credit crisis, like 2008, it would have sold off for liquidity, but it did not. I am not sure if I would be buying gold right now because I already own a position, but if I did not own any gold I would be a buyer.
All is not well in the global markets and people should stay nimble as to where to put their assets until things settle down. I would say this decline is extremely bearish and way overdue, the higher the market went the worse the selloff would be, which could make it worse. It was insane to think that volatility would not comeback and that people went from sheer panic a year ago to such utter complacency this year. The worst part about all of this is if this does trigger another crisis what can the Fed or the governments do to calm the markets or remedy the situation? Nothing, they already spent all their ammo and they even had to borrow some to boot. I am not saying this will trigger another crisis, but it certainly has all the ingredients for one, if you look at the big picture.

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Tags: bankruptcy, credit crisis, dennis kneale, dumb money, earnings, economic recovery, Economy, gdp, housing recovery, longtime, macroeconomic data, market correction, Markets, mutual fund flow, talking heads, unemployment, USD