Wednesday, 29 June 2011

China’s old bad banks run new risks

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/563ddf18-a187-11e0-baa8-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1QXf0MVOW


Many of Huarong’s borrowers are second-tier property developers who can’t get credit at home as China tries to slow a rise in property prices which threaten social stability. Usually, these borrowers are able to get the money back across the border into China.


But lack of credit is not yet the problem. Credit is still flowing in China, though at a slower pace and with a higher cost, thanks to non-banks in Hong Kong such as Huarong. Bank credit in Hong Kong stands at 240 per cent of gross domestic product, according to data from JPMorgan, mostly reflecting the arrival of Chinese borrowers circumventing restrictions at home. In mainland China itself the figure is 120 per cent.

The current problem is just how much money is going to the high end property market, precisely because China depends so heavily on the property market for its economic growth – and how little is going to more productive small and medium enterprises.


Today, all the choices involve difficult trade-offs: Local governments need revenue from land sales since that is their main source of income and have a vested interest in keeping prices high. The interest on bank deposits is still negative, leading investors to put their money into property because they don’t trust the stock market and there isn’t much else in which they can invest, as long as capital controls remain in place.

There is a need for more housing. But it wont be met by the luxury flats that can now be seen in third and fourth tier cities where there isn’t the sort of rising income that could support that kind of high-end market.



Today, it is hard to know what the cost of all this actually will actually be.

Dubai Denies Emirate Neighbors Fuel in Struggle to Pay Debt: Arab Credit

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-27/dubai-denies-neighbors-fuel-as-city-struggles-to-pay-off-debt-arab-credit.html

 “The Dubai government continues to be cash-strapped, and this is one of the reminders that just because its companies are restructuring, it doesn’t mean that Dubai Inc. is out of the woods yet.”

“This Time It’s Different”– The Four Most Expensive Words In The English Language

http://www.sovereignman.com/expat/this-time-its-different

For at least a decade now, the world has marveled at China’s amazing economic transformation.
Hundreds of millions of people have been lifted out of medieval peasantry and brought into the modern world. Living standards have improved dramatically. China has become the manufacturing hub of the world.

And, today, China boasts world-class infrastructure on a truly impressive scale. Beijing, Shenzhen, and especially Shanghai, have all become modern metropolises with facilities on par with any in the world.

Every taxi driver from Melbourne to Manitoba, and every money manager from London to L.A., recite the same mantra: insatiable demand from China (and India) will guarantee decades of prosperity for countries such as Australia and Canada which are blessed with the raw materials that billions of Chinese and Indian consumers require to emulate western lifestyles.

So the story goes…
Thing is, once anything has become mainstream knowledge in financial markets, it’s usually a sign we’re nearing the END of the boom. Or, at the very least, that all the positive news is already baked in the price. That’s where we are today with China.

The Australian press is constantly running economic puff pieces, declaring endless rosy times for the country due to its commodity exports to China. This sort of thing borders on propaganda.
They claim that “this time it’s different,” suggesting that the resource boom in Australia which got underway in the 1990s is not going to bust this time around (as has happened so often in the past).
It’s been said that, “this time it’s different” are the four most expensive words in the English language. They have an uncanny knack of showing up at the top of EVERY boom, just before the bubble bursts.
I’ve been around in the financial markets long enough, and lived through enough spectacular booms and busts, to know the telltale signs of a bursting bubble when I see them.

China today fits the bill… and that’s most likely going to be very bad news for industrial commodity prices and the economies of the countries that supply them. China accounts for less than 10% of global economic activity. Yet, the country is consuming nearly half of all the steel, cement, and copper used in the world.

You’ve seen the videos– vast, empty ghost cities in China with thick forests of empty apartment towers, 8-lane highways with no cars on them, and brand new government buildings and public infrastructure all sitting idle.

I’ve read estimates from well-respected, independent (i.e. not invested in seeing a continuance of the Chinese gravy train) analysts who suggest that there are up to 64 million empty apartment buildings in China. This is a misallocation of capital on an unimaginable scale.

To be sure, any time you have a government-directed boom that lasts for 3-decades and is fueled by cheap credit, you are going to get massive economic distortions. Construction and fixed capital formation in China has accounted for more than 60% of GDP for more than 10 years in a row now. This is simply not sustainable.

These empty cities, bridges to nowhere, airports with only three or four flights per week, brand new bullet trains with hardly any passengers (because they can’t afford the fares), and millions of empty apartments are NOT indicators of a healthy economy at all.

True, China’s economy is quite a bit of cloak and dagger… they don’t let you see what’s going on behind the curtain. But there is enough objective and empirical at hand to suggest major problems in the country, and we should take measures to protect ourselves from the consequences.

I’m in Hong Kong right now and will be heading over to the mainland in a few days to put some boots on the ground myself (concurrent to Simon’s PIIGS tour in Europe). Naturally, you’ll be the first to hear about our findings, right here, in Notes from the Field. Stay tuned.

Greek Vote Obscures the European Union’s Unsavory Choices: View

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-28/greek-vote-obscures-the-european-union-s-unsavory-choices-view.html

Even if Greece gets its bailout and its economy rebounds, the government would have to run a budget surplus, excluding debt-service costs, of 5 percent of GDP for about three decades to bring down debt to the 60 percent maximum allowed by euro-area rules. Achieving such a fiscal feat for even five years is extremely rare for any government, let alone Greece’s.

Zynga to File for $1 Billion IPO Tomorrow

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-28/zynga-to-file-ipo-tomorrow-to-raise-as-much-as-1-billion-greencrest-says.html

Zynga, known for “FarmVille” and “Texas HoldEm Poker,”is joining the biggest wave of Internet IPOs since the dot-com heyday in 2000. LinkedIn Corp., Pandora Media Inc. and Yandex NV all went public in the past two months, and other Internet companies such as Groupon Inc. aim to benefit from the rebound with their own IPOs.

Shilling: China Heading for a Hard Landing, Pt. 3

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-28/shilling-why-china-is-heading-for-a-hard-landing-pt-3.html

Inflation worries start with housing. With Chinese exports curtailed by U.S. consumer retrenchment, capital spendingthreatened by government restraints and excess capacity, and domestic spending less than robust, housing has been China’s big generator of economic growth in recent years. By some estimates, half of Chinese GDP is linked to real-estate activity.

Buyers must now put down 60 percent of the purchase price on second homes, and 30 percent on first homes. The government is pressing banks to contain mortgages, and some have raised interest rates. In January, the mayor ofShanghai announced a new tax on property transactions that may be copied nationwide as other officials attempt to cool prices.

Houses are now being built at about twice the rate they’re being sold, well above earlier norms.



Tuesday, 28 June 2011

Shilling: China Heading for a Hard Landing, Pt. 2

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-28/shilling-why-china-s-heading-for-a-hard-landing-part-2.html

China’s reliance on exports and a controlled currency for growth, for instance, will no longer work if U.S. consumers are engaged in a chronic saving spree, as I believe they will be. Chinese export growth, which averaged 21 percent per year in the last decade, is bound to suffer.

The country’s seemingly inexhaustible pool of cheap labor is expected to peak in 2014, in part due to its rigid one-child policy. By some estimates, ample labor has boosted GDP growth by 1.8 percentage points annually since the late 1970s, but the contraction of the working-age population will reduce growth by 0.7 percentage points by 2030.

As the Chinese population ages, the ratio of retirees to working-age people is forecast to rise from 39 percent last year to 46 percent in 2025.

Why China’s Heading for a Hard Landing, Part 1: A. Gary Shilling

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-27/why-china-s-heading-for-a-hard-landing-part-1-a-gary-shilling.html

To start, China is much more vulnerable to an international slowdown than is generally understood. In late 2007, my firm’s research found that too few people in China had the discretionary spending capability to support its economy domestically. Our analysis showed that it took a per-capita gross domestic product of about $5,000 to have meaningful discretionary spending power in China.
About 110 million Chinese had that much or more, but they constituted only 8 percent of the population and accounted for just 35 percent of GDP in 2009, while exports accounted for 27 percent. Even China’s middle and upper classes had only 6 percent of Americans’ purchasing power.

Why Overconfidence Abounds

With such limited domestic spending, why do so many analysts predict that China can continue its robust growth?

In part because they believe in the misguided concept of global decoupling -- the idea that even if the U.S. economy suffers a setback, the rest of the world, especially developing countries such as China and India, will continue to flourish. Recently -- after China’s huge $586 billion stimulus program in 2009; massive imports of industrial materials such as iron oreand copper; booms in construction of cement, steel and power plants, and other industrial capacity; and a pickup in economic growth -- the decoupling argument has been back in vogue.

This concept is flawed for a simple reason: Almost all developing countries depend on exports for growth, a point underscored by their persistent trade surpluses and the huge size of Asian exports relative to GDP. Further, the majority of exports by Asian countries go directly or indirectly to the U.S. We saw the effects of this starting in 2008: As U.S. consumers retrenched and global recession reigned, China and most other developing Asian countries suffered keenly.

Overconfidence in China’s ability to keep its economy booming is also partly psychological.

It reminds me of the admiration and envy (even fear) that many felt toward Japanduring its bubble days in the 1980s.

As Japanese companies bought California’s Pebble Beach, Iowa farmland and Rockefeller Center in New York, what was safe from their zillions? Then the Japanese stock and real-estate bubbles collapsed, and Japan entered the deflationary depression in which it’s still mired.

 I suspect that the 2007-2009 global recession, and the dramatic transformation by U.S. consumers from gay-abandon borrowers-and-spenders to Scrooge-like savers, caught Chinese leaders flat-footed.

(BN) China Auditor Warns of Risk on 10.7 Trillion Yuan of Local Government Debt

June 27 (Bloomberg) -- China’s first audit of local government debt found liabilities of 10.7 trillion yuan ($1.7 trillion) at the end of last year and warned of repayment risks, including a reliance on land sales.         

 Financing vehicles set up by regional authorities already had more than 8 billion yuan in overdue debt, while more than 5 percent of such companies used new bank borrowing to repay loans, according to the audit, posted on the National Audit Office’s website and submitted to China’s cabinet.         

 “Some local government financing platforms’ management is irregular, and their profitability and ability to pay their debt is quite weak,” Liu Jiayi, the country’s auditor-general said in speech published today.         

 Premier Wen Jiabao ordered the first audit of local- government borrowing in March, amid concern spending designed to support the economy following the 2008 global financial crisis would leave a legacy of bad debt. As much as 30 percent of bank loans are expected to turn sour and they are likely to be the biggest source of non-performing assets for the industry, Standard & Poor’s said in April.         

 Local governments, barred from selling bonds or borrowing directly from banks, had set up 6,576 financing vehicles by the end of 2010 to raise money, the audit showed, accounting for 4.97 trillion yuan, 60 percent of which governments have responsibility to repay. Some governments have offered illicit guarantees to such companies, while others rely on land sales to help them repay, Liu said.         

 ‘Time Bomb’         
 UBS AG estimated in a June 7 report that local government debt could be 30 percent of gross domestic product and may generate around 2 to 3 trillion yuan of non-performing loans. Credit Suisse AG economist Tao Dong said it was the biggest “time bomb” for China’s economy.         

 “Overall it seems manageable but the real question: is anyone going to manage it?” said Vincent Chan, head of China research at Credit Suisse in Hong Kong. “Everyone wants to solve the problem on the condition that the other two parties pay the bill.”         

 The audit showed 80 percent of local government debt was bank loans and 70 percent will mature in the next five years.         

 Qu Hongbin, a Hong Kong-based economist for HSBC Holdings Plc, said the biggest problem was transparency and the mismatch between maturities and projected revenue generation.         
 Maturity Mismatch         

 “Without real action going towards a restructuring of these debts, banks would face a real risk of defaulting in the coming years,” he wrote in report today.         

 Governments from 12 provinces, 307 cities and 1,131 townships have pledged to use revenues from land sales to repay a combined outstanding debt of 2.55 trillion yuan. More than 35 billion yuan of money borrowed by local governments went into the stock and property markets or prohibited projects, the report showed. Five of China’s commercial banks have issued 58 billion yuan of loans
that violated loan rules, it said.         

 The yield on the government’s 2.77 percent May 2012 bonds jumped 41 basis points, or 0.41 percentage point, this month to 3.43 percent, as the central bank tightened money supply to curb inflation. Twelve-month non-deliverable yuan forwards have dropped 0.7 percent in June to 6.4015 per dollar as of 4:30 p.m in Hong Kong.         

 The cost of five-year credit-default swaps protecting Chinese government bonds from default jumped 16 basis points this month to 89, according to data provider CMA, which is owned by CME Group Inc. and compiles prices quoted by dealers. The contracts protect investors from losses when a company or government fails to pay its debt.         

 Municipal Sales         

 Liu proposed that the country study allowing provincial governments and some city authorities to sell an appropriate amount of debt. Government financing vehicles shouldn’t keep borrowing money that local governments have responsibility to repay, he said. Separately today, the National Development and Reform Commission said it will speed up approvals for bond sales designed to fund affordable housing construction.         

 Many financing vehicles will have to pay interest and principal by year-end, said Liu Li-Gang, who formerly worked for the World Bank and is chief China economist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Hong Kong. If the local governments can’t issue debt in the next three years, they would have to cut their combined fiscal spending by 5 percent to 7 percent of GDP to meet obligations, he said.         

 “If the central government can allow local governments to issue long-term debt, then the liquidity problem won’t look very serious,” he said. “I don’t think this will necessarily run into a banking crisis in China given the balance sheet condition of the central government is very good at this stage.”         

 The audit gave a number lower than the central bank, which said June 2 that more than 10,000 financing vehicles had been set up. The banking regulator has estimated local government financing vehicle debt at over 7.7 trillion yuan.         

 “It seems the government doesn’t have a concrete idea what is a local government financing vehicle and what isn’t,” Credit Suisse’s Chan said. “The biggest problem is it’s very difficult to define in China what is private and what is public.”         

Irish Yields Reach Record on Greek Contagion; German Bunds Fall

Longest Losing Streak Since 2008 Ending for Commodities as Futures Surge

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-26/longest-losing-streak-since-2008-ending-for-commodities-as-futures-surge.html

Speculators are holding a net 1.1 million U.S. futures and options contracts to bet on higher prices, 37 percent more than the average of the last five years, data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission show.

Silver Winner

Silver will be the biggest winner among 15 commodities in the second half, rallying as much as 46 percent by Dec. 31 to match the all-time high $49.79 set in April, the median in a Bloomberg survey of more than 100 analysts and traders shows.

SS says

Unbelievable!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Even after dropping to 33 fro 49 in a week and staying flat since then - the herd is still bullish!!!!!!!!!

===

There’s no sign of that happening now. The combined net-long position rose in three of the last five weeks, data from the Washington-based CFTC show.
====


Economists don’t expect a return to the slump of 2008 and 2009 either. U.S. growth will accelerate to 3.2 percent in the next two quarters from 2.3 percent this quarter, the median of as many as 68 economists’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg show. The world economy will expand 4.3 percent this year and 4.5 percent in 2012, the International Monetary Fund said June 17.

===

“I still like the growth story,” said Michael Cuggino, who helps manage $13.5 billion at Permanent Portfolio (PRPFX) Funds in San Francisco. “Commodity prices are going to continue to go higher. Worldwide, the economy continues to grow and monetary policy is going to stay relatively consistent with no changes.”


IPO Filings Accelerate to Highest Since 2007 Just as Stock Markets Retreat

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-28/ipo-filings-accelerate-to-highest-since-2007-just-as-stock-markets-retreat.html

At least 720 companies including Groupon Inc. and Beijing Jingneng Clean Energy Co. have announced plans this quarter to seek $67 billion in IPOs, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s the largest number of deals in a quarter since 794 IPOs were announced during the final three months of 2007, the data show.

For Many in Britain, Being a Homeowner Is a Fading Dream

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/24/business/global/24rent.html?_r=1

But as the pain of government-imposed austerity sinks in, disposable income has shrunk and loan requirements have toughened, forcing more and more Britons into renting rather than buying.       

About four years ago, a first-time buyer had to raise an average down payment equal to 41 percent of annual income to buy a property, according to the Council of Mortgage Lenders. Now it is more than 87 percent of income, or about £26,500 ($42,800).

And while banks were willing to make mortgage loans for more than the value of the house before the credit crisis, buyers now find they must put up at least 10 percent, and often substantially more. (The average deposit for first-time buyers is 23 percent, according to the price comparison Web site Moneysupermarket).       



Treasury urges British banks to take big losses to help Greece avoid meltdown

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jun/25/greece-debt-british-banks?CMP=twt_gu

Another worry is that Britain's banks and hedge funds have written multibillion-pound insurance contracts – credit default swaps – that would be triggered if Greece defaults.
Erik Britton, director of City consultancy Fathom, said: "It's not the direct exposure, it's the indirect exposure and the implications of an unruly default that I would be worried about. French and German banks bought Greek bonds, and they took out insurance against default. Who did they take out that insurance with? The US and UK banks. There has to be a loser – who's the loser?"



Greece is standing up to EU neocolonialism

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/jun/27/greece-bailout-eu-neocolonialism?CMP=twt_gu

The bailout of Greece is not a gift or grant but a loan bearing high interest. Crucially, bailout funds are not used to pay civil servants' salaries and pensions, but to pay off debt held by German and French banks. According to IMF estimates, Greece will pay €131bn in refinancing and interest payments between 2009 and 2014, far more than the initial bailout loan of €110bn. In a magician-like sleight of hand, German and French workers are forced to bail out their national banks, not directly as in the 2008-9 banking bailouts but through the mediation of Greece, which inevitably becomes the target of populist outbursts. The Greek government, on the other hand, was ordered to provoke an economic and social meltdown unimaginable in western Europe in peacetime in order to receive the loans.

Stress Increases in Eurozone; Portuguese, Spanish, Irish, and Italian 10-Year Yields All Make New Highs

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2011/06/stress-increases-in-eurozone-portuguese.html

Eurozone sovereign debt yields pushed higher across the board today. Irish debt has topped 12% for the first time, Italian debt topped 5% and most Euroland debt yields are at all times high spreads compared to Germany.

Significantly, yields are at fresh new highs for Spain, Italy, Ireland and Portugal.

If by any chance you are wondering whether to believe EU officials or the bond markets, I suggest you believe the bond markets.

The charts below are delayed, but the quotes are accurate. Stress increases in Eurozone.

Spain 10-Year Government Bond Yield



Portugal 10-Year Government Bond Yield


Italy 10-Year Government Bond Yield



Ireland 10-Year Government Bond Yield



Greece 10-Year Government Bond Yield



Greece 2-Year Government Bond Yield



If EU and ECB officials thought they solved something with their Greek bailout maneuvers, the bond market disagrees and so do I.

Consumer Spending, Personal Incomes "Weaker Than Expected", Economists Optimistic for Second Half, I'm Not

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2011/06/consumer-spending-personal-incomes.html

Are economists ever pessimistic? The idea that growth will pick up because of falling gasoline prices is complete silliness. Gasoline prices are falling because growth is slowing.

Leading German Economist Buys Greek Bonds On Belief in "Boundless Stupidity of German Government", Says Bailout Programs Will Exacerbate Problems

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2011/06/leading-german-economist-buys-greek.html

Homburg: In recent days, I myself have invested a considerable sum in Greek bonds. They will mature in one year's time and, if all goes well, produce a 25 percent return on investment. I sleep very soundly at night because I believe in the boundless stupidity of the German government. They will pay up.

Homburg: Many politicians have also come to the realization that the path that we are on ultimately leads to national defaults and currency reforms. This process is already irreversible, but nobody wants to say it out loud and go down in history as the one who triggered the explosion. So we leave the bankruptcy to subsequent German governments and, in the meantime, throw good money after bad. Sooner or later, this much is certain, the system will be blown apart by political and economic factors. And, unfortunately, there is a great danger that, when this happens, it is not only the euro that will fall apart, but also the entire EU.

The bailout is certainly the wrong thing to do for the reasons

Homburg suggested. However, as much as I generally agree with the notion of "boundless stupidity" of governments, buying Greek debt is not risk free. There will likely be steep haircuts on long-dated debt.

Spanish Banks Hiding Over $70 Billion In Bad Real Estate, El Confidencial Finds

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-27/spain-banks-hide-eu50-billion-in-bad-assets-confidencial-says.html

Spanish banks have 50 billion euros ($70.7 billion) in unrecognised problematic real estate assets,El Confidencial reported, citing a report by the Boston Consulting Group.

The consulting group estimates that Spanish banks need between 20 billion euros and 30 billion euros in additional capital and that Spain’s bank rescue fund, known as the FROB, could end up taking over 20 percent of the banking industry, El Confidencial added.

Moody's Warns Of "Severe Greek Bank Cash Shortage" Due To Accelerating Deposit Flight

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/moodys-warns-severe-greek-bank-cash-shortage-due-accelerating-deposit-flight

Today, as part of its Weekly Credit Outlook, Moody's issued for the first time a very stark warning that should the rate of attrition in domestic deposits (and to see where these are going merely look at the daily EURCHF chart) persist, or accelerate, the results would be disastrous.

To wit: "a sustained decline of deposits by more than 35% (roughly equal to the consolidated banking system’s liquid assets and ECB funding availability) within a short period of time, would cause a severe shortage of cash among banks."

Bottom line, it is unclear if even the existing deterioration in the deposit base can ever be undone due to the banks unprecedented reliance on the ECB for day to day funding, now that the bulk of domestic Greek capital is stashed away, safely, somewhere in the Swiss Alps: "With the decline in customer deposits, we expect Greek banks to find it increasingly challenging to reduce their ECB funding dependence, which is their primary objective based on their funding plans committed to the Central Bank of Greece."

What If the Consensus Is Wrong?

http://www.oftwominds.com/blogjune11/consensus-wrong6-11.html

We all know the mainstream consensus is wrong, but what about the non-mainstream consensus? Maybe it's equally misguided.

There are a variety of consensus views floating around the Mainstream Media and the blogosphere. The two sets of consensus don't align on much, as might be expected: the financial MSM is still spouting the Federal Reserve/Wall Street's "happy story" about how the recovery is weak but muddling forward with "uneven growth" (i.e. someone else got laid off,you still have a job) but corporate profits (the only metric of "growth" that counts) will still be rising forever (as usual).
The financial blogosphere consensus is more or less that the fiscal-stimulus/Fed-goosed "recovery" is obviously rolling over here, and since inflation and fear are baked in, gold will continue its steady climb towards $3,000 an ounce and beyond. Oil, meanwhile, is poised to rise as suppliers either lose production to depletion or ratchet production down to support prices.

We all know about confirmation bias, the tendency to seek evidence which supports our views after they have hardened into conviction.

Seasoned traders practice the opposite: they actively seek out arguments against their current views. If these "Devil's Advocate" arguments are more compelling than their current convictions, then they change their minds and their trading positions (or at least slap on a nice thick hedge).

Which leads me to play Devil's Advocate: what if both consensus camps are wrong?
Again, this is a thought experiment which traders go through to avoid confirmation bias.

1. What if the economy rolls over hard? The Fed and mainstream economists are expecting a "soft patch" based on "mixed data," i.e. the top 20% are still "consuming" while everyone below the top 20% whithers on the vine.

Expect a hard rollover to show up all over the place in July and August data: container shipments, gasoline consumption, retails sales, auto sales, Christmas orders, tax collections, etc.

2. If the dollar rises substantially, then corporate profits will tank. Much of the big jump in corporate profits came not from actual net but from overseas sales converted into a weakening dollar.
Zero Hedge presented an excellent technical case by John Noyce for the dollar rising as the euro falls to 1.15 or lower:The Charts That Matter Next Week.

Recall that the DXY dollar index is essentially a see-saw, with the USD on one end and the euro on the other, and the other currencies adjusting to the primary trend in the see-saw.
Does anyone seriously expect the euro to rise from here? Based on what? A rescue of Greece by Alpha Centaurians bearing quatloos?

3. Gold is looking kinda heavy here (technical pun intended). Gold is in a long-term uptrend, but it has occasionally swooned for long chunks of time without threatening the long-term trendline.
We might ask: what happened in 2008 when the whole bogus fraud-ridden scheme of leverage, debt, propaganda and risk-trades imploded? Both oil and gold also tanked as debtors with margin calls or equivalent scurried out to unload whatever assets still retained some value, with a preference for selling those which retained the most value, i.e. gold and oil.

If all the world has done is push the cleansing that started in 2008 forward three years, then December 2008 is a pretty good model of what to expect going forwardas the exact same forces will eventually unleash their creative destruction again, only this time with greater force and at higher levels of non-linearity.

Depending on what you look at technically, there are some major divergences popping up in gold's chart as MACD, RSI and other indicators have been sagging even as price held on until recently.

4. Oil and gasoline are also looking toppy. The consensus is watching the shaky supply situation and seeing all sorts of reasons for supply to decline, but if the global economy rolls over hard, then demand could fall faster than supply, pushing prices off a cliff.

One feature of the "oil curse" is that the oil exporters have no other revenue stream to fund their regimes and welfare states. Saudi Arabia has enough other investments in the West to weather a downturn, but the rapid rise in the cost of extraction, population and welfare has pushed up the fiscal pain point even for the Saudis.

Iran and other exporters have a wafer-thin fiscal break-even point: if oil slumps to $50/barrel, the Iranian government budget is in serious shortfall.

As I noted in Oil: One Last Head-Fake? (May 9, 2008), despite brave talk to the contrary, exporters have no choice politically but to pump and sell every barrel they can, as oil revenue is the foundation of the government's spending and legitimacy.

As demand crashes in a global rollover, oil plummets below fiscal break-even for exporters, who must then pump even more to keep revenues from destroying their domestic legitimacy and power base.
Supply won't drop as fast as demand, and that will push prices down hard at the margin, where prices are set. And as the U.S. dollar shoots up, then oil will cost a lot more in weaker currencies. That will further suppress demand and thus price.

Those two dynamics will reinforce each other in positive feedback loops, pushing prices down lower than the consensus thinks possible.

"Impossible"? Where have we heard that before? Lehman going belly-up was impossible, as I recall, and so was the housing bubble bursting, to name but two previously "impossible" financial events.

Confirmation bias has its own positive feedback called the herd instinct. When the herd reaches a consensus, it's hard not to follow along with what is "obvious."

Sometimes what's obvious isn't "obvious" at all.

Is Fat Tails Insurance Worthless?

http://www.scribd.com/doc/58839921/Tail-Risk-Protection-Montier

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/fat-tails-insurance-moot

Probably the best most recent example is our overview of the 5 black swans that keep Dylan Grice up at night, and the way to hedge against them (incidentally, these were Long-term deflation, a Chinese Hard Landing, Asset Bubbles, Hyperinflation, and of course, a Bond Market Blow-up).

 If the price of tail risk insurance is driven up too high, it simply won’t benefit its purchasers."

His solution for the best tail hedge: cash.

"In many situations, cash is a severely underappreciated tail risk hedge."

1. Cash
This is perhaps the oldest, easiest, and most underrated source of tail risk protection. If one is worried about systemic illiquidity events or drawdown risks, then what better way to help than keeping some dry powder in the form of cash – the most liquid of all assets. (There is much more on the joy of cash to come shortly.)

Broke New Jersey Seeking $2.25 Billion Bridge Loan At Up To 9% From JPMorgan For Emergency Funding

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303627104576412172854764168.html

Is New Jersey the canary in Meredith Whitney's coalmine? According to the WSJ, New Jersey may be the first state to use the highly unconventional approach of using a commercial bank funded bridge loan as large as $2.25 billion to "plug a cash shortfall." The loan raised by Chris Christie's state, "would cover bills the state will need to pay as its new fiscal year begins July 1. Normally, states have some cash available as they finish one fiscal year and begin the next, while gearing up for a bond offering based on the new budget...Terms of the loan, also known as a credit line, haven't been finalized and negotiations could fall apart, according to the people familiar with the matter." And since this will likely be a benchmark loan whose term sheet will be promptly circulated to other cash-strapped states, it will be all the more important in defining such key term components as subordination, collateralization, and general interest rates.

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/broke-new-jersey-seeking-225-billion-bridge-loan-9-jpmorgan-emergency-funding

Welcome To The Recession: Manufacturing Surveys Imply US Economy Has Entered The Second Month Of A (Re)Recession

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/manufacturing-surveys-imply-us-economy-has-entered-second-month-rerecession

There may be those among the less than brainwashed lemmingerati out there who have noticed what, as we have pointed out for the past month when reporting on the various manufacturing and regional Fed indices, has been an epic collapse in the appropriate data series. As John Lohman so kindly demonstrates, the two month implosion has been beyond epic, and while certainly the biggest drop in the past decade, may also be the all time worst ever. To the point of this post: the last time we had an economic contraction of this magnitude was back in February of 2008, which was two months into the most acute recession in post-depression history. We are confident that once the groupthink wraps its head around the fact that the auto production based renaissance is not coming, and the economy officially tumbles into the commode of Ben Bernanke's fiat dungeon, the NBER will determine (with an appropriate 12-18 month delay), that the current recession started in April of 2011.



How Capitalism Went On A Brief Sabbatical Which Became A Permanent Vacation: Rosenberg Explains "The Artificial Recovery"

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/how-capitalism-went-brief-sabbatical-which-became-permanent-vacation-rosenberg-explains-arti


There is little if anything that can be added to the latest commentary from the original skeptic.

Indeed, this 2009-2011 recovery and cyclical bull market has been as artificial as the 2003-07 expansion. That last one was fuelled by financial engineering in the financial sector. This one is being underpinned by unprecedented government intrusion in the credit markets. As of this quarter, your government has replaced the private sector as the largest source of outstanding mortgage market and consumer-related credit (see front page of the Investor's Business Daily). So not only is the U.S.A. turning Japanese in many respects, it is also now resembling China where the government also redirects the flow of private sector credit.

When we said capitalism went on a sabbatical three years ago, we didn't expect this to be a permanent vacation. In the past five years, private sector loans have deflated by $1.9 trillion, while public sector assisted credit has surged a similar amount. Roughly nine in 10 dollars of mortgage flow is being dominated by the Federal government — Fannie Mae, Ginnie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the FHA. That is amazing, and these entities have actually been tightening their scorecards to avoid political taxpayer backlash.

Be that as it may, in this new era of socialized credit, the private sector now accounts for 42% of outstanding residential mortgages, down from nearly 60% at the bubble peak in 2006. The only reason why consumer credit has not shown a complete implosion is because in the past three years, federally- assisted student loans have soared by $250 billion.
But not even the government can prevent credit from retrenching — the best it can do is cushion the blow. The front page of the weekend WSJ runs with an article on the aftershocks of the credit collapse — Tighter Lending Crimps Housing. Credit applications are still being rejected at a rapid rate.
About 20% of new home loan applications have been refused this year, up from 18% in 2010; 27% of refinancing requests have been turned down, up from 24%. And if you need any proof as to how this is playing out in the consumer space, have a look at Property Investors Face Losing Their Shirts with Strip Malls on page C14 of the WSJ. The low-income consumer that tends to shop at strip centers has been completely hobbled by weak job market conditions and punishingly high food and gas prices this cycle. Somehow the benefits from QE1 and QE2 bypassed the $50,000 and lower income club, and this group represents half of the U.S. consumer spending pie, for all the talk of Coach, Tiffany's, and Saks for much of the past 24 months.
The WSJ emphasizes the implications of the on-going deleveraging cycle on the front page of today's paper — Debit Hamstrings Recovery. It is so obvious that as much as the government tries to slow the process, it cannot prevent the private sector from healing itself after decades of tremendous credit excess. U.S. consumers have 30% more credit card and other revolving debt on their balance sheet than they did just a decade ago. While outstandings are down 6% from the peak, there is still considerable contractions to go before household debt levels revert to the mean relative to both income and assets. At the same time, an estimated 23% of mortgages are "underwater" and it is against this backdrop that home-equity and credit lines have almost completely dried up. The necessity of climbing out from under this unprecedented amount of debt-related stress means that interest rates are very likely going to remain near the floor for a very long time. Ben Bernanke may publicly state that "extended period" means over the next few FOMC meetings, but anyone with a sense of history knows that they will stay close to zero for years to come.

And whoever thought we'd be seeing headlines like this, four years after the initial detonation in the U.S. housing market — Lennar Profit Slides 65% on page B8 of the weekend WSJ. Incredible. Revenues are down 6.1% YoY, margins are still compressing and order books are flat.

Source: David Rosenberg, Gluskin Sheff

Monday, 27 June 2011

Analysts Double S&P 500 Sales Forecast

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-26/wall-street-doubles-s-p-500-revenue-growth-forecast-amid-stagnant-margins.html

Analysts are increasing sales forecasts for Standard & Poor’s 500 Index companies by the most in three years, compensating investors as the biggest expansion in profitability since 2002 ends.
Revenue will climb 10 percent in 2011, twice last year’s rate, as personal income and corporate spending recover, according to data from analysts compiled by Bloomberg. Net margin estimates were unchanged the past two months after rising more than 50 percent since 2009. The measure of income divided by revenue increased to 13.4 percent in the first quarter from 8.2 percent in October 2009, Bloomberg data show.

Companies that boosted profits by firing workers and closing factories in the first two years of the expansion are running out of opportunities to reduce costs, requiring sales gains to keep growing. While bears say U.S. businesses will fail to increase revenue fast enough to justify higher stock prices, chief executive officers at Caterpillar Inc. (CAT) and Coventry Health Care Inc. (CVH) have raised forecasts.

“In the early part of the recovery, the CEO focuses on efficiency, productivity and margin enhancing, until their sales kick in,” said James Paulsen, the chief investment strategist at Minneapolis-based Wells Capital, which oversees $340 billion.“Once that happens, that emphasis on margins starts to fade. What looks on the surface as something you’d check off as bad is actually an indication that things are getting better.”

Caterpillar, Coventry

Caterpillar, the world’s largest maker of construction equipment, and Coventry Health, an insurer based in Bethesda,Maryland, posted higher profits when sales retreated, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Each has rallied after boosting revenue, the data show.

The S&P 500 fell 0.2 percent between June 17 and June 24, dropping for the seventh time in eight weeks. The gauge has surged 87 percent to 1,268.45 since reaching a 12-year low in March 2009 during the 18-month recession, the longest since the 43-month slump of the Great Depression, according to theNational Bureau of Economic Research. S&P 500 futures expiring in September rose 0.1 percent at 8:53 a.m. in London today.

Analysts have boosted estimates for S&P 500 sales growth in 2011 to 10 percent, compared with 5.2 percent last year and a decline of 9.1 percent in 2009.

Income Rising

Personal income for Americans is rising at an average rate of 0.6 percent a month in 2011, versus 0.3 percent in 2010, Commerce Department data show. Capital spending by companies in the index may jump 21 percent this year, according to the median estimate of analysts compiled by Bloomberg. Retail sales excluding cars increased 0.3 percent last month, topping economist predictions for a 0.2 percent gain, the data show.

Revenue gains may push S&P 500 profits to $99.08 a share this year, up 17 percent from 2010, after rising 37 percent a year earlier, the biggest two-year expansion since 1995, analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg show. The gauge has traded at an average 15.7 times reported earnings since the start of 2010, or 15 percent below the average for the rest of the past 10 years.

“Due to the stubbornly high unemployment, lack of economic clarity and questionable self-sustainability, the multiple needs to come down,” said Chad Morganlander, a Florham Park, New Jersey-based money manager at Stifel Nicolaus, which oversees $110 billion. “Margins have reached the crescendo, so any improvement with earnings will be pushed through with sales growth. But the economy suggests only a modest improvement in sales, and so earnings improvement should be modest at best.”

Employment Report

The S&P 500 tumbled as much as 7.2 percent after reaching an almost three-year high of 1,363.61 on April 29, driven by government reports showing U.S. employers added 67 percent fewer jobs than economists forecast in May and producer prices rose at twice the expected rate. At 39 days, the decrease is the second longest since the bull market began, Bloomberg data show.
Shares broke a four-day winning streak on June 22 after theFederal Reserve cut its forecast for growth and employment in 2011 and 2012. Risk signals for financial stability in the euro area are flashing “red,” European Central Bank President Jean- Claude Trichet said that day.

The U.S. economy grew 1.9 percent last quarter, a slowdown from 3.1 percent at the end of last year. Unemployment unexpectedly climbed to 9.1 percent in May, homebuilder confidence plunged to the lowest level in nine months and economists cut their estimates for 2011 gross domestic product growth to 2.5 percent from 3.2 percent in February.

‘Derisking and Deleveraging’

“We’re seeing a tightening in financial conditions, derisking and deleveraging,” said Doug Noland, the money manager for Pittsburgh-based Federated Investors Inc.’s Prudent Bear Fund, which oversees $1.3 billion. “The markets are starting to recognize this. They’re recognizing we need to bring down these multiples because the environment is so uncertain.”

Peak profit margins haven’t always signaled the end of equity gains in the past, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The last time corporate profitability reached a high was in January 2007, before the S&P 500 advanced 10 percent through October, the data show. In the same period, U.S. government bonds returned 5 percent, while bonds for American companies added 3 percent, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch data.

Margins rose to a record 15.6 percent in 1999, when the benchmark gauge for U.S. equities rallied 14 percent through March 2000. That time, Treasuries rose 1.5 percent, and corporate bonds lost 0.24 percent. The S&P GSCI Total Return Index of 24 raw materials outperformed equities in both periods, advancing 23 percent in 2007 and 38 percent in 1999.

Four Stages

Stocks will probably climb about 5.9 percent through March 2012 if history is any guide, according to Birinyi Associates Inc., which examined data on bull markets since 1962. The Westport, Connecticut-based money-management and research firm found advances typically have four stages with the biggest gains coming in the first, when economic data rebounds, and the last, when investors who missed earlier gains buy shares.

The third phase of an advance is usually the weakest as economic growth slows, Birinyi said. While that may be happening now, the firm predicts equities will rise 51 percent by the end of the rally in 2013, based on average historical returns.

“We had two years where every data point was stronger than the next one, and earnings were just marching back to all-time peaks,” said Jeffrey Kleintop, the chief market strategist at LPL Financial Corp. in Boston, which manages about $300 billion.“It’s great, but that pace of growth is unsustainable, and ultimately you get to the point where businesses do need to reinvest to generate growth.”

Profit Margins

Profit margins have reached the highest level since the end of 2007, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The expansion since 2009 has helped S&P 500 companies raise earnings for nine straight quarters.

“As sales start to emerge, attention turns to investment, to staffing, and to meeting the sales demand,” Paulsen said.“We’re not going to have profit growth going forward like we have had, but there’s nothing uncommon about that, because of the economic cycle we’re in. Even if margin slips a little bit, your overall earnings can still do fairly well.”

Caterpillar in Peoria, Illinois, posted a 28 percent increase in adjusted earnings per share for the first quarter of last year, even as sales shrank 11 percent. It countered a slump in machinery and engine sales by lowering operating expenses 23 percent that quarter after cutting about 37,000 workers and contractors from late 2008 to the end of 2009.

Higher Sales

The company said on April 29 that revenue will climb to at least $52 billion this year, compared with an October forecast of less than $50 billion, as sales surge in developing countries. The stock is up 50 percent since Caterpillar started to report higher sales.

Coventry Health Care’s adjusted earnings rose 73 percent last year even as sales slipped 17 percent. The profit margin, which in 2009 was the lowest since 1997, more than doubled. Shares of the health insurer advanced 1.6 percent since the company boosted its revenue estimate for the year on April 29.
“We are downshifting to a more normal mid-cyclical environment,” said Kleintop. “That’s a good thing, it sustains the recovery. Even as profit margins might be stable or even falling, stocks will do reasonably well because people believe the growth is going to continue, even if at a slower pace.”

Treasury Yield One Basis Point From 2011 Low Before Greece Austerity Vote

Dollar Strengthens as Europe’s Debt Crisis Boosts Demand for Safer Assets

The dollar rose against the euro and yen as Europe’s debt crisis spurred demand for safer assets. The U.S. currency gained to $1.4140 per euro as of 9:26 a.m. in Tokyo from $1.4188 in New York last week. It traded at 80.73 yen from 80.43.

"Geithner: Taxes on Small Business Must Rise So Government Doesn’t Shrink"

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2011/06/geithner-says-taxes-on-small-business.html

Mr. Secretary, You are Wrong

Ellmers ended the exchange with this statement "Mr. Secretary I would just like to close by saying, On behalf of the business owners in North Carolina and across the country, you are wrong".

Lloyds has largest exposure to risky loans

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/16313334-a033-11e0-a115-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1QLt4FzGl

Lloyds Banking Group’s exposure to the riskiest kind of mortgages is more than double that of any of its top five rivals in what is potentially a ticking time bomb for Britain’s largest high-street lender.

Data published last week by the Bank of England showed that loans representing more than a quarter of Lloyds’ mortgage book are worth at least 90 per cent of the property value they are secured against.

U.K. Home Prices Fall For Second Month on Subdued Demand, Weak Confidence

Asian Crisis Shows Greek Default Inevitable: William Pesek

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-26/what-europe-can-learn-from-asia-s-1997-crash-william-pesek.html

No. 1: A default is unavoidable. What makes Europe’s bailout efforts so hard to watch is that they are so futile. The Greek public has been very consistent about one thing: the belief that it bears no responsibility for all the debt its leaders took on over the last decade. If that doesn’t provide the backdrop for debt repudiation, what does?

As Greece runs through more and more of the funds its European neighbors throw at it, other dominos will fall. We saw that in Asia after Thailand devalued the baht in July 1997. Indonesia swore up and down it wouldn’t get dragged into Thailand’s mess -- until it was. Korea assured the world it would avoid an IMF aid package -- until it couldn’t.

The U.S. and Japan are near recession. China’s boom continues to squeeze wages in uncompetitive economies such as Greece. This won’t end well for the euro zone.

Purge the Debt


No. 2: Recovery is quicker once debts are purged. Greece fudged its way into the common currency with the help of Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s financial creativity. That leaves the government in Athens with a yawning credibility gap. When it says the country can close its budget deficit with stop-gap measures, traders roll their eyes and policy makers lose more sleep.

In December 1997, Korea caved in and sought a $57 billion IMF bailout. It acted quickly to let weak companies fail, closed insolvent banks, clamped down on tax cheats and came clean about the magnitude of its debts.

Greece will have to restructure its debt, and the fallout from this will increase pressure on Portugal, Spain and Italy. If Greece had acted a year ago, markets might not be spending every waking moment on edge over how and when a default will arrive.

“Asia’s crisis showed that the quicker you deal with the root of the problem, however painful that may be, the quicker you are likely to recover from it,” says Simon Grose-Hodge, head of investment strategy for South Asia at LGT Group in Singapore. “Europe could do worse than to heed that lesson.”

Euro Exit Plan is ‘Probably Inevitable’: Soros

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-27/exit-plan-for-eu-probably-inevitable-soros.html

Billionaire investor George Soros said it’s “probably inevitable” that a mechanism will be put in place to allow weaker economies to exit the euro.

“We are on the verge of an economic collapse which starts, let’s say, in Greece, but it could easily spread. The financial system remains extremely vulnerable.”

China Is Long-Term Investor in EU Bonds: Wen

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-26/wen-says-china-is-a-long-term-investor-in-european-debt-confident-on-euro.html

“China has actually increased the purchase of government bonds of some European countries, and we haven’t cut back on our euro holdings,” Wen told the British Broadcasting Corp. yesterday in an interview. These acts “show our confidence in the economies of Europe and the euro-zone.”

SS says

They also invested in the IPO of Blackstone at the peak in 2007.
The stock price still hasnt reached its Oct 2007 high.
CIC invested 3 bn into it.

Doesnt speak volumes about their investment acumen.

----

‘Angry Birds’ Staying Power Under Test

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-26/-angry-birds-staying-power-under-test-with-ceo-hatching-movie-before-ipo.html

After racking up more than 200 million downloads, Rovio now wants to make an “Angry Birds” movie, develop more game titles that appeal to the market of casual gamers, and open offices outside Finland to bring in more gaming and storytelling talent.

“If they are able to replicate the success of ‘Angry Birds’ with other titles, it may be a candidate for an IPO but with one title it’s difficult,” said Sarkamies. “The risk of not being able to do it and getting into trouble later on may just be too high.”

Sunday, 26 June 2011

Hulu Seen at 50 Times Earnings With Netflix Multiple: Real M&A

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-23/hulu-seen-at-50-times-earnings-in-sale-seeking-netflix-multiple-real-m-a.html

Hulu LLC may cost potential buyers from Yahoo! Inc. to Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) as much as 50 times earnings for a chance at owning what may be the next Netflix Inc. (NFLX)

Atlanta City Council Poised to Cut Workers’ Retirement Benefits

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-23/atlanta-city-council-poised-to-cut-retirement-benefits-for-city-employees.html

Atlanta’s City Council may begin closing a $1.5 billion pension shortfall by reducing retirement pay for current employees and allowing them to contribute to a 401(k)-style plan.

Treasury Two-Year Yields Approach Record Low on Greece, Fed View

June 25 (Bloomberg) -- Treasuries rose, pushing two-year note yields to within a basis point of the record low, on concern Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis is getting worse and as the Federal Reserve cut its forecast for U.S. growth.         

 Two-year notes gained for an 11th straight week before next week’s U.S. auctions in the longest rally since the 1980s as the central bank said it would maintain record monetary stimulus after its $600 billion of debt purchases ends June 30. Benchmark 10-year note yields fell to this year’s low on speculation Greece will struggle to pass austerity measures.         

 “There’s absolutely no immediate relief that can occur that can lift the accelerator off the floor in
buying Treasuries,” said Jim Vogel, head of agency-debt research at FTN Financial in Memphis, Tennessee. “The minute you knock down one piece of bad news, there’s no way to shrug your shoulders and say thank God that’s over because there’s going to be something else coming.”         

 Yields on two-year notes slid five basis points, or 0.05 percentage point, to 0.33 percent, according to Bloomberg Bond Trader prices. The 0.5 percent security maturing in May 2013 increased 3/32, or 94 cents per $1,000 face amount, to 100 10/32.         

 The two-year note yields fell yesterday to 0.32 percent, the lowest level since touching a record low 0.3118 percent on Nov. 4. The last time the yields fell for 11 straight weeks was in September through November 1984, when the U.S. central bank had switched to cutting from raising interest rates.         

 Ten-Year Notes         
 Yields on 10-year notes fell for a sixth week, dropping eight basis points. They slid yesterday to 2.85 percent, the lowest level since Dec. 1.         

 The benchmark notes extended gains yesterday after yields dropped below the 2.88 percent level where the securities had found resistance three times since June 16, according to Suvrat Prakash, an interest-rate strategist in New York at BNP Paribas Securities Corp., one of the 20 primary dealers that trade with the central bank. Resistance is a level where sell orders may be clustered.         

 “We’ve decisively rallied through that level,” Prakash said. “That is a big deal. This rally can probably reach 2.75 percent.”         

 Italian 10-year bonds fell this week, increasing the additional yield investors demand to hold the securities instead of benchmark German bunds to the most since the euro was introduced in 1999. Moody’s Investors Service said this week it may cut the ratings of Italian banks.         
 The difference in yield widened to 2.14 percentage points as Italy’s 10-year yield advanced to 4.98 percent. Greece’s 10- year yield fell to 16.78 percent.         

 Greece Austerity         
 For Greece’s Prime Minister George Papandreou, the next hurdle is to shepherd 78 billion euros ($111 billion) of austerity measures through Parliament. The program was endorsed this week by experts from the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund.         

 “All eyes are on Europe,” said Christopher Bury, co-head of fixed-income rates in New York at Jefferies Group Inc., a primary dealer. “We’ve seen a steady grind to lower yields without a significant pullback for several weeks now. Investors are just waiting for the storm to pass until there is some clarity.”         

 The U.S. economy will expand by 2.7 percent to 2.9 percent this year, down from April’s forecasts of 3.1 percent to 3.3 percent, the Fed said following its June 21-22 policy meeting.         

 Gross domestic product grew at a 1.9 percent annual rate from January through March after expanding at a 3.1 percent pace during the last three months of 2010, revised figures from the Commerce Department showed yesterday. The government reported in May a quarterly expansion of 1.8 percent.         

 Fisher’s View         
 Economic growth will pick up in the second half while remaining slow, and the Fed will maintain its record asset holdings for an “appropriate” period, according to Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher.         
 “It’s going to take quite some time to achieve a glide path that brings unemployment down significantly,” Fisher said yesterday in a Bloomberg Television interview from Dallas. “It’s a slow recovery, and it’s going to continue to be slow.”         

 President Barack Obama will meet with Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid and Republican leader Mitch McConnell next week in an effort to revive talks on the budget and deficit.         
 The parties are at an impasse on finding a way to cut at least $1 trillion and raise the nation’s $14.3 trillion debt ceiling before an Aug. 2 deadline. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor and the second-ranking Senate Republican, Jon Kyl, walked away from a negotiating effort led by Vice President Joe Biden.         

 The government will sell $35 billion in two-year notes, the same amount of five-year debt and $29 billion of seven-year securities on three consecutive days beginning June 27, the Treasury Department announced this week.         

Why the Eurozone and the Euro Are Both Doomed

http://www.oftwominds.com/blogjune11/eurozone-doomed6-11.html

Papering over the structural imbalances in the Eurozone with endless bailouts will not resolve the fundamental asymmetries.

Beneath the endless announcements of Greece's "rescue" lie fundamental asymmetries that doom the euro, the joint currency that has been the centerpiece of European unity since its introduction in 1999.

The key imbalance is between export powerhouse Germany, which generates huge trade surpluses, and its trading partners, which run large trade and budget deficits, particularly Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain.

Those outside of Europe may be surprised to learn that Germany's exports are roughly equal to those of China ($1.2 trillion), even though Germany's population of 82 million is a mere 6% of China's 1.3 billion. Germany and China are the world's top exporters, while the U.S. trails as a distant third.

Germany's emphasis on exports places it in the so-called mercantilist camp, countries that depend heavily on exports for their growth and profits. Other (nonoil-exporting) nations that routinely generate large trade surpluses include China, Japan, Germany, Taiwan and the Netherlands.

While Germany's exports rose an astonishing 65% from 2000 to 2008, its domestic demand flatlined near zero. Without strong export growth, Germany's economy would have been at a standstill. The Netherlands is also a big exporter (trade surplus of $33 billion) even though its population is relatively tiny, at only 16 million. The "consumer" countries, on the other hand, run large current-account (trade) deficits and large government deficits. Italy, for instance, has a $55 billion trade deficit and a budget deficit of about $110 billion. Total public debt is a whopping 115.2% of GDP.

Spain, with about half the population of Germany, has a $69 billion annual trade deficit and a staggering $151 billion budget deficit. Fully 23% of the government's budget is borrowed.
This chart illustrates the dynamic between mercantilist and consumer nations:

Although the euro was supposed to create efficiencies by removing the costs of multiple currencies, it has had a subtly pernicious disregard for the underlying efficiencies of each eurozone economy.

Though German wages are generous, the German government, industry and labor unions have kept a lid on production costs even as exports leaped. As a result, the cost of labor per unit of output -- the wages required to produce a widget -- rose a mere 5.8% in Germany in the 2000-09 period, while equivalent labor costs in Ireland, Greece, Spain and Italy rose by roughly 30%.

The consequences of these asymmetries in productivity, debt and deficit spending within the eurozone are subtle. In effect, the euro gave mercantilist, efficient Germany a structural competitive advantage by locking the importing nations into a currency that makes German goods cheaper than the importers' domestically produced goods.

Put another way: By holding down production costs and becoming more efficient than its eurozone neighbors, Germany engineered a de facto "devaluation" within the eurozone by lowering the labor-per-unit costs of its goods.

The euro has another deceptively harmful consequence: The currency's overall strength enables debtor nations to rapidly expand their borrowing at low rates of interest. In effect, the euro masks the internal weaknesses of debtor nations running unsustainable deficits and those whose economies had become precariously dependent on the housing bubble (Ireland and Spain) for growth and taxes.
Prior to the euro, whenever overconsumption and overborrowing began hindering an import-dependent "consumer" economy, the imbalance was corrected by an adjustment in the value of the nation's currency. This currency devaluation would restore the supply-demand and credit-debt balances between mercantilist and consumer nations.

Absent the euro today, the Greek drachma would fall in value versus the German mark, effectively raising the cost of German goods to Greeks, who would then buy fewer German products. Greece's trade deficit would shrink, and lenders would demand higher rates for Greek government bonds, effectively pressuring the government to reduce its borrowing and deficit spending.
But now, with all 16 nations locked into a single currency, devaluing currencies to enable a new equilibrium is impossible. And it leaves Germany facing with the unenviable task of bailing out its "customer nations" -- the same ones that exploited the euro's strength to overborrow and overconsume. On the other side, residents of Greece, Italy, Spain, Portugal and Ireland now face the unenviable effects of government benefit cuts aimed at realigning budgets with the productivity of the underlying national economy.

While the media has reported the Greek austerity plan and EU promises of assistance as a "fix," it's clear that the existing deep structural imbalances cannot be resolved with such Band-Aids.
Either Germany and its export-surplus neighbors continue bailing out the eurozone's importer/debtor consumer nations, or eventually the weaker nations will default or slide into insolvency.
Germany helped enable the overborrowing of its profligate neighbors by buying their government bonds. According to BusinessWeek, German banks are on the hook for almost $250 billion in the troubled eurozone nations' bonds.

Now an inescapable double-bind has emerged for Germany: If Germany lets its weaker neighbors default on their sovereign debt, the euro will be harmed, and German exports within Europe will slide. But if Germany becomes the "lender of last resort," then its taxpayers end up footing the bill.
If public and private debt in the troubled nations keeps rising at current rates, it's possible that even mighty Germany may be unable (or unwilling) to fund an essentially endless bailout. That would create pressure within both Germany and the debtor nations to jettison the single currency as a good idea in theory, but ultimately unworkable in a 16-nation bloc as diverse as the eurozone.

Be wary of the endless "fixes" to a structurally doomed system.

1 Month Bill: -0.005%

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/1-month-bill-0005

As vacuum tubes slowly realize they were all cheated by the great European fraud headline and soundbite machine, the scramble into the relative safety of Uncle Sam's paper is once again reaching a crescendo. At last check, the 1 month Bill was trading 0.000/-0.005, whereby people pay Tim Geithner to prevent them from investing in the worthless asset class known as stocks.



What's Really Driving House Prices In Canada? The Must-See Graph Of The Day...

http://www.theeconomicanalyst.com/content/whats-really-driving-house-prices-canada-must-see-graph-day

Extract

My position has long been that the driver of house price appreciation in Canada over the past decade has been primarily the result of the unprecedented expansion in debt caused by the loosening of CMHC mortgage insurance requirements and the removal of the maximum insurable mortgage ceiling....facilitated by a falling interest rate environment, a new mass perception of the 'investment worthiness' of real estate as an asset class, and the emergence of housing as a form of conspicuous consumption. But if we boiled them all down into one word, it would be this: DEBT! And the pace of debt accumulation is not sustainable... ergo, the pace of house price appreciation is not sustainable. Nor are house prices at current levels relative to underlying fundamentals.

King at odds with ECB on eurozone crisis

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/4dfcca24-9e46-11e0-8e61-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1QLt4FzGl

Sir Mervyn King, governor of the Bank of England, warned on Friday that stopgap measures to extend new loans to countries such as Greece, Portugal and Ireland would not solve the eurozone debt crisis.

“Right through this crisis from the very beginning ... an awful lot of people wanted to believe that it was a crisis of liquidity,” Sir Mervyn said. “It wasn’t, it isn’t. And until we accept that, we will never find an answer to it. It was a crisis based on solvency ... initially financial institutions and now sovereigns.”

“Providing liquidity can only be used to buy time,” Sir Mervyn said. “Simply the belief, ‘oh we can just lend a bit more’, will never be an answer to a problem which is essentially one about solvency.”

U.S. Markets Not Vulnerable to Big Drop, Barclays’ Kantor Says

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-23/u-s-markets-not-vulnerable-to-big-drop-barclays-kantor-says.html

SS say
SPX is down 100 points already from 1370.

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U.S. stocks aren’t likely to see price declines similar to those during the financial crisis of 2008, said Larry Kantor, head of research for Barclays Capital.

Markets are vulnerable when households and corporations are overconfident, valuations are stretched, and cyclical sectors are booming, and “none of those conditions hold now,” said Kantor during a presentation of the firm’s Global Outlook report released today. Barclays advises investors to maintain a“neutral risk.”

SS says

I dont agree with him.

Look at all the crazy bullish actions and data out there.
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There’s a “chance for a decent rally” in financials in the third quarter, said Barry Knapp, head of Barclays’ U.S. Equity Strategy, who cautioned against stocks leveraged to the U.S. economy and consumer.
“The credit issues are largely behind us,” said Knapp.“The U.S. has done a better job of recapitalizing than Japan and bank lending is up 1 percent so far in the second quarter” after falling in the previous quarter.

“If you can put two decent quarters together that’s a catalyst for a late rally to get to our yearend price target of 1450,” he said. “If I had to have a price target for the end of the third quarter, it would be 1350.”

In fixed income, Barclays’ credit group said investors may want to “put some risk on, especially in the high-yield sector,”said Kantor. “They like financials right now.”

SS says

Let us get back at this post in a years time to see where we are.

Then we can judge this guy.


EU Vows to Rescue Greece in Exchange for Papandreou’s $111 Billion Savings

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-23/eu-vows-to-rescue-greece-in-exchange-for-cuts.html

Already at a European record of 142.8 percent of gross domestic product, Greek debt is set to rise to 166.1 percent next year, the EU predicts. The effort to cut a budget deficitthat is about 10 percent of GDP has helped deepen a third year of recession.

Silver-Coin Sales Booming at Perth Mint

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-22/silver-coin-sales-booming-at-perth-mint-as-investors-desert-paper-money.html

Silver-coin sales from Australia’s Perth Mint, which was founded in 1899 and processes all of the country’s bullion, have surged to a record as buyers seek to protect their wealth with the metal known as poor man’s gold.

“Silver’s still booming and it’s been going strongly for a year,” Currie said in interview yesterday from the mint inWestern Australia’s capital. “A lot of the buying is by people new to the market,” with European and U.S. investors the most active international purchasers of the mint’s products, he said.

Silver sales have also surged in the world’s largest economy. Sales of American Eagle silver coins climbed 30 percent to 3.65 million in May, taking the total for the year so far to 18.9 million ounces, the mint’s website shows.