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#683 | |
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22·3·641 Posts |
Quote:
Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2009-08-13 at 05:00 |
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#684 |
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22·3·641 Posts |
Did you bother to notice that I haven't disputed your recent analyses except on a few very specific points?
That I have called attention to some factors not mentioned by you or others does not mean that I disagree with what you post other than the few specific items I've explained. So, why offer to "help" me? Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2009-08-13 at 05:18 |
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#685 | |
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Dec 2008
34116 Posts |
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#686 | ||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
2D7F16 Posts |
Retail Sales in U.S. Unexpectedly Fall on Concern Over Job Losses, Income: Sales at U.S. retailers unexpectedly fell in July as a boost from the cash-for-clunkers automobile incentive program failed to overcome cuts in other spending.
Quote:
------------------------ Foreclosure Filings in U.S. Climb to Record for Third Time in Five Months: Foreclosure filings in the U.S. climbed to a record for the third time in five months in July as falling home prices and the recession left more homeowners unable to keep up payments or refinance. My Comment: Markets sold off hard in the first hour on the above news, but then, "as if by magic" rallied and wiped out their first-hour losses. Amazingly "resilient", these markets are ... so "resilient" in fact that Wednesday`s losses were more than nullified in the first few hours yesterdays, on ONE-FIFTH the total trading volume. Interesting asymmetry there. ----------------------- And, our morning quick-glance at the market and economic headlines would simply not be complete without a nice dose of titillating Wall Street schmutz, involving none other than Bernard "Love Machine" Madoff and a certain Hadassah-hottie former client of his: Madoff Had Affair With Ex-Hadassah CFO, Stole Life Savings, Her Book Says: An accountant who has publicly blamed imprisoned con man Bernard Madoff for stealing her family’s savings has written a book that will disclose a secret she previously withheld -- they once had an extramarital affair. Quote:
"Rumors that Madoff may respond with a written-in-prison OJ-style apologia titled 'Why I did her' elicited a terse 'no comment' from Madoff’s attorney Ira Sorkin"... |
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#687 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
10 Year U.S. Net Private-Sector Job Creation = ZERO
Quote:
Another interesting way to look at the same data is via the so-called "employment ratio", which (when multiplied by 100%) is the percentage of the civilian labor force which is currently working. Below is a historical chart of this from the St. Louis Fed, with recessions highlighted via dark gray vertical stripes. The ratio rises starting in the early 1960s, and goes from the mid-50% to an all-time high of ~64% in 2000, via the combination of more women entering the workforce in those 5 decades and the 2-decade-long "Greenspan secular bull market" of the 80s and 90s (Which not coincidentally coincided with the largest consumer and government debt expansion is U.S. history). By the late 80s the percentage of women in the workforce has effectively plateaued, so the remaining pop is mostly the secular Bull at work. Now notice something very interesting about the recession data: In all the recessions there is a sharp drop in the employment ratio. In all the recessions up to and including the nasty 1981-1982 one, there is also a sharp rise during the recovery, and the end of the job losses coincides very accurately with the official end of the recession (as determined by GDP stats). That correlation begins to break down in the 1990-1991 recession, where the job losses continue for 1-2 years before reversing, and coming out of the 2001-2002 recession (dotcom bubble pop + 9/11) the "jobless recovery" trend is even pronounced. With the current downturn due to to an unprecedented level of debt overhang (and hence excess economic capacity which needs to be wrung out), there is no more bubble the government can blow which will lead to organic (i.e. sustainable private-sector) jobs creation. Thus, many of the pundits who were proved right about the housing and credit bubble are predicting not even a "jobless recovery" coming out of this one, but rather a "job loss recovery", due to the huge excess capacity issue. (Think of homebuilding and auto manufacturing for prime examples of the latter - even with the one-time cash4clunkers.com program there will be nearly 50% fewer vehicles sold in the U.s. this year than at the height of the housing/credit bubble. With the U.S. consumer mired in debt, that demand for cars and homes and All Things Asian Sweatshop ain`t coming back any time soon. Here is the historical employment ratio chart from the St. Louis Fed: Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2009-08-13 at 22:04 |
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#688 | |||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
The news out central and eastern Europe continues to worsen - on top of the latest downgrades of Latvia and Estonia`s debt to various shades of "junk" and the former country reporting that their GDP shrank at a deflationary-depression-style annual rate of around 20% in the past several quarters, one of the banks having huge loan exposure to that part of the world is seeing its bad-loan percentages skyrocket:
Raiffeisen Profit Plummets on Bad Loan Provisions Quote:
Raiffeisen: "Eastern Europe remains highly attractive" ...and here in the above Bloomberg article: Quote:
Eastern Europe bears close watching - The spark needed to set off the next wave of the global financial crisis may very well come from there, and then ripple rapidly around the global to the interconnectedness of modern finance. It is, however, strangely gratifying to see that investors in that part of the world are no less delusionally hopefully than elsewhere: Eastern Europe Stocks Rally as Recession Eases : Eastern European stocks surged, pushing indexes in the Czech Republic and Bulgaria to the highest levels in at least nine months, as signs Europe’s recession is ending boosted speculation earnings will improve. Quote:
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#689 | |
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6809 > 6502
"""""""""""""""""""
Aug 2003
101×103 Posts
22×23×107 Posts |
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#690 |
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Dec 2008
Boycotting the Soapbox
24·32·5 Posts |
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#691 | |
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"Jacob"
Sep 2006
Brussels, Belgium
2·32·5·19 Posts |
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Jacob Last fiddled with by S485122 on 2009-08-14 at 06:03 Reason: specified the independance of the ECB a bit |
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#692 |
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Aug 2002
Termonfeckin, IE
276410 Posts |
True but the ECB is printing money in effect. For instance it has accepted all sorts of garbage securities from Irish banks as collateral.
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#693 | |||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
As gar notes, there are numerous ways for a central bank to effectively "print money" without appearing to do so. Anything which takes bad assets off banks books (or allows them to artificially value them higher than mark-to-market accounting would) and this allows them to increase/resume lending amounts to a form of money-printing, thanks to the "miracle" of fractional reserve banking.
---------------------- Stocks slump on sentiment slide: Wall Street pulls retreats after a surprise plunge in consumer sentiment. Stocks are vulnerable after ending the previous session at 10-month highs. Quote:
Consumer prices in largest annual fall since '50: The government's index of prices paid by consumers was unchanged in July from the previous month, but the closely watched inflation gauge recorded its largest over-the-year decline in 59 years. Quote:
Banks May Reach Point of No Return as Toxic Loans Exceed 5% of Holdings: More than 150 publicly traded U.S. lenders own nonperforming loans that equal 5 percent or more of their holdings, a level that former regulators say can wipe out a bank’s equity and threaten its survival. No New Normal as JPMorgan Sees V-Shaped Recovery With Growth Accelerating: Instead of a so-called New Normal of subdued growth, the U.S. may be heading for a robust recovery. Quote:
Raiffeisen Update: Regarding my posting yesterday about Austria`s big Raiffeisen bank, my sister who lives in Austria writes: The inside poop here in Austria has been that one of the big 5 banks will be "allowed" to fail. Which one was the subject of a lot of back-room dealing since the bank heads are affiliated with different political parties. Guess Raiffeisen drew the short straw. Now merely because RB announced a huge increase in its loan-loss provisions this week is not a smoking gun that it will be "the one", but recent rumors on ZeroHedge also indicate that something is up with Raiffeisen. If it is "allowed to fail", I wonder what kind of ripple effects and "unexpected consequences" that will have for the European credit markets and other banks. Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2009-08-14 at 16:34 |
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