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#485 |
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Aug 2003
Snicker, AL
7·137 Posts |
I'm somewhat skeptical of your jolly good humor aka caustic cynicism Ewmayer. In fact, you might just be a misanthrope.
The skids are greased, the economy is poised, is everyone ready? There were modest signs of stabilization in the housing market a few months ago. Prices were no longer going down, they weren't really going up, but they were not sliding at double digit percentages. No longer true today. Some premium properties is affluent areas are still on the high side of normal, but most everything else is sliding. All it would take at this point is one serious down day in the stock market. DarJones |
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#486 | ||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19·613 Posts |
Quote:
------------------ Fed Zeppelin Sighting #2: For fans of the recently-popular field of Hindenburg-Omenology, we had Sighting #2 yesterday. Denninger - in one of his occasional non-rantish, non-xenophobic posts [I find him quite readable when it comes to market technicals and "inside trading tech"] - describes. ------------------ 401(k) Withdrawals Spike: 401(k) withdrawals hit 10-year high, says Fidelity. Withdrawals from 401(k) retirement saving plans saw their biggest spike in over ten years, Fidelity Investments said on Friday, in the latest sign of a dismal economy. Quote:
------------------ The 10 Most Dangerous Jobs in America: CNN/Money has click-bait-formatted summary of the 10 Most Dangerous Jobs in America: Here is the Job / Fatality rate (deaths per year per 100,000) and Median-wage summary, go to the original piece for more details about each job. Think about this Top-10 list the next time your local Police or Firefighters` Union agitates for better pay/benefits because "We put our lives on the line every day" ... well, so do a whole lot of "regular" unheralded folks who get paid a hell of a lot less for doing so: Code:
Job Fatality rate Median wage Notes ------------- ------------- ----------- ----------------- Fisherman 200 $ 23,600 Mainly cold-water fishing (Alaska) Logger 62 $ 34,440 Bush Pilot 57 $106,240 Mainly Alaska Farmers, Ranchers 36 $ 32,350 Roofers 35 $ 33,970 Better safety training is steadily reducing the rate Ironworkers 30 $ 44,500 Sanitation worker 25 $ 32,070 Meth-lab chemicals a new recent danger Industrial machinist 19 $ 39.600 Truckers/Deliverers 18 $ 37,730 Highest total deaths of Top 10 due to large numbers Construction laborer 18 $ 29,150 |
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#487 | ||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
Barry Ritholtz Interview With Felix Zulauf:
And lastly for today, Barry Ritholtz has a great long interview with famed Swiss-born investor Felix Zulauf ... here is my favorite excerpt from that: Quote:
Quote:
Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2010-08-20 at 20:37 |
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#488 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
265778 Posts |
ZeroHedge reports that today (like yesterday) we again had a Zeppelin sighting, making for a total of 3 in the past week. It`s not clear to me to what extent rapid repeat events carry statistical importance ... I would for now simply sum things up "signs of unusual stresses in the markets persist".
A reader - who I hope does not mind having his (I use the literary "his" denoting the singular person, but not literally specifying gender) private message excerpted - frets as to what to do. My advice to him generalizes to all folks in a similar situation - that is, not super-sophisticated about investing, not wanting to watch stock charts constantly, but wanting to keep their money safe: Quote:
But given all the other bad macro news, I think the chances of a major plunge (10-30% down) between now and end of the year are quite high (at least 50/50) and the chances of missing a major rally in the same timeframe seem very slim. For most 401k-type investors my advice is to move to cash (or a money-market cash-like fund, if your 401k has no pure-cash option). Then wait patiently ... one benefit of deflation (as opposed to the usual government-caused inflation) is that cash carries little or no lost-interest opportunity cost versus the alternatives. Cheers, and remember not to smoke around those Hydrogen tanks. ;)" |
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#489 | |
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22×3×641 Posts |
Another bearish factor I don't recall having seen mentioned here lately:
"Another Threat to Economy: Boomers Cutting Back" http://finance.yahoo.com/focus-retir...uilding_wealth Quote:
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#490 | ||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
Those of you who may have been following the investigations into the May 6 "Flash Crash" may be familiar with Nanex, the small private market-quote-software firm which has been doing most of the really insightful research into the causes of the crash and its links with high-frequency trading and the two-tier ("for-pay premium quote access" and "everybody else") market-quote balkanization "pioneered" by for-profit-exchanges trying to do what for-profit companies do, namely: maximize profits. (Bizarrely, there is a widespread misconception - as illustrated by Senator Kaufman`s quote in the NYT article below - that the equity markets are still in some way "public marketplaces" despite this for-profit 2-tiering of access to the same "public" markets).
Well, Nanex has completed its analysis, and found a smoking gun in the form of "do it yourself latency arbitrage via quote stuffing" by the HFTs. ZeroHedge has been following Nanex's ongoing analysis since Nanex started publishing their findings, and the New York Times finally deemed it worthy to chime in yesterday. Note the party-line "experts dismiss all this as tinfoil-hat conspiracy theory" closing to the NYT piece. They may be wishing they had waited one more day - read on to see why: Stock Swing Still Baffles, With an Ominous Tone: It sounds like “Wall Street” meets “The X-Files.” Quote:
May 6'th 2010 Flash Crash Analysis: Continuing Developments Quote:
Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2010-08-23 at 22:31 |
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#491 |
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Aug 2003
Snicker, AL
7×137 Posts |
Economic stressors are showing up with distressing regularity. Recent news articles have pointed out that average single family house prices have slipped a few thousand dollars and that the volume of house sales is the lowest seen in several years. Today an article trumpets that oil has slid below the $72 price level. Yet the cost of necessities such as food is either flat or rising slightly. These are all signs of a market malaise called Deflation. While it is possible to fight inflation with interest rate adjustments, there are no effective tools to ward off deflation.
The real worry that comes with deflation is the relationship it has with unemployment. Severe periods of deflation go hand in had with fewer people having jobs. Perhaps more worrying about this economic cycle is the present indication that people who are working are getting paid less in real dollars (Adjusted for inflation, etc.) than they were getting 10 years ago. DarJones |
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#492 | |||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
Brief recap of breaking econNews: Ireland debt downgraded yet again due to ballooning banking-sector bailout costs ... Illinois Teachers` Retirement System pension fund enters death-spiral financing mode ... Another day, another Hindenburg sighting (4th event in the series which began August 12th) ...
In Striking Shift, Small Investors Flee Stock Market. Renewed economic uncertainty is testing Americans’ generation-long love affair with the stock market. Quote:
Government-Supplied Housing Cocaine All Snorted, Home Sales Back To Face-Down Under a Table Sales of U.S. Existing Homes Drop More Than Forecast. Sales of U.S. previously owned homes plunged 27 percent in July, twice as much as forecast, evidence foreclosures and limited job growth are depressing the market. Quote:
And speaking of paid shills, the folks at the NAR even managed to find a way to try to spin the above dismal data in a hopeful way, with a "lunatic counterfactual spin" quotient which would make their spiritual mentor proud: "July Existing-Home Sales Fall as Expected but Prices Rise." Yep, just ignore the " "The national median existing-home price2 for all housing types was $182,600 in July, up 0.7 percent from a year ago." Fed Loses Latest Round In Fight To Keep Bailout Secrets Fed Loses Bid for Review of Bailout Disclosure Ruling. An appeals court refused to reconsider a decision compelling the Federal Reserve Board to release documents identifying banks that might have failed without the U.S. government bailout. Quote:
Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2010-08-25 at 18:43 |
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#493 | |
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Aug 2003
Snicker, AL
3BF16 Posts |
Your post highlights one of the most misused and abused tools today, Ewmayer.
Where do you measure from? It makes a tremendous difference in a fluctuating economy. Take for example, do you measure average house sale price from 2006 when the market was still near the bubblicious peak? or do you measure it from 2008 when the market was reeling from the bubble collapse? This is precisely the spin that you mention. If you measure from the market high, you get to see the huge drop in average single family house price. Which one is right? Quote:
DarJones |
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#494 |
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Aug 2003
Snicker, AL
7×137 Posts |
The Hindenburg indicator hit the news front page in Yahoo today. It is surprising how much attention it is getting now. Does it highlight market volatility and instability? Yep, sure does.
Mortgage news is big news again today. By one current estimate, up to 10% of all U.S. home mortgages may face foreclosure. I suspect there are conditions where this could be significantly too low. This is also on top of the hundreds of thousands of foreclosures already completed over the last 2 years. What kind of market event would it take to double foreclosures over the next 3 years? That would require a significant rise in unemployment. We would have to see unemployment at least double from today. To borrow a term, that would represent a significant Black Swan event. Is it likely? Current models do not look like it will happen, just don't be totally surprised if the current models fail. We are dealing with seriously uncharted territory. DarJones Last fiddled with by Fusion_power on 2010-08-26 at 19:46 |
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#495 | ||||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
2D7F16 Posts |
Blind and Blinder
Former Fed Vice Chairman Alan Blinder had an op-ed in the WSJ yesterday saying in effect that "the economic recovery seems to be stalling" and contemplating option for the Fed to once again step in and "fix things": Fed Is Running Low on Ammo Quote:
How the Great Recession Was Brought to an End No One Left to Sell CDOs To? Sell to Yourself! No One Left to Sell CDOs To? Sell to Yourself! Quote:
Leftovers from early this week: Failure Of Bank With Close Ties To Obama Costs Taxpayers $368 Million: And even better, the failed bank was sold right back to a newly-constituted holding company led by the same folks who ran the bank into the ground[/u] and backed - with the help of a generous taxpayer "donation" - by a "consortium of several large U.S. financial firms": In a revival of multi-bank "Bank Failure Fridays", Eight failed banks were seized by the FDIC last Friday ... As The WSJ reports, the largest not only one has some interesting ties to the Obama administration, but was allowed to be "reconstituted" under much of the old management and at a hefty price to taxpayers - My link is to a piece by Mish on the failure which also links to ZeroHedge`s commentary on the hinkiness of the whole affair: Regulators Seize ShoreBank; Management Takes Over. Regulators seized ShoreBank Corp. on Friday and agreed to sell assets to a team led by the community lender's executives and backed by several large U.S. financial firms. Quote:
Former Fed Governor Mishkin Paid $124,000 to Write Glowing Report on Iceland before its Collapse Former Fed Governor Mishkin Paid $124,000 to Write Glowing Report on Iceland before its Collapse; Mishkin Never Disclosed he was Paid Quote:
Friday Humor: The Gathering of Government Labor Statistics |
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