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#199 |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
Time to play the fun "What do these quotes have in common" game:
Bear Stearns CEO: "We have no liquidity issues" George W. Bush: "Economy is strong" NAR: "Housing Market should recover by 2nd half of 2008" Me to the IRS: "The check was in the mail, but the dog ate it" Bill Miller: "I think we have seen the bottom in financials and consumer stocks ... by far the worst is behind us. I think the credit panic ended with the collapse of Bear Stearns..." Never thought I'd be saying this, but this guy has become almost as good a contrarian indicator as chief CNBC market shill Jim Cramer. |
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#200 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
Kevin Phillips` [cf. post #196, and my comments in #123 about the bogus February CPI figures released by the US govt] latest article in the upcoming Harpers issue illuminates the kind of funny-numbers racket the USGov plays with economic statistics - devastating stuff.
On a lighter note: eCONomic Scuttle Butt | Ditech Acknowledges Waterboarding Delinquent Homeowners -- LOL, some people just take life *so* seriously ... check out reader comment #1. This Week's MotWee Award: "The Alan G. Reamspan Memorial Prize for bald-faced denial of responsibility" goes to ... some "I am zee varry outraged!" French dude: Wall $treet Folly | Jerome Kerviel's former manager suing him for ruining his career Quote:
Instead of filing a wimpy lawsuit and hiding behind his lawyer, he should just do what real men do, namely ... deny everything. Like I said to my stockborker* yesterday, "Who is this guy Margin, and why does he keep calling me?" === * [You read that correctly ... for those of you not intimately acquainted with the world of Haute Finance, a "borker" is somewhere in between a "broker" and a "boinker" in terms of his or her function - as their names imply, brokers help you go broke and boinkers tell you bend-over-and-try-to-relax-it'll-be-less-painful-that-way ... borkers do a bit of each.] Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2008-05-20 at 15:46 Reason: Updated Phillips link to HTML version of Harpers article |
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#201 | |
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Nov 2003
22×5×373 Posts |
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BOHICA |
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#202 | |||||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19·613 Posts |
FDIC Head Calls for Massive Govt Bailout of Underwater Mortgage Holders
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Now, Ms. Bair's misguided and rewarding-all-the-wrong-parties proposal would be eminently worthy of a MotWee award, but in fact this week's award has already been claimed by an even bigger moron, whose name I shall reveal Friday. [Unless an even more-colossal moron comes along between now and then, which is eminently possible]. On a lighter note, Mr. Shorty Mantle, a.k.a. "Professor eCON 101", has a more practical way for communities around the country to deal with their housing-bubble aftermath, and support their friendly local neighborhood defense contractor in the process: eCONomic Scuttle Butt: Banks Walking Away From Foreclosed Homes Quote:
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#203 | ||||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
1164710 Posts |
April Jobs - Another Report From Bizarro World
The rundown: All the significant job losses were in real, high-paying job sectors. All the "gains" were either in low-wage service jobs or were a result of outright statistical fabrication by the BLS, using its handy-dandy [and completely discredited] boom-economy-based birth/death model. Clinton, Obama Back Bill to Punish China on Currency Quote:
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California Association of Realtors: Median Home Prices Down 29% [YOY] In March: Home sales decreased 24.5 percent compared with the same period a year ago Been looking at the SF Bay Area sales-volume and price trends from DataQuick which the San Jose Mercury News publishes every weekend in their Saturday Surreal Estate section. Here, sales volume has fallen off a cliff -down 40-50% across the board, and in all areas - but the price drops are most in the East and South bay [where new housing and condo complexes were sprouting up like weeks over the past 10 years] and the Santa Cruz mountains - Silicon valley housing prices still holding their bubble values fairly well, especially in areas like Palo Alto, Cupertino, Los Altos/Los Gatos and downtown Mountain View, where one has the magic combination of great schools, desirable geographic/social-stratum locale, and lots of SiVal money from firms lime Apple and Google propping up prices. On a lighter note, Florida Ream Estate numbers are similarly [and predictably, if you believe in speculative boom/bust cycles] bad, but at least the Fla. Legislature has things, um, "well in hand" as far as their priorities go: Reuters | Florida legislature moves to ban fake testicles on vehicles Quote:
And Friday would simply be incomplete without a Moron of the Week award: This week's coveted MotWee goes to real estate finance maven "Bill D of California, Maryland", who, in reader reply #1 [bottom of page] to this CNN/Money article discussing Oppenheimer Inc financial analyst [and enemy #1 of the Ponzi-scheming bankers] Meredith Whitney's skeptical take on Citigroup's latest "we have no liquidity issues" raising of cash via dilutive stock sale, proposes the following surefire scheme for solving our economic woes: Quote:
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#204 | ||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
Another great example of most of the real high-quality insightful financial analysis and reporting during the current credit crunch occurring outside the mainstream financial press: Aaron Krowne of the various Implode-o-Meter sites discusses Minsky cycles of credit expansion and Ponzi finance:
Sic Semper Tyrannis: Gleaning The Wrong Lesson From Minsky Quote:
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#205 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
In the wake of Yahoo's post-Microsoft-walks-away haircut today, 3 guesses as to who the 2nd-largest YHOO shareholder was...now predictably clamoring for a bailout, by way of share buyback-at-the-higher-recent-price.
FORTUNE Daily Briefing: Bill Miller wants Yahoo buyback Quote:
X, above current market Y, and share price does not rise accordingly, company must initiate share-buyback program in order to boost share price to X." Shows you how much I still have to learn about the stock market ... here I was thinking the relevant rule was "if you bet on a stock rising and it goes down instead, in the absence of provable malfeasance, it's tough beans for you, bucko." Also, why on earth would anyone be surprised by MSFT's deciding to walk away? They originally offered $29 per share - a full $10 above what YHOO was then trading at - and eventually agreed to the even-higher price of $33. Instead of Yahoo being thankful for that, they ask for another $4 per share, i.e. nearly double what the company was trading for before MSFT expressed interest. As one Yahoo finance poster put it: "Worth silver, offered gold, they gave the finger and demanded platinum. Greedy, retarded, and nasty. What happens next is exactly what is deserved." In all fairness to Mr. Miller, he just bought a new yacht, and all those much-needed customizations to help meake 'er seaworthy likely were quite distracting. Plus, it can take time for a landlubber - even a once-legendary-six-sigma-market-beating-one - to get his sea legs ... some never do, in fact. And too much ocean motion and dramamine can make looking at market data and stock charts difficult. Poor Bill ... my sympathies go out to him, as he now has to endure the slings and arrows of the non-six-sigma unwashed rabble. Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2008-05-06 at 16:25 |
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#206 | ||||||||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
2D7F16 Posts |
Analysts agree "Worst is yet to come":
Fannie Mae loses $2.2B in 1Q, warns of severe weakness Quote:
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Fannie Mae says improves loan quality, share value Quote:
Edit: More details on just "how Bizarro" Fannie's accounting methods are are detailed here. And speaking further of "improbable events", In Vegas and elsewhere, "HELOC Freezes Over": Countrywide Freezes nearly all HELOCs in Vegas Quote:
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And speaking of really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really "improbable events" [That's 25 "really"s, one for each alleged sigma of improbability]: GHoldman Sachs Math Whizzes Blame "Multiple 25-sigma events" for big fund losses Quote:
Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2008-05-06 at 17:38 |
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#207 |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
Did I say FNM up 4% on horrible financials and further-deterioration-ahead? How very premature of me - stock in fact was up over 10% at one point late this afternoon, before some profit taking late caused in finish up a "mere" 9%.
I can't help but be reminded of the height of the dotcom bubble in 2000-2001 - it seems the days of "fundamentals are for old fogeys - this here is a new paradigm" are back in the markets. I wonder ... if Fannie had flat-out declared "We are insolvent. All out of money. Game over. Someone turn out the lights on their way out", would their stock have tripled, or merely doubled? |
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#208 | ||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
Vallejo, CA to File For Bankruptcy
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On the silver-lining front, SUV sales are cratering: Death of the SUV Quote:
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#209 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19·613 Posts |
Interesting contrast among the headline-economic news articles today - let's have a look:
Productivity in U.S. Increases More Than Forecast; Pending Home Sales Drop: U.S. worker productivity unexpectedly accelerated in the first quarter and helped curb inflation as companies showed no loss of output with fewer employees. Note how the news about the massive glut of unsold vacant homes and further plummeting of demand and prices kinda gets buried in the latest batch of phony-baloney fuzzy-math statistics from the Ministry of Truth [by way of its affiliated agency the BLS]. This continues the trend we've been seeing for most of the year: All the real, measurable, verifiable data - even after upward-optimization by the folks at the NAR - look extremely dire. Fuzzy fudge-o-rama figures from the MoT, on the other hand [see recent articles about CPI and employment numbers and how the MoT manipulates those] continue to be "better than expected." That game appears to finally be played out, at least as far as credibility-amongst-the-masses is concerned. Next up, another bogus "surprise": Surprise jump in consumer borrowing: Fed report shows Americans' personal debt increased by $15.3 billion in March. Um, this was a "surprise" to whom, exactly? Home-as-ATM spigot almost completely choked off now, gas and food prices shooting into the stratosphere ... of course people are going to be going to their last-line-of-borrowing, their credit cards. Only a complete idiot would be "surprised" by this. Or better, only a complete idiot and, apparently, a whole legion of Wall Street "Analysts". Great article detailing the situation the big banks and other financial playahs who made big markets in dubious mortgage-based paper find themselves in: Credit Crisis Over? Not Likely Quote:
Lastly, let's contrast the above article with the stated opinion of our Moron-of-the-Week Award winner, none other than U.S. Treasury Secretary, Henry "Yammering Hank" Paulson: Paulson says credit crisis fading[quote]In an interview with The Associated Press, Paulson said that the turmoil that has gripped Wall Street and took a turn for the worse yet again in March has eased somewhat. "There's progress," he said. "I think we're closer to the end of this than the beginning."[quote] By definition, as time passes, one will inevitably be closer to the end of a given process than the beginning. Interesting hedging-of-language, though - note he doesn't actually say that we a are "close" to the end of the credit crunch, just that we are "closer". |
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