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Mortgage delinquencies and foreclosures surge

More bad news for the housing market as mortgage delinquencies and foreclosures surge to record levels of close to 15%.  This means that just about one out of every six home owners in America are in serious financial distress.

Danger! Danger!

This should be a wake up call.  There is not a recovery happening.  Jobs are not being created in large enough numbers to bring down unemployment and many people can no longer afford their homes.

The notion of solving a debt crisis with more debt will not work.  Giving the majority of the support to the bankers and big businesses in the form of corporate welfare is causing more problems than it is fixing.

Reflation nation

With all of the bailout money that’s been spent so far, what do we have to show for it?  A stock market rally alone does not signify a healthy economy.

It’s time to start looking beneath the surface here, because it’s apparent that the only groups that are benefiting from the government’s bailouts and stimulus are the very wealthy.  Meanwhile the middle class and working class are getting eviscerated by this economic crisis.

The answer

Small businesses, the most significant generator of jobs and the true engine of American growth, are largely being ignored by the government programs and tax breaks.

The only way to get back to prosperity is to engender an environment that allows entrepreneurs to start companies that create jobs and real wealth.  It’s time that America goes back to its roots!

European Union losing strength

Update: The Fed is moving in to further appease Europe’s ailing banks by restarting the US dollar currency swap program they used during the last financial crisis.

As the EU moves to establish a 750 billion Euro bailout slush fund, political opposition in Germany and the UK is growing and the problems within the EU may be getting more serious.

Hiding the truth

EU politicians claim the fund is being created to defend against the “wolf pack” of banks betting against the Euro and EU sovereign debt.  They say they will defend the Euro at “any cost”.

The reality is that Greece misrepresented its debt, hiding it with the help of Goldman Sachs.  This fraud triggered the downfall of Greece’s bonds once it was discovered.  Other EU countries are now struggling to get their house (of cards) in order.

The contagion could spread

Greece is struggling, if not failing, and with it may come a domino effect. The other “PIIGS” (Portugal, Ireland, Italy and Spain) may also begin their descent on debt woes and poor economic performance.

Even the UK is not immune to these problems as its economy is in bad shape and the debt keeps mounting.  The UK government is facing uncertainty as recent elections delivered a hung parliament, the first such event since 1974.

Germany’s Merkel has potentially exhausted all her political favors as she offered the German taxpayers’ money to Greece in the form of a debt bailout.  Her party has suffered significant losses in recent elections as a result.

Anger grows

Meanwhile, in Greece, where severe austerity measures are being forced on to a weary population, the result has been much civil unrest and violence in the streets.

There have been several deaths, property has been destroyed and no compromise has been reached to temper the rage of the population.

No end in sight

The EU is in a panicked state.  There isn’t any meaningful resolution within reach as they frantically create more debt in a naive attempt to solve a debt crisis.  When other member countries begin to falter the volatility of their bonds, stock markets and currencies may increase dramatically.

Such a significant disruption will spread beyond the EU to the US and Asia.  These headwinds are blowing strong now and could jeopardize the very fragile global economic recovery.

That is, if you believe there was a recovery in the first place.  So much for the Euro being the next world reserve currency.

Brian Williams on David Letterman



Ban high frequency trading, stop the scam

High frequency trading, or more specifically flash orders, are practice of allowing certain market participants to pay a premium for access to order data (before it is placed on exchanges) and feeding that data to computers, allowing them to front run the trades of other market participants.

In effect, it is theft by using what should be privileged information.  Most of the time institutions are targeted, but institutions often manage the retirements and pensions of Americans.

The great fabrication

We’re told by these high frequency trading companies that they’re providing liquidity to the market, enhancing price discovery and reducing slippage.  The level of naivety necessary to believe these claims is unheard of.

First of all, to provide liquidity to the market these companies would have to provide a bid and ask that are not far apart.  That is to say, if I’m buying a stock for $10.00 a share, I should expect a bid of $9.99 and an ask of $10.01.  Anything more and the slippage potential is too great.

On Black Thursday, May 6th, 2010, we saw instead that the market makers ran for the hills, even their high frequency trading computers only knew how to offer the ask.  Hence, the programs were selling anywhere they could and forcing the markets much lower.

To enhance price discovery high frequency traders would have to play fair instead of front running trades.  When they front run a trade that there’s a lot of buyers on, the way they make money is to artificially raise the price.  Instead of helping the market discover the actual value of a security, they are manipulating it for profit.

Incredible risk

Black Thursday illustrated what can happen when computers run the markets without restraint.  If high frequency trading lived up to its own hype it would have saved us from having such an event.  Instead, it helped to cause massive losses and instability in stocks and other peripheral markets.

Theft is wrong

The only way to stop this unfair activity is to make it illegal.  Anything short of a law that explicitly forbids high frequency trading will give the wiggle room that Wall Street can use to escape regulation and prosecution.

There’s no reason for a company to be able to pay for inside information on trades they can exploit to make a buck at someone else’s expense or claim to be a pillar of stability in the markets and fail completely right when we need it.

This activity is immoral and not a productive mechanism in a free market.  Instead it is an alarming moral hazard and must be stopped before it brings down the market again.

Keiser Report: Peter Schiff Interview and More


Dylan Ratigan exposes the Fed and Bankers


An open letter to states delaying tax refunds

It is not the right course of action for any governmental body to delay tax refunds to its citizens. These are payments made in good faith. If citizens overpaid they are entitled to a refund as soon as it is available, regardless of any fiscal disciplinary problem.

Many families are struggling due to the ongoing economic crisis and every single penny they can hang on to is incredibly important to their well being. I understand that many state governments are suffering from lower tax receipts, but to make your citizens suffer for a lack of foresight, bad investments or budget deficits is morally questionable at best.

We are all facing the same situation so let’s help each other come out of it stronger and leaner. It’s time to make some serious cuts and perhaps even consider raising taxes in certain areas. It may not be politically popular, but it sure is a lot more favorable than delaying the repayment of money that technically isn’t even yours.

Significant headwinds ahead for US economy

I feel we are facing significant headwinds moving forward because of the loose monetary policy of the Federal Reserve, the refusal to address the core problems in our financial system and the incredibly opaque derivatives market that has yet to be regulated or even cleared on open exchanges.

The root of the problem

To expand on the first point of loose monetary policy, from my own research I have gathered that the government has put at least $12T, possibly up to $30T worth of guarantees, backstops and other forms of insurance against the prospect of another meltdown. In addition the Federal Reserve has, in my opinion, illegally bailed out AIG through programs they are not authorized to participate in. These actions and other measures have transferred the risk of collapse from the private sector to the US government and to the Federal Reserve.

Interest rates remain below 1% in a range of 0.00% to 0.25%. Combine that with the infusion of US dollars the Federal Reserve has given to other central banks around the world and we have literally created a carry trade scenario. Not only are we repeating the mistakes of Japan, but we are going down a path where should a geopolitical event or other significant negative catalyst occur the repatriation of dollars could create a collapse across nearly every asset class.

Risk grows as stability wanes

This environment that has been created to engender a recovery is not only unsustainable, but it has created more risks than had existed beforehand:

#1 Should another market panic occur where AIG’s credit default swaps are due, the US Treasury and Federal Reserve must cough up the difference. This would lead to another series of bailouts and funneling cash to foreign and domestic banks at the tax payer’s expense on bets that never should have been made and were downright idiotic.

#2 Big banks are BIGGER now than before: JPM, BAC, WFC, USB and others are now larger and present a much more significant risk to the system should, say for example, one of their mark to make believe off balance sheet assets implode — potentially bringing down the entire world financial system, again.

#3 The stress tests were fraudulent and did not expose the off balance sheet asset liquidity vacuum these banks are suffering from. Papering over fraud never leads to a sustainable rebound.

#4 Tax receipts are down across the board – how can counties, cities, states and the Federal government hope to control deficit spending if they are not collecting as much in taxes? They can’t sell bonds forever, bringing me to my next point.

#5 Commercial real estate and corporate bonds are headed towards a potential implosion in the next few years, with major mall holders filing bankruptcy and many occupants of office and retail space vacating as they downsize. Corporations also must refinance their debtload which is ever growing while the global appetite for these bonds is diminishing.

#6 We in the United States are very seriously facing the risk of a sovereign debt default in the future. This prospect is made even more serious by continued bail outs, war spending, entitlements and other programs that are completely unsustainable with our country’s $14T debt burden.

#7 Such a sovereign debt default would lead to a currency collapse and that could engender either an environment of hyperinflation or heavy deflation — all depending on where the chips fall at the end of the day.

Inflation or deflation?

While speculators are now hedging for inflation and shorting the dollar in any way possible, there is another market we must pay close attention to. A market that significantly dwarfs the size of the commodities markets as a whole. That is the US Treasury Bond Market. Last I checked it was $33.5 trillion dollars. I find it interesting that gold is touching $1111.00 an ounce while 10 year bonds are at only 3.625% — who is wrong in this gigantic game of chicken?

Either the folks buying gold are insane to believe inflation is the bogeyman to fear or the much larger, much more influential and liquid bond market is crazy because they obviously fear deflation. Why else would a rational human being buy a bond at 3.625% that they must hold for 10 years? Such an instrument would be less than worthless in an inflationary environment.

First the principle value of the bond erodes as interest rates rise, and secondly the yield would not make up for the rate of inflation. So we are experiencing a financial conundrum right now. Either we are on the verge of a deflationary collapse or a hyperinflationary currency crisis. Which way we’re going to go has not yet been made clear to me because I feel the markets are being propped up, even manipulated.

The most dangerous bubble

Why would I pose such an idea? Let’s start with the P/E of the S&P 500 which is now well over 25 (and was at one point over 100). How can anyone feel that these stocks are reasonably valued with such an absurd P/E? Most of the decrease in P/E from over 100 to over 25 has been from companies downsizing, firing employees, hiding bad assets and not organic growth. In the current global macroeconomic environment there’s no feasible way earnings can catch up, so in my opinion we’re already in a bubble.

Bubbles of the past were not as dangerous because the US government never had such a large stake in the market. Now we’re talking about a situation where if the credit, bond, currency and/or stock markets implode, so does our sovereign debt and currency potentially.

Investing is now speculation

Investing in this environment is difficult at best. During the March panic I was a buyer in the high S&P 600s of just about any material, technology, financial and energy stock I could find, but once we got to the 900s and I saw P/Es jump beyond levels I felt were fair valuations I became a seller of my holdings. I also invested some in to silver, foreign currencies and other commodities during the March lows, but also have since taken a lot of those profits off the table.

We are in a very risky area for people to be entering the market. I don’t feel these lofty levels are sustainable nor do I think the valuations are rational. I don’t know when the rally will end, but I do know that any parabolic move usually ends very badly and any time there has been a carry trade in the history of money it has ended painfully for all the speculators who did not exit in time.

Another collapse coming?

In closing I will say that before Rome’s collapse the government was shaving gold and silver coins down to create more currency. They also had a severe debt crisis. The shaving and continued spending led to awful inflation that eventually catalyzed the empire’s downfall.

History is being made every day and the decisions are going to shape the face of America’s future. It is imperative that we start to take our medicine (meaning we must face the financial problems instead of ignoring them) and deal with the overwhelming burden of debt before it swallows up everything left.

Why are banks buying oil if they are not lending?

I would like to pose an important societal question to any banker that is willing to answer it:

Why are bankers increasingly hesitant to lend, even drawing back lines of credit, yet at the same time allocating a lot of funds in to commodities, especially oil?

Isn’t it true that oil and consumer consumption are closely correlated?

Are they seeing something that I am not or is this a bit of a logical paradox?  How can the banks create the growth they need for their trade (or investment) to be profitable if they refuse to lend to those that would spend it on consumables?

There has to be more than just dollar weakness factored in to this equation.

Credit problems linger in financial markets

There are no shortage of credit problems to navigate through with mortgages (both subprime and now prime), credit cards and commercial lending, potentially indicative of a deflationary credit squeeze for the everyday person who will no longer be able to borrow to buy everything based off their future earnings or assets.  This contraction could also have very negative effects on small business growth and hiring, too.

It’s because consumers and small businesses account for the majority of the US economy that I think we are wise maintain a defensive posture as most of the multi-month rally’s asset allocation haven’t taken this matter in to focus yet.  I believe we are well out of bounds of realistic equity valuations and the dollar is being sacrificed by the printing press of the Federal Reserve, Treasury and Congress to temporarily support financial markets.

Once this liquidity flood induced euphoria wears off there will be severe consequences to the US currency, bond and equity markets that most investors don’t seem to be aware of or have not positioned themselves for.

Sources:

http://market-ticker.denninger.net/uploads/KeyCharts/Credit-y-o-y-large.png

http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/g19/Current/

http://econompicdata.blogspot.com/2009/09/consumer-credit-freefall.html

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/troubles-shift-to-prime-borrowers-wsj-2009-09-04

http://www.boston.com/realestate/news/blogs/renow/2009/09/mortgage_market.html

http://www.reuters.com/article/rbssFinancialServicesAndRealEstateNews/idUSN0829660420090909

http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSTRE58752720090908