Member Login

Login
No account yet? Register

The Market Ticker

  • The Market Ticker - It's 2008 Again

    The cheering is all over the media this morning, especially CNBC.

    The charts?  They look stellar, especially the Nasdaq.

    Straight up and accelerating.

    But beware.  The internals belie the truth -- this is a rally that is happening on increasingly-narrow participation.  In this case, all Apple, all the time.

    But Apple will fail.  They always do when they take these positions of leadership.  It is simply a matter of when, not if.  The current "golden boy" will make a mistake, and when it does that monstrous percentage will cut on the downside just as it boosts on the upside.

    It is not often that one gets this sort of rotational warning in such a clear form, but you're getting it now.  The same thing is true in the DOW, with IBM being the power mover there.

    Beware folks.  Be very, very careful.

    There's a decent shot that this move has more legs in it, just as it did in late 2007 and before that, in late 1999 and early 2000.

    But there's a very high correlation between these sorts of rotational moves, which have shown up before both major tops in the last 20 years, and that event down the road.

    This is not a crash call and it is certainly is not a call to "short everything" today.  But it is a caution that when coupled with the fiscal situation here, in Europe and in Japan, that the "strong market" meme that has taken over is in fact, on the internals, becoming too extended and is now narrowing down, which makes it increasingly dangerous to continue to dance.

  • The Market Ticker - Ah, A Bit Of Honesty From The WSJ

    Now we get a bit of honesty here....

    Critics are missing the larger point. Why should the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) decree that any of us must pay for "insurance" that covers contraceptives?

    I put "insurance" in quotes for a reason. Insurance is supposed to mean a contract, by which a company pays for large, unanticipated expenses in return for a premium: expenses like your house burning down, your car getting stolen or a big medical bill.

    Right. Insurance is a negative-sum game.  That is, on balance everyone who buys it must lose when everyone adds up their expenses, since nothing is free and the company that aggregates and doles this out must get paid somehow.

    Therefore it is not insurance when you are buying "insurance" on something that everyone, or close to everyone, will actually use. 

    Insurance is the purchase of a contract that pays off when you have an unlikely event that would otherwise be catastrophically expensive.  By spreading this risk of unlikely but catastrophic outcome while everyone must mathematically lose when all the costs and benefits are added up, the cost becomes palatable to people in general.  This is why homeowners insurance is reasonable in cost -- it's unlikely that you'll have a fire, but if you do the loss would bankrupt you absent the insurance. You thus voluntarily buy the insurance to protect against the risk, unless of course you have a shack, in which case you don't care (and don't buy.)

    But when it comes to "Social Insurance" (Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security) these are not insurance programs, in the main.  Nor is the "HMO/PPO" nonsense with coverage of routine expenses.  And it is those routine expenses that have gone through the roof in cost, along with prescription drugs and devices at the same time "catastrophic" events have skyrocketed.

    Nobody denies that things like heart stents and "miracle" drugs are expensive to develop.  But the benefit -- and cost -- of those things can be borne by actual insurance, with individual people choosing to have or not have that coverage. 

    Routine medical care, on the other hand, along with chronic conditions are another matter.  Those are things that are utterly predictable.  We all get old.  We all go to the doctor more often as we get old.  It is as routine as, well, getting old.

    Likewise with birth control.  If you're of fertile age as a woman or a man involved with such a woman then you have this concern in one form or another.  You either both want an unlimited-size family or you do not.  If you do not, and most people do not, then this is an utterly predictable expense.

    As for those who say that this sort of thing is "expensive", no it's not.  Not any more than your iPhone is.  If you can afford the cellphone you can afford the birth control.  Is sex more important to you than your toy piece of technology?

    It's not about "access" and it's not about "insurance." It's because Americans, when paying even modest co-payments, choose to spend their money on other things. They prefer a new iPod to a "wellness visit" to the doctor. As the HHS unwittingly admits: "Often because of cost, Americans used preventive services at about half the recommended rate."

    Yep.  And Americans prefer this because they do not have to bear the cost of this decision.

    That is, Americans are free to spend the money on an iPod rather than a "wellness visit" to the doctor because if they make this choice and then get severely ill they can force everyone else to cover the otherwise-avoidable expense they would not have taken on if they eschewed the iPod and went to the doc!

    This is where the problem lies and until we admit it and deal with it there is no resolution to our budget mess that is possible.  The simple fact of the matter is that we do not have the ability to pay for that which we've promised to people.  This has resulted in what look like "excellent profits" in various businesses (like Apple) that are factually false as these "sales" are in fact shifted to federal borrowing -- a death spiral that will detonate in our face.

    This game must end.  In reality this "debate" about birth control in Obamacare is not about birth control at all.  It is about the Church and the professional left and right creating entitlement programs that serve as nothing more than a cost-shift they cannot fund, then claiming that we "cannot stifle" an alleged but false economic recovery!  This an outright fraud by both the Church and everyone else involved in it, both government and private sector.  So long as the Church was able to make someone else -- anyone else, including their congregation -- eat the cost of their frauds they were perfectly happy with it.  In fact they reveled in it as the Church's historical role in helping the poor through voluntary donations was able to be sloughed off to the taxpayer!  The bleating now, just like that of the doctors, drug companies and hospitals, is all a function of the truth being shoved in their face -- their cost-shifting game has backfired and they are now forced to deal with not only the financial but moral costs of the policies they actively promoted.

    There is no recovery folks and there can't be until truth is faced.  The Federal Government is creating the illusion of economic demand that does not exist and has been for more than a decade.  The truth of this is becoming more and more evident as each day goes on and our standard of living is continually eroded as each pillar of debt dependency is exposed for what it is -- a pyramid scheme and thus an outright scam.

    You're free to buy into this if you want and to believe in the "faux outrage" of the Catholic Bishops, but that's what it is -- faux outrage. These same people were more than happy to shove you into the hole so the government could take by taxation that which they believed you "should" give as nothing more than a throwback to former Church policy when the Church had the force of law behind it.  By making such arguments and endorsements from the pulpit, something that the Pope just did recently with his claim that "redistribution" is "appropriate", the Church has in fact endorsed Ponzi spending that is no more correct than was the Church's insistence that Earth was the center of the universe.

    There are many "churches" that are involved in this scheme and scam and most of them do not have crosses over their altars.  That there is an intersection between the political left, right and various faith-based groups is no surprise -- none of them are willing to abide our Constitution or the math.

    The fact of the matter is that fully 61% of Federal Spending (FY 2012) is for blatantly unconstitutional things.  Universal retirement and indigent health care (Medicare and Medicaid), Title I (public education), universal retirement income (Social Security) and universal money and goods assistance to indigent people (welfare in all forms, AFDC, Section 8, etc) are all without foundation in the Constitution of the United States at a federal level.  The growth of these programs was utterly predictable -- with federal medical spending growing from $53 billion in 1980 to over $800 billion last year, a compound growth rate of just over 9%, it is clear that mathematically Medicare and Medicaid alone will eclipse the entire Federal Budget within the next 20 years.  This will bankrupt our nation with certainty unless we stop being stupid. 

    The bad news is that when we stop the economic contraction that will inevitably ripple through the economy is going to be massive and the magnitude of that contraction grows with every day we continue to pretend instead of "eating our peas."  This economic adjustment, which I estimate was 10% of GDP in 2000, grew to 20% by 2007 and today is approaching double that amount!  If we don't accept the truth soon collapse will become inevitable.

    While you can ignore the Constitution, seemingly without consequence in this country, you cannot ignore math.  Compound functions just are, and the consequence of refusing to deal with them is utterly predictable and in fact certain.

    We must stop this now and if there was any sort of honest outrage from these institutions, including the Church, their outrage would be directed at the fact that the majority of what our Federal Government does today is in fact blatantly unconstitutional and thus without justification under The Constitution of the United States.

    The very same Constitution that, when it's convenience for them, they bitch about being violated.

    The difference between rape and sex is consent. As such I'll be interested in the Church's complaints about contraception when -- and only when -- they stop telling me that being horse-raped on a daily basis by my government is in fact consensual sexual intercourse.

  • The Market Ticker - Claims: 358k, Good News?

    Interesting report....

    In the week ending February 4, the advance figure for   seasonally adjusted initial claims was 358,000, a decrease of 15,000   from the previous week's revised figure of 373,000. The 4-week moving average   was 366,250, a decrease of 11,000 from the previous week's revised average of   377,250.

    What's the raw number look like?

    The advance number of actual   initial claims under state programs, unadjusted, totaled 397,810 in the week   ending February 4, a decrease of 24,477 from the previous week. There were 440,706   initial claims in the comparable week in 2011.

    Ok, that looks fairly decent.

    But what I want to look at is the big table, as that's the "big deal", although we're (of course) a couple of weeks behind.  And here we see that the numbers are basically flat, with a +7982 figure at the bottom; drops in initial and EUC benefits were offset by more extended benefits.

    The only caution on this report is that if there's more long-term unemployment (but the rate itself is stable) that's not positive.  It's not as negative as adding more unemployed would be, but long-term unemployment is far more damaging from a budgetary perspective than those who lose their job but find a new one in a reasonably-rapid timeframe.

  • The Market Ticker - How We're F*ed -- In Raw Numbers

    Worth watching.... and thinking about.  But do so soon, because if we don't the system will collapse, and then there will be no benefits at all.

    Bill puts into graphs in a couple of minutes what I've been writing about for the last five years.  Your choice is to either act on it or go to the store, right now, and buy all the vasoline you can find -- because if you don't act you're going to need it.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u24nH03NccI&feature=player_embedded#!

  • The Market Ticker - Fraudclosure -- You Have Been Sold Out

    And people wonder why there are more and more folks who are saying (or should say) "fuck it", throw their hands in the air, make no investment in capital formation and just walk off?

    A multistate settlement with five large U.S. banks over foreclosure practices would include as much as $17 billion in mortgage debt forgiveness and loan modifications and take three years to complete, according to a letter describing the deal.

    The draft letter to stakeholders from state attorneys general outlines an agreement among large mortgage servicers, states and the Department of Justice, which are continuing talks to finalize the proposal.

    Perjury is, in most states, a felony.  Uttering (forgery) is also, in most cases, a felony.

    But now it is being reported that both NY and California have caved -- making a "deal" all but inevitable.

    And you, dear reader, are going to (again) take it in the ass.

    What do you think the banks held over these folks?  Might it have been their state bond financings?  Oh, probably.  Property rights and a property registration system that literally pre-dates the Revolution?  No problem, we'll give it all to you, Sir Greedy Bastard, so long as you keep presenting your bare member for us to perform an obscene act upon.

    Then we will tell our constituents that we "got the best deal possible" and that "we couldn't have prosecuted."

    In point of fact what the states had to do was stop the ridiculous overspending and tell the banksters to pound sand.  But they didn't because you insisted they keep making promises to you they couldn't keep, and so once again the so-called "elected" turn out to be a bad joke.  Representation of the people, by the people and for the people falls again to those who do whatever the hell they want, law be damned.

    There is no law any more folks.  Not when it really matters -- when systemic and rampant violations are committed by big business and your fundamental liberty interests are ignored.

    We, the people of this nation, deserve this.  We vote for Attorneys General in 43 states and in all but two of the others they're appointed by the governor (and we vote for the governor.)

    So get out of your chair this evening, my friends, and go stand in front of the mirror to identify the problem.  Then decide for yourself whether you're going to keep consenting, because up until now, you have and this crap will not stop until you decide you've had enough and insist that the law that applies to you is also applied equally to these institutions and their executives.

Home arrow News arrow Money and Finance arrow Time Is Up Congress - And America
Time Is Up Congress - And America PDF Print E-mail
Posted by RussianDE Admin   
Karl Denninger: I must caution everyone - if you are not prepared for six months to two years of unemployment, you need to be.  If you are dependent on credit to survive (that is, if you couldn't make it without your credit cards) you need to fix that now.

Like today now.

Several times I have said "raise cash, get out of debt, be prepared."

I must reiterate this advice and emphasize it, as we may see a bond market dislocation and concurrent stock market crash at any time, without warning.  It could be as early as today, in fact.

No, what happened the last three days isn't a crash, although it has now hit my full "bear market" target - 1070 - and in fact exceeded it.

Unfortunately what happened the last three days forces me to reset that target to the 2003 lows, and perhaps as low as four hundred on the S&P 500, 4000 on the DOW.

Needless to say if that happens it will be on the back of an economic catastrophe of a scale similar to the 1930s.

Bernanke's latest load of crap with an "SIV" for commercial paper is just another example of "more of the same" stupidity. 

Bernanke and Paulson need to be indicted and jailed for criminal negligence (at best) and put in the stocks where the people can serve up some rotten tomatoes.

This evening we were "treated" to both political candidates shooting their mouths off on matters economic, but saying nothing of substance.  Neither candidate was willing to admit the truth - that this "bailout" hadn't worked, that in fact the market had crashed by 15% since it was voted on, and that there is a zero chance of it having any positive impact on one American household.

But no, not even the "moderator" was willing to ask those tough questions, nor was anyone present.

These "debates" are a sham, a fraud and a gigantic waste of time.

Never mind that McCain embarrassed himself by claiming to be a "maverick" and "against pork", when he had just gotten done voting for over $150 billion of it in the Bailout Bill - pork that was not present in the original house version.

Was that claim of being "against pork" good for a "no" vote?  Nope.  He voted yes, as did Obama.

To those who dismissed the six petitions (you can go over to http://supportedthebailout.org and see the old ones) over the last year, how do you feel about it now?

To those who said that "subprime was contained", how contained is it now?

To those who said that deterioration in consumer credit wasn't going to be a big deal, would you like to revisit that belief?

To those who said that "the nation would not have a recession", do you have any regrets, apologies, or perhaps an outright retraction?

To those who told people to buy buy buy all the way down, how do you feel now that they've lost 30% of their money?

To those politicians from both parties who voted for the ESSA on the claim that it would "stabilize markets", can you show me where it has been, in fact, stabilized?  If this is "stable" I'm somewhat curious as to your definition of "unstable".

There is chatter circulating, apparently, that "global equity markets will be closed after the emergency G7 meeting this weekend."  That ought to induce confidence - just ask the Russians or Indonesians, both of whom have tried this and it has resulted in an instantaneous crash when they reopened (the Indonesian market was just closed AGAIN this evening, after literally imploding - down by more than 10% - within an hour of starting to trade.)

This is no longer a US problem, but the United States continues to refuse to lead.  We continue to "trust" the idiot savants Bernanke and Paulson, both of whom have sung the same song since this crisis began more than a year ago, have been wrong 100% of the time, and yet have found an ear in Congress repeatedly willing to listen to and follow their insanity.

By allowing this action and indeed following the advice of these two each and every one of the 535 members of that body has taken unto themselves the responsibility for the calamity that now faces American investors and the public, as our economic system literally "folds back" and consumes itself.  Americans will not be able to retire and have no economic security, and now are losing their jobs in increasing numbers.  This will continue.

For more than a year I have tried to get the attention of Congress with petitions, phone calls and faxes.  I have been ignored, as have others who have been consistently right in our expectations and beliefs, including "Mish" Shedlock, Nouriel Roubini, Charles Hugh Smith and others.  Over 200 degreed economists urged that the "Bailout Bill" not be passed as submitted, including two Nobel Lauretes; all were ignored.

The people of this nation have sat on their hands and watched American Idol, now turning into the NFL, while lapping up the slop from Paulson, Bernanke and Bush about how the "economy is fundamentally strong", instead of showing up in Washington DC to protest or flooding the fax and phone lines demanding that Congress act to reign in the fraudsters.

Let me know how "fundamentally strong" the economy is when you're walking the unemployment line and waiting for your turn at the soup kitchen for something to eat.

Entitlements?  Forget 'em.  They're gone.  Social Security?  Medicare?  Done.  Not today, but in the not-distant future.  China, having gotten its money from the $700 billion "bailout", will ditch our Treasuries and refuse to buy more, as they will no more need to sterilize export dollars as our economy collapses.  We in turn will be left to twist. 

We deserve it, because we could have (but didn't) stand up to their demands that we cover a private dispute instead of handing over $700 billion we don't have.  When (not if) the foreign flow of funds inward disappears due to the lack of need for these nations to recycle dollars, we will suddenly find that we have a nearly $800 billion a year hole in our federal budget - a hole that can only be filled by chopping Social Security, Medicare and the Military.  Congratulations Congress (and America in general); you didn't really think you'd get away with that, did you?

George W. Bush will go down in history as the President who held the office while we drove our nation's financial system off the cliff, laughing all the while about flipping houses.  And despite his protests to the contrary, the history books will record that it was his administration that removed the 12:1 leverage limits, sued New York to prevent them from clamping down on predatory lending, and willfully stuck its head in the sand while Bear Stearns prepared to blow up, never mind ignoring the problem after Bear detonated in February.

Henry Paulson will go down in history as the Treasury Secretary who sold out our nation to the Chinese and London Bankers, then fled the country with $500 million he "earned" creating and selling the very credit instruments that later blew up and sunk the nation.

The members of the House Financial Services Committee, the Senate Banking Committee and the Joint Economic Committee will each have special places reserved in the history books for refusing to deal with Ben Bernanke's raw power grab after Bear Stearns, an act that will ultimately be judged to be the single most important element of the crisis, as it forever put the market in a mood to expect "rule changes" at any time, precipitously damaging trust and liquidity.

The "no short" rule will ultimately be cited as the reason that the market crashed, being that there were no shorts to cover and thus hundreds of stocks, on that fateful day, went "no bid" and had their prices collapse to zero - all at once.

Oil will collapse in price to $20/bbl.  Unfortunately nobody will have any money to buy gasoline, or a car, so it won't matter.  As in The Depression millions of automobiles will be scrapped after being abandoned by their owners for lack of insurance and registration fee money.  Cheap scooters will become the dominant form of transportation for those with jobs, as they will be all most people can afford.

As credit collapses distribution of food and other essentials will break down.  Unable to access credit, trucking companies will be unable to get goods to market.  The current distribution system for food requires travel of over 500 miles from production to consumption; this is untenable in a market where stable credit is unavailable.  Food distribution will be severely impacted and in some areas may break down below critical levels.

Unemployment will reach 25% within two years.  Median income will fall by 30% nationally.  Foreclosures will reach 20 million homes.  The government will step in with HOLC-style remediation but it won't matter - the unemployed won't be able to pay irrespective of the price.

House prices will fall to well under $100,000 nationally on a median basis but with lending all but non-existent you'll need 50% down.  A few people will make out like bandits near the bottom, being able to buy up homes for $10,000 each in blocks of 10 at a time - for cash.  60% of America will be renters; nearly half of all homeowners will ultimately lose their homes to foreclosure.

Civil unrest will break out in major cities when incomes fall but the cost of food and essential services fail to come down materially, leaving millions of Americans hungry, broke and homeless.  Unlike in the 1930s America will not quietly stand in soup lines - instead they will riot, loot and burn.  The National Guard will be called up but will find it impossible to exert meaningful control without shutting down all commerce in the affected areas. The decision will be made to cordon off the cities and deny entry to anyone who does not live in that specific neighborhood, essentially shutting down commercial activity.  GDP will fall by 30%.

The S&P 500 will fall to 150 and flatline, a 90% loss.  CNBC and Bloomberg will cease broadcasting.  Volume will fall to 10% of former levels.

Bleak outlook? 

Yep.

Quite possible?

Yep.

Can it be stopped?

Yes, but not for much longer. 

The markets are perilously close to a tipping point where they will collapse, after which all of the above will come to pass, and Congressional action (or inaction) will be irrelevant. 

Congress will then have to face the people, as will President Bush and his Cabinet, and may God have mercy on our Republican form of government, because history shows that when government mismanages things to this degree and refuses to respond to the will of the people, a "messiah" generally appears with a "solution" - but there will be "compromises."

Like your freedom.

To fix the problem trust must be restored.  To restore trust you must stop the lying, expose the liars, prosecute and jail them all, and stop changing the rules in the middle of the game. 

This must happen now.  Today.  Immediately.  Not tomorrow, not next week, not after a series of hearings.

Right now.

Market participants must be able to know that when they engage in a transaction it will be transparent, handled fairly, and their rights will be protected.

Our politicians must stop demanding the impossible - that home prices "levitate."  House prices cannot be maintained at more than 3x incomes - it simply can't be done.  We must encourage home prices to contract to sustainable, affordable levels quickly and efficiently.

Mortgages must return to 30 year fixed notes, 20% down, no more than 36% DTI.  No government-linked paper in any GSE may issue outside these guidelines.  We must reliquify the mortgage market, and this is the only way to do it - by writing only sustainable mortgages.

Strong consumer protection laws must be written that bar negative balance auto and home loans.  The practice of "rolling over" an old car loan into a new one, producing an instant 20% or more deficiency against the vehicles value, must end.

Usury laws must be re-imposed, limiting credit card and other consumer loan interest to no more than a reasonable spread over funding costs.  Yes, this will limit credit to less-worthy borrowers.  So be it.  Unbridled credit got us here, and we must prevent it from happening again.

The excess, unsustainable debt in the system must be defaulted.  Whether held by corporations or individuals, it must be purged from the system.  Those firms and individuals that are bankrupt must be so declared and their assets liquidated, so they can start over and the market can clear.

People will say that what I ask is unreasonable, unable to be achieved, or "needs study."

You're free to study all you want, but if these actions are not taken immediately, right now, today, the above forecast will come to fruition. 

You are seeing the global credit markets unravel in front of your eyes, and it is happening precisely because the fraud, avarice and outright theft has gone unpunished and left in place to siphon off wealth from the average American for more than 20 years, and our President, in that environment, went on national television and threatened the world with a global Depression unless his Treasury Secretary got a $700 billion blank check.

The markets, correctly perceiving there was a problem, did exactly what they did when this same gambit was run during the Fannie and Freddie debacle - they called the bluff.

The check is now on the table and we have but two choices - either pay it or suffer the consequences.

Source: denninger.net

 
< Prev   Next >
Advertisement