Tagesarchiv für den 25.08.2009

Molecool

Toppy Tuesday Wrap Up

No, I’m not saying that today was the very top - but we’re getting close and what I’m seeing is a ‘topping pattern’.

Please note what I coined to be the ‘mother of all divergences’ on the PZI (left side). After today’s early morning irrational exuberance everyone who’s anyone seemed to have unwound their long positions. The air is getting mighty thin up here and I’m glad having exposed myself to the red side by now.

Aaah - the force is strong in this one….

Program Trading Update:

evil.rat/ES: +0.25
resident.evil/ES: +1.25
resident.evil/NQ: +1.5
geronimo/ES: -4 (three trades: one good one, one stopped out but we exited subs early, one that ran out of time).

That’s all I got for today - the wave count scenarios have not changed:

Seems to me that the diagonal support line would have to be breached in order to catalyze either green or orange before the week is over. Remember that we’ve got another POMO tomorrow - should give the bulltards more ammunition for blue. Just keep stacking those winter puts…

Quote Of The Day:

The true test of the Fed is the market.“– Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner

Translation:

The desired end justifies the means.

Urban Dictionary Translation:

It’s hard out there for a pimp…

1:10am EDT: Seems some noobs are doubting my March option magic. Let’s just use thinkback to review the 2008 precedent I keep referring to as a prior example:

Click this image to enlarge. BTW - this is no option simulation - this is based on historic data. Why don’t you guys chew on this for a while - I’m going to bed now.

See you rats tomorrow.

Cheers,

Mole


That's at least what their collective S&P 500 price target shows. At the start of the year, the average year-end S&P 500 price target was 1,049.9, which converted into a gain of 16.2%. After lowering their estimates as the market tanked and then upping them when the market turned around, the consensus year-end target currently sits at 1,022, which is...


Obama's reappointment of Fed chairman Ben Bernanke was supposed to be a pleasant surprise for the markets today

Wall St barely blinked after the announcement. This was a surprise IMO because Bernanke has been hailed as the "saviour" of the financial system according to the financial pundits.

Ben has also consistently backed the bankers almost everytime as the Fed continues to scramble to keep the financial system in one piece.

Does anyone else find this muted response to Ben's second term strange?

Why didn't we see a 300 point up day as Wall St cheered the reappointment of their fearless leader? The market recently has done nothing but move higher on any word of a new "green shoot". Yet, this shoot was almost completely ignored.

The silence was defeaning in response to the Bernanke reappointment as far as I am concerned. The DOW closed up only 30 points today despite seeing better housing and consumer confidence #'s.

The Iranian people were more joyeous over the announcement of Ahmadinejad's second term versus Bernanke's second term announcement!(scarcasm off)

Is America Ready For a Change?

You gotta ask yourself this after seeing the muted reaction in the markets today after the Bernanke announcement.

I believe the smartest people on the street are not very confident in Bernanke. You need to ignore what the wizards of Wall St said on CNBC in reaction to the news. Wall St is in total spin mode right now because knows that they must restore confidence in order to turn the economy around

Behind closed doors however, Wall St looks at where we are conomically and wonders if this was the right move. I believe that Wall St is petrified at what they see when they look at the real economic numbers. The economy continues to sink despite the largest stimulus package in history.

The Fed has dropped money out of helicopters for 2 years only to see the economy continue to fall apart.

The Freddie news today regarding its mortgage portfolio was a perfect example:

"Freddie Report:
Mortgage Fundamentals Still DeterioratingLast update:
8/25/2009 9:51:19 AM
By Andrew Edwards
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Mortgage financing giant Freddie Mac's (FRE) monthly report showed that whatever improvements there have been in credit markets underlying fundamentals are still declining.

Delinquencies on Freddie's portfolio nearly tripled to 2.95% in July from 1% a year earlier. Freddie holds a portfolio of $2.23 trillion in mortgages and is restricted to buying mortgages from the strongest borrowers. Delinquencies edged up slightly from 2.78% in June.

"July delinquencies showed no improvement whatsoever, and what incremental movement there was, the figures showed accelerating credit weakness," said Jim Vogel of FTN Financial.

The report also showed that Freddie is unwinding its portfolio of mortgage-related investments faster than had been expected by market observers."

My Take:

Folks, if trends like this continue there will be no recovery. Delinquencies have TRIPLED from a year ago. Recovery? Where?

The supposedly "bullish" housing data that was released today via Case/Shiller really doesn't mean anything because we don't know all the facts.

The massive shadow inventories combined with various foreclosure moratoriums make it extremely difficult to guage how large the housing inventories really are.

I am also hearing more and more stories of families that have simply stopped paying their mortgage(for 2 years or more). The banks have reacted by doing nothing. The banks figure its better to have someone in there taking care of the place then it is to foreclose on it, be resposible for upkeep, and then be forced to take the loss on their books.

God only knows how many squatters there are right now that find themselves in this situation.

It's going to take years to figure out the real story here. I would be in no ruch to buy until the banks puke up the real losses. I am sure its much worse then we are led to believe.

The Bottom Line

Wall St's support of Bernanke is mild at best. They all know he was part of the Greenspan mess that created this nightmare in the first place.

Bernanke's reactions to the financial crisis are unprecedented, and even the smartest guys in the room don't really know how this is all going to play out.

The Fed has basically orchestrated one gigantic fiscal experiment that's created a lot of uncertianty in the markets, and uncertianty is the one thing that Wall St hates most.
by Bruce Webb

I ask people to examine the following labels and concepts:
Arbitrary Executive
Permanent Majority
Homeland Security
New American Century

Did any of these labels or the concepts behind them come from the Left? Well no and we could easily assign names to people associated with each, for example we could name in the same order Addington/Yoo, Norquist/Rove, Bush, Cheney/Rumsfeld. Each man or pair of men openly and publicly associated themselves with one or more or generally all of these concepts.

Lets add some more terms:
American Exceptionalism
Christian Nation
Traditional Family

Are these in origin from the Left? Are there very many American Conservatives out there that wouldn't endorse all three concepts? I think not.

If we examined only post-war history what country would (with its own changes on the tune) this combination best resemble? If you said 'Spain under Franco' you would have a winner. To which some would add 'Chile under Pinochet'. There is a word for regimes that combine their version of all seven concepts. A word that by convention we cannot use because it is attached to a great deal of other historical baggage. Which doesn't make it less historically correct.

Conservatism has always been wary of democracy, in fact 19th century conservatism in Britain and the United States was in large part by a determined effort to control democracy by retaining strict control over the franchise to vote. This effort went hand in hand with an attempt to retain control over the acceptable shape of the family and especially over the sexual conduct of family members.

While Conservatives by and large are fully aware of what they see as the dangers of too much license in speech, conduct and their expressions in things like art and music, they seem less aware of the dangers of slipping back into something that resembles Franco's Spain. If it helps to reduce the temperature we can simply say that from the Left Bush/Cheneyism could not easily be distinguished from Falangism. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falange)
Paul Hickey

Oil Down, Stocks Up

Given the strong positive correlation between oil and equities, one would expect the S&P 500 to be considerably weaker today on the heels of oil's 3.5% decline. As it stands now, however, the S&P 500 remains modestly higher. So is today's action a sign that the positive linkage between the two assets is diminishing? We wouldn't be too quick to...


Brett Steenbarger, Ph.D.

Tracking Intermarket Themes With Barchart.com



Here's a nice, quick way to track intermarket themes; major props to the excellent Barchart site for these futures market heat maps. Above is the heat map for 12:50 PM CT and then the map from an hour later. The map shows how major asset classes are moving relative to one another; by tracking the map over time, you can see which groups are receiving buying and selling interest.

Note how stocks are range bound today and how we see very little in the way of directional intermarket themes on the day. Oil is down, stocks retraced earlier strength, the dollar and interest rates are little changed, and--overall--there's not much volatility to the numbers. This is one excellent tell for a range day: if correlated markets aren't trending, stocks often won't find distinctive buying or selling interest.
.
Molecool

It’s Getting Messy

2:10pm EDT: Quite frankly I have no clue as to which scenario is going to unfold here today:

Participation is extremely thin - which in the past few months was a harbinger of more upside. So, I’ll just stay put here (literally) and add more of that Dec/Jan/Mar goodness as we probably bust higher. Really would love to see 1045 at least - come on bulltards, you can do it!

Remember that we’ve got another POMO tomorrow - so, the fat lady hasn’t sung yet by any measure. As much as my puts would enjoy a nasty drop it’s still a bit early. At the danger of sounding like a broken record - don’t worry about the intra-day gyrations - focus on the long term, rats!

Public Service Announcement: I am going to be heading out to San Diego again on Thurday afternoon and won’t return until Sunday night. Thus, except for the occasional comment cleaner there won’t be any posts between Thursday noon and Monday morning. I am not sure if Fujisan will have returned from Japan by then - if so, she might put up a chart or two every once in a while.

I will be checking my email once/twice a day - so if you are a subscriber and have any problems feel free to send me an email to [admin at evilspeculator dot com].


Im Juni 2009 steigen die US-Immobilienpreise in den USA den zweiten Monat in Folge leicht an. Allerdings belegen auch die heutigen Daten zum S&P/Case-Shiller Häuserpreisindex, dass von einem Ende der Immobilienkrise keine Rede sein kann und die USA sich immer noch durch rezessive Gewässer steuert.

Der 10 Metropolen-Index stieg um +1,4% zum Vormonat und fiel nur noch um -15,1% im Vergleich zum Vorjahresmonat! Der 20 Metropolen-Index stieg um +1,39% zum Vormonat und sank um -15,4%!

> Im Chart die prozentuale Veränderung der Häuserpreise in den Metropolen, im Vergleich zum Vorjahresmonat. Der Rekordeinbruch wurde im Januar 2009 mit -19,4% beim 10-City Composite und beim 20-City Composite mit -19% markiert! Was sich in diesem Chart als kleine Erholung prozentual im Vergleich zum Vorjahresmonat darstellt, geht aber weitgehend auf den niedrigeren statistischen Basiseffekt im Vorjahresmonat zurück. Quelle Chart: PDF Standardandpoors.com <

> Die Indizes steigen nun beim 10- wie auch beim 20 City Composite den 2. Monat in Folge leicht an, sind aber noch in der Nähe ihrer Tiefs! Eine erwähnenswerte Erholung sieht anders aus! Im Juni 2009 bewegt sich der 10-Metropolen-Index mit 153,2 Punkten immer noch um -32,3% unter dem Hoch von Juni 2006 mit 226,29 Punkten! Beim 20-Metropolen-Index beträgt das Minus seit dem Hoch im Juli 2006 noch 31,3%! <

Um zu verdeutlichen wie brutal die Immobilienpreise eingebrochen sind, hier noch der Vergleich zwischen Juni 2009 zu den Hochs der am schlimmsten betroffenen Metropolen. Die Immobilienpreise im Großraum Las Vegas fielen seit dem Hoch im August 2006 um unglaubliche -54,29%! Phoenix folgt mit -53,94% seit Juni 2006, dann Miami mit -48,24% seit Juni 2009 und gleich danach folgt Detroit mit -45,14% seit Januar 2006! Quelle Daten: XLS Standardandpoors.com

Nach solchen gigantischen Einbrüchen bei den Immobilienpreisen ist selbst eine kräftigere Erholung - nur resultierend aus einer technischen Erholung normal.

Die Immobilienpreise sind aber weiter schwach genug um negative Signale auf das Konsumverhalten der hochverschuldeten privaten Haushalte zu senden. Eine zusätzliche Beleihung von bestehendem Wohneigentum aus einem Wertzuwachs heraus, Mortgage Equity Withdrawal (MEW), ist bei diesen Immobilienpreisen weiter ausgeschlossen!

Während die Immobilienpreise nun wieder auf dem Level von August 2003 stehen, sind aber seit Mitte 2003 rund 4 Billionen Dollar an neuem ausstehenden Volumen bei den Hypothekendarlehen generiert worden!

Die Immobilienvermögen verdampften - während die Hypothekenschulden in den letzten Jahren immer neue Höhen erklommen und nun weiter in der Nähe der Rekordhöhe verharren! Die Realität am US-Immobilienmarkt sieht weiter düster aus! Der positive Vermögenseffekt als Antriebskraft für den privaten Konsum hat sich nachhaltig in Luft aufgelöst!

Querschuesse-Forum


Kontakt: info.querschuss@yahoo.de

Rebecca Wilder

Trends in home values: becoming murky

by Rebecca Wilder

Actually, murky is something of a good thing when referring to business cycle dynamics. It usually means that a bottom is forming.

In some sense, the key to recovery is the stabilization of home values. If home values would just “stop” declining – I understand that there is a market mechanism going on here that is pushing home values to (or even below) an equilibrium – then the banking system can get on with its solvency issues. (Naked Capitalism has a nice piece today on banks not foreclosing in order to avoid further writedowns.) Let’s see what’s going on in the US from the perspective of several indicators.

The S&P/Case-Shiller and the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) reported their quarterly house price indexes today. Interestingly enough, the two (Q2 2009)reports diverge.

The S&P/Case-Shiller marked a quarterly gain of about 1.4%, while the FHFA reported a quarterly loss of about 0.7%. Is this the start of an interesting story on the downside? On the upside, the Case-Shiller index showed a much larger bubble in home values relative to imputed rents. Will the FHFA show a deeper trough than the Case-Shiller?



The chart illustrates the price to imputed rent ratio for the two measures of national real estate values. This can be thought as the tangible asset equivalent to a corporate stock price to earnings, or price to dividend, ratio. It measures the value relative to the flow of ownership gains, as represented by the imputed rent series measured by the BLS (owner occupied rent in the CPI table).

It is unlikely that the quarterly FHFA index will depart from the positive trend for too much longer (if indeed, it has stabilized), as the monthly index is showing more consistent gains over the last three months.

This is kind of interesting - the Case-Shiller, which includes foreclosures, is likely catching the upswing in foreclosure demand, while the FHFA is grabbing more of the downward trend in the "average" mortgage. But the LoanPerformance home price index likewise includes subprime loans and foreclosures, and it is showing some life (see chart below). Below is the 3-month annualized growth rate over the last two years for a cross-section of home value indicators. (In most cases, the monthly indexes are a subset of the national index.)



One indicator to note is the LoanPerformance house price index (LPHPI), which is used by the Fed to estimate the value of real estate in the flow of funds accounts, and is growing at a 9.1% annualized rate. States seeing at least a 4% 3-month gain include Ohio, Wisconsin, New York, Virginia, South Carolina, Georgia.

Likewise, the median existing home price and new home values are reported. These series are not seasonally adjusted; and therefore, are not extremely helpful in this context. But the 3-month existing home values remain in positive territory, although at a slowing rate of improvement. It should be noted that the median home prices is a cruder measure of home values – the Case Shiller and FHFA were developed in order to overcome the limitations of thinking in terms of the “median”.

So it looks like there is a chance that home values stabilize before 2010. We will see, as a 1 quarter increase by the Case Shiller index, although positive, is far from a trend.

Rebecca Wilder

(Edited slightly for readability....rdan)
After a few rough months, consumer confidence has finally rebounded sharply after peaking in May. With the general economic situation much improved over the last 3-4 months, the confidence of consumers has been of the main laggards in the Leading Economic Indicators. Indicators that were up 6% on a annualized basis would've been significantly higher had consumer confidence been up to match the
Lynda Applegate

Was Israel involved with Arctic Sea?

Oh my, this is sounding like a spy novel.

A comment posted on this blog

Anonymous said...

I've heard rumours that the vessel was carrying weapons from Russia to Iran, and that the 'pirates' were recruited by the Mossad (Israeli secret service) to interrupt the trade.
Source:
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1249418676474&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull


Which, sends us here

Did Mossad hijack Russian ship to stop Iran arms shipment?

The Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta reported over the weekend that the vessel Arctic Sea had been carrying x-55 cruise missiles and S300 anti-aircraft rockets hidden in secret compartments among its cargo of timber and sawdust.

Pravda's Web site reported that the ship had been smuggling cruise missiles to Iran on a well-worn path via Algeria, but a "power that has relations with Ukraine" had prevented this. Novaya Gazeta reported that the hijackers had been operating on behalf of the Mossad. It also reported that President Shimon Peres's visit to Moscow the day after the Russians recaptured the vessel had been motivated by an urgent request to his Russian counterpart, Dmitry Medvedev, to refrain from arming Iran.

Israeli officials dismissed the reports as "classic conspiracy theories," but defense experts noted that Israel has a record of seizing foreign vessels carrying arms to its enemies.

"This appears as the classic conspiracy theory. I didn't see any evidence for it and so we aren't going to comment," said Yigal Palmor, a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem.


click here for link
David

Case Shiller Price Index Up

"The prices of single-family homes in 20 major cities rose a seasonally adjusted 1.4% in June, the second increase in a row after falling every month for three years, according to the Case-Shiller home price index released Tuesday by Standard & Poor's." (Market Watch)

Fully 18 of 20 markets in the Case Shiller Home Price Index showed a rise in prices, demonstrating that the trend is broad-based. Only Las Vegas and Detroit saw declining overall prices in June. Nevertheless, on a year-over-year basis prices still are off by a considerable margin, 15.1% for the Composite-10 index and 15.4% for the Composite-20. (Seeking Alpha)

In the Washington, DC area prices were up 2.2% (seasonally adjusted) in June compared to May; Annually prices are down 11.8%.

For more info:
Paul Hickey

S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Numbers

In our last post we looked at the composite index for housing. Below is a table of the month-over-month and year-over-year changes in median home prices in the 20 cities that Case/Shiller tracks. As shown, only two cities (Detroit and Las Vegas) showed month-over-month declines. It's interesting that Detroit was down while Cleveland was up 4.18%. On a year-over-year basis,...


Molecool

Sell The Rips

10:15am EDT: I just used the obviously inane consumer confidence numbers to bulk up on more puts - got some nice fills there.

Giggidy - giggidy - goooh!

Meanwhile in the murky depths of the currency pits the ole’ buck is hanging on - so far so good. Again, a breach of the prior 77.4 low should get us to 76ish but there is a sliver of a chance that the low for this year has been painted.

I’m going to sit back and watch this tape for a bit longer before I post an updated wave count. I still have hopes of seeing 1045 today but at this point it’s starting to look like the boys are taking profits.

12:47pm EDT: The count goes on…

Second stage is cut - we are now in orbit… ooppps… back at Ground Control there’s a problem…


This morning's release of the Case Shiller Home Price Index for June showed its second straight monthly increase. The last time home prices increased two months in a row was back in the Summer of 2006 at the end of the last housing boom. June's 1.4% monthly gain was also the largest monthly increase since June 2005. There's no denying...



FN: This is an update on the divergence of both semiconductors and energy from the rest of the market from the post Semiconductors and Energy: Major Divergence from Rest of Market.
FN: The Chinese government has finally caught on to the fact that they've created a bubble and are trying to "talk it down". As long as the central bank and the rest of the banks continue to provide liquidity, Wen Jiabao is going to be as successful as Alan Greenspan was when he warned of "irrational exuberance" while having his foot placed firmly on the monetary accelerator.

China Stocks Decline as Wen Says Economy Faces ‘Uncertainties’: "Chinese stocks, the world’s worst performers this month, extended declines after Premier Wen Jiabao said the economy faces many “uncertainties” and China Construction Bank Corp. warned of asset bubbles."

Asian Stocks Fall on Lower China Earnings, U.S. Credit Concern: "Asian stocks dropped, led by mining and finance companies on lower profit at Chinese companies and amid speculation loan losses in the U.S. will increase."
FN: After losing a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit, the Federal Reserve must now reveal exactly where $2 trillion in emergency money went... Finally shining a light onto the rot in the financial system could prove to be interesting. The information must be revealed withing five days.

Court Orders Federal Reserve to Disclose Emergency Loan Details: "The Federal Reserve must for the first time identify the companies in its emergency lending programs after losing a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit.

Manhattan Chief U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska ruled against the central bank yesterday, rejecting the argument that loan records aren’t covered by the law because their disclosure would harm borrowers’ competitive positions.

The Fed has refused to name the financial firms it lent to or disclose the amounts or the assets put up as collateral under 11 programs, most put in place during the deepest financial crisis since the Great Depression, saying that doing so might set off a run by depositors and unsettle shareholders. Bloomberg LP, the New York-based company majority-owned by Mayor Michael Bloomberg, sued on Nov. 7 on behalf of its Bloomberg News unit.

“The Federal Reserve has to be accountable for the decisions that it makes,” said Representative Alan Grayson, a Florida Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee, after Preska’s ruling. “It’s one thing to say that the Federal Reserve is an independent institution. It’s another thing to say that it can keep us all in the dark.”

The judge said the central bank “improperly withheld agency records” by “conducting an inadequate search” after Bloomberg News reporters filed a request under the information act. She gave the Fed five days to turn over documents it told the reporters it located, including 231 pages of reports, and said it must look for more at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which runs most of the loan programs. "
Gary

Trading gold ? No thanks!

I tend to think we have entered another C wave advance in gold. These C waves don't come around all that often. In my opinion it's a huge mistake to think one can successfully jump in and out of a C wave. Gold is simply too volatile to successfully time every little wiggle.

The last C wave took a year to consolidate before breaking out and surging over $1000.

I suspect anyone who tried to trade in and out of that consolidation probably just managed to whittle away at their cash all the while reinforcing a trading mentality that would have cost them dearly once the breakout occurred in Oct of 07.

A subscriber asked the question yesterday if the subscription service would be beneficial to his trading. My response is no. I will not be doing any trading as this C wave unfolds. It's too important to me not to miss any of the move and not to incur multiple losses during this volatile period.

What I can do is keep you focused on the big picture and ultimately that is the key to huge profits during this secular bull market.
James

More bubbles to come

"Helicopter" Ben Bernanke, a guy who cannot recognize asset bubbles, is to be reappointed Chairman of the Federal Reserve. From The Wall Street Journal:
President Barack Obama will announce the nomination of Ben Bernanke to a second term as Federal Reserve chairman on Tuesday, opting for continuity in U.S. economic policy despite criticism in Congress of the low-key central banker's frantic efforts to rescue the financial system.

Mr. Obama's decision had become a subject of growing speculation and uncertainty in financial markets and in Washington policy circles.

The president called the Fed chairman to the Oval Office this past Wednesday to offer him another four-year term. Mr. Bernanke then flew off to Wyoming where he gave a defense of his controversial policies at the Fed's annual meetings in Jackson Hole. Mr. Obama left for Martha's Vineyard, Mass., where he will deliver the news Tuesday with Mr. Bernanke at his side.

Mr. Bernanke is seen by supporters inside the administration and in markets as a creative and steady hand who helped to keep the financial chaos, which became especially dangerous in the past year, from becoming much worse. White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel said the president credits Mr. Bernanke for "pulling the economy back from the brink of depression."
My Bernanke poem:
Real estate was
The way to get rich.
Just buy a home
And give it a flip.

If you bought more house
Than you can afford,
Helicopter Ben
Will dump cash your door.

He's Helicopter, Helicopter,
Helicopter Ben,
The money-throwing man
Who works at the Fed.

Money from the clouds,
Money from the sky,
Manna from heaven,
Thank that helicopter guy.
Rdan

Nazis

rdan

Mudflats has the story of her dad to tell. My own father was navy, in the Pacific, and had a different story to tell. I have nothing to add.



...When he was 20 years old, he’d been taken prisoner by the Germans at the Battle of the Bulge, was marched for miles, imprisoned, and starved. Like many men of his generation, veterans of World War II, he didn’t talk about it much. He held his memories close to his chest. If he talked to anyone about them, I didn’t know. It was only many years after his service and just before his death that he shared some of those memories with me.

Starvation does strange things to people. He told me that after a while in the camp, he had the same recurring dream, every night – a stack of pancakes topped with two fried eggs, sunny-side up. He’d dream that dream over and over, a still frame, a picture of a breakfast that never came. He told me that his fellow prisoners got so hungry that once they had killed and eaten a cat that had strayed into the camp. You don’t forget a story like that.

(The rest of the story is below the fold)


Or the story of the man in the camp, who snapped. In peace time, we’d have called him a boy. Suddenly and without warning in the middle of the day, out in the yard, his mind went. He ran for the fence in a desperate effort to escape. There was nowhere to go, and in broad daylight with armed guards everywhere, he didn’t stand a chance. My father, who was quick to pick up languages, had learned some German. “Don’t shoot! He’s crazy! He’s lost his mind! He doesn’t know what he’s doing!” my father called out to the guards as he ran out in the yard waving his arms. The man kept running for the fence, and he climbed, and the guards didn’t shoot. They waited until he reached the top. And then they shot him. They left him there for three days as a warning to anyone else who might have been thinking about escape.

Any survivor of World War II has stories. Millions were never able to tell them. Their lives ended on battlefields, and in gas chambers, at the hands of the Nazis. My dad was able to tell me some of his experiences, but most of those memories died with him, like they died with many vets and victims of the war. I didn’t even know he’d received a Purple Heart until after his death. But he survived. He survived to marry the girl he left at home, to buy a house, to get a college degree, to start his own company, and to raise a family of five children.

I asked my dad if he ever got his stack of pancakes with the fried eggs on top. I imagined it being his first meal after the Russians had liberated the camp. The Germans had heard that the Russians were coming, and they left quickly in the night. The prisoners hadn’t known what was happening until two days later when the Russian army came and let them out, confused and near death. No, he told me, he never did have the pancakes and eggs. It took months in the hospital to build his system back up to where he could eat normally. He began at 5′11″ weighing less than 100 pounds, and started with an IV, then a liquid diet, then cream of wheat, and finally solids. A fellow prisoner, he said, on his way from the camp to the hospital in France had managed to get a hold of a box of donuts and had gorged himself. He died a free man, but still a victim. By the time my dad was able to eat that stack of pancakes and eggs, the desire had passed.

I remember as a child I was not allowed to watch Hogan’s Heroes. It wasn’t a joke in my house. There was nothing funny about prisoner of war camps. There were no handsome well-fed prisoners with secret tunnels under their bunks, and pirate radio equipment who always managed to play their captors for the fool. There were frightened, emaciated young men whose minds and bodies were broken an ocean away from home, who were shot on fences , and who ate cats, and watched their friends die. There was nothing to laugh about. Those were Nazis.

I am tired of people comparing Obama to Hitler. I am tired of seeing signs with swastikas and nazi symbols at health care rallies. I am tired of people saying that a health care plan designed to uplift millions of Americans to give them dignity, and choice and the ability to care for their families, is like Naziism. I am tired of Rush Limbaugh.

As time passes, and as the greatest generation becomes a memory, passing into history one soul at a time, it is up to the generations that follow them to keep “Hitler” and “Nazi” out of the clutches of those who would make them political buzzwords for people they don’t like, or policies they don’t understand. Those words remind us of the worst that people can be. There is nothing horrible about Germans in particular that caused them to do these things. This is humanity’s dark potential, and something that we all need to remember, whether we were there or not, or whether our family was affected or not, because this is what people can do to each other. To strip those words of their power and meaning in order to create political fear for self-gain is inexcusable and needs to be confronted and refuted whenever it arises, by all of us, whether we support the current health care bill and the current president or not.

Charlie Assparino
In this video you can see the CNBC idiots discussing Goldman Sach’s PR problem without once ever mentioning the billions of taxpayer dollars that were funneled into the company on the sneak via AIG. According to CNBC, GS is perfectly innocent and their critics are simply anti-Semites.

What a bunch of BS. I’ve read a lot of the criticism of GS, and didn’t see a single instance of antisemitism. Maybe it is out there, but I sure didn’t see it.

No Americans
Speaking of racism, in the old days companies would put signs in their window: “Help wanted – No Blacks” or no Irish, or no Jews, or no Italians. Today, IBM has a sign in their window that reads: “No Americans.”

In Zachary Karafool’s Newsweek article which I mentioned yesterday, I find it curious that he felt compelled to bring up IBM’s anti-American hiring policy. As far as I could tell, it was getting practically no press at all, with the media obediently keeping it quiet. And then, a CFR member writes about it in a mainstream news magazine? Curious indeed.

Could it be that our overlords are feeling a little hot under the collar, and feel the need to go on a PR offensive? So, they send out Assparino and Karafool to try and smooth things over?

Can the slithering apologists convince Joe Sixpack that it is OK for Corporate “America” to steal his tax dollars, and ship his job to Asia?

Good luck with that.

Cramer is Revoliting
Here is what Cramer wrote on Monday morning:

“Roubini in an FT article outlines the growing risk of a double-dip recession. Can anyone at least ask the guy why we should believe him when he never saw the recovery coming in the first place? How do people approach any of this with a straight face?”

Cramer acts as if, he himself, has never made a bad call such as this one from August 22, 2008, just weeks before one of the greatest crashes in history:

“I think today’s a real rally. I expect more. The more time we keep ourselves from the July 15 lows the more obvious it will be that my position that those lows will hold will be true. It was a radical proposition when I said it then. It will soon be gospel.”

There he was making an epic idiotic call, and proclaiming it to be gospel! And now he acts as if he is an intellectual titan compared to Roubini. What a delusional pompous ass. I have subscribed to his website for many years, but I will not be renewing. The guy is just revolting.

Note to Cramer: Nobody in the USA got a job. There ain’t no recovery.

Oscar Goes Bulltard
When you see otherwise sensible traders go all bulltard, like Oscar did in this video from Sunday, you can be certain that at least a short-term top is coming soon. Euphoria is almost always a reliable sell signal.

TARP Gap Continues to Loom
Three weeks ago, I mentioned that the QQQQ was up against its TARP gap, and it still is. The Q’s have forayed into the gap, but have been unable to close within it, let alone above it. A proper bull would just gap right back over it, but the Q’s haven’t been able to muster the juice for that. Nevertheless, the Q’s are still within striking distance, and must be watched closely. This is the single most important feature on the current chart landscape.

Guy M. Lerner

Asset Allocation Road Map: US Equities

Before getting to my outlook for US equities, I feel that I first must explain why my methodology did not anticipate this monstrous move off the March, 2009 bottom.

In short, the explanation is that I don't have an explanation. Now I could consider this a failure of my methodology or the tools that I use to navigate the markets, but I don't. To understand why I feel this way, I will take you on a quick review of the past 6 months.

On March, 2009, I wrote the following:

"So here we are with the "smart money" bullish and the "dumb money" bearish. Beautiful! According to the back testing process, the optimal time to buy would be after this Friday's close.

Lastly, if equities do rally, I believe this will be a counter trend rally within an ongoing bear market. This will not be "the bottom", and it is my belief that "the bottom" will take time (i.e., many more months) to develop."

I was in at the bottom, but little did I know at the time that the S&P500 would embark on a 50% rally! As many of you may remember, I kept saying that this was a bear market rally and that this was not the launching pad for a new bull market. Now after a 50% rally in the S&P500, the best I can do is state that this is a cyclical bull run in an ongoing secular bear. I will be right, but once again, I did not anticipate the last 20% of this rally.

I was basing my observations on the fact that the "next big thing" indicator, which is a tool that I use to identify those technical conditions seen at market bottoms prior to secular trend changes, had not gotten into the correct position, and it would be unlikely to do so for a long while. Furthermore, a strong snapback rally was expected as sentiment had gotten very bearish (i.e., bull signal), and prices were very oversold by all known metrics, but bear markets rarely end in a "V" shaped bounce. Typically, there is a basing period before secular trends reverse.

Towards the end of April, I was tightening up stops and looking to sell strength. Bear market rallies generally move a certain period of time (weeks on x axis) and distance (percent gains on y axis), and this one did not appear any different. So you get out while the getting is good. The market did not rollover and in fact, the S&P500 traded higher than I had expected, which was based upon similar situations in the past. Maybe this was a sign: when the market doesn't behave as you expect, you should take notice.

Although my "call" to sell strength at the end of April wasn't looking good in the first parts of May, by the early parts of July, the S&P500 was actually trading back at the levels seen on May 1. My "call" was looking a lot better as the S&P500 hadn't gone anywhere for 10 weeks. Yes, the S&P500 had managed to get over the falling simple 10 month moving average by the end of June, but even this positive sign was looking like a failed signal. As we all know, the market took off from this point as the "this time is different" scenario unfolded. Like all good rallies, it started with short covering and has gone on further than most anticipated. What was looking like an extraordinary bear market rally that was rolling over in early July - or maybe just a normal bounce back given how far prices were oversold- turned into a bullish stampede and trampling of the bears as the S&P500 moved 18% higher over the last 7 weeks.

So that brings us to today. Our bear market rally has turned into something more, and one of the key tools that I use to navigate the markets (i.e., the "next big thing" indicator) appears to have failed to identify this important turn for the better in the markets. Or has it?

I say "appears" because I still could be correct; in this environment, we could just as easily find ourselves at new lows or new yearly highs within 6 months time. Either way, I would not be surprised. I say "appears" because the indicator did work well in identifying several key sectors and the Russell 2000 index that have been market leaders over the past 6 months. So I am not ready to throw the "next big thing" indicator in the junk pile, and in fact, I still think it has great validity that is supported by the data across multiple market eras and many different asset classes.

So what went wrong? Honestly, I am not sure. The idea behind the "next big thing" indicator is that it assesses not only how far prices have dropped but how long investors have been underwater. We are looking at the y axis as much as the x axis. The price drop in the S&P500 was rather significant yet it occurred over a relatively short time period. The time component really has not been there, and that still leaves the notion on the table that this very "V" shaped rally may rollover. In other words, what we are really witnessing is a very strong bear market rally or the indicator was not sensitive enough to pick up the potential for this market move. Be that as it may, what we call it or how we react are really two different things.

So what do I see for equities going forward? On a purely price basis alone, the equity markets have bottomed. Now that may sound like a stupid statement after a 50% move, but the price evidence is there to suggest that March, 2009 was an important market bottom. What is the evidence? If we look at figure 1, which is a weekly price chart of the S&P500, we note the blue up arrows. It was at this point that we had a weekly close over 3 pivot low points, and looking at over 50 years of S&P500 data, this kind of price action has tended to define bear market bottoms leading to secular trend changes. Conversely, a close below 3 pivots (like we have seen in the Dollar Index) is another good measure of a market top.

Figure 1. S&P500/ weekly

In any case, even within the confines of a bull market, the price cycle -or that cycle of fear and greed that the "Dumb Money" indicator attempts to quantify - will exert itself. Although I don't know when, I am pretty sure at some point in the future that there will be a buying opportunity where investors turn bearish (i.e., bull signal). If following that signal the markets do not achieve new highs for this price cycle or trade below the levels seen at the time of the signal, then there is a high likelihood of prices trading much lower.

Think about it this way: with the S&P500 so far above its 200 day moving average, it is unlikely that the market will rollover without this key metric being defended. We will get a sell off, sentiment should turn bearish (i.e., bull signal), and we will get a bounce. The nature of that multi -week bounce will be the tell.

The bigger question remains and it is the question we can only answer with the passage of time: Will the events of the past 6 months be seen as a new secular bull market or a cyclical bull market within an ongoing secular bear market?

In sum, March, 2009 was an important bottom for equities that was not expected by my methodology. The nature of the price action and the extent of the rally would suggest a prolong period of time before the market rolls over. This is not meant to be a prediction that the market will roll over, but to suggest that the markets will need to go though the normal price cycle, which is dictated by fear and greed, before rolling over. This will take time to manifest itself.

In the next installment of this series, I will discuss why I like commodities over equities and Treasury bonds.

energyecon

Deficit as a % of Spending


A couple of critiques I received to the eye popping deficit plot I posted related to the nominal nature of the dollar values and the % of GDP etc. After some thought, there seemed to be some merit to the normalization over time argument, thought I think the % of expdenditures by the government is more meaningful than the GDP argument...for your viewing "pleasure".