Tagesarchiv für den 08.10.2009

If this is indicative of the beginning of the end for Medallion, it raises many questions:

1) Medallion is the sterling example of a M/N quant trading system.

2) Medallion is up 20% YTD. That means someone was on the losing side of those trades.

3) RIEF done? Will anybody want to keep their money in RenTec with JS out, especially after this year's deplorable performance.

4) Did the SEC uncover impropriety?

Expect major changes in the electronic trading landscape

 

Update: Jimbo will be replaced by the firm's Co-Presidents, and former IBM TJW Research Center employees, Peter Brown and Robert Mercer. Bios below:

Peter Brown, PhD, Co-President and Co-head of Trading and Research Dr. Brown joined Renaissance in November 1993 as an Equity Portfolio Manager for Nova Fund. With Dr. Robert Mercer, he is responsible for all technical trading and research conducted by Renaissance. Dr. Brown has a BA in mathematics from Harvard College and a PhD in computer science from Carnegie-Mellon University.
Before joining Renaissance, Dr. Brown was a member of the research staff at IBM’s Thomas J. Watson Research Center from 1984 to 1993.


Robert Mercer, PhD, Co-President and Co-head of Trading and Research Dr. Mercer joined Renaissance in November 1993 as an Equity Portfolio Manager with primary responsibility for the management of Nova Fund. With Dr. Brown, he is responsible for all technical trading and research conducted by Renaissance. Dr. Mercer has a PhD in computer science from the University of Illinois. Before joining Renaissance, Dr. Mercer was a member of the research staff at IBM’s Thomas J. Watson Research Center from 1972 to 1993.

From Fed Governor Daniel Tarullo: In the Wake of the Crisis
Turning first to the economic outlook, let me begin by stating the obvious: After a period in which there seemed to be only two plausible scenarios--very bad and even worse--financial and economic conditions have steadied. ... As we closed out the third quarter last week, it was apparent that economic growth was back in positive territory. ...

This turnaround is certainly welcome, but it should not be overstated. Although we can expect positive growth to continue beyond the third quarter, economic activity remains relatively weak. The upturns in industrial production and residential investment, for example, follow startling declines in the first half of the year. Improvement is gradual and beginning from very low levels.

The employment situation continues to be dismal. While the pace of job losses has slowed from the extraordinary levels of early 2009, the economy has recently still been losing on average about a quarter of a million jobs each month. Hopes for a steady reduction in the pace of job losses were once again confounded last Friday with release of the September employment report, which showed net job declines well above the consensus expectation of economic forecasters. The unemployment rate has risen to 9.8 percent. ...

Indicators apart from the unemployment rate underscore the weakness of labor markets. The percentage of working-age people with jobs has fallen to a point not seen in a quarter century. Average hours worked have not increased through the spring and summer from what were, by historic standards, unusually low levels.The number of part-time workers who want full-time jobs jumped nearly 50 percent last fall and winter and has remained elevated since. The a>verage duration of unemployment has risen almost 10 weeks since the recession began, to more than six months.

The labor market conditions I have just described reflect the low level of resource utilization in the economy as a whole. In this context, with inflation expected to remain subdued for some time, the Federal Open Market Committee indicated after our meeting two weeks ago that exceptionally low interest rates are likely to be warranted for an extended period. Indeed, with the effects of the February stimulus package diminishing next year, bank lending that is still declining, and continued dysfunction in some parts of capital markets, there is considerable uncertainty as to how robust growth will be in 2010. At the same time, the unconventional policies pursued by the Federal Reserve in order to halt the crisis have produced levels and types of reserves that will eventually require use of the unconventional exit tools discussed on numerous occasions by Chairman Bernanke and Vice Chairman Kohn.

The coincidence of a weak economy and an unusually large balance sheet at the Federal Reserve will require some judgments by the Federal Open Market Committee of a sort for which there are not many historical precedents. Still, just as with conventional monetary policy, decisions on the timing and pace for removing accommodation should and will depend on our ongoing analysis and forecasts of all relevant economic factors.
emphasis added
Tyler Durden

S&P Update – October 10, EOD

Submitted by Nic Lenoir of ICAP

We fell a little short of the target at 1,069.40 earlier today but it now looks the pattern may be complete. The good news is that we have established a clear support line as well, so short-term traders have a clear game plan. It would appear that since the pattern from the lows looks complete we could expect to break through the support and retrace, the overlap at 1,056.70 should act as intermediary support but it's 1,042/1,045 that we will be looking at reaching and that will be a key pivot to determine what happens next. Since we have the 88-week moving average acting as resistance right above at 1,066 it would make sense to hold off a bit and decide the way to go after the long weekend especially since tomorrow's volume can't be expected very high barring anything major happening. However this remains a carry trade driven by excess liquidity, and running extensions to the upside is always a possibility, so if we do not break lower I guess we should keep using our friendly support line as a lifeline towards the highs.



Good luck trading,

Nic


Yesterday, I pointed out that Gary Gensler, chairman of the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (an agency with responsibility for overseeing derivatives trades) - and one of the main people who blocked regulation of credit default swaps in the past - said that Congress' proposed regulation of CDS leaves huge loopholes.

Bloomberg notes that Gensler testified:

Legislation by Representative Barney Frank to tighten derivatives regulation contains an exemption that may let most financial firms escape new collateral and disclosure rules...

What does it mean when even the guy who blocked regulation of CDS is saying that Congress' proposed bill won't do anything, and contains more holes than Swiss cheese?

I'll give you a 4-word hint: regulatory capture of Congress.

Similarly, the SEC's Henry Hu testified:

Frank’s proposal['s] “ambiguous” definition of risk management may leave a large number of corporations unregulated.


You cannot make this stuff up. The Saudis are lobbying for foreign aid in anticipation of declining oil revenues. Hat tip reader Michael:

Saudi Arabia has led a quiet campaign….demanding behind closed doors that oil-producing nations get special financial assistance if a new climate pact calls for substantial reductions in the use of fossil fuels.

That campaign comes despite an International Energy Agency report released this week showing that OPEC revenues would still increase $23 trillion between 2008 and 2030 — a fourfold increase compared to the period from 1985 to 2007 — if countries agree to significantly slash emissions and thereby cut their use of oil…..

The head of the Saudi delegation Mohammad S. Al Sabban dismissed the IEA figures as “biased” and said OPEC’s own calculations showed that Saudi Arabia would lose $19 billion a year starting in 2012 under a new climate pact….

Al Sabban accused Western nations of pursuing an agenda against oil producers, under the guise of protecting the planet.

As noted earlier, Friday marks the two-year anniversary of the S&P 500's closing peak. As of Thursday's close (10/8), only 57 of the 500 stocks currently in the index are up since then. Needless to say, it has been a lousy two years. Below we highlight the 25 best performing stocks in the index over the last two years. As...


Barry Ritholtz

Afternoon Reading

Some late Thursday linkage for your reading pleasure:

Banking Lessons We Should Have Learned (Dealbook)

• Interesting Interview Jordan Kotick, Global Head of Technical Analysis For Barclays -  Philosophy & Markets are related

GOP Faces Multiple Hurdles as It Aims for a 1994 Replay (WSJ)

The Art of Finding Good Comparables (Matrix Miller)

Schmidt: We paid $1 billion premium for YouTube (C/Net)

Supreme Court Justice Scalia is a supremely clueless jerk (Pharyngula)

The 10 Most Useful Online Tools Ever (Cluebert)

What are you reading?

Ironically though it was only an upgrade to a Neutral. Another analyst that has missed the run and yet still not bullish. The time to unload Atwood Oceanics (ATW) is when this guy goes to a Buy. For now Stone Fox continues to hold it's position while the stock remains in a beautiful technial position.Pritchard Capital Partners analyst Brian Uhlmer upgraded the company to "Neutral" from "Sell,"

Much has been said on Zero Hedge about the Fed's monetization of Treasuries, usually via the NY Fed's POMO activities, which on occasion buys back Treasuries as promptly as 5 days after any one given auction. Yet we were dumbfounded by this piece of information, presented to us by Jim Bianco, which demonstrates that the Fed's monetization of Agencies is far more blatant than anything even encountred in Treasuries.

Below is the 10:00 am announcement of a new $5 billion auction of 2 Year Fannie Agencies:

A mere half hour later, the NY Fed announced that as part of tomorrow's "Outright Agency Coupon Purchase" precisely this CUSIP would be one of the securities repurchased:

These shell games are getting tiresome. A half an hour turnaround time between issuance and buyback? Really Ben?

As Jim Bianco comments, some answers are far overdue, when trying to explain this most blatant example of monetization to date.

1. Who bought these securities at auction? The potential for foul play here is high if the news of such a buyback accidentally leaked to a few individuals in the market

2. Who does the Federal Reserve think it is fooling by monetizing in such a roundabout way?

Perhaps it is time for another probing interview by administration darling Steve Liesman of Tim Geithner. Hopefully this time he won't lie as blatantly as he did last time when he claimed: "The Fed is absolutely not monetizing debt" (9 mins, 9 seconds into the clip)

 

Governor Daniel K. Tarullo

At the Phoenix Metropolitan Area Community Leaders’ Luncheon, Phoenix, Arizona, October 8, 2009

In the Wake of the Crisis

I am pleased to be here in Phoenix at the invitation of President Yellen. Having come across the country to speak to you today, I thought I would not confine myself to a single subject, but would instead address a number of areas about which I have been thinking. Lest you fear that means a potpourri of unrelated observations, let me assure you that there is at least some thematic unity in my remarks–namely, the challenges we face in the wake of the financial crisis. So, with your indulgence, let me strike that rather grand theme by covering the current state of the economy, the task of financial regulatory reform, and some broader comments on credit markets.1

The Economic Outlook
Turning first to the economic outlook, let me begin by stating the obvious: After a period in which there seemed to be only two plausible scenarios–very bad and even worse–financial and economic conditions have steadied. A year ago the world financial system was profoundly shaken by the failures of large financial institutions here and abroad. Significant liquidity problems that had been building since early 2007 turned into a full-blown liquidity crisis. The economy deteriorated at a pace that was both rapid and sustained. The period ending in the second quarter of this year was the first time the United States had suffered negative GDP growth in four consecutive quarters since the Great Depression.2

As we closed out the third quarter last week, it was apparent that economic growth was back in positive territory. Financial markets continued to stabilize and, in some respects, improved. Consumer spending was showing signs of firming. Housing-related economic indicators have turned positive. Industrial production rose significantly in the summer, and not just for the auto industry, which was effectively restarting after the disruption caused by the bankruptcies of General Motors and Chrysler. Growth in foreign markets, particularly emerging Asia, has been encouraging.

This turnaround is certainly welcome, but it should not be overstated. Although we can expect positive growth to continue beyond the third quarter, economic activity remains relatively weak. The upturns in industrial production and residential investment, for example, follow startling declines in the first half of the year. Improvement is gradual and beginning from very low levels.

The employment situation continues to be dismal. While the pace of job losses has slowed from the extraordinary levels of early 2009, the economy has recently still been losing on average about a quarter of a million jobs each month. Hopes for a steady reduction in the pace of job losses were once again confounded last Friday with release of the September employment report, which showed net job declines well above the consensus expectation of economic forecasters. The unemployment rate has risen to 9.8 percent. Decomposing this figure, we see that the only demographic group whose unemployment rate appears less than awful is that for college graduates–at 4.9 percent. A look behind even that figure gives little reason for comfort, insofar as it has nearly doubled from the level of 2.6 percent at which it stood just a year earlier. Rates for many race or age-based demographic groups remain downright discouraging.3

Indicators apart from the unemployment rate underscore the weakness of labor markets. The percentage of working-age people with jobs has fallen to a point not seen in a quarter century.4 Average hours worked have not increased through the spring and summer from what were, by historic standards, unusually low levels. The number of part-time workers who want full-time jobs jumped nearly 50 percent last fall and winter and has remained elevated since.5 The average duration of unemployment has risen almost 10 weeks since the recession began, to more than six months.

The labor market conditions I have just described reflect the low level of resource utilization in the economy as a whole. In this context, with inflation expected to remain subdued for some time, the Federal Open Market Committee indicated after our meeting two weeks ago that exceptionally low interest rates are likely to be warranted for an extended period. Indeed, with the effects of the February stimulus package diminishing next year, bank lending that is still declining, and continued dysfunction in some parts of capital markets, there is considerable uncertainty as to how robust growth will be in 2010. At the same time, the unconventional policies pursued by the Federal Reserve in order to halt the crisis have produced levels and types of reserves that will eventually require use of the unconventional exit tools discussed on numerous occasions by Chairman Bernanke and Vice Chairman Kohn.

The coincidence of a weak economy and an unusually large balance sheet at the Federal Reserve will require some judgments by the Federal Open Market Committee of a sort for which there are not many historical precedents. Still, just as with conventional monetary policy, decisions on the timing and pace for removing accommodation should and will depend on our ongoing analysis and forecasts of all relevant economic factors.

Reforming Financial Regulation
In one sense, the financial crisis that began in 2007 is an old and familiar tale of explosive growth in leverage built on assumptions of ever-rising asset prices. Financial crises are, as the economist Charles Kindleberger put it, a “hardy perennial.”6 Instead of tulips in the seventeenth century Dutch Republic, South Sea Company stock in eighteenth century England, or the Nikkei and real estate in late twentieth century Japan, we had subprime mortgages and securitizations. However, like most recurring stories in human history, each financial crisis has its own plot twists and themes interwoven with elements common to most crashes. To fashion an effective and sensible response, it is necessary to understand both the unique and shared features of our own experience.

The financial crisis revealed that systemic risk was very much built into our financial system. As shown by the intervention of the government when Bear Stearns and AIG were failing, and by the repercussions from the failure of Lehman Brothers, the universe of financial firms that appeared too-big-to-fail during periods of stress included more than insured depository institutions and extended beyond the perimeter of traditional safety and soundness regulation. During the years immediately preceding the crisis, there were both private and public sector mistakes. Within many financial firms there was a massive failure of risk management. Within government there were serious shortcomings in the regulation of both firms and markets.

In truth, though, the origins of the financial crisis lay deeper. In the preceding decades our regulatory system had accommodated the growth of capital market alternatives to traditional financing by relaxing many restrictions on the type and geographic scope of bank activities and virtually all restrictions on affiliations between banks and non-bank financial firms. These changes, in turn, enabled a series of acquisitions that resulted in a number of very large, highly complex financial holding companies centered on a large commercial bank. These firms were subject to prudential supervision to be sure, but it was a kind of supervision that had not kept pace with the far-reaching changes in the industry. At the same time, there was a group of very large, much higher leveraged financial firms that were not subject to mandatory prudential regulation.

Many firms of both types relied for a considerable portion of their financing on short-term capital market sources that were often poorly matched with the maturity structure of a firm’s assets. Securitization markets played a major role in these complex, tightly wound financial arrangements, which for a time seemed to promise ever-increasing credit availability. But when questions arose about the quality of the assets on which this system was based–notably poorly underwritten subprime mortgages–a classic adverse feedback loop ensued. With lenders increasingly unwilling to extend credit against these assets, liquidity-strained institutions made increasingly distressed asset sales, which placed additional downward pressure on asset prices, thereby leading to margin calls for leveraged actors and mark-to-market losses for all holders of the assets. The margin calls and booked losses would start another round in the adverse feedback loop.

The causes of the crisis were thus embedded in the very nature of the financial services industry as it had evolved since the 1980s, and with the failure of the regulatory system to adapt to the new sources of financial risk. An adequate post-crisis program of regulatory reform must be equally concerned with the fundamentals of leverage and too-big-to-fail. There must be improvement in traditional, firm-centered regulation, sometimes referred to as microprudential regulation. We must also develop a macroprudential regulatory outlook–that is, an approach that considers linkages among firms and markets that could threaten the financial system as a whole, and that watches for the emergence of risks that might not be apparent solely through examination of specific financial institutions.

Both objectives will require changes by the financial regulatory agencies acting under their existing authority, as well as new legislation to ensure that there is sufficient authority and accountability for the regulatory agencies in adapting their policies. I believe that a reform program is, in fact, taking shape, though important components remain the subject of debate within Congress, the Administration, and the financial regulatory agencies. While I do not have time today to cover everything that the Federal Reserve is doing, much less the activities of other financial regulators, let me describe some of our initiatives and identify some of the more important areas in which I believe that Congressional action could be helpful.

The Federal Reserve has worked with other U.S. and foreign supervisors to strengthen capital, liquidity, and risk-management requirements for banking organizations. There is little doubt that capital levels prior to the crisis were insufficient to serve their functions as an adequate constraint on leverage and a buffer against loss. Higher capital requirements for trading activities and securitization exposures have already been agreed internationally. Efforts to improve the quality of capital have made considerable progress, with a particular emphasis on the need for higher levels of common equity, which ultimately provides the greatest protection against losses for creditors or the deposit insurance fund. We are also working with our domestic and international counterparts to deal with the procyclical tendencies that characterize important areas of financial regulation, including capital and accounting standards.

We must also adopt new regulatory mechanisms to counteract the systemic and too-big-to-fail problems that became so embedded in our financial system. One possible approach is a special charge–possibly a special capital requirement–that would be calibrated to the systemic importance of a firm. Needless to say, developing a metric for such a requirement is a new, and not altogether straightforward, exercise. Another proposal, which strikes me as having particular promise, is that large financial institutions be required to have specified forms of “contingent capital.” One form of this proposal would have firms regularly issue special debt instruments that would convert to equity during times of financial stress. If well devised, such instruments would not only provide an increased capital buffer at the moment when it is most needed. They would also inject an additional element of market discipline into large financial firms, since the price of those instruments would reflect market perceptions of the stability of the firm.

In addition to changing the regulations under which banking organizations function, the Federal Reserve is adapting the methods by which we supervise those organizations. For the largest and most complex firms, we are implementing closer coordination among our on-site examiners of those firms and with Federal Reserve Board staff in Washington. We will expand our use of so-called horizontal reviews of these large firms, a process involving cross-firm analysis of key practices and circumstances that gives all supervisory participants a broader perspective on the state of the financial industry.

We are also creating a quantitative surveillance mechanism that will use supervisory information, firm-specific data analysis, and market-based indicators to identify developing strains and imbalance that may affect multiple institutions. This program will be distinct from the activities of supervisors, so as to provide an independent assessment of the conditions in major firms, as well as to provide additional information to on-site examination teams. It will also provide a good starting point for the macroprudential regulatory perspective I mentioned earlier.

There is, then, much to be done under existing supervisory authority. But there are limits. For example, under present law, our capital and other regulatory requirements apply only to firms that own a commercial bank. And yet, as became evident last year, systemic problems can arise from the activities of non-banking firms as well. Indeed, there is an incentive to shift riskier activities to such firms. For this reason, the Federal Reserve supports proposals that Congress extend the reach of the regulatory system so that every systemically important firm is subject to consolidated supervision.

A second important legislative initiative would be creation of a special resolution process for systemically important financial firms. At present we have such a process for banks, but not for the holding companies of which they are part or for other financial firms. A regime that raised the real prospect of losses for shareholders and creditors would add a third alternative to the unattractive existing options of bailout or disorderly bankruptcy. The consequent increase in market discipline before severe financial distress arises could provide another way to help contain the too-big-to-fail problem.

A third relevant proposal for Congressional action is creation of an oversight council composed of the financial regulatory agencies. This council, which should be given access to a wide range of information from regulators and market actors, would be charged with identifying emerging risks to stability and regulatory gaps across the entire financial system, and coordinating agency responses to potential systemic risk. It could also play a useful role in identifying financial firms that may deserve designation as systemically important and thus subject to consolidated supervision, as suggested above.

These and other actions by Congress and the regulatory agencies, completed and proposed, offer a real and welcome prospect of broad reform in the financial regulatory system. Still, as the reform process proceeds and people inevitably become involved in detailed debates on the merits of particular ideas, I would suggest that there are two basic norms that should guide the outcome of this process.

First, there is some danger that reforms and restrictions on financial activity will simply be piled on one another, with insufficient attention to their cumulative or interactive effects. Reforms must reflect the social and economic desirability of ensuring access to credit on risk-sensible terms for businesses and consumers alike, even as policymakers strive to ensure that methods of credit allocation are consistent with financial stability.

Second, the reform process cannot be judged a success until it substantially reduces systemic risk and the too-big-to-fail problem. While it is unrealistic to think that these concerns can be eliminated, it is critical that they be addressed head-on. We cannot know for certain that the regulatory, supervisory, and legislative changes to which I have already alluded will be up to these tasks. Accordingly, as I have said before, all participants in the reform process must continue to explore other possibilities–including potentially quite innovative possibilities–even as we work to shape and implement the current batch of worthwhile proposals to these ends.

A “New Normalcy” for Credit Markets
Thus far I have spoken exclusively from the perspective of a member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve in thinking about the economy, monetary policy, financial supervision, and regulatory reform. Before closing, I want to make a few more general comments on changes, actual or potential, in credit markets. These remarks are prompted in part by the conversations I often have with bankers, business people, and consumers. During these discussions I have realized that just about everyone understands we will never return to the credit markets of the middle part of this decade, but very few people believe they understand what the “new normal” will look like once the crisis has fully passed and the economy is on a sustained recovery path. I suspect that this uncertainty is itself an impediment to stronger growth, since it makes financial planning more difficult.

There are some features of the pre-crisis credit world with little to be said for them, whose apparent demise we should welcome. For example, mortgage lending at high rates with little or no down payment and non-existent underwriting is not something we want to see again, for both consumer protection and financial stability reasons. Likewise, a business model for credit cards based upon low interest rates and high, frequent penalty fees seems at odds with responsible allocation and use of credit.

But what of securitization? There were undoubtedly many imprudent, even reckless, practices associated with the securitization process, particularly with respect to some exotic instruments whose risk could not be understood even by their creators. There is little to lament in their disappearance. But securitization is not in and of itself a bad thing. On the contrary, a well-functioning system for securitizing well-underwritten loans can make capital available at lower cost to businesses, homeowners, and retail consumers. The failure of many relatively straightforward securitization markets to revive without government support may be explained simply as a hangover from the excesses and still-encumbered assets of the pre-crisis period. Just as some have restarted, perhaps others will follow as markets for the underlying assets improve. But I will confess to some concern that there has not already been greater activity.

Beyond specific financial instruments, there are clearly fundamental behavioral and macroeconomic adjustments in the offing. The habit of building personal savings predominantly through appreciation of one’s home is one that many Americans will have to change. Similarly, the growth models of emerging market countries dependent on unshakeable American consumption and ever-increasing borrowing will not be sustainable even as recovery becomes more established. And, needless to say, major fiscal reform here at home will very likely be the central issue of U.S. economic policy in the years following recovery from the present crisis.

Conclusion
My focus today on what follows in the wake of the crisis might itself be read as a touch of optimism, signifying that the crisis itself looks to be over. The sobering counterpoint is my argument that some rather substantial adjustments will be needed by individuals, financial firms, businesses, regulators, and nations. That there will be adjustments is not something we can choose. How deftly we adjust is the question whose answer will weigh heavily in our nation’s economic performance over the next decade.


Footnotes

1. The views expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of my colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee. Return to text

2. As measured in chained 2005 dollars and reported by the Bureau of Economic Analysis of the U.S. Commerce Department, the quarterly changes in GDP were -2.7 percent, -5.4 percent, -6.4 percent, and -0.7 percent in the period from the third quarter of 2008 through the second quarter of 2009. Return to text

3. The unemployment rate is 15.4 percent for African-Americans, 12.7 percent for Hispanics, and 25.9 percent for teenagers. Return to text

4. As reported by BLS, in September the ratio of employed persons to the (adult) population stood at 58.8 percent. The last time this ratio was lower was in 1984. Return to text

5. BLS reports that in September there were about 9.2 million people working part-time for “economic reasons” –that is, because they could not find a full-time job. This compares to about 6.3 million a year previously. Return to text

6. Charles P. Kindleberger (2000), Manias, Panics, and Crashes: A History of Financial Crises (4th ed.) at 1. Return to text

Return to topReturn to top

By Paul Krugman

Opt-out public option

At first blush, it sounds good.

click for video

jon miller bloom

Tim Knight

SPY vs. VIX

I think I'm pretty "blogged out" for now, this being my eighth post for the day. My final post last night garnered about 1,000 comments, so I wouldn't be surprised to see something similar in the morning.

Just for fun, I was curious to see in ProphetCharts what a chart of the SPY versus the $VIX yielded. This is an interesting ratio, particularly since the VIX nearly reached the triple digits a year ago and now is almost back in the teens. Here's the chart:

1008-spyVIX

That red line pretty much sums up why I think the notion of a new bull market is misguided (I would normally describe it as clinically insane, but I'm trying to temper myself). The past year - - and by a lot of measures, this countertrend rally isn't 7 months old, but is 12 months old (take a look at GS to see what I mean) - - - has been nothing more than a recovery rally, fueled by government debt.

Today's very whippy tape shows the struggle continues. As I said in my post last night (which, if you didn't read it, please do), I grudgingly accept the possibility of an S&P as high as 1120, and, for the most part, I continue to wait and watch, with almost all my buying power sitting in cash.

Edward Harrison

Is the consumer really deleveraging?

Submitted by Edward Harrison of Credit Writedowns

Why is everyone saying consumer credit is falling? It’s not. But, everywhere I look, everybody is saying it is.

I would like to be true to the data and not just take the government’s seasonally-adjusted numbers at face value.

Judge for yourself. Here’s the data:

This is what everyone is focused on – the seasonally-adjusted data. The part in red shows consumer credit down $12 billion.

consumer-credit-2009-sa

But, what about the actual unadjusted data?

consumer-credit-2009-nsa

What do you know, it’s up $7 billion. It is indeed down $4 billion for revolving credit as banks are cutting credit card limits. But, non-revolving credit is up over $11 billion.  It was decreasing and is down 4.4% year-on-year (see the section highlighted in green above), but that ended this month.

Yes, I too believed that consumers were poised to begin deleveraging, but with stocks up 60%, interest rates at record lows, and house price declines stalled, why would you do that?

Conclusion: consumer credit is increasing, not decreasing. I wish people would actually look at the data.

The question you should be asking is not whether consumer credit is increasing, but whether it will continue to do so after August and cash for clunkers.

And I did a full review of the asset-based economy during economic turns yesterday. All indications are that the consumer is not deleveraging as I would have anticipated (see post here).

Sources

G.19 Current – Federal Reserve

G.19 Historical – Federal Reserve


Zumindest sollen 2010 ganze 329 Mrd. EUR am Kapitalmarkt eingesammelt werden (nach 302 Mrd EUR in 2009) – u.a. für „economic stimulus programs“. Na, wenn die genauso „gut“ wirken wie die letzten beiden…

Gefunden bei bloomberg.com:

Germany Plans Record Bond Sales in 2010, Budget Draft Shows

By Brian Parkin

Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) — Germany’s federal government plans record bond sales next year to help cushion the worst recession since World War II, the draft budget shows.

The government’s credit-funding plan, released today in Berlin, shows a gross borrowing target of 329 billion euros ($466 billion) compared with this year’s revised issues worth 302 billion euros. The money raised, to top up tax revenue, will be used to pay off outstanding debt and help finance spending including economic stimulus programs.

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s coalition, which is facing national elections on Sept. 27, ditched a target to balance the federal budget by 2011 as tax income plunged this year. The federal government’s net borrowing requirements next year including 85 billion euros in stimulus measures will rise to a postwar record, it said in June.

“The market probably won’t have any problem taking down these bonds,” Russell Jones, head of fixed-income and currency research in London at RBC Capital Markets, said in an interview. “Germany, unlike the U.K. and the U.S., has legally committed to reining in the deficit. That, and its reputation as an inflation-buster, counts for something.”

The German economy, Europe’s largest, may contract by 6 percent year as the country’s export-driven companies struggle with global sales. The federal budget will expand next year to 327 billion euros from 303 billion euros this year, today’s Finance Ministry data shows. Germany’s parliament voted in May to ban deficits in the 16 states and limit the federal government’s leeway to borrow.

Borrowing Requirement Cut

Merkel’s government has provisionally cut its gross borrowing requirements this year, the latest borrowing plan shows. While the Federal Finance Agency calendar said in June that a record 346 billion euros in bonds would be sold this year — one third more than in 2008 — that figure has been cut to 302 billion euros.

In a July 15 interview, Berlin-based Deputy Finance Minister Karl Diller said the agency may sell fewer bonds in the fourth quarter than expected as the banking crisis ebbs.

The 2010 plan shows the government will sell 133 billion euros in debt with a maturity over four years; 137 billion euros in debt maturing between one and four years; and 59 billion euros in debt maturing within one year.

The Frankfurt-based finance agency plans this year to sell 97 billion euros in debt with a maturity of less than one year, more than in previous years as it uses the instruments for short-term stimulus programs or helping to prop up ailing banks.

The provisional bonds outlook is a budget appendage without comment delivered by the Finance Ministry to the lower and upper houses of parliament. The budget will continue to be fine-tuned from August to November, when the lower house budget committee signs off on the plan before it becomes law that month.

To contact the reporter on this story: Brian Parkin in Berlin at bparkin@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: August 10, 2009 12:26 EDT

By Paul Krugman

Lost in translation

A "fully conservative Bible translation"????
Tyler Durden

Have We Hit Too Much Liquidity?

By now it is no secret why the stock market goes up on a virtual flatline. In case there is any confusion, the almost daily release by the NY Fed of such excess liquidity tidbits should clue one in. Yet, in its over-zealousness to pump up equity markets, has the Fed gone too far? Are all the billions of free dollars now tired of chasing the risky and safe assets (at the same time... yes, think about that for a second) and going straight into gold, be it as a dollar crash backstop or simply because all other assets have run up beyond too far? The one asset class that is riskiest to the Fed from an appreciation stand point is, and has always been, gold. Yet the market action from the past two weeks should make the Fed nervous. After meandering in the $900-$1,000/ounce range for a long time, gold has finally exploded and started closely correlating with risky assets.

In fact a long-term chart of the S&P expressed in ounces of gold, demonstrates that we are once again starting to approach the 1.00 barrier. If this support level breaks, the upside moves in gold will likely make the Fed consider other alternatives to stimulating inflation than mere paper printing. Alas, not many come to mind. The counterargument would go that the Fed has (un)officially abandoned the strong dollar policy, and any claims to the opposite are merely for soundbite purposes before the camera. Since this would merely be a preamble to a hyperinflationary episode, gold would become very valuable to the administration, for that point in time when the first round of dollar devaluation cracks (about where you would pay a few hundred million dollars for a bottle of milk). Thus the prevention of hoarding of gold, and its outright sequestration, in many ways comparable to what FDR did with Executive Order 6102, will be the next big step, once the Fed starts projecting forward what needs to be done as the initial bout of hyperinflation needs to be contained. At that point, as always, the amount of gold held in various underground bunkers will determine the new price point of the dollar's far more valuable, post hyperinflationary descendant.


:-(

Und nur zur Erinnerung: „Osteuropa-Kredite: 220 Mrd. EUR von Deutschland hängen mit drin!

Gefunden bei n-tv.de:

Wirtschaft

Donnerstag, 08. Oktober 2009

Keiner will Staatsanleihen

Dramatische Lage in Lettland

Eine fehlgeschlagene Versteigerung von lettischen Staatsanleihen hat Spekulationen über mögliche weitere finanzielle Probleme des Landes verstärkt. Bei einer Auktion lettischer Schatzanweisungen waren keine Gebote eingegangen.

Die Kosten für die Versicherung von lettischen Staatsverbindlichkeiten zogen daraufhin weiter an, was die erhöhte Unsicherheit der Anleger über die Aussichten für Lettland widerspiegelte. Die Notenbank des Landes kritisierte in einem Statement die lettische Regierung, der es nicht gelinge, das Vertrauen der Anleger wieder zu gewinnen.

Eine Abwertung würde die Kreditlast so weit vergrößern, dass massenhafte Zahlungsunfähigkeit drohen würde. Daher versuche Riga nun den Befreiungsschlag. Die Regierung unter Premier Valdis Dombrovskis habe eine Gesetzesänderung angekündigt, die die Rückzahlungspflicht für faule Hypotheken erheblich einschränken soll. Ein Hypothekengeber soll nicht mehr die Kreditsumme, sondern nur noch den aktuellen Wert der Immobilie vom Schuldner einfordern können.

Neue Welle des Misstrauens

Die Commerzbank bezeichnete die Lage in der baltischen Republik als „dramatisch“. Das Bruttoinlandsprodukt habe im zweiten Quartal 18,7 Prozent unter dem Vorjahresniveau gelegen; die Arbeitslosenquote liege bei 18 Prozent. Eine Abwertung der Währung Lats, die der Wirtschaft zumindest kurzfristig etwas Entlastung verschaffen könnte, schien bislang nicht möglich gewesen, da das Finanzsystem weitestgehend „euroisiert“ sei. Unternehmen und private Haushalte seien in der Regel in Euro und anderen Fremdwährungen verschuldet. Nur 9,1 Prozent der Kredite seien in Lats denominiert.

Nach Angaben der lettischen Notenbank ist es der Regierung in Riga nicht gelungen, die vom internationalen Währungsfonds (IWF), der Europäischen Union und anderen internationalen Kreditgebern im Gegenzug für die finanzielle Unterstützung vorgeschriebenen Haushaltskürzungen zu erreichen. Zudem habe die Regierung Investoren verunsichert, indem sie Gesetzesänderungen vorschlug, die die Haftung von Kreditnehmern gegenüber den Kreditgebern auf die Höhe der Deckung begrenzen würde, nicht auf die volle Höhe des Kredits. Dies würde die finanzielle Stabilität Lettlands ernsthaft schädigen. Eine neue Welle des Misstrauens beginne Lettland zu überrollen, warnt die Notenbank.

Bereits im Juni dieses Jahres war die lettische Regierung daran gescheitert, Staatsanleihen an Investoren zu verkaufen. Das Land stürzte deshalb in eine Währungskrise, was vor allem skandinavische Banken schwer traf, die stark in dem baltischen Land engagiert sind.

Schwedenkrone unter Druck

Das riesige Haushaltsdefizit Lettlands belastet zunehmend auch die Schwedische Krone. Der schwedische Bankensektor ist in einem hohen Maß in Lettland präsent, so dass nun die Angst vor Zahlungsausfällen die Schwedenkrone belastet. Die Krone schwankt im Verhältnis zum Euro seit Mitte Juli zwischen 10,3700 und 10,0500.

wne/DJ

Michael Shedlock

Audit The Fed Revisited

Thanks to all of those who acted on various Audit the Fed Campaigns. However, the campaign may not have been as effective as it should have been. The following Email from "Jacob" should be self-explanatory. There is still more work to be done.
Hello Mish,

Please note that Barney Frank's personal Congressional office (for his Massachusetts 4th district) is not the most effective address for registering support for Ron Paul’s “audit the Fed” bill, H.R. 1207, the Federal Reserve Transparency Act of 2009. This office is only accountable to Frank's home district and generally does not care what people in other districts or states think.

The right address is the Democratic staff of the House Financial Services Committee, which Frank chairs. It is these people who would be writing and/or editing the legislation in question, and advising Frank accordingly. In principle, they are accountable to the entire USA. Without a flood of citizen lobbying, they will most likely water down H.R. 1207 into something meaningless, or else ignore it altogether.

The committee Democrats' central phone number is (202) 225–4247, and the fax is (202) 225-6952. Alternately, and perhaps more effectively, you can politely email some or all of the committee's most senior Democrat staff directly, as follows:

Committee staff director and chief counsel: Jeanne.Roslanowick@mail.house.gov

Committee deputy chief counsel: Lawranne.Stewart@mail.house.gov

Committee communications director: Steven.Adamske@mail.house.gov (or possibly Steve.Adamske@mail.house.gov)

Another technique, if you live within reasonable driving or Amtrak range of Washington and you can spare a day off work, is to show up with a group of well-dressed, like-minded people at the Committee’s front office (2129 Rayburn House Office Building, Washington, DC 20515) and have your most eloquent group member tell the receptionist that you would like to speak with one of the above staff, or anyone who is available, regarding H.R. 1207.

The Committee Democrats have over 50 staff, so there is absolutely no reason why you cannot speak to someone other than a 22-year old receptionist. Be politely insistent and try not to leave empty-handed unless threatened with eviction or arrest.

You can also contact Committee members directly, asking them to talk to Barney Frank about H.R. 1207. By “members”, I mean other Congressmen on the Committee, and specifically on its most relevant subcommittees, which would have co-jurisdiction over the legislation.

These would likely be the Subcommittee on Domestic Monetary Policy and Technology (of which Ron Paul is the minority ranking member), the Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit, and possibly the Subcommittee on Capital Markets, Insurance, and Government Sponsored Enterprises as well.

Membership breakdown of subcommittees is available at Subcommittee Assignments for the 111th Congress

Hopefully, many of your readers will find their own Congressman on this list, or failing that, a Congressman from a neighboring district or at least the same state. (Again, there is no use in contacting a Congressman with whom you have no connection, and who owes you nothing).

Given there is strength in numbers, it would be particularly effective to arrange for multiple constituents to jointly contact the same Congressman on this issue, whether in the form of a petition/letter or, if possible, through an in-person meeting with him or his staff. Any petitions/letters should include a copy of the Text of H.R. 1207: Federal Reserve Transparency Act of 2009 and a clear, concise request for the Congressman, as a Committee member, to insist on movement of the complete and unadulterated bill to Chairman Frank, ASAP.

Of course, you also want to ensure that your Congressman is signed on to the bill as a cosponsor . To see cosponsors, go to Govtrack Audit The Fed then click on “show cosponsors”. It is particularly important to have as many members of the above subcommittees, especially Democrats, signed on to this legislation as possible).

Moreover, anyone who has in the past donated money or volunteered for their Congressman's campaign, should not hesitate to play the quid-pro-quo card at this time. Make them work for you!

I hope that this helps.

Regards,

Jacob Dreizin
Thanks to Jacob for these suggestions.
Please contact the various subcommittees as Jacob has suggested.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List
Brett Steenbarger, Ph.D.

Overcoming Mood Problems in Trading

A reader recently commented on the post that described three life problems that can become trading obstacles. The reader described intense anxiety experiences even when trading in simulation mode. To the reader's credit, he is wanting to resolve this problem before putting his capital at risk.

If the anxiety problem is one that also interferes with other spheres of life and/or does not respond to the kinds of self-help interventions described in my book, the answer is to get professional help for anxiety. Cognitive-behavioral therapy is quite effective in the research literature and would be my preference for treatment of first choice. One referral list of trained professionals can be found here.

In particularly debilitating circumstances, including those that do not respond to talk therapy, medication can be effective and consultation with an experienced, board-certified psychiatrist can be useful. Sometimes medications can get the problem under control sufficiently that the person can then begin the cognitive behavioral work to learn skills and master the anxiety.

One area to explore with a trained professional in cognitive-behavioral work is one's expectations going into trading. Many times, expectations are so high and the need for success so great that traders place undue performance pressure on themselves. (See this post and its links for more on performance anxiety). If trading success is equated with one's personal worth and success, the pressures of taking losses will be greatly magnified.

Where cognitive techniques are effective is in reframing these expectations and needs so that traders can more readily divorce their self-esteem (and their feelings about their future) from the outcomes of specific trades. Very often, traders are less afraid of losing trades than losing trading. Their anxiety stems from seeing normal losses as threats, not opportunities for learning and development.
.
CalculatedRisk

Hotel Occupancy: Two Year Slump

Note: Market graph at bottom.

From HotelNewsNow.com: NorfolkLuxury occupancy holds steady in STR weekly numbers
Overall, in year-over-year measurements, the industry’s occupancy fell 5.8 percent to end the week at 55.8 percent. Average daily rate dropped 8.3 percent to finish the week at US$95.51. Revenue per available room for the week decreased 13.7 percent to finish at US$53.30.
Hotel Occupancy Rate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

This graph shows the YoY change in the occupancy rate (3 week trailing average).

The three week average is off 7.3% from the same period in 2008.

The average daily rate is down 8.3%, and RevPAR is off 13.7% from the same week last year.

Data Source: Smith Travel Research, Courtesy of HotelNewsNow.com


As I noted last week, the comparisons are now easier soon since business travel fell off a cliff last October. Comparing to the same week two years ago, occupancy rates are off 16.4%.

Occupancy rates for October in 2006 and 2007 were close to 68%.

Stock Market Crashes Market update:

The second graph is from Doug Short of dshort.com (financial planner): "Four Bad Bears".

Note that the Great Depression crash is based on the DOW; the three others are for the S&P 500.
Paul Hickey

S&P 500 Sector P/E Ratios Rise

As shown in the table at right, the P/E ratios of the S&P 500 and its ten sectors have jumped significantly since the March 9th low. As the market has rallied sharply, earnings have not been able to keep pace at all, hence a rising P/E. While P/E expansion is normal during a bull market, at some point investors will...



Gefunden bei sueddeutsche.de:

Folgen der Krise

USA mit 1,4 Billionen Dollar im Minus

08.10.2009, 12:20

Den Amerikanern droht eine Rekordverschuldung: Schuld daran sind vor allem die Rettungspakete für die maroden Banken und sinkende Steuereinnahmen.

Die Wirtschafts- und Finanzkrise wird den USA aller Voraussicht nach ein Rekordhaushaltsloch von 1,4 Billionen Dollar (0,95 Billionen Euro) bescheren. Die Deckungslücke hat sich damit im Vergleich zum Vorjahr verdreifacht, wie aus den Berechnungen von Experten des Kongresses hervorgeht.

Dabei war das Defizit schon 2008 auf die Rekordhöhe von 459 Milliarden Dollar gestiegen. In Bezug auf die Gesamtwirtschaft gesehen hat das Defizit fast zehn Prozent des Bruttoinlandsprodukts erreicht. Ein solches Niveau gab es seit dem Zweiten Weltkrieg nicht mehr.

Gründe für das riesige Loch im Staatshaushalt sind die milliardenschweren Rettungspakete für die ins Trudeln geratenen Banken, die staatliche Übernahme der Immobilienfinanzierer Fannie Mae und Freddie Mac, das Paket der Regierung von Präsident Barack Obama zur Ankurbelung der Wirtschaft im Umfang von 200 Milliarden Dollar und die angesichts der Rezession eingebrochenen Steuereinnahmen.

US-Regierung unter Druck

Das Haushaltsjahr 2009 endete am 30. September. Die Schätzungen des Haushaltsbüros des Kongresses wurden zwar so auch erwartet, sie setzen die Regierung von Präsident Obama aber erheblich unter Druck. Denn mit den tiefroten Zahlen im Hintergrund dürfte es im Kongress deutlich schwieriger werden, die geplante Gesundheitsreform durchzusetzen, die in den kommenden zehn Jahren nochmals 900 Milliarden Dollar kosten soll.

Die Regierung hat schon zugesagt, sich mit aller Kraft um die Reduzierung des Defizits zu bemühen, sobald das Finanzsystem stabilisiert und die Rezession vorüber ist. Ziel sei es, das Defizit auf drei Prozent des Bruttoinlandsprodukts zu senken. Ökonomen sorgen sich aber, dass das Defizit den Druck erhöhen könnte, schon bald die Zinsen zu erhöhen.

(sueddeutsche.de/Reuters/AP/gits/tob)

Tim Knight

Strong Move by TBT

The ultrashort-on-bonds ETF symbol TBT is having a great day, and it's about the only bright spot for me. It's up nearly 3%, and on very strong volume.

1008-tbt



Gefunden bei fr-online.de:

Heidelberger Druck

Einigung über Jobabbau

Heidelberg. Der angeschlagene Druckmaschinenbauer Heidelberger Druck kann wie geplant tausende Arbeitsplätze streichen.

In Deutschland sollen bis Ende März 2010 im laufenden Geschäftsjahr 1500 Stellen sozialverträglich abgebaut werden, teilte das Unternehmen am Mittwoch nach einer Einigung von Management und Arbeitnehmervertretern mit. Insgesamt reduziere Heidelberger Druck den Personalstand weltweit um 4000 Mitarbeiter. Zur Jahresmitte arbeiteten weltweit gut 18.350 Menschen für den Weltmarktführer.

Das Unternehmen konnte sein Überleben als Folge einer Branchenkrise zuletzt nur dank staatlicher Hilfe sichern.

Heidelberger Druck und der Konkurrent manroland wollen mit einer Fusion gegensteuern. Beide kämpfen mit Auftragseinbrüchen und steigenden Verlusten.

Durch die Sparmaßnahmen sollen die Kosten im Vergleich zum vorherigen Geschäftsjahr um mehr als 250 Millionen Euro gedrückt werden, hieß es. In Deutschland sollen die Arbeitsplätze an den Standorten Wiesloch/Walldorf, Amstetten, Brandenburg, Ludwigsburg und Mönchengladbach abgebaut werden. Vom 1. März 2010 können die betroffenen Mitarbeiter für 12 Monate in eine Transfergesellschaft wechseln.

Zusätzliche Einsparungen sollen durch den Verzicht auf tarifliche und übertarifliche Leistungen sowie durch flexible Arbeitszeitmodelle gehoben werden. Bis zum Geschäftsjahr 2010/11 seien jährliche Einsparungen von rund 400 Millionen Euro anvisiert, hieß es.

Um den Stellenabbau hatte es zähe Verhandlungen gegeben, die auch von Protesten der Belegschaft begleitet wurden.

Die Arbeitnehmervertreter hatten sich unter anderem daran gestört, dass Heidelberger Druck auch trotz der staatlichen Hilfen an den Jobstreichungen festhielt. Die Förderbank KfW gibt dem Konzern einen Kredit über 300 Millionen Euro, Bund und Länder bürgen für weitere 550 Millionen Euro. Die Banken stellen weitere 550 Millionen Euro zur Verfügung unter dem Vorbehalt, dass der Staat seine schützende Hand über Heidelberger Druck hält. (dpa)

It is a curious state of affairs when the continuity of the stock market rally, and in fact the validity of its 60% run up to date, lies in the hands of politicians. Yet this is precisely the case with the housing equivalent of the Cash For Clunkers subsidy in the form of the extended or expanded $8,000 housing credit. The expiration of this freebie in November has spooked numerous pundits into proclaiming that it would be sheer lunacy for the government to not continue its communist ways. In fact, very amusingly, none other than the chief equity market strategist overseeing Federated Investors' $400 billion in AUM is putting his career on the line, assuming a continuation of the massive government subsidy:

I can’t believe the Congress will be so stupid in allowing those programs to expire”, said Philip Orlando, who helps oversee $400 billion as chief equity market strategist at Federated Investors Inc. in New York. “If the government suddenly eliminates the stimulus program in the housing market, that will begin to call into risk the sustainability of the recovery at some point during 2010. I think that program will be not only extended, but expanded.”

And there you have a demonstration of what programmed, brain-washed group-think is all about: the fate of American Capitalist Corporate Communism will be determined by an $8,000 stimulus check. The market can only sustain its overbought levels compliments of taxpayers' generous subsidies to those who believe that renting is some form of inhuman cruelty banned by the Geneva convention. But then you still have those hundreds of billions in FHA losses that are yet to be "uncovered."

Rosie summarizes this idiocy best: "Are we supposed to go when the fundamentals deteriorate because Uncle Sam will come to the rescue? We are confused. If state capitalism works, shouldn’t we be investing heavily in Venezuela?" Yet the adage "good news is good news, and bad news is good news" only works when Obama's Moral Hazard doctrine is fully accepted by all market players as the prevailing trading paradigm. It is simply moronic to assume that Congress would be "so stupid" as to let natural supply and demand find their intersection points. If that were to happen, the US economy would crater so fast it would make Usain Bolt seem slower than Art Cashin.

Yet, it may be prudent to not bet it all on black (or green as the case may be) just yet. In a report issued yesterday by Deutsche Bank, analyst Nishu Sood seems to be less certain on the outcome of the stimulus fiasco, and is in fact betting on the "stupid" outcome dreaded by Philip Orlando:

Our view on a tax credit extension differs from that of the market – we don’t think it will be extended in the near-term. While it is always difficult to project political outcomes, the experience of the last few years argues that government acts on housing only when the situation is plainly deteriorating. With the economy and housing apparently on the mend, we think this good news may sap the political momentum needed to extend the tax credit. If, as we expect, housing conditions deteriorate again that might propel a renewal of the purchase tax credit.

So there you have it: up is down, good is bad, etc, etc. We now have the equivalent of a banana economy, let alone republic. Yet this is precisely what nearly 90% of investors are not only OK with, but factor into their "fundamental models."

86% of investors surveyed expect the credit to live on in some form, but most of these investors (61%) expect a simple extension for 6 months. Other possibilities include a 12 month extension (13%) or an extension and expansion of the credit (12%). The credit could be expanded by removing the first-time buyer or income cap restrictions or by simply increasing the amount. Proposed amounts have reached as high as $15,000. Only a small proportion of investors think that the credit will be allowed to expire (11%).

It is very unlikely that Obama learned his lesson with CARS: the adverse impact of that particular subsidy will likely plague automakers for many quarters, precisely at a time when they should have been able to budget and project demand, even if it meant slower growth curves. Now all bets are off, as nobody has any idea what inventory, labor or products to budget. Which is why it is only likely that a CFC 2.0 is not far off in the making. In the meantime, while we would like to believe Mr. Sood, his conviction is based on the assumption that at some point in its tenure, the administration will do what is in the best interest of capitalism, efficient markets, and not the Wall Street oligarchy. Based on empirical evidence, this assumption is flawed at its core.


10,3% bei strip-malls und 8,6% bei „normalen“ malls. Dadurch kommen natürlich auch die Mieten weiter unter Druck… So wird das nix. :-(

Gefunden bei reuters.com:

Shopping center vacancy rate hits 17-year high: report

Thu Oct 8, 2009 12:33am EDT

By Ilaina Jonas

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The vacancy rate at U.S. strip malls reached a 17-year high in the third quarter and mall vacancy was the highest in at least 10 years, reflecting the protracted pull-back by consumers, real estate research firm Reis Inc said.

The downturn in the U.S. economy, anemic consumer spending and the U.S. housing bust severely hurt new retail properties, 30 percent of which were completed with less than 50 percent occupied, Reis said in a report released on Thursday.

„Our outlook for retail properties as a whole is bleak,“ Victor Calanog, Reis director of research, said. „Until we see stabilization and recovery take root in both consumer spending and business spending and hiring, we do not foresee a recovery in the retail sector until late 2012 at the earliest.“

The prognosis does not bode well for mall and shopping center owners including Developers Diversified Realty Corp (DDR.N), Macerich Co (MAC.N), General Growth Properties Inc (GGWPQ.PK), Simon Property Group (SPG.N), Equity One Inc (EQY.N), Kimco Realty Corp (KIM.N), Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust (PEI.N), Realty Income Corp (O.N) and Kite Realty Group (KRG.N).

The third-quarter vacancy rate at U.S. strip malls, which include local shopping and big-box centers, rose 0.3 percentage points from the second quarter to 10.3 percent, the highest since 1992, Reis said.

Asking rent at strip malls slid 0.3 percent from the second quarter to $19.22 per square foot and were down 1.9 percent from the prior year. Asking rents were the lowest since mid 2007.

Factoring in months of free rent and other perks, effective rent fell 0.8 percent from the second quarter to $16.89 per square foot or down 3.8 percent from the third quarter 2008. Rents were the lowest since mid-2007

Rents continued to decline as retail property landlords faced ongoing pressure from tenants who reduced their space requirements, negotiated more favorable lease terms, or went out of business altogether.

„Since asking and effective rent growth only turned negative about one year ago, it is daunting to observe this acceleration in decline in what has traditionally been regarded as a stable property type,“ Calanog said.

Reis expects rising vacancy levels and declining asking and effective rents for neighborhood and community centers through 2011.

„We have yet to observe any unexpected systematic resumption in hiring and strength in consumer spending that may lead us to revise our projections with a more optimistic bent,“ Calanog said.

U.S. mall vacancy rate rose 0.2 percentage points to 8.6 percent in the third quarter, the highest vacancy level since Reis began tracking regional malls in the first quarter 2000.

Asking rent at big U.S. malls fell 0.6 percent from the prior quarter to $39.18 per square foot and was down 3.5 percent from a year earlier. It was the fourth straight decline in rents and the largest one-year decline Reis has seen.

Reis does not generate forecasts for regional malls.

(Reporting by Ilaina Jonas; Editing Bernard Orr)

© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved

Molecool

Rollercoaster Thursday Rub Down

Pretty decent Zero day but I’m still dizzy from the double loop they put us through today:

There was a notable bullish divergence that resolved but didn’t really lead anywhere. Otherwise, frankly - I don’t know what to say - it was a pain in the ass day and I was glad to hear the bell. I was getting frustrated and I don’t even have money in the market right now - LOL :-)

Wave count has not changed as of now - this could be the start of a series of 2nd waves within Minute wave {iii}, i.e. {i}-{ii}-(i)-(ii)…, as it’s a bit early for a third wave to stop right here. But I have only very few candidates on the table right now and none of them look very convincing. Which is why I’m out of the market right now and continue to solely focus on scalping.

Program Trading Update:

geronimo/ES: -2 (for a first short trade, gone horribly wrong - kidding, it actually dropped back into the close so we got out easy - however I told folks to get out somewhere between 1062 and 1066, based on email delivery - so it could have been as bad as -7).

Now as a bit of a moral booster here’s a brand spanking new Rammstein single - no XXX content this time, so crank it up!

Cheers,

Mole


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