Courtesy of Phil’s Stock World
The Fed did nothing – yay!
That’s the take on the futures market, which are up about 1% this morning. We thought we were pretty clever taking some bearish bets into the post-Fed rally (see David Fry chart) as it seemed a little overdone and those bets paid off into the close but holding them overnight was a huge mistake so far as the dollar dropped a point, mostly since Europe’s open (but not against the Yen, of course to keep Japan happy) and that plus the IEA upgrading their demand outlook (despite OPEC disagreeing) has sent oil flying back to $72 and gold back to $960 and the commodity pushers are sll singing happy days are here again, keying off Bernankes promise to continue to “employ all available tools to promote economic recovery and price stability.”
Now price stability may sound like a good thing but it’s not because Ben is not promising the US consumers that prices will remain low, Ben is promising us, the investing public, that he will not allow deflation to harm our long-term investments so we should BUYBUYBUY because he also promises to keep “exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for an extended period.” I always think it’s funny when conservatives complain that the government shouldn’t be telling people what to do but here is the Federal Reserve telling us exactly how they want us to invest our money. They’re NOT going to give you a high interest rate for keeping it in the bank so you’d better get it off the sidelines and into stocks and commodities, where they do promise to use “all available tools” including the purchase of $1.2Tn of agency mortgage-backed securities and up to $200 billion of agency debt by the end of the year. BY THE END OF THE YEAR! Wow, that’s $350Bn a month. Hey Mr. Chairman, I have some mortgage backed securities I’d like to sell. Mr. Chairman. Mr. Chairman. Ben…. Darn, he’s gone – maybe next month….
As I said in my Alert to members just after the Fed yesterday, the statement is not bullish on the economy, even the $1.4Tn is not new money, it’s just a renewed commitment to spend it. This was taken as a dolllar negative in Europe but, “in reality” (such as it is), Fed accounting does not affect our national budget so they can spend this money without impacting US debt but it is a sneaky way to jam the money supply to nosebleed levels. To me, this was nothing to be bullish about and is simply more of an examply that our economy, like China, is stimulated but not improved.
I hate to be a gloomy gus but I had to point out to members last night that Foreclosures Set 3rd Record High in 5 Months. A total of 360,149 properties received a default or auction notice or were seized last month. “We’re in a deep hole,” Diane Swonk, chief economist at Chicago-based Mesirow Financial Inc., said in an interview. “There is a whole new wave of foreclosures tied to the cyclical dynamics of the economy.” The median price of an existing single-family house dropped 15.6 percent to $174,100 in the second quarter, the most in records dating to 1979, the National Association of Realtors said yesterday. “There are a slew of factors showing fundamental weakness on the demand side: tighter underwriting, job loss, investors who’ve been badly burned,” said Stuart Gabriel, director of the UCLA Ziman Center for Real Estate in Los Angeles. “We have not seen the bottom of the housing market.”
We nave not seen the bottom of the jobs market either as another 558,000 Americans lost their jobs last week, more than the 540,000 expected and last month was revised slightly higher as well. This may come as a shock to Uncle Ben as he seeks to maintain the stability of $70 oil but unemployed people can’t afford to drive to the mall and buy semiconductors and other commodities so July Retail Sales came in at -0.1%, which is about what we at PSW expected but is a total shock to the “expert economists” who thought they were going to be up 0.9%. A 1,000% miss is pretty normal for these bozos, who generally live within walking distance of a college and spend about $5 a week on gas as they take their classic cars out for a spin so forgive them if they are totally clueless as to what is happening in the lives of real people.
In California, a state that is bigger than any country in Europe except united Germany, 1 out of 10 homes is being foreclosed this year. That rate is 1/123 for the month of July and is UP 15% from June. Arizono is our second most foreclosed state but they are catching up with a July rate of 1/135 but that’s up a whopping 25% from June – mmmmm, can’t you just smell those green shoots? Also, 126,000 people went bankrupt last month, 34% more than last July and we are on pace for 1.4M for the year and that’s in the average 3.2 person household so 4.5M people in families that have nothing at all and will not likely be “rebounding” for 7 more years at least.
Even WMT posted lower 2nd quarter sales this morning with same-store sales falling 1.2% and miles below expectations of up 3%. The company managed to save their stock by raising the low end of their guidance for they year by a nickel as they are managing to put the squeeze on their suppliers and pay remaining workers a lot closer to minimum wage ($7.25/hr). The company did make $3.44Bn for the quarter and that’s .88 a share so still not a bad place to park your money but if WMT can’t do well then you can expect a few major retailers to join the 1.4M individuals in bankruptcy court at the end of this year as we are just one bad Christmas season away from catastrophe.
And let’s not kid ourselves with that down 0.1% number on Retail Sales as that includes automobiles under the $1Bn “cash for clunkers” stimulus. Without automobiles, which were up 2.4%, retail sales were down 0.6%. Also interesting for the oil bulls is gasoline sales were down 2.1% so Americans are not going anywhere and are not buying anything. Retail sales excluding autos and gas decreased 0.4% in July, the fifth drop in a row. Furniture retailers fell 0.9% and building material and garden supplies dealers were dropped 2.1%. Food and beverage stores declined 0.3%. Electronic and appliance stores were down 1.4%. General merchandise stores tumbled 0.8%. Sporting goods, hobby, book and music stores fell 1.9%. There were some increases: Health and personal care stores, up 0.7%; restaurants and bars, up 0.4%; clothing stores, up 0.6%; and mail order and Internet retailers, up 0.1%.
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