Friday, May 15, 2009

Intrigue over hedge fund bailout comments

Friday, May 15, 2009

http://themessthatgreenspanmade.blogspot.com/2009/05/intrigue-in-qatar-over-bailout-comments.html


An item included in the Friday morning links here earlier today, penned by blog-favorite Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, has become the hot topic du jour as it has been pulled by the Telegraph.

Titled "Buy-out chief accuses US over 'sham' bank bail-outs", it contained incendiary comments about the Treasury Department's bank bailout plan by Mark Patterson, chairman of buyout hedge fund MatlinPatterson Advisers.

MatlinPatterson Advisors apparently contacted the Telegraph, citing factual errors and other innacuracies, after which the story was taken down.

The original article is still available at the new uber-blog Zero Hedge for all to see in an important reminder that, once you post something on the internet, it really doesn't go away - if nothing else, you'll be able to retrieve it from Google since they cache just about everything these days.

Anyway, it's reproduced below, all highlights mine:

The US Treasury’s effort to stabilise the banking system through the TARP programme is a hopelessly ill-conceived policy that enriches speculators at public expense, according to the buy-out firm supposed to be pioneering the joint public-private bank rescues.

The taxpayers ought to know that we are in effect receiving a subsidy. They put in 40pc of the money but get little of the equity upside,” said Mark Patterson, chairman of MatlinPatterson Advisers.

The comments are likely to infuriate Tim Geithner, the US Treasury Secretary, because MatlinPatterson took advantage of the TARP’s matching funds to buy Flagstar Bancorp in Michigan. His confession appears to validate concerns that the bail-out strategy is geared towards Wall Street.

Under the convoluted deal agreed earlier this year, MatlinPatterson has come to own 80pc of the shares while the US government has ended up with under 10pc.

Mr Patterson said the US Treasury is out of its depth and seems to be trying to put off drastic action by pretending that the banking system is still viable.

It’s a sham. The banks are insolvent. The US government is trying to sedate the public because they are down to the last $100bn (£66bn) of the $700bn TARP funds. They think they’re doing this for the greater good of society,” he said, speaking at the Qatar Global Investment Forum.

Mr Patterson said it would be better for the US to bite the bullet as Britain has done, accepting that crippled lenders must be nationalised. “At least the British are not hiding the bail-out,” he said.

MatlinPatterson said private equity and hedge funds were deluding themselves in hoping to go back to business as usual after the trauma of the last 18 months.

“This is not a normal recession and there will be no V-shaped recovery. The crisis has destroyed leveraged companies. We’re going to see a catastrophic increase in the number of LBO’s (leveraged buyouts) going into default because they’re knee-deep in debt and no solution exists since they can’t refinance,” he said.

“Alfa hedge funds have been making their money by gambling with excessive leverage, so the knife that cuts off leverage is going to cut off their heads as well,” he said.

Like many bears, Mr Patterson expects the great crunch to end in deliberate inflation, deemed a lesser evil than outright depression.

“The US government has thrown 29pc of GDP at this crisis compared to 8pc in the early 1930s. The Fed’s balance sheet has risen from $900bn to $2.7 trillion to bail out the system. America has to do it because the only way out is to debase the currency, but that is going to lead to some very high inflation three years down the road,” he said.

Matlin Patterson, however, has missed the Spring rebound, the most powerful rise in equities in over 70 years. “We shorted the equity rally because we thought it was lunatic. We’ve kept adding positions seven times, and we’re still holding,” he said. Ouch!
There's lots more coverage at Zero Hedge and Naked Capitalism.

Buyout Chief: “It’s a sham. The banks are insolvent”

Buyout Chief: “It’s a sham. The banks are insolvent”

It’s a rare thing when insiders speak their minds publicly against the powers-that-be. Today in a global investment conference held in Qatar, an insider accused the entire US bank bailout of being a “sham”, and said it publicly at a global conference of his peers. Meet Mark Patterson, chairman of MattlinPatterson advisers, a firm which utilized the TARP program’s ‘matching funds’ to buy Flagstar Bancorp in Michigan. Patterson certainly didn’t pull any punches in blasting US Treasury Secretary, Tim Geithner’s bailout as being a deeply flawed plan which will not only ultimately fail, but is enriching Wall Street insiders in the process.

The Telegraph UK reports:

Mr Patterson said the US Treasury is out of its depth and seems to be trying to put off drastic action by pretending that the banking system is still viable.

“It’s a sham. The banks are insolvent. The US government is trying to sedate the public because they are down to the last $100bn (£66bn) of the $700bn TARP funds. They think they’re doing this for the greater good of society,” he said, speaking at the Qatar Global Investment Forum.

Mr Patterson said it would be better for the US to bite the bullet as Britain has done, accepting that crippled lenders must be nationalised. “At least the British are not hiding the bail-out,” he said.

Well said indeed, Mr. Patterson. We’d love to hear Mr. Geithner respond, but he’s off skipping through fields of green shoots, and worse yet, seems blissfully unaware that the US taxpayer is bearing most of the cost while seeing precious little of the upside. Perhaps when the last $100 billion of TARP funds has been magically transferred into private coffers, Mr. Geithner will make the hard choices we’re hoping for.

More from the Telegraph UK:

“This is not a normal recession and there will be no V-shaped recovery. The crisis has destroyed leveraged companies. We’re going to see a catastrophic increase in the number of LBO’s (leveraged buyouts) going into default because they’re knee-deep in debt and no solution exists since they can’t refinance,” he said.

“Alfa hedge funds have been making their money by gambling with excessive leverage, so the knife that cuts off leverage is going to cut off their heads as well,” he said.

Like many bears, Mr Patterson expects the great crunch to end in deliberate inflation, deemed a lesser evil than outright depression.

“The US government has thrown 29pc of GDP at this crisis compared to 8pc in the early 1930s. The Fed’s balance sheet has risen from $900bn to $2.7 trillion to bail out the system. America has to do it because the only way out is to debase the currency, but that is going to lead to some very high inflation three years down the road,” he said.

We couldn’t agree more with Mr. Patterson, and he has our sympathies for exercising good judgment, but bad luck in choosing to short this rally from the start. As our colleague Tyler Durden at Zero Hedge once said, “Anyone with any common sense is losing money in this market”. Our only hope is that more insiders speak up like Mark Patterson did before the situation gets any worse than it already is.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Goodbye David Rosenberg

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Goodbye David Rosenberg

One of the few sane voices in the desert has left the (Merrill Lynch) building. David Rosenberg, on his way out, leaves everyone with an economist's dozen of rules to remember.

David, so long, and thanks for all the fish.

Rosie's rules to remember:

1) In order for an economic forecast to be relevant, it must be combined with a market call.

2) Never be a slave to the data – they are no substitute for astute observation of the big picture.

3) The consensus rarely gets it right and almost always errs on the side of optimism – except at the bottom.

4) Fall in love with your partner, not your forecast.

5) No two cycles are ever the same.

6) Never hide behind your model.

7) Always seek out corroborating evidence.

8) Have respect for what the markets are telling you.

9) Be constantly aware with your forecast horizon – many clients live in the short run.

10) Of all the market forecasters, Mr. Bond gets it right most often.

11) Highlight the risks to your forecasts.

12) Get the US consumer right and everything else will take care of itself.

13) Expansions are more fun than recessions (straight from Bob Farrell's quiver!). Sphere: Related Content

Busy Day For REIT Analysts

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Busy Day For REIT Analysts

Or at least for the ones that are still getting paid. Two more price target increases courtesy of Merrill Lynch, first SL Green, which "beat on one-time items", and second for AMB, which is "well positioned to weather the storm." With all the ML equity raises done on the past 3 weeks, aren't all REITs perfectly positioned to weather the storm? Oh wait, now that they will all survive post 2010, you will instead see a massive race to the bottom chasing the 3 retail tenants that have not gone bankrupt yet. About as smart as sneezing in the rush hour 6 train.

Who knows, maybe one can squeeze out a few last nickels out of this REIT rally.



The Spin On -6% GDP

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

The Spin On -6% GDP

More sanity from David Rosenberg:

We have to keep an open mind and respect Mr. Market

There is an old adage that a market which does not respond bearishly to bearish news is clearly not a market in a bear phase. As financial economists, we have to keep an open mind and respect the verdict that is being turned in by Mr. Market as he continues to shrug off weak data and embrace whatever sprinkle of good news that can be gleaned from the incoming data releases.

Worst back-to-back GDP performance in 50 years

Indeed, the vast majority of economic data remain very soft even if treated by investors at this point as old news. Not only did 1Q real GDP contract sharply -- at a 6.1% annual rate versus consensus expectations of -4.6%, it followed on the heels of a 6.3% decline in the fourth quarter of 2008. That marks the worst back-to-back performance in 50 years.

A few reasons that the stock market is rallying on this news

1) The second derivative can only get better from here

The market believes that the back-to-back declines of 6%+ in real GDP is a cathartic event and that the 'second derivative' (i.e. change in the rate of growth) can only get better from here.

2) Investors like the knife companies took to inventories

Inventories were cut by $103.7B in 1Q and accounted for nearly half of the decline in real GDP last quarter. While demand was also soft, the view is that we entered the second quarter with an inventory/sales ratio that was quite a bit lower than many forecasts, including ours, and as such we should see a much 'less negative' 2Q print on real GDP. It is hard to argue with that point, and again, this is a market willing to trade off of 'second derivatives' in the economic data.

3) Government spending contraction, a one-off event

Government spending also contracted, mostly on defense, which subtracted 0.4 percentage points off of the headline GDP number. Again, a market that has been very selective in its interpretation of the data is viewing this drag as a one-off nonrecurring event.

4) Upside surprise to consumer spending

If there was an upside surprise in the data, it was consumer spending, which managed to post a 2.2% annualized advance. Many pundits are pointing to this as a sign of stabilization in the most critical segment of domestic demand. Then again, we know from the monthly retail sales data that the bulk of this first quarter growth took hold in January, which followed a record 30% annualized plunge as 2008 drew to a close.

We advise investors to view consumer rebound as a blip.

While most of the post-Lehman collapse in spending, output and credit supply is behind us, we would advise investors to view the consumer rebound in 1Q as 'noise' or a blip in what is still very likely going to be a secular (multi-year) downtrend. The process of liquidating debt and rebuilding depleted baby-boomer savings is barely one-third over (with a savings rate of barely more than 4% from 0.2% a year ago.).

Difficult to see recession ending anytime soon

So, we view the recovery in consumer spending that has the bulls rather excited as temporary and as we said, mostly reflecting a bounce in January. What we see in the data supporting the consumer in 1Q was a $193 billion (annualized) decline in tax payments by the household sector. Meanwhile, organic personal income (excl government benefits) contracted at a 5.9% annual rate (-$154 bln). In the absence of a recovery in wage and salary income, we think it will be very difficult to paint a picture of the recession coming to an end anytime soon.

Nominal GDP declines at a 3.5% annual rate

We must admit to being surprised at the bond market reaction as the yield on the 10-year note retests critical support around the 3% area, especially with NOMINAL GDP, which has the highest correlation with interest rates, in contraction phase. Nominal GDP declined at a 3.5% annual rate on top of a 5.8% slide in the fourth quarter of last year. This back-to-back slide dragged the year-on-year trend to -0.5% from +1.2% in 4Q and +4.7% a year ago.




As for equities, a client made a very key point to us this morning in the aftermath of the data. The left side of the V does not surprise anyone anymore -- it's a done deal. What investors will have to see for this market to reverse course is that the right side of the V will prove elusive and end up looking like an L, an elongated U or a series of W's.

Are Fed And Markets On Same Page?

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Are Fed And Markets On Same Page?

Last thoughts for today from D. Rosenberg. Furthermore, the fact that the WHO just raised the Black Swine pandemic to level 5 should force more SPY "deleveraging" compliments of JPM, DB and UBS. To paraphrase WHO chief Margaret Chan: "it really is all of humanity that is under threat in a pandemic."

Mr. Market is to be respected, but he is not always correct

We find it rather difficult to square today’s Fed press statement with the amazing reversal in investor sentiment towards euphoria over the past several weeks. The equity market is, as we all know, a forward-looking barometer, and now seems to have gone further than merely pricing in “green shoots”, to discounting the righthand side of the ‘V’. Mr. Market is to be respected, but he is not always correct.

Fed has a more somber forecast than Mr. Market

The Federal Reserve does possess the largest US macroeconomic model on the planet, and although the central bank acknowledged the obvious today (that “the pace of contraction appears to be somewhat slower”, which was hardly a resounding endorsement for the second-derivative viewpoint, in our view), it seems to have a much more somber forecast of the economy (that “economic activity is likely to remain weak for a time”) compared to Mr. Market.
Disconnect between Fed & market’s ability to sustain rally Although the “outlook has improved modestly since the March meeting”, the operative word is “modestly”. In addition, the “remain weak for a time” quote resonated with us even if the market has largely shrugged it off. The Fed certainly does not have a perfect forecasting track record , but let’s just say that there does appear to be a disconnect between the central bank’s choice of words to describe the economic backdrop and Mr. Market’s ability to sustain this vigorous rally.

Never in the past 60 years have prices dropped this much

As for Treasuries, the selloff continues unabated, and comes on a day when real GDP contracted at over a 6% annual rate with confirmation of a deflationary environment with the gross domestic purchase deflator (GDP deflator ex trade) declining at a 1% annual rate on top of a 3.9% annualized slide in the fourth quarter of 2008. In fact, at no time in the past 60 years have we seen domestic prices fall this much over a six-month span.

Fed views deflation as the primary risk

Perhaps the market was expecting that the Fed would announce more in terms of the size of its bond-buying program (which was not forthcoming) and viewed the press statement as a disappointment. But as we stated this morning, periods of deflation in the past were typically met with long-term yields in a 2-3% band with near consistency. The Fed may have tweaked how it portrayed the current climate in today’s statement, but what it did not change was its view that deflation remains a primary risk – “the Committee sees some risks that inflation could
persist for a time below rates that best foster economic growth and price stability in the longer term”.

Too much slack in the economy to worry about inflation

The fact that the Fed can state this view, knowing full well that it has dramatically expanded its balance sheet and the money supply, is a testament to the view that the central bank has been leaning against the winds of deflation rather than creating inflation. In our view, the latter will be practically impossible to do in an environment where the underlying unemployment rate is approaching 16% and capacity utilization rates are at all-time lows of 66%. There is simply too much slack in the economy, in our view, for us to be worried over the prospect of inflation or a sustained bear market in bonds. Sphere: Related Content

A Look Back At The Week

Friday, May 1, 2009

A Look Back At The Week

The week that was through the eyes of David Rosenberg.

1) Largest drop in real GDP since early 1980s

GDP fell 6.1% QoQ annualized in 1Q, well below consensus expectation of -4.6% and even below the BAS-ML forecast of down 5.5%. All investment-related segments of the economy showed significant pullback, reflecting the global recession and the ongoing credit crunch that is making it difficult to complete projects. Commercial construction fell 44.2% in 1Q, which is the largest quarterly decline ever recorded going back to the late 1940s. The BEA noted significant declines in energy-related drilling projects as well as sharp downturns in commercial, healthcare, power and communication building. Capex investment fell 33.8%, the 5th quarterly decline in a row and the deepest decline to date. The residential building sector fared just as poorly, down 38% in 1Q continuing a string of declines that stretch back to early 2006, but again the 1Q drop was the deepest decline so far in the cycle. Inventories were cut by $103.7B in 1Q and took 2.8ppt from top line growth; however, this was far short of our expectations and combined with the weaker than expected final sales pace suggests businesses will likely need to slash more inventories in the months to come.

The one bright note in the report was the consumer, which posted a 2.2% quarterly annualized gain, in the first upturn since 2Q 2008. Early tracking into 2Q, however, suggests that this positive pace likely will not be sustained – not surprising amid the steadily climbing unemployment rate. The saving rate continued to climb, resting at 4.2% in 1Q – a full percentage point higher than in 4Q. On the price side, the GDP price index increased by 2.9%, above consensus but in line with BAS-ML expectations. The more important consumer price index fell by 1.0% as expected and the core PCE advanced by an anemic 1.5% q/q annualized while the yearly pace slowed to a 4-year low of 1.8%.

2) Nominal GDP declines at a 3.5% annual rate

We must admit to being surprised at the bond market reaction as the yield on the 10-year note retests critical support around the 3% area, especially with NOMINAL GDP, which has the highest correlation with interest rates, in contraction phase. Nominal GDP declined at a 3.5% annual rate on top of a 5.8% slide in the fourth quarter of last year. This back-to-back slide dragged the year-on-year trend to -0.5% from +1.2% in 4Q and +4.7% a year ago. This is a historic event, in our view. Outside of the deepest part of the Great Depression from 1930-33, the only other times that nominal GDP was deflating were in 1938, 1946, 1949, 1954 and 1958. While the equity market turned in rather mixed showings during these periods, what is clear to us is that long-term bond yields traded in a 2-3% range with perfect consistency, which could be a signal that at current levels, we could have the makings of a pretty nice buying opportunity in the Treasury market. As for equities, a client made an interesting point to us in the aftermath of the data. The left side of the V does not surprise anyone anymore – it’s a done deal. What investors will likely have to see for this market to reverse course is the right side of the V prove elusive and end up looking like an L, an elongated U or a series of W’s.

3) Are the Fed and markets on the same page?

We find it rather difficult to square the Fed’s press statement this week with the extremely positive reversal in investor sentiment over the past several weeks. The equity market is, as we all know, a forward-looking barometer, and now seems to have gone further than merely pricing in “green shoots”, to discounting the right-hand side of the ‘V’. Mr. Market is to be respected, but he is not always correct. The Federal Reserve does possess the largest US macroeconomic model on the planet, and although the central bank acknowledged the obvious (that “the pace of contraction appears to be somewhat slower”, which was hardly a resounding endorsement for the second-derivative viewpoint, in our view), it seems to have a much more somber forecast of the economy (that “economic activity is likely to remain weak for a time”) compared to Mr. Market. Although the “outlook has improved modestly since the March meeting”, the operative word is “modestly”. In addition, the “remain weak for a time” quote resonated with us even if the market has largely shrugged it off. The Fed certainly does not have a perfect forecasting track record , but let’s just say that there does appear to be a disconnect between the central bank’s choice of words to describe the economic backdrop and Mr. Market’s ability to sustain this vigorous rally.

4) Deflation seen as the primary risk

As for Treasuries, the sell-off continues unabated, and came on a day when we learned that real GDP contracted at over a 6% annual rate, with confirmation of a deflationary environment with the gross domestic purchase deflator (GDP deflator ex trade) declining at a 1% annual rate on top of a 3.9% annualized slide in the fourth quarter of 2008. In fact, at no time in the past 60 years have we seen domestic prices fall this much over a six-month span. Perhaps the market was expecting that the Fed would announce more in terms of the size of its bondbuying program (which was not forthcoming) and viewed the press statement as a disappointment. But as we have stated, periods of deflation in the past were typically met with long-term yields in a 2-3% band with near consistency. The Fed may have tweaked how it portrayed the current climate in the statement, but what it did not change was its view that deflation remains a risk – “the Committee sees some risks that inflation could persist for a time below rates that best foster economic growth and price stability in the longer term”.

The fact that the Fed can state this view, knowing full well that it has dramatically expanded its balance sheet and the money supply, is a testament to the view that the central bank has been leaning against the winds of deflation rather than creating inflation. In our view, the latter will be practically impossible to do in an environment where the underlying unemployment rate is approaching 16% and capacity utilization rates are at all-time lows of 66%. There is simply too much slack in the economy, in our view, for us to be worried over the prospect of inflation or a sustained bear market in bonds.

5) March spending decline implies weak 2Q start

Real consumer spending fell 0.2% MoM in March, after upwardly revised prints of 0.9% and 0.1% MoM respectively in January and February. Since so much of the 1Q gain was front-loaded into the beginning of the quarter it leaves an extremely weak hand-off of -0.4% (March/1Q annualized) heading into the second quarter. Thus the numbers are confirming our view that the 2.2% quarterly annualized gain in 1Q was little more than a short-lived rebound after the extreme bout of risk aversion seen in 4Q. Combined with the decline seen in April retail sales, this leaves our 2Q tracking for PCE at around -2.9%. Personal income fell 0.3% MoM in March, continuing an almost unbroken string of pullbacks dating back to last September. Real disposable personal income (DPI) was flat in March after a 0.3% drop in February, marking a renewed downturn after the boon to real income of the prior 6 months as energy prices collapsed. The statistical momentum (March/1Q annualized) of real DPI turned negative in March for the first time since last September.

6) This rally more rooted in technicals than fundamentals

We remain of the view that this is a rally more rooted in technicals than in fundamentals and that means that traders may well end up enjoying a further upleg to the 200-day moving average of 970. It is possible, though we choose not to participate. If you want risk, at least get paid something for the price of being wrong; for example, an 8-1/4% yield on a Baa corporate at least means investors will garner some income if the consensus view of a second half economic turnaround turns out to be off base. Everyone loves to point to that 1932-37 rally in the equity market when the economy bounced off its lows – then again, real GNP had plunged 33% peak-to-trough so there was space for a “bungee jump” and indeed, that stock market rally took place as the level of economic activity surged nearly 60%. We shall see the extent to which we see such a vigorous rebound this time around. For all we know, this is not 32-37 but perhaps the hiccup we saw in 1Q31 when we saw a 1.1% annualized growth rate followed by a 7.2% pop the very next quarter. We can only imagine how much excitement there must have been back then, but the reality is that the recovery in both the economy and the equity market was still more than a year away.

7) Homeownership out of vogue

Data from the Census Bureau on 1Q homeownership and vacancy rates revealed that the homeownership rate eased slightly from 67.5% in 4Q08 to 67.3% in 1Q09. Though down 2ppt from the peak of 69.2% in 4Q04, a reversion to the long-term average would still suggest another 2-3ppt correction. To date, the largest correction has been in the Midwest, where homeownership has dropped 3.5ppt from the 74.2% peak in 2Q04. At 62.8%, the homeownership rate in the West is now the lowest regionally – likely the result of surging foreclosure rates. By age of homeowner, those under the age of 44 years have seen the largest correction in homeownership, with rates falling to 40% for those under 35 years (from 43.3% in 1Q05) and to 65.7% for those between 35-44 years (from 70.1%) –this segment was likely the most active in market speculation and/or taking out subprime and Alt-A mortgages during the financing boom. The latest climb in delinquency and foreclosure rates suggests on ongoing shift of households into the rental market – a trend that stands to only add to current vacant housing stock.

19.1M homes stood vacant in 1Q – a record figure – including over 2.1M specifically for sale. Relative to pre-bubble levels, this is an 800K overhang of homes that can be expected to weigh heavily on prices for quite some time. In fact, at the current sales and housing start rates for single-family homes, it would take over 7 years to work through inventories. Simply calling an outright moratorium on homebuilding would require a 125% jump in new home sales to work through the housing stock in one year’s time. In short, these numbers indicate a work-out period in the housing market that will likely take quarters/years to resolve even with mortgage rates at record lows and affordability at record highs.

8) Consumer confidence — a hope and prayer

Consumer confidence jumped by the most in 3 years to 39.2 in April from 26.9 in March, almost exclusively on the expectation that the policies put in place will set the economy on a better glide path. This is still an extremely depressed level of sentiment, down 65% from the cycle peak back in February 2007. As such, we reserve judgment on whether the government policies will actually play out as optimistically as the US consumer predicts, but in the short term it is suggesting less of a pullback in consumer spending and a perhaps temporary slowing in the pace of saving rebuild.

Consumer assessment of the present situation rose by 1.8 points to a still very depressed 23.7 in April, with the job assessment (jobs plentiful minus jobs hard to get) up just 0.7 points to -43.4. Thus we have not changed our forecast for April payrolls of -670K with a 0.5ppt jump in the unemployment rate to 9.0%. Future expectations surged to 49.5 from 30.2, the largest jump since just after the Iraq invasion in April 2003. The net assessment of business conditions improved to -9.7, a 20-point jump from the previous month, which is the largest delta we have seen in this indicator since the end of the 1990 recession. Employment prospects performed equally as well as business prospects. Notably, however, the needle in income prospects barely moved, suggesting consumers remain wary about economic-based pay such as bonuses, tips and commissions.

9) March home price declines could be set to reaccelerate

The Case-Shiller home price index for the 20 largest US cities fell 2.2% M/M in February to stand down 18.6% Y/Y (a let-up from the record decline of -19% Y/Y in January). Results were in line with BAS-ML expectations but a tick lighter than consensus estimates. All 20 markets were in the red for the 6th straight month, with declines ranging from -0.3% M/M in Dallas (-4.5% Y/Y) to -5.0% M/M in Cleveland (-8.5% Y/Y). While the pace of deflation appears to have eased slightly in February, prices were still down -26.3% at a 3-month annualized rate. Further, sales transactions in March were driven by a higher share of distressed properties (50% versus 45% in February according to the NAR), suggesting that a reacceleration to the downside may lie ahead.

The hardest hit markets continue be those where sub-prime lending was pervasive and foreclosure rates have surged. Such areas include San Francisco, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Miami, and Los Angeles – all off by 40-50% from their respective peaks. At the same time, Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago and Minneapolis were among the cities to post the largest monthly declines in February, reflecting the spreading nature of real estate deflation. To be sure, malaise in the auto industry was also partly at play in some markets and can be expected to continue to weigh heavily on real estate prices in coming months. Looking ahead, depressed demand, tight credit, rising default rates and excess inventories will likely continue to lead prices lower. We estimate that an additional 10%-15% in downside is still in store, for a peak to trough decline of 40% (versus -30.7% at present).

10) Swine flu — a look back to SARS

With the world watching the swine flu situation, we thought it would be interesting to look at the market impact of the SARS breakout in the opening months of 2003, though we note that this cannot be considered predictive for the current situation. SARS certainly did exert a market impact, though it did not last for much more than 2-3 months. We also have to consider that at the time, the recession was over by well over a year and the economy was far less fragile than is now the case. Plus, the Fed had just announced that it was going to build a “firebreak” around deflation and was on the cusp of cutting the funds rate to 1%, and we also had the positive impact from the initial success in the Iraq war. But what was clear at the time was that (i) S&P food processors fell 15% as the stock market was building its base, and along with that we had airlines down 20%. The hotel/leisure/tourism segment of consumer discretionary pulled back 15% as well. The best ‘hedges’ were pharmaceuticals, which rallied 15%, and gold, which rose 10% during the peak of the pandemic. Emerging market equities were clocked, with the near-25% slide in the Korean Kospi at the time was just one indication. Commodity prices dropped 10% while bond yields managed to rally 100 basis points (though keep in mind that the Fed was still in the process of cutting rates).

Shooting The Shoots

Friday, May 1, 2009

Shooting The Shoots

Must read from David Rosenberg, who is on fire today, even taking on Larry Kudlow now.

It’s time to set the record straight

We acknowledge that we have felt like salmon swimming upstream. And, we constantly preach that everyone should keep an open mind and about the dangers of being perma-bears at the low (not our intention!) – but it’s time to set the record straight.

Big money investors have been on the sidelines

We have talked to so many bewildered clients about the massive equity market rally from the March lows that we’ve lost count. Few, if any (especially in the hedge fund community) seem to be celebrating the fact that the S&P 500 has rallied 30%, which tells us that big-money investors have been on the sidelines through this entire move. From our lens – and you can see this clearly from the twice-monthly NYSE data – the buying power for this market has actually come from severe short-covering as the bears head for the hills.

Few market-makers share enthusiasm of most economists

We don’t really share the view that the recovery, if and when it comes, will be sustained. We understand the historical record that even in the face of monumental fiscal and monetary easing, it takes a good four years for the economy to work through the aftershocks of a collapse in credit and asset values. While most economists are now waving the pom-poms, we find very few marketmakers who share their enthusiasm.

By and large, this rally has been a clear technical event

Gaps get filled rapidly and the primary source of buying power seems to be coming from a huge short-squeeze, and perhaps some pension fund rebalancing, which always seems to happen after the market makes a new low. To be sure, there is always the chance that the dry powder (money on the sidelines) is put to work and investors chase this rally. And nothing says that the S&P 500 cannot go as high as the 200-day moving average of 970 over the near term. We have seen these kinds of rallies in the past There were four of these kinds of rallies from 1929 to 1932; a half-dozen in the 19-year-old Japanese bear phase; and no fewer than 40,000 rally points in the Nasdaq that were fun to play in the 2000-2003 bear market – but the fundamental downtrend was obviously still intact.

Stock market not good at predicting inflection points

The stock market bottomed for good in the spring of 2003 because at that time, we were on the cusp of a 4%+ real GDP growth rate over the ensuing four quarters. The reason the rally of late 2001 to early 2002 failed was because the market realized the recovery would be delayed. Let’s just say that a 21% rally in the S&P 500 from Sept 2001 to January 2002 was not a bounce that was pricing in a 1.5% GDP growth rate for the ensuing four quarters, which is what we ended up with.

We can look at the situation in reverse. Did the 20% slide in the S&P 500 in the summer accurately predict the 4-1/2% GDP growth trend we were going to see the following year? No. And even in this cycle, the equity market was peaking just as the recession started in the fourth quarter of 2007. So, this notion that the equity market is telling us anything meaningful about the economic outlook, as Larry Kudlow would have us believe, is open for debate. The stock market’s track record is just about as good as the economics community at predicting the inflection points in the business cycle – and that’s not very good.

The market, as a whole, cannot be considered cheap

While there are some good blue-chip companies trading at low multiples, the market as a whole can hardly be considered cheap. That may have been the case two months ago, but no longer. As for the earnings landscape, it has become fashionable to talk about how the vast majority of companies are beating estimates in their 1Q results, but the bar was set extremely low to begin with after that epic 4Q operating and reported loss on S&P 500 EPS. In the meantime, earnings forecasts are being trimmed steadily for the balance of the year. In fact, forward P/E multiple of 15x operating and 30x on reported EPS are not that compelling. So, we do not have a strong valuation argument. We do not have a strong earnings argument. The seasonals ("sell in May”) are about to become less compelling too.

New lows in S&P won’t happen as soon as we thought

We would, at the same time, acknowledge that if the terms of engagement have changed, the Obama economics team and the Fed have made it exceedingly difficult for the shorts to make money in this market. Tail risks, notably in terms of the banking system, have been removed. This, in turn, does mean that even if we break to new lows in the S&P 500, it probably will not happen as soon as we had thought.

Government will do whatever it takes

At the March 9 lows, there was a real feeling of possible bankruptcy in the financial system. But it is now abundantly clear the government will not allow any big financial institution to fail. The end of mark-to-market accounting rules and the super-steep yield curve have returned most of the banks to profitability. Uncle Sam can be relied on to remain the capital provider of last resort, even for those banks that do not pass the coming stress test (which has been delayed, in part because the government wants to assess how to deal with the fallout of those particular institutions). More and more taxpayer money is being thrown at the credit crisis, and now we hear that $50 billion will be allocated toward easing debt-service strains among those households that took on second mortgages during the housing bubble. And, until recently when the green shoots started to appear, there was growing talk of yet another fiscal blockbuster coming down the pike to underpin the economy.

Green shoots can turn into a dandelion or a beanstalk

We are more impressed with solid roots than we are with green shoots. The economy and the capital markets are being held together by tape and glue, in our view. Private sector activity is contracting and will continue to lose its share of GDP as the government’s influence rises on a secular basis. Tax rates will inevitably rise, as they are already doing at the state and local government level. The public sector is now involved in the mortgage market, the insurance sector, the banking industry, and of course, the automotive business.

Economy transforming into an early 1980s European model

As economists, strategists, analysts, and the media, focus on the noise – which is what green shoots really are: a blip in a fundamental downtrend – a dramatic transformation of the economy toward a 1970s/early 1980s European model is unfolding. That post-Mitterrand, pre-Thatcher model, if memory serves us correctly, was one of low-potential real GDP growth rates, low-fair-value P/E multiples, low rates of return on capital and a sclerotic economic system. Economy is not in free-fall but is hardly stabilizing.

Now let’s get to the economy and those fabled green shoots

There is no doubt that the economy is no longer in free-fall, but it is hardly stabilizing, even if the data have improved from deeply negative trends at the turn of the year. There are pundits claiming that because initial jobless claims have managed to come off their recent highs, the end of the recession is in sight. That is a fairy tale, in our opinion.

Slack still being built up in the labor market

Given the looming wave of auto sector layoffs, we expect claims to break to above 700,000 this summer, which would be a new record. So, jobless claims do not appear to have peaked yet. In fact, the relentless surge in continuing claims signals that an ever-increasing amount of slack is being built up in the labor market. There has never been a peaking out in gross claims without there being a confirmation from a similar turn in the continuing jobless claim data. Moreover, initial jobless claims have topped the 600,000 threshold now for 13 weeks in a row, and that is the real story.

To suggest that claims have stabilized above 600,000 and that this is a good thing is ridiculous. It would mean that by this time next year, the unemployment rate could potentially reach 15%. The reason is because employment losses do not end until claims actually break below 400,000. No recession ever ended until claims broke below 600,000, and on average, recessions only end once claims drop below 500,000 (when the last recession ended in November 2001, as an example, claims were 450,000).

Job losses will not end until the end of the year

Employment is one of the four critical ingredients that go into the recession call, not jobless claims, and at over 600,000 on claims, we lose payrolls at a monthly rate of around 600,000. That is hardly what we would call a stable economic backdrop. We do not see job losses ending before the end of the year. Industrial production and real manufacturing/trade sales are two other components that go into the NBER recession-determination model, and our forecast suggests that they too will not bottom conclusively until 2010.

Real organic personal income decrease is unprecedented

What really caught our eye is the fourth horseman of the recession call – real organic personal income. This metric peaked in October 2007 and was early in predicting the official onset of the recession, which began in December of that year. This measure of household income – it nets out government benefits – slipped 0.5% in March and has declined for five months in a row (and six of the past seven). Over that stretch, it declined at over a 6% annual rate, which is unprecedented (the data series go back to 1954).

Expect consumer spending to lag because of lost income

Since August of last year, the consumer sector has lost $266 billion of organic income (in nominal dollars at an annual rate) as job losses mounted, hours worked cut back, and full-time positions shifted to part-time. This lost income – not to mention $20 trillion of evaporated net worth – will likely bring long lags in dampening consumer discretionary spending. We realize that one of the bright spots in the 1Q GDP report was the +2.2% print on real consumer spending. But let’s face facts: The bounce was concentrated in January after a record 30% plunge in retail sales (at an annual rate) in the final three months of 2008. We already know that sales were down in both February and March and that the statistical handoff with respect to consumer spending is negative as we head into the second quarter.

The government does not create income; it redistributes it

We mentioned tape and glue above because the only component of household income that is rising is government transfers (mostly jobless benefits), which rose 0.9% in March and by more than 12% on a year-over-year basis. The government share of personal income at 16.3% is higher today than at any other time in the past six decades (and that covers the LBJ Great Society social benefit transfer of the 1960s). But keep in mind that the government does not create income – it distributes income by borrowing from today’s bondholders and tomorrow’s taxpayer. Not until we begin to see real incomes rise without the crutch of Uncle Sam’s checkbook will it be safe to call for the end of the recession. And again, we see this as more a 2010 story than a 2009 story, although very clearly the markets are suggesting the latter (insofar as they are signaling anything about the economic outlook).

The worst is over

In any event, the economy has certainly passed its worst point of the cycle even if we do not yet see the bottom that many others do at this time. And it may very well be that we overstayed our bearish call on the equity market and that the lows were turned in on March 9. Many pundits who have been around far longer seem to believe that, and they could be right. But there is no sense crying over spilled milk, even after a 30% run-up in the S&P 500 and a 100 basis point surge in the 10-year note yield from the lows. It just broke above its 200-day moving average, and there is nothing but empty space on the chart to 3.8% – that is an observation, not a forecast, by the way.

Lessons learned from the Great Depression

With all that in mind, we thought it would be instructive to look back to the experience of the 1930s. A credit collapse, asset deflation and massive decline in economic activity were finally stopped in their tracks by massive doses of fiscal and monetary stimulus. The S&P 500 bottomed in the summer of 1932 and the trough in GDP occurred shortly thereafter. But if history is any indication, the depression did not end for another nine years. Even after the massive relief efforts and government intervention from the New Deal, we closed the 1930s with a 15% unemployment rate and consumer prices deflating at a 2% annual rate.

Focus on SIRP — safety and yield at a reasonable price

Because the attention now has shifted to the green shoots, as was likely the case after the 1932 low as well, we highly recommend that investors focus on the big picture, which is that the aftershocks of a credit collapse and an asset deflation of this magnitude last for years, even with public sector support. Now go back to that June 1932 low in the S&P 500 (below 5) and the initial surge was breathtaking – the market roared ahead by 75% in just the first three months. But guess what? For buy-and-hold investors, by the end of 1941, the S&P 500 was at the same level as in the fall of 1932. Nine years of nothing, unless you are the most astute trader around.

Folks who chased the rally after the market broke out of the gate woefully underperformed those who stuck with their focus on generating cash flows from the fixed-income market. The yield on long Treasuries fell from 3.8% to 2.5% (Fall of 1932 to the end of 1941) while Baa corporates did even better – rallying from 7.1% to 4.4%. So from this point forward, unless you are comfortable that you have the discipline as to when to get out, the lesson of the last post-credit crunch/asset deflation/depression seven decades ago is to retain your focus on SIRP – safety and yield at a reasonable price. Passive buy-and-hold strategies are destined to fail, in our view. Sphere: Related Content

Parting Thoughts From Rosenberg - Ver 1.0

Monday, May 4, 2009

Parting Thoughts From Rosenberg - Ver 1.0

Some of David Rosenberg's last thoughts as he is putting the bubble wrap in his boxes. It is not surprising that his parting gift to his bank is a moderate shift to a slightly bullish outlook, likely designed to make life for his "Economic Strategist" replacement a little easier. However, reading between the lines allows for the real Rosie to shine through. And is, as always, a breath of fresh air in an environment where the MSM has become utterly useless.

We are in year 9 of an 18-year secular bear market

The S&P 500 peaked in real terms back in August 2000. Adjusted for the CPI, it is down 58% since that time. So, we would say that we are in year 9 of what is likely to be an 18-year secular bear market, because if you look at long waves in the past, they tend to last about 18 years with near perfection.

What happened during the last secular bear market

As an example, go back to the last secular bear market, and you will see that the S&P 500 peaked, again in real terms, in January 1966 and bottomed in July 1982, 18 years later. But there were plenty of mini-cycles in between. In fact, there were four recessions and three expansions during that entire 18-year period and unless you were a completely passive investor, you definitely wanted to be in the game during the three expansions because the S&P 500 rallied an average of 50% during those phases. Again, it is important to note that these were rallies you
could rent, not own, but they did last an average of 20 months. So, it’s not exactly as if they have an extremely short shelf life.

Playing a game of devil’s advocate

With all this in mind, we went through an exercise over the weekend and played a game of devil’s advocate. If Rosie had to face off against Rosie, what would we say if we were forced to take the other side of the debate, keeping in mind that in fact, we may be overly bearish at the present time. And believe it or not, we did manage to come up with some pretty compelling material.

Past the half-way point in the recession

First, our in-house model of predicting where we are in the cycle, for the first time, gave us a signal late last week that we are past the half-way point in the recession. Considering that the stock market bottoms 60% of the way through, this is an encouraging signpost.

We’ve worked through the effects of the Lehman collapse

Second, our propriety proxy for private sector interest rates has come down from 8.11% at the nearby peak to 7.18% now despite the backup in Treasury yields, to stand at their lowest since last September. The TED spread is back to where it was last September, as are most credit spreads. The VIX has finally broken to 35, back to where it was last September. 10-year TIPS breakeven levels, which were predicting deflation at the end of last year, are now forecasting 1.5% average inflation rates for the next decade. Again, we last saw this in September of last year. This is interesting because even though the economy and the markets were clearly in the doldrums back in September, the fact that so many market barometers are back to where they were then means that at the very least, we have worked through the ill-effects of the post-Lehman collapse.

Stock market has lagged relative to other asset classes

All an equity bull really has to do is point to the fact that the S&P 500 last September was trading around 1200. The only difference is back then we were looking at it from the perspective of being 20% off the highs whereas a move back to September levels, which, after all, would only mimic what many other market indicators have accomplished, would be viewed as an 80% surge off the lows not to mention another 35% potential upside from where we are today. Even the CRB raw industrials are now back to where they last October when the S&P 500 was hovering around the 950 level. So again, if we were equity bulls, and maybe we should be, we would simply point out that of all the asset classes that have bounced back to life, the stock market has actually been a laggard.

Three indictors that suggest cyclical bear market is over

Third, we found three indicators that have stood the test of time and strongly suggest that the cyclical bear market in equities and the economy have drawn to a close: the ISM, the Conference Board’s coincident-to-lagging indicator and the University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey. The ISM bottomed in December 2008 at 32.9 and is now 40.1. Going back to 1950, we found that recessions end within three months of the ISM hitting bottom, and never by more than six months. The coincident-to-lagging ratio just turned in successive lows of 89.6. The data go back to 1960 and we found that recessions ended within two months of this indicator, 100% of the time. And, the U of M consumer sentiment index bottomed at 55.3 last November. As we saw on Friday it had rebounded to 65.1 as of the end of April. The data show recessions end typically within six months of the bottom in this key leading indicator, and not once was the lag longer than eight months.

We could be on the precipice of a cyclical upturn

This is not to say that our secular views have changed. However, we could well be on the precipice of a cyclical upturn, and whether it is sustainable or not may have to be a story for another day. We don’t see as many green shoots as others do, but then again, we endured more than a year of jobless recoveries following the market lows of 1990 and 2002.

The most glaring example

The most glaring example of all is the fact that the S&P 500 bottomed in the summer of 1932 and yet by the end of the 1930s, seven years after ‘New Deal’ stimulus, the unemployment rate was still 15%, consumer prices were deflating at a 2% annual rate, and let’s face it, the Great Depression did not actually end until 1941. But for investors, the worst was over in the summer of 1932 in the immediate aftermath of the acute government intervention at the time. While
there were recurring setbacks along the way, including the severe bear market of 1937-48, the fundamental lows had already been turned in long before.

Investors have been able to price out financial tail risks

Fast forward to March 2009, and the same mantra was heard – ‘nationalization’, ‘depression’ and ‘deflation’. As was the case with FDR’s early days as President, what the last half of Obama’s first ‘100 days’ managed to accomplish was to eliminate these words from the investment lexicon. The degree of intervention from the Treasury and the Fed has been so intense that investors have been able to price out financial ‘tail risks’ that had dominated the market landscape through much of the first quarter.

The market is gravitating to a new mean

So, the way to look at the situation is that by removing the ‘tail risks’ of an outright systemic financial collapse, the market has gravitated to a new ‘mean’ (in the sense that at any given point in time, market prices reflect some expected distribution of possible outcomes – a very bad potential outcome has been taken out of the probability distribution, at least according to Mr. Market). This is why if the bulls have a solid argument, it is the prospect that the S&P 500 can indeed approach those pre-Lehman levels, which back in September, seemed rather bearish, but is only bullish today benchmarked against where we are.

Still not sold on the bull case for equities

Despite all these powerful arguments, we are still not totally sold on the bull case for equities. Valuation is not compelling, in our view. Sentiment has completely swung towards a bullish consensus (which is a contrary negative). Home prices and employment are still in freefall, the former undermining the balance sheet and the latter exerting a drag on the income statement and suggestions that a mild improvement in the negative growth rate is something to be excited about seems off base.

Difficult to ascertain who the marginal buyer will be

It seems hard to believe that after being burned by two bubbles seven years apart that the baby boomer is going to line up at the trough one more time. So, it’s difficult to ascertain who the marginal buyer is going to be. Disposal of durable goods assets to pay off a record household debt burden seems like a multi-year deflation story as far as we are concerned. Since the boomer household is income constrained and underweight fixed-income securities on its balance sheet, we believe that demand for high-quality bonds is going to strengthen in coming years. Government policy will remain highly pro-cyclical but there is no match for the contractionary effects from a shrinking US household balance sheet.

Deflation will win out over inflation

We are concerned that deflation will win out over inflation this time around. While the data cited above are indeed impressive in terms of their track record, since this is not a manufacturing inventory recession but rather a downturn deeply rooted in asset deflation and credit contraction, we may find out that the economic releases that were tried, tested and true in the other post-war cycles may not be appropriate today given the overpowering secular trends of consumer deleveraging and frugality. Sphere: Related Content

Saturday, March 28, 2009

上星期五,遵照行动计划, 将信任退休基金转去现金基金. 再将马股减持20%...现在只剩20%,再看星期一.

星期五也做了重大决定, 短了一张"马期",
"短博"至4月上旬或见调至850 到870点结算. (如要下,就ok, 如要上也要调一下再衝) "长持"6个月或见底结算. 预750到850点. (看国内政治与国外经济变化)

港股卖空多17%, 50%看空, 50%cash.

2月Existing Home sales up
2月New home sales up
2月Durable Goods up
与上月比(环比或同比?)up一些, 与07 和08年比,跌到阿妈都唔认得.
除却季节性波动,无论如何,是上调, 再看多一,两个月又如何?

Revised 4th Qtr GDP -6.3% 好过预期 -6.4%

美国银行肥貓说3月sales 不好, 上次说1,2 月sales 很好...所以是不好
4月就知道了.

在大马, 我只听Dr Zeti 讲野, 还有Dr. Mohd Ariff

Keys:
三月尾
基金Quarterly 结算 .结完就
期指结算 .结完就

四月
月中, 公司业绩公佈.大马受直击 .US再看
经济指标,差呱?
US公佈三月经济指标,差呱?
大马公佈二月经济指标,直情
大马看IPI, Trade, Manufacturing,
US 看消费指标,PCE, 债,
US 公佈第一季GDP

五月
五月大马公佈第一季GDP

Thursday, January 8, 2009

2009年经济灾难预测

2009年经济灾难预测
Roger Wiegand(tigergoo翻译)

2008-12-22

“我们认为我们现在有足够的资料从基本面和技术面来对2009年做一些严肃的预报和预测。2008年是一个令人讨厌的年份,很多事情被引爆,并且还远远没有得到修复。财政部长保尔森告诉我们这个星期没有更多的惊喜,还告诉我,我们甚至还没有发现金融衍生怪物的一小部分。拿纳税人的7000亿美元仅仅是一个热身。对交易商和投资者来说,更大的问题是未来会发生什么以及何时发生。

在下面的报告中,我们将考虑全球经济的关键点,并预测2009年的结果。

2008年最重要的新闻是全球大型银行的净资产的解体以及他们对运作正常业务和提供市场流动性贷款的脆弱的自我修复能力。

伯南克和保尔森只帮助坏孩子银行恢复流动性以保持营业状态,而不把信贷扩张提供给西部或全球经济体的任何企业。

2009年的结果将是没有显著的银行贷款,采取更多的救助资金和撇清各种不良贷款。

我们认为最大的看点是保险业巨头美国国际集团(AIG)的巨大灾难。尽管多次注资数十亿美元拯救,AIG仍处于千钧一发之际。

2009年的结果将是AIG的意外坠落和失败威胁全球,导致整个西方国家和亚洲国家的保险业无法开展业务,除非使用强制保险政策。

大多数人不理解这个的怪物的滑落将产生什么后果。我们认为这几乎无法估量的,这就是为什么保尔森给他们这么多钱。

我们的新总统决心进行一项8600亿至1万亿美元的艰巨努力,以实现新的经济复苏,尽管他的一些想法的确是崇高,但总体规划将毫无效果,第二次大萧条仍将发生,股市将在2009年5月和9-10月间坠落。

我们认为最严重的打击将在2009年9月的晚些时候。

在明年春天,我们看到:

( 1 )第二波更大的住宅按揭违约浪潮;

( 2 )第一波汽车消费贷款违约的大浪;

( 3 )超过400亿美元的信用卡违约,将打击银行贷款;

( 4 )第一波购物商场、办公楼和其他商业地产的抵押贷款止赎权丧失;

( 5 )最后,无保证金资金或定金的CDS交易将上演华丽的终场乐章!我们今天听到的总数是500万亿美元!我甚至不能形容这个数字。

这五个融合的死亡列车将带着道琼斯指数从死猫跳的10400-10800回到7250 ,甚至6600,或5600。



股市交易者和投资者有一个更坚实的季度,我们认为即将到来的奥巴马万亿美元的施舍能够恢复一些股市的损失。

我们认为,提升股票市场将有助于让大多数部门获得一些恢复,并且提供了股市触底和发现新的基地的幻想。

严峻的现实是,股价在4月或5月上旬达到峰值后进行的前所未有的高台跳水吓得美国人和全世界不知所措。

即使这些事件和不断上升的失业率问题出现,经济观察家和分析家们继续会信誓旦旦地说最坏的时期已经过去,底部已经出现,一个良好的、新的、熠熠生辉的世界贸易和投资体系将在2009年秋季之前出现在我们光明的经济中。

然后,在9月末10月初,纽约,伦敦,东京和亚洲市场将发生一个巨大的崩溃。

多低才算低,多坏才是尽头?

我们认为,道琼斯可能在2009年11月1号终结,从5600附近跌至3000点,甚至1500点。跨国公司的市盈率(PE)将降至4-7。今天,他们中的大多数接近18。

这种严重性的预测告诉了我们什么?

美国现在全国失业率触及16 % ,官方公布的数字只是真实数字的一半。

到2009年秋天,美国的实际失业率将接近1930年代整个大萧条时期的水平即25 %,可悲的是,这并不是最严重的,我们预测美国真实的失业率将达到30-40 % 。在密歇根州和俄亥俄州,40 %的失业率也并非天方夜谭。

几个欧洲国家都为失业人士建立了更大更多的社会安全网。而美国国家当局几乎没有准备。

美国联邦政府提供食品券的部门和提供福利供应的工作将被淹没。这将是一次卡特里娜飓风对全美国饥饿公民的袭击。

城市地区将看到犯罪率暴涨,一些城市的部分地区则完全无法居住。

在最近的报告中,我们已经看到1100万美国公民接受粮食援助、70万儿童每天挨饿。我们怀疑接受粮食帮助的真实数字将达到3500万人,其中一些是幼小的、手无寸铁的儿童。政府仍然会否认,而且无论如何也不准备宣布全国紧急状态。随着事态恶化,针对富裕人群的粮食骚乱和其他暴力行为将司空见惯。

未来三年内银行倒闭的数量将达数千。另外,2011年或2012年,美元指数可能击破最近的低点70.00,下滑到46.00。

当联邦储备委员会和美国财政部拼命印刷和分发现金以刺激停滞不前的经济,甚至超低利率也失效时,通货膨胀或潜在的恶性通货膨胀就是很实际的。伯南克已经没有降息空间。

消费者将破产或走向破产。相互关联的家庭户数将增加一倍和两倍,甚至与一些雇员在同一个屋檐下。基本租金成本,按揭付款,医疗保健,食品,公用事业和税收负担过多,而工资却在持续下跌。

在美国的一些地区,大量的住宅完全被遗弃,或只有一部分人能够完全占有。数以百万计的新抵押贷款人没有获得通过,只有极少数人可以得到贷款。

我们正在目睹系统性崩溃。

市政府和国家陷入支出和债务缠身的困境。据报道,美国50个州中的22个有严重的预算问题。加州是其中可怕的一个,密歇根州在技术上已经破产。

底特律将在2009年破产,并且还将有更多的意外发生。将有一连串的债券违约,其结果将淹没这些城市、州和县,导致他们借钱越来越多。

这些闪耀光线越快通过,我们从底部开始复苏也会越快。可悲的是,复苏进程将需要经年。

在股票市场被遗忘了多年之后,期货和商品交易商会持续获得稳定的利润。

2015年之前我们将看不到复苏的迹象。