Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Viral Nonsense About What Caused Tuesday's Rally
- Good News in Michigan: Right-to-Work Drive Gains Steam in Legislature
- "Get the Heck out of Bank of America" says Senator Richard Durbin, on Senate Floor; Rep Brad Miller Accuses Banks of "Vulgar Profits"
- Christie Blows Golden Opportunity to Lead Nation, Bows Out of Presidential Race; Prospects for US Economy Go Down the Drain
- Australia Central Bank Signals Rate Cut; "Different Economic Phase" Says PM;Reflections on the "Hard Currency" Play; "Out of the Blue" Taunt Indicator
- Goldman Sachs Says Commodities May Rally 20% on Emerging-Markets Growth; Mish Says Fade Goldman
Viral Nonsense About What Caused Tuesday's Rally Posted: 04 Oct 2011 09:03 PM PDT No fewer than a half-a-dozen sites featured or repeated a silly story about Tuesday's late rally that propelled the S&P 500 up 45 points in an hour. I am commenting because of all the emails I received on the idea. Supposedly the Financial Times article EU ministers look at bank aid plans triggered the rally. European Union finance ministers are examining ways of co-ordinating recapitalisations of financial institutions after they agreed that additional measures were urgently needed to shore up the region's banks.This is a case of looking for a cause and finding one. The most likely explanation of this rally is purely technical. Support was breached, no more sellers stepped in and a short-covering rally from deeply-oversold commenced as bears covered. If you prefer, "short-term psychology changed for unattributable reasons" It is highly doubtful this all happened because of non-statements with no details from Olli Rehn. Rather, Rehn just happened to be spouting nonsense right as the market was ready to reverse on short-covering. It is a mistake to look for an immediate explanation for every market move. Sometimes the explanation will not come for days (then be attributed to something else), and sometimes there really is no explanation other than short-term psychology changed. When everyone starts fishing for answers, someone will find one, no matter how silly, and the story gets repeated everywhere. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Good News in Michigan: Right-to-Work Drive Gains Steam in Legislature Posted: 04 Oct 2011 06:14 PM PDT I am always in search of good news. Today I found some in Michigan where a Right-to-work drive gains steam In this historic stronghold of the American labor movement, the phrase "right to work" is seen by many as fighting words.Here's the bad news. Republican governor Rick Snyder is a wimp. If he would get behind this bill it would sail through the legislature. Right-to-work is the right thing to do and he should have no qualms backing it. Hopefully the Republican legislature puts Snyder to the test. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 04 Oct 2011 12:25 PM PDT Senator Richard Durbin of Illinois is telling Americans to "Get the heck out of that bank", right on the Senate Floor. His comments are in response to Bank of America hiking fees on debit cards. Please consider BofA Customers Urged by Lawmakers to Quit Lender Over Debit Fee Congressional Democrats are pushing customers to quit doing business with Bank of America Corp. and one lawmaker is looking to make it easier for them to do so as the biggest U.S. lender announced plans for new debit-card fees.Bank of America Website Down 4th Day, "Thanks for Your Patience" Says Website The Register reports Bank of America website disrupted for 4th day in a row Bank of America's website continued to suffer sporadic outages on Monday, marking the fourth day that some customers have been unable to use its online services to check balances and pay bills.By not commenting, Bank of America is making matters worse. Bank of America (BAC) Flirts With $5 Note the late-August "Buffet is Buying" spike has been taken back and then some. The $5 level is crucial. Many mutual funds cannot hold stocks whose share prices drop below $5. Exclusive Nonsense As an example of shoddy reporting please consider Exclusive: Buffett not worried by BofA share fall. Billionaire investor Warren Buffett is not concerned by the sharp drop in Bank of America Corp (BAC) shares in the last couple of days, despite his $5 billion investment in the company last month, he told Reuters on Tuesday.Of course Buffett is not concerned about share price of Bank of America. He owns the debt. His primary concern is the debt is paid back, not the share price. It is extremely sloppy reporting to not point this out. Addendum: Reader Blake writes "As a libertarian I am appalled that a senator would directly attack an individual company for pricing decisions made by that company." Blake is correct in that stance. Senators should not make such statements on the floor of Congress. However, the decision by Bank of America was piss poor. They misunderstood public reaction, and worse yet were not prepared for the surge in traffic. No one will remember all the other banks who followed suit. Everyone will remember Bank of America was the first to jack rates. Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan is incompetent. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 04 Oct 2011 11:33 AM PDT I had hopes that Christie would step up to the plate because other than Ron Paul, every other Republican candidate leaves much to be desired. Thus, I am sad to report Christie Says No to White House Bid, Ends Speculation New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, who spent more than a year denying he'd run for president in 2012, put an end to renewed speculation of a bid and said he won't join the race to challenge President Barack Obama.I believe Christie would have become the next president had he run. Instead, expect more war-mongering, trade wars, and refusal to do anything about public unions regardless of what candidate wins. I do not know what Christie's policies are regarding war-mongering or trade wars. However, I do know the rest of the field, including Obama is committed to doing nothing about excessive military spending. I also know that protectionist nonsense is brewing in Congress and Mitt Romney is on the wrong side of the debate. Finally, I know (as does everyone else) what Christie has done in New Jersey to take on public unions. Christie would have lit a fire in the middle. Instead, the nation faces the prospect of another four years of Obama or some lame Republican (assuming Paul does not win). The very best we can hope for from Romney or Perry is to not make matters worse. Prospects for US Economy Go Down the Drain I highly doubt Christie gets another chance, ever. Moreover, Obama's odds of winning just shot up. Unfortunately, Christie's time has come and gone, unless by some miracle he is drafted in a deadlocked convention. The chance for a genuine outsider to lead just went down the drain, and so did prospects for the US economy. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 04 Oct 2011 09:25 AM PDT Housing, retail, and now commodity weakness have taken a toll on the Australian dollar. The final straw for the "Aussie", the hardest of "hard currencies" (currencies of commodity producing countries such as Australia and Canada) is rate cuts. They are coming. Bloomberg reports Aussie Weakens to One-Year Low as RBA Signals Interest-Rate Cut Possible The Australian dollar dropped to its lowest in a year against the greenback as a policy statement by the central bank suggested that an easing of inflation pressures will pave the way for possible interest-rate cuts.Economic Bust Hits Australia Flashback May 13, 2011: Economic Bust in Australia:Near-Record Corporate Bankruptcies, Employment Drops Unexpectedly; Rise in Bad Home Loans;Record Low Property Transactions
I expected the Australia dollar would sink for the reasons stated: Rising unemployment, recession, a housing bust, and most importantly rate cuts (when everyone else was expecting hikes). Australia's unemployment rate rises to 10-month high Flash Forward: September 8 2011: Australia's unemployment rate rises to 10-month high Australia's unemployment rate rose unexpectedly to a 10-month high in August.Note the expectation even in September for more rate hikes. Also note how badly the RBA screwed up its assessment of unemployment. Australian Dollar Daily Chart click on chart for sharper image Reversals Difficult to Time It is exceptionally difficult to time these reversals. I thought it was pretty clear in May (actually way before that because of the housing bust and retail weakness), that the next move by the RBA would be to lower rates. However, it was not until September (accompanied by the plunge in commodities and increased tension in Europe) that the market agreed. Then it was a quick 14.5% drop in the value of the Australian dollar in two months, from 1.10 all the way to .94. That drop wiped out a years' worth of gains (or more) for anyone in the "hard currency" trade betting on short-term Australia bonds. "Out of the Blue" Taunt Indicator One of the signs of a huge reversal is what I call the "out of the blue" taunt indicator. In early August several people emailed "out of the blue" telling me how horrendous my call was, how the RBA was going to hike, why commodities would not pull back, and that there would be no Australia housing crash. They nailed the top in the Australian dollar. Congratulations! Reflections on the "Hard Currency" Play Those who got in the "hard currency" play in early 2009 or the dip in mid-2010 are still way ahead. However, those who chased the play anytime in 2011 are underwater. Those who chased in mid-2011 are way underwater. The moral of this story is simple: The much ballyhooed "hard currency" play is not something you plow into and forget about. "Different Economic Phase" Says Prime Minister Those looking for further evidence of pending economic demise can find it when charlatans start preaching new paradigms and "it's different this time". Australia's prime minister Prime Minister Julia Gillard did just that on Tuesday. Please consider Aussie PM says mining boom likely to be sustained Australia's mining boom fueled by Chinese demand, which kept the economy out of recession during the global financial crisis, "is likely to be sustained for a very long period," Prime Minister Julia Gillard said Tuesday.The idea that exports will keep the Australian economy out of recession is complete silliness. Moreover, it was not commodities that kept the Australian economy humming during the great financial crisis, but an enormous property bubble that has now burst. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Goldman Sachs Says Commodities May Rally 20% on Emerging-Markets Growth; Mish Says Fade Goldman Posted: 04 Oct 2011 01:06 AM PDT Goldman Sachs says Commodities May Rally 20% on Emerging-Markets Growth Commodity prices may advance 20 percent over the next year as growth in emerging markets offsets the impact of the sovereign-debt crisis in Europe and a slowdown in developed economies, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS)Fade Goldman For starters, the fact that Goldman and Commerzbank trimmed estimates says they failed to spot the weakness in Europe, the US, and China and what that would do to commodity prices. I see no reason to be bullish or even neutral on commodities now. The idea that emerging markets will trump a recession in Europe, the US, and Australia is ridiculous to put it mildly. Moreover, the idea that emerging markets will decouple from the global economy is preposterous in and of itself. Finally, China is overheating and a new regime change next year will likely end the huge infrastructure plays in China that have been sucking up copper and other commodities. Goldman's Rationale Horrendously Flawed Simply put, no matter what commodities do, Goldman's rationale is horrendously flawed. Yes, commodities "may" rally 20%. However, they "may" fall 20% or even 30% first, and I suggest that is more likely. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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