Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Is the Bull Market Super-Cycle Nearly Over? Bill Gross Thinks So, But Here's a Common Sense Approach
- Robots About to Take Away 18 Million German Jobs, 59 Percent of Germany's Work Force?
- Factory Orders Positive First Time in 8 Months, Remain Weak
- Beware, the Tax Man Has Eyes on You: Potential Hike for Illinoisans is Staggering
Is the Bull Market Super-Cycle Nearly Over? Bill Gross Thinks So, But Here's a Common Sense Approach Posted: 04 May 2015 07:56 PM PDT Using a Prechteresque term, Bill Gross Says the "Bull Market Super-Cycle is Nearing End". The attempt by global central banks to cure a debt crisis with more debt doesn't have much further to run, which will end a rally that's lasted three and a half decades, the 71-year-old manager wrote in an investment outlook for Janus Capital Group Inc. Investors should stop focusing on price appreciation and instead look to "mildly levered income," such as his recommendation to short German government debt, he said.Elliot Wave Curiously, the article fails to mention the Elliot Wave Grand Supercycle Principle originally formulated by Ralph Nelson Elliott but whose main proponent is Robert Prechter. Modern application of Elliott Wave Theory posits that a Grand Supercycle wave five is completing in the 21st century and should be followed by a corrective price pattern of decline that will represent the largest economic recession since the 1700s.Grand Supercycle? So is this the "grand bull market supercycle". I don't know. Nor does Gross or anyone else. I am a general believer in Kondratiev waves, but they get longer over time because people live longer. Such theories aside, it's perfectly obvious that stocks are horrendously overpriced. Common Sense What matters now is common sense. And common sense is the same now as it was for technology stocks in 2000, housing in 2006, and stocks in 1929. From a practical standpoint that's all you really need to know. It matters not if this is a K-Wave or a supercycle. The supercycle issue is theoretically interesting, but meaningless in practical terms. By the way, these cycles and supercycles differ from country to country. Take a look at Japanese equities. It should be crystal clear that Japan is not on the same path as the rest of the world. Australia, Russia, and Brazil may not be either. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Robots About to Take Away 18 Million German Jobs, 59 Percent of Germany's Work Force? Posted: 04 May 2015 12:47 PM PDT I have seen many grim predictions regarding robots taking away human jobs, but one of the most dire predictions comes from a study commissioned by ING-Diba. The study claims that 59 percent of Germany's work force could be replaced by machines and software in the coming decades. The Local asks Robots About to Take Away 18 Million Jobs? The results of the [ING-Diba] study paint an almost doomsday-esque scenario for Germany.Not All Bad News 18 million jobs vanish but it's not all bad news because "machines will create new jobs". OK, how many new jobs will be created? The answer cannot be many because the study claims "Almost two thirds of Germany's workforce will be unemployed". Does Technology Create Jobs? Let's make an optimistic assumption that over time technology creates jobs, simply because it always has. To assume otherwise is to assume "It's different this times." The sewing machine, the reaper, the cotton gin, the assembly line, radio, the phone, PC, mobile phones, and the internet all created jobs. Those technologies had one thing in common: they were price deflationary. Role of the Central Bank Today we live in a world where central banks insist prices rise. That is the real source of the problem, not the technology itself. The sorry state of affairs right now is central bank inflationary policies have accelerated the trend to robots while crushing everyone on a fixed income and everyone priced out of a job. It may come down to this grim question: Which comes first, technology that creates another wave of jobs or a huge global war over resources, prices, and wages? Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Factory Orders Positive First Time in 8 Months, Remain Weak Posted: 04 May 2015 11:38 AM PDT Last month I noted Factory Orders Unexpectedly Rise Snapping String of 6 Straight Declines. They didn't. Last month's orders were revised to the negative column in today's report. Factory Orders Rise but Soft Today, the Bloomberg Economic Consensus on factory orders was correct, but soft. Boosted by aircraft and also by motor vehicles, factory orders rose an as-expected 2.1 percent in March. March's gain ends what were 7 straight declines as February, which was initially at plus 0.2 percent, is revised now to minus 0.1 percent. The 7 straight declines are the most striking evidence of how hard the manufacturing sector has been hit, by the strong dollar that weakens exports and also specific trouble in the energy sector due to the downturn in oil.New Orders and Shipments Percent Change From Year Ago Census Report Diving into the Census Report, for March (seasonally adjusted) we find new orders look like this: All Manufacturing: +2.1% ....Excluding Transportation: +0.0% ....Excluding Defense: +1.3% ....With unfilled orders +4.9% Durable Goods +4.4% ....Transportation +13.5% ........Motor Vehicles, Bodies, Parts +3.4% ........Nondefense Aircraft +30.6% ........Defense Aircraft and Parts +103.0% Nondurable Goods -0.3% As noted before, aircraft orders have a long lead time and are more subject to cancellation than other orders. For the second month in a row, the string of declines finally ends. This time, I think the rise will stick. Hooray! Otherwise, this looks like another questionable month. Excluding transportation, there was no increase in factory orders. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Beware, the Tax Man Has Eyes on You: Potential Hike for Illinoisans is Staggering Posted: 04 May 2015 01:03 AM PDT Live in Chicago? A report by Nuveen shows a pension payment spike looms in 2016, and the potential tax hike to fix it is staggering. Please consider Chicago's Fiscal Stress: New Term, Same Problems. Pension Payments Are A Growing Portion of the BudgetShockingly Bad Fiscal Health of Chicago On April 1, I noted the Shockingly Bad Fiscal Health of Chicago (and the Financial Engineering Chicago Uses to Hide that Fact). That bad fiscal health was just related to Chicago schools. I knew the pension funds were in dire straits as well. Although I then did not have current numbers, on March 3, I was comfortable saying Chicago's Only Possible Salvation: Bankruptcy - a Name That Cannot be Spoke. On April 21, a $295.7 million bond offering by the beleaguered Chicago Board of Education hit the market. The Yield Hit 5.63%. That is 285 basis points higher than Municipal Market Data's benchmark triple-A scale. For more details, please see Yield on Chicago School Bond Offering Hits 5.63%; Debate Over Risk; Miracles Not Coming; Bankruptcy the Sensible Option. Rauner pledged "The taxpayers of Illinois are not going to bail out the city of Chicago, that ain't happenin. But there are things we can do to help them restructure and get their government and their schools turned around, and I'd like to help them." What About the Rest of Illinois? Note the above woes are for Chicago only. Illinois has other massive funding problems. On March 2, I noted some of the problems in Illinois Pension Plans 39% Funded; Taxpayers On the Hook for $105 Billion in Liabilities; It Will Get Worse!. Illinois State Budget Deficit According to Crain's Chicago Business, Illinois Budget Deficit is $9 billion. "Illinois' fiscal woes are significantly deeper and more serious than generally realized, with the state facing a $9 billion operating deficit in the fiscal year that begins July 1." When Nuveen came up with 50% property tax hike, it did not include tax hikes to bail out other Illinois pension plans. Nor did it address the $9billion budget deficit for the state. Lost Cause Not a penny of taxpayer money should go to fund these lost causes. I find it hard to believe that Emanuel himself does not know the school system is truly bankrupt. To spare the citizens of Illinois massive tax hikes, the only reasonable course of actions are as follows:
Had options 1-4 been done a decade ago, Illinois would not be as bad off as it is today. Now, even those measures cannot and will not fix the problems. Moody's Announcement "Chicago's Pension Pressures Will Grow For Years" On May 1, Moody's made this announcement: Regardless of legal and political outcomes, Chicago's pension pressures will grow for years. Illinois desperately needs bankruptcy legislation. 50% tax hikes are not only amazingly unfair, they will drive both corporations and individuals out of the state. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
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