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Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
Another Unbelievable Stress-Free Test; Whitewash Math and Deferred Tax Assets Posted: 26 Oct 2014 09:36 PM PDT In an effort to fool the public into believing the latest round of bank stress tests were actually designed to find stress, the ECB found 25 scapegoats, with the biggest losers in Italy and Greece. Interested parties may wish to slog through the full 178 page Stress Test Report. Capital Shortfalls Reuters reports ECB Fails 25 Banks in Health Check but Problems Largely Solved. Roughly one in five of the euro zone's top lenders failed landmark health checks at the end of last year but most have since repaired their finances, the European Central Bank said on Sunday. Italy faces the biggest challenge with nine of its banks falling short and two still needing to raise funds.€48 Billion Shortfall The Financial Times reports ECB Says Banks Overvalued Assets by €48bn. The European Central Bank's dissection of the books of the eurozone's biggest banks has found lenders overvalued their assets by €48bn.Whitewash Math Of the 130 banks, 25 failed, which seems like a lot. However, the total amount of under-capitalization is a mere €48 billion out of balance sheets that total €22 trillion. That is an overall asset overvaluation of 0.218%. Anyone seriously believe that with France, Italy, and Spain in or near recession? I don't. It's not even a generous rounding error. Have Spanish banks written off 100% of their bad property loans? What about sovereign bonds assumed to be 100 percent risk-free? Didn't Greece prove bonds payments are not sacrosanct? When the eurozone splinters, German banks are going to take a massive hit. Deferred Tax Assets Huky Guru has some interesting figures about Spanish banks. About a year ago, Guru reported that a Reclassification of DTAs (Deferred Tax Assets) provided an extra €30 billion capital for Spanish banks. Guru brought up the subject again today in Putting the Stress Tests in Context. Paraphrasing Guru ... Accounting magic and government decree has allowed banks to compute an extra €30 billion in capital for Spanish banks via DTAs. Without that €30 billion, the average Tier 1 capital for Spanish banks would have fallen from 9.1% to 7.1%. More than one bank would have failed the test. Spanish Banks Plow Into Spanish Sovereign Bonds Guru notes "Spanish banks hold Close to €231.519 billion in Spanish bonds, almost twice around the capital of the Spanish banking system." At least six Spanish banks have massive leverage in bonds. Catalunya Banc and NCG are particularly exposed. The entire exercise was another stress-free farce. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Mike "Mish" Shedlock is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction. Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/account_management.html to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific. |
What Do Seven Billion People Do? Top 10 Mega-Cities by Population 2014 vs. 2030 Estimate Posted: 26 Oct 2014 11:20 AM PDT Reader Bran who lives in Spain sent some interesting charts of population, expected population growth, the world's largest cites, and what people do for a living. I don't have links for the charts, but most show the origin. Seven Billion People Breakdown
Total about 7.2 Billion people Cities With Projected 2030 Population of 10+ Million Top 10 Mega-Cities by Population Anyone have any concerns over these numbers in regards to jobs, food, housing, cost of education, healthcare costs, or retirement? Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Mike "Mish" Shedlock is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction. Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/account_management.html to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific. |
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When you present to a board, to potential investors, they ask themselves some questions about your new project:
Is there a problem?
Do I like the solution—is it free, instant and certain, or at least close enough to be interesting?
Are you the one to take this problem on and create this solution?
Is the way you’re doing it the way I would do it?
And, is it urgent, or can I wait?
Note that the order of the questions matters a lot. If you bring me a solution for a problem I haven't been sold on, you lose. And if your solution is risky and difficult, I'm almost certainly going to work hard to begin diminishing the problem in my mind, because no one finds it easy to walk around with a difficult problem.
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Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
Home Prices Drop in 69 of 70 Chinese Cities; Did the Pool of Greater Fools Run Out? Posted: 25 Oct 2014 10:25 AM PDT China eased purchase restrictions last month ending its four-year campaign to contain home prices. And what a ridiculous campaign it was. Prices are down less than 1% this month and less then 1% year-over-year. Bloomberg reports China Home-Price Drop Spreads as Easing Doesn't Halt Fall. Prices dropped in 69 of the 70 cities in September from August, the National Bureau of Statistics said in a statement today, the most since January 2011 when the government changed the way it compiles the data. They fell in 68 cities in August.Did the Pool of Greater Fools Run Out? All it took for china to reverse course was a .8% year-over-year decline. Home sales are down 11% this year, but that may not last long if September is any indication. Then again, the easing of restrictions may have suckered in the last remaining greater fools. Either way, I laugh at the assessment analyst Yang Kan who says "developers will keep prices attractive as they open more projects toward the end of the year to meet sales targets". The only thing that will make prices attractive is a 50% decline in price. That's how big China's property bubble is. Even in China the pool of greater fools will eventually run out. Perhaps it already has. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Mike "Mish" Shedlock is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction. Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/account_management.html to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific. |
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21 One Line Jokes You Need To Memorize Posted: 24 Oct 2014 10:34 PM PDT |
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"Selling enough records to make another record."
Rick Rubin started DefJam in his NYU dorm. Steve and I built TSR in Curtis Hall, and I went on to build my publishing business in my wife's dorm at NYU. It happens more than you might guess, and the reason it works is something you can use, even if you're not in college or living in a dorm...
You sell enough records to make another record.
You're not trying to sell the company or to make a huge payroll or to make sure the stock options are in place. You're building something.
The only way to build something when you don't have money to invest is to make something so great that people will pay for it in advance, that they'll eagerly sign up to use what you're making. Now not later. Now when it's new. When it's useful and fresh and interesting.
Too often, we look at the serious nature of starting a business (and worse, our imagined serious implications of failing when we do so) and we forget about useful, fresh or interesting. We forget to do that thing that might not work, to expose ourselves to things that are generous and new and fun.
You don't have to quit your day job to start something, just as you don't have to drop out of college to do so. You have weekends and evenings and all that time you're online...
Make another record.
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