Vital Statistics:
| Last | Change | Percent | |
| S&P Futures | 1394.3 | -6.3 | -0.45% |
| Eurostoxx Index | 2418.2 | -18.8 | -0.77% |
| Oil (WTI) | 91.79 | -1.6 | -1.68% |
| LIBOR | 0.437 | -0.001 | -0.11% |
| US Dollar Index (DXY) | 82.8 | 0.157 | 0.19% |
| 10 Year Govt Bond Yield | 1.63% | -0.06% | |
| RPX Composite Real Estate Index | 189.1 | 0.1 |
Stocks are taking a breather this morning after a 6-day rally. Chinese and French economic data showed that their respective economies are slowing. Import prices fell 3.2%. Bonds are up 27 ticks and MBS are up about a quarter of a point.
The USDA cut its corn production forecast 17% due to the drought, while corn has rallied 63% in the last two months. Since corn is also used for feed and is a big input into other foods, price increases will flow through to other foods as well. So if you were wondering why you are spending so much more on groceries (which is our 2nd biggest expenditure after shelter) now you know why. Gas isn’t the only commodity that can influence consumer behavior.
The debate going on regarding house prices centers on this: Bull Case: Housing has never been more affordable, prices appear to have bottomed and are increasing. Bear Case: Price Increases are due to constricted supply and once the shadow inventory hits the market back down we go. Freddie Mac Chief Economist Frank Nothaft examines the issue in the latest Freddie Mac US Economic and Housing Market Outlook. His conclusion is that the shadow inventory is still there, but it has been dramatically reduced. I tend to agree, although there isn’t really a standard definition of “shadow inventory.” Certainly the red-hot rental market is attracting professional investors, while boomerang college grads are crimping supply. As a trader, my take is that after 6 years, whatever inventory is left is largely in strong hands. I don’t see a capitulation trade happening. I do find his economic forecasts to be way aggressive, though. He is predicting 2.5% GDP growth through the end of the year, with 2.8% in Q113 and 3.2% in Q213 and mortgage rates gradually ticking up to 4.2% by the end of 2013. Mortgage origination volumes are set to fall as the refinancing boom runs its course. You can click on the table below to increase the size.
Filed under: Morning Report |
I used to be an agressive GDP forecaster myself, but like Mae West said, I drifted.
I think the best mix in housing would be home ownership down to no more than 60%, so residential properties being bought up for rental is a good thing
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Crazy Obama statement of the day:
“I said, I believe in American workers, I believe in this American industry, and now the American auto industry has come roaring back,” he said. “Now I want to do the same thing with manufacturing jobs, not just in the auto industry, but in every industry.”
You mean you want to take taxcpayer dollars to create jobs in France, Italy, Mexico and China? Well ok, but the ad for doing so had better be a humdinger!
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sorry, here’s the cite
http://www.politico.com/politico44/2012/08/obama-lets-repeat-auto-rescue-with-every-manufacturing-131566.html
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If we were younger we would so buy another house for a rental. Yes, even though we had an awful year as landlords, it’s still the best investment for our retirement we’ve made. We’re just not planning on working full time that much longer and don’t need the extra house payment. I’d want to pay it off quickly which wouldn’t really be possible for us anymore.
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lms
So we can look forward to seeing you more often in the near future then?
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“U.S. import prices unexpectedly fell in July for the fourth straight month as costs declined for imported oil, industrial supplies and many consumer goods, further icing inflation pressures.
Overall import prices dropped 0.6 percent last month, the Labor Department said on Friday.
Import prices have only risen once in the last eight months”
. http://www.cnbc.com/id/48607199
Stupid article. Not one mention of the dramatic rise of the dollar and the Chinese lowering interest rates twice already this year as the proximate cause.
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Not one mention of the dramatic rise of the dollar
Don Juan, is the dollar up 6% against our trading partners, first half of ’12 over first half of ’11? If no adjustment is made for money rates, how can we compare year-to-year trade [im]balance?
I have not gone to the Commerce web site but assume they explain, there. No?Click to access US%2BInternational%2BTrade%2Bin%2BGoods%2Band%2BServices%2B%2528June%2B2012%2529.pdf
They “seasonally adjust”. Over time, currency swings are reflected later in trade balances, I assume. Dollar goes way up we can import more and export less, but the dollar volume of both stays the same if trade moves to equilibrium. Or so it would seem.
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So we can look forward to seeing you more often in the near future then?
Banned, we still have at least a few more years of working the business pretty hard. I can’t get medical insurance without it and we lost about 10K last year on the rental and another 10K on medical bills (at least) so we have some ground to make up. Generally work doesn’t keep me away from here anyway. I’ve had lots of medical issues this year that have kept me really busy with appointments, tests and general malaise. Nothing permanently serious has turned up, thank God, and I’m almost done with all of it so I should be able to be around a little more. Looks like I’m good to go for another twenty years or so anyway.
Lol, today I’m fasting for a couple of big tests tomorrow morning so I’ll be around and probably grumpy so watch out………………………….
I’ve been doing a little reading for a post I want to put up this afternoon, on a subject I find fascinating. I don’t know if anyone else will however.
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So it looks like the Goldman Sachs and GE’s won’t be supporting Obama this time around. Mitt’s one of their own anyway. There was one interesting comment I read that said Obama did his job for them and will continue if he wins, so now they can safely turn their backs on him and throw money at Romney. Either way they win.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-08-09/goldman-sachs-leads-split-with-obama-as-ge-jilts-him-too.html
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lms:
There was one interesting comment I read that said Obama did his job for them and will continue if he wins, so now they can safely turn their backs on him and throw money at Romney.
Interesting, yes. Far more likely, however, is that people who work at GS are sick of hearing Obama and his fellow Dems demonizing them and the industry they work in, and so are going to throw their financial support behind the opposition.
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I would guess that both GE and GS find ways to support the current administration, even when their donor money goes elsewhere. For instance I doubt they cut themselves off from the GOP in 2008 even though they publicy moved to Obama.
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Haaaahaaaa, john, financial companies hedging their bets?
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The Romeny campaign used to be the leader in the clubhouse inlies, but now the Obama campaign is racing hard to catch up:
From Benen:
“The Obama campaign released an ad with an easily supportable claim this week. “You work hard, stretch every penny,” the voiceover says. “But chances are, you pay a higher tax rate than him: Mitt Romney made $20 million in 2010, but paid only 14 percent in taxes — probably less than you.”
Not true by any calculation made by any honest method.
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banned:
Not true by any calculation made by any honest method.
Honest arguments are simply not available to anyone who wants to claim that the wealthy do not already pay more than their share in taxes. Hence the routine resort to dishonesty.
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mark
That’s a very interesting point, but I don’t know where to go to find the numbers in constant dollars terms. Seasonal adjustments are not currency related of course. I struck out on a quick google.
I use the trading economics web stie for currency figures and the dollar has been rising against the Yuan for the last 8 months;
http://www.tradingeconomics.com/china/currency
but of course China is not our biggest trading partner overall, Canada is but that puts movements in the price of oil in too big of a focus so I generally stay away from that.
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One of the better arguments for Mitt Romney:
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Good observation by Jonathan Chait:
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Some interesting speculation:
“Will Erskine Bowles be our next Treasury Secretary?
Posted by Ezra Klein on August 10, 2012 at 1:55 pm”
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/ezra-klein/wp/2012/08/10/will-erskine-bowles-be-our-next-treasury-secretary/
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jnc:
Romney has certainly screwed the pooch with his poorly run campaign. I think it may have been that he thought being generic would get him there, as you have suggested, or maybe he would have have made a bad president no matter.
Barring something unforeseen on November 7th Obama will become President of the United States. I do wish that he would tell us how he will differ from the mistakes of his predecessor though!
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“bannedagain5446, on August 10, 2012 at 2:49 pm said:
Barring something unforeseen on November 7th Obama will become President of the United States. I do wish that he would tell us how he will differ from the mistakes of his predecessor though!”
If by predecessor you are referring back to President Obama, then he’s already told us. His only mistake over the past four years was not telling a good enough story.
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He cares too much. God help us all if there’s no compromise
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scott:
As I move from blog to blog, I am really amazed by the numbers of people who think they have an effective tax rate over 20%. It’s unbelievable.
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“As I move from blog to blog, I am really amazed by the numbers of people who think they have an effective tax rate over 20%. It’s unbelievable.”
In the late 90s when I was single, renting and living in NYC, I was pushing 50%
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