Morning Report 9/7/12

Vital Statistics:

Last Change Percent
S&P Futures 1435.1 4.1 0.29%
Eurostoxx Index 2556.1 31.1 1.23%
Oil (WTI) 95.63 0.1 0.10%
LIBOR 0.408 -0.001 -0.15%
US Dollar Index (DXY) 80.77 -0.272 -0.34%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 1.66% -0.02%
RPX Composite Real Estate Index 192.8 0.2

Markets are giving back earlier gains after a disappointing jobs report. Bonds and MBS are rallying on the number. The markets should be selling off on the lousy jobs report, but perhaps they are reacting to the possibility of more QE. Don’t fight the Fed, as they say.

Nonfarm payrolls increased by only 96k, a surprisingly weak number given yesterday’s ADP number which showed an increase of 200k. The Street was expecting 130k. June and July payrolls were revised down by 20k each. The unemployment rate fell to 8.1% from 8.3% due to a drop in the labor force participation rate, which now stands at 63.5%, the lowest level since the 81-82 recession.

Lawrence Yun has an interesting post showing how low mortgage rates are over the past 40 years. Unfortunately, it is mainly the professionals who are able to take advantage of these rates – the first time homebuyer is largely shut out.

Chart:  30 year fixed rate mortgage:

Vlog Brother On Taxes

Hank Green, one half of the Vlogbrothers, is a minor internet celebrity who usually stick to videos about Harry Potter and other aspects of nerdom but today he tackles explaining the tax code to his audience, many of whom are still living with their parents.

Feel free to critique.

Morning Report 9/6/12

Vital Statistics:

  Last Change Percent
S&P Futures  1411.0 7.5 0.53%
Eurostoxx Index 2475.4 33.6 1.38%
Oil (WTI) 96.28 0.9 0.96%
LIBOR 0.408 -0.002 -0.37%
US Dollar Index (DXY) 81.08 -0.156 -0.19%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 1.64% 0.05%  
RPX Composite Real Estate Index 192.7 -0.2  

Markets are higher this morning after the ECB maintained rates and the ADP Employment Change came in better than expected.  The ADP number came in at 201k, which suggests the street estimates for nonfarm payrolls is too low. Initial Jobless claims were 365k, better than expected.  Bonds are down a point, and MBS are down about 10 ticks.

Mario Draghi is discussing the ECB bond purchase program right now. It seems consistent with what had been leaked earlier – unlimited, fully sterilized purchases. It appears the plan requires that the governments need need to formally ask the ECB to conduct purchases of their debt. So, if there are strings attached that Spain or Italy do not like, nothing may happen at all.

Bob Woodward’s new book, The Price of Politics, gives insight into how the Obama Administration’s White House worked (or didn’t). It does not paint a rosy picture of the Obama White House.

Morning Report 9/5/12

Vital Statistics: 

  Last Change Percent
S&P Futures  1403.6 -2.4 -0.17%
Eurostoxx Index 2439.2 2.6 0.11%
Oil (WTI) 95.58 0.3 0.29%
LIBOR 0.41 -0.002 -0.49%
US Dollar Index (DXY) 81.21 -0.105 -0.13%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 1.58% 0.01%  
RPX Composite Real Estate Index 192.1 -1.0  

 

Stock index futures are lower after the ECB released its blueprint for unlimited bond purchases and FedEx warned. A positive surprise in productivity was offset by higher unit labor costs. Bonds and MBS are flat.

The ECB has declined to put a cap on yields and will sterilize bond purchases to prevent inflation. The plan will also focus on short term government debt with maturities up to 3 years. Bill Gross must have gotten the advance word, as he tweeted yesterday “Draghi appears willing to write 2-3 year “checks” to peripherals. Very relationary.  Buy gold, TIPS, real assets.”  The Bundesbank is anticipated to be the only objection. 

The CoreLogic Home Price Index grew at 3.8% and the early indication for August is + 4.6%.  Excluding distressed sales, August is expected to come in + 6%. While they anticipate a seasonal slowdown in the growth rate, they are forecasting a gain for the full year 2012. 

Toll Brothers just priced a convertible bond issue.  $250MM, 20 year senior debt, 50 basis point coupon, 50% premium. Japanese coupon, American premium.  Old school convertible arbs are shaking their heads at that one. Credit Crunch?  What Credit Crunch? Arbs better hope the company never institutes a dividend because that bond will get smoked.

Ally is auctioning off 4 billion of subprime loans.  There has been a lot of money raised for distressed mortgage purchases in the last year, and Nationstar, Fortress, and Berkshire Hathaway are some of the high profile bidders. GMAC expects to emerge from Chapter 11 sometime in Q113.

Dem Convention Open Thread

Comments are welcome.

Booker? Castro? First Lady?

Your thoughts. Please. I missed it, in favor of time with grand daughters, and will continue to do so.

I rely on the beneficence of strangers.

Morning Report 9/4/12

Vital Statistics:

  Last Change Percent
S&P Futures  1405.6 0.5 0.04%
Eurostoxx Index 2458.5 -4.7 -0.19%
Oil (WTI) 97.09 0.6 0.64%
LIBOR 0.412 -0.003 -0.60%
US Dollar Index (DXY) 81.2 -0.011 -0.01%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 1.56% 0.02%  
RPX Composite Real Estate Index 192.1 -1.0  

Markets are flat after the long weekend with no major news pre-open.  We will get ISM and Construction spending at 10:00 am. Moody’s cut the outlook of the EU to negative. Bonds and MBS are down a few ticks. 

As we head into fall, remember that most of Europe takes August off and therefore no real decisions get made. Part of the complacency in the US markets has been driven by a lack of bad news out of Europe.  Nothing has changed since mid-summer, so I would expect Europe to take the forefront again (along with the election).  WaPo has a depressing piece on the state of the young in Spain, Italy, and Greece. And there is a small matter of a slow motion bank run in Spain, in spite of another rescue. Welcome back.

paper presented at Jackson Hole last week is generating some discussion, in that it gives ammo to advocates of further quantitative easing.  It also recommends the Fed issue guidance for rates based on nominal GDP, not a timeframe (late 2014). FWIW, PIMCO CEO Mohammed El-Arian believes the Fed is signalling more activism. The sidestory is that a President Romney will replace Ben Bernake with someone more hawkish. A Romney win could be bond bearish.  How that would affect equities is anyone’s guess.

In spite of the gloom, Roger Altman makes the case that the economy will surprise on the upside. Housing and energy will lead the rebound. From 1980 to 2005, housing accounted for 4.5% of GDP.  This year, it is projected to be 2.4%.  As I have been pointing out, we have underbuilt by about 200k units for the past 10 years (even ignoring population growth).  There is pent-up demand and eventually it will be released in spite of the current economic gloom – even in hard times, people still get married, have kids, and move out of their parent’s homes. This will affect demand at the starter home level, which has been the part of the market that has been lagging. This  will enable the move-up trade that will start impacting mid-price homes. The high end (especially in the NYC metro area) probably has further to fall.

A new book details the bipartisan trainwreck that was Fannie Mae and looks at the options going forward.

Labor Day Open Thread

I love this quote from the US DOL:

The vital force of labor added materially to the highest standard of living and the greatest production the world has ever known and has brought us closer to the realization of our traditional ideals of economic and political democracy. It is appropriate, therefore, that the nation pay tribute on Labor Day to the creator of so much of the nation’s strength, freedom, and leadership — the American worker.

With so many people out of work this Labor Day and an election on the horizon I think most of us are a little more apprehensive this year than other years in the more distant past.  Regardless, I always love Labor Day as the end of a long hot summer of  beaches, swimming, busy work days, sleepovers with the grand kids and the transition to making plans for the Fall.

I’m about ready to go out and tear out the rest of my summer garden and will plant the Fall one in two weeks.  We’ll swim another few weeks here and then I’ll switch to the high school pool as it’s heated year round and ours will begin to cool as the nights get colder.  We had our last big beach trip this weekend, the grand kids are back in school and our youngest just left this morning to finish writing her thesis and so we won’t see her again until Christmas.

Here in our local community is the big (we like to think of it that way) fair and a parade down Main Street.  At the fair we still have displays of quilts, canned goods, arts and crafts and the 4H Club will show off their ribbon winning animals and cute bunnies and baby chicks.  It’s always a reminder to me of the way things were when I was growing up and that those values are still alive and well in pockets of America.

Wishing all of you a happy Labor Day and hoping you’ve all enjoyed the last real break in what appears to be a heated campaign season.   Haaaaahaaaaa, I’m rested and have my boxing gloves on so watch out…………. just kidding.

Sunday Open Thread

Question:  If  Lawrence O’Donnell hears these dog-whistles, doesn’t that make him the dog?

http://youtu.be/bUlzH2NUM80

In other contexts, of course, the PGA tour would be mocked for being as lily white as the Republican Party, but in O’Donnell’s fevered imagination, a reference to the PGA is intended to invoke images of sexually obsessed black men.   What I really wonder is whether O’Donnell is as deranged as a true belief in this theory suggests, or if he just assumes MSNBC’s audience is.

Host Martin Bashir was certainly right when he said “Wow, things are getting lower and lower each day,” although not in the way he probably meant it.

Are You Ready to Rumble?

It’s that most wonderful time of the year–football season!  This weekend kicks off the college game, and two of my teams have already won:  Utah (41-0 over Northern Colorado)(who?) and MSU (17-13 over Boise State).

Who’s up today?

Wyoming at UT [Update:  Wyoming 17, UT 37]

Oklahoma at UTEP [Update: Oklahoma 24, UTEP 7]

Miami (OH) at ohio state university  I don’t know that I could root for either team in this one, but for personal reasons I’d have to say that I hope that Urban Meyer’s day is really, really bad.  [Update: Miami (OH) 10, osu 56]

Notre Dame is trouncing Navy in Dublin, Ireland. [Update: ND 50, Navy 10]

Northwestern at Syracuse [Update N’western 42, Syracuse 41 in a truly wild game]

Boston College at Miami (FL)  [Update: BC 32, Miami (FL) 41]

Chattanooga at South Florida [Update: Chattanooga 13, USF 34]

Toledo at Arizona [Update: Toledo 17, Arizona 24 in overtime.  Lots of wealth redistribution on this game!]

And the mac daddy game of them all today–

Michigan at Alabama [Update:  much sadness at Chez Michigoose tonight.  The running game (231 yards for ‘Bama vs 68 for UM) did them in.  Michigan 14, Alabama 41; the Tide did, indeed, roll.]

I don’t know everybody’s almae matres/academic places of employment, so feel free to edit to add yours.  Ah, I love the smell of flying pigskin on a Saturday!