Vital Statistics:
| Last | Change | Percent | |
| S&P Futures | 1437.2 | 1.3 | 0.09% |
| Eurostoxx Index | 2467.5 | -4.8 | -0.19% |
| Oil (WTI) | 92.42 | 0.0 | 0.03% |
| LIBOR | 0.343 | -0.004 | -1.15% |
| US Dollar Index (DXY) | 79.93 | -0.018 | -0.02% |
| 10 Year Govt Bond Yield | 1.75% | 0.03% | |
| RPX Composite Real Estate Index | 194.8 | 0.1 |
Markets are flattish after Alcoa cut its forecast for global aluminum demand in its earnings release. Earnings were better than expected, but the forecast is weighing on the stock, which is down a couple of percent pre-open. Analysts are predicting a 2% drop in Q3 earnings for the S&P 500. Mortgage applications fell. Bonds and MBS are down small.
Corelogic reported a 10% decline in shadow inventory down to 2.3 million units in July. This represents six month’s supply. Geographically, Florida, California, Illinois, New York, and New Jersey account for 45% of all distressed properties. Currently, the flow of properties into shadow inventory is more or less equal to outflows. Remember that shadow inventory does not count properties currently listed on MLSs so it isn’t a full picture of housing inventory.
The government is going after Wells for reckless lending on FHA loans. Prosecutors say the bank claimed over 100,000 loans were FHA compliant when it knew they were not. Wells notes that its FHA delinquency rates are half the industry average. Meanwhile, revenues are up 37% for mortgage bankers and Wells is the biggest. The government giveth, the government taketh away…
Issuers of MBS are going to be watching the outcome of the lawsuit against Flagstar closely. Judge Rakoff is no friend of the securities industry…
FHFA has released its new strategic plan for the mortgage market. Housing advocates will dislike two portions of this – first the fact that there remains no interest in principal reductions, and second, that FHA remains interested in varying guarantee fees by state. Which means that judicial states will have higher mortgage rates than non-judicial states. They also intend to review the servicing compensation model.
Fannie Mae has a touchy-feely survey of attitudes about homeownership and the economy.
Filed under: Morning Report |
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry goes to Lefkowitz and Kobilka for their studies on G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs). GPCRs are intracellular molecules that transmit signals detected at the cell membrane in order to produce proper cellular and physiological responses to stimuli. They are involved in the detection of a wide variety of stimuli, from light (in your eyes) to hormones to histamine (allergies) to taste/smell. Lefkowitz and Kobilka studied the beta-adrenergic receptor, which recognizes epinephrine and which is the target of a number of asthma controller medications.
LikeLike
Because I am a cynic like Bill Clinton with no real belief system, I just made a long term options bet on Romney being elected using the value of dollar.
It’s one of those what if the Bengals win the Super Bowl kind, that cost me virtually nothing, but If Romney gets elected and say in January that he isn’t going to reappoint Bernanke, I’ll be doing … um . . . ok.
Remember, you always hedge your bets, no matter what your politics.
LikeLike
You can trade it directly in size on Sporting Index:
http://www.sportingindex.com/spread-betting/politics/united-states-of-america/next-president-of-the-usa/M3484919_1
LikeLike
Sigh – Maureen Dowd:
Obama didn’t “let” anyone do anything here. Sometimes, events aren’t up to him.
LikeLike
jnc:
Sometimes, events aren’t up to him.
It’s hard to imagine it was just 4 short years ago that he was a Lightworker ushering in “a new way of being on the planet”.
LikeLike
From jnc’s link:
Evidently she’s now a trained psychologist, also. I used to like Maureen Dowd’s writing a lot, whatever happened to her?
LikeLike
Kelley, what’s a gossip columnist to do when both nominees are actually happily married?
I have smiled at some of her snark, but I have never taken her seriously as either a political or a social commentator.
Her personal confrontation in a DC restaurant with the intern ML was a hoot.
LikeLike
Way out in left field OT:
D’oh!!!
I don’t even want to know how he knew the sex hot line number. . .
LikeLike
“sex hot line number.”
is that why my phone won’t stop ringing?
LikeLike
“Now Romney is floating a slightly different version of his deduction cap idea. On CNN on Tuesday, Romney said that one possible way to execute his tax plan “would be to have a total cap number [for deductions]. It could be $25,000 or $50,000, and people could put whatever deduction in that total cap they’d like.”
At the next debate Romney should simply ask the audience to vote on tax changes and promise to do that.
LikeLike
brent:
I’d rather use the value of the dollar, based in part on your belief from here that if Romney wins Bernanke is gone and probably QE3 with him. That would presumably make a stronger US dollar. Even if Obama is elected, you always have the slight chance of a euro collapse versus the dollar, so why not roll the dice?
LikeLike
Fairly fluffy pre-VP debate analysis by Scott Conroy at RCP, but an aspect I hadn’t really thought about.
LikeLike
is that why my phone won’t stop ringing?
That was you who answered???!!!!!
LikeLike
Unless of course Ryan comes across as he did at AARP, a first grade teacher mistakenly placed in front of a grad school class.
LikeLike
From a Bloomberg piece with an unintentionally funny headline:
Emphasis mine. How, exactly, is he supposed to do that? Is that where those rainbow-farting bunnies come into the picture??
LikeLike
Scott–
Where in the world did you find this in the first place?!??
Gack!!!!
LikeLike
I know that this could happen anywhere, but dollar for dollar is MS really, that much ahead of SC as the worst state in the nation?
“Camaro owner records mechanics abusing car, scheming to get damages paid for”
http://autos.yahoo.com/blogs/motoramic/camaro-owner-records-mechanics-abusing-car-scheming-damages-152707580.html
I think I recall reading that SC has more of the worst 20 high schools in the country than any other state.
LikeLike
Who is vile and soul-sucking?
[checks avatar]
oh.
LikeLike
Dimon coming out and explicitly saying that the Bear Stearns purchase was a “favor to the US government”
LikeLike
according to my neighborhood listserv — there’s a station down the street from my house selling gas for $1.84. lines around the block. advertising it as “pre-obama” prices.
LikeLike
“ScottC, on October 10, 2012 at 10:53 am said:
jnc:
Sometimes, events aren’t up to him.
It’s hard to imagine it was just 4 short years ago that he was a Lightworker ushering in “a new way of being on the planet”.”
First he had to stop the oceans from rising, then he could move on to helping mankind evolve into it’s next transcendent state of being (cue “Age of Aquarius”).
Thanks for that link, it will make for a useful reference in certain discussions. Perhaps his Nobel Peace Prize should have been awarded for his efforts as a “Lightworker”.
LikeLike
advertising it as “pre-obama” prices.
Or post-bunny prices?
LikeLike
“markinaustin, on October 10, 2012 at 10:44 am said:
…
I have smiled at some of her snark, but I have never taken her seriously as either a political or a social commentator.”
I thought she had two worthwhile points in the piece:
I think the comparison between Obama and George H.W. Bush when it comes to the debates is apt.
and
She’s correct that part of leadership in a democracy is “salesmanship” and that Obama’s disdain for Romney’s efforts to “sell” his policies is misplaced. If Romney puts the same level of effort into his Presidency as he did into the debate, then he may turn out to be a more effective president than I expected.
This is also part of a continuing pattern of Obama’s where everyone else fails to live up to his expectations:
Clearly the problem is that the electorate wasn’t “serious in the first place” about President Obama’s policies.
Jon Stewart had a great piece as well on “Obama’s approval rating OF the American People falls”. Across the demographic board, the President thinks less of the American people than he did when he was elected.
“Barack Obama used to find the American people’s inconsistent irrationality charming, but he’s losing his patience.”
http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/thu-december-9-2010/national-displeasure
LikeLike
Fed’s Beige Book is out… employment characterized as “little changed” from last report. Friday’s jobs report is looking more and more like a statistical fluke
LikeLike
Update on the story Don Juan posted yesterday about Mitt Romney and the former Navy SEAL he met at a Christmas party a few years ago.
Seems the mom isn’t too happy with Mr Romney:
LikeLike
I was wrong though, it was confirmed elsewhere that they had actually met.
LikeLike
jnc:
I would say this, Obama is uncomfortable placing himself out front, because he is used to others doing it for him. I said in the beginning his style is more collegial than executive because I imagine that he got a lot of deference in those type settings for who he was. That’s why he doesn’t know how to sell the things like Bin Laden or the ACA because he is without the natural politician’s gift for taking credit while appearing to give credit to others.
LikeLike
It’s difficult to believe that anyone who was comfortable uttering about his own election prospects the incredibly narcissistic absurdity “This was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow, and our planet began to heal” could be said to be uncomfortable placing himself out front.
LikeLike
I agree with Scott. The takeaway I have from the President’s performance in office over the past four years is the constant theme of “Not My Fault” to explain any shortcomings (with a hat tip to a PL poster who makes this observation frequently).
LikeLike
“Not My Fault”
LikeLike
I found This utterly fascinating.
LikeLike
From the blue area of the LRGV:
http://kut.org/2012/10/why-bother-fighting-corruption-in-rio-grande-valley/
LikeLike
If I read that article right, Mark, they’re stacking the deck for Dems–is that correct? Do you think that’s what’s making at least part of that area so blue?
LikeLike
The patron system worked like this: Ds pay vote collectors to bring out votes and Rs pay them to make them stay home in federal elections. everyone pays for their votes in local elections. Collectors did not always stay bought, btw.
80% of the LRGV eligible voters do not vote because they think the system is rigged. It has been rigged. There is finally some bipartisan “good gummint” stuff going on.
When there is an honest system, the thinking goes, 3 times as many folks will vote. Locally they will throw more D crooks out then Rs b/c there are more D crooks in office. There used to be an honest lawyer in Harlingen and an honest judge in McAllen. An honest sheriff was assassinated not too many years ago. So this R legislator and this D D.A. are trying to swim upstream here, and the volunteers are trying to convince folks they can make a change. On federal elections the Ds stand to gain. Local Rs are of course Tejano/Tejana and are in no way a threat to shut the river off from this side b/c everyone in the LRGV sees a fence on this side as giving the river to Mexico and Mexico owes us the water they steal, above the treaty allowance, now. Just think how it will be when the freaking river is fenced effectively into MX. Stupido. Or so the thinking goes.
LikeLike
Texas politics seem to me to be a law unto themselves, Mark!
LikeLike
Brent:
This one’s for you: Lawrence Mishel on The Economic Institute Blog.
LikeLike
Start spreading the news…
LikeLike