Showing posts with label consumer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label consumer. Show all posts

Wednesday, 26 August 2009

Consumer sentiment

There exist a couple of consumer sentiment indices. Some are glowing, other not. Thos made up by the government are getting better. Others are less cheerfull. As the ABC News poll index released yesterday. The consumer comfort index rose from -46 to -45.
The consumer comfort index was based on a random survey of 1,000 respondents nationwide ended Aug. 23. The index measures typical Americans' confidence in three areas: the national economy, their own finances, and their willingness to spend money, according to the report.

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Friday, 14 August 2009

It's going better, isn't it?

Everything goes better.
That’s what we have to believe.
But:

From HousingWire.com

The number of foreclosure notices delivered to homeowners increased nearly 7% from June to July, and are up 32% from July 2008, according to Irvine, Calif-based RealtyTrac's Foreclosure Market Report.
Foreclosure filings — default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions — were reported on 360,149 US properties during the month, about one in every 355 households.
“July marks the third time in the last five months where we’ve seen a new record set for foreclosure activity,” RealtyTrac CEO James Saccacio said in a statement. “Despite continued efforts by the federal government and state governments to patch together a safety net for distressed homeowners, we’re seeing significant growth in both the initial notices of default and in the bank repossessions.”

From Bloomberg

Sales at U.S. retailers unexpectedly fell in July as a boost from the cash-for-clunkers automobile incentive program failed to overcome cuts in other spending.
The 0.1 percent decrease in sales, the first drop in three months, followed a revised 0.8 percent gain in June that was larger than previously estimated, Commerce Department figures showed today in Washington. Purchases excluding automobiles fell 0.6 percent, also more than anticipated.
Today’s report underscores the threat to spending from the continued deterioration in the job market; a separate government report today showed more Americans than forecast filed claims for unemployment insurance last week. Retailers such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Macy’s Inc. are cutting costs and inventories to bolster profits as households cut back on non-essential items.

From the Wall Street Journal

Only last week, Ginnie announced that it issued a monthly record of $43 billion in mortgage-backed securities in June. Ginnie Mae President Joseph Murin sounded almost giddy as he cheered this “phenomenal growth.” Ginnie Mae’s mortgage exposure is expected to top $1 trillion by the end of next year—or far more than double the dollar amount of 2007. . . Earlier this summer, Reuters quoted Anthony Medici of the Housing Department’s Inspector General’s office as saying, “Who would have predicted that Ginnie Mae and Fannie Mae would have swapped positions” in loan volume?
Ginnie’s mission is to bundle, guarantee and then sell mortgages insured by the Federal Housing Administration, which is Uncle Sam’s home mortgage shop. Ginnie’s growth is a by-product of the FHA’s spectacular growth. The FHA now insures $560 billion of mortgages—quadruple the amount in 2006. Among the FHA, Ginnie, Fannie and Freddie, nearly nine of every 10 new mortgages in America now carry a federal taxpayer guarantee.
Herein lies the problem. The FHA’s standard insurance program today is notoriously lax. It backs low downpayment loans, to buyers who often have below-average to poor credit ratings, and with almost no oversight to protect against fraud. Sound familiar? This is called subprime lending—the same financial roulette that busted Fannie, Freddie and large mortgage houses like Countrywide Financial.
On June 18, HUD’s Inspector General issued a scathing report on the FHA’s lax insurance practices. It found that the FHA’s default rate has grown to 7%, which is about double the level considered safe and sound for lenders, and that 13% of these loans are delinquent by more than 30 days. The FHA’s reserve fund was found to have fallen in half, to 3% from 6.4% in 2007—meaning it now has a 33 to 1 leverage ratio, which is into Bear Stearns territory. The IG says the FHA may need a “Congressional appropriation intervention to make up the shortfall.”
… Then there is the booming refinancing program that Congress has approved to move into the FHA hundreds of thousands of borrowers who can’t pay their mortgage, including many with subprime and other exotic loans. HUD just announced that starting this week the FHA will refinance troubled mortgages by reducing up to 30% of the principal under the Home Affordable Modification Program. This program is intended to reduce foreclosures, but someone has to pick up the multibillion-dollar cost of the 30% loan forgiveness. That will be taxpayers.
In some cases, these owners are so overdue in their payments, and housing prices have fallen so dramatically, that the borrowers have a negative 25% equity in the home and they are still eligible for an FHA refi. We also know from other government and private loan modification programs that a borrower who has defaulted on the mortgage once is at very high risk (25%-50%) of defaulting again.

From DNAIndia.com

An outspoken Communist Party official in China has confirmed long-held suspicions that GDP data was being massaged and exaggerated by regional party leaders to show higher economic growth, in the process "squandering social resources."
In a brutally honest and searing speech recently, Wang Yang, the reformist-minded party secretary of Guangdong province in southern China, laid bare the dishonest means party leaders at the provincial level were employing "to polish their numbers." Since Wang is one of the few provincial party leaders who is also a member of the decision-making central Politburo, his words -- and the fact that even the official media has reported them -- is being seen as a signal that Beijing is wary of the accuracy of GDP data reported by the provinces.
"Some of our GDP data sure looks rosy," Wang told party officials. "But they do not amount to growth of social wealth; in fact, social resources are being wasted to show GDP growth." For instance, he said, provincial party officials build a bridge, which contributes to GDP; they then "dismantle" and rebuild the bridge, each time contributing to GDP. "We may have boosted our GDP this way, but this is a huge waste of social resources."
Likewise, he said, some regional governments registered GDP growth by encouraging "polluting industries", and then showed even higher growth by cleaning up the pollution.
Wang said that such practices, which went against "the laws of a market economy", were causing him deep disquiet. "Amidst the economic downturn, when everyone is eager to show 'rosy' numbers, all manner of backward productive forces are being revived," he said.
Chinese policymakers have set a target of 8% GDP growth for this year, and going by the 7.9% GDP growth reported for the first half of 2009, that looks like it will be achieved. But independent economists have expressed scepticism about the authenticity of the official data.
Others have voiced concern that an excessive preoccupation with the pace of growth (as opposed to the quality of growth) was spawning structural distortions in the Chinese economy.
Indicatively, the provincial GDP data for the first half of 2009, released by China's 31 provinces over the past week, adds up to 1 trillion yuan higher (or about 10% more) than the national GDP data released by Beijing earlier this month. Strikingly, 24 of the 31 provinces reported growth rates higher than the national average --- which, while not statistically impossible, is highly improbable, according to economists.
Party leader Wang argues that instead of artificially boosting GDP data, provincial leaders should focus on "restructuring and transforming" the industrial structure -- that is, move away from labour-intensive, low-technology, polluting and energy-inefficient industries.
It's an odd world
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Friday, 17 July 2009

Summer Song

It ‘s Friday. Let’s have a smile.
This one comes from Andy Borowitz

In what some on Wall Street are calling the biggest blockbuster deal in the history of the financial sector, Goldman Sachs confirmed today that it was in talks to acquire the U.S. Department of the Treasury.
According to Goldman spokesperson Jonathan Hestron, the merger between Goldman and the Treasury Department is “a good fit” because “they’re in the business of printing money and so are we.”…
Mr. Hestron said the only challenge facing Goldman in completing the merger “is trying to figure out which parts of the Treasury Dept. we don’t already own.”


The future for Bernie Madoff is less bright than everybody expects. ‘He will leave prison in a bag or in a coffin’ comments one man, owner of http://www.wallstreetprisonconsultants.com/.
His intake is original and – I believe – true: not his former clients, but the banks where he is hiding al his billions have an interest to silence him.

Diamonds are forever. That’s what we all believe. Hmmm, learn everything about this story on http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/198202/diamond.
And than there is this.
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Wednesday, 15 July 2009

Consume and be confident

How much confidence has the American consumer.
Here you go?
Aonther green shoot turning brown.


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Friday, 6 March 2009

A good laugh?

Our favorite joke these days ?

What is the difference between Ireland and Iceland?
Answer: One character and six months.

But it is a joke only.
Read
this, and you will know why.

Less of a joke is this letter:

I own a small Advisory firm in Texas... and my fiancée happens to live in Simferopol, Crimea. I assure you I talk with her daily and she reports that reality there is in fact much worse than your current assumptions imply. Over the past 6 months... there have been continual shortfalls of water... electricity... bread... and other staples. Crime and general lawlessness has increased and in some districts, internet services have failed.
We have found that the only reliable way to wire transfer funds in this environment is through Western Union and her Export company banks with the country’s largest bank. If I knew of a way to buy puts on Ukraine I would... it is that bad.
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Wednesday, 4 February 2009

Ride this bike

Yesterday Harley Davidson (ticker: HOG) jumped with 20%, slaughtering a lot of shorts. Even in a bear market, a shorter is not safe. News that Buffett came in with financing, ignited the short squeeze and drove the share price from 12 USD to 14 USD.
This is the reason we found:

Harley-Davidson Inc. said Tuesday it priced $600 million in new debt to fund motorcycle lending at its troubled financing unit. Berkshire Hathaway Inc., the company owned by billionaire investor Warren Buffet, and Davis Selected Advisers LP, the company's biggest shareholder, both agreed to purchase equal portions of the principal amount of the new debt.

Now Warren Buffet decided earlier to start buying distressed assets. He came in with financing for Goldman Sachs (ticker: GS) en General Electric (ticker: GE).
Both stocks have retreated since with 50%.
Why is Buffet a winner? Because these unsecured notes will carry an annual interest rate of 15%.
Wow, very nice terms indeed.
But not for the common shareholder.





We see this as a potential set-up to short this stock.
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