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Menelaus
07 Apr 12 13:56
Joined:
Date Joined: 03 Feb 05
| Topic/replies: 6,745 | Blogger: Menelaus's blog
1. All talk of an economic recovery taking place in the US is a big lie. The most recent horrid NFP report drives the point home, but even at that, it still falls short of telling the whole story. The "improvement" in the unemployment rate is strictly due to unemployed falling out of the labour force (it's the denominator that's changing) and unemployed leaving the unemployment ranks (and hence the unemployment statistics) and moving over to disability benefits. The number of people not in the labour force is now at a stunning 87.9 million. Anyone who thinks the US economy is getting better, just think about that for a minute…..then stop and ponder about 45+ million people on SNAP.

Most of the other indicators have also been very weak, once you bothered looking under the surface. Initial claims have printed a miss to consensus far more often that they've beat, and were a miss for the last three consecutive reports. The latest Chicago PMI missed, printing at 62.2, down from 64.0. New orders dropped and input prices increased substantially from 65.6 to 70.1. Whatever growth there is seems to be coming from inventory build-up. Durable goods were a miss printing at 15 of 17. The headline print was 2.2pc to a total of $211.8bn, on expectations of 3.0pc, up from a revised -3.6pc decline the first of the year. Consumer confidence fell but met expectations. Expectations of inflation were at the highest level in six months and jumping considerably from the previous month. The last  Richmond fed missed expectations, the highest miss in 10 months. Case Shiller reported home price declines for the 9th consecutive month. The most recent Dallas fed mfgr outlook printed its biggest miss in 9 months, and the biggest single month drop in 7 months. I can go on, but I think you get the point and I have probably lost benny the clown with the "figures" sufficiently enough.

All the noise from the last FOMC minutes about not doing more QE unless the economy worsens is based on two things. One, the FED who has access to the real data knows that the economy is worsening, so doing more QE down the road doesn't violate their statement, but rather support it. And second, and by far the most important factor, the FED who again has access to the real numbers, sees that the inflation monster is metastasizing into double digits. You can only substitute, remove, eliminate, and ignore weight-outs to manipulate and distort the official inflation low only for so long. And then there's OIL which makes the inflation monster all that move evident every time the gullible lemmings fill up. The FED is trying to jawbone the inflation monster back in its cage.  Good luck with that……if they can't raise interest rates because that automatically bankrupts just about every financial entity on the planet, you can't rein-in inflation. It's that simple.

2. The housing market in the US hasn't bottomed, which will put additional strain on their banking system.The FED will print to cover the gap. That's their first true mandate, to keep the financial system afloat. There are over 9 million units coming into the market now that the robosigning scandal has been favourably settled by the banks. There are another almost 10 million units in "default territory" (three monthly payments is arrears). Many of those will end up being foreclosed on. There will be no bottom in the market until this inventory clears the system.  Combine this with persistent high unemployment, reduced median wages and a substantial increase in the cost of living through inflation, a second wave of mortgage defaults and foreclosures are a certainty . Throw in the mix an increase in consumer credit card debt that is strictly due to people using it for day to day sustenance, a student loan debt mountain that has reached monstrous proportions (now over one $ trillion) that is ready to pop, municipal and state debt that hasn't been addressed, and the writing is on the wall. It's not a matter of IF the banks will need shoring up again, it's a matter of WHEN.

3. The EZ crisis hasn't gone away, and contrary to what signor Monti is trying to convince the world, it is actually getting worse, not better. Which means the EZ banking crisis continues (I won't elaborate here on what's going on with EZbanks/ECB/EFSF/ESM/LTRO as this post is already too long), which means the global lender of last resort will come to the rescue again with FX swaps, or in other words, the FED will print USDs.

4. The second FED mandate is to keep funding the US government ( Those who thought the FED's two mandates were price stability and unemployment, well, think again). The CBO is reporting USG deficits in the range of $1.5 trillion as far as the eye can see (10 years). The US debt is growing at $4.1bn per day, an incredible $154 million per hour. Their unfunded liabilities are growing at $18.2bn per day,  a mind numbing $757 million per day…..(try and wrap your head around that when you're trying to decide where gold is going). The FED bought 61pc of USG debt in 2011. Their 2012 deficit, excluding off balance sheet guarantees (think GSEs here), are projected at around $1.5 trillion. Who will have enough growth in this environment to buy about a trillion of US debt in 2012 to replace the FED if they stop printing, at the same time when about another two trillion of debt around the globe needs to be rolled over. If you said NO ONE, not possible, you'd be right. This is not conjecture, it is basic math.


The FED will print……THERE'S NO PLAN B.



P.S. And if at this point, I need to explain where Gold is going and why, you wasted your time reading this post.


P.S.S. What do think benny the clown, up or down? Quick mate, your thumb is starting to dry up…….Laugh
Pause Switch to Standard View Here's why the FED can't stop printing.
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Report Maximum April 7, 2012 5:30 PM BST
Not so impressived with that salary...Blush
Report Maximum April 7, 2012 5:33 PM BST
I am actually logged off when I write this.Confused
Report Menelaus April 7, 2012 5:34 PM BST
That "mind numbing $757 million per day" line should read PER HOUR. Yes, PER HOUR.

I also missed including the commercial real estate wave of defaults that is about to hit (they were "rolled-over" in a classic extend and pretend fashion in 2009/10) as part of the building stain on their banking system but there's only so much a man can think of while serving champagne.

Enjoy easter, or what's left of it. Grin
Report Menelaus April 7, 2012 5:57 PM BST
strain, not stain....duh....

....this champagne is awfully good...Laugh
Report Mrben April 8, 2012 3:07 AM BST
1000 words but not a single piece of news.

we alresdy know all these things and it has been the case for a while now. So what is the housing crisis has not bottomed?

   So what if europe has more bad news?


  This is common knowledge.

You entire argument is based on 1.Money printing giving only one possible result

2. BB is lying about printing more

3. Inflation is much higher than official figures.

Answer this then.

BB anounces QE 1- melly believes him

BB anounces QE 2- melly believes him

BB announces NO QE 3- melly does not believe him ConfusedConfused

You claim inflation is much higher in reality than official figures- this is not the case. Whilst I would concede that govt  rig the  weightings to give the lowest possible result, inflation is still low.

  You are constantly referring to the price of petrol and the cost of putting a meal on the table ( which by the way is a dead giveaway you have a small limited income) yet you make no references to things that have fallen in price.EG electronics, the cost of a mortgage etc.

  You are using only evidence that suits your heavily biased perspective.

You argue that the US economy is not improving, that all the figures release are somehow false.You chose to believe figures that are bad during the crisis but ignore those same figures when they show improvement.

  You claim that any figure showing improvement is a lie but then use the fed bought 61 % of USG debt in 2011- did'nt you just say the FED was lying? There is NO legitimacy to the argument that uses fed figures to support its argument and then  dispells the   FED figures when they don't suppot the argument.

    Either the FED is lying or its telling the truth.

Now onto more printing argument- given that QE 1 and QE 2 have already occurred and as a result there has been no collapse and no substantial inflation- why og why would  QE 3 result in anything other than the same?

   College debt btw is a red herring, as I understand it that debt is not paid back in the same way as a housing loan, it is only paid once the borrower gets a job and it comes out of salary.No salary no repayments are required. We have the same system in OZ.

  Your way melly of looking at the world is strictly simpleton. A+B+C= D .For you there is only ever one possible result,no matter what the discussion.You absolutely refuse to accept the possibility that A+B- C +D = E.

  Things go up, and down and sideways, in the financial world there are many possibilities.

Your failure to recognize that, as well as your intolerance for any other point of view is why you are so poor and worried about the price of a family meal.
Report Menelaus April 8, 2012 6:29 AM BST
Of course you knew all that, you know, the "figures" and all that...LMFAO. The fact that you didn't mention any of those in the pages of litter you put up is neither here nor there.

Your knowledge of this stuff is somewhere between more than comical and less than anecdotal. You can twist, you can turn, you can go into full convulsions with the garbage you keep putting up here but anyone who can fog a mirror can see through that.......and easily come to the conclusion that you are epically ignorant.

END OF.
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