[Posted 7:00 AM ET]
Wall Street
The housing bubble has been the root of virtually all the problems on the economic front, particularly in the developed world, whether it’s the
In the U.S., Oppenheimer’s superstar analyst Meredith Whitney, who really should have her own bobblehead doll night at Shea or Yankee Stadium, she’s been that good, said that when it comes to the financial sector, even after Merrill’s dreadful news (discussed in depth below), “valuations remain uncertain” and that, yes, it continues to be all about housing. The S&P/Case-Shiller 20-city index for May revealed that housing prices fell 15.8% year over year, with
Yet all the pundits, egged on by CNBC, are trying to pick a bottom, as my friend Trader George was bemoaning the other day. PIMCO’s Bill Gross was among those saying that in the case of
For my part, I’ve never said I knew where the bottom would be but that when we did hit it, we’ll sit there for an extended period, which would continue to eat away at consumer confidence. Trust me, there is no reason to rush into a purchase of a home if your sole purpose for doing so is that you think we’ve bottomed. Take a deep breath. There will be no V-shaped recovery for the sector…period. It certainly doesn’t help that the labor picture remains punk, at best, as July saw the 7th-straight month of job losses, off another 51,000, with the unemployment rate rising to a 4-year high, 5.7%, as we increasingly learn those who do have jobs have part-time ones at that.
But as for the confusing housing relief / Fannie-Freddie rescue package signed into law by the president, the bill establishes a $300 billion fund under the Federal Housing Administration that may allow up to 400,000 distressed families to obtain more affordable, government-backed mortgages and get out from the killer adjustable rate mortgages they can no longer afford. The banks, however, have to agree to play and seeing as the program doesn’t go into effect until Oct. 1, and won’t be in full force until early next year, a lot can happen between now and then to influence the lenders’ attitudes as hundreds of thousands are forced into foreclosure beforehand.
[Eligible borrowers must have spent more than 31% of their monthly incomes on their mortgages as of March 1, 2008, and the troubled loan must have originated no later than Jan. 1, 2008, and be on the borrower’s primary residence, according to an AP analysis.]
As for the Fannie/Freddie aspect, the measure for the first time explicitly gives the government’s backing to the two, while in essence encouraging them both to take on more risks by increasing the size of loans the two can buy, up to $625,500.
But bottom line, few expect all of the above to have that much of an impact, while the cost to the government to backstop Fannie and Freddie, deemed to be manageable today by proponents of the legislation, could easily escalate were housing to take another header.
Martin Mayer / New York Times
“Congress has given the Bush White House yet another chance to operate outside the Constitution. Unsurprisingly, the administration has taken it. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson now has the go-ahead for his two-part plan to salvage Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-sponsored mortgage companies – a blueprint that violates fundamental American principles in two worrisome ways.
“First, the Treasury will be allowed to advance money to Fannie and Freddie (and even to buy their stocks) in unlimited quantities to keep them afloat – in any fashion Mr. Paulson sees fit. Yet the Constitution requires that ‘no money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in consequence of appropriations made by law.’ Even in wartime, budgets for the military specify how much is to be spent for what purposes.
“Second, as an alternative to increasing the national debt, Mr. Paulson wants to let the two mortgage lenders become preferred customers of the Fed’s discount window, with the authority to pawn their own securities for cash. But only Congress has the constitutional power to borrow on the credit of the
“It isn’t a good idea to authorize the Treasury secretary to spend unlimited amounts of taxpayer money, even accepting the administration’s argument that Mr. Paulson will probably never have to use it. Even worse is the notion that the Fed’s portfolio of assets – assets that back our currency – should be polluted by the inferior stuff of collateralized mortgage obligations.”
[Mr. Mayer does say, however, that Secretary Paulson can spare the Treasury by dipping into a little-known pool of money called the Exchange Stabilization Fund, but I won’t get into that today.]
“The new law actually reduces the amount of competition in the mortgage securitization business going forward by solidifying the special position for the two leading players, Fannie and Freddie, while competitors scramble to get capital.
“The legislation also creates long-term uncertainty with regard to the extent and form of government assistance. In effect, Treasury Secretary Paulson now has an open-ended mandate to bailout the nation’s troubled housing finance market, the largest single capital market in the world.
“If any other country announced that its finance minister could print unlimited debt to do something similar, financial markets around the world would dump both the country’s debt and the country’s currency. It may well be different because this is the
Lastly, the news on the trade front was disturbing as the Doha Round collapsed in a sea of recrimination, specifically between the
I was reading an account in the Wall Street Journal and the reporter offered that despite the severe setback, the world is not “on the edge of the kind of protectionist wave that ended the last period of globalization in the early 20th century and contributed to two world wars, analysts say.” I beg to differ. As the global economy continues to grind to a halt, trade will become the #1 target of the people and protectionism is a natural byproduct.
From an editorial in the Washington Post:
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I was one of those backing Chinese membership in the WTO. I may have been wrong.
Street Bytes
–Stocks finished as mixed as you can get, with the Dow Jones dropping 0.4% to 11326, the S&P 500 tacking on 3 points, or 0.2%, to 1260, and Nasdaq finishing unchanged at 2310. With about 75% of companies in the S&P 500 having reported their earnings, the report card isn’t good, no matter how you slice it, ex-financials, ex-energy, or ex-GM. The bottom line is as a group they are down about 20% vs. year ago levels and there is little cause for optimism the 3rd quarter will be much better.
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6-mo. 1.86% 2-yr. 2.51% 10-yr. 3.94% 30-yr. 4.56%
The White House is now projecting that the budget deficit for fiscal ’08 will come in at $389 billion, while next year’s is forecast to explode to $482 billion amidst the slowing economy, declining tax receipts, costs for the wars, and the ever-growing impact of Medicare legislation signed in 2006, if I recall correctly. The record deficit is $413 billion set in F ’04, after which it shrunk to $162 billion by ’07 before rocketing anew.
–On Friday, General Motors posted a $15.5 beeellion (channeling Carl Sagan) loss for the second quarter, the third-worst quarterly loss in the automaker’s history. Revenue was down a massive $8.5 billion, while on the cash burn front, at first blush it appears GM can get through 2009.
Overall for the industry in the month of July, while GM’s U.S. auto sales plunged 26%, Chrysler’s dived 29%, Toyota’s fell 12%, Ford’s were off 15%, and Honda’s 2%. Nissan Motor saw its sales grow 8.5%. But the figures hide even worse carnage, such as Ford’s SUV sales plummeting 54%!
–As alluded to above, Merrill Lynch announced it was taking a $5.7 billion further writedown, making it about $46 billion in total writedowns thus far during the credit crisis, while raising another $8.5 billion in fresh capital by selling stock, including another $3.4 billion to
Merrill’s biggest single action on the writedown front involved the sale of collateralized debt obligations that once had a face value of $30.6 billion for $6.7 billion to private equity vulture shop Lone Star Funds. The 22 cents on the dollar is seen as a new floor on CDOs for the industry and may help exposed players such as UBS, Citigroup and Lehman at least get their own crapola off the books as part of ‘moving on.’
–Citigroup and Merrill Lynch were sued by the states of
–ExxonMobil reported profits of $11.68 billion, the highest ever for an American company, though it missed its earnings forecast significantly and the shares fell. Exxon continues to spend more of its cash hoard on buying back stock rather than on exploration, subjecting itself to even further criticism. Royal Dutch Shell also earned $11.6 billion in the quarter.
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–The parent of the Benigan’s and Steak & Ale chains, with over 310 locations nationwide, filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy amid rising costs and falling sales. Thousands more thus enter the unemployment line. Very sad.
–Tyson, the 2nd-largest chicken producer, blamed soaring corn and soybean prices for a 90% decline in profits, while Black & Decker cut its earnings forecast on the housing slump.
–Shares in Biogen Idec and Elan plummeted on Friday on word two patients being treated with their multiple-sclerosis drug Tysabri contracted a potentially fatal brain disease. This is the same drug that was once withdrawn over a different safety concern but this time Biogen said it has no plans to recall it or restrict its use. [Elan is the marketing partner.] The benefits for MS patients seem indisputable, despite the risks.
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–Then there is
–Starbucks’ troubles continue as the company reported a net loss of $6.7 million for the quarter and the pain has spread to
–Ha! Home prices in the
–Alcatel-Lucent finally forced the two executives responsible for the ill-conceived merger, CEO Patricia Russo and chairman Serge Tchuruk, to walk the plank after posting a loss of $1.7 billion for the quarter. The company has failed to turn a profit since it was formed in November 2006.
–SAP, the world’s largest maker of business software, kicked butt (read Oracle’s) as sales rose 21%, above expectations. While you’d be right in saying the rate of capital or business spending is slowing, for its part SAP has been successful convincing companies that its new product offers a “strong value proposition,” in the words of its Co-CEO. As for Oracle’s longstanding suit against SAP, alleging theft of trade secrets, first brought in 2005, a new trial won’t commence until Feb. 2010. Wake me up when it’s over.
–In all my travels, one of the best state newspapers is right here in
–Eric Savitz of Barron’s had some good comments on the disastrous IPO of GT Solar, a
“What makes the story so appalling is that the deal didn’t raise a single penny for the company. All of the cash goes to an entity called GT Solar Holdings, owned by the venture funds GFI Energy Ventures and Oaktree Capital Management. This wasn’t some hyper-growth company that needs cash to fund operations; this was a pair of venture investors who wanted to take some money off the table. Even after the offering, they own three-quarters of the equity; would it have killed them to price the deal a couple of bucks lower?
“To take a solar company public in the current environment, with so many other companies in the pipelines, and to botch the IPO this way hurts both their venture competitors and the companies lined up behind GT awaiting a chance to go public.”
It didn’t help my own solar holding, either, though the entire sector is now going to have to wait until year end it would seem to see if its tax credits are extended. This is an abomination, as Republicans fight for more drilling, while Democrats want a focus on renewables. As I’ve said before, I recognize this is one case where the government may have to shell out considerable sums, and we all know how lousy the deficit picture is, but both sides have to compromise. In the meantime, I just hope the company I’ve invested a fair piece of change in doesn’t have its line of credit pulled, an issue with just about every small company in
–One of the joys of leaving the business world and Wall Street in 1999 was no longer having to go through
And what’s the largest cargo airport in the world?
–Still no change to my recommended 80% cash, 20% equities allocation.
Foreign Affairs
*As I go to post, CBS News is reporting al-Qaeda\’s #2, Ayman Zawahiri, has been killed or critically wounded. Beyond that there is no further information at this time.
But today, Saturday, is the deadline for
Longer-term, like into the fall, Israeli officials continue to rule out no options of their own in dealing with the threat to their very existence and, again, it’s important to understand that the leadership vacuum at the top with the announcement Prime Minister Olmert is stepping down in September has no impact on any Israeli plans to confront Iran. Deputy Prime Minister Shaul Mofaz told a
As for Olmert, his decision to step down in the face of probable indictment in the corruption investigation does impact peace talks with the Palestinians and Syria, neither of which was particularly popular with the Israeli masses anyway because Olmert was seen to be more interested in burnishing some kind of legacy rather than acting in the best interests of his people. Now, all bets are off on these fronts.
Politically, here is what may happen. Olmert resigns around Sept. 17 when his Kadima Party selects a new leader, but if Kadima then can’t form a new ruling coalition, an early national election will be called, with Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu the favorite should this be the case. Otherwise, a general election will not take place until sometime in 2009, it would appear. Current Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni is the favorite to take the helm of Kadima, incidentally, even as Livni has her fingerprints all over the failed Lebanese war of 2006.
But back to Olmert’s announcement, I thought this editorial in the Jerusalem Post nailed it.
“Until the very end, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert remained Ehud Olmert: combative, lacking humility, convinced of his own abilities and infallibility. These same traits, which hoisted him up the country’s political ladder, eventually brought about his political downfall.
“There was something unsettling about watching Olmert essentially tender his resignation Wednesday night on the porch of his official residence in
“Unsettling because, Richard Nixon-like, the prime minister believes that it was not his own faults and missteps chasing him from office, but rather that he was being hounded out by his enemies.
“ ‘As a citizen in a democratic state, I have always believed that when a person is elected prime minister in
“But that was not his case, he added, saying that from day one he was subjected to ‘a wave of investigations, probes and criticism,’ as if those investigations and probes were merely ways to drive him from office, not the product of any of his actions.
“If Olmert had demonstrated some humility along the way, perhaps the public would have been more forgiving. But he never did. The investigations against him were cooked up to get him. The poorly waged war in
“It was as if he was speaking to a nation that has not been around for the last two years…
“As if the country did not live through the blunders of the Second Lebanon War, and witnessed how the inability to win that war – or decisively stop the rockets from the Gaza Strip – has not bolstered, but rather damaged,
“He talked of a nation that learns from its mistakes, though the second anniversary of the war in
But if
So authorities have sought to deflect attention on human rights, while grudgingly lifting some restrictions on press censorship, in talking about the terror threat it faces during the Olympics from Islamists, Tibetan separatists and Falun Gong. The stifling security in
But some of us are curious to see how the crowd reacts to the competition. Chinese fans have a history of misbehaving badly, after all. During an Asia Cup soccer game between
Along these lines I’ve long argued that should
Matthew Continetti / The Weekly Standard
“
“On a visit to
Russia: The Kremlin continues to play the oil card, further reducing deliveries to the Czech Republic, now just 50% of old levels, over the latter’s agreeing to deploy part of the Pentagon’s missile defense shield on Czech territory. At least the Czech’s had smartly diversified their sources of oil and natural gas back in the 1990s so
But then you have the ongoing saga of BP-TNK, where BP’s president of the operation was forced to flee two weeks ago and as of this writing hadn’t resurfaced.
Editorial / Wall Street Journal
“By now, the jilted investor in
“So let’s not shed many tears for the latest oil major brought low in
“The steady erosion of the rule of law in
Putin has also been working his magic on steel and coal producer Mechel the past few weeks, accusing it of tax evasion. It appears criminal charges are likely, after which the Kremlin can Yukoize the company…just snap up all the assets. Putin has been feuding with $billionaire CEO Igor Zyuzin as Mechel’s shares have gone from a May high of $58 to Friday’s $20.
And now, as reported by the Financial Times, Putin and his gang are looking to monopolize the food export business to turn it into a diplomatic weapon as well.
Lastly, hate crimes in
The country had been on edge ahead of the ruling with a major terrorist attack in
But Foreign Secretary David Miliband took things too far in openly laying out his own plan for change, so Brown’s allies rallied around the boss and Brown demanded Miliband cancel a trip to
Random Musings
–In his last column before being diagnosed with brain cancer, Robert Novak wrote of Republican presidential nominee John McCain:
“Not even Bob Dole’s dismal candidacy in 1996 generated less enthusiasm in GOP ranks than McCain’s current effort.” Yet despite this, McCain can still back into the election.
That said I really wish both candidates would take a break and leave us alone for the month of August. The more they talk, the more I wish we had a serious third-party candidate.
The Gallup/USA Today survey of registered voters shows Obama with just a 47-44 lead (I don’t pay attention to the ‘daily tracking’ numbers) as the two run truly pitiful campaigns. I was going to write a lot on this topic, but we’ve long reached overkill in the coverage of who is a racist or most patriotic.
For now I saw McCain on “This Week” and thought it was his best performance in a long time, as even Sam Donaldson said this was the McCain his supporters have been looking for; strong and confident, but not angry. McCain can pound away successfully at Obama on
But after McCain’s interview with George Stephanopoulos the right pounded the senator over his statements on taxes. One Wall Street Journal columnist went so far as to ask “Is he stupid?” This coming from the base McCain desperately needs to hold. My own views of his comments on taxes were more sanguine for one simple reason, something I stated long ago. You can throw all the campaign rhetoric on the economy and taxes out the window, from both candidates, because the deficit picture is such that neither is going to have much of a chance of enacting their top priorities.
As for Obama, Pat Buchanan summed it up succinctly. He’s not polling over 50%, despite all his advantages, because a ton of people are still asking: “Who is this guy?” and “Is he one of us?”
My own bottom line is I can’t wait for the debates. They will be electric and total tension conventions. I’m also increasingly of the opinion that they will decide the election, barring an October surprise on the geopolitical front. [Like does the Bush administration give
–Republican Senator Ted Stevens of
–It appears the prime suspect in the 2001 anthrax attacks killed himself just as he was about to be arrested for the crimes. Bruce Ivins worked in the government’s elite biodefense research laboratory at
–The earthquake that rocked the
–Joel Achenbach /
“The ‘dead zone’ in the Gulf of Mexico, an area on the seabed with too little oxygen to support fish, shrimp, crabs and other forms of marine life, is nearly the largest on record this year, about 8,000 square miles, researchers said this week.
“Only the churning effects of Hurricane Dolly last week prevented the dead zone from being the largest ever.
“The problem of hypoxia – very low levels of dissolved oxygen – is a downstream effect of fertilizers used for agriculture in the
A main cause is increased corn production, which relies heavily on fertilizer. Yet another reason to blame ethanol, sports fans. [My conclusion, not Mr. Achenbach’s.]
–I have to admit I haven’t spent any time on the John Edwards story that he recently hooked up with a long-time mistress at a
Seven months ago the Enquirer reported that Rielle Hunter, a 44-year-old former campaign worker, was mother to Edwards’ child, but a friend of Edwards came forward and said he was the father. That quieted things down until the Enquirer, “acting on a tip, staked out a hotel where Hunter and a male friend had rented adjacent rooms. Sure enough, Edwards showed up at 9:45 p.m. and took an elevator up, according to Enquirer reporters. At 2:40 a.m. he took an elevator down – all the way to the basement,” writes Mulshine. “Confronted by reporters and a photographer, he holed up in a restroom as they shouted questions through the door. Finally hotel security came to escort him out.”
Mulshine’s point, however, was why hasn’t the story become a bigger one?
“(It’s) time the major media picked up (on it). It’s not merely the stench of liberal bias that bothers me but the unfortunate reality that we in the MSM are giving up a good story to the Internet. And if we in the major media continue to cede such stories to the Internet, we won’t be major much longer.”
–Recall that I sleep with one eye open to watch out for North Korean bottle rockets, or as I like to say, I worry so you don’t have to, but the other morning I was awakened around 2:00 a.m. by the sound of a helicopter hovering overhead. At first I thought it was a military exercise of some kind but when I left my place for Dunkin’ Donuts on my way to work about two and a half hours later (I’m an early riser), the helicopter was still there and on my drive to the office I passed ten police cars assembled at a train station. It was a little disconcerting and I found out later I was within minutes of seeing the arrest of one of four armed robbery suspects who had knocked off a nearby 7-11 around 1:30 a.m. All four, however, were caught in a terrific display of police work, after they had scattered following the crash of their vehicle.
But the reason why I bring this up is because the case could have national significance. In the paper later, the
–Dreaming of a vacation on
–For those of you with a lot of tattoos, you may want to take note of the following from Dr. Bernadine Healy in her U.S. News & World Report column.
“(Tattooing) is designed to last forever, delivering permanent ink deep under the epidermis. The skin reacts by protectively encapsulating the alien clumps of pigment in dense fibrous tissue while a few nearby lymph nodes collect what migrates out. For a long time, removal meant surgical excision or deep abrasion of the skin, invariably causing scarring and sometimes the need for skin grafting. In the preferred approach now, the tattoo gradually fades away under many months of laser treatments tailored to the wavelength of the pigments. Sounds easy. But with disruption, the fading tattoo becomes more like a toxic chemical dump.
“Chemists from several laboratories, including the government’s
Sorry if I just ruined your day.
–We have us a true dirtball of the year candidate in the seminarian who pilfered Barack Obama’s prayer from the Western Wall. It was equally poor that an Israeli paper published it, as innocent as it proved to be.
–NASA sought to distance itself from comments laid out by former Apollo 14 astronaut Edgar Mitchell, who claimed extra-terrestrials have been coming to visit for decades. Dr. Mitchell, 77, said governments have been covering it up for 60 years.
“I’ve been in military and intelligence circles, who know that beneath the surface of what has been public knowledge, yes – we have been visited. Reading the papers recently, it’s been happening quite a bit,” he said.
Jeff S. first passed on the report from the Daily Telegraph that during a radio interview, Mitchell said sources at the space agency who had had contact with aliens described the beings as “little people who look strange to us.”
To me that rules out UPS deliverymen because most of the ones I know are pretty big.
–But ironically, this same week Nick Pope, who was in charge of UFO investigations for the British Defense Ministry from 1991 to 1994 and author of a book on the topic, “Open Skies, Closed Minds,” had some of the following in a New York Times op-ed.
Cases in
“On Dec. 26, 1980, for instance, several witnesses at two American Air Force bases in
“On March 30 and 31, 1993, there was a wave of UFO sightings over
“On April 23, 2007, a commercial airline pilot and some of his passengers reported a huge cigar-shaped UFO – the pilot estimated it to be a mile wide – near the
“In addition, there have been several incidents of near misses between UFOs and known aircraft – enough to prompt the Ministry of Defense and the British Civil Aviation Authority to advise pilots, if they encounter anything, ‘not to maneuver, other than to place the object astern, if possible.’”
Pope’s conclusion concerns the fact the
“The
–And so with the above in mind, the
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Pray for the men and women of our armed forces.
God bless
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Oil, $124.87…3rd straight weekly close below $130
Returns for the week 7/28-8/1
Dow Jones -0.4% [11326]
S&P 500 +0.2% [1260]
S&P MidCap +0.7%
Russell 2000 +0.8%
Nasdaq +0.02% [2310]
Returns for the period 1/1/08-8/1/08
Dow Jones -14.6%
S&P 500 -14.2%
S&P MidCap -6.7%
Russell 2000 -6.5%
Nasdaq -12.9%
Bulls 30.0
Bears 50.0 [Source: Chartcraft / Investors Intelligence]
I hope you like the new site. The bottom line is I’ve added more bells and whistles in terms of the search engines and gaining exposure, with many of the changes behind the screen, you might say. I hope to add a podcast of Week in Review on the weekend of Aug. 30 and further down the road a few videos. Just help me spread the word.
Have a great week. I appreciate your support.
Brian Trumbore