Wikinvest Wire

The week's economic reports

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Large declines in retail sales in July and August along with a sharp rebound in consumer sentiment highlighted the week's economic reports. Stocks and bonds ended with the S&P 500 Index up 0.7 percent to 1,252 (for a year-to-date total return of –12.9 percent) and the yield of the 10-year U.S. Treasury note rose 7 basis points to 3.73 percent.
IMAGEInternational Trade: The trade gap between the U.S. and the rest of the world widened sharply in July, from a downwardly revised $58.82 billion in June to $62.2 billion, driven largely by the surging dollar value of crude oil imports. Oil imports rose to a new all-time high of $43.4 billion as the average price of crude rose from $117.13 to $124.66 a barrel, a trend that is set to reverse abruptly in August.

Aside from energy, imports shrank from $32.5 billion to $29.6 billion, most of which is attributed to a general slowing in the U.S. economy. Overall, imports rose 3.9 percent while exports gained 3.3 percent, exports once again being led by industrial and automotive products.

Initial Jobless Claims: Initial claims for unemployment insurance fell from an upwardly revised 451,000 during the last week of August to 445,000 during the week of September 6th. The four-week moving average now stands at 440,000, a figure consistent with the last two recessions in 1990-1991 and 2001, while continuing claims rose 122,000 to 3.53 million.

The labor market is bad and getting worse with an increasing number of calls for job losses in the months ahead in the 150,000-200,000 range or perhaps worse. Unemployment is expected to continue rising with 6.5 percent being the new optimistic forecast, some analysts now pegging the jobless rate at 7 percent or more in 2009.

Retail Sales: For a complete report on retail sales, see this item from yesterday.

Producer Prices: As expected given the recent plunge in energy prices, wholesale inflation reversed course in August, dropping 0.9 percent after a 1.2 percent surge in July. On a year-over-year basis, producer prices are up 9.7 percent. Energy prices fell 4.6 percent after rising 3.1 percent the month before and food prices rose 0.3 percent in August, the same increase seen in July.

The core rate of inflation for producer prices (excluding food and energy) was in line with expectations rising 0.2 percent, down from an increase of 0.7 percent the month prior, largely due to heavy discounting from automobile dealers.

Consumer Sentiment: The mood of the consumer, as measured by the Reuters/University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index, surged to its highest level since January, rising to 73.1 after a month-end August reading of 63.0. This is the first of two readings for September with the final reading due on the 26th. Inflation expectations declined sharply, tumbling from 4.8 percent to 3.6 percent for the one-year outlook and down 0.3 percentage points to 2.9 percent for the five-year period.
IMAGEMore than ever before, consumer sentiment and the Conference Board's similar consumer confidence survey are being driven by gasoline prices and, with the price at the pump having fallen more than 60 cents a gallon recently, this improvement should not be surprising. It is important to note, however, that current sentiment/confidence levels have been associated with recessions in the past and a one month surge in confidence is not necessarily the beginning of a trend, more likely, something of a "relief rally" for the consumer.

Summary: The decline in retail sales was, by far, the most important economic development last week and it gives credence to the idea that, after a four month respite due to government stimulus checks and high gasoline prices, the resumption of the consumer spending slowdown is underway. Falling home prices, a weakening job market, and tight credit markets have combined to transform a spendthrift American consumer into a cautious spender and this bodes ill for the economy.

During the last slowdown in 2001, home prices were already rising at eight percent per year and, once the Fed's low interest rates hit the mortgage market, there were waves and waves of refinancing which eventually led to even bigger home price gains and then the housing bubble that burst five years later. This time, there is no such remedy in store.

With foreclosures still rising and the next wave of defaults now appearing - the "maturing" Alt-A, Option-ARM products - the housing market will get much worse before it gets any better, perhaps accelerating the consumption slowdown. Pending home sales dropped again in July, however, it is home prices, not home sales, that are much more important in determining how freely American's spend in the period ahead.

After a few months of relatively better economic data, we may now be set to begin another leg down as the troubles in the labor market intensify, the credit market continues to deteriorate, and the export boom once spurred by a weaker dollar begins to throttle back due to the combination of a stronger dollar and slowing growth overseas.

The Week Ahead: The coming week will be highlighted by reports on consumer prices on Tuesday and housing starts on Wednesday. Also scheduled for release are reports on industrial production and New York area manufacturing on Monday, the National Association of Home Builders' housing market index on Tuesday, and both leading economic indicators and the Philadelphia area manufacturing survey on Thursday.

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Nouriel Roubini on Bloomberg

Friday, September 12, 2008

Over at Bloomberg, this video clip of Nouriel Roubini sharing his outlook on the housing market and economy appears near a clip featuring Jeremy Siegel ("Stocks for the Long Run") who sees a bottom in equity markets and thinks it's time to load up.

IMAGEClick to play in a new window

Some highlights from Nouriel:
  • The recession (already underway) will last eighteen months
  • The financial crisis will be with us for two or three years
  • Two or three hundred banks will go bankrupt
  • Home prices will fall a total of 40 percent through 2009
The summary from Bloomberg:
00:00 Outlook for financial markets, economy
02:26 "Serious weaknesses" in financial system
03:31 "Many have to be blamed" for woes; regulation
04:25 Impact of financial turmoil on economy
05:49 Timing of recovery, financial crisis outlook
06:26 Outlook for global economy

Running time 07:11
Everyone have a nice weekend...

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Sorry about that college money boys

The litigious society that we are, it wouldn't be surprising if contractor Adam Freid of Thousand Oaks, California ends up with something to show for his Freddie Mac stock pick that went horribly wrong when the U.S. government stepped in to take over the mortgage giants and, in the process, wiped out most shareholders.

As discussed in this Wall Street Journal report, his sons' education is riding on it.

Adam Freid, a general contractor in Thousand Oaks, Calif., says he was through day-trading stocks and instead looking for a promising long-term investment when he read some of Henry Paulson's recent comments about Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

The Treasury secretary's assurances that the government-sponsored mortgage companies would raise more capital gave Mr. Freid the impression that a government takeover wouldn't be necessary. So he bought approximately 25,000 Freddie Mac common shares last week at about $5 each. "After reading that, I said, 'I'm going to buy this stock. It's been beaten up, but it will go up over time,' " Mr. Freid says.
IMAGENow he says he is out more than $100,000 -- money that he was saving for his two young sons' college education. He is also talking to a lawyer about a class-action lawsuit against Freddie Mac, which angry investors say offered no hint of what was to come when announcing earnings last month. "I'm completely distraught," Mr. Freid says.

Most investors are aware that stock investing carries risks and that share prices can collapse if the business fails. Yet in the case of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, there are unusually loud cries from individual investors who can't understand how they got the short end of the stick.
One can only imagine the particulars surrounding this story - a general contractor in Southern California where home prices are falling faster than they went up a few years back and, given his most recent gamble, the future complainant's perhaps shocking reversal of fortune since the housing bubble burst.

You can never be sure.

But, one thing you can be sure of today in the U.S., if somebody's got to get the short end of the stick, it will certainly be "the little guy".

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Retail sales stumble

The artificial support of government stimulus money and soaring gasoline prices have now been removed from the retail sales data revealing a sobering trend for an economy that counts on personal consumption for more than two-thirds of economic growth.
IMAGERetail sales in August declined 0.3 percent and the July data was adjusted downward from minus 0.1 percent to minus 0.5 percent. Excluding automobiles, sales fell 0.7 percent in August, the biggest drop so far this year.

Home improvement retailers continue to suffer. After big increases during the housing boom, sales at building material and garden equipment dealers have now declined during 19 of the last 29 months and are 2.4 percent below last year at this time in nominal terms (remember that none of the retail sales data is adjusted for inflation).
IMAGEAt home furnishing stores, the situation is far worse as the foreclosure and credit crisis drags on and fewer homeowners feel the need to "spruce up the place" with trips to Ikea or Pottery Barn.

Furniture and home furnishings sales declined during 14 of the last 19 months and are now 6.8 percent lower than last August.
IMAGESpurred by dealer incentives, automobile sales surged in August (up 1.9 percent) after a big decline in July (down 4.3 percent) as prices for new and used cars are reportedly tumbling amid weak demand.

As this relates to the third quarter economic growth statistics, many analysts now expect a decline in nominal personal consumption during the July-August-September period for the first time in 17 years.

When combined with a reversal in the trade data that buoyed second quarter growth, economists are revising third quarter growth estimates downward with some now expecting another negative number to surface when the advance estimate is released at the end of October. Recall that the fourth quarter growth of 2008 was recently revised downward to -0.2 percent, the first quarter of negative real economic growth since 2001.

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Friday morning links

TOP STORIES
U.S. Helps Lehman Go Up for Sale - Washington Post
Alt-A Mortgages Next Risk for Housing Market as Defaults Surge - Bloomberg
Regulators say speculators' role uncertain in oil prices - Reuters
Speculation, manipulation drive commodity prices - Commodity Online
WaMu cut to "junk," sees $4.5 billion loss reserve - Reuters
Ike storms toward Texas coast - MarketWatch
Poole Says Fed Shouldn't Give Funding to Any Lehman Agreement - Bloomberg
Don't Rule Out Another Fed Rate Cut This Year - CNBC

MARKETS/INVESTING
OPEC's math is murky but its mistake is not - MarketWatch
Precious metals bounce back as dollar retreats - Reuters
Contrite Sprott blames U.S. actions - Globe & Mail
Ten ways for you to acquire the Midas touch - TimesOnline
USDA cuts estimates for corn, soybean harvests - AP
The problem with a strong dollar - MSN Money

ECONOMY
Retail sales unexpectedly drop in August - AP
U.S. Producer Prices Fall 0.9% in August; Core Rate Rises 0.2% - Bloomberg
McCain, Obama Couldn't Pass FDR's Econ 101 Class: Susan Antilla - Bloomberg
The Economy: Best- and Worst-Case Scenarios - BusinessWeek

HOUSING
Foreclosure filings increase, but at slower rate - AP
Democrats Push for Foreclosure Freeze at Fannie, Freddie - Housing Wire
30-year mortgages dip to lowest level since April - AP

FED/TREASURY/BANKING
Bernanke May Be Wrong: Next Fed Rate Move Might Be Down, Not Up - Bloomberg
Feds bailed out China, not the US - MSN MOney
Financial stability will take a while, Kohn says - Bloomberg

INTERNATIONAL
Chinese output weak but retail sales robust - Reuters
Bank of England cannot save mortgage market, warns Mervyn King - Telegraph
Japan reports economy shrank 3 percent April-June - AP
Japan unveils economic boost plan - BBC
Indian Output Rises Before Higher Rates Impact Demand - Bloomberg

INTERESTING
Reverse Mortgage Co. Revamps Name, Brand - Housing Wire
Early Whales Had Legs - LiveScience

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Leaving Las Vegas

Thursday, September 11, 2008

We will soon depart Las Vegas to return home after a very interesting Hard Assets Investment Conference - more to come on that in the days ahead. We hope to stop at Bodie State Historic Park on the way - an old silver mining town seemingly frozen in time.IMAGE

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Thursday morning links

TOP STORIES
Pressure Builds as Lehman Faces Mounting Losses - NY Times
Junk Bond Distress Levels Surge, Signaling Defaults - Bloomberg
Lawmakers Seek to Curb Speculators - NY Times
Washington Mutual shares plunge to 17-year low - AP
Legg Mason manager's plan seems to be crash and bear it - Baltimore Sun

MARKETS
Gold up from 11-month low, physical buying supports - Reuters
Saudis Vow to Ignore OPEC Decision to Cut Production - NY Times
Federal oil agency under ethics cloud - MarketWatch
At OPEC, cooling rivalries, extending a hand - AP

ECONOMY
July trade deficit widens on surge in oil imports - MarketWatch
Jobless claims fall less than expecte - AP

HOUSING
Mortgage rates are plunging -- for those who qualify - LA Times
Fannie, Freddie Get Bigger Before They Shrink - Bloomberg
ForeclosureS.com Reports More Than 100,000 Homeowners Lost Homes in August - MarketWatch
Even in the Most Expensive Zip Codes, Prices Are Down - BusinessWeek

FED/TREASURY/BANKING
U.S. Considers Bringing Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac on to Budget - Bloomberg
Fed auctions another $25 billion in loans to banks - AP
Fed May Expand Funding Aid to Banks in a `Mother of Year-Ends' - Bloomberg

INTERNATIONAL
Australian Employment Rises Three Times Forecast Pace - Bloomberg
EU sees recession likely to push UK behind Spain and Germany - Telegraph
Bollard Cuts New Zealand's Key Rate to 7.5%; Currency Tumbles - Bloomberg
'Tens of thousands to be laid off every week' as UK falls into recession - Guardian
Taiwan to Spend NT$181 Billion to Revive Economy, Stock Market - Bloomberg

INTERESTING
Teacher OK after crashing into bear on a bicycle - AP
Atom Smasher Works, World Survives - LiveScience

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TMTGM top tags, word cloud, whatever

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

The word cloud, top tags, or whatever this thing at Technorati is called is an interesting depiction of the subject material here at this blog. It's probably been there for some time, but I just noticed it the other day.
IMAGE

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The death of consumption?

We'll have to wait until the end of October to hear anything officially from the government about what's happening with the economy during the third quarter, but economic growth during July-August-September isn't looking too good at the moment.

Last quarter's real GDP figure of 3.3 percent was driven largely by trade - some 3.1 percentage points were a result of rising exports and falling imports - and, while personal consumption rebounded a bit from prior quarters, it looks like it's about to reverse course in a big way.

This story from Bloomberg fills in the details:

Consumer Spending in U.S. to Stall, Hurting Growth

Sept. 10 (Bloomberg) -- A record spending spree by U.S. consumers will come to an abrupt end this quarter as job losses cause Americans to restrain purchases, a Bloomberg News survey predicts.
IMAGEPersonal spending, the biggest part of the economy, will stall from July to September, three months earlier than predicted last month, according to the median estimate of 49 economists polled from Sept. 2 to Sept. 9. The slump will slow growth to less than half the prior quarter's pace.
...
The job market is sending the surest signal the economy is contracting. Payrolls have shrunk by more than 600,000 workers so far this year and the jobless rate shot up 1.1 percentage points from May to August, the biggest four-month jump in almost 27 years, the Labor Department reported last week.

``There will shortly be a sea change in the consensus economic outlook for early next year, and it won't be an upward revision,'' said Scott Anderson, a senior economist at Wells Fargo & Co. in Minneapolis, who forecast spending would drop this quarter and next and the economy would shrink in the last three months of 2008. ``Too many households are just one
job loss away from default and foreclosure.''
It's surprising that we haven't had a Recession Probability Update from former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan lately. Maybe I just missed it.

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Michael Masters .... in the news again

Boy, you know you've made it to the big time when one of those sketches of your pensive mug appears as part of a story on the front page of the Money and Investing section of the Wall Street Journal.

Such was the case with Mr. Michael Masters today.

Recall that Masters coined the term "index speculators" earlier this year in his then single-handed quest to reduce long positions in commodity futures that, incidentally, might benefit the outsized allocation of airline stocks in his hedge fund.

It's no longer a single-handed quest as many elected officials have seized on the idea of "simple solution to complex problems" as it relates to the nation's challenging energy future.

Apparently, even if the WSJ art department does take the time to do a nice charcoal sketch of you, it doesn't mean that the writers are going to be kind.

To wit:

The recent oil selloff came after several senators proposed laws to curb investments they say drove up the price of gas and food, a notion heralded by Mr. Masters and derided by many economists. Critics said Mr. Masters is trying to buoy his own investing portfolio, which is laden with transportation-related stocks, and lawmakers are trying to show they are addressing high gas prices.
...
One of the biggest champions of the antispeculation movement is Mr. Masters, 42 years old, who lives in St. Croix and manages Masters Capital Management LLC. The firm reported holdings of about $600 million in a recent regulatory filing, down about half from year end.

Mr. Masters won't comment on the firm's holdings; about 10% are in airlines, autos and other transportation companies that would benefit from lower oil prices. He said profits have been about flat this year.
...
Mr. Masters gained admiration from farmers, crop distributors and others who invited him to speak around the country. But he has drawn ridicule from some economists and others, who question his analysis and say he isn't a commodities expert and is trying to boost his own portfolio.
Ouch!

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Wednesday morning links

TOP STORIES
Lehman plans asset sales, reports huge 3Q loss - AP
Opec cuts output to keep oil above $100 - Guardian
Fed Loans May Give Lehman Breathing Room Bear Lacked - Bloomberg
IEA lowers oil demand forecasts for 2008, 2009 - MarketWatch
Pimco fund makes $1.7 billion in a day after bailout - OC Register

MARKETS
Oil barely budges as traders parse OPEC decision - AP
OPEC is behind the curve - MarketWatch
Gold may run out of steam at $1000 - Telegraph

ECONOMY
Consumer Spending in U.S. to Stall, Hurting Growth - Bloomberg
Economic Breakdown: Result of Moral Breakdown? - The Trumpet
Consumer borrowing slows to weakest in 7 months - AP

HOUSING
Housing bust is boom for ‘board-up’ specialists - MSN Money
Fannie Mae's Demise Rooted in the Swinging '60s - Bloomberg
Freddie, Fannie Scam Hidden in Broad Daylight - Bloomberg

FED/TREASURY/BANKING
Bernanke to testify to Congress on Sept. 24 - MarketWatch
Paulson Sends Message to Freddie, Fannie Employees: Don't Leave - Bloomberg
Budget outlook worsens on war, economy - MarketWatch

INTERNATIONAL
Price of auctioned homes falls 25% in a year - TimesOnline
Trichet Says ECB `Resolute' in Fighting Inflation - Bloomberg
Japan wholesale prices rise 7.2 percent in August - AP
China's CPI falls to 4.9% on softer consumption - MarketWatch
EU Slashes Growth Forecasts for 2008 - NY Times
U.K. Economy Contracts, Lurches Toward a Recession - Bloomberg

INTERESTING
Why We Are All Insane - LiveScience
Airline seeks bald men as walking billboards - AP

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Commodity funds for retail investors

Tuesday, September 09, 2008

At the moment, I'm about half-way through with my half-hour Newsletter Editor Masterclass Workshop at the Hard Assets Investment Conference in Las Vegas, this post being set to automagically appear at the designated time without operator assistance as my clammy fingers are currently wrapped around one of those remote control thingies for the computer/projector in the back of the room.

Below is the updated table of commodity mutual funds, ETFs and ETNs from the back of the paper titled, Buy the Stocks Or, Buy the Commodities? (.pdf), the subject of the presentation.

A whopping 76 commodity offerings are now available to retail investors, up by about two dozen since this list was last updated back in May.
IMAGE NAMELook at the trading volume of those new leveraged funds - DTO (double short oil), DGP (double long gold), and DGP (double short gold). Traders just love those things.

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To learn more about investing in natural resources using commonly traded ETFs, stocks, and mutual funds, see this description at Iacono Research. Or, sign up for a free trial.

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Jim Rogers on the Fannie/Freddie bailout

Big surprise! Jim Rogers isn't a big fan of the Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac bailout.

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Inventory vs. price for iShares Silver Trust

One of the many surprising aspects of this year's huge 40+ percent plunge in the silver price - from a multi-decade high of $21 per ounce in March to just over $12 per ounce as of last Friday - is that inventory held by the iShares Silver Trust (AMEX:SLV) has climbed steadily over that time.

I've seen charts similar to the one below prepared by others, but it wasn't until I looked at the data myself and made my own charts that that it struck me how bullish an indicator this inventory data really is. Since March, the price has declined more than 40 percent but the SLV inventory has risen by almost 20 percent.
IMAGE NAMEThere has been much talk about short positions in the silver market along with the shortage of physical silver at coin dealers and this graphic is just one more piece of data to add to the discussion.

According to data from the Silver Institute (where you can get all kinds of interesting information about the supply, demand, and usage of silver), the 2000 tonne increase in SLV inventory over the last year amounts to about 7 percent of overall annual silver demand where the bulk of the metal goes to industrial use, jewelry, and photography. So, this is a relatively small part of the overall demand picture, but it is an important part of incremental demand.

More importantly, as it pertains to sentiment amongst holders of the silver ETF, since the time that the price of silver peaked at about $19 in July and then proceeded to plunge by more than 30 percent, as shown in the chart below there have been net additions to the SLV silver inventory of 524 tonnes!
IMAGE NAME(Note that the mid-August purchases in the chart are a group of five additions totaling 353 tonnes, a fact that is difficult to discern from the chart due to the resolution of the blue bars).

This total - 524 tonnes - is equivalent to about 16 million ounces which is just two percent of the annual world-wide demand of about 900 million ounces, but it is an important signal that investor demand continues to grow despite the virtual price collapse in the metal.

I often forget how popular silver is among many people and that silver really is "the poor man's gold", the word "poor" being used here as a relative term since anyone with enough common sense and enough extra money to buy silver is certainly not "poor" in the classic sense.

Many people of modest means continue to favor silver over gold simply because of the price differential and the amount of the metal they can buy for a given dollar amount, this being more true in the physical market than in the paper or ETF market for obvious reasons.

While I sometimes complain about the difficulty in storing 100 ounce bars, today valued at $1,300 each, to many people, a few of these or perhaps a $1,000 bag of 40 percent silver half-dollars, today valued at about $3,400, makes up their entire investment in silver.

Personally, I just like the sound and feel of 90 percent coins as compared to the base metal versions of the today - "real money" as Jim Kunstler calls it in "World Made by Hand".

Full Disclosure: Long SLV at time of writing

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Tuesday morning links

TOP STORIES
Oil dips as Ike weakens, OPEC mulls holding steady - AP
An Itchy Finger on the Trigger of a Bazooka - NY Times
2008 a tough year so far for hedge funds - AP
US Is "More Communist than China": Jim Rogers - CNBC

MARKETS
Gold Declines in London as Crude Oil Retreats; Platinum Drops - Bloomberg
Gold Futures: Trapped between Oil & Dollar - Commodity Online
Toronto stocks tumble on resource demand fears - Reuters

ECONOMY
U.S. Fourth-Quarter Hiring Plans at 5-Year Low, Manpower Says - Bloomberg
Consumer borrowing slows to weakest in 7 months - AP
A race to use less gas in the long haul - LA Times

HOUSING
Urban real estate values set to plunge, UBC expert forecasts - CBC
Mortgage rates drop after Fannie, Freddie takeover - AP
Mortgage Giants’ Future: A Rebuild or a Teardown? - New York Tiemes

FED/TREASURY/BANKING
Rescue of Mortgage Giants Displays Paulson’s Clout - NY Times
Fannie, Freddie: Feds Step In - BusinessWeek
Fannie, Freddie `House of Cards' Prompts Government Takeover - Bloomberg

INTERNATIONAL
Outlook for UK jobs at 16-year low - Telegraph
Boom time for Spain's costumed debt collectors - The Independent
Freddie and Fannie bailout to help British homeowners - TimesOnline
Asian Stocks Decline as Growth Concerns Eclipse Fannie Rally - Bloomberg
U.K. House Prices Fall as Sales Drop to Record Low, RICS Says - Bloomberg

INTERESTING
Greek postmen beat zombies to win oddest book title - AP
Oregon man captures 6-foot-long lizard in his yard - AP

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A first entry for an RV Fill Up Index?

Monday, September 08, 2008

This surprising story about this summer's undeterred motorhome travelers contains a possible first entry for an RV Fill Up Index similar to the SUV Fill Up Index which was last updated when gasoline sold for about $4.50 back in July.

In this case, it's a nice round $400 for some sort of a 39 foot behemoth (39 feet is big, right?) that chugs along getting about 10 miles per gallon on diesel which, incidentally, makes the $176 July fill up for a Chevy Suburban look downright economical.

Despite high fuel prices and a sputtering economy that have hurt RV sales and caused many people to put the brakes on vacation plans, plenty of the lumbering, gas-guzzling rigs have taken to the road this summer.

"If you want to stay out here and do this, you just suck it up and go," said Leyman Williams, lounging on a folding chair outside his 39-foot RV at Fishing Bridge

The Williams live year-round in their motor home, which has all the comforts of a traditional home — running water, refrigerator, kitchen, private bathroom and bed space for up to six people.

But the huge vehicle gets only about 10.5 miles to the gallon. With diesel prices above $4 a gallon much of the summer, filling the 90-gallon tank means shelling out around $400.

"I learned to drive a little slower," William said, noting the RV gets better highway mileage at around 60 mph.
In the years ahead, there are likely to be much bigger adjustments in store than slowing down to 60 miles an hour.

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Commodities correction now exceeds 2006 correction

OK, it's official. The current correction in commodities, which some continue to insist on calling something other than a correction, has now exceeded the 2006 correction - by a whopping two percentage points.

Based on Friday's closing data and as indicated below, the 2008 plunge from 471 in early-July to just 368 last week works out to be a 22 percent decline for the venerable CRB Index while the 2006 tumble from 361 to 290 yields a result of only minus 20 percent.
IMAGE NAMEOf course, there's no comparison in the swiftness of the two declines - the 2006 drop took a full five months to make a final bottom whereas it has been only two months for the current move down.

It's not likely that we would have reached a bottom so soon this time, however, between geopolitical events, weather, and the ongoing credit crisis highlighted by the nationalization of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, you never, know.

Since traders insist on pushing commodity prices in the direction opposite that of the dollar, a sudden reversal of fortune for the greenback (which might be understandable now that the U.S. government is going to add one more, possibly very large, line item to its next fiscal budget) may make this a "V" shaped recovery, the sort of recovery that is so desperately sought for the U.S. economy and ailing housing market.

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Viva Las Vegas!

We are off to Las Vegas for a few days, primarily to attend the Hard Assets Investment Conference where I'll be speaking on Tuesday (see schedule for details), but also to maybe snap a few photos of some of the real estate devastation that ranks Sin City right up there with Miami and Phoenix as the top housing market basket cases.
IMAGE NAMEThere are a few items already cued up to go in the days ahead and I'm sure we'll pay the $15 a day (or whatever it is) to get an internet connection in our hotel room, so there will be new material appearing here, albeit on an unpredictable schedule.

The Wednesday afternoon session with GATA (Gold Anti Trust Action Committee) founder Bill Murphy and IIC (International Investment Conferences - the conference organizer) Vice President Tim Wood titled "Do Financial Institutions Conspire to Suppress the Price of Gold?" should be interesting. I'll be sure to take notes.

We're going to log about another 1,000 miles on this trip, once again doing our part to support high energy prices.

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Monday morning links

TOP STORIES
U.S. Losses on Fannie, Freddie May Be $300 Billion, Poole Says - Bloomberg
Fannie, Freddie Credit-Default Swaps May Be Unwound - Bloomberg
OPEC considers cutting oil production - AP
S&P, Fitch slash Fannie, Freddie preferreds to junk - Reuters
Washington Mutual forces CEO out - report - MarketWatch
Lehman announces senior management changes - Reuters

MARKETS/INVESTING
Wall St set for frantic day after Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bail-out - Telegraph
Unraveling according to schedule - MarketWatch
Oh, This Is Not Good - Hussman Funds
Oil Rises From Five-Month Low as Hurricane Nears, Dollar Eases - Bloomberg
Coming Soon: Mother of all Market Crashes - Commodity Online

ECONOMY
Like Pauline, Economy Faces Perils, Doesn't Die - Bloomberg
A Sigh of Relief, but Hard Questions Remain on U.S. Economy - NY Times
Light, or train, at end of tunnel? - Reuters

HOUSING
Falling home prices open doors - Ventura County Star
How to Recycle a Home - Zillow Blog
Fannie, Freddie deal helps some borrowers, not all - AP

FED/TREASURY/BANKING
U.S. Takeover of Fannie, Freddie Offers `Stopgap' - Bloomberg
Few Stand to Gain on This Bailout, and Many Lose - NY Times
Treasuries Beating U.S. Assets Vindicate Bernanke - Bloomberg
As Crisis Grew, a Few Options Shrank to One - NY Times

INTERNATIONAL
U.K. August Producer Prices Drop Most in 22 Years - Bloomberg
Russian GDP Probably Grew 7.6% in Second Quarter: Week Ahead - Bloomberg
Commodity Trends: Ban dampens interest in futures - Commodity Online
Asian stocks soar after Freddie, Fannie bailouts - AP

INTERESTING
Cruise lines change course to cut fuel - AP
Fish flies out of lake, breaks Arkansas teen's jaw - AP

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Just one question on the Fannie and Freddie bailout

Sunday, September 07, 2008

The financial news media is all over today's nationalization of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac by the U.S. government. Here's a list of links with enough reading material to keep anyone busy until sometime around mid-week:

There's just one question that comes to mind.

One of the terms of the agreement stipulates that each GSE will receive up to $100 billion from the Treasury Department (at least, that's the ceiling for now) in return for preferred stock as needed in order for the mortgage giants to remain solvent.

In an apparent effort to make it look like this takeover isn't going to cost the taxpayer a tidy sum over the next couple years, the GSEs are required to pay the Treasury a 10 percent annual dividend on this preferred stock once issued.

Given the way things are going these days, these dividend payments could add up over time - after all, ten percent of half the current $100 billion ceiling would be $5 billion.

Can the GSEs just sell more stock to the Treasury in order to make these payments?

If so, that would be a sweet deal.

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Sunday morning links

TOP STORIES
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac Taken Over by Government to Prevent Collapse - Bloomberg
Fannie And Freddie Are Fine, Bernanke Says (7/16/08) - Forbes
US lenders 'face state takeover' - BBC
Regulators close down Nevada's Silver State Bank - MarketWatch
Mortgage Giant Overstated the Size of Its Capital Base - NY Times
Boeing, With an Order Backlog, Is Hit by a Strike - NY Times

MARKETS/INVESTING
Seasonal disorder: It's time to avoid the markets - Globe & Mail
Be on red alert for US market chaos - MSN Money
It's no conspiracy: Gold is just priced right - Globe & Mail
Bull market in oil & commodities is over - Commodity Online

ECONOMY
Retail Sales Excluding Cars Probably Fell: U.S. Economy Preview - Bloomberg
US rules out new economic package - BBC
U.S. unemployment rate hits 6.1%, highest level in five years - LA Times

HOUSING
9% of homeowners are late with bill or in foreclosure, study says - AP
Fannie, Freddie blind to the bubble - AP
Speculation Does Not Explain Apparent Housing Overvaluation - Research Recap
Cashing out the nest egg - Star Tribune

FED/TREASURY/BANKING
Treasury to Rescue Fannie and Freddie - Washington Post
Treasury Secretary Paulson's balancing act on Fannie and Freddie - LA Times
How to determine your bank's financial health - LA Times

INTERNATIONAL
Gulf Arab States to Urge OPEC Not to Cut Oil Output: Week Ahead - Bloomberg
Bank must hold interest rates and ignore panicking politicians - Telegraph UK
Japan's economy: Down but not out - Economist
Britain's economy: How bad is it? - Economist

INTERESTING
Credit Crisis Puts a Dent in Card Offers - NY Times
Illinois kindergarten golfer has ace - AP

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