Archive - Aug 26, 2010 - Story
Rosenberg Explains Why Not One New Home Priced Over $750,000 Sold In July
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2010 09:15 -0500
The most damning words on the recent horrendous housing data come from David Rosenberg: and since he has long been spot on in his macro observations, the 15% or so in additional price losses anticipated, will make this depression a truly memorable one (we will investigate not only the surging supply side of the housing equation, but the plunging demand side in a later post), and will leave the Fed with absolutely no choice than the nuclear option: "If the truth be told, if we are talking about reversing all the bubble appreciation that began a decade ago, then we are talking about another 15% downside from here. The excess inventory data alone tell us that this has a realistic chance of occurring...The high-end market, in particular, is under tremendous pressure. In fact, it is becoming non-existent. Guess how many homes prices above $750k managed to sell in July. Answer — zero, nada, rien; and for the second month in a row."
After Calling The Top In The Euro, John Taylor Sees A 50% Collapse In The Value Of The Mexican Peso
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2010 08:31 -0500From the man who is better than pretty much anyone in calling the inflection points in the EURUSD. "As the world is still recovering from the 2008 recession – and another seems on the way – and a major equity market decline is in our future, the outlook for Mexico is dire. A 50% collapse in the value of the peso would be an optimistic outcome and the odds favor a more significant weakening over a five year timeframe." - John Taylor, FX Concepts
Goldman On Claims: Surge In People Receiving Extended Or Emergency Benefits Offsets Positive News
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2010 08:13 -0500
BOTTOM LINE: Initial claims fall, adding support to claims that distortions could have been a factor in the preceding increases. Although continuing claims also decline, the number of recipients of extended/emergency benefits posts another large increase, pushing total claimants closer to the highs reached earlier this year... The number of people receiving extended or emergency benefits rose another 301k. In our view, this offsets the positive surprise from this part of the report, leading to the judgmental adjustment on the US-MAP reading for this part of the report.
16th Sequential Equity Fund Outflow Takes Total To Over $50 Billion YTD; Retail Boycott Of Stocks Continues
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2010 08:02 -0500
The latest anticipated weekly outflow from equity mutual funds just hit a one month high of $2.7 billion, as reported by ICI, and with that, YTD redemptions by equity investors have hit over $50 billion. Domestic equity mutual funds have not seen a net positive retail inflow since April 28, yet despite this the market has been substantially rangebound and until last week. What is notable is that even during times of relative stock outperformance, courtesy of whoever it is that is left buying stocks, be it HFT algos, or Primary Dealers pumped with cheap Fed liquidity (and don't forget today is another "free $2 billion courtesy of POMO" day), the investing public refuses to be drawn into owning stocks. CNBC has now failed to sucker its viewers into the stock ponzi for 16 weeks in a row and rising. The clear capital rotation winner- the bond bubble, but that is the topic for another week.
Frontrunning: August 26
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2010 07:43 -0500- NYSE Confirms Price Reporting Delays That Contributed to the Flash Crash (ai5000)
- Ireland's `Vicious Circle' Leaves Banks Facing Higher Debt Cost (Bloomberg)
- Hungary’s Communication Faux Pas Dashes Hopes for IMF Deal (WSJ)
- Glencore Said to Value Gold Unit at More Than $5 Billion in IPO (Bloomberg)
- Ozawa to challenge Kan for PM position (FT)
- Capital Investment Slowdown in U.S. Signals Reluctance to Hire (Bloomberg)
- Japan May Have Supplementary Budget to Fund Stimulus Plan, Nikkei Reports (Bloomberg)
Initial Claims Come At 473K, On Expectations Of 490K, Previous Revised To 504K From 500K
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2010 07:35 -0500Futures spike immediately as the economy is now losing just around 73k jobs per month instead of the expected 100k, truly a miraculous result. Continuing claims come at 4,456k on expectations of 4,496k, as yet again more unemployed move to the extended ranks: extended rise by 102k and EUC by just under 200k. The US transition to a welfare state continues 300k jobless at a time
Daily Highlights: 8.26.2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2010 07:02 -0500- Asian shares trade mostly higher, though action proves choppy.
- New-home sales slid to a record low and a slower-than-f'cast rise in durable-goods orders cast doubt on the US recovery.
- Official China data masks surge in housing, food prices.
- Roubini: Q3 growth in US to be 'well below' 1%.
- SEC votes to boost power over boards.
- Treasury sells 5-year notes at lowest yield ever.
- Agricultural Bank of China temporarily stops lending to property developers.
- Ahold reports 3% rise in Q2 profits.
A Glimmer Of Good News: Goldman Raises Its Q2 GDP Estimates To 1.2%, From 1.1%, But Turns Even Gloomier On Q3
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2010 06:58 -0500Goldman's Ed McKelvey is trying to salvage his team's reputation as the biggest gloom and doomer on Wall Street by explaining why facts and not noise will be responsible for a revised drop of Q2 GDP by not 50%... but 45% of something. What is more interesting are the reasons for the contraction: i) A significantly reduced pace of inventory accumulation; ii) An even wider trade deficit than was first estimated; and iii) A small shift in the composition of final sales to domestic purchasers. Yet those expecting this note to be a start of an optimistic shift, prepare to be disappointed. As McKevley says, "such a conclusion would be premature given the information currently available on the economy’s transition into the third quarter," and in looking at Q3 GDP, the firm gets even gloomier than ever: i) Growth in real consumer spending appears to have softened from an already sluggish pace; ii) Real residential investment has resumed falling at a double-digit pace, iii) Real business investment is roughly on track for our 10% annualized growth assumption, but with risks now tilting to the low side, iv) The trade deficit ended the second quarter in a deep hole, and the conclusion is :"Thus, the key components of private final demand suggest that our 1.7% estimate for annualized growth in real final sales this quarter is more likely to be too high than too low." A lot of words for not saying we are in a double dip.
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 26/08/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 08/26/2010 04:59 -0500RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 26/08/10



