This page has been archived and commenting is disabled.
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 01/07/10
- 1325 reads
- Printer-friendly version
- Send to friend
- advertisements -
This page has been archived and commenting is disabled.
- advertisements -
Another good read:
Despite the happy talk coming out of the White House, there is overwhelming and terrifying evidence that we’re heading for an economic cliff next year. It’s going to happen. Make your plans accordingly.
Arthur Laffer, who was on President Reagan’s Economic Policy Advisory Board and is known as the father of supply-side economics, makes a strong argument in his Wall Street Journal piece, “Tax Hikes and the 2011 Economic Collapse.” His extended subtitle reads, “Today’s corporate profits reflect an income shift into 2010. These profits will tumble next year, preceded most likely by the stock market.” The economics is simple. When the cash for clunkers program was paying people significant incentives to buy cars, sales spiked. Lo! Incentives work! But when the program ended, sales plummeted. And why should anyone be surprised? Much of the sales spike was people simply shifting their purchase plans forward in response to the government gift.
The same thing happened with last year’s $8,000 government incentive for people to get out and buy a house. When the incentive ended, sales . . . you guessed it . . . fell sharply. The publicly funded incentive either subsidized people who were buying anyway or concentrated in a shorter period of time sales that would have happened over a longer period. Undoubtedly it brought some people into the market who otherwise would not have entered, but Laffer’s point is that the numbers are far overstated, and that we can see this in the collapse that followed the spike.
Bearing that in mind, consider that the Bush tax cuts are set to expire on January 1, 2011. Given that Congress has no plans to make those cuts permanent, people are doing what you can expect them to do in response to incentives and disincentives. They are using every means possible to move 2011 income into 2010, giving the misleading impression that the economy is recovering. But it’s just a sugar high. Next year will see a tremendous crash as a result of the massive tax hikes that are scheduled to hit the people who have money.
As if that were not enough, the housing crisis is not over. The government, via the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), is fueling its continuation. Stephen Meister explains in the New York Post how:
FHA also insures one-in-five refinances. Whereas private lenders—who are in the business of managing risk—are asking10 to 20 percent down when they lend at all, FHA requires as little as 3.5 percent down. As before, people in risky situations who really shouldn’t be in the housing market are being facilitated into homes for political reasons, not market-based ones. Also, as before, many of them will default. But unlike the last time, the bulk of responsibility for the loss will fall on the public treasury. That’s a huge chunk of $11 trillion. Meister continues:
Feeling down? Now meet the third “Spirit of Crisis Yet to Come.” In Bloomberg Businessweek, Kevin Hassett of the American Enterprise Institute examines the Greek debt crisis and sees, if not an inevitable collapse, then at least a terribly brittle and shaky sovereign debt situation stretching from the east end of Europe to this side of the Atlantic:
And our president is speaking to us from the Oval Office about energy-efficient windows.
Hassett says a 2003 working paper by the International Monetary Fund puts the debts we have been running for the last couple of years in chilling perspective:
The lesson in each of these cases is that economics is unforgiving. There’s no free lunch. Debts come due. You can put them off, but not indefinitely (though politicians tell us we can). The bigger you let them get and the longer you put them off, the deeper they bury you when they come back at you.
Well written and concise post. Gentlemen, I recommend you panic.
EURUSD buying support detected for some time now, has returned again and the daily chart is now neutral to bullish.
http://stockmarket618.wordpress.com/about
Certainly a lot of details like that to take into consideration. Thanks windows vps | cheap vps | cheap hosting | forex vps