Housing Bubble
The Keynesian Apotheosis Is Here; But Blame The Final Destruction Of Sound Money On The Bushes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/19/2014 21:51 -0500- Alan Greenspan
- Bond
- callable
- China
- Corruption
- CPI
- Federal Deficit
- Florida
- GAAP
- Great Depression
- Housing Bubble
- Janet Yellen
- Jim Grant
- keynesianism
- Main Street
- Milton Friedman
- Monetary Policy
- Neo-Keynesian
- Paul Volcker
- PIMCO
- Real Interest Rates
- Recession
- recovery
- Russell 2000
- Unemployment
- White House
The only thing that can be said about Janet Yellen’s simple-minded paint-by-the-numbers performance yesterday is that the Keynesian apotheosis is complete. American capitalism and all political life, too, is now ruled by a 12-member monetary politburo, which is essentially accountable to no one except its own misbegotten doctrine that prosperity flows from the end of a printing press.
After 6 Years Of Unprecedented Central Planning, The Economy Is More Fragile Than Ever
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/19/2014 11:10 -0500The damage done by Central Planning has yet to come home to roost. Six years into the Grand Experiment--that Central Planners can pick winners who just happen to be their cronies--the chickens of consequence are still making their way home. And when they finally come home to roost, we will all discover that the economy is much more fragile than advertised by the Central Planners and their media toadies.
Futures Unchanged Ahead Of The Fed Announcement
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/18/2014 06:08 -0500- Bank of England
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- BOE
- Bond
- China
- Copper
- Core CPI
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- default
- Equity Markets
- fixed
- Gilts
- Global Economy
- Greece
- Green Shoots
- Housing Bubble
- Housing Market
- Housing Starts
- India
- Iraq
- Jim Reid
- Nikkei
- Poland
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- recovery
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
- Volatility
- Zurich
it is suddenly not fun being a Fed president (or Chairmanwoman) these days: with yesterday's 2.1% CPI print, the YoY rate has now increased for four consecutive months and is above the Fed's target. Concurrently, the unemployment rate has also dipped well below the Fed’s previous 6.5% threshold guidance, in other words the Fed has now met both its mandates as set down previously. There have also been fairly unambiguous comments from the Fed’s Bullard suggesting that this is the closest the Fed has been to fulfilling its mandates in many years. Finally, adding to the "concerns" that the Fed may surprise everyone were BOE Carney’s comments last week that a hike “could happen sooner than the market currently expect." In short: continued QE here, without a taper acceleration, merely affirms that all the Fed is after is reflating the stock market, and such trivial considerations as employment and inflation are merely secondary to the Fed. Which, of course, we know - all is secondary to the wealth effect, i.e., making the rich, richer. But it is one thing for tinfoil hat sites to expose the truth, it is something else entirely when it is revealed to the entire world.
London's Whopping 18.7% Home Price Surge Means UK's Housing Bubble Slams China's
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/17/2014 09:44 -0500A month ago, using the latest UK housing data from Rightmove, we asked a simple question: whose housing bubble is bigger: China's, or the place where increasingly more of China's $25 trillion in bank assets are being parked: the UK (specifically London). Using then available data, the answer was still a toss-up, even if the divergence in directions was quite clear. Earlier today, we finally got the official data from the UK's Office for National Statistics, and we politely retract our question, as rhetorical as it may have been. The reason: there is no contest - the UK's housing bubble has officially slammed China's, and the result is nothing short of a knock out.
Stick A Fork In Yet Another "Housing Recovery": Starts Tumble, Multi-Family Permits Collapse Most Since Lehman
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/17/2014 08:11 -0500Blame it on the... spring?
John Hussman's Formula For Market Extremes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/16/2014 16:10 -0500Market extremes generally share a common formula. One part reality is blended with one part misguided perception (typically extrapolating recent trends as if they are driven by some reliable and permanent mechanism), and often one part pure delusion (typically in the form of a colorful hallucination with elves, gnomes and dancing mushrooms all singing in harmony that reliable valuation measures no longer matter). This time is not different.
Meanwhile In Palm Springs...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/14/2014 19:31 -0500... the world may be burning, so the Obamas go house hunting.
The Generational Short: Banks, Wall Street, Housing And Luxury Retail Are Doomed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/14/2014 11:22 -0500Those who have lost trust in Wall Street or actively hate it and everything it stands for (neofeudalism, unbridled greed, the corruption and collusion of the revolving door between the state and Wall Street, etc.) will never change their minds and hand their money to Wall Street to play with. If the primary assets held by Boomers (houses and stocks) both decline for these fundamental reasons, there may be relatively little wealth left to pass on to Gen-Y... if Gen-Y avoids bank debt/mortgages, buying conspicuous consumption luxury goods on credit and investing in Wall Street's scams and skims, this generational lack of demand for housing, stocks and luxury goods will effectively crash the sky-high valuations of these assets. These factors suggest a generational bet against banks, Wall Street, housing and luxury retail stocks.
Frontrunning: June 13
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/13/2014 06:38 -0500- Apple
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- Capstone
- China
- Citigroup
- Consumer Sentiment
- Crude
- dark pools
- Dark Pools
- Detroit
- Federal Reserve
- Ford
- GOOG
- Greece
- Hong Kong
- Housing Bubble
- Housing Market
- International Monetary Fund
- Iran
- Iraq
- Merrill
- Mexico
- Michigan
- New Orleans
- Nikkei
- Raymond James
- Real estate
- recovery
- Reuters
- Shadow Banking
- Time Warner
- Treasury Department
- Univision
- Wells Fargo
- Yuan
- Tea Party struggles to repeat Cantor-style shock in Tennessee (Reuters)
- Iran Deploys Forces to Fight al Qaeda-Inspired Militants in Iraq (WSJ)
- Oil Rallies as Militant Advance in Iraq Threatens Crude (BBG)
- Gold Set for First Back-to-Back Weekly Gain Since April (BBG)
- Hedge Funds Get Stung by Slow Markets (WSJ)
- Sterling nears 5-year high after Carney speech (FT)
- Britain Warns Boom in Real-Estate Prices Threatens Economy (WSJ)
- East Europe Leaders Urge EU Unity to Counter Russia (BBG)
- Formula One Said to Be Valued at $8 Billion as Malone Seeks Stake (BBG)
- Dumb and dumber: Abe Plans Company Tax Cut in 2015 as Kuroda Warns on Budget (BBG)
Global Growth Gets a Downgrade
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 06/13/2014 05:55 -0500We all knew just how wrong it was as we sat there and listened to the World Bank going on in January about how world economic growth would top 3.2%. Today the World Bank has downgraded economic growth to 2.8%, which some might say is even over the odds
Two Thirds Of Gen X Households Have Less Wealth Than Their Parents Did At The Same Age
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/10/2014 20:15 -0500
Just how badly is Generation X doing? Bad enough to turn around the entire concept of middle-class prosperity in America - one where every next generation should do better than the preceding one - on its head. "Only one-third of Generation X households had more wealth than their parents held at the same age, even though most earn more, The Pew Charitable Trusts found." And there, in a nutshell, is your so-called recovery: two thirds of an entire generation - one which is in its prime working years - doing worse than the one before them!
Jobs Friday: What The Bubblevision Revelers Missed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/09/2014 19:06 -0500
Yes, the nonfarm payroll clocked in at 138.5 million jobs and thereby retraced for the first time the point at which it stood 77 months ago in December 2007. This predictably elicited another “milestone of progress” squeal from the mainstream media. So you have to wonder. Did these people skip history class? Do they understand the vital idea of “context”? So if you want to try a little “context” absurdity recall this. So far we have created a trifling 100k “new” jobs since the last cyclical peak. During the equivalent 77 months in the Reagan era the US economy actually generated 150 times more jobs!
What's The Source Of Soaring Corporate Profits? Stagnant Wages
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/09/2014 10:02 -0500
What if all the low-hanging fruit of outsourcing jobs and financialization have already been plucked by Corporate America?
What Most Americans Don't Know About Student Debt
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/08/2014 11:53 -0500- Only 28% of respondents knew that if student loans aren’t repaid, the U.S. government can garnish wages, withhold Social Security payments and tax refunds, and report the debt to credit bureaus.
- Even more people—35%—incorrectly thought the government couldn’t do any of those things or said they didn’t know what the government could do.
- Only 37% of those surveyed knew that students loans are extremely hard to shed in bankruptcy, a reality that differentiates student loans from other debts, such as mortgages and credit cards.
- About half of those with higher-than-average student debt didn’t have high comprehension of the issue.
The Rich Get Richest: Household Net Worth Rises To All Time High Courtesy Of $67 Trillion In Financial Assets
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/05/2014 13:33 -0500
Another quarter, and another confirmation that in the New Normal only the rich get richer, pardon: richest.



