Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Jobs

Where are the jobs? Overseas, of course

Article from Salon. Complete Article

Corporate profits are up. Stock prices are up. So why isn't anyone hiring?

Actually, many American companies are -- just maybe not in your town. They're hiring overseas, where sales are surging and the pipeline of orders is fat.

More than half of the 15,000 people that Caterpillar Inc. has hired this year were outside the U.S. UPS is also hiring at a faster clip overseas. For both companies, sales in international markets are growing at least twice as fast as domestically.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Buy vs. Rent: An Update

The health of the real estate market remains a disaster, but there remains some expensive deals depending on location, location, location. Here is a New York Times article on buy vs rent ratio.


Below is an updated list of rent ratios — the price of a typical home divided by the annual cost of renting that home — for 55 metropolitan areas across the country.

We last covered this subject about eight months ago, and you’ll notice that most ratios have not changed much since then. A good rule of thumb is that you should often buy when the ratio is below 15 and rent when the ratio is above 20. If it’s between 15 and 20, lean toward renting — unless you find a home you really like and expect to stay there for many years.

Metro area Ratio
East Bay, Calif. 35.9
Honolulu 34.4
San Jose, Calif. 32.7
San Francisco 27.9
Seattle 27.3
more....

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Bernanke Double Down

The market year of 2010 started in a edgy mode hoping to avoid complications over the uncertainty of whether the potential problems in banking and business might multiply. Because of the veiled intervention and ludicrous mark to mark values of an enormous amount of assets held on bank's balance sheets, no one knew what might happen if one great failures appeared. It became clear to the Fed there was virtually no hope in a normal recovery and that if fact the world banking system was at risk of another event which would possibly shut down normal lending functions again. Persistent high unemployment with no prospects for any recovery led the Fed to make a tactical decision to further facilitate a rise in the value of assets based on the performance of one of the few markets which were recovering appreciably, equities.

As of this post, the DJIA is 74% off its lows of March 2009 with the SP500 and NQ100, 88% and 119% respectively. Individual stocks such as AAPL are over 300% higher while Goldman Sachs has seen a gain of 385%. The Fed is not digging deep to scratch out a rally, it is hoping to further perpetuate a resilient asset class in the hopes that all will somehow benefit.

Bernanke is definitely playing poker and one might wonder why he wasted a lot money going to Harvard when anybody can learn the basics of double down on the streets. For all his great supposed knowledge of the Great Depression, endorsing social programs to build America are so yesterday. Why not take a shot and be somebody.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

What Brand Is This?

The steepening yield curve is a bet by players that all forms of stimulus already implemented, along with those planned, will spark the top while providing enough anemic growth in the middle to grow the economy. The real estate market is a large unknown and so to is whether tickle down will increase borrowing at all levels. Profits for business and any spending by consumers have come so far from adjustments made by reducing expenditures in their overall operations. Not a growth dynamic. The Feds absolute belief in the inability to attain normal growth without massive subsidisation is clearly derived from a vision where once normal business opportunities are being cleavered by the hoarding of capital.

Stocks rallies to date have been a brand name affair which is not so much a vote of confidence in the economy as it is from a lack of perceived broad investment opportunities. Apple, IBM, and Ford are examples of where distorted premiums result from a reluctance to buy beaten brands as if the chosen live in a world outside of this one. So both the Fed's reasoning and brand name strategies have at their very nature an implied risk resulting from an extreme lack of confidence in future growth. Failure to develop a recovery would leave the Fed willing to target other ways to stimulate the economy and would leave favored brands as just a target.

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Right Stuffing

President Obama, Mr. Cave-In? He may be right that the best thing for the economy or market psychology is to cut this particular deal. But many of his supporters across the nation who have seen their upside probably diminished forever could give a rat's ass about current practicality. Real negotiations would fight against the future implications of policies promoted by a Republican party which now and historically has had the interests of an elite business class as their narrow trickle down vision for America.

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Ben Greenanke, Little General, Father Christmas

Ben Greenanke, the Little General, father of QE2, and possibly 3 and 4, has decided it is now or never it terms of fighting any impediments to asset malaise. While real economic growth would be nice, why wait and possibly have real economic price discovery screw up any chances to pull the economy out of a downturn, now three years old. What with gold, oil, and other commodities showing no lack of money supply velocity, in the name all things liquid, why not give equities a blast to remember. While Republicans are spinning tax chants and cursing extending unemployment subsidies, Greenanke has joined the mob turning their collective outrage against those with little political influence in favor of the great business class of Wall Street whom the Republicans have championed for decades and who collectively produced a worldwide economic meltdown. There is no greater friend than Mr. Greenanke, father Christmas. Ben is spraying money like a snow machine hoping it will cover us all in this, last chance, do or die, price asset rally. Bend over bears, Ben is driven.

Friday, December 3, 2010

Jobs Number TV

Watch cable financial new stations as the jobs number released. Usually have on Bloomberg but today watching Joe Kernen and the group on CNBC with Alan Greenspan. Number comes out.

Market shocked at lousy jobs number. Rick Santelli says market will rally because data so bad. Greenspan says market will rally because.... well because he says it will and talks about some ratio where you take a big number and divide by a made up number. Remember this the guy who basically made up uninterpretable testimony year after year when reporting to Congress. We now know he is as goofy as ever and he will never shut up. As for Santelli, talking is easier than trading and obviously more profitable for him.

What is clear from listening to the panel, beyond the obvious upside shilling, is that they want a recovery, a rally, something that will balance the hopeful elements of rebound with the truly scary realities about current global economic mechanics. Of course, the whole point of QE2 is to fight scary because real economic growth is not an option.