Tripod - Camera set to Remote � Remote on Duration set to 10min. � ISO 200 - Manual Exposure Set � Rotate Shutter Dial to BULB � Rotate Aperture Dial to F/8 � Set Focus to Manual � Focus out to Infinity.
Saturday, July 31, 2010
4th of July Fireworks with the Nikon D90!
Tripod - Camera set to Remote � Remote on Duration set to 10min. � ISO 200 - Manual Exposure Set � Rotate Shutter Dial to BULB � Rotate Aperture Dial to F/8 � Set Focus to Manual � Focus out to Infinity.
High-Frequency Programmers Unhappy Making 6-Figures; Investors Punish Corporate Expansion Plans; Chinese Bank Turmoil; India Develops $35 laptop
India's $35 Laptops
India develops world's cheapest "laptop" at $35
India has come up with the world's cheapest "laptop," a touch-screen computing device that costs $35. India's Human Resource Development Minister Kapil Sibal this week unveiled the low-cost computing device that is designed for students, saying his department had started talks with global manufacturers to start mass production.70% of Companies "Beat The Street" - Here's How
"We have reached a (developmental) stage that today, the motherboard, its chip, the processing, connectivity, all of them cumulatively cost around $35, including memory, display, everything," he told a news conference.
He said the touchscreen gadget was packed with Internet browsers, PDF reader and video conferencing facilities but its hardware was created with sufficient flexibility to incorporate new components according to user requirement.
It�s easy to beat low expectations
Quel, as they say, surprise! Aluminum Co. of America kicked off the second-quarter earnings season after the markets closed Monday by beating analysts� consensus earnings expectations. Alcoa, which is traditionally the first Dow stock to report, had a profit of 13� a share versus forecasts of 11�.Chinese Banks Face Huge Default Risk
Then, on Tuesday, Intel Corp., the leading maker of computer chips, also beat expectations, with profit coming in at 51� a share versus analysts� forecasts of 43�. Quel surprise!
Yes, it�s the summer earnings derby, whereby the markets pretend to be surprised by companies beating the consensus forecasts, which, by tacit agreement, have been lowballed. The companies give guidance that is conservative. The analysts willingly concur, rolling over and playing dumb.
In the parlance of the Street, it�s �grooming.� Companies find no advantage in putting themselves out to guide rigorously and precisely; analysts find no advantage in bucking that guidance. It�s a convenient dance, a little two-step that works.
Just as companies pretend to offer guidance with a straight face and analysts concur with a nod and a wink, we in the cheap seats must watch the performance in the knowledge it�s merely an act. The so-called �whisper� estimates � what the Street really expects � becomes a loud prompting from stage left, theatre of the absurd.
The first-quarter earnings �beat� rate for S&P 500 index was 73%, one of the top �surprise� levels in the past 10 years. But recent beat-analyst-expectations rates have all been near the 70% mark.
If economics is the dismal science, what ironic description does fundamental analysis deserve? Of course, securities analysts can hide in the consensus pack. And, of course, an analyst does himself and his firm no real favour by going out on a limb and going against the crowd. You can be wrong with the rest and not be punished. You cannot be wrong against the rest.
Chinese banks face state loans turmoil
China�s banks are facing serious default risks on more than one-fifth of the Rmb7,700bn ($1,135bn) they have lent to local governments across the country, according to senior Chinese officials.Investors Punish Corporate Expansion Plans
In a preliminary self-assessment carried out at the request of the country�s regulator, China�s commercial banks have identified about Rmb1,550bn in questionable loans to local government financing vehicles � which are mostly used to fund regional infrastructure projects.
Local governments had, until recently, been on a construction spree on orders from Beijing to prop up the economy in the face of the financial crisis. However, since the start of this year, top Chinese bankers and regulators have been warning that many of the loans used to fund infrastructure spending and a property boom could go bad.
Chinese banks lent a record Rmb9,600bn last year � more than double the new loans issued in 2008. But stern warnings by regulators for the banks to slow down lending appear to be having an effect on the economy. The regulator ordered a stop to this type of lending at the start of the month.
Investors Say No to 'Let's Expand' Companies
Among the lessons from earnings season so far: Now is not the time for optimistic CEOs to tell skittish investors an expansion push is right around the corner.Companies for the most part do not want to expand and are instead hoarding cash while outsourcing everything they can to Asia. Pray tell, where is job growth going to come from?
In a sign that the shell shock from the financial crisis, recession and European sovereign-debt mess hasn't worn off, investors last week punished the stocks of companies that are talking openly about plans to expand.
Delta Air Lines executives spent much of an earnings conference call Monday parrying with analysts over the airline's plans to increase capacity by 1% to 3% in 2011, on top of this year's growth of 1% to 1.5%. Delta Chief Executive Richard Anderson said Delta is committed to "capacity restraint," but the stock fell 2.9% that day. The shares lost 2.3% for the week, compared with a 5.4% gain by the NYSE Arca Airline index.
In contrast, the kinder, gentler approach to production capacity went over much better. Harley-Davidson shares jumped more than 13% on Tuesday after the motorcycle maker announced rosy quarterly results and noted its plans to cut shipments by 5% to 10% in 2010.
On Monday, Texas Instruments CEO Rich Templeton pointed to the chip maker's "steady investments in production capacity," saying they were allowing the company "to meet higher demand levels from customers."
The comments and mildly disappointing quarterly revenue pushed the stock down more than 3% Tuesday, though the shares finished the week up 2.5%. Some analysts worried that the expansion could come back to haunt Texas Instruments if the economy softens. The company stressed that prices it has been paying for additional capacity have been good deals, reducing any potential downside risk.
United Airlines parent UAL Corp. got a pat on the back from analysts for its plans to keep capacity additions relatively muted. Its shares jumped 4.8% on Tuesday after UAL released earnings.
Programmers Want Bigger Slice of the Pie
High-Frequency Programmers Revolt Over Pay
Pity the programmers toiling away at Wall Street's secretive high-frequency trading shops--places like Goldman Sachs ( GS - news - people ), Citadel and Getco. They wrote algorithms that take advantage of fleeting trading opportunities and bring in up to $100,000 a day. In return, they received a fraction of the pay doled out to their bosses.Given that HFT programs put out offers that are not legitimate (thus constituting fraud), I fail to see why HFT should not be banned. Thus not only is HFT not needed, neither are the HFT programmers.
Now some programmers feel used and are instigating a revolt. They are doing so by striking out on their own or forming profit-sharing arrangements. Jeffrey Gomberg, 32, worked for a trading firm that paid him a low-six-figure income after four years on the job. His trader colleagues, by contrast, made millions manipulating the algorithms he'd written.
Last year Gomberg and a fellow programmer quit their jobs and cut a deal with HTG Capital Partners of Chicago, whose programmers typically trade on regulated futures exchanges. HTG supplies office space, technology and access to exchanges. Gomberg keeps 40% to 80% of net profits, with the percentage rising as his profits do. More importantly, says Gomberg, the programmers retain ownership of the code they write.
�We designed this deal so we wouldn't lose intellectual property,� he says. �If it doesn't work out, we can go somewhere else and take all the software [that we developed]. That's really the key.�
Another high-frequency programmer, who spoke on condition that his name not be used, quit two firms that he believed were underpaying him. He says one group was generating $100,000 a day from his high-frequency trading software and paying him $150,000 a year. �I'm on my way to making a ton,� he says.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List
ECRI WLI in Negative Territory 8 Consecutive Weeks, Index Drops to -10.7
click on chart for sharper image
Given the July bounce in the stock market, the ever-optimistic me expected some sort of anemic bounce in the WLI as well, but that bounce never came. Of course, it would be helpful to know the makeup of WLI (components and percentages), but unfortunately that information is proprietary.
Nonetheless, we can say there has never been a WLI plunge in history of this depth and duration, nor any dip at all below -10 that has not been associated with a recession.
Whatever the ECRI sees preventing them from issuing a recession alert remains a mystery.
Then again, as I pointed out two weeks ago in ECRI Weekly Leading Indicators at Negative 9.8; Has the ECRI Blown Yet Another Recession Call? the ECRI is literally paranoid about calling a recession that does not occur. So they wait until it is blatantly obvious we are in one before issuing a warning.
However, in light of today's GDP report sporting 3 Years of Massive Downward GDP Revisions it is becoming increasingly likely that the recession that started in 2007 never ended.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List
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Friday, July 30, 2010
July Month in Review!
Hello there! I�m baaaack with another month in review! Can you even believe how fast this month has gone? Nuts!
To start out July, I showed you the progress I had made on my kitchen redo (with help from American Express!):
And see? I said I hoped to get the kitchen done in July, and looky there�NOTHIN� else has been done. It�s the kiss of DIY death to say it out loud. :) (Well, I did work on the window treatments, but they did NOT go as planned. More on that later!)
I still don�t know where I�m going to place the glass doors in the upper cabinets � but now I�m contemplating doing all of them. Hmmmm�that depends on if I can get the not so pretty stuff hidden away in baskets. There�s that itsy bitsy cost issue too. ;)
Next, my love of Craigslist blossomed. And I had a ton of fun decorating my new, loverly buffet for our foyer:
I have plans to add beautiful crystal knobs to this beauty, once I find them. :)
I continued my blogging series and discussed how/when/where/why I�ve accepted ads and what�s worked for me:
Many of you asked how long I had been blogging when I was up to the 2,000+ hits a day and decided to start accepting ads. I started this blog in May of 08, so it had been eight months total at that point. My site did not really take off till the fall of 08, so I had been actively blogging for five months.
I showed you how I took Walmart and Target jars, and black craft vinyl and made adorable cereal jars and �chalkboard� labels:
The vinyl is the stuff you use for craft cutters, like the Silhouette. I found mine at Meijer, but I think you can find it at Walmart and Target, and for sure at Hobby Lobby and Joann�s. If you loved the idea of Chalk Ink markers, you can find them here.
Some of you asked if the cereal has stayed fresh, and so far so good! The lids aren�t air tight, but they provide enough of a seal. I just munched on some Cheerios to double check, and they were nice �n crunchy. :)
I showed you my next Craigslist find, which was actually my first Craigslist find, but whatever. I originally bought a dresser for the foyer, but it was way too big, so I ended up moving it to the family room, and now this spot:
Now looks like this:
Sigh. Isn�t she lovely?
I admitted to my love of faux and showed the nonbelievers that yes, it can look good!:
At least I think so. ;)
I showed off Emily and some of her fab projects, including these DIY Willliams Sonoma candleholders:
Oh yeah, hers were only two bucks EACH. I do believe Dollar Trees all over the country are cleaned out. :)
Next, I dissected the beautiful catalog pictures we all drool over:
And I still love them, even with the fake menu falling off the wall. ;)
I showed you the chore I loathe�and the torture I go through to get this:
To this:
Let�s just say there�s some sweating involved. And a clear schedule for the day.
One of my lovely readers let me know that these bins were recalled:
I was annoyed with them anyway (they �shed,� you can�t sit on them and the lids don�t stay up � hence the recall). I took them back and got a store credit � if you have them, you may want to see if you can do the same!
I discussed one of my most frequently asked questions � how to pick out and mix metal finishes in your house:
And also mentioned my hatred of shiny brass. ;)
Many of you have asked if I have tried spray painting door knobs � I haven�t, but my friend Beckie has, and she gives you the low down here. I think they�ve held up pretty well for her!
Last weekend, Saffron Marigold offered a fantastic giveaway of their luxurious linens.
One of my favorite (and mostly FREE!) changes of late was taking the massive hutch off the beautiful buffet in our dining room:
I �made� a mirror, Emily�s candleholders (from above) and got some fabuloso lamps from HomeGoods, and it was complete! (And loverly!!)
Finally, I showed you how some of our rooms have progressed over the years, from this:
To this:
It�s taken six and a half years to get from the before to the after, and there�s still more I�d like to change up!
I have to give a BIG shout out to my wonderful advertisers for July as well! You can click their buttons to get to their sites:
If you are interested in a photography class that teaches you the basics of beginner photography, how to better use your camera and its settings, etc., then Angie�s class is for you!:
If you need quick, easy dinner recipes and family meals, check out Quick and Easy Dinners for a ton of ideas!:
Dimples and Dandelions is a family owned company that sells the most adorable and unique products available for both baby and child!:
Bomobob�s shop is full of fine carnival, bird, flower, nature and travel photography -- all shot with vintage film, digital, and Polaroid cameras. And ALL unique and original!:
PhotoJewelryMaking.com is the world's largest photo jewelry supplies super store, offering a large selection of photo jewelry making items such as bracelet, brooch, pendant and ring blanks. (And more!):
Need help decorating a room in your house? The designers at My Design Guide will help with everything from choosing the perfect paint colors to picking furniture, lighting and accessories:
And thanks to my additional lovely advertisers for July � The Vintage Pearl, Thirty-One and The Rusted Chain:
And thanks to YOU for what was the BIGGEST month ever at TDC!!
HOLY CATS.
I couldn�t do this without you Squeeeeeezies!! ;)
* The Before and After Party is on for this coming Monday � it will go up that night!
** If you are interested in my primary or secondary advertising, or a giveaway post, email me at thriftydecorchick (at) gmail (dot) com.
*** If you have any additional questions about this month�s posts that I didn�t answer, please leave them in the comments and I�ll respond back this weekend.
A Daily Dose of Architecture, v2
The upgrade will look different but will have basically the same three-column layout. I'll need to research on keeping a few of the bells and whistles I've grown to like, namely the collapsing comments and sidebar truncation on individual posts. I'm also going to look into making "v2" work with mobile devices.
That said, bear with me over the weekend as this change happens.
Update, 45 minutes later: Flipped the switch and copied over the sidebar information. I'm digging the background image (corresponds with "this week's dose"), but it's not static on iPad (I like it static, with the content scrolling in front of it). Nevertheless the transparent boxes and background image are more readable on iPad than a laptop with Firefox.
Update, 2 hours 45 minutes later: Fixed the sidebar so the long list of links and recommended books don't show up on individual post pages. Another thing I noticed that could be improved is the differentiation between posts on the main and archive pages. Right now the posts bleed together, so it is hard to see, at least at a quick glance or scroll, where one post ends and the next begins.
Owls of the Raptor, birds of prey sanctuary Lincolnshire.
GDP: 3 Years of Massive Downward Revisions; Inventory Adjustments Run their Course; Where to From Here? Fed's Counterproductive Policies
Please consider BEA report Gross Domestic Product: Second Quarter 2010 (Advance Estimate) Revised Estimates: 2007 through First Quarter 2010
Real gross domestic product -- the output of goods and services produced by labor and property located in the United States -- increased at an annual rate of 2.4 percent in the second quarter of 2010, (that is, from the first quarter to the second quarter), according to the "advance" estimate released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the first quarter, real GDP increased 3.7 percent.The real story in the report was not the continuing ratcheting down of GDP forward estimates, but rather massive backward revisions, most of them negative, dating back three full years.
Revision Lowlights
- For 2006-2009, real GDP decreased at an average annual rate of 0.2 percent; in the previously published estimates, the growth rate of real GDP was 0.0 percent. From the fourth quarter of 2006 to the first quarter of 2010, real GDP increased at an average annual rate of 0.2 percent; in the previously published estimates, real GDP had increased at an average annual rate of 0.4 percent.
- For the revision period, the change in real GDP was revised down for all 3 years: 0.2 percentage point for 2007, 0.4 percentage point for 2008, and 0.2 percentage point for 2009.
- For the revision period, national income was revised down for all 3 years: 0.4 percent for 2007, 0.6 percent for 2008, and 0.4 percent for 2009.
- For the revision period, corporate profits was revised down for all 3 years: 2.0 percent for 2007, 7.2 percent for 2008, and 3.9 percent for 2009.
- For 2007, the largest contributors to the revision to real GDP growth were a downward revision to PCE, an upward revision to imports, and a downward revision to state and local government spending;
- The percent change from fourth quarter to fourth quarter in real GDP was revised down from 2.5 percent to 2.3 percent for 2007, was revised down from a decrease of 1.9 percent to a decrease of 2.8 percent for 2008, and was revised up from an increase of 0.1 percent to an increase of 0.2 percent for 2009.
- National income was revised down for all 3 years: $51.8 billion, or 0.4 percent, for 2007; $77.4 billion, or 0.6 percent, for 2008; and $55.0 billion, or 0.4 percent, for 2009. For 2007, downward revisions to corporate profits and to supplements to wages and salaries were partly offset by an upward revision to wages and salaries.
- Personal outlays -- PCE, personal interest payments, and personal current transfer payments -- was revised down for all 3 years: $15.4 billion for 2007, $15.0 billion for 2008, and $79.1 billion for 2009. For all 3 years, downward revisions to PCE more than accounted for the revisions to personal outlays. The personal saving rate (personal saving as a percentage of DPI) was revised up for all 3 years: from 1.7 percent to 2.1 percent for 2007, from 2.7 percent to 4.1 percent for 2008, and from 4.2 percent to 5.9 percent for 2009.
Inventory Rebuilding Runs Its Course
There are pages of revisions, that is just a sample. One of the key findings in the report concerns inventory rebuilding. Dave Rosenberg discusses inventories and the GDP in general in Slow Motion Recovery.
The big story in the second quarter as has been the case for much of the past year was the contribution from inventories � there was a �build� of $75.7 billion and this added over a percentage point to headline GDP growth. This follows a �build� of $44 billion in the first quarter so this is no longer the case that companies are merely reducing the pace of inventory withdrawal. Businesses actually added to their stockpiles at the fastest rate in five years. And with sales lagging behind, this inventory contribution is likely to fade fast in coming quarters. Real final sales � representing the rest of GDP (excluding inventories) � came in at a paltry 1.3% annual rate last quarter and has averaged 1.2% since the economy hit rock bottom a year ago in what is clearly the weakest revival in recorded history.Consumer Metrics Institute Looks Inside the New GDP Numbers
Normally, real final sales are expanding at closer to a 4% annual rate in the year after a recession officially ends. Then again, we haven�t heard anything official just yet about the one that began in December 2007 � and so the fact that it is averaging at around one-third that typical pace in the face of unprecedented policy stimulus is rather telling. And frightening.
Looking at the components of GDP, it appears as though the economy is set to slow even further and a flattening in Q3 and perhaps even contraction by Q4, barring some positive exogenous shock, cannot be ruled out.
If indeed, the inventory cycle is behind us, then what we have on our hands is an underlying baseline trend in GDP of 1.2% at an annual rate. And if we are correct in our assumption that the looming withdrawal of fiscal stimulus at the federal level and the cutbacks at the state and local government level subtract 1.5% from growth in the coming year, then it begs the question: How exactly does the economy escape a renewed moderate contraction over the next four to six quarters, barring some unforeseen positive boost? In turn, how does a strong possibility of such a contraction square with consensus views of a 35% surge in corporate profits to new record highs as early as next year? The answers to these questions are as painful as they are obvious.
Rick Davis at Consumer Metrics Institute (CMI) has been calling for this slowdown and these revisions in advance. Please consider Inside the New GDP Numbers
The 2.4% figure will garner all of the headlines, but the more important "real final sales of domestic product" continues to be weak, growing at a reported 1.3% annualized rate. The real cause for concern is that the reported inventory adjustments dropped from a 2.64% component in the revised 1st quarter to a 1.05% component during the 2nd quarter. If factories have begun to realize that end user demand remains anemic, the inventory adjustments could well go negative soon, pulling the reported total GDP down with it.Consumer Metrics vs. BEA
The BEA revised much more than the first quarter of 2010. They revised down 2009, 2008 and 2007 as well. Apparently the "Great Recession" has been worse than our government has previously reported.
The new GDP report shows that the current gap between the consumer demand that we measure and the BEA's reported number continues to grow as factories build their inventories in anticipation of a strong recovery. If factories curb their enthusiasm during the third quarter, the BEA's "advance" estimate for Q3 2010 might be brutal, just 4 days before the U.S. mid-term election.
The new GDP report shows that the current gap between the consumer demand that we measure and the BEA's reported number continues to grow as factories build their inventories in anticipation of a strong recovery. If factories curb their enthusiasm during the third quarter, the BEA's "advance" estimate for Q3 2010 might be brutal, just 4 days before the U.S. mid-term election.
click on chart to enlarge
The CMI lead the BEA by 1-2 quarters at both the prior bottom and again at the most recent peak. Although the CMI has GDP negative, that is as a result of analyzing consumer spending.
We must factor in massive government stimulus that did literally no good, but it did add to GDP.
No matter how useless, government spending is always considered productive. Thus I was certain that GDP would not come in negative this quarter. However, I am equally certain Consumer Metrics has the weakening trend correct.
Unless there is another round of huge government spending, GDP will be headed towards 0% in the 4th quarter.
For a discussion of the parameters Consumer Metrics takes into consideration and how their modeling works, please see my February 26, 2010 post GDP Contraction Coming In Second Quarter 2010?
Where To From Here?
The important point as always is not where we have been, but rather where we are headed. In this regard, note how hopeless the BEA is. We are just now getting revisions as to where we were three full years ago. Looking ahead, everyone listens to Bernanke who not only appears clueless, but has a vested interest to not tell the truth lest it "spook the markets".
However, we do not need Bernanke or the cheerleaders on CNBC to tell us what we need to know, we can open our eyes and see rising foreclosures, no "help wanted signs", a recovery in profits but no real world recovery, and various Obama stimulus measures that have all failed spectacularly, especially home tax credits.
Now that inventory replenishment is nearly over, if not indeed completely over, this economy is headed back into the toilet unless consumer demand picks up.
As noted in Bill Gross Ponders "Deep Demographic Doo-Doo" the likelihood for consumer demand to pick up is remote at best.
Hello Japan
Real final sales of domestic product -- GDP less change in private inventories -- increased 1.3 percent in the second quarter, compared with an increase of 1.1 percent in the first.
Those anemic numbers are AFTER trillions of dollars of stimulus money had been thrown at it.
Does this sound like Japan to you? It does to me.
Fed's Counterproductive Policies
The Fed wants banks to lend and consumers to spend. St Louis Fed Governor James Bullard ("Bullard the Dullard"), is now proposing QE2, hoping to force down interest rates even more.
Ponder the effect on consumer spending plans. Credit card rates are north of 20%. The savings deposit rate at banks is 1%. Any consumer in his right mind has every incentive to pay down their credit cards and not spend more.
Think about that. Consumers can get effective rates of return on their money by paying off credit cards or other consumer debt and not charging more. Will forcing long-term rates lower change this picture? Of course not. Ironically, it will cause the savings rate to rise (simply by increasing the incentive to pay down debts at much higher interest rates!)
Moreover, forcing down long-term rates will rob those on fixed incomes struggling to make ends meet, thus increasing pressure on bankruptcies and foreclosures. However, it might make gold buyers happy campers as the liquidity attempts to find a home.
In other words, QE2 would be hugely counterproductive to the Fed's desire to spur lending and spending. Those who expect to see massive inflation as a result of Bullard's proposal, simply do not understand the role of collapsing credit in this economic depression.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List
Should China Dump Dollars for Commodities? What about the "Nuclear Option" of Dumping Treasuries? Can Global Trade Collapse?
Such fears are extremely overblown for several reasons.
1. China's purchasing of US assets is primarily a balance of trade issue. If the US runs a trade deficit, some other countries ruin a trade surplus and thus accumulate dollars. This is purely a mathematical function as I have pointed out many times.
2. If China dumps treasuries for Euro-based assets, oil-based assets, yen-based assets or for that matter anything other than dollar based assets, the problem merely shifts elsewhere and those buyers would have to do something with the dollars such as buying US treasuries or other US assets. This too is purely a mathematical function.
3. If China dumped treasuries it would tend the strengthen the RMB and China has been extremely reluctant to let the RMB appreciate. Indeed, the US is begging China to revalue the RMB upward, but China resists.
While China may make short-term moves in its reserve holdings, the odds of China dumping treasuries or dollars in size is quite remote.
Capital Tsunami Is The Bigger Threat
Michael Pettis discusses those ideas and more in The capital tsunami is a bigger threat than the nuclear option.
An awful lot of investors and policymakers are frightened by the thought of China�s so-called nuclear option. Beijing, according to this argument, can seriously disrupt the USG bond market by dumping Treasury bonds, and it may even do so, either in retaliation for US protectionist measures or in fear that US fiscal policies will undermine the value of their Treasury bond holdings. Policymakers and investors, in this view, need to be very prepared for just such an eventuality.So far, the discussion is purely on mathematical statements of fact. Yet most writers, especially the hyperinflationists, fail to understand simple math.
... the idea that Beijing can and might exercise the �nuclear option� is almost total nonsense.
In fact the real threat to the US economy is not the dumping of USG bonds. On the contrary, in the next two years the US markets are likely to be swamped by a tsunami of foreign capital, and this will have deleterious effects on the US trade deficit, debt levels, and employment. Investors and policymakers should be far more worried that China and other capital exporting countries are trying their hardest to maintain and even increase their capital exports, while the capital importing countries are either going to see capital imports collapse, or are trying desperately to bring them down.
So why not worry about Beijing�s �nuclear option�? For a start, unlike you or me the PBoC cannot simply sell Treasury bonds, pocket the cash, and go home. Dollar bills are just as much obligations of the US government as are USG bonds, only that they pay no interest. If the PBoC wants effectively to reduce its holdings of USG bonds it must swap them for something else.
Should China Dump Dollars For Commodities?
Some want China to dump dollars for commodities and stockpile them. Does this make sense?
Not really, as Pettis explains.
Because of the positive correlation between Chinese growth and commodity prices, stockpiling commodities is a bad balance sheet decision for China.The Capital Tsunami
Why? Because by locking in relatively �cheap� commodities if Chinese growth subsequently surges, or relatively �expensive� commodities if Chinese growth subsequently stalls, it will only exacerbate volatility in China�s already incredibly volatile economy.
This exacerbation of volatility is made worse by the widespread suspicion that China has already stockpiled huge amounts of commodities, but the main point is that even if the PBoC were to do this, it does not change anything material. It simply reassigns the problem to commodity exporters, with almost the same net results, because if Brazil, say, sells more iron ore to China, Brazilians now have more dollars, which they must either spend on US imports � thus boosting US employment � or invest in US assets. In this case Brazil simply intermediates the former PBoC purchases of USG bonds.
Finally the PBoC could sell US Treasury bonds and purchase assets in China. This would be most damaging for China because it would mean a drastic reversal in the country�s currency regime. The PBoC currently sells huge amounts of renminbi to Chinese exporters in order to keep down the value of its currency. Suddenly to switch strategies and to buy renminbi would cause the value of the renminbi to soar. This would wipe out China�s export industry and cause unemployment to surge.
So basically any sharp reduction in China�s Treasury bond holdings is likely either to be irrelevant to the US or to cause far more damage to China than to the US. I really don�t think we should waste a lot of time worrying about the nuclear option.
Pettis goes on to argue the real problem is exactly the opposite of what most are ranting about. While I mostly agree with what Pettis has to say, I strongly disagree on one point. Let's tune in.
The problem facing the US and the world is not that China may stop purchasing US Treasury obligations. The problem is exactly the opposite.Whoa! Stop right there.
The major capital exporting countries � China, Germany, and Japan � are desperate to maintain or even increase their net capital exports, which are simply the flip side of their trade surpluses.
China, for example, is unwilling to allow the renminbi to rise against the dollar because it wants to protect and even increase its trade surplus.
Japan is in a similar position. In Japan, consumption growth has been glacially slow, and any contraction in its trade surplus will lead almost directly to reduced production and higher unemployment, so Japan, too, is eager to maintain capital exports.
Finally Germany, like China, has been reluctant to put into place policies that boost net demand, and in fact the collapse of the euro means that Germany�s trade surplus will almost certainly grow. Needless to repeat, if the German trade surplus grows, so must its export of capital.
So who will import capital?
Here the situation is dire. The second largest net importer of capital until now has been the group of highly-indebted trade-deficit countries of Europe � including Spain, Greece, Portugal, and Italy. The Greek crisis has caused a sudden stop to private capital inflows, as investors worry about insolvency, and it is only official lending that has prevented defaults. These countries are unlikely soon to see a resurgence of net capital inflows. The world�s second-largest net capital importer, in other words, is about to stop importing capital very suddenly. I discuss this more generally in my May 19 blog entry: Don�t misread the trade implications of the euro crisis for China.
This leaves the US. Because it has the largest trade deficit in the world it is also the world�s largest net importer of capital. So what will the US do?
At first nothing. As net capital exporters try desperately to maintain or increase their capital exports, and deficit Europe sees net capital imports collapse, the only way the world can achieve balance without a sharp contraction in the capital-exporting countries is if US net capital imports surge. And at first they will surge. Foreigners, in other words, will buy more dollar assets, including USG bonds, than before.
But remember that an increase in net US imports of capital is just the flip side of an increase in the US current account deficit. This means that the US trade deficit will inexorably rise as Germany, Japan and China try to keep up their capital exports and as European capital imports drop.
I have little doubt that as the US trade deficit rises, a lot of finger-wagging analysts will excoriate US households for resuming their spendthrift ways, but of course the decline in US savings and the increase in the US trade deficit will have nothing to do with any change in consumer psychology or cultural behavior. It will be the automatic and necessary consequence of the capital tug-of-war taking place abroad.
Please read that last paragraph again.
While I agree that the math MUST balance, to say that attitudes play no part in the formation of that math is simply wrong.
If consumers decide to stop buying goods from China there is almost nothing China can do about it? Why? Wages!
Chinese Exporters Under Severe Pressure
Chinese exporters are already under severe price pressures. Yahoo!News reports Wages are rising: Companies brace for end of cheap made-in-China era
Factory workers demanding better wages and working conditions are hastening the eventual end of an era of cheap costs that helped make southern coastal China the world's factory floor.Attitudes Are The Key
A series of strikes over the past two months have been a rude wakeup call for the many foreign companies that depend on China's low costs to compete overseas, from makers of Christmas trees to manufacturers of gadgets like the iPad.
Where once low-tech factories and scant wages were welcomed in a China eager to escape isolation and poverty, workers are now demanding a bigger share of the profits. Many companies are striving to stay profitable by shifting factories to cheaper areas farther inland or to other developing countries, and a few are even resuming production in the West.
Labor costs have been climbing about 15 percent a year since a 2008 labor contract law that made workers more aware of their rights. Tax preferences for foreign companies ended in 2007. Land, water, energy and shipping costs are on the rise.
In its most recent survey, issued in February, restructuring firm Alix Partners found that overall China was more expensive than Mexico, India, Vietnam, Russia and Romania.
Mexico, in particular, has gained an edge thanks to the North American Free Trade Agreement and fast, inexpensive trucking, says Mike Romeri, an executive with Emptoris, the consulting firm.
This has everything to do with attitudes.
If US consumers decide to hold out for lower prices, China will be in an enormous squeeze, unable to cut prices much.
I agree 100% with Pettis that Europe will not pick up the slack. However it is not a mathematical certainty the US will pick up the slack. Perhaps no one picks up the slack. Given the math must balance, pray tell what is stopping a collapse in global trade?
Nothing as far as I can see. It all depends on consumer attitudes. Certainly Bernanke and Congress will do their best efforts to get banks to lend and consumers to spend, it is by no means a certainty the Fed will succeed.
Bernanke's Deflation Prevention Scorecard
Indeed Bernanke has already failed to prevent deflation as noted in Bernanke's Deflation Preventing Scorecard.
Also see Are we "Trending Towards Deflation" or in It? for current conditions.
Moreover, given the highly likely dramatic shifts in the next Congress and given the appetite for more stimulus efforts now has nearly dried up, it is problematic at best to suggest Congress will keep consumers happy and spending.
Furthermore, cutbacks in state budgets are just now beginning to severely bite. Those cutbacks have to be factored in unless sugar-daddy Congress steps up to the plate.
While Congress may partially bail out the states, don't count on it, especially in entirety.
Can Global Trade Collapse?
Given that Bernanke has already failed once, and in a big way, why can't he fail again? I suggest he will. Regardless of the outcome (even if Pettis is correct), consumer attitudes towards spending and debt will determine the global trade imbalance math NOT preordained math deciding the role of the US.
The result may be a collapse in global trade, not an inflationary event to say the least.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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Thursday, July 29, 2010
Will the "Tiny House" Movement Catch On?
Dee Williams, who lives in a simple but stylish 84 square-foot home has started a company to help other people build their own mini-homes. It's all part of the "tiny house" movement, a trend becoming more popular as people look for ways to save money, help the environment and simplify their lives.
Think this will this catch on? I don't, at least in a big way. 84 square foot homes (or even 250) are simply too extreme. However, tiny homes are just a small part of a major and growing trend towards frugality and downsizing in general.
That trend has just begun. It is a crucial part of the deflationary environment in which we live.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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Trenton Bath House Photos
Water Drops get a makeover!
Housing Bubble will Not be Reblown; Foreclosures Increase in 154 of 206 Metro Areas with Population Over 200,000
Please consider Foreclosure Filings Rise in 75% of U.S. Metro Areas
Foreclosure filings climbed in three-quarters of U.S. metropolitan areas in the first half as high unemployment left many homeowners unable to pay their mortgages, according to RealtyTrac Inc.Video with Rick Sharga Senior Vice President of RealtyTrac
The number of properties receiving a filing more than doubled from a year earlier in Baltimore, Oklahoma City and Albuquerque, New Mexico, the mortgage-data company said today in a report. Notices of default, auction or bank seizure rose more than 50 percent in areas including Salt Lake City; Savannah, Georgia; and Atlantic City, New Jersey.
�Foreclosures are spreading out from areas that had been hardest hit,� Rick Sharga, senior vice president for marketing at Irvine, California-based RealtyTrac, said in a telephone interview. �We�re dealing with underlying economic weakness as opposed to unsustainable home prices and bad loans.�
Continued weakness in employment and efforts to prevent foreclosure may �delay the inevitable� and weigh on home prices, RealtyTrac Chief Executive Officer James J. Saccacio said in a statement.
The company said 154 of 206 U.S. metro areas with populations of more than 200,000 had increases in households with filings from January through June.
Cities in Nevada, Florida, California and Arizona accounted for the 20 highest foreclosure rates. Nine of the top 10 metro areas had decreases in the total properties receiving filings, a sign that foreclosures may have peaked in the states hurt the most by the housing market�s collapse, RealtyTrac said.
Bloomberg has an interesting Video Interview with Rick Sharga that inquiring minds will want to play.
Partial Transcript: "There is a pretty direct correlation between job loss and foreclosure. Until the unemployment rates start to go down, and until we actually see net job creation, and importantly until consumer confidence comes back, the housing market has really slim chances of recovery. That coupled with the huge overhang of distressed property, really suggests the housing market is not going to turn around for the next few years."
Flashback Thursday, October 25, 2007
When Will Housing Bottom?
Cycle Excesses Greatest In HistoryThe Last Bubble is Not Reblown
The excesses of the current cycle have never been greater in history. The odds are strong that we have seen secular as opposed to cyclical peaks in housing starts and new single family home construction. With that in mind it is highly unlikely we merely return to the trend. If history repeats, and there is every reason it will, we are going to undercut those long term trendlines.
There will be additional pressures a few years down the road when empty nesters and retired boomers start looking to downsize. Who will be buying those McMansions? Immigration also comes into play. If immigration policies and protectionism get excessively restrictive, that can also lengthen the decline.
Finally, note that the current boom has lasted well over twice as long as any other. If the bust lasts twice as long as any other, 2012 just might be a rather optimist target for a bottom.
In a few locations, the bottom may be close at hand but certainly not everywhere. More importantly, think of tech stocks and remember the creed "the last bubble is not reblown". Ten years after the tech bust, the Nasdaq is still down over 50%.
The recovery in housing will be even slower. There is no need to rush into housing at this point even IF the bottom was at hand.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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California Approaches "Fiscal Meltdown"; Schwarzenegger Declares Fiscal Emergency; Fort Worth Texas Ponders Scrapping Defined Benefit Pension Plans
Bloomberg reports Schwarzenegger Orders Furloughs Amid California Budget Impasse
California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger ordered more than 150,000 state workers to take three days of mandatory unpaid time off to conserve cash.Fiscal Emergency California Style
The executive order, effective Aug. 1, stipulates that the furloughs will end when a budget for the fiscal year that began July 1 is enacted, the governor�s press secretary, Aaron McLear, said in an e-mail. It comes after government workers endured furloughs over almost 12 months that ended June 30.
California began its fiscal year without a spending plan after Schwarzenegger and Democrats remained deadlocked over how to fill a $19.1 billion deficit. Controller John Chiang has warned he may again need to issue IOUs to pay bills if the impasse continues into September.
�Every day of delay brings California closer to a fiscal meltdown,� Schwarzenegger said in a statement today. �Our cash situation leaves me no choice but to once again furlough state workers until the Legislature produces a budget I can sign.�
The Business Spectator reports California state of fiscal emergency: Schwarzenegger
California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a state of emergency over the state's finances yesterday, raising pressure on lawmakers to negotiate a state budget that is more than a month overdue and will need to close a $US19 billion ($A21.3 billion) shortfall.Political Ploy or Act of Sanity?
The deficit is 22 per cent of the $US85 billion general fund budget the governor signed last July for the fiscal year that ended in June, highlighting how the steep drop in California's revenue due to recession, the housing slump, financial market turmoil and high unemployment have slashed its all-important personal income tax collection.
In the declaration, Schwarzenegger ordered three days off without pay per month beginning in August for tens of thousands of state employees to preserve the state's cash to pay its debt, and for essential services.
California's budget is five weeks overdue, joining New York among big states with spending plans yet to be approved, and Schwarzenegger and top lawmakers are at an impasse over how to balance the state's books.
Analysts say it could be several more weeks before the Republican governor and leaders of the Democrat-led legislature reach an agreement, a delay that threatens to lower the state's already weak credit rating, now hovering just a few notches above "junk" status.
Schwarzenegger's new furlough order was instantly condemned by labor officials as a political ploy.
"To once again force state employees to take unpaid furloughs is just another punitive measure by Governor Schwarzenegger because he couldn't impose minimum wage," said Patty Velez, president of the California Association of Professional Scientists.
The unions accuse Schwarzenegger of playing politics. Here's the real story: He had 8 years to get rid of unions and failed to do so. He is not playing politics now, he played them before, being too spineless to take on the unions until recently.
Now he is a lame duck. Let's hope the next governor has more common sense. Don't count on it. After all we are talking about California where pandering to unions is the best way of getting elected.
By the way, can someone even tell me why California has an "Association of Professional Scientists"? Is there anything in California that is not unionized?
The solution is privatize everything, putting people like Patty Velez out on her ass where she has to do some real work instead of preying on taxpayers for more unjustified union benefits. The same applies to the prison guards and every other California union as well.
Common Sense in Fort Worth
Please consider Fort Worth council considers eliminating guaranteed pension for newer workers
City Council members are considering doing away with a guaranteed pension for newer employees as the council struggles to bring Fort Worth's spending in line with the drop in taxes.Finally!
No decisions have been made. And Assistant City Manager Karen Montgomery said the city would still have to deal with a big backlog in pension costs even if the council decides to cut benefits. But pensions have been a sacred cow among state and local governments, and few others have even discussed cutting them.
By law, the city can't change the benefits that it's already paying retirees or those that it has promised to employees who have worked long enough to be vested in the pension system. Also, police and firefighter pensions are guaranteed under labor contracts.
The city could be forced to pour tens of millions of dollars into the pension system over the next few years, and pension costs are a major contributor to Fort Worth's projected $73 million budget gap.
"This is the elephant in the room for not only this budget but all future budgets," Mayor Mike Moncrief said.
Montgomery suggested moving new employees and perhaps even unvested employees to a "defined contribution" plan. The specifics of the plan haven't been determined, but Montgomery suggested a range of options, including annuities or accounts similar to a private-sector 401(k).
That would be a game-changer for municipal employees, who often stay in their jobs because of the pension and other benefits.
"In our current pension, employees cannot outlive their benefit," Montgomery said. "In a defined contribution, that risk is on the employee to manage their money until they die."
Employees, including the police and firefighters associations, have argued to keep the pension system as it is. A committee made up mostly of employees recommended that the city contribute an additional 6 percent of payroll to the pension, which would fix the shortfall in a few years.
At long last a major city in the US (Fort Worth has a population in excess of 600,000) is considering doing what desperately needs to be done: killing defined benefit pension plans for public workers.
Instead, the union suggests "an additional 6 percent of payroll to the pension, which would fix the shortfall in a few years". Where would that contribution come from? Taxpayers of course. Will it fix the system? No, it will not fix the shortfall because of insane pension plan assumptions.
The only solution is to kill these plans right here, right now. Unfortunately, such action will not fix the problem of unfunded plans for current vested employees, but it is a major step in preventing further buildup of a fiscally insane proposition.
If unions had any common sense they would embrace, not fight these decisions. The reason of course is the only other solution for cities would be to resolve these difficulties by declaring bankruptcy, putting accrued benefits at risk.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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Email from FedUpUSA regarding Afghanistan
Hello Mish,Troops Do Not Support The Mission
Just wanted to say thanks for the balanced and objective view on Afghanistan. My son is on the front lines with the 101st Airborne (Infantry). He�s been there since the first week in May.
The things I could tell you would make your hair stand on end. What civilian leadership, with some complicity of military leadership is doing to our young men and women is repulsive.
The war is getting a little more coverage in the media now, but for a while there, it looked like all these fine men and women would be led to their deaths and no one would even know.
It has been hard as a parent (and there are MANY of us) not able to speak up. Most people have no idea what it is like to live 24/7 being terrified of the doorbell ringing.
Thanks again for the article on Afghanistan. The more people talk about it, the better chance something will be done.
Stephanie S. Jasky, Founder, Director - FedUpUSA.org
Several people have informed me that OPSEC bars the military from saying things like "Troops Do Not Support The Mission" no matter how true that might be. Thus, all those stuck in Afghanistan, not supportive of the mission, wanting to speak their minds have no means of doing so.
Worse yet, inability to speak ones mind not only applies to military, but their family's ability as as well. I am not just talking about sensitive data like troop, size, location, strength, etc, but simple matters of freedom of speech as to whether or not troops believe in what they are doing.
Freedom of speech means nothing anymore. It's the new American way.
The
Well, come on all of you, big strong men,With thanks to Country Joe and the Fish I wonder "Where are the protest songs?" Are boomers too worried about stock market and housing prices to care if our youth is getting slaughtered?
Uncle Sam needs your help again.
He's got himself in a terrible jam
Way down yonder inVietnamAfghanistan
So put down your books and pick up a gun,
We're gonna have a whole lotta fun.
And it's one, two, three,
What are we fighting for ?
Don't ask me, I don't give a damn,
Next stop isVietnamAfghanistan;
And it's five, six, seven,
Open up the pearly gates,
Well there ain't no time to wonder why,
Whoopee! we're all gonna die.
Come on Wall Street, don't be slow,
Why man, this is war au-go-go
There's plenty good money to be made
By supplying the Army with the tools of its trade,
But just hope and pray that if they drop the bomb,
They drop it on theViet CongTaliban.
And it's one, two, three,
What are we fighting for ?
Don't ask me, I don't give a damn,
Next stop isVietnamAfghanistan.
And it's five, six, seven,
Open up the pearly gates,
Well there ain't no time to wonder why
Whoopee! we're all gonna die.
What ARE we there for anyway? Oil? Empire Building? Obama's Reelection Bid? All Three?
By the way, I neither endorse nor denounce other positions of FedUpUSA.org. I have not followed them closely enough to know. Rather, and as always, I support specific policies on a case by case basis. In this case we both seem to agree on the need to get the hell out of Afghanistan.
The best way to "Support the Troops" is to not put them needlessly in harm's way in the first place. It's time to declare the war won and bring them home.
President Obama has been a huge disappointment in regards to war, torture, Guantanamo Bay, and of course the economy. Youth of America, are you paying attention?
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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