Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Fed Issues More Debt Than It Needs

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On Friday, September 10, 2010, Horizon Bank, Bradenton, FL was closed by the Florida Office of Financial Regulation and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) was named Receiver. No advance notice is given to the public when a financial institution is closed.

In site of intervention by “the Working Group on financial Markets”, gold has increased almost 16% year-to-date. It has done so for each of the past ten years, which has gone almost unnoticed by professionals and investors. Obviously some are watching or the price wouldn’t be where it is. Commodities have been up for 11 years and nine years for Treasuries. As you know we are trend followers, so gold and silver have been kind for our readers since June of 2000. That is after we bailed our subscribers out of the stock market in the second week of April of 2000. We were at a conference and Joe Granville made the same call on that sunny Saturday, so long ago.

As we pointed out in our last issue the administration will attempt to have $643 billion in stimulus passed by Congress between November 5th, and the end of the legislative session, this in the midst of 52.4% unemployment of people between 16 and 24 years old. No one needs to remind politicians and those who control them that this is the age group that fight wars and start revolutions. The corporations, which would receive tax breaks of $300 billion are making record profits and are sitting on over $1.5 trillion in cash. These are the same corporations that continue to fatten their bottom line by laying off workers. Far be it for us to call this a political payoff, especially with the elections only seven weeks away. This reminds us of five years ago when Congress allowed American transnational conglomerates, the same companies that have cost America eight million jobs over the past nine years, via offshoring and outso urcing, to bring home $350 billion from their hideaway in the Cayman Islands. The deal was that these corporations would bring home their loot at a tax rate of 5-1/4% instead of paying the regular 35%. For this they would create jobs. Needless to say, few jobs were created. These are the kind of sweetheart deals our politicians arrange for those who pay them off. Incidentally, the tax scam is still flourishing and the corporations now have $1.6 trillion sitting offshore waiting for another dispensation. Some things never change and what the administration proposes is just more of the same. A reward for those destroying our country. Wall Street, of course, looks at this quite differently, because they have an attention span and time horizon of 30 seconds, or the time needed to make the next trade or to create the next scandal. We were 28 years on Wall Street and we didn’t miss much. Incidentally, administrations pull this, let’s payback our masters, about every 2-1/2 year s, thus, if you take the time to look you will find this is nothing new. Another question is where did the $868 billion in the first stimulus program go too? We have seen no accounting and sources in Washington tell us $275 billion still hasn’t been spent. Perhaps it has ended up in the hands of some labor union.

The real help is needed for creating jobs, not adding to profits of transnational conglomerates. Hasn’t anyone told the President real unemployment is 21-3/8% and the jobless between 16 and 24 years old is 52.4%? These are the youth that demonstrate and cause revolutions. Could we be setting up a repeat of 1789’s French Revolution? This is the lowest employment level for this group since statistics began to be compiled in 1948. In spite of stimulus one, hiring intentions are 50% lower than they were 1-1/2 years ago. In fact, large corporations intend to lay off even more workers. These are the same corporations that will receive, if passe d, $300 billion in tax breaks, even though they have trillions in cash. In spite of the fact that Wall Street, banking, government, economists and analysts think all this is normal, it is not normal, this is a depression. Government is sustaining the depression along with the Fed. In spite of these efforts every economic statistic is lower today than it was almost three years ago. Everything is not fine and that is why the President has been told to inject $650 billion into the economy and that is why the Fed is again going to engage in quantitative easing of almost $2 trillion. The facts speak for themselves. Retail sales are 4% lower, housing starts 47% lower with an admitted 12-month inventory when in fact it is considerably higher, GDP has fallen 1% and employment has fallen 6% and is still falling. How far away can the riots be?

Some of the latest news is that a record number of loan resolutions in August softened the effect of $3.1 billion in new delinquencies. Recent defaults on five loans greater than $100 million contributed to a 23-basis point net increase taking the US CMBC delinquency rate to 8.48%. Those three giant loan failures are Innkeepers Portfolio $825.4 million, Hyatt Regency, Bethesda, Maryland for $140 million and Lynnewood Gardens for $129.5 million. More than 200 loans totaling $2.1 billion in delinquency in July did not appear in the August list. Three of those loans were for more for over $100 million.

Fitch’s ratings delinquency index includes 2,931 loans totaling $37 billion over 60 days overdue.

The administration has done a very poor job over 21 months. One in seven Americans are in poverty, that is 14.3%. Child poverty has risen from 19% to 20%, and in the 18-64 year group it has jumped from 11.7% to 12.4%. This takes us back to the War on Poverty and the late 1950s. The current anticipated poverty rate increase has moved from 13.2% to 15%. Forty-f our million of Americans are on food stamps and 45 million live in poverty. Wall Street and banking get bailed out, but no jobs are created for the average American.

The formation of the European Union and the euro zone have taught us that putting together different countries as a group does not work. This lofty failure has been exacerbated by free trade and globalization, a benefit of WTO, the World Trade organization. With all the huffing and puffing about recovery, second quarter euro zone growth was 1% and that was the highest in four years. Taxes were recently raised and the zone is now imposing austerity due to excessive debt, the result of which can only be depression. They figure paying the bankers is far better than assisting the economy and the public. Sovereign debt ratings are being cut, and Europeans are rushing to buy gold, silver and Swiss francs. The 10-year Swiss franc note is yielding a puny 1%. We guess the real question is can Europe a nd England be worse than the US? We do not know, but what we do know is it’s all bad.

Then there is Greece, Europe’s poster child of failure. Mostly peaceful demonstrations abound as more and more workers are laid off. The IMF loan formula for $140 billion is deep austerity. As the people starve, PM George Papandreou, Bilderberg and Illuminist, wants taxes on corporations cut from 24% to 20%, so corporations will invest. The problem is if they get the tax cut there is no guarantee that they will use the money to increase plant and equipment, do research, or hire people. And, if the past is prologue then they will simply keep the difference for themselves. Unfortunately, that has been our experience. The budget deficit has to be cut from 13.6% of GDP to 8.1% over just seven months, which is economic and financial suicide, just to pay back European bankers and governments, which should have never made the loans initially. Cuts yes, but not in that time frame. They should be spread out over 3 to 4 years. Do not forget that this problem has existed for years. As the layoffs deepen tax revenues fall. Forty percent of judicial procedures presently in court concern tax disputes. Just like in Spain, $56 billion in environmentally friendly projects are underway, which will end in failure. Greece should just walk away from the bankers and default, dump their government and the IMF, leave the euro, reintroduce a cheap drachma, cut taxes and cut government spending 30% or over 3 or 4 years. Five years of depression is a lot better than 30 to 50 years under IMF dictates.

As we have seen already as stimulus programs abound and quantitative easing holds forth, this debt and monetary debasement is forcing the middle class and the populace as a whole into the arms of government dependence. This process is destroying the middle class worldwide. As consolidation takes place in order to form monopolies, middle sized and smaller companies are driven out of business and business formation comes to an end.

Personal taxes are rising, as are taxes on the sale of your home, and in the form of higher fees at all governmental levels. It doesn’t look like the Bush tax cuts will be canceled, but other taxes are being instituted every day. The new taxes passed within the Health Care Reform are some 19 in number and employers will pay 30% more in premiums, unless they opt out by paying a large penalty tax.

What has happened to America is that the private sector only is allowed to exist to keep banking in business and to supply funds for government, bureaucrats, other criminals and the elitists who actually run your country. Who wants to start or maintain a business under these conditions? Is it any wonder that there are few new jobs? Business at the middle and lower levels have no voice in Washington. Like in Germany in the 1930s, America is run by monopo ly capitalists. A marriage of transnational conglomerates and government known as corporatist fascism. They are deliberately killing small business just as we have seen for 65 years in Europe. Next comes the jackbooted thugs from Homeland Security to keep order. Those with no place to live and without jobs will be relocated to interment camps and those who criticize the regime, like us, will be eliminated.

The current depression did not just happen â€" it was planned that way to bring the citizens of the US and Europe to their knees economically and financially to bring about world government and the enslavement of all the world’s people. You might call this the triumph of the parasites. Over the next few years, taxation will increase until it reaches levels now seen of 60 to 83 percent in Europe. That is how they intend to strangle us just as they have Europe, with very high income taxes and value added taxes. Our industrial sector will migrate just as it is doing in Europe to the second and third worlds to bring about the great socialist leveling. The VAT tax is all consuming and in the end deeply retards growth. Just look at Europe, it is not capable of recovery. Their citizens are simply taxed to death. It’s all about control and that is what world government is all about. Taxation saps incentive and that is how countries and economies fail. There will be no end to government regulations and interference.

This all leads to a small coterie of the rich, a shrinking middle class and those with jobs and those without jobs. This gap, our President tells us, will be closed with his new $650 billion stimulus plan. Whether the items pass remains to be seen. We do know the employer of last resorts has been the federal government. We do know federal employees make double state and private workers and privately employed workers are three times more likely to be terminated. Federal workers are a privileged cl ass, which could eventually start social conflict. Conflict federal workers could not win. That gap between federal and private employees is widening. Ninety percent of government employees receive lifetime pension benefits, while only 18% of private employees receive them.

Then there is the endemic political corruption at the federal level, although corruption is certainly present at the State level. Unions and corporate interests are the moving parties that manifest the corruption. In many states retirement benefits alone are growing at 15% annually. Worse yet, it is almost impossible to fire a public service employer. What do you do when you are broke and you must by law pay benefits? These problems go on and on and can only lead to a breakdown in society. This is what socialism and fascism have brought to America and it is not pretty.

 

Last week saw the Dow rise 0.1%, S&P rose 0.4%, the Russell 2000 fell 1 .1% and the Nasdaq 100 gained 1.2%. Banks fell 0.2%; broker/dealer fell 0.2%; cyclicals fell 0.8% and transports added 0.3%. High tech rose 0.4%; semis fell 3.8%; the Internet rose 0.4% and biotechs jumped 1.5%. Gold bullion was little changed, the gold index, the HUI fell 1.1% as silver fell 0.3% and the USDX rose 1% to 82.87.

Two-year T-bills rose 5 bps to 0.54%; the 10-year T-note rose 10 bps to 2.80% and the 10-year German bunds rose 5 bps to 2.40%.

Federal Reserve credit was little changed at $2.287 trillion. It is up $66.7 billion YTD, and 10.5% YOY. Fed foreign holdings of Treasury, Agency debt jumped another $9.9 billion. Custody holdings for foreign central banks increased $265 billion YTD, and 13.9% YOY.

M2, narrow money supply, jumped $30.7 billion to $8.690 trillion. It has increased $265 billion YTD, or 2.7% YOY, it is up 3.1%.

Total money market funds increased by $10.6 billion to $ 2.839 trillion.

Total commercial paper fell 5.5 billion to $1.059 trillion.

Last week we opined that someone is rigging the stock market to prevent an autumn debacle. It is possible that the rig is a political scheme to help avert a GOP tsunami in November. If this hypothesis is correct, look out after November 2.

The Fed continues to issue more debt than they need. The August deficit was $90.5 billion, versus $103.6 bullion YOY. The bottom line is debt issuance was more than double what was needed.

Recently corporate insiders bought only $5 million in securities, but sold $332 million worth of shares.

Americans' self-reported average daily spending in stores, restaurants, gas stations, and online averaged $63 per day during August -- down $5 from July, and down $2 compared with August 2009. http://www.gallup.com/poll/142913/Consumer-Spending-Across-Income-Groups-Down-August.aspx

For years we have noted that the US Treasury has regularly issued much more debt than the stated official US deficit in a given year. Our conclusion was and remains that the real US deficit is the amount of new debt issuance adjusted for cash on hand. And because cash on hand at the Treasury has been declining, the real deficit has been and continues to dwarf the stated budget deficit.

Last week we opined that Obama’s proposed Stimulus Lite (or Stimulus Parcels) with class warfare- inspired extended Bush tax cuts for the middle class was primarily a political scheme that would force Republicans to vote against a middle-class tax cut ahead of the November elections.

 

On Sunday, GOP House leader John Boehner (R-OH) made his “Sophie’s Choice” in favor of the middle-class, class warfare tax cuts. The WH immediately screamed ‘foul’ because its brain trust didn’t foresee

Boehner’s Choice and his qualification that he would vote for the class warfare tax cut because it was better than no tax cut.

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0910/42037.html

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Indications: U.S. futures falter after first round of data

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By Simon Kennedy and Kate Gibson, MarketWatch

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stock futures slid Wednesday after a regional report on manufacturing threw cold water on thoughts of a sector rebound, while the dollar rallied against the yen after Japan intervened in currency markets.

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Already mildly lower, stock futures extended their losses after the New York Federal Reserve Bank reported its Empire State Manufacturing Index declined to 4.1 in September from 7.1 in August.

Separately, the government said U.S. import prices climbed 0.6% in August, while export prices jumped 0.8%.

Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 37 points to 10,493, while those on the S&P 500 index dropped 4.3 points to 1,111.50. Futures on the Nasdaq 100 lost 5 points to 1,917.5.

U.S. stocks ended mostly lower Tuesday after a four-session advance, as investors parsed the latest U.S. retail-sales figures and some disappointing data from Germany. The Dow Jones Industrial Average /quotes/comstock/10w!i:dji/delayed (DJIA 10,565, +38.56, +0.37%)  closed down about 18 points. The Nasdaq /quotes/comstock/10y!i:comp (COMP 2,296, +6.02, +0.26%) , though, eked out a gain, extending its winning streak to a fifth day.

“We believe that the market was hoping for more of an announcement from President Obama on the fiscal side for the rally to get more momentum,” said David Deddouche, an analyst with Societe Generale.

“A failure to break the current levels in the coming days would push us back in range trading, so we advise to remain very flexible on the macro view and trade tactically,” he added in a note to clients.

The dollar was up 3.1% against the Japanese currency at 85.61 yen Wednesday after Japanese authorities publicly intervened in currency markets for the first time since 2004.

The intervention was aimed at stemming the rise of the yen, which had earlier hit its highest level in more than 15 years and has been an increasing concern for exporters in the country.

The Finance Ministry and Bank of Japan were continuing to intervene in markets intermittently, according to reports Wednesday. See full story on Japan’s currency intervention.

The dollar was little changed against other currencies, with the euro falling 0.1% to $1.2984.

Figures on August U.S. industrial production are due at 9:15 a.m. Eastern.

Among companies in focus, Boeing Co. /quotes/comstock/13*!ba/quotes/nls/ba (BA 62.68, -0.08, -0.13%)  said it expected the World Trade Organization to rule Wednesday in a case the European Union brought in 2006, alleging that the U.S. government was subsidizing the Chicago-based aerospace giant.

The Wall Street Journal earlier reported that the WTO was likely to rule that Boeing received improper subsidies. That could prompt talks between Boeing and the Airbus unit of France’s European Aeronautic Defence & Space Co. to settle the subsidies matter, the report added.

Shares in AngloGold Ashanti /quotes/comstock/13*!au/quotes/nls/au (AU 44.78, -1.94, -4.15%)  fell in premarket trading after the company late Tuesday announced plans for a simultaneous offering of stock and bonds.

Savient Pharmaceuticals /quotes/comstock/15*!svnt/quotes/nls/svnt (SVNT 18.83, +4.07, +27.57%) was another big mover; its shares jumped after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved its drug Krystexxa for the treatment of gout in adults.

In international markets, Japan’s Nikkei 225 Average surged 2.3% after the intervention in currency markets, while most major European indexes were lower, with the French CAC 40 dropping 0.4%.

Simon Kennedy is the City correspondent for MarketWatch in London. Kate Gibson is a reporter for MarketWatch, based in New York.

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Indications: U.S. futures in tight range ahead of data

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By Simon Kennedy, MarketWatch

LONDON (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stock-market futures traded within a tight range Wednesday ahead of data on import prices and industrial production, while the dollar rebounded against the yen after Japan intervened in currency markets.

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Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 10 points to 10,453, while those of the S&P 500 index dropped 1.3 points to 1,114.50. Futures on the Nasdaq 100 were up 1.25 points at 1,923.75.

U.S. stocks ended mostly lower Tuesday, halting a four-session winning streak, as investors eyed the latest U.S. retail-sales figures and some disappointing data from Germany. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down around 18 points. The Nasdaq, though, eked out a gain to extend its winning streak to a fifth day.

The dollar was up 2.6% against the Japanese currency at 85.237 yen Wednesday after Japanese authorities publicly intervened in currency markets for the first time since 2004.

The intervention was aimed at stemming the rise of the yen, which had earlier hit its highest level in more than 15 years and has been an increasing concern for exporters in the country.

The Finance Ministry and Bank of Japan were continuing to intervene in markets intermittently, according to reports Wednesday. See full story on Japan’s currency intervention.

The dollar was little changed against other currencies, with the euro falling 0.2% to $1.29697.

On the data front Wednesday, release of the New York Federal Reserve’s September Empire State Index is due at 8:30 a.m. Eastern time, as are data on import prices for August. Figures on August industrial production are due at 9:15 a.m. Eastern.

Among companies in focus, Boeing Co. /quotes/comstock/13*!ba/quotes/nls/ba (BA 62.76, -1.43, -2.23%)  said it expected the World Trade Organization to rule Wednesday in a case the European Union brought in 2006, alleging that the U.S. government was subsidizing the Chicago-based aerospace giant.

The Wall Street Journal earlier reported that the WTO was likely to rule that Boeing received improper subsidies. That could prompt talks between Boeing and the Airbus unit of France’s European Aeronautic Defence & Space Co. to settle the subsidies matter, the report added.

Shares in AngloGold Ashanti /quotes/comstock/13*!au/quotes/nls/au (AU 46.72, +2.13, +4.78%)  fell more than 4% in premarket trading after the company late Tuesday announced plans for a simultaneous offering of stock and bonds.

Shares in Savient Pharmaceuticals /quotes/comstock/15*!svnt/quotes/nls/svnt (SVNT 14.76, -0.06, -0.40%) were another big mover, jumping 22% in premarket trades after the Food and Drug Administration approved the Savient drug Krystexxa for the treatment of gout in adults.

In international markets, Japan’s Nikkei 225 Average surged 2.3% after the intervention in currency markets, while most major European indexes were lower, with the French CAC 40 dropping 0.4%.

Simon Kennedy is the City correspondent for MarketWatch in London.

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NYSE Arca Morning Update - 08:30:00 ET

NYSE Arca Morning Update for Wednesday, Sep 15, 2010 :

STOCKS TRADING ON NYSE Arca AT A PRICE 15% OR MORE AWAY FROM
THE PREVIOUS TRADE DAY'S CONSOLIDATED CLOSE PRICE (AS OF 08:30:00 ET)

Stock Tuesday's Close Current Price Pct Change Current NYSE ARCA Vol
SVNT $14.75 $18.69 26.7% 345,666


10 MOST ACTIVE STOCKS ON NYSE ARCA AS OF 08:30:00 ET

BASED ON DOLLARS TRADED: | BASED ON SHARES TRADED:
Stock $ Volume Price PctChg | Stock Share Vol Price PctChg
SPY $89,139,707 $112.23 ( 0.4%) | C 4,415,449 $3.94 0.0%
IWM $31,118,590 $64.80 ( 0.3%) | BAC 1,249,285 $13.62 ( 0.5%)
AU $28,366,023 $44.43 ( 4.9%) | SPY 793,461 $112.23 ( 0.4%)
GLD $18,115,220 $123.83 ( 0.2%) | AU 634,651 $44.43 ( 4.9%)
C $17,384,077 $3.94 0.0% | IWM 479,939 $64.80 ( 0.3%)
BAC $17,027,346 $13.62 ( 0.5%) | NOVL 369,229 $5.82 4.5%
SVNT $6,466,709 $18.69 26.7% | SVNT 345,666 $18.69 26.7%
FXY $5,891,970 $115.50 ( 3.0%) | LVLT 190,655 $0.99 2.8%
TBT $5,751,938 $33.32 2.6% | TBT 173,490 $33.32 2.6%
TLT $5,580,554 $102.41 ( 1.4%) | EPB 157,700 $31.74 ( 4.1%)


Price changes may be affected by symbol splits and dividends.

Consolidated close price is the last print (excluding prints with trade
conditions) prior to 4PM ET.

This information is also updated on our web page every morning at 8:35ET:
http://www.tradearca.com/data/volume/daily_update.asp

This material is for informational purposes only.
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