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Strategies & Market Trends : Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Crimson Ghost who wrote (21497)1/16/2005 8:18:19 PM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
10 year treasury discussion on the FOOL
Mish:
10 yr treasuries
Brian did you put a wave count on this yet?
I can not remember
mrci.com

Brian:
Forget about the long-term counts on this on and just look at the last 5 years. The 10Y rallied hard from its low at the beginning of 2000, and has declined from the high in mid-2003. Here is a chart of that decline:

stockcharts.com

As long as it stays above the June 2004 low, I think the decline from the 2003 high was a clear A-B-C correction.
That is bullish for bonds.
Brian



To: Crimson Ghost who wrote (21497)1/16/2005 8:26:43 PM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 116555
 
U.S. real estate: The next bursting bubble?

Buyers' faith in markets may prompt excessive risks, economists say

ALISON FITZGERALD
Bloomberg News

Forrest Maltzman, a college professor, sold stock in July to buy the house next door in Bethesda, Md., for $740,000. He plans to rent it to cover the mortgage, then sell for a profit in a few years.

In the hottest U.S. real estate markets, including the Washington area, where median prices rose 22 percent in the year ended Sept. 30, investors such as Maltzman expect better returns from real estate than from equities.

"I have a lot of faith in real estate," says Maltzman, 41, who teaches politics at George Washington University.

About 30 percent of condominium buyers in Washington and San Francisco and 40 percent in south Florida are obtaining mortgages for investment purposes, says Gregory Leisch, chief executive of Delta Associates, a real-estate research firm. In south Florida, median home prices are rising by as much as 29 percent annually; in southern California, 36 percent; and Las Vegas, 54 percent.

That's a sign the market may be overheating, says Stephen Roach, chief economist at Morgan Stanley in New York.

"The latest trends in house prices and savings are disturbing," Roach wrote in a Dec. 3 note to clients. "They underscore the distinct possibility that America's asset economy is in the midst of yet another bubble-induced blow-off."

An economic decline in these high-growth pockets, especially one accompanied by job losses, might cause investors to dump properties, undermining local housing values. With the U.S. personal savings rate at a record low of 0.2 percent, a decline in home prices may narrow retirement options.

An October report by Fannie Mae Chief Economist David Berson, using data from the San Francisco-based research firm LoanPerformance, said the proportion of people getting home mortgages for investment purposes nationwide rose to 9.2 percent in mid2004 from 5.5 percent in the middle of 2003.

More of those people are using money for down payments that they once had invested in securities, says David Lereah, chief economist at the Chicago-based National Association of Realtors.

The enticement to buy houses and condos is strong in areas such as Washington, where the median home price has risen 69 percent to $362,400 in the past three years. During the same period, the benchmark Standard & Poor's 500 Index has risen 9.8 percent, including reinvested dividends.

The nationwide increase in median home prices in the year ended Sept. 30 was 7.7 percent, according to the realtors association. That leads most economists, including Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, to conclude that there's no national housing "bubble" that might destabilize the economy.

Dean Baker, director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, said prices have gone up "in enough regions that it can have a national economic impact."

Fast-growth markets include Miami, where median values in the last year have risen 23 percent; Fort Lauderdale, Fla., up 24 percent; West Palm Beach, Fla., up 29 percent; San Diego, 33 percent; and Los Angeles, 24 percent, according to the realtors association.

The median increase in housing prices for the Charlotte area was not available. Average prices rose 3.42 percent for the year ended Sept. 30, according to the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight. That was well below the national average of almost 13 percent.

Some Fed officials are concerned. The minutes to the central bank's Dec. 14 meeting say that low interest rates may be encouraging "excessive risk-taking." They cited "anecdotal evidence that speculative demands were becoming apparent in the markets for single-family homes and condominiums."

Nik Shah, 31, a mergers and acquisitions consultant, owns $2 million worth of condominiums that he rents in Washington's Dupont Circle, Foggy Bottom and Georgetown neighborhoods and says the value of each has doubled in the last two years.

"It's like buying a bond," Shah says. "I bought it and I'm getting a coupon payment and the value is appreciating."

Now, Shah says he's stopped buying because the market may have overheated.

The Washington area's price gains are supported by job growth in the region, said Stephen Fuller, director of the Center for Regional Analysis at George Mason University in Virginia.

"When the stock market was flying high, only 10 percent of condo buyers were investors," says Delta's Leisch from his office in Arlington, Virginia. He estimates that 30 percent of Washington condos now go to buyers seeking investment gains.

Prices for vacation homes in resort and coastal areas are likely to rise at twice the rate of the overall residential market, says Lereah, the association's economist.

An association survey to be published next month will probably show that second-home sales reached a record in 2004.

charlotte.com



To: Crimson Ghost who wrote (21497)1/16/2005 9:00:03 PM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
Developers cash in by converting apartments to condos

seattletimes.nwsource.com



To: Crimson Ghost who wrote (21497)1/16/2005 9:41:43 PM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
Japan Risks Recession With Coming Tax Increases.

While economists worry that history is about to repeat itself, government officials say the country's huge debts leave it little choice. Japan has by far the worst government-debt problem in the industrialized world. Debt outstanding now amounts to 169% of gross domestic product, and has risen every year since 1991, when it was 65%, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. That compares with 65% of GDP for the U.S. now and a 78% average for the euro area, both lower than a decade ago.

Japan's problem resulted from ballooning public spending and falling tax revenues, as the government tried to stimulate the economy out of its 1990s doldrums. Japan now has a primary deficit -- the gap between tax collections and the national budget -- of 7% of GDP.


The new tax increases are the government's attempt to get a grip on the problem. A series of complex pension and social-security contribution increases has begun this year. Heavier tax increases are expected to pass Japan's Parliament in the next few weeks. This legislation will abolish part of a 1999 special income-tax reduction starting in 2006, which economists say will mean 180,000 yen, or about $1,800, more to pay for a four-person household with an income of 10 million yen, or about $98,000. A similar measure is planned on top of that for 2007.

Japan is unlikely to get out of its debt bind so easily. For a start, its problem is much worse than that faced by the U.S. Japan's ratio of debt outstanding to GDP is already more than twice that of the U.S. at its 1993 peak, which was 75%. In addition to the primary deficit, Japan also has to pay interest on the money it is already borrowing. So, in spite of the tax increases, Japan's ratio will continue climbing to about 175% by the end of 2006, forecasts Brian Coulton, a senior director of Fitch Ratings' sovereign group.

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And people are rushing to buy the YEN?!

The US is bankrupt
Japan is Bankrupt
Europe is bankrupt
I have not seen the figures but I hazard a guess the UK is bankrupt as well

In the meantime most countries act as if there is some semblance of chance "to grow our way out of the debt".

The US$ is falling because at the moment we are increasing our debt and sucking up more of the worlds savings faster than anyone else.

Is any fiat currency any good?
When does the entire slate get wiped clean?

There is the case for gold, right there in a nutshell.
Mish.