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Strategies & Market Trends : The Residential Real Estate Crash Index -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Smiling Bob who wrote (249336)5/21/2010 1:04:18 PM
From: Broken_ClockRespond to of 306849
 
Figures reveal US slump is sustained, deepening for the working population
By David Walsh
21 May 2010
wsws.org
Two sets of US economic data released Thursday poured more cold water on recent claims of an “economic recovery” at least as far as the conditions of broad sections of the American population are concerned.
At the same time, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) reported that the net income of US banks rose to $18 billion for the first quarter of 2010, the highest total in two years. The gains were concentrated among the largest banks, indicating that certain portions of the economy are performing quite well.
The Conference Board, based in New York, issued its influential Leading Economic Index (LEI) for April on Thursday morning, which showed a slight decrease, of 0.1 percent, the first monthly decline since March 2009. The biggest negative contributors were a sharp decline in building permits, supplier deliveries (vendor performance), consumer confidence, and manufacturers’ new orders for consumer goods. The March 2010 LEI increase has also been revised downward, from 1.4 to 1.3 percent.
The Commerce Department reported earlier in the week that building permits fell 11.5 percent in April, to the lowest level in six months. This foreshadows a new slowdown in residential construction.
The decline in the Conference Board LEI had not been anticipated on Wall Street, helping to drive down share prices Thursday morning. Notes RTTNews, “The decrease came as a surprise to economists, who had expected the index to increase by 0.2 percent.” Overall, comments Bloomberg Businessweek, “A slump in building permits, little letup in firings and retreating stock prices highlight risks to the strength of the recovery as concern over the European debt crisis mounts.”
A day earlier, the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) reported that a record share of US houses were in foreclosure, 4.63 percent, in the first quarter of 2010 “as job losses caused homebuyers to fall behind on monthly payments” (Bloomberg Businessweek). The MBA reported the combined share of foreclosures and mortgage delinquencies was 14 percent, or about one in every seven US mortgages, a staggering total.
“Job losses have strained budgets, making it difficult for households to pay monthly bills,” Jay Brinkmann, the MBA’s chief economist, told Bloomberg Businessweek. “The unemployment rate is the major factor driving the numbers,” Brinkmann said. “We’re seeing the states with the biggest unemployment problem, like Ohio, Illinois and Michigan, showing the biggest increases.”
In other words, there is no recovery for the working population in the US.
This reality was underscored by another unexpected statistic announced Thursday morning, the jump in weekly jobless claims in the US by 25,000 last week, to 471,000, “defying predictions” of economists they would decline by 4,000. The previous week’s jobless claim total was also revised upward a slight amount.
The Wall Street Journal commented, “In a troubling sign for the U.S. labor market, the number of workers filing new claims for unemployment benefits unexpectedly surged last week to wipe out most of the recent declines.”
Joseph Lazzaro at Daily Finance wrote, “At this stage of a U.S. economic expansion, initial jobless claims would normally be below 400,000. But this recession, which was deepened by the financial crisis, has defied numerous, historical economic norms and patterns, and the expected trend in jobless claims has been one.”
It was considered good news that continuing jobless claims (those drawn by workers for more than one week) declined by 40,000, to 4.6 million. It is necessary to bear in mind, however, that hundreds of thousands of the jobless are simply exhausting their benefits each month.
Moreover, Lazzaro points out, “This week, states reported 5,101,000 persons claiming Emergency Unemployment Compensation [established and extended several times by Congress] benefits for the week ending May 1, the latest week for which data is available, a decrease of 94,788 from the prior week. A year ago, there were 2,290,000 million EUC claimants.
“In other words, while continuing claims have declined by about 1.8 million over the past 12 months, emergency claims have increased by about 2.8 million.”
The large US banks meanwhile “enjoyed a disproportionate share” of the industry’s earnings gains in 2010’s first quarter, commented a Reuters dispatch. Thestreet.com reports that among those institutions “showing vast improvements” were FIA Card Services, a subsidiary of Bank of America, with first-quarter earnings of $507 million compared to a net loss of $1.5 billion in the first three months last year. The main subsidiary of Wells Fargo posted a profit of $2 billion, up from $1.2 billion in the same period in 2009.
“The largest U.S. bank by total assets as of March 31, was JPMorgan Chase Bank, NA, which is held by JPMorgan Chase, and it reported first-quarter net income of $2.7 billion, a slight rise from $2.5 billion during the first quarter of 2009.” Citibank, NA, took in net income of $2.2 billion in the first quarter of 2010, as opposed to $1.5 billion in the same three months last year.
However, despite having trillions made available to them, the banks continue to balk at loaning out their money. Without an accounting change that skewed the figures, “loan balances would have declined for the seventh quarter in a row.”
The number of problem banks increased, reported the FDIC, from 775, up from 702 the previous quarter, and 305 a year ago. Seventy-two US banks and thrifts have failed so far in 2010, and 237 since the beginning of 2008; the FDIC expects the total this year to exceed 2009’s 140.
Bank failures and consolidations resulting from the ongoing crisis have driven down the number of US banks to below 8,000, Reuters notes, for the first time in the FDIC’s 76-year history.



To: Smiling Bob who wrote (249336)5/21/2010 1:04:49 PM
From: James HuttonRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 306849
 
"Gold should start its move next week after euro crashes, mkt slips, and bonds lose their shine"

I don't see bonds losing their shine quite yet. Maybe when the Brits become a default concern. Even today with the market up, people are buying long bonds. Shows you how much confidence there is in the "rally."



To: Smiling Bob who wrote (249336)5/21/2010 1:56:55 PM
From: Skeeter BugRead Replies (2) | Respond to of 306849
 
>>Gonna call it the worldo. You in?<<

that's asking for tyranny. a cashless, one world currency is the wet dream of tyrants everywhere.



To: Smiling Bob who wrote (249336)5/21/2010 2:24:24 PM
From: Bank Holding CompanyRespond to of 306849
 
dUDE. cAN YOU mAKE THIs MARKEt CLOSE in THE REd TodAY. tiA.



To: Smiling Bob who wrote (249336)5/24/2010 5:12:41 PM
From: Smiling BobRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 306849
 
Gold Rising as Euro Weakens Spurs More Speculation (Update2)
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By Nicholas Larkin, Claudia Carpenter and Millie Munshi

May 24 (Bloomberg) -- Speculators are buying gold faster than the world’s biggest producers can mine it as analysts forecast a 27 percent rally that may extend the longest run of annual gains since at least 1920.

Exchange-traded products backed by bullion added 41.7 metric tons in the week to May 14, the most in 14 months, data from UBS AG show. China, Australia and the 15 other largest mining nations averaged weekly output of 41.6 tons last year, researcher GFMS Ltd. estimates. Even though prices have fallen 5.1 percent to $1,185.30 from a record $1,249.40 an ounce May 14, the median in a Bloomberg survey of 23 traders, analysts and investors shows it will reach $1,500 by the end of the year.

Buying accelerated as the MSCI World Index of 23 developed nations’ stocks tumbled as much as 16 percent since mid-April and the euro weakened to a four-year low against the dollar. Holders of ETPs, including George Soros and John Paulson, accumulated a record 1,938 tons by May 21, eclipsing all but four of the biggest central-bank holdings.

“You could see gold go up another $1,000,” said Evan Smith, who helps manage $2 billion at U.S. Global Investors Inc. in San Antonio and in 2006 correctly predicted that gold would reach $700 within two years. “All of the turmoil and problems we’ve seen in Europe is just another reminder that there’s a lot of value in gold as a safe haven.”

The risk to gold bulls lies in economic growth, which should buoy the prospects of metals linked to industrial demand, such as copper and silver. The world economy will expand 4.2 percent this year, the International Monetary Fund said April 21, raising its January projection from 3.9 percent.

Industrial Metals

Astor Asset Management LLC, with $520 million under management, held as much as 10 percent of its assets in the SPDR Gold Trust, the biggest ETP backed by bullion, according to Bryan Novak, managing director of the Chicago-based company. The firm sold the stake in the first quarter.

China, the biggest consumer of industrial metals, will expand 10.1 percent this year, more than three times the pace of the U.S.’s anticipated 3.2 percent gain, according to as many as 77 economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

“The feeling now is as we move into the expansion phase of economic growth, we want to be diversified in economically sensitive metals,” Novak said. “We’re not negative on the economy now.”

‘Afraid of Debasement’

While gold is favored by investors when the dollar weakens and inflation gains, the metal can also advance at other times. Gold rose 5.8 percent in 2008 as U.S. consumer prices gained 0.1 percent. The metal added 18 percent in 2005 when the U.S. Dollar Index, a measure against six counterparts, advanced 13 percent. Gold rose 8 percent this year as the U.S. Dollar Index jumped 11 percent. U.S. consumer prices dropped in April.

“People are afraid of the debasement of all the currencies,” said Peter Schiff, president and chief global strategist for Darien, Connecticut-based Euro Pacific Capital, whose clients have more than $2 billion in assets. “What’s surprising is that gold is still as low as it is,” he said, predicting $5,000 to $10,000 an ounce in the next five to 10 years.

Since the last week of April, ETPs have been adding bullion at a pace not seen since the first quarter of 2009, in the wake of the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Buying rose as European policymakers agreed on an almost $1 trillion emergency loan package to prevent sovereign defaults.

Half the Peak

Assets in gold-backed products increased 18.3 tons last week, according to UBS data. The bank revised its estimate for the previous week’s holdings.

Gold is still at half the peak set in 1980, after adjusting for inflation. Then, prices rose to $850, equal to $2,266 today, according to a calculator on the website of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis.

Supply from mines, which peaked in 2001, fell in five of the last eight years, data from London-based GFMS show. Companies are digging deeper to extract dwindling reserves, with mines in South Africa extending as far as 2.35 miles (3.8 kilometers) down.

Investment, including bars and coins, almost doubled to 1,901 tons last year, exceeding jewelry demand for the first time in three decades, according to GFMS. Jewelry will jump 19 percent to 2,100 tons this year and industrial use 8 percent to 398 tons, Sydney-based Macquarie Group Ltd. says.

Central Banks

Muenze Oesterreich AG, the Vienna-based mint that makes the Philharmonic, the best-selling gold coin in Europe and Japan, on May 12 said it had sold 243,500 ounces since April 26, more than the 205,300 ounces sold in the entire first quarter.

Central banks and governments are also buying gold, adding 425.4 tons last year, for a combined 30,116.9 tons, the most since 1964 and the first expansion since 1988, data from the World Gold Council show. Official reserves of central banks and governments may expand by another 192 to 289 tons this year, according to CPM Group, a research and asset-management company in New York.

The net-long position in Comex futures, or bets on higher prices, is within 13 percent of the record reached in November, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show. The most widely held option gives owners the right to buy gold at $1,500 an ounce by December, data from the bourse in New York show.

Economists’ outlook may be too rosy, said Michael Pento, chief economist at Delta Global Advisors in Holmdel, New Jersey, who correctly predicted the 2008 commodity collapse. Some investors judge that a debt crisis in Greece may spread elsewhere in the euro zone, including Spain and Portugal.

Billionaire Managers

“The second half of this year will likely show very anemic growth on a global basis,” he said. “The crisis in Greece is going to spread to Spain and it’s going to be very difficult to deal with. They are bailing out debt with more debt and it isn’t sustainable. It’s a wonderful scenario for gold.”

Billionaire John Paulson’s New York-based Paulson & Co. hedge fund is the SPDR gold trust’s biggest investor, with 31.5 million shares, or about 96 tons, a May 17 regulatory filing showed. Kyle Bass, the head of Dallas-based Hayman Advisors LP who made $500 million in 2007 on the U.S. subprime collapse, bought gold this month, according to a letter to clients.

Buying at the start of a bubble is “rational,” Soros said in January. His New York-based Soros Fund Management LLC was the sixth-biggest investor in the SPDR fund in the first quarter, a May 17 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission shows. He trimmed his holding by 9.6 percent from the previous quarter.

“People still want a store of wealth,” said Andrew Karsh, co-manager of funds for the Credit Suisse Total Commodity Return Strategy team. “A lot of the fundamentals are still in place.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Nicholas Larkin in London at nlarkin1@bloomberg.net; Claudia Carpenter in London at ccarpenter2@bloomberg.net; Millie Munshi in New York at mmunshi@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: May 24, 2010 07:03 EDT