By Bob DeMarco
All American Investor
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How to make money in the market...look beyond the obvious...spot the trends...and do your homework.
Data Points: U.S. Markets
Dow Industrials, down 271.10 points this month, or 2.18% to 12143.24.
- Fell for the third month in a row.
- Worst down month since August 2010.
- This week it is down 537.92 points, or 4.24%.
- Largest weekly percent drop since the week ended July 2, 2010 when it fell 4.51%.
- Today, it fell 96.87 points, or 0.79%.
- Today’s top contributors to the Dow’s movement and their point contribution: IBM (0.38), T (0.00), CSCO (-0.30), UTX (-0.61), BAC (-0.61).
- Today’s laggards and their point contribution: XOM (-12.64), HPQ (-8.10), CVX (-7.64), DD (-6.66), CAT (-6.43).
The Outlook for the Economy and Monetary Policy
My subject today is the outlook for the economy. We are now two full years into the economic recovery, yet progress on restoring the economy from the damage caused by the financial crisis and ensuing Great Recession remains discouragingly slow. The news from the jobs front has been particularly disappointing, with the unemployment rate—currently 9.2 percent—stubbornly high. This afternoon, I’ll give my perspective on why economic growth has been so modest and offer my outlook for the future, which anticipates some improvement during the second half of this year and next year. I’ll also talk about inflation, which has seesawed in recent months. Finally, I’ll explain what the Federal Reserve is doing to promote maximum employment and price stability. As usual, my remarks represent my own views and not necessarily those of my Federal Reserve colleagues.
Who Is In Worse Shape – the United States or Europe?
If economic performance is in part a beauty pageant, as John Maynard Keynes suggested, both the U.S. and Europe seem to be competing hard this summer for last place. If anything, based on the latest flow of news coverage, Europe might seem to be experiencing something of a resurgence – last week the eurozone agreed on a big deal involving mutual support and limiting the fallout from Greece’s debt problems. In contrast, the U.S. this week seems to be completely mired in a political stalemate that becomes more complex and confused at every turn.
The Depart of Transportation's Federal Highway Commission has released the latest report on Traffic Volume Trends (PDF format), data through May. The lead observation is that travel on all roads and streets declined by -1.9% (-5.0 billion vehicle miles) for May 2011 as compared with May 2010.
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Here is a chart that illustrates this data series from its inception in 1970. I'm plotting the "Moving 12-Month Total on ALL Roads," as the DOT terms it. See Figure 1 in the PDF report, which charts the data from 1986. My start date is 1971 because I'm encorporating all the available data from the DOT spreadsheets (see link). |
My friends at GaveKal point out that this is “… the sixth time in 18 months European leaders have announced a definitive solution to the Euro crisis. Should this version of the final bailout be taken any more seriously than the first and second solutions to the Greek crisis in May and September 2010 or the Irish bailout of December 2010 or the Portuguese rescue package of March 2011 or the breakthrough vote in the Greek parliament of last month? The supposedly good news for markets was that the -21% haircuts to be imposed on Greek creditors (as estimated by banker groups) were less than half those suggested a few days ago.”
Read more at advisorperspectives.comA 21% haircut is a bad joke. If you assume that Greece can afford to spend 10% of their revenues just to pay the interest, which is what they will need to be able to do to get out of their crisis, then the haircuts look more like 75-80%. Sean Egan, the most credible credit analyst in the country, estimated this week that the eventual haircuts on the Greek debt will be 90%.