How to make money in the market...look beyond the obvious...spot the trends...and do your homework.
Monday, August 13, 2012
Morning Journal-A close look at Paul Ryan
This Week’s Data
Other
Government jobs versus private jobs (short/medium):
http://advisorperspectives.com/dshort/guest/Shedlock-120813-Job-and-Population-Growth.php
Another plus for Wall Street (medium):
http://www.thereformedbroker.com/2012/08/10/wall-street-eats-its-young/
More debt doesn’t solve the problem (medium):
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/eric-sprott-solution%E2%80%A6is-problem-part-ii
Monday morning humor (short):
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/friday-humor-olympics-edition
Politics
Domestic
Right Condition blog looks at Paul Ryan (medium):
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/guest-post-mitt-romneys-selection-paul-ryan-sign-desperation
Romney’s tax plan won’t cut the deficit (medium):
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/why-romneys-tax-plan-wont-cut-the-deficit/2012/08/09/37fb2d20-e19c-11e1-a25e-15067bb31849_story.html
More from Mickey Kaus on Obama altering work requirements (medium):
http://dailycaller.com/2012/08/10/nyt-proves-romney-right-on-welfare/
Why nations fail (medium):
http://www.csmonitor.com/Books/chapter-and-verse/2012/0806/Why-Nations-Fail-Can-elites-choke-American-prosperity
Steve Cook received his education in investments from Harvard, where he earned an MBA, New York University, where he did post graduate work in economics and financial analysis and the CFA Institute, where he earned the Chartered Financial Analysts designation in 1973. His 40 years of investment experience includes institutional portfolio management at Scudder, Stevens and Clark and Bear Stearns. Steve's goal at Strategic Stock Investments is to help other investors build wealth and benefit from the investing lessons he learned the hard way.
Monday, May 21, 2012
The Morning Call + Subscriber Alert + A classic Dow Sell signal
The Market
Technical
Monday Morning Chartology
As you can see, the S&P is approaching a range with multiple support levels. With this kind of congestion, I expect a slow down in the rate of decline and, hopefully, the establishment of a new lower boundary of its short term trading range.

GLD makes a great rebound. Notice the similarity to the late December/early January sell off and bounce.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/why-has-gold-fallen-price-and-what-outlook
Friday, July 31, 2009
Federal Government Receipts Dropping Uh Oh (Graph)
Once this series becomes more widely discussed in the media it is likely to create investor uncertainty about the future. This is never a good thing for the market.
With the S and P 500 near 1000, investors should start to assume a more cautious stance.
A short fall in government receipts is a negative on the dollar, will likely lead to higher long term interest rates, and could lead to crowding out in the corporate securities market.

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Wireless Reading Device Wednesday, July 08, 2009
Roubini Still Concerned About the Economy

In conclusion, the outlook for the U.S. economy remains very weak. The recent rally in global equities, commodities and credit may soon fizzle out as worse-than-expected earnings and financial news take their toll on this rally, which has gotten ahead of improvements in actual macroeconomic data.
Source: RGE Monitor Newsletter
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Lingering Concerns:
Labor market conditions are still quite dire, more than 3.4 million jobs have been lost in 2009 and about 6.5 million have been lost since the beginning of the recession. Compare this with the 2.5 million jobs lost in the recession of 2001; 1.5 million lost in the recession of the early 1990s; 3 million in the one of the early 1980s; 2.2 million in the one of the 1970s.
The U.S. consumer is still the engine of U.S. growth, and contributes to over 70% of aggregate demand. While saving rates are headed for the high single digits and high oil prices together with long-term rates keep putting a dent in personal consumption, the over-leveraged consumer is finding some support in the tax breaks of the fiscal stimulus package. Yet the over-indebted U.S. consumer – whose deleveraging process yet has to start – will likely continue to put the brakes on consumption, while the savings rate continues to creep up. While this will encourage a rebalancing in the U.S. and global economy, in the medium-term it isn’t likely to support strong U.S. and global growth.
Housing starts appear to have stabilized and will likely move sideways for quite some time. However, housing demand is not yet improving at a pace that can guarantee that the lingering inventory overhang will dissipate. This implies that home prices will continue to fall. RGE Monitor expects home prices to continue to fall through mid-2010.
U.S. industrial production has been contracting for 17 months in a row – with a short break in October 2008. Industrial production usually finds a bottom shortly after the ISM manufacturing index does. While the index probably found its bottom back in December 2008--at depression levels of 32.9--industrial production remains in a mode of contraction that started in January 2008.
Financial conditions are showing some improvement. Banks are borrowing at zero interest rates and higher net interest margin can definitely help rebuild capital. Regulatory forbearance, changes in FASB (Financial Accounting Standards Board) rules and under-provisioning might enable banks to post better than expected results for a few quarters. However, relaxation of mark-to-market rules reduces the banks’ incentives to participate in the Public-Private Investment Program (PPIP) and therefore reduces the likelihood that the program will succeed in clearing toxic assets from banks’ balance sheets. The muddle-through approach might be successful in a scenario in which the U.S. and global economy recover soon and go back to potential growth during 2010, but according to RGE’s forecasts, this is highly unlikely. While we might have positive surprises coming from the banking system in the next couple of quarters, the situation could turn around again after that, jarring confidence in financial markets in a way that would spill into the real economy. Increases in the unemployment rate, well beyond the rates envisioned by the adverse scenario of the recent bank stress tests, imply that recapitalization needs are larger than what the too-lenient stress test prescribed. The U.S financial system – in spite of the massive policy backstop – thus remains severely damaged, and the credit crunch remains unlikely to ease very fast.
A sharp rise in public debt burden – the U.S. Congressional Budget Office estimates that the public-debt-to-GDP ratio will rise from 40% to 80% (in the next decade), or about $9 trillion – will also put a dent on growth. If long-term rates were to increase to 5%, the resulting increase in the interest rate bill alone would be about $450 billion, or 3% of GDP. The implication is that the fiscal primary surplus will have to be permanently increased by 3% of GDP, which could constitute further pressure on the disposable income of the U.S. consumer.
Not only does the U.S. economy face downward risks to growth in the medium-term, but potential growth might fall as well. The U.S. population is aging. With employment still falling – and another jobless recovery on the horizon – the rate of human capital accumulation will fall. Moreover, workers who remain unemployed for a long period of time lose skills, while young workers that enter the workforce, but don’t find a job, don’t acquire on-the-job skills. Reduced investments in worker training and education, coupled with lower capital expenditure, are a recipe for lower productivity ahead.
Deflationary pressures are still present in the U.S. economy. Demand is falling relative to supply and excess capacity is still promoting slack in the goods markets. Moreover, the rising slack in labor markets, which is pushing down wages and labor costs, implies that deflationary pressures are going to be dominant this year and next year. This implies that the Fed will keep monetary policy loose for a while longer. However, discussion of an exit strategy has to start now as investors’ concerns about the Fed’s ballooning balance sheet and expectations of inflation both mount.
There are also signs that a double-dip recession could materialize toward the second half of next year, or in 2011. If oil prices rise too much, too fast, too soon, that’s going to have a negative effect in terms of trade and real disposable income in oil-importing countries. Also, concerns about unsustainable budget deficits are high and are pushing long-term interest rates higher. If these budget deficits are going to continue to be monetized, eventually, toward the end of next year, there is a risk of a sharp increase in expected inflation that could push interest rates even higher. Together with higher oil prices, driven up in part by this wall of liquidity rather than fundamentals alone, this could be a double whammy that would push the economy into a double-dip or W-shaped recession by late 2010 or 2011.
In conclusion, the outlook for the U.S. economy remains very weak. The recent rally in global equities, commodities and credit may soon fizzle out as worse-than-expected earnings and financial news take their toll on this rally, which has gotten ahead of improvements in actual macroeconomic data.
Bob DeMarco is a citizen journalist and twenty year Wall Street veteran. Bob has written more than 700 articles with more than 18,000 links to his work on the Internet. Content from All American Investor has been syndicated on Reuters, the Wall Street Journal, Fox News, Pluck, Blog Critics, and a growing list of newspaper websites. Bob is actively seeking syndication and writing assignments. |
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Wireless Reading Device Tuesday, April 07, 2009
The 15 Biggest Holders of U. S. Government Debt
Maybe you are thinking China? Nope. Luxembourg is number 15 at a paltry $87.2 Billion.
The biggest? This entity owns $4.806 Trillion.
Take a look at the slide show to see the 15 biggest holders.
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Saturday, March 14, 2009
Bad Omen for U. S. Government Debt
The potential for a downgrade of U. S. sovereign debt is listed as considerable by Moody's. Moody's describes the current situation for the debt as:
Resilient Aaa, whose ratings are being tested but, in our view, display sufficient capacity to grow out of their debt and repair the damage.
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Bob DeMarco is a citizen journalist and twenty year Wall Street veteran. Bob has written more than 500 articles with more than 11,000 links to his work on the Internet. Content from All American Investor has been syndicated on Reuters, the Wall Street Journal, Fox News, Pluck, Blog Critics, and a growing list of newspaper websites. Bob is actively seeking syndication and writing assignments. |
Friday, March 13, 2009
Over Leveraged American Consumer Needs the Big Inflation
I found this interesting chart over at Calculated Risk.

The chart shows Household Net Worth as a percent of GDP. If you look closely you will notice three things.
- The first big spike up in household net worth occurred during the Internet stock bubble (1996-2000).
- The second big spike up in household net worth occurred when both stocks and housing prices were rising fast (late 2002- late 2007).
- And third, the trend since 1952 is for household net worth to range between 300-350 percent of GDP.
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Today, I am reading about Household Debt as a Percent of GDP in the Wall Street. This chart is more worrisome.

When you marry the information on these two charts you can come to a simple conclusion--much of the increase in household net worth was fueled by the taking on of debt by consumers. We have been reading about the over leveraging of companies like Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, and AIG; but, not so much about the over leveraging of the American consumer. What is true is that consumers experienced a short term burst in net worth that was fueled by debt. But, now these debts need to be repaid and the consumer will no longer be able to borrow from "peter" to pay "paul". In other words, consumers won't be able to refinance their home and take the proceeds and spend them on houses and cars. They will now have to pay down the debt the old fashioned way.
It should be clear, after looking at these two charts that Household Net Worth has already corrected to a more normalized level--this is a good thing. It should be clear that consumers have a long way to go before they reach the point of more normal leverage on their personnel balance sheets. Many consumers are leveraged beyond their means. Not a good thing.
Retail sales account for two thirds of GDP. It should be clear that consumers are going to need to reduce debt before they can get back to buying houses, cars, and stocks. This means that it is going to be a long time before we see a return to robust gains in the GDP. Not a good thing.
Superimpose on top of these charts: rising unemployment and the sharp rise in government spending. As financial institutions deleverage and consumers face a long period of deleveraging--the government is leveraging up its balance sheet. Another credit bubble waiting to burst? Not a good thing, although necessary.
My guess is that a year or two down the road we will see the stresses from this new bubble--government spending. This will occur as the government finds difficultly financing its debt in the world markets, consumers start to default on credit cards in greater numbers, and the reality that there is no short term fix to a problem that has been building since the early 1980s.
Inflation is a likely to rear its ugly head soon, see (Reserve Balances held by the Federal Reserve Bank are going off the chart). Actually a good thing if you are in debt. You pay back debt with cheaper dollars. This reminded me that I started paying on my student loans in 1978. Loans I took out while I was in college and started paying after graduate school. When I made my last payment in 1988, I was paying with dollars that were worth about one third of what they were worth when I borrowed them (value of a dollar 1988 versus 1970). You might think to yourself right here--big inflation is the way out of this trap. Seems right to me.
My final advice here is straightforward--don't get carried away by the madness of the crowd. You will have plenty of time to buy great stocks at low prices.
Special thanks to Calculated Risk--Fed: Household Net Worth Cliff Dives in Q4, and the Wall Street Journal--Is Debt Ready for a Dive? Both articles are worth reading and considering.
Bob DeMarco is a citizen journalist and twenty year Wall Street veteran. Bob has written more than 500 articles with more than 11,000 links to his work on the Internet. Content from All American Investor has been syndicated on Reuters, the Wall Street Journal, Fox News, Pluck, Blog Critics, and a growing list of newspaper websites. Bob is actively seeking syndication and writing assignments. |
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Monday, February 23, 2009
Avalanche of Treasuries to Hit Market this week
The U.S. will probably borrow $2.5 trillion during the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc., one of the 16 primary dealers required to bid at U.S. debt sales. The figure is almost triple the $892 billion in notes and bonds it sold in the previous 12 months.In a separate news item Hillary Clinton was calling on China to keep buying Treasuries this weekend.
“It would not be in China’s interest” if the U.S. were unable to finance deficit spending to stimulate its economy, Clinton said yesterday in an interview in Beijing with Shanghai- based Dragon Television.This weeks Treasury auctions will be watched closely in the markets. A bigger issue moving forward is whether or not this avalanche of treasury sales is going to crowd corporation, states and municipalities out of the market. I think that is likely and we will be following that closely in the weeks and months ahead.
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Treasuries fell, paring two weeks of gains, as stocks rose on speculation the U.S. is planning to boost its stake in Citigroup Inc., increasing the likelihood of additional debt sales as borrowing soars.
Ten- and 30-year securities led the declines as the MSCI World Index snapped nine days of losses after the Wall Street Journal reported Citigroup is in talks with federal officials. The U.S. is planning to sell a record $94 billion of notes this week, raising speculation investors will demand higher yields to purchase the securities.
“We’ve got supply coming back into the market all this week,” said Padhraic Garvey, head of investment-grade debt strategy in Amsterdam at ING Groep NV. “We’re also seeing a reversal of the large risk aversion trade this week.”
Ten-year yields increased five basis points to 2.84 percent as of 11:15 a.m. in London, according to BGCantor Market Data. The price of the 2.75 percent security due in February 2019 fell 13/32, or $4.06 per $1,000 face amount, to 99 8/32. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.
The yield, which touched a record low of 2.04 percent on Dec. 18, has averaged 4.65 percent during the past decade. Yields slid 10 basis points last week as falling stocks drove investors to bonds.
The U.S. government may end up with as much as 40 percent of Citigroup’s common stock, the Wall Street Journal said citing people familiar with the matter.
‘Wall of Supply’
“Treasuries face a wall of supply and the fact that Citigroup may need more government intervention means there may be more sovereign bond issuance to come,” said Nick Stamenkovic, a fixed-income strategist in Edinburgh at RIA Capital Markets, a securities broker for banks and institutional investors. “That’s unnerving investors.”
Banks may have to be nationalized for “a short time” to help lenders such as Citigroup and Bank of America Corp. survive the U.S. economic slump, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd said Feb. 20.
U.S. yields indicate bets on inflation have been rising over the past three months.
The difference between rates on 10-year notes and Treasury Inflation Protected Securities, or TIPS, which reflects the outlook among traders for consumer prices, was 115 basis points. The spread climbed from minus eight basis points in November, and the six-month average is 95 basis points.
Stocks Advance
Consumer prices were unchanged over the last 12 months, a Labor Department report showed Feb. 20, meaning bond investors aren’t losing anything to inflation. The so-called real yield of 2.81 percent is close to the most since 2006.
Stocks in Europe and Asia climbed, pushing the MSCI World Index higher for the first time in 10 days, with a gain of 0.7 percent.
“It’s an unwinding of the flight to quality,” said Kazuaki Oh’e, a Tokyo-based debt salesman at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, Canada’s fifth-biggest bank.
Government efforts to support the banking system will help corporate bonds outperform Treasuries, David Kotok, chief investment officer at Cumberland Advisors Inc. in Jersey City, wrote in a report today.
“The story circulating about Citigroup is a way for the idea of nationalization to get vetted,” wrote Kotok, who oversees $1 billion.
Treasuries have handed investors a 2.7 percent loss so far in 2009, while U.S. company bonds returned 1 percent, according to indexes complied by Merrill Lynch & Co.
The Treasury Department plans to auction $40 billion of two- year notes tomorrow, $32 billion of five-year securities on Feb. 25 and $22 billion of seven-year debt on Feb. 26.
Higher Yields
“That’s a lot of bonds that need to be sold,” said Peter Jolly, head of market research at National Australia Bank Ltd.’s investment-banking unit in Sydney. “The bias this week will be for yields to rise.”
The U.S. will probably borrow $2.5 trillion during the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc., one of the 16 primary dealers required to bid at U.S. debt sales. The figure is almost triple the $892 billion in notes and bonds it sold in the previous 12 months.
Treasuries rose initially after U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said China, the largest foreign holder of Treasuries, should keep buying to help fund President Barack Obama’s economic-stimulus plans.
“It would not be in China’s interest” if the U.S. were unable to finance deficit spending to stimulate its economy, Clinton said yesterday in an interview in Beijing with Shanghai- based Dragon Television.
‘Good for Treasuries’
“Clinton’s statement is good for Treasuries,” said Takashi Yamamoto, chief trader in Singapore at Mitsubishi UFJ Trust & Banking Corp., part of Japan’s largest bank. “It will make yields decline.”
Fund managers became less bearish on Treasuries last week, a survey by Ried, Thunberg & Co. showed.
The company’s index measuring the investor outlook through the end of March rose to 44 in the seven days ended Feb. 20 from 43 the week before. The economic analysis firm in Jersey City, New Jersey, surveyed 25 fund managers controlling $1.39 trillion. A reading below 50 means investors expect prices to fall.
For all the $9.7 trillion pledged by the U.S. to combat the financial crisis, money markets show the world’s biggest banks see no recovery before 2010.
‘Barometer of Fears’
The premium banks charge each other for short-term loans, the so-called Libor-OIS spread, rose above 1 percentage point last week for the first time since Jan. 9. Contracts traded in the forward market indicate the gauge, which measures banks’ reluctance to lend, will remain higher for the rest of the year than before Sept. 15, when the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. froze credit markets.
“Libor-OIS remains a barometer of fears of bank insolvency,” former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said in an interview. “That fear has been substantially reduced since mid-October, but the decline has stalled well short of any semblance of normal markets.”
The difference between what banks and the Treasury pay to borrow money for three months, the so-called TED spread, rose to 98 basis points from 91 basis points on Feb. 10.
Thirty-year fixed mortgage rates rose to 5.04 percent in the seven days ended Feb. 19 from 4.96 percent in the middle of January, according to loan finance company Freddie Mac. Rates are about 2.25 percentage points higher than 10-year Treasury yields, widening from 1.48 percentage points five years ago.
To contact the reporter on this story: Kim-Mai Cutler in London at kcutler@bloomberg.net; Wes Goodman in Singapore at wgoodman@bloomberg.net.
More from All American Investor
- Ray Dalio on the current state of affairs in the market
- Homebuyer Credit Won’t Stabilize Market, Analysts Say
- Roubini Predicts U.S. Losses May Reach $3.6 Trillion
- Six Errors on the Path to the Financial Crisis
- Who Caused the Financial Crisis?
- Option ARM--The Toxic Mortgage
- Debt Binge--The Perfect Financial Storm
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
The Whole World is Nutty about Stock Investing even China
This one really caught me by surprise. It appears that Chinese companies are using bank loans to invest in stocks. In fact, it looks like they are doing it in record amounts. This could explain why the Shanghai Composite Index was the best performing index in the world this year. This also reminds me of the nuttiness in Japan in the late 1980s. If you are too young to remember, the Japanese Nikkei index soared to the 38,900 area at the end of 1989. In case you have not been paying attention the Nikkei closed around 7650 today. So twenty years later it is still down close to 31,000 plus points or a whopping 80 percent--give or take.
You might be thinking what does this have to do with the price of cotton in west Texas. Well, while we are sitting around worrying about the Chinese divesting or buying less Treasury securities we might also think about Japan. At the end of 2008, Japan held $578 billion of treasury securities. China? $696 billion. One big difference though--China's holdings increased by about $219 billion in 2008, while Japanese holdings dropped by about $1.5 billion.
Have you been thinking about where all the money is going to come from to finance our ever increasing Treasury debt? Given any thought to what would happen if we had to pay sharply higher interest rates? I suggest you give this some thought and get back to me.
Leveraging up in China via bank loans, Japan's economy falling off the face of the earth. None of this is bullish for U.S. stocks.
You might want to read the Bloomberg article and give it some thought.
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China Record Loans Diverted to Stocks, Shenyin Says
Chinese companies may be using record bank lending to invest in stocks, fueling a rally that’s made the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index the world’s best performer this year, according to Shenyin & Wanguo Securities Co.
As much as 660 billion yuan ($97 billion) may have been converted by companies into term deposits or used to buy equities, Li Huiyong, Shanghai-based analyst at Shenyin Wanguo, said in a phone interview today, citing money supply figures.
China’s banks lent a record 1.62 trillion yuan in January as part of a government drive to stimulate the world’s third- largest economy, while M2, the broadest measure of money supply, climbed 18.8 percent from a year earlier. The Shanghai Composite has surged 29 percent since the start of 2009, compared with a 10 percent decline in the MSCI World Index.
“Part of the liquidity flowing into the stock market could be from companies using borrowed funds to invest in the stock market instead of working requirements,” said Li.
He arrived at the 660 billion yuan figure by subtracting M1, which includes cash and demand deposits, from M2. The brokerage was voted the best in the country for research by the national pension fund, China’s largest investor.
New loans jumped to twice the record set a year earlier. The biggest proportion of new lending, 39 percent, was through discounted bills, which supply working capital. Medium and long- term corporate loans accounted for 32 percent.
Chasing Returns
Companies are reluctant to increase production amid a slowdown in demand and some may have diverted funds meant for expansion into the stock market to chase higher returns, said Li.
China’s central bank is asking lenders to identify the recipients of last month’s loans to ensure the funding contributes to economic growth, a person with knowledge of the matter said Feb. 13, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Loan growth may continue to surge this month, the Shanghai Securities News reported today, without citing a source.
The government is putting pressure on banks to support its 4 trillion yuan stimulus package, while seeking to avoid a pile- up of bad loans. Default risk represents the biggest threat to Chinese lenders this year, Fitch Ratings has said.
“It’s hard for banks to tell whether the funds are flowing into the real economy or into the stock market,” said Michelle Qi, a Shanghai-based portfolio manager at Bank of Communications Schroder Fund Management, which oversees about $790 million.
“In the short term, there’s a risk that this inflow of funds could push the market too high,” she said.
Stock Valuations
The rally has driven stock valuations 41 percent higher since November, when the Shanghai Composite Index traded at 13.3 times earnings, the lowest since at least November 1997, according to Bloomberg data. The gauge was valued at 48.7 times earnings at its peak in October 2007.
Equity transactions rose last week to the highest in at least three years. The Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges handled a combined 32 billion shares Feb. 13, the most since Bloomberg started compiling the data in January 2006. An average of 17.3 billion shares have changed hands daily this year, compared with 9.8 billion shares in 2008.
China’s banking regulator is reviewing commercial lenders’ financing of discounted bills after January’s surge prompted concern about excessive risks, the China Business News reported yesterday, citing unidentified people.
Fortune SGAM Fund Management Co.’s Gabriel Gondard said while there may be examples of companies diverting working funds into the stock market, they are likely to be in the minority.
Working Capital
“Corporates are in need of working capital right now,” said Gondard, who helps oversee about $7.2 billion. “There may be exceptions, but it’s not big enough an impact to explain the rally.”
China’s domestic stock market capitalization has increased by $743.1 billion since November, when the government announced its 4 trillion yuan stimulus plan.
The rally has drawn more Chinese investors. About 224,000 accounts were opened to trade equities on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges last week, the fastest pace in almost two months. That’s still about a quarter of the record 1.07 million set up in the week to Sept. 7, 2007.
The gains in the country’s yuan-denominated shares, restricted to its citizens and approved overseas institutions, contrasts with a decline in shares of Chinese companies listed in Hong Kong, where there are no restrictions on overseas investors. The Hang Seng China Enterprise Index of Chinese companies has lost 7.7 percent this year.
‘Superficial Exuberance’
China’s government bonds may rally with the end of the “superficial exuberance” that drove the surge in bank lending over the last two months, Qu Qing, Shenyin Wanguo’s head of bond research said in an interview today.
Some 64 percent of the new loans were made on a short-term basis, rather than for medium- and long-term investment projects, and these are likely to limit a recovery in the economy, Qu said.
Most of the discounted-bill financing was “behavior by companies” to help meet their funding needs, People’s Bank of China Vice Governor Yi Gang said Feb. 14 during a conference in Beijing. “We should respect the market,” he said.
To contact the reporter on this story: Chua Kong Ho in Shanghai at kchua6@bloomberg.net; Zhang Shidong in Shanghai at szhang4@bloomberg.net
- Ray Dalio on the current state of affairs in the market
- Homebuyer Credit Won’t Stabilize Market, Analysts Say
- Roubini Predicts U.S. Losses May Reach $3.6 Trillion
- Six Errors on the Path to the Financial Crisis
- Who Caused the Financial Crisis?
- Option ARM--The Toxic Mortgage
- Debt Binge--The Perfect Financial Storm
Monday, February 16, 2009
Total Public Debt Outstanding---A Tale of Two Presidents

You can think of the total public debt as accumulated deficits plus accumulated off-budget surpluses. The on-budget deficits require the U.S. Treasury to borrow money to raise cash needed to keep the Government operating. We borrow the money by selling securities like Treasury bills, notes, bonds and savings bonds to the public.
The public debt is what we--as citizens of the United States--owe. In other words, the amount we have allowed our elected officials to borrow. Everyone knows the federal government takes in revenue in the form of taxes and other receipts. The difference between revenue and the amount that is actually spent equals the Public debt. This is also known as Treasury Debt.
- Public debt outstanding January 20, 1993--4,188,092,107,183.60
- Public debt outstanding January 19, 2001--5,727,776,738,304.64
- Under the Clinton administration Public debt increased by $1,539 Trillion
Total outstanding Treasury Debt as of February 12, 2009 is $10,759,196,587,563.44
- Public debt outstanding January 19, 2001--5,727,776,738,304.64
- Public debt outstanding January 20, 2009--10,626,877,048,913.08
- Under the Bush administration Public debt increased by $4,899 Trillion
If you would like to pay off part of the national debt you can write a a check and send it to:
Bureau Of the Public Debt
P. O. Box 2188
Parkersburg, WV 26106-2188
You can look at the numbers above and decide for yourself if the borrowing habits of the Federal government--we the people--effects stock prices. Your IRA and 401 k probably did very well from 1993-2001, not so good from 2001-2009.
Feel free to comment.
If you would like to know the total amount of treasury debt outstanding each day, or learn more about--The Debt to the Penny and Who Holds It--go here.
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More on All American Investor
- Ray Dalio on the current state of affairs in the market
- Homebuyer Credit Won’t Stabilize Market, Analysts Say
- Roubini Predicts U.S. Losses May Reach $3.6 Trillion
- Six Errors on the Path to the Financial Crisis
- Who Caused the Financial Crisis?
- Option ARM--The Toxic Mortgage
- Debt Binge--The Perfect Financial Storm
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Debt Binge--The Perfect Financial Storm

A binge is any behavior indulged to excess.In America, we now have a series of binges coming together to form the perfect financial storm. The components of the perfect storm include:
- excessive governement borrowing from foreigners to finance enormous debt in the public sector,
- excessive borrowing by consumers in the form of mortgages, mortgage refinancings, and credit cards,
- and, the enormous borrowing by investment banks and bank banks to leverage up their balance sheets with credit default swaps.
The most recent of the borrowing binges--the stimulus package. Or should I say--packages.
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If you saw the movie the Perfect Storm you might remember at one point in the movie it appeared that the fishermen on the Andrea Gail had ridden out the perfect storm. For a brief moment, a hole appeared in the sky and the sun peaked through. The fishermen in an almost euphoric moment thought they had ridden out the monster storm. But, as quickly as the sky opened it closed. Soon the ship was being battered with a series of monster waves that kept getting bigger and bigger. In spite of efforts of the fisherman the Andrea Gail was consumed by a giant wave that consumed the boat and sent it to the bottom of the sea. This where we are today in the financial markets.
I am a proponent of the stimulus package. It is better than nothing (nothing equals depression). Nevertheless, the stimulus package is a continuation of the same binge pattern--
curing a debt problem with more debt.
It seems like much of this is happening unnoticed as history unfolds right before our eyes.
The best way out of this trap is a massive inflation that bastardizes the U.S. currency and lessens the debt burden by cheapening it. Of course, there is the Argentinian solution--default.
We should be looking around and noticing that every major economy in the world is wounded. The situation came about because of excessive debt and leveraging--the World Debt Binge.
The cure to excessive debt is savings. The only good thing I hear out there is talk about wringing out the excesses in our government to bring about costs savings and lessen the need for future borrowing. What is the likelihood of that happening soon? In case you haven't noticed over the last 25 years the quickest way to cut costs is to "fire" people. Instead, we are trying to put more people on the government payroll by creating projects funded with government dollars via the stimulus package.
Something has to give. The massive leveraging of the U.S. economy leaves us in debt to the tune of three and a half times times the output of our economy. The big credit card in the sky is being leveraged to the max. What if the lenders pull the plug? The likely result is higher and higher interest rates to finance the borrowing--or worse.
We have not learned our lesson--excessive leverage via borrowing is not a good thing. There are only two possible solutions to this problem: inflation or default. Both are ugly but the only way out of the trap.
Coming soon: Tsunami.
Wednesday, January 07, 2009
Fed Officials Worry Inflation Rates Could Ease Too Much
The Fed’s balance sheet has ballooned from less than $900 billion to more than $2 trillion since September Fed’s efforts to purchase debt “have only just begun.” |



