Economic Recovery

‘For Years to Come’

Posted by John Shipman on November 22, 2010
Deflation, Economy, Federal Reserve, GDP, Housing, Unemployment, Washington / 1 Comment
Better economic growth? It’s way off in the distance.

Capital Economics out today with a thorough, frank and reasoned report on the US economic outlook, taking a look at a host of areas like consumption, investment, external demand, labor market, prices and monetary & fiscal policy. The upshot? Recovery is “likely to remain muted for years to come.”

Let that sink in for a minute. For years to come. Doesn’t seem as if investors have really wrapped their heads around that concept, but the firm builds a pretty compelling case, in straight-forward terms. For example, this simple point:

The fundamental obstacle preventing a return to stronger economic growth is the damage done to the balance sheets of households and financial institutions by the housing bust and
the related financial crisis.

Household deleveraging is “still in its infancy,” the firm says, noting that since the start of 2008, household debt has fallen $470 billion, but half that decline has come because of defaults, not from folks paying off their debt. “Overall, the downward pressures on real incomes and the structural problems caused by high debt and lower asset prices mean that households will not be able to spend freely for at least the next two years.” Continue reading…

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When Did We Become So Afraid of Hardship?

“It’s an old American custom,” the sign says.

We’re not tough enough to take the pain.

That’s why it’s come down to this, citizens — the Fed priming more QE, doing “whatever it takes” to alleviate the hardship. The ceaseless efforts to artificially prop up asset prices. The extraordinary amount of Americans’ monthly personal income now derived directly from Uncle Sam.

It should be much more expedient and ultimately less costly for the government to simply step back and let the economic chips fall where they may. But it’ll hurt, and the nation’s leadership doesn’t think we citizens can handle the sting.

Indeed, we often come across like a society of coddled whiners who can’t stand to even be the slightest bit inconvenienced, never mind subjected to any degree of physical or psychological travail. We can’t handle bad reception on our iPhones, why should the government expect us to deal with the hardship that would come with allowing home prices to reach their natural level, to finally unleash market-clearing prices and probably the failure of more big banks and other institutions? Continue reading…

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Links 5/13/2010

Posted by Steven Russolillo on May 13, 2010
Banks, Economy, Financials, Gold, Internet, Markets, Media, Recession, Retail Sales, Stimulus, Technology, Unemployment, Washington / Comments Off

- A wider probe of Wall Street may ease the heat on Goldman. “If everyone is guilty, nobody is guilty,” Joe Weisenthal writes at Business Insider. “That principle doesn’t apply in a legal sense, but we think it applies in a reputational sense. There’s no good reason to leave Goldman for some other firm, if in the end their behavior was very similar.”

- Determining what caused the financial crisis has taken on a shift in narrative, Mark Thoma notes at Economist’s View. “Fraud, deception, and other questionable if not illegal behaviors are beginning to take on a larger role in the story of what happened to bring about the problems in the financial sector.”

- Gold surged to another all-time high yesterday as fears of EU’s bailout plan represents another “step down the road to severe inflation or debasement of paper currencies, or both,” Tom Petruno says. “And after last week’s stock market ‘flash crash,’ prudence is all the more in vogue.”

- Initial jobless claims dropped 4,000 to 444,000. The four-week moving average also ticked lower to 451,000, a six-week low. But “for an economy that has begun creating jobs again, claims should be running below 400k at this point in the recovery and thus implies that this recovery is not your typical one,” writes Miller Tabak equity strategist Peter Boockvar.

- Claims have been bouncing around 450,000 for much of 2010, and “it’s still unclear if claims will break through this floor any time soon,” James Picerno says. Still, two months of job growth have renewed hope, suggesting either jobless claims will finally begin to tail off or the rebound in nonfarm payrolls will stall out. If that happens, investors should watch out.

- Adobe (ADBE) hearts Apple (AAPL) in its latest newspaper ad. And it was only a matter of time before the Adobe founders jumped into the Apple-Adobe-Flash fray. They published their own essay about the importance of open standards on a new section of Adobe’s website dedicated to choice.

- Recovery chatter is running rampant, especially with retail sales up and the labor market improving. But Mike Shedlock, an investment advisor for SitkaPacific Capital, still isn’t convinced. “Believe what you want, but I refuse to believe a recovery is in progress when federal income tax collections are off a half trillion dollars, and state after state is still showing declining revenue,” Shedlock says.

- Rumored BlackBerry tablet doesn’t sound so hot. Boy Genius Report confirms the device will be 9.9″ large and should be ready for a December launch. But “RIM employees have privately voiced their frustration to us regarding this initiative,” BGR says.

- “It’s not a promising sign for RIM if its own employees are thinking the BlackBerry tablet will be DOA,” Jay Yarow writes at Silicon Alley Insider. “Overall, the tablet sounds pretty dull and uninspired.”

- “History books will one day describe this stretch as one of the most interesting and important junctures ever for the financial market construct,” Todd Harrison writes at Minyanville. “The script is still being written, which is why we need proactive stair-step solutions rather than reactive blame and haphazard policy. I’m not exaggerating when I say the future of free-market capitalism hangs in the balance.”

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Make Hay While the Sun’s Shining, Investor Class

Posted by Steven Russolillo on April 20, 2010
Economic Indicators, Economy, Markets, Unemployment / Comments Off
Yes, we're feeling very confident. Can't you tell?

We're just giddy over the market's certainty.

For Main Street, there are still considerable uncertainties out there. Wages, sans government transfers, are stagnant. Good-paying jobs, the kind that aren’t temporary for example, remain scarce. Taxes are almost certainly going up – at some point and by some amount.

But for Wall Street and the investor class, the times couldn’t be better, University of Oregon economics professor Tim Duy says.

The economy’s sitting in a “sweet spot” right now as far as the Street’s concerned, as the recovery is moving “fast enough to push corporate profits upward, not fast enough to attract the attention of the Fed,” Duy says.

“The combination of steady, solid growth with low interest rate and no inflation is about as good as it can get for Wall Street — the sudden work ethic on the part of SEC officials notwithstanding,” he notes.

And with the Fed still holding to its “extended period” pledge so far as keeping interest rates pinned to the floor, investors are experiencing “considerable certainty” in the near-term, Duy adds. “And that certainty is a valuable commodity.”

Yes, he has a point that near-zero interest rates combined with solid growth and high unemployment creates a great environment for stocks to push higher. But, as the stock market keeps running up, we can’t forget the only thing certain about the market is its uncertain nature.

Continue reading…

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