Saturday, May 23, 2009

Look who waste our taxpayer money !!!

5/23/09

The Administration is starting to face some resistance in Congress about its plan to put GM (GM) into Chapter 11 using Treasury money to sustain the company as it works it way back to profitability. The government put another $4 billion into the car company yesterday. In the process of a government supported bankruptcy, $27 billion in bondholder capital will probably become worthless, GM workers will be laid off, and hundreds of dealers will be closed.

Fundamentally, taxpayer money will be used to restructure GM in such a way that thousands of taxpayers will lose their jobs.

According to the FT, “hopes that GM can follow a similarly rapid path through court are being dimmed by a building backlash from lawmakers, some of whom are claiming that creditors’ rights are being given short shrift while others complain about job cuts and the closure of dealerships.”

The argument by Congressmen who are opposed to the process may get some “traction”. Blue collar workers around the country should be enraged by seeing their peers being thrown out of jobs with support from the Treasury. Local towns and cities will have to support workers at dealerships that close. Financial firms will have to ask themselves if their rights could ever be undermined by a process driven by the financial might of the American government.

Of course the entire GM restructuring process will raise national unemployment.

As the pockets of resistance grow, GM may not has as easy a path through a bankruptcy court has Chrysler has had.

My comment: WTF our government doing??! Another $4 Billion. Another ?Billion there..maybe Trillion...Damn. I know America is going to be broke for sure. We are doomed 100%.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Truth about Option ARM !!


5/20/09

U.S.

Alt-A active: $469 billion

When we talk about the $500 billion in Alt-A mortgages this is what we are talking about. Last time I checked $469 billion does not mean the problem has gone away. Businessweek came out with a chart only last month showing how Pay Option ARMs will be recasting over the next few years: See above Chart

I’ve added a reference point for all those people who seem to think that Option ARMs and Alt-A loans have somehow disappeared from the market. The game is just starting. Currently, we are seeing less than $2 billion per month of these loans recasting. However, in 2010 we are going to start seeing $8 to $10 billion per month recast, nearly 5 times the current rate. The chart states “months to 1st reset” but they are referring to recasts brought on by negative amortization. And as you will see, since the majority of these loans are in California the bulk are underwater Jacque Cousteau style.

The above I reprint from other blogger. Folks, the real game is just started. I am expecting more foreclosure coming for whole country with no end in sight. And I do not see our stock market would doing any good later part of year.



Monday, May 18, 2009

Bulls Trap again??


5/18/09

What do we have today? Another gap up Bulls trading day again. However, it will pullback tomorrow morning hours. The intermediate term high has been reached and I remain bearish. Is this another bulls trap?! These days there are too many bad news going on and I have been very very disappointed about our government action. Good luck.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Sucker Rally!!

5/10/09

Merrill's economist David Rosenberg left the firm yesterday (planned for several months). And he went out swinging. David has maintained from the beginning that the recent rocket rally off the lows is just a suckers' rally, and he reiterated that view as he walked through the doors.

Some excerpts from his swan song, which was published Thursday:

Market likely to peak the end of the week [Yesterday]. Just as the clock is winding down on my tenure at Merrill Lynch, the equity market is winding up with an impressive near-40% rally in just nine weeks. For those that were still long the equity market back at the March 9 lows, a good ‘devil’s advocate’ exercise would be to ask yourself the question whether you would have taken the opportunity, if the offer had been presented, to have sold out your position with a 40% premium at the time. What do you think you would have said back then, as fears of financial Armageddon were setting in? We haven’t conducted a poll, but we are sure at least 90% of the longs at that point would have screamed “hit the bid!”

Are we at risk of missing the turn? Fast forward to today, and within two months optimism seems to have yet again replaced fear. Are we at risk of missing the turn? What if this is the real deal — a
new bull market? This is the question that economists, strategists and market analysts must answer.

Risk is much higher now than it was 18 weeks ago. The nine-week S&P 500 surge from 666 at the March lows to 920 as of yesterday has all but retraced the prior nine-week decline from the 2009 peak of 945 on January 6 to the lows on March 9. We believe it is appropriate to put the last nine weeks in the perspective of the previous nine weeks. To the casual observer, it really looks like nothing at all has happened this year, with the market relatively unchanged. But something very big has happened because the risk in the market, in our view, is much higher than it was the last time we were close to current market prices back in early January, for the simple reason that we believe professional investors have covered their shorts, lifted their hedges and lowered their cash positions in favor of being long the market.

Employment, output, income, sales still in a downtrend. Considering what transpired from an economic standpoint, the decline in the first nine weeks of the year was rather appropriate in the midst of the worst three-quarter performance the economy has turned in roughly 70 years. The rally of the past nine weeks appears to be rooted in green shoots. While it may be the case that the pace of economic decline is no longer as negative as it was at the peak of the post-Lehman credit contraction, the reality is that employment, output, organic personal income and retail sales are still in a fundamental downtrend.

Need to see an improvement in the first derivative. We have evidence that the consumer, after a first-quarter up-tick that was front- loaded into January, is relapsing in the current quarter despite the tax relief (didn’t we see this movie last year?). Not until improvement in the second derivative morphs into improvement in the first derivative with respect to the important economic data will it really be safe to declare what we are seeing as something more than a bear market rally, as impressive as it has been.

This is a bear market rally that may have run its course. The investing public is still holding tightly to their long-term resolve, but much of the buying power at the institutional level seems to have largely run its course, in our view. That leaves us with the opinion, as tenuous as it seems in the face of this market melt-up, that this is indeed a bear market rally and one that may well have run its course. We have “round-tripped” from the beginning of the year and there is real excitement in the air about how these last nine weeks represent evidence that the economy will begin expanding sometime in the second half of the year.

Growth pickup will likely prove transitory While it is likely that headline GDP will improve as inventory withdrawal subsides and fiscal policy stimulus kicks in, our view is that whatever growth pickup we will see will prove to be as transitory as it was in 2002, when under similar conditions the market ultimately succumbed to a very disappointing limping post-recession recovery. So yes, there may well be some improvement in the GDP data, but it is based largely on transitory factors. We strongly believe it is premature to totally rule out the end of the vicious cycle of real estate deflation – residential and now commercial – that we have been experiencing since 2007. Balance sheet compression in the household sector will continue to pressure the personal savings rate higher at the expense of discretionary consumer spending. This is a secular development, meaning that we expect it will last several more years.

Chances of a re-test of the March lows are non-trivial. To reiterate, it seems to us likely that the risk in the market is actually higher today than it was back at the same price points in early January, and we say that with all deference to the stress tests (which given the less-than-dire economic scenarios, along with the changes to mark-to-market accounting, were destined to reveal healthy results). While the consensus seems gripped with the burden of trying to decide if there is too much risk to be out of the market, we actually still believe that the chances of a re-test of the March lows are non-trivial, especially if the widely touted second-half economic rebound fails to materialize...

The data flow is less relevant this cycle than in the past. This was not a manufacturing inventory cycle, which makes the data flow less relevant than in the past. Real estate values are still deflating and the unemployment rate is still climbing; these are critical variables in determining the willingness of lenders to extend credit. And as we just saw in the Fed’s Senior Loan Officer Survey, while there may be a ‘thaw’ in the financial markets, banks are still maintaining tight guidelines. In fact, the weekly Fed data are now flagging the most intense declines in bank lending to households and businesses ever recorded.

The best case is that this is a bear market rally. All of this has not precluded an elastic band bounce from an egregiously oversold low in the S&P 500, and perhaps we will even test the 200-day moving average of 960 (as the 10-year note yield and NASDAQ just did). But we still do not believe what we are seeing fits the hallmark of a new bull market. In our view, the best case is that this is a bear market rally, but one that clearly has more legs than its predecessors this cycle.

My comment: One more economist join the roll that this is another sucker rally. Folks, this is not bulls market. Period!

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Still overbought !!!

5/6/09

All major stock indexes are still propelling upward even in super overbought condition. However, it is getting closer to have a big correction/pullback. It should not be any buying here unless you are daytrading. Bank Stress testing result will be annoucned after tomorrow market close and there will be non-farm payroll number report on Friday. Would these two factors can give the excuse for sell off??!

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

My Chinese Blog about technical stock charting !!

5/5/09

Please go to cigstockchart.blogspot.com. to see the chinese version.