Nov
25
Posted (Van Santos) in Business on November-25-2009

I was shocked this morning to see the large drop in the USDX; however, I’m near speechless at the loss suffered by the index.  At the end of NYSE trading today the USDX was down 1.17% (-.88) to 74.24, virtually at the low of the session.

India’s decision to buy gold and the Fed comments on rates helped drive the dollar down, but remember there is very little support in the index until 72.00.  I have no doubt that we’ll see a pullback in the next week, however, testing the 72 floor seems to be closers than ever. While I had expected to bounce around that target until Feb of next year, I wouldn’t be surprised to see that by the end of the year 09 OR early Jan 2010.

Anything can happen, yes. The government may change fiscal policy, yes.  As long as the economy is weak, and the feds keep the rates low, the dollar will continue to head south. The lower it goes will also lead to selling pressure by those who invested in the currency. You very well may be witnessing the death of the dollar and as a result you should really be asking yourself how you will protect your future.

Think about it before you wake up one day with half of the purchasing power you have today.



 
Nov
25
Posted (Van Santos) in Business on November-25-2009

Yes, nothing goes straight up or down but the large drop in the dollar (USDX) over night made me say “WOW!” when I check my usual sources this morning. At of this very moment the dollar index sits at 74.53, or a drop of .55 in the last 12 hours.

There wasn’t much “bad” news, per se, that would be driving the drop. The one story that really caught my attention, and is most likely helping the drop, is the latest news that India was looking to buy more gold from the IMF. Obviously, the price of gold has also seen some action in response to the news – hitting another all time high.

Watching the market overnight makes me wonder if the economists expecting a drop of 6.4% vs. the Euro next year is an “optimistic” view.



 
Nov
24
Posted (Van Santos) in Business on November-24-2009

For the last two months I have been talking about the death of the dollar. My conclusion, along with others who watch the financial world, is government policy has placed the dollar at risk in the global market.  The days of the U.S. Dollar acting as the world reserve currency is coming to an end, which will have negative long term effects on the U.S. economy.

While there is no one single reason that I have come to this conclusion, it is clear that the economic indicators are lining up for such a situation to occur.  The speed of such an event is unpredictable, some people are saying within the next year while others are pointing for the death to take place over the next decade.  In the end there is no single answer, and a number of events dictate if (or when) such a thing would even happen; however, economic analysts are calling for the dollar to depreciate 6.4 percent versus the euro next year unless the U.S. changes economic policy soon.

It is one thing for bloggers and economic watchers to call out trends, it is another when economists who work in the financial market to point out the problem.  Without action by the Fed (raising rates, cutting funds) the dollar is in trouble on the world market.



 
Nov
19
Posted (Van Santos) in Business on November-19-2009

In my mind the U.S. debt it out of control.  Coming in at $12.1 trillion and growing countless people are wondering how the Government will be able to service the debt with an economy that is flat or contracting.

The short, very possible, answer is that will be unable to do so.  While the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office has sounded the alarm in the past some very shocking number are out from a number of sources – data that should make everyone take notice.

  • Half of the debt ($4.8T) built over the next 10 years will be interest on existing debt
  • Interest due in 2015 will be $533 Billion or 1/3rd of ALL federal income taxes collected for that year
  • Roughly 40% of U.S government debt will need to be refinanced within the next year

The real question is this: What happens if (when) the U.S. cannot service the debt? Oh, yea. Maybe that is part of the reason why people are fleeing the dollar as an investment.



 
Nov
18
Posted (Van Santos) in Business on November-18-2009

A number of things to take note of

Alvaro de Molina, GMAC Financial Service head, out

Only 19 months as head of the troubled financial services unit, not a good sign, and he was kicked out by the board no less. I wonder how much this action speaks about the current condition of the company. Michael Carpenter is taking over who, ironically, was a director at the now in bankruptcy CIT Group.

And speaking of CIT – Goldman Sachs goes after the business

One major worry about the CIT bankruptcy was the ability for small business to obtain credit.  While contracting is still taking place, it looks like Goldman Sachs is going after CIT business while the company is in bankruptcy. The story doesn’t explicitly state it, but when you are targeting 10,000 small business customers for credit – and the company that would service such a market is in ruin – not hard to put the pieces together.

Oh, yea, and on the topic of taxes

Yesterday I posted a graphic from mint.com regarding taxes in the US. As I did not go into more detail, I want to point out one thing – 5% of the population pays 60% of the income taxes.

President Obama warns of double dip recession

Just a few short months ago President Obama was standing in front of congress, touting his policies, and taking credit for the “economic recovery”.  Today he is warning that his very same policies could fuel a double dip recession. A number of people have been saying this for months – myself included: Chances for the recession to pick up next year are near 100% once government spending stops.

People needs to come to terms with high jobless numbers, lower paying jobs, and a lower standard of living.  How is that for change?

The Dollar

The USDX is quickly heading back toward 75 today, and gold has hit another high.  The signs as to why this is happening are just all over, people just need to look. Despite the administration saying they have a strong dollar policy there is little evidence to support those claims.

Finally, the post office records huge loss – again

The post office recorded a $3.8 Billion dollar loss and, once again, is thinking of cutting Saturday service. How the USPS is around still amazes me.  Most mail I get is junk, nothing of any value.  FedEx and UPS have put them to shame and can provide better, quicker, services… All the USPS manages to do is drive up cost, cut employees and watch satisfaction ratings drop…

Note to President Obama – as others have pointed out, using the USPS as to a ’successful’ government run program is a poor move, especially when trying to pitch health care.



 
Nov
16
Posted (Van Santos) in Business on November-16-2009

The dollar index (USDX) closed below the critical support level of 75.00 today – during the trading day, as well as the calendar day. Keep an eye on the chart below for the next several days.  

With little support between 75 and 72, it would be very interesting to see how the market reacts. Especially when government like China come out and say U.S. fiscal policy threatens the global economic recovery, especially since this comment came right after China talked about keeping the yuan strong rather healthy.



 
Nov
11
Posted (Van Santos) in Business on November-11-2009

Did anyone watch the action of the dollar today?

As I was unavailable most of the day I was unable to see the action until I got home but the dollar once again broke through the 75.00 mark – all the way down to a low of 74.77.  As the trading day was coming to an end the USDX managed to make it back above the 75.00, also known as what traders sometimes call the support level.

A number of people I speak to think 75 is a critical support level as there is very little in the way of support on the way down to the next major support level of 72.  When 72 breaks all bets are off the table.  This action is interesting to note, however, as the dollar manages to get back to support by the end of the day and has consistently done so over the past several weeks.

My question focuses on what happens when the dollar closes below that psychological level? As a betting man I would guess a movement lower from a mid-term perspective. We have to remember that investments rarely just go to zero (delisting of stocks/bonds aside).  What is often seen is a zig zag pattern – one step forward and two back.  While I would expect the USDX to find its way to the area around 72, it will not be a straight drop.

While a number of events are pushing the dollar lower the news of the day that may explain the action is this: China Signals That It May Allow Currency to Rise Against Dollar.

This is yet another signal, along with moving to a basket in place of the U.S. note as the reserve currency and not selling oil in dollars, that points to the U.S. dollar falling.  If China strengthens the yuan the government is providing a clear sign they have concern about the rise in property and equity prices within their country.

They are moving to prevent inflation.

From the U.S. perspective Chinese goods will become more expensive, possibly impacting the U.S. economy, and it also signals to the world that China is no longer interested in the dollar as an investment.  Also, the possible move to strengthen the yuan can be seen as retaliation for President Obama’s protectionist economic decisions that end up negatively impacting China.

Interesting times we all live in.



 
Nov
10
Posted (Van Santos) in Business on November-10-2009

Over the last several weeks a number of economic events have taken place that really concern me. For some time I’ve held the view that the economic recovery being reported by the media and government is anything but.

The Capmark and CIT bankruptcies
Capmark, the former GMAC commercial real estate mortgage lender, declared bankruptcy on October 25th. This mortgage lender happens to be one of the largest in the United States but what does this event really dictate?  The weakness in retail sales is being felt on all levels and is expected to carry on to other CRE lenders.  Translation – the Capmark bankruptcy was the first in a number of coming CRE lenders going bust.
CIT, one of the largest commercial and consumer financing companies, also declared bankruptcy. CIT is to small business credit what Lehman was to the derivatives market.  While the sudden impacts of a CIT bankruptcy may not be noticeable to the consumer, small business will feel the impact shortly as the company is only expected to provide roughly 20% of the loans they issued last year.
Such a situation will mean that small business will need to find other credit sources or go without.  With credit already in contraction that will mean the requirements are going to be higher in order to obtain credit and/or the interest rates will be significantly higher.  All of this points to a small business
market with limited or no credit.
Much like the residential real estate market collapsed so will the Commercial Real Estate market and the effects will be felt by some of the largest banks in the U.S. The commercial and consumer financing collapse at CIT also advances the effects, all of which point to further credit restriction in the next 8 to 12 months.
This past earnings season
Did you notice this past earning season was a blow out?  Companies the financial pundits expect to report poor results did not and everyone was celebrating.  I mean, really, the DOW broke 10,000 again on the news.
CSX, the transportation giant, turned a profit of .74 cents per share. Alcoa recorded their first profit in more than a year, equipment giant Caterpillar turned a profit of .60 cents a share, Du Pont profits jumped 11%, GE posted a $2.5B net income… and the story can go on and on of positive news.
It’s a sham.
CSX turned a profit on revenue that was down 23%, Alcoa’s shipments were down by sequentially, the sales at Caterpillar fell 41%, Du Pont saw revenue fall 18% and GE’s revenue fell by 20%.
What people are seeing as a “positive” economic recovery is actually the result of major companies performing cost cutting.  On the majority, revenues in the large S&P companies were down year over year showing NO sign of improvement.
Stabilization, yes. Improvement, no.
The problem with this earnings season isn’t what took place here, rather what will happen in 6 months when it is obvious that companies can no longer cut costs without cutting in their ability to remain operational, or what will take place when people take notice to the fact that the holiday sales for 2009 will be flat – if no lower – than 2008?
Easy.  Everyday people will wake up to the lack of a recovery, leading to consumers spending less.  The impact will be felt in organizations as layoffs increase and more companies going under.
Not trying to be all negative, there were two really impressive notes from the 3Q earning season  – Apple and Amazon.  Both companies provided outstanding results on the bottom line and on revenue.
Oh, and about the dollar and gold…
There is something scary going on in the Gold and Dollar markets.
The dollar is bouncing index (USDX) is bouncing around the 75.00 support level, which is a drop of nearly 15 points since the start of 2009.
Why is this happening? Easy, the dollar is experiencing the world moving away from it as an investment vehicle due to the roughly trillion dollars the Federal Reserve has pumped into the system over the last 12 months.
Essentially, the Fed is literally making money out of nothing there by diluting the current currency value and the world market wants nothing to do with it.
Iran has stated they will not sell oil in dollars, rather a basked of currencies and gold. Russia, China, Turkey have all suggested the same possibility. As to add insult to injury all of the above countries have stated the U.S. dollar should no longer be the world’s reserve currency.
And since there is no other true reserve currency where is all the money going? It’s going into gold.
India recently purchased 403.3 tons of gold, which pushed the price up to an all time high over $1,100 an ounce. China and Russia are also fighting to purchase 200 tons of the glitter from the IMF as a safety net. There are cases being reported worldwide of such events – major world governments and banks making large (or huge) gold purchases, and they are doing so in order to protect themselves from the falling dollar.
The world sees the coming economic issues and they are doing their best to protect themselves.  For those who suggest that China would never let the dollar collapse due to their investments needs to think again.  They are selling off their dollar positions in small amounts and buying HUGE stocks of commodities.
And where does this lead us?
One day in the not too distant future the world will see an event that really catches them off guard, and as with other currency collapses, there will be not apparent reason for it. One day the dollar will make a large, if not unprecedented, turn downward. This will lead to massive and rapid inflation of specific goods… namely the commodities that China (and other world governments) have been stocking up on. The price of food will elevate quickly while the cost of your wonderful LCD TV will fall.
The rapid inflation will lead to small businesses trying to find cash to run operations, but guess what, the commercial financing market is going to be at a trickle thanks to the collapse of CIT and the restricted credit market. Oil prices will rise rapidly leading to the U.S. trucking and transportation industry straight into a depression. Commercial real estate will continue to collapse as people will be spending money on food, not on clothing, cars and electronics.  As a results, banks will feel the pinch.
Truly, we are in the perfect storm of economic events.  But what is the solution?
The answer comes down to our government and their willingness to mop-up the nearly trillion dollars in excess liquidity, as well as their actions to cut the level of U.S. debt.  Problem being, doing so will pull the legs out of the already weak economy.
In the end, it comes down to picking the lesser of two evils – preventing the collapse of the dollar or allowing the country to officially go back into a recession. The actions by this administration, as well as the past administration, have shown a history of poor critical decision making skills.  At this point, I would expect the worst and hope of things staying where they are today…

With port traffic down year over year close to 18%, hotel rentals down roughly 14%, car sales down from 20% to 40% (post stimulus), unemployment rising and consumer confidence falling, it is clear the average consumer isn’t coming back to the purchasing table. As the consumer accounts for roughly 65% of the economic activity in the U.S. this is a problem if we are to believe in a recovery. In conjunction with the above, a number of other things have taken place that only go to create the possible trigger for the next economic meltdown.

The Capmark and CIT bankruptcies

Capmark, the former GMAC commercial real estate mortgage lender, declared bankruptcy on October 25th. This mortgage lender happens to be one of the largest in the United States but what does this event really dictate?  The weakness in retail sales is being felt on all levels and is expected to carry on to other CRE lenders.  Translation – the Capmark bankruptcy was the first in a number of coming CRE lenders going bust.

CIT, one of the largest commercial and consumer financing companies, also declared bankruptcy. CIT is to small business credit what Lehman was to the derivatives market.  While the sudden impacts of a CIT bankruptcy may not be noticeable to the consumer, small business will feel the impact shortly as the company is only expected to provide roughly 20% of the loans they issued last year.

Such a situation will mean that small business will need to find other credit sources or go without.  With credit already in contraction that will mean the requirements are going to be higher in order to obtain credit and/or the interest rates will be significantly higher.  All of this points to a small business market with limited or no credit.

Much like the residential real estate market collapsed so will the Commercial Real Estate market and the effects will be felt by some of the largest banks in the U.S. The commercial and consumer financing collapse at CIT also advances the effects, all of which point to further credit restriction in the next 8 to 12 months.

This past earnings season

Did you notice this past earning season was a blow out?  Companies the financial pundits expect to report poor results did not and everyone was celebrating.  I mean, really, the DOW broke 10,000 again on the news.

CSX, the transportation giant, turned a profit of .74 cents per share. Alcoa recorded their first profit in more than a year, equipment giant Caterpillar turned a profit of .60 cents a share, Du Pont profits jumped 11%, GE posted a $2.5B net income… and the story can go on and on of positive news.

It’s a sham.

CSX turned a profit on revenue that was down 23%, Alcoa’s shipments were down by sequentially, the sales at Caterpillar fell 41%, Du Pont saw revenue fall 18% and GE’s revenue fell by 20%.

What people are seeing as a “positive” economic recovery is actually the result of major companies performing cost cutting.  On the majority, revenues in the large S&P companies were down year over year showing NO sign of improvement.

Stabilization, yes. Improvement, no.

The problem with this earnings season isn’t what took place here, rather what will happen in 6 months when it is obvious that companies can no longer cut costs without cutting in their ability to remain operational, or what will take place when people take notice to the fact that the holiday sales for 2009 will be flat – if no lower – than 2008?

Easy.  Everyday people will wake up to the lack of a recovery, leading to consumers spending less.  The impact will be felt in organizations as layoffs increase and more companies going under.

Not trying to be all negative, there were two really impressive notes from the 3Q earning season  – Apple and Amazon.  Both companies provided outstanding results on the bottom line and on revenue.

Oh, and about the dollar and gold…

There is something scary going on in the Gold and Dollar markets.

The dollar is bouncing index (USDX) is bouncing around the 75.00 support level, which is a drop of nearly 15 points since the start of 2009.

Why is this happening? Easy, the dollar is experiencing the world moving away from it as an investment vehicle due to the roughly trillion dollars the Federal Reserve has pumped into the system over the last 12 months.

Essentially, the Fed is literally making money out of nothing there by diluting the current currency value and the world market wants nothing to do with it.

Iran has stated they will not sell oil in dollars, rather a basked of currencies and gold. Russia, China, Turkey have all suggested the same possibility. As to add insult to injury all of the above countries have stated the U.S. dollar should no longer be the world’s reserve currency.

And since there is no other true reserve currency where is all the money going? It’s going into gold.

India recently purchased 403.3 tons of gold, which pushed the price up to an all time high over $1,100 an ounce. China and Russia are also fighting to purchase 200 tons of the glitter from the IMF as a safety net. There are cases being reported worldwide of such events – major world governments and banks making large (or huge) gold purchases, and they are doing so in order to protect themselves from the falling dollar.

The world sees the coming economic issues and they are doing their best to protect themselves.  For those who suggest that China would never let the dollar collapse due to their investments needs to think again.  They are selling off their dollar positions in small amounts and buying HUGE stocks of commodities.

And where does this lead us?

One day in the not too distant future the world will see an event that really catches them off guard, and as with other currency collapses, there will be not apparent reason for it. One day the dollar will make a large, if not unprecedented, turn downward. This will lead to massive and rapid inflation of specific goods… namely the commodities that China (and other world governments) have been stocking up on. The price of food will elevate quickly while the cost of your wonderful LCD TV will fall.

The rapid inflation will lead to small businesses trying to find cash to run operations, but guess what, the commercial financing market is going to be at a trickle thanks to the collapse of CIT and the restricted credit market. Oil prices will rise rapidly leading to the U.S. trucking and transportation industry straight into a depression. Commercial real estate will continue to collapse as people will be spending money on food, not on clothing, cars and electronics.  As a results, banks will feel the pinch.

Truly, we are in the perfect storm of economic events.  But what is the solution?

The answer comes down to our government and their willingness to mop-up the nearly trillion dollars in excess liquidity, as well as their actions to cut the level of U.S. debt.  Problem being, doing so will pull the legs out of the already weak economy.

In the end, it comes down to picking the lesser of two evils – preventing the collapse of the dollar or allowing the country to officially go back into a recession. The actions by this administration, as well as the past administration, have shown a history of poor critical decision making skills.

I understand that anything can happen and the economic world is “alive”.  Literally, things can change in a second; however, too many things have taken place and are all pointing in one direction. The best way to summarize the events we face is in a quote from the classic HBO series – Deadwood.

Wild Bill Hickok: You know the sound of thunder, Mrs. Garret?

Alma Garret: Of course.

Wild Bill Hickok: Can you imagine that sound if I asked you to?

Alma Garret: Yes, I can, Mr. Hickok.

Wild Bill Hickok: Your husband and me had this talk, and I told him to head home to avoid a dark result. But I didn’t say it in thunder. Ma’am, listen to the thunder.

Listen to the thunder, folks…



 
Oct
22
Posted (Van Santos) in Business on October-22-2009

Notice that little dollar chart on the right hand side? Yea, that is there to track the current USDX index (Dollar Index). Over the last several months the dollar has been falling in value, in large part to all the printing the Federal Reserve has done, and the decline has quickened in recent months.

As the move downward take place, other governments in the world will migrate away from the dollar (bonds) as an investment, also as a means of transaction, in return of more stable investments. One has to ask when that is go to happen.

For now, any attempt to put a floor under the dollar’s exchange rate is expected to remain rhetorical, with actual market interventions by central banks unlikely — especially if China won’t change its currency policy.

But with the dollar sagging against the euro, the yen and a host of other peers, policymakers around the world are voicing worries a weak dollar will dampen their still-shaky economic recoveries. A falling dollar hits exporting countries because they find it more difficult to sell their products to the U.S.

A weak dollar also raises the cost of commodities such as oil, which are priced in the U.S. currency.

So far, currency traders have largely ignored escalating rhetoric from government officials. They pushed the euro above $1.50 on Wednesday for the first time in 14 months and it has hovered round that level all day Thursday.

And the dollar could get weaker yet, if the stock market rally has further legs. That’s because dollar investments were used as a refuge as markets tanked. Now that markets are rising, that money is flowing back out of the dollar safe haven into stocks or emerging-market currencies.

For the U.S. to agree to intervene, however, the current dollar decline will have to turn into a rout. President Barack Obama’s administration says it wants a strong dollar — but the fact is, a weaker dollar helps exports and the U.S. recovery.

“Unless the dollar collapses, the U.S. is unlikely to feel compelled to adjust its policy levers,” said Bank of New York Mellon currency strategist Neil Mellor.

And what happens if the dollar does weaken further, will there be a rush away from it?

Will the US step in to place a floor?

Inflation?