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Monday, September 7, 2009

Citigroup 2006: America - A Modern Day Plutonomy

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Surfing around this weekend I happened upon some review's of Michael Moore's "Capitalism: A Love Story". Reading some of the UK paper's view of the movie, I saw an interesting reference to an internal 2006 Citigroup memo regarding "America, which has turned into a modern day plutonomy". With the wonders of the internets (sic) I was able to unearth at least part of the report, which frankly pretty much reinforces things that are plainly obvious.

In a "plutonomy", according to Citigroup global strategist Ajay Kapur, economic growth is powered by and largely consumed by the wealthy few.


If this wealth concentration in a democracy is good, bad, or indifferent is the subject for an entirely different blog but that's neither here or there right now.


According to new Internal Revenue Service data announced last week, income inequality in the U.S. is at its worst since the 1920s (before the Great Depression). The top percentile of wealthy Americans earned 21.2% of all income in 2005, up from 19% in 2004, while the bottom 50% of wage earners earned 12.8% that year, down from 13.4% a year earlier.


More interesting are what the views are from within investment banking circles on why the economy acts differently than it used to as wealth is concentrated in a level seen in the States similar to only the 1920s. Below is at least part of the report; a quite fascinating read - I've also attached at the bottom of this post an entry in the Wall Street Journal Blog section from January 2007 - which does a quick summary of the report's findings/opinion. I vaguely remember reading about this at the time, but now in retrospect - after what has happened in the financial system - it is interesting from a totally different prism.

[sidenote: 1 bit of humor - Citigroup listed "financial crisis" as one of the threats to the plutonomy status quo. Oh, irony.]

Now that it has become clear that unlike the 1930s where this historic concentration of wealth was reversed for a good 4 decades post crisis, that this time around a financial crisis is actually serving to concentrate wealth even further, it might be helpful to readers to see how the entrenched money thinks on how to benefit from it. Basically the same way you'd invest in feudal Europe in the 1400s - avoid the peasants, stick with the lords. I don't see this changing anytime soon - as I said in 2007, in time you will not want to have anything to do with the bottom 80% of the country; it won't be a fun place to be. [Dec 8, 2007: Do the Bottom 80% of Americans Stand a Chance?] I think in the nearly 2 years since written, the fissures I spoke about have already begun to widen considerably.


Citigroup Oct 16, 2005 Plutonomy Report Part 1

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From the WSJ Blog:


It’s well known that the rich have an outsized influence on the economy.

The nation’s top 1% of households own more than half the nation’s stocks, according to the Federal Reserve. They also control more than $16 trillion in wealth — more than the bottom 90%.

Yet a new body of research from Citigroup suggests that the rich have other, more-surprising impacts on the economy.

Ajay Kapur, global strategist at Citigroup, and his research team came up with the term “Plutonomy” in 2005 to describe a country that is defined by massive income and wealth inequality.

In a series of research notes over the past year, Kapur and his team explained that Plutonomies have three basic characteristics.

1. They are all created by “disruptive technology-driven productivity gains, creative financial innovation, capitalist friendly cooperative governments, immigrants…the rule of law and patenting inventions. Often these wealth waves involve great complexity exploited best by the rich and educated of the time.”

2. There is no “average” consumer in Plutonomies. There is only the rich “and everyone else.” The rich account for a disproportionate chunk of the economy, while the non-rich account for “surprisingly small bites of the national pie.” Kapur estimates that in 2005, the richest 20% may have been responsible for 60% of total spending.

3. Plutonomies are likely to grow in the future, fed by capitalist-friendly governments, more technology-driven productivity and globalization.

Kapur says that once we understand the Plutonomy, we can solve some of the recent mysteries of the American economy. For instance, some economists have been puzzled (especially last year) about why wild swings in oil prices have had only muted effects on consumer spending.

Kapur’s explanation: the Plutonomy. Since the rich don’t care about higher oil prices, and they dominate spending, higher oil prices don’t matter as much to total consumer spending.

The Plutonomy also could explain larger “imbalances” such as the national debt level. The rich are so comfortably rich, Kapur explains, that they have started spending higher shares of their incomes on luxuries. They borrow much larger amounts than the “average consumer,” so they have an exaggerated impact on the nation’s debt levels and savings rates. Yet because the rich still have plenty of wealth and healthy balance sheets, their borrowing shouldn’t be a cause for concern.

In other words, much of the nation’s lower savings rate is due to borrowing by the rich. So we should worry less about the “over-stretched” average consumer.

Finally, the Plutonomy helps explain why companies that serve the rich are posting some of the strongest growth and profits these days. “The Plutonomy is here, is going to get stronger, its membership swelling” he wrote in one research note. “Toys for the wealthy have pricing power, and staying power.”

To prove his point, he created a “Plutonomy Basket” of stocks, filled with companies that sell to the rich. The auction house Sotheby’s is on the list, along with fashion houses Bulgari, Burberry and Hermes, hotelier Four Seasons, private-banker Julius Baer and jeweler Tiffany’s. Kapur says the basket has risen an average of 17% a year over the past year, outperforming the MSCI World Index.

Of course, Kapur says there are risks to the Plutonomy, including war, inflation, financial crises, the end of the technological revolution and populist political pressure. Yet he maintains that the “the rich are likely to keep getting even richer, and enjoy an even greater share of the wealth pie over the coming years.”

All of which means that, like it or not, inequality isn’t going away and may become even more pronounced in the coming years. The best way for companies and businesspeople to survive in Plutonomies, Kapur implies, is to disregard the “mass” consumer and focus on the increasingly rich market of the rich. A tough message — but one worth considering.

Bookkeeping: Weekly Changes to Fund Positions Year 3, Week 5

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Year 3, Week 5 Major Position Changes

To see historic weekly fund changes click here OR the label at the bottom of this entry entitled 'fund positions'.

Cash: 72.5% (v 65.8% last week)
22 long bias: 14.1% (v 12.2% last week)
9 short bias: 13.5% (v 22.0% last week) *includes long term puts

31 positions (vs 36 last week)

Weekly thoughts
After a moderate selloff to start the week, (almost) all was forgiven by a rally late in the week including the traditional post 3:30 PM mark up Thursday, followed by the traditional "all economic news is good news" rally after the jobs report Friday morning. There was a few scary moments early in the week where it seemed economic news mattered but thankfully that ended in short order, and we could get back to what is rightfully ours as a nation - an upward trending market.

As we can see by the charts, this was the 2nd week in three where the major indexes broke below the lightest of the support lines (20 day moving average) but there is simply too much demand for stocks to even allow the markets to fall to the 50 day moving average.


There is nothing to complain about technically and since this market has completely shifted to HFT trading (mostly within 5 stocks that would not exist if not for government support) for 5 hours a day in between the "spike into 10 AM economic reports" and "crush those shorts in the closing 30 minutes spike", any talk of fundamentals is a bit silly. For portfolio positioning we are just awaiting to see what the market does when it invariably tests recent highs (approx S&P 1040)- a break over will surely lead to a new leg higher and away we go. On the 1.8% chance the market is allowed to fall, there can't be much read into it unless a serious breakdown happens - i.e. below S&P 980. Anything between 980-1040 remains white noise unless you are HAL9000. There are still gaps to be filled lower in the charts but in this market, as long as Citigroup, Fannie, Freddie, AIG can make up a third of the volume on the NYSE ... we're good.

While I think US markets are expensive, now that I see European markets trading well over 40x earnings I suppose a case could be made that the US is dirt cheap. With so much liquidity being created by central banks worldwide, and so little going into the real economy - it is going where it is most needed. To the hands of market participants to speculate ... we're back baby. Don't talk to me about the end of the financial system or 35:1 leverage... that was 6 months ago. It was like a Bobby Ewing dream - I already forgot it. The backstopped by Federal Reserve market and subsidized by US government economy is back to its heydey; in fact better than their heydey - this is like the steroid era. Yeh, sure we'll have more bailouts coming down the pike for the drugs we are taking today but that's for someone in another election cycle to deal with.

As I reflect on what the Chinese sovereign wealth fund manager said this week, I now see the light. I've mistakenly chosen to think about long term consequences - but this market is so much simpler when you don't care about the future and only care about now. To paraphrase - savers are destroyed with paltry 1%ish returns on savings, and speculators are worshiped - bid up assets and let us "not lose" together.

It will not be too bad this year. Both China and America are addressing bubbles by creating more bubbles and we're just taking advantage of that. So we can't lose.


We have every world government and central bank on our side - why look a gift horse in the mouth? Hopefully we can jam Europe up to 100x earnings by the time this is over... that's 100% upside from here.

We entered last week with the blasphemous thought that the market might take a short break (I like to call it a pit stop on the way to ever more prosperity) and our wish came true. Like clockwork the market petered out after the 6-7 week mark - just as it has done on intervals since early March. However, it took the full 7 weeks this time and then finally we "sold the news"... for a few days anyhow. We took the opportunity to take profits on some of our short exposure and get out of a 2:1ish short:long weighting , to a more balanced 1:1ish. We had some 15 limit purchase orders awaiting but only 1 hit this week, CNinsure (CISG) so while we are desperately trying to partake in "we can't lose because bubbles are supporting bubbles" prosperity, we still are lost in our old school ways of thinking that we need to buy at decent valuations.

On the docket this week are a slew of economic reports which for the 25th straight week we can be "surprised" at (to the upside of course), no matter what the data is. Really the data today is immaterial as we await Congressional approval for the $15,000 Cash for housing allowance to be approved post the November expiration of the $8000 1st time credit, and then the next round of Cash for clunkers which should hit in the winter time. I am also hoping for a new $500B type of stimulus by spring 2010 but only if we are very good children and behave (i.e. spend) between now and then. As an army of Americans demand more handouts since jobs are "so 1980s", we'll just continue to smile while accepting gifts from a very kind government and crow about the effect on economic reports. ("look at that GDP! America is back! Told ya!") I believe this is where I interject with "Boo Yah!". It's a short week so there is not much to be "surprised" about - but we have Beige Book Wednesday, weekly jobless claims (to be ignored since they are backwards looking) Thursday, and yet another consumer sentiment report Friday. Whatever the sentiment on Main Street has proven to be immaterial, just get this stock market up and that's the important thing.

To finish this report on prosperity, one last bit of news from the parallel universe of Main Street a nice human interest story in the NY Times on the "uncounted" in the monthly employment report that I have been harping on since blog inception - remember in America after you throw in the towel for 4 straight weeks on the job search ... you are no longer unemployed. Congrats fellow Americans, I see you've discovered green shoots.
  • As interviews with several of them demonstrate, many desperately long for a job, but their inability to find one has made them perhaps the ultimate embodiment of pessimism as this recession wears on.
  • Some have halted their job searches out of sheer frustration. Others have decided it makes more sense to become stay-at-home fathers or mothers, or to go back to school, until the job market improves. Still others have chosen to retire for now and have begun collecting Social Security or disability benefits, for which claims have surged.
Some quotes so you can feel the "prosperity" soaking through the land... I hope the reporters in the story reinforced to these story subjects, that their situation is simply backwards looking and hence we could care less.

“When you were in high school and kept asking the head cheerleader out for a date and she kept saying no, at some point you stopped asking her,” he said. “It becomes a ‘why bother?’ scenario.”

“There are thousands of people applying for every job I’m looking at, and potential employers won’t even give me the courtesy of acknowledging I applied,” he said. “The entirety of that causes me not to bother. It’s a waste of my time and theirs.

He reads Robert Ludlum novels. He sleeps. To fill his time, he is looking into volunteer work. The other day, he cut the grass on his small lawn using just a pair of clippers.


Ray Rucker came home from a job interview several months ago, sat down in his living room with his suit still on and wept. He is 62 years old and, as he puts it, “I look 62.”

Mr. Rucker said he was done looking. His wife, who works at a small nonprofit organization, protested, saying there was more he could do to look. “You don’t know what I’m going through,” Mr. Rucker said he told her.

But the process of searching for work and coming up empty has also left her feeling spent. “I was just discouraged, fed up and angry, feeling like my career had betrayed me,” she said.

“I stopped looking because that feeling of being rejected again and again is hard,” she said. “It’s just like somebody punching you in the face.”

“You figure out it’s just like when you toss a piece of meat at a pack of hungry cats,” she said. “I just gave up because I could not compete.”


You know my position here - unfortunately we still have a brainwashed populace who things they need to work and support themselves. Cmon folks - it's a new day; this is what monthly checks from Big Brother are for. Further, American workers are only a drag on corporate profits. If we can have completely hollowed out public corporations where there is only a CFO and CEO (with 80%+ of the pay) and the rest of the workers in Vietnam or central China (sharing in the other 20%) just imagine the heights this market can go. I believe Bill Gross of PIMCO would call this a "win win win" scenario.

The quotes and stories above are anecdotal, I'm sure and do not represent all the good things I am hearing about on CNBC. And even if they are not anecdotal - it is irrelevant (or backwards looking - whichever excuse works best for you)... enough money printing and any problem can go away through asset inflation. At least for those with assets. And if you don't have any assets - don't worry, a house or car shall soon be yours - by 2014 the government should reach the point it is paying us the full amount (rather than partial subsidization ) to buy these things. Just need to hold on for half a decade more and the eventuality we are heading to shall blossom. Can't wait.

UK Telegraph: China Alarmed by US Money Printing

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Considering the source - this is a quite sobering warning to America of what the Chinese are thinking. Nothing surprising as we have seen China up their stake in gold, sign bilateral currency agreements with other countries to avoid the dollar, purchasing hard assets to redeploy out of dollars, move their bond purchases to near term maturities and the like, but you can see in their words both a dismay at what we have done, and what they are slowly planning for in the long term. [Feb 13, 2009: FT.com - China to US: "We Hate You Guys"] [May 21, 2009: China Becoming More Picky About Debt]

Of course, as we have said many times - for now they are stuck with us, because any move to detach from the States or our bond market would destabilize both countries.

Also interesting to note the comments about bubbles in real estate [Aug 13, 2009: WSJ - In China, Land Prices Fan Bubble Fears] and stock market in China. [Jun 29, 2009: China Business News - $170B of Bank Loans Funneled into Stock Market] And unlike CNBC bulls, he reiterates all the world cannot rely on China to save them.

Via UK Telegraph
  • The US Federal Reserve's Policy of printing money to buy Treasury debt threatens to set off a serious decline of the dollar and compel China to redesign its foreign reserve policy, according to a top member of the Communist hierarchy.
  • Cheng Siwei, former vice-chairman of the Standing Committee and now head of China's green energy drive, said Beijing was dismayed by the Fed's recourse to "credit easing". "We hope there will be a change in monetary policy as soon as they have positive growth again," he said.
  • "If they keep printing money to buy bonds it will lead to inflation, and after a year or two the dollar will fall hard. Most of our foreign reserves are in US bonds and this is very difficult to change, so we will diversify incremental reserves into euros, yen, and other currencies," he said.
  • "Gold is definitely an alternative, but when we buy, the price goes up. We have to do it carefully so as not to stimulate the markets," he added. The comments suggest that China has become the driving force in the gold market and can be counted on to
    buy whenever there is a price dip, putting a floor under any correction.
  • Mr Cheng said the Fed's loose monetary policy was stoking an unstable asset boom in China. "If we raise interest rates, we will be flooded with hot money. We have to wait for them. If they raise, we raise. Credit in China is too loose. We have a bubble in the housing market and in stocks so we have to be very careful, because this could fall down."
  • Mr Cheng said China had learned from the West that it is a mistake for central banks to target retail price inflation and take their eye off assets. "This is where Greenspan went wrong from 2000 to 2004," he said. "He thought everything was alright because inflation was low, but assets absorbed the liquidity."
  • Mr Cheng said China had lost 20m jobs as a result of the crisis and advised the West not to over-estimate the role that his country can play in global recovery. [Dec 7, 2008: WSJ - China Fears Restive Migrants as Jobs Disappear in Cities] [Jan 26, 2009: NYT - College Educated Chinese Feel Job Pinch]
  • China's task is to switch from export dependency to internal consumption, but that requires a "change in the ideology of the Chinese people" to discourage excess saving. "This is very difficult". Mr Cheng said the root cause of global imbalances is spending patterns in US (and UK) and China. [Jan 8, 2009: NYT - As Trade Slows, China Rethinks Its Growth Strategy] [Dec 7, 2008: NYT - China's Economy, In Need of Jump Start, Waits for Citizens to Loosen Fists]
Great quote... great quote...
  • "The US spends tomorrow's money today," he said. "We Chinese spend today's money tomorrow. That's why we have this financial crisis."
  • Yet the consequences are not symmetric. "He who goes borrowing, goes sorrowing," said Mr Cheng. It was a quote from US founding father Benjamin Franklin.
Excellent use of putting founding fathers language in a context that Americans can only scoff at today. [remember, founding fathers are only to be quoted when it conveniently fits your dogma]

What Mr. Cheng is saying is the American ethos (I call it "kick the can" nation), put in simpler terms:

I'll gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today.






[July 28, 2009: FT.com - China Warns Banks Over Asset Bubbles]
[Aug 5, 2009: China's Provincial Growth Figures Far Overstated versus National Figures]

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Updated Position Sheet

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Cash: 72.5% (v 65.8% last week)
Long: 14.1% (v 12.2%)
Short: 13.5% (v 22.0%)

This data is updated weekly and can be found on 'Performance/Portfolio' menu tab on the website. As always the total gain/loss (both dollars and percentages) only apply to the open portion of the position; it is does not apply to portions of the position sold earlier.

*** Please note, I've added an options category for things I am holding longer than intraday.

(click to enlarge)

LONG (2 photo files)


SHORT

OPTIONS (long or short)


And So The Next Crisis Begins: FHA Loans Starting to Default in Increasing Numbers - 2% Reserve Threshold Threatened

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Watching America act is like watching a driver on coke, swerving left and right, over the expressway at 120 miles per hour. We've said many a time that all we've done to create this "housing bottom" is institutionalize in the government the EXACT same behaviors that was done by the banks. Many of the first time home buyers who today have to offer nothing down as the $8000 tax credit takes care of their 3.5% down FHA loans + closing costs, will be the defaults of 2011-2013. But we really don't even have to wait that long; it has begun. FHA loans which were meant for 1st time buyers, and troubled credit now are going to almost anyone. It's share of the market has exploded.
  • In the past two years, the number of loans insured by the FHA has soared and its market share reached 23% in the second quarter, up from 2.7% in 2006, according to Inside Mortgage Finance.
All we can do is shrug our shoulders and realize we are spitting in the wind - no one cares or listens as we wave our arms in angst.... we'll just constantly do bail out after bail out. No one seems to ask why this keeps happening. I only wish I could get a tax cease and desist for the future FHA bailout by professing I saw it coming. We should not be forced to pay if we said it would happen. This is going to be my Nouriel Roubini moment where I am going to take credit for being way ahead of the pack.

I am going to start keeping a track of this issue because what FHA is today is nothing compared to the crisis we'll see hit with hurricane force in about 30 months. This is not even the tip OF the tip of the coming iceberg - only the beginning... but now we see (as I predicted) why the Ginnie Mae CEO ran off into the night a few weeks ago - not a year into the job.
  1. Warning: [May 6, 2009: FHA - The Next Housing Bust]
  2. Warning: [May 8, 2009: Minyanville - Subprime Lending is Back with a Vengeance]
  3. Warning: [May 13, 2009: Tax Credit as Mortgage Down Payment Now Official Federal Government Policy]
  4. Warning: [Jul 6, 2009: WSJ - No Money Down or Negative Equity Top Source of Foreclosures]
  5. Warning: [Aug 12, 2009: WSJ - The Next Fannie Mae - FHA/Ginnie Mae]
  6. Warning: [Aug 14, 2009: Ginnie Mae CEO Resigns After 1 Year on the Job]
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Via WSJ
  • The Federal Housing Administration, hit by increasing mortgage-related losses, is in danger of seeing its reserves fall below the level demanded by Congress, according to government officials, in a development that could raise concerns about whether the agency needs a taxpayer bailout.
  • The rising losses at the FHA, part of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, come as the agency has rapidly increased its role in guaranteeing loans in an attempt to stabilize the housing market.
  • Options for the agency could include politically unpalatable choices, such as asking for taxpayer funds to boost reserves or increasing the premiums borrowers pay for the insurance offered by the agency.
  • .... some mortgage and housing analysts see trouble ahead. "They're probably going to need a bailout at some point because they're making loans in a riskier environment," says Edward Pinto, a mortgage-industry consultant and former chief credit officer at Fannie Mae. "...I've never seen an entity successfully outrun a situation like this."
  • Rising defaults have eaten through the FHA's cushion. Some 7.8% of FHA loans at the end of the second quarter were 90 days late or more, or in foreclosure, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association, a figure roughly equal to the national average for all loans. That is up from 5.4% a year ago. (and this is with foreclosure mitigation plans, sponsored by OTHER parts of government - flying out the wazoo)
Trust me, that 2.4% increase we've already seen is nothing since FHA's share of 2004-2006 mortgages was tiny. The 2007 and especially 2008-2010 vintages are going to be the barn burners.
  • Federal law says the FHA must maintain, after expected losses, reserves equal to at least 2% of the loans insured by the agency. The ratio last year was around 3%, down from 6.4% in 2007.
  • If its reserves fall short, the agency is obliged to notify Congress, which could spark a commotion over the extent to which the government is funding losses in the housing market.
  • Critics have said the FHA, which has never had a chief risk officer, isn't able to manage such a large portfolio in an unstable market.
  • Policymakers have used the FHA to stabilize the housing market by pushing it to offer credit with far easier terms than that offered by most private lenders. For example, it will back loans with down payments as low as 3.5%.
  • The FHA is particularly sensitive to home-price declines because of the small down payments it will accept, which can quickly become wiped out by a fall in home values.
  • While most private lenders have raised lending standards and now require minimum 20% down payments, the share of borrowers who are able to make down payments of less than 10% hasn't changed in the last two years, largely because of the FHA, says Mr. Pinto, the former credit officer at Fannie Mae.
And please let us not forget who is ultimately responsible for changing the rules...
  • Before the boom, the FHA wasn't a big player in the housing business because it didn't follow private lenders in loosening its standards. Borrowers had to fully document incomes and insured loans were capped at $362,000. Congress increased those limits last year to as high as $729,750 in the most expensive markets.
Surprise, surprise - a financial model that is not working. Where have we seen that before?
  • Officials said as recently as May that they didn't expect to fall below the 2% limit, but home-price declines have exceeded those used to model their expected losses.
  • Given the pace of those declines, "there is no way they will make the 2%" if the current study follows last year's methodology, says Mr. Lawler.
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I would like to have this man or woman's name:
  • A senior official at HUD, which oversees the FHA, said there is "no risk" that the FHA would require money from Congress if the ratio falls below 2%.
At least we have this guy's name, I want to compile these for my "lists of ridiculous quotes" we will compile in 2011.
  • HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan said in June, "there's a better than even chance that we will stay above the two percent reserve threshold. That suggests, not just for the 2010 business, but overall for the portfolio, that we'll more than likely to stay out of a broader need for any taxpayer funding."
Well time to begin a new blog topic; welcome to the club: "FHA"

Friday, September 4, 2009

Meet Optiver, High Frequency Trading Friend in Oil

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I'd like to introduce you to a friend in the oil market, named Optiver. This is one of countless HAL9000 high frequency firms who simply make a market and "provide liquidity". The New York Times has a nice piece on this little firm, with the cute name.
  • Traders in the Chicago office of Optiver openly talked among themselves of “whacking” and “bullying up” the price of oil. But when called to account by officials of the New York Mercantile Exchange, they described their actions as just “providing liquidity.”
Errr....

Remember, if you ask any questions about the market nowadays, you have an avalanche of people from inside the game telling you all they do is provide liquidity. Without them, we'd be unable to have a functioning market. Countless posts I (and others) put up on sites like Seeking Alpha that even dare to ask about any potential loopholes that some firms in the HAL9000 league could exploit are met with an army of "they just provide liquidity" comments. :) Almost as if those retorts are organized. Or maybe it's just the dogma that pervades so much of group think nowadays.

Now of course some of these firms are truly only providing a market making business - skimming off the top and in return "providing liquidity" (in good times at least) [Meet Getco, High Frequency Trading King]. But if one firm like Optiver can manipulate the oil market (allegedly) just imagine what some of the powerful financial elite could do with all the money they have (much of it now backstopped by the Federal Reserve) in all the other markets. Not that they'd ever take advantage of it to post a 97% winning percentage. [Aug 5, 2009: Goldman Sachs Q2 Winning Percentage: 97%] Or more likely (ahem) Optiver was the only bad apple in the bunch...

Wait a second, Larry Summers once worked for a HAL9000 firm DE Shaw learning the tricks of the trade [Apr 6, 2009: Larry Summers - No Conflict of Interest; He Pinkie Swears] ... hmm... and now he has his hands on the PPT which is like the HAL9000 of our dreams... [May 27, 2009: Daniel Shaffer Notices the "Invisible Hand" aka PPT] Nah, no connection to strange market behavior - I am sure.

As I said in many pieces, I am sure I don't even know about 80% of the stuff that goes on in the dark allies of "the Street", so just imagine what must be happening in those corners when we can see some of the dirty laundry in the other 20%. But don't ask the questions - simply understand that any questioning of tactics must simply be answered with "it provides liquidity".

********************************

Let's hear more about our friendly overseas trading firm ...
  • Its superfast, supersecret oil trading software was called the Hammer. And if the Commodity Futures Trading Commission is right, the name fit well with an intricate scheme that allowed commodity traders in Chicago working for Optiver, a little-known company based in Amsterdam, to put their orders first in line and subtly manipulate the price of oil to the company’s advantage.
Wait a second, I thought this was a piece about providing liquidity. I pray this does not get posted on Seeking Alpha - might cause a firestorm. ;)
  • Transcripts and taped conversations of actions that took place in 2007, included in the commission’s case, reveal the secretive workings of high-frequency trading, a fast-growing Wall Street business that is suddenly drawing scrutiny in Washington. Critics say this high-speed form of computerized trading, which is used in a wide range of financial markets, enables its practitioners to profit at other investors’ expense.
  • In July 2008, the commission charged Optiver with manipulating the price of oil; negotiations over a settlement continue.
Now what is typical on Wall Street is (alleged) wrong doing is found and the financial oligarch settles with the regulator, usually for a sum equal to about a few hours worth of manipulation. Of course they settle without admission of doing anything wrong. I suppose the fee is for following the law. These "penalties" are almost like a toll - (overheard in an imaginary hallway)

Look, we are going to bilk this silly system (Wild Wild West) where we almost got Bernie Madoff in as SEC Chairman, for all it is worth. I mean... we're going to "provide liquidity" for all it is worth. Every so often you will catch us "providing liquidity", and we'll pay your silly fee for whatever offense - while not admitting we did anything. Then we'll see you right back here in 3-4 years on the next charges. Of course for every 1 thing you catch, we're "providing liquidity" in 5 other places.

p.s. Main Street = Wall Street... make sure to get that on TV, and please send in your 401k money, we need more fuel for our profits.



Rinse. Wash. Repeat. Anyhow back to Optiver which is not an oligarch and thus appears to be in actual trouble
  • In the cutthroat world of high-frequency trading, success is a function of speed, secrecy and often a bit of intrigue. Few have been more adroit at these arts than Optiver. Optiver describes itself as one of the world’s leading liquidity providers, a trading firm that uses its own capital to make markets. It seeks to profit on razor-thin price differences — which can be as small as half a penny.
And this bullet below is certainly the nexus of this situation:
  • But the extent to which market making (providing liquidity to markets that need it) and proprietary trading (the pursuit of pure profit with a firm’s own money) can properly coexist has become a thorny question for regulators.
  • They are grappling with an exploding business that makes up as much as half the overall trading in the United States and a growing share in Europe as well.
Of course Optiver gives the same defense any HFT firm would offer
  • Mr. Massar said that the company was committed to transparent markets (surely) and that there was no inherent conflict between pursuing profits and making markets (cough) — a view that top Optiver officials had long been trying to convey to regulators when their oil trades were being investigated. (hide the Hammer! pronto!)
  • But their pleadings fell on deaf ears. During a tense conference call in 2007, Thomas Lasala, the chief regulator for Nymex, made his doubts clear about Optiver’s trading strategies. “The market seems to move in reaction to your orders,” he said, according to a transcript of the conversation. “And I don’t think that is a market-making strategy.
On a serious note, let's take a moment to thank Mr. Lasala - I'm glad someone is watching the "providing of liquidity". Granted it took the exchange to catch Optiver rather than the SEC (why is the SEC around again?)

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The bullet point below is the second nexus of the questions we (as in the SEC) should be asking, if they were not a captured institution who will pass some light face saving regulation in the months to come... which will be quickly circumvented.
  • It could well be that Optiver’s cowboy trading tactics are unique to the company. But as concern grows over the effect that high-octane computerized trading is having on markets worldwide, Optiver’s conduct in the oil futures market raises questions as to whether the relentless competition of this business is forcing companies to engage in similar practices.
I'm sure it's a one off...
  • These are proprietary trading shops that are masquerading as market makers,” said Tim Quast of Modern IR, a consulting firm that advises corporations on market structure issues.
I believe the biggest one is now a bank holding company protected the US of American Taxpayer and rhymes with Foldman Fachs.
  • The spread of high-frequency trading in Europe has lagged behind the United States. But it is now experiencing rapid growth, spurred by arbitrage opportunities that have attracted large American firms like Getco and Madison Tyler.
Just be careful liquidity providers - I think in the socialist parts of the world they actually try to enforce regulation. You might outsmart them, but they are at least trying over there. The foxes are not handed keys to the hen house unlike our local bourses.
  • Amsterdam, as much as if not more than London, has been the breeding ground for local firms seeking the same advantages. Companies like Optiver, All Options, Tibra and others have assumed influential positions in Europe, moving from their original expertise in trading options to the full gamut of stocks, bonds and derivatives as well. Called low-latency trading, this blend of speed and opportunism is the essence of Optiver’s business model.
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Some more background for those interested
  • It deploys a sophisticated software system called F1 that can process information and make a trade in 0.5 milliseconds — using complex algorithms that let its computers think like a trader. And the company is so careful about preserving its secrets that when some traders and engineers left for a rival operation recently, Optiver hired private investigators and subsequently sued the former employees on charges of making off with intellectual property.
  • Founded in 1986 by an options trader named Johann Kaemingk, Optiver has grown far beyond its roots in Amsterdam to trade on exchanges all over the world. It employs 600 people and, judging from the many positions advertised on its Web site, it is still in a hiring mode.
  • Given the vicious competition that exists in the industry, Optiver and other companies have become creative in attracting the smartest people in finance. The dress code is aggressively casual. The company provides free breakfasts, lunches and Friday afternoon drinks, as well as chair massages. (paid for by the retail blokes we are "providing liquidity" to)
  • And in one recruiting Web video (no longer online), an Optiver trader sitting before four giant trading screens is seen ogling two skimpily clad women as they sit on his thighs. (boo yah...)
Now again as we've written in other pieces, look what the SEC (full of lawyers - rather than computer science PHds or traders or former quants or statisticians is up against) It's like having David chase around Goliath with his sling; might get a lucky shot in every few years but Goldman... err Goliath ...usually has his way.
  • To enjoy these professional fruits, applicants need to subject themselves to three math-based tests to test facility with numbers and the ability to think clearly under pressure. For one of the tests, 80 questions must be answered in under 8 minutes. Sample questions include 0.034 times 0.2, or, if you have a cube made of 10 by 10 smaller cubes, how many are facing the outside?
  • Few of the applicants even get an interview: 80 to 90 percent of people who take the test fail it. People who have worked at Optiver say the average age is young — under 30 — as the company has a policy of not hiring traders from rival institutions, preferring recent university graduates who can more easily embrace the firm’s culture.
Ball game! Checkmate - SEC.
  • The markets used to be about capital formation,” said Mr. Quast, the consultant. “Now 80 percent of trading is driven by some form of statistical arbitrage. We are buying into a statistical house of cards that could unravel very quickly.
Nothing more to be said than that - we've posted the same warnings in almost exact same language and we are nothing but a 2 bit blogger...

This will continue until it implodes - could happen in 2 days, 2 months, 2 years, or 10 years - who knows. As I've said, I expect this Black Swan to repeat Oct 19, 1987 but in a matter of minutes. And then the Fed will step in and fix it by.... (drumroll) Providing Liquidity. The circle of life. The regulators will all sit around and ask "how could this ever happen!"?? Congress will adjourn hearings and wag fingers.

Until then - the orgy continues.

[Jul 18, 2009: Joe Saluzzi Comments on HAL9000]
[Aug 6, 2008: Cramer - Quants and their Machines]

The Potential Retest of Recent Highs; Dennis Gartman Scratching Head on Gold

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I should of posted this in its own post but in the comments section Wednesday evening on the "gold breakout" post I wrote

My thought process would we would have a rally to create a double top after this "massive selloff" and then if that double top holds, the greater move down begins. We shall see how it works out. But I'd like to see S&P 980 first before that scenario plays out since it would mess with the most number of people - a quick trip to below S&P 980 would freak many out, and cause longs to throw in the towel, than a reversal back up to S&P 1030 would have everyone scrambling for long exposure and kicking themselves for not just buying the dip again, and then we could have a rip roaring selloff from there once everyone is comfortable.

Ok that's how I scripted it anyhow - what really happens is a guess :) S&P 980 is a key area.


S&P 980 did not hit, we only fell to 990 and now are doing the retrace back up. Volume is light today so very hard to read anything but prices are prices. The S&P 500 peaked around 1040 so bears would want to see a move to the 1030s and then a failure; this would lay the groundwork for a "double top" - we shall see if it works out like that.

Bulls will want to see new highs created of course. Thus far Fibonnaci has done a good job of turning back both China [Aug 15, 2009: Fibonnaci Stops Rally in China?] and the U.S. [Aug 5, 2009: Fibonnaci Calls: The 38.2% Retrace is Approaching] but unlike China the "massive selloff" in the States has been a very benign 3-4%ish.

Hard to make any directional bets as we've once again entered a white noise area - between S&P 980 and 1040. We are churning around and grinding but I don't see any big movements until we exit this 60 point roadblock - maybe sideways movement for now. With no "feel" for the tape (we could fall 20 S&P points or rise 20 S&P points just as easy) I'm retrenching, hedging, and waiting. Each white noise area for half a year has simply been a resting stop before the next move up, so we'll see if that continues. Today was the first non "sell the news" reaction we've had in the past week, but going back full circle - who exactly is out there trading today aside from the retail investors and the quant shops is beyond me.

Until this S&P 980 is broken to the downside, it is very difficult to get too bearish on things other than for short term forays as we enjoyed the first half of this week.

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Someone asked in comments yesterday why I was not chasing into gold after the breakout over $970. Two reasons - #1 we are having a great year so I don't need to chase into every opportunity, and #2 there is only about 3% between where gold broke out from (over $970) and a similar retest of a double top with February 2009 highs (under $1010). With the jobs report pending I didn't see a reason to bother taking on any risk with gold ahead of a market moving event for a few percent reward. I am not sure what the move in gold is "about" at this time; as it came out of the blue.


Dennis Gartman is similarly confused -

"It is a very weird week when you see gold going up and the bond market rallying," Gartman told "Squawk Box," adding that one cannot have a "warm and fuzzy feeling" when one sees it.
















That said, silver continues to act better than gold, and was up another 6% yesterday ... it has (unlike gold) broken out over yearly highs, and I am not too happy I did not get on that train after mentioning it early this week. [Silver Perking Up]


As I watched Marc Faber yesterday and his comments about "as the situation in the real economy gets worse and worse, that means more and more money printing and markets can go up - the worse the economy the more the market can go up on money printing" it made me think that John Paulson is listening to Marc Faber. [May 16, 2009: John Paulson Continues to Pile Into Gold] [Mar 17, 2009: John Paulson Joins David Einhorn as Gold Bug with Stake in AngloGold Ashanti (AU)]

[Long] Weekend Reading Part 1

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Special "long weekend" edition - part 1

News we just did not have time to dissect during the week but still deserve notice

(1) WSJ: US Buys Pork to Support Industry. Look, I am getting sick of all this pork spending. Wait a second... I didn't mean literally, or did I? As you know, the solution to overcapacity in America is letting free market capitalism reign and a process of ... wait, a second. That's HOG wash (sorry I could not resist). The solution is to subsidize those who lobby the most effectively, so as to never let the industry correct. Bailout / subsidization nation continues in a country which is technically broke. It's not the money, it's the mindset that you should be completely petrified about. Just put it on the grandkids tab - Cash for Clunker Hogs.

The Agriculture Department, in a bid to help the ailing pork industry, said Thursday it will buy another $30 million of pork in an effort to boost prices. The USDA already has pledged to purchase $121 million of pork this year for government food-assistance programs, but producers continue to struggle.

The National Pork Producers Council has been lobbying the USDA hard this year to buy more pork....

Mr. Vilsack told lawmakers during a May hearing that the group was asking for an additional $50 million purchase, but the USDA didn't have the money in its budget. The council upped the pressure in August, though, holding a media event to publicize its plea to the Obama administration for "immediate financial assistance."


(2) Bloomberg: PetroChina Agrees to Biggest North America Acquisition. The Chinese continue to slowly but surely make long term investments in global resources; this time right up north in Canada in those oil sands. We've spoken about this initiative countless times; the U.S. plans for 1 election cycle, Japan plans for 1 decade, China plans for 1 century.

PetroChina Co. has agreed to pay C$1.9 billion ($1.7 billion) for a stake in a Canadian oil sands project in its biggest North American acquisition, widening the search for energy resources overseas. China’s largest oil company will buy 60 percent of Athabasca Oil Sands Corp.’s MacKay River and Dover oil-sands projects, the Canadian company said in a statement yesterday.

PetroChina has acquired gas fields in Kazakhstan and a Singapore refinery in deals accounting for about a fifth of China’s $17 billion spending on overseas energy assets since December. Oil sands resources are harder to exploit than conventional fields and the Athabasca transaction underscores China’s determination to snare reserves


(3) NYT: Call to Jury Dury Strikes Fear of Financial Ruin. The green shoots are so real in the Main Street economy that countless appear to be fearing jury dury because being away from work or their businesses could spell financial doomsday. At this point we should only be filling jury duty with the unemployed; at least they get some pay to supplement their unemployment checks, and there are plenty of them out there.

Few people like jury duty. But for many people squeezed by the recession, a jury summons holds a new fear: financial ruin. Judges and court officials around the country say they are seeing the impact of the recession in their courtrooms.

While no one keeps overall statistics on juror excuses, those closest to the process say that in many parts of the country an increasing number of jurors are trying to get out of service, forcing courts to call an ever larger pool of jurors to meet their needs.

Ranae Johnson, the jury commissioner for Bonneville County, Idaho, said that she typically summoned 400 people for each two-week term of service, but that lately she “had to pop it up to 500” because of rising numbers of economic hardship claims. “We’re hearing it more than we used to,” Ms. Johnson said. “A lot more.

She read from her notes of recent calls. “I was laid off, have no car, no job and no friends that can even bring me there,” one caller had argued. Another said, “I cannot even afford the gas to have to come down there.”

Jane Hybarger, the jury administrator for the United States District Court in Las Vegas, said the pleas she was hearing were more urgent, even desperate. “Now I’m hearing people who are living day to day, who are months behind in their mortgage,” Ms. Hybarger said. “There’s tears in their voice — they don’t know how they’re going to put food on the table.”


(4) WSJ: Rethinking Stocks' Starring Role. Is the 60% stocks/40% bonds - always buy stocks as they outperform in the long run dying a slow death? It's already happened in Japan which is working on its 2nd lost decade [Oct 27, 2008: Japan's Lost Quarter Century] , but then again we are nothing like Japan - we've only had 1 lost decade. [Oct 7, 2008: 2000s Stock Market Worse than 1930s] [Mar 26, 2008 - WSJ: Stocks Tarnished by Lost Decade] [Feb 5, 2009: Mutual Funds Have Tough Decade] Let me just say anything that shakes people out of the conventional view, built on the back of a once in a lifetime bull market (1983-1999) is a good thing.

For at least a generation, financial professionals have urged mutual-fund investors to put more money in stocks than in bonds. The logic: Stocks power a portfolio, while bonds provide some protection.

Now some pros are questioning that conventional wisdom. After last year's stock crash, and ahead of a potentially weak economic recovery, they're arguing that bonds and alternative asset classes such as commodities deserve more weight.

What's more, the classic 60-40 split between stocks and bonds—the formula that many balanced funds use to allocate investments—ignores alternative asset classes that can deliver returns with different levels of risk.

"The whole 60-40 idea is almost like Betamax videotapes—it's now passé," says Andrew Silverberg, co-manager of Alger Balanced Fund. "It gained popularity while we were still in a bull market."

Over the past 200 years, Mr. Arnott says, stocks have beaten bonds by 2.5 percentage points a year—but half of that advantage comes from the 1949-1965 period.


(5) Huffington Post: Madoff Claims He was Considered for SEC. This headline seems so outrageous until you consider everything that has happened the past few years, indeed decade. At this point Bernie has no reason to make up things - and it should tell you everything you need to know about the state of our regulatory system in capital markets. Can you only imagine if it happened? As I said, this is the Wild Wild West - don't believe for a second the SEC is a competent sheriff - this would of been the ultimate hood ornament for the foxes running the hen house. laughable - simply laughable.

Bernard Madoff once boasted that he "was on the short list" to be the next chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, according to a report issued Wednesday by the agency's internal watchdog. Madoff's claim came during a 2005 interview with agency investigators.

The report doesn't detail whether Madoff's claim was ultimately verified but it did note that Madoff told the investigators that Christopher Cox -- the now-disgraced former SEC chairman -- would be appointed to the position "a few weeks prior" to the official announcement.

As the foregoing demonstrates, despite numerous credible and detailed complaints, the SEC never properly examined or investigated Madoff's trading and never took the necessary, but basic, steps to determine if Madoff was operating a Ponzi scheme. Had these efforts been made with appropriate follow-up at any time beginning in June of 1992 until December 2008, the SEC could have uncovered the Ponzi scheme well before Madoff confessed.


(6) CBSMarketwatch: Hong Kong Recalls Gold Reserves, Touts High Security Vault. Gold bugs should have a field day with this one; Hong Kong is repatriating its physical gold from London. I mean, if things really get all crazy in the coming decade do you really want to have your gold thousands of miles away? With that said, putting the vault in your airport? Seems strange to me, but it's a small country.

Hong Kong is pulling all its physical gold holdings from depositories in London, transferring them to a high-security depository newly built at the city's airport, in a move that won praise from local traders Thursday.

The facility, industry professionals said, would support Hong Kong's emergence as a Swiss-style trading hub for bullion and would lessen London's status as a key settlement-and-storage center. The 3,660-square-foot depository, located at the city's main Chek Lap Kok Airport, will serve as a "storage facility for local and overseas government institutions," according to the government statement.

Martin Hennecke, a financial advisor with the Hong Kong-based Tyche Group Ltd., said that could be appealing to regional central banks unnerved after watching the global financial system teeter on verge of implosion last year. "Central banks are increasingly aware of the importance of having gold reserves at time of financial crisis and having it easily available at their own disposal," he said.


(7) WSJ: The Reluctant Landlords. Just another reason this housing recovery is going to take a LONG time to play out. We have not really even begun the stage of "shadow inventory" sales - that is where people who want to get out of their homes but feel prices are too low or "unfair" versus what they bought wait for some recovery in prices so they can put their "For Sale" sign out. For now, many of these are turning into landlords - whether they want to or not.

With housing prices still in the dumps, many Americans are finding themselves in the uncomfortable position of landlord. Some have been forced to relocate for a job and can't sell their houses. Others have moved, but are holding on to their previous homes, hoping for prices to rebound before selling. Many are finding that rent checks don't come close to covering their mortgage payments.

In one indication of the trend: More homeowners are converting their homeowners insurance to landlord policies that cover the additional risks of leasing out a home. Allstate Corp., the second largest home insurer in the U.S., reported a 27% increase in conversions in the first quarter from the previous year.

Experts generally advise against becoming a landlord in hopes of recouping lost home value. In some hard-hit parts of the country, such as Florida, Nevada, Arizona and parts of Ohio, prices may not climb back to mid-2000s levels anytime soon. Landlords have to pony up money each year for property taxes, insurance, maintenance and repairs. Meanwhile, demand for rentals in many parts of the U.S. isn't strong: Apartment vacancy rates nationally are the highest in more than two decades and rents are falling in some areas, compounding the difficulty of finding a good, steady tenant.

Can You Hear People Exiting the Offices?

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I expect a very quiet day from here as the traditional early morning ramp up (+0.5%) is now in place and we can trade in a 2-4 S&P point range for the next 5 hours, until 3:30 PM shows up. NYC and Greenwich, CT quietly shall be emptying by the minute as people leave early for the long weekend. Thankfully computers do not need to make the drive to Martha's Vineyard so they can continue working. I see no interesting corporate news and every position in my portfolio except one is trading in a concise range of +/- 1%.

I'll be working on some catch up posts today to post, that I have not had time to get to earlier since we are back to what I call the Siesta Market (i.e. you can take a nap mid day). [The Dead in the Middle of the Day Market] Run the market up in the first 60-90 minutes, leave at 11AM, let the HFT traders milk the system for 4-5 hours pushing stocks back and forth in tight ranges, working thousands of trades a second while collecting mad money, and then turn the market back on at 3:30 PM, preferably rocketing it up 0.5% or so in a last minute flurry to finish the day on a positive note.

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I have been doing some thinking and after backtesting this over the past 6 months, my mutual fund shall only be operational 29 minutes a day. In fact I shall call it "The 29 Minute Fund". I shall buy SPY ETFs at 3:30 PM, and sell them at 3:59 PM each day. The backtesting shows this to have a 81.27219821% success rate the past 6 months. That is not Goldman Sachs (97%) good, but it's a pretty sweet success rate.

After that fund brings in a few billion I'll launch a sister fund: "The Siesta Fund" in which I'll buy SPY ETFs premarket 9:00 AMish and sell them by 10:30 AM to 11:00 AM after the market is run up on economic news of the day (if economic news is good bad or indifferent is a moot point, the market goes up almost all the time in those hours). Then the fund will shut down between 11 AM and 3:30 PM, while I drink some fruity colored beverages and do interviews on CNBC about my prowess (don't worry, I'll say "buy stocks" at the end of every interview). I'll then get back to work, with the fund mimicking the strategy of the "29 Minute Fund" 3:30 PM to 3:59 PM. The expense ratio on this fund will be double that of "The 29 Minute Fund" because I am doing double the work. The success ratio of this has been 77.21218921% as I backtest the past 6 months.

You think I kid? Try it yourself - it is almost like clockwork.

Job Seekers Across America Willing to Take Substantial Pay Cuts

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As we await Wall Street's lemming like reaction to a incredibly faulty government employment report, in which they've been reporting hundreds of thousands (every quarter) of new jobs created in businesses too small to measure [Jan 27, 2008: Monthly Jobs Report & Birth/Death Model] , along with figuring that anyone who did not look for a job actively in the past 4 weeks magically is no longer unemployed, let's focus on the reality... not to make money in the stock market, but just to maintain our existence outside of the Matrix.

About a year and a half ago I wrote a piece about how (EVEN THEN) things were far worse than they looked as so many Americans now ply their trade in the world of underemployment [Apr 2, 2008: The Underemployment Rate is Rising]

I like this term I found in this CNNMoney.com article - "Underemployment"; I've been struggling to think of a term for all these people who are struggling with part time work, working 2 jobs, or in contractor jobs where they get hired/fired on a daily whim ( I call them "nomad workers").

This is a systematic and secular situation - nothing to do with 1 month's report or another. It is part and parcel with the erosion of living standards - and why so many in the middle and lower economic strata turn to home equity, credit cards, etc to just get by.


Now the offset of this is, these trends have helped US corporate profits - so there is always a winner and a loser. The loser is becoming very apparent once you detox off the Kool Aid...


Just this week we saw a report in which productivity shot up 6%+ in the last quarter. While many will say that is due to "efficiencies in technology" or other such nonsense - that is just a small part of the story. Let's be blunt, technological efficiency did not suddenly shoot up the past 3 months or 6 months versus a year ago. The vast majority of this "improvement" in productivity is the fact people are getting paid less to do more. Doing the work of people who have been let go, as people are simply thankful to have a job. We also discussed this situation before it was fashionable [May 10, 2008: Finally Some Mainstream Reporters are Figuring Out the "Spin" from Government]

The unemployment rate drops. Productivity grows. The trade deficit shrinks. Sounds great, right? Not so fast. Some seemingly good economic numbers can be something of a mirage masking weaknesses in the national economy.

U.S. productivity -- an important ingredient to the country's long-term vitality -- grew solidly in the first three months of this year. That efficiency gain, however, came at the expense of workers. "Productivity gains were due primarily to declines in hours worked," the Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics explained. Those hours fell at a 1.8 percent pace, the biggest drop in five years. Employers also shed workers in the first quarter.

"American workers, you just got to love them," said Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economic Advisers. "They just seem to produce more and more and more. That was the case in the first quarter of the year as fewer workers working fewer hours managed to produce more," he said.


Yes you must love them, Mr Naroff. When threatened with keeping a roof over their families heads and food on the table, it is amazing what people will do.

Instead of giving you the same old data set you hear on every news channel, we've been focusing on a lot of metrics under the hood, and they are ugly. We've been seeing national wages stagnating which is scary considering a portion of this national workforce (mostly in government, healthcare, or C-level executives) continues to see substantial gains - which means a lot of people are going backwards to get the "average" down to "flat". [Jul 3, 2009: US Workers Continues to Suffer - First 0.0% Monthly "Growth" I Can Recall]

We've already seen many of the blue collar scorched, many now working at 30, 40, 50% of the wage rates they used to in their old jobs - many are now being 'transformed' from jobs making things to jobs providing services; and reaping the financial... uhh, benefits. White collar like to say 'well just get an education, and you won't be in that spot' - check back in 10-20 years when many white collar will be in the same space and that dogma will look foolish. Ask the architect who is trying to compete with his peer in Romania where the cost of living is 60% lower than in the US and hence homebuilders can pay 60% less of a wage. Sound improbable? That's not a forecast - that's a story I read 3 years ago. Extrapolate from there.

What's a safe place for stable wages long term? Places we are creating
unsustainable long term costs - i.e. healthcare and government jobs (or quasi government i.e. education). These are areas we've talked about for nearly 2 years now - they are "stable" because we are kicking the can down the road on the costs, building bigger and builder long term obligations but growing these areas in many cases exponentially.


It is actually even more remarkable that median wages are stagnating when the powers that be are so desperate in trying to inflate every asset class in the world to create an air of normalcy. But that is an entirely different topic.

Now let me put on my cold hearted speculator hat on - this data above and the story I post below is GREAT as an investor - at least in the short run. If corporations I invest in can continuously shed workers and cut back their wages, or rehire new people at lower wages (of course we're just talking about the drone bees, the queen bees don't face such difficulties), that only increases profits. It is anti Henry Ford, who believed workers in the 1910s+ should make enough of a wage to afford the things they build. That's SO old school - we have a new paradigm now.

The new paradigm can work for a while - until eventually you cut out so much ability of the US workforce to spend ... well then they have to turn first to their house ATM and then when that game ends, to the government, for handouts to maintain their standard of living. Which is the stage we are at now. [Jun 5, 2009: 1 in 6 Dollars of Income Now Via Government; Highest Since 1929] [Jul 30, 2009: Cash for Clunkers a Bit Hit, Government Asks "What Can we Buy You Next?"] Except no one wants to admit it... because we're America and this can't be happening to us. Folks, it is happening and it didn't just happen overnight - this has been a long term erosion and the cummulative affects now are vividly apparent since "asset inflation" no longer is masking the truth of what is happening in the lower / middle tranches of society. As I've argued many times, some of this is simply inevitable as global wage arbitration in a flat globe brings down salaries for many of the middle class in richer countries and drives it up for the middle class in poorer countries. But a lot of it is policy decisions and national economic ethos.


So it all ties together - what we have been doing can continue to work as long as our foreign creditors gladly give us more and more rope to eventually hang ourselves with... workers make less (unless you are a queen bee level exec of course), corporations maintain flattish profits, and government makes up the shortfall between what private workers used to make, and now make (of course, public workers are mostly unaffected by the above conditions). This is our newfound "prosperity" as the service economy works its magic. I've been talking about it for a few years here on the blog, and I don't mind being early - I am finally hearing whispers of similar thinking from other places the past 6 months.

But once again, after you read this post and the story from CNN/Money below I want you to quickly chew on the appropriate colored pill and forgot about it. Just keep repeating to yourself - we are nothing like Japan [Oct 28, 2008: Pooring of Japan Too?] even though if you replace the word Japan with United States from these quotes you'd think this story was about Main Street Chicago rather than Main Street Tokyo.

The 29-year-old laborer is one of a burgeoning class in Japan -- the working poor. The number of Japanese earning less than $19,610 a year surged 40 percent from 2002 to 2006, the latest data available, the government says. They now number more than 10 million.

The growth of the working poor -- not seen in such numbers since Japan surged to wealth in the 1980s -- has been a shock to a country that once prided itself on being a bastion of economic equality.

"It is unprecedented to see such a widening income gap in Japan," said Yoshio Sasajima, economist at Meiji Gakuin University in Tokyo. "Our society is definitely becoming a class society."

The seeds of changes now wrenching Japanese society were planted in the burst of the so-called "bubble economy" in the early 1990s.

A key to the growth of the working poor has been the explosion in temporary employment agencies, which allow corporations to take on labor without having to pay benefits -- and then unload workers at will.

The spike in the number of the working poor is already taking a toll on Japanese society. More people are putting off marriage because of tight finances, exacerbating a declining fertility rate. Part-time workers unable to afford rent sleep in 24-hour Internet cafes to escape the streets. Some have stopped going to the doctor because they can't afford it.


Main Street reality does not matter to Wall Street whose vision of long term nowadays is > 300 thousands of a second. The costs of today's profits are irrelevant, just celebrate the profits - however gained (preferably gained by government handouts apparently). We'll either be celebrating (red) or drowning our sorrows (black) as the government tells us what is happening in the economy and labor pool (rather than relying on common sense or talking to our friends, family, and neighbors). Place your bets... Caesars NYC opens soon. Stories such as these below are simply anecdotal and for amusement - they mean nothing as long as stock prices go up, because Main Street = Wall Street as we all know by now. Let's get ready to rumb.... err, act like lemmings reacting to a government data point!
  • Finding work in this recession takes determination, perseverance and, most of all, sacrifice. With unemployment as high as 9.4% (vastly understated number) and job prospects scarce, job seekers are willing to accept as little as half of what they were making before, if it means finding a job.
  • In a recent survey, 65% of out-of-work respondents reported willingness to accept wages up to 30% lower than their previous compensation.
  • And, 3% and 4%, respectively, said they would accept up to 40% and 50% of prior wages, according to the 2009 Annual Career Fair Survey released by Next Steps Career Solutions.
  • "In the old days people would expect to get at least a 10%-15% bump when they were making a transition from this job to the next," said Paul Bernard, an executive coach and career management adviser who runs his own firm. Now, "being asked to take cuts in the 20%+ range is pretty standard."
Standard anecdotal example that of course has nothing to do with reality in the Main Street economy and is just a one off (ahem)
  • That was true for Rebecca Eason, who living in Tennessee. After losing her job as an office manager for a steel company, Eason, 29, says she has used to make a comfortable $33,000-a-yearsettled for a temporary position making $9.25 an hour until something better comes along.
  • Her current position is a 40% paycut from what she was making previously and also comes without benefits like health insurance. Her husband, Chris, also lost his job this summer and found a temporary position for 50% of his previous salary.
  • "Every penny covers our mortgage, life insurance, groceries, gas -- just the basic necessities," she said.
Nothing at all like Japan. Let's carry on.
  • Eason's situation has become all too common since the recession began.
Wait a second, that was supposed to be a one off anecdotal story....
  • "I see it every day," said Jay Meschke, president of EFL Associates, a division of professional services company CBIZ. "People are out there accepting positions as much as 50% below what they were making before."
  • "If it is a choice of putting food on the table, paying for a kid's school expenses, or attempting to get on a healthcare plan -- many people are flat out accepting jobs well beneath their former market values," he said.
Please don't let CNBC see this story...

Even if true among more than 1-2 people in the story, I am sure this is a temporary situation and once prosperity returns... cancel that... what I meant to say, NOW THAT prosperity has returned, things will turn around.
  • But those who do accept lower salaries in order to ride out the recession might find that they've permanently damaged their value in the workplace.
  • "Job seekers that take severe pay cuts in order to secure a job today may find it extremely difficult to recoup forfeited wages once the economy recovers," said Patrina Campbell, a spokeswoman for Next Steps Career Solutions.
  • "Your future salary will be based on what you were making at your last employer," Bernard explained. In addition, pay cuts are often coupled with lesser titles or demotions, making it harder for employees to jump back to their original level, he added.
Doh!

As I said, now that you've read it... it's time to ignore everything just written. Take the pill, let us reattach to the Matrix, click our heels three times and repeat "there's no place like green shoots... " Make it all go away (at 8:30AM) dear Big Brother... tell me it's all ok, and spending like a drunken sailor has created a new era of prosperity - I hang on your every word/statistical inaccuracy. I await my chance to buy many a stock based on your propoganda ... err, data points.

[Aug 14, 2009: No New Normal Say Some Economists, Prosperity Without Jobs?]
[May 9, 2009: The Curse of the Class of 2009 - Lower Wages for Up to a Decade]

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