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Friday, August 5, 2011

LinkedIn (LNKD) Reports First Quarter as a Public Company

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LinkedIn (LNKD) reported its first quarter as a public company with a surprising profit, and nice revenue growth.  However, some analysts rightly question the valuation.  That said, when the market is good, people are piling into a few select high growth stocks without regards for valuation.  Valuation will only matter.... when it does.



Via AP

  • LinkedIn earned $4.5 million, or 4 cents per share, in the April-June period. That contrasted with earnings of $938,000, or 2 cents per share, at the same time last year.  Non-GAAP EPS for the second quarter was $0.10.
  • Revenue more than doubled from last year to $121 million while membership climbed 61 percent to 116 million at the end of June.
  • Revenue from hiring solutions, or services that help companies hire employees -- which makes up the bulk of the social network's business -- surged 170 percent to $58.6 million, racing past expectations.  Revenue from marketing solutions jumped 111 percent to $38.6 million, while sales of premium subscriptions rose a more sedate 60 percent to $23.9 million.
  • Analysts, on average, had projected a loss of 4 cents per share on revenue of $104.5 million, according to FactSet.
  • The earnings in LinkedIn's most recent quarter represented the most money the company has made in any three-period so far in its eight-year history. It's still a puny profit for a company whose market value is sitting around $10 billion.
  • Losses could loom ahead too. LinkedIn has indicated it's willing to sacrifice short-term earnings to increase spending on technology and new product development.  Growth is also expected to slow, partly because of economic uncertainty and partly because of the temporary lift provided by the IPO publicity.
  • LinkedIn expects its third-quarter revenue to climb as high as $125 million, which would be slightly below the second-quarter growth rate of 120 percent. For the full year, LinkedIn sees its revenue rising to as high as $485 million, roughly doubling from $243 million in 2010.
  • LinkedIn gets more than two-thirds of revenues from fees that it charges companies, corporate recruiting services and other people who want broader access to the profiles and other data on the company's website. The remainder comes from advertising.

Some analyst reaction:
  • Morgan Stanley analyst Scott Devitt this morning cut his rating on the stock to Equal Weight from Overweight on a valuation basis, noting that his base case valuation on the stock of $110 leaves little upside.
  • Evercore Partners analyst Ken Sena reduced his rating to Underweight from Equal Weight, setting a $70 price target. He is concerned about both valuation and the coming expiration of lock-up agreements that affect 92% of the company’s outstanding shares.
  • William Blair analyst Timothy McHugh picked up coverage of the stock with a Market Perform rating. “If we used a multiple of 7-9 times projected 2012 revenue for hiring solutions, 6 times for premium subscription, and 14-16 times for marketing solutions, shares would be worth $55-$80,” he writes. “Upside to our revenue estimates, which is very possible, could push this valuation range up a bit. However, the company’s valuation leaves no room for error, in our opinion, so we prefer to find a better entry point on the stock.”

Full report here.

No position

Fannie Mae Quietly Seeks Another $5.1 Billion Bailout

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We take a moment from our normally scheduled market thrashing for this update:

Hmmm... this is surprising.  Usually Fannie Mae announces earnings after the close Friday when almost everyone has left the building.... along with their request for more billions of dollars of bailouts.  Yes, they're still asking - quarter after quarter.  Today, for some reason the news came out in the morning.  Perhaps because everyone is fixated on the crazy action in the general market.  So please empty your pockets for another $5.1 Billion.

  • Mortgage finance giant Fannie Mae said it would ask for an additional $5.1 billion from taxpayers as it continues to suffer losses on loans made prior to 2009.  The largest U.S. residential mortgage funds provider on Friday also reported a second-quarter net loss attributable to common shareholders of $5.2 billion, or 90 cents per share.
  • Including the latest funding request, Fannie Mae has needed $104 billion in government capital injections since the U.S. Treasury seized control of it in 2008 during the financial crisis.
  • Fannie said in a statement that its second-quarter loss "reflects the continued weakness in the housing and mortgage markets, which remain under pressure from high levels of unemployment, underemployment and the prolonged decline in home prices since their peak in the third quarter of 2006." It said expenses related to mortgage modifications also contributed to its loss in the quarter.
  • The $5.2 billion loss attributable to shareholders follows a loss of $8.7 billion in the first quarter and compared with a loss of $3.125 billion in the second quarter of 2010.

Reason for the Reversal - ECB Says will Buy Italian and Spanish Bonds... Pending Reforms

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This was what I was looking for in yesterdays news conference from Trichet (which he failed to deliver)

Appears to be the reason for the reversal... or Trichet really likes technical analysis and wanted to help the market ;)

Reuters saying ECB telling Italy it will buy Italy and Spain bonds if they commit to bring forward specific reforms

In due time, the ECB's balance sheet will be as chock full of debt as the Fed's is.

------------------

Link here.

The European Central Bank is demanding that Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi commit to fast-track specific welfare reforms and a constitutional amendment enshrining a fiscal rule before it will buy Italian bonds, sources close to the matter said on Friday.

The sources, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue, said the ECB had agreed in principle on Thursday to buy Italian and Spanish bonds if key structural reforms were brought forward.

Berlusconi's office said he and Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti will hold a news conference at 1700 GMT, although it was not clear whether he will make an announcement along those lines.

Top European Union leaders were applying concerted pressure on Berlusconi to make an announcement by the end of the weekend so that the ECB could intervene in bond markets early next week

"The ECB has already signalled their will to act. People in the market say the ECB has started inquiring about Italian bond prices, but it hasn't bought any," one source said.

Looking Good on the Reversal

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See edit in previoius post... already back to 1190s....

The rubber band has been pulled back so far, could have a very nice violent upward move here for short term flippers (which is all I would be in this type of market)

1175 Broken, So Longs Will Throw in the Towel Here

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1175 broke on the S&P 500, so anyone hoping for that sort of support will throw in the towel.  We should get a woosh down quickly as computer orders hit, and then we have to see what happens.  Either another horrible day or a reversal after everyone is washed out....

It is fascinating to watch if nothing else.

EDIT 12:09 PM - Ok we got the break of support, the washout, and a small reversal.  Already back to S&P 1178ish.  If you play this long, you do the same thing as yesterday, use a stop out if we break 1175 or days lows depending on how loose of a stop you want.  If your stop hits, its a sell - no questions asked, as with yesterday.

Wicked Oversold, but Thus Far Hasn't Mattered - Coming to Test November 2010 Lows

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As I mentioned yesterday once we broke that low of the day in the afternoon, I was not very interested at another attempt until we got to 1175ish.  You can see why from the chart below.  If bulls can't make a stand there, frankly it will be amazing but we are seeing liquidation and emotional selling at this point.  Good for those of us with patience and who preserve capital but still quite awe inspiring to watch.  By standing to the side with lots of cash in times like this, you are going to (mostly) miss the glorious day we reverse but you will not have huge losses to make up.  So you really don't need to catch the bounce like all the people swimming in horrendous losses the past 3 weeks.

Just like overbought markets can remain overbought, so can oversold.  It seems more so nowadays with the dominance of the HFT crews.



Every single secondary indicator is flashing massive oversold and "reading not seen since 2008 or 2009" but those of you who lived through 2000-2002 and 2008-early 2009 know, things like that sometimes don't matter.

If 1175 breaks, I really don't see much in the way of support for a while because the QE2 rally made the market go up vertical without building any support along the way.  1125ish is the high of August 2010, and that's 50 points below 1175. 

That said, for those newbie technicians this is an excellent example of a head and shoulders formation that 'worked' once the neckline was broken.  There was a similar occurence last year but we had a strange situation where it did not work - I don't remember the exact circumstances, I just remember having to reverse course 180 degrees at the time.

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Frankly I don't know of any solution to Europe aside from (a) it breaking apart and allowing the member countries to follow the U.S. and Japan solution - debase the currency or (b) the ECB turning into the Fed and taking trillions of assets on their balance sheet by turning into the U.S. or Japanese central bank or (c) some sort of crazy plan where American citizens begin taking on European debt as the Fed somehow does something crazy that supports the ECB.

Position b does not seem plausible YET in Europe but I feel will be the eventual situation.  Position c would be Armageddon type of situation, simply because asking the Fed to support another country (or continent) to that extent would seem incredible.  Position a would be messy but frankly Europe would not be in this mess if they each had their own currency to debase.  (see Iceland!)

For the past year I have been pointing out FRANCE as a suspicious character which the market has not concentrated on.  Germany and France are supposed to be the 2 strong players in the EU, but France has a quite poor debt go GDP ratio as well (as bad as Portugal!), but has for some reason been granted immunity.  While both Spain and Italy are TBTF (hence the ESFS), if the market ever focuses on France than what do you do?  Hence something to keep your eye on in the years ahead.  [Feb 5, 2010:  Sovereign Risk Chart - Where Would the U.S. Fit In?]

[click to enlarge]


Whatever the case there is really no argument for fiat currencies - at least those of the big 3 - yen, dollar, or EU - 3 ugly ducklings who have been in a race to the bottom since 2008 and from this point of view will be for much of the next decade.  Hence... gold.

Wow, that Did Not Last Long

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A straight dump from the opening gap up.  From about +1.2% to -0.5% in minutes.  For now its a market mostly to watch as that sort of action is dangerous.  As I said I would have preferred a gap down to create some sort of wash out and at least a short term rally.... maybe we will still get it but it's stomach churning for now.



As mentioned yesterday the Nov 2010 lows of 1175ish is an area I'll be interested in watching closely.  At this pace we might get there soon.

Bespoke: Key ETF Performance Over the Last Week and Month

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I would have liked to seen this data shown since the July peak, but whatever the case it is always interesting to see what has been hit the hardest and what has held up whenever we get this dramatic swoons.  Bespoke created a table below showing the major ETF classes.  No surprise the Europeans have been hit the hardest but a bit surprising Germany (which has been a star during this recovery) has been thrown out with the bathwater.  Back in the U.S. midcaps have suffered the most in terms of market cap, while the cyclical growth sectors (no surprise) have been hit the hardest as questions about a double dip arise.

[click to enlarge]


July Employment +117,000 with Private Sector +154,000; Unemployment Rate 9.1%

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I was thinking we'd have a pretty solid number, if for nothing else the previous 2 months were so horrid and had deteriorated so quickly that we'd have some reversion to a mean.  However, I would not be placing bets on it.  Indeed, the number came in quite solid at 117,000 job gains with a better number in the private sector.  Will have to see how many of these gains came from 'birth death' model but with such a bad oversold condition and sour mood on Wall St anything in the 100K range would be good enough I think.

The unemployment rate ticked down 0.1% to 9.1%.  Digging for more info and will update shortly.

Average hourly earnings up 0.4% versus last month's 0.0% (big improvement)

Average hourly workweek flat at 34.3 hours.



Labor force dropped to 63.9%, which explains the drop in the headline unemployment rate.  Awful.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Always a Bull Market Somewhere: Priceline.com (PCLN) Up Some 12%+ In After Hours

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Priceline.com (PCLN) continues to awe and amaze - cannot believe I sold this one in the $200s a few years back thinking it had run its course.   The chart below is deceiving as the stock fell 7.4% to $483 during regular hours and is currently trading in the mid $530s in after hours.



The company absolutely demolished analysts estimates of $4.87 by 62 cents! ($5.49)

Revenue rose 44% to $1.1 billion.  (International sales skyrocketed 90% to $612 million)

Bookings rose 70%.

Guidance for next quarter was superlative - $9.10 to $9.30 versus analysts' $7.94.

“The Group benefitted from strong second quarter performances by our global hotel and rental car businesses,” said Jeffery H. Boyd, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Priceline Group. “Global hotel room nights increased 56% compared to last year, while global rental car days were up 55% for the two nd quarter. In general, our hotel booking business is benefitting from improving ADRs, continuing strength in our core markets, and high rates of growth in new markets, particularly Asia-Pacific, where both Booking.com and Agoda are performing well.”


No position

Did I Mention Fugly? Oh Yes, I Already Did...

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Ouch.



At this point if you are looking for some natural support areas the 1175ish area from Nov 2010 looks like a good spot. 

A bad unemployment number and gap down would be the 'best' thing tomorrow.  A gap up, I would not prefer.

Today was the first day, after being patient with this selloff, I would have tried a foray into the long side but I was stopped out within a few hours.  Any bad opening tomorrow would have me interested again.

So Ben Bernank's $600B of QE2 has been about halfway repelled in terms of 'wealth effect'.  Another great use of our money. :)

Boy oh boy, just by having the fund open and being 100% in cash the past few weeks, I would have been off to a roaring start versus the indexes.

Starting to Get those Calls and Emails

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I'm starting to get those calls and emails from people who barely watch the market, saying "what's going on???!!"

Generally that's a positive sign ;) as are the traffic spikes on the blog.

Tomorrow will be so interesting with the employment report.  Anything like 150K jobs should send this market in a tizzy upward!  That said, with 35 minutes to go the close is looking poor - finishing near or at the lows of the days..... therefore only riverboat gamblers should be the only ones going long.  Unless one of those hockey sticks shows up in the last moments.

p.s. WSJ reporter went on CNBC about 40 minutes ago speaking tales of QE3... which was why we had the rally from 1213ish to 1222. ;)

Bespoke: Most 52 Week Lows Since March 2009

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Pretty interesting statistic by Bespoke Invest - today is showing the most 52 week lows in the S&P 500 than anytime since 3/9/2009.  Unless we do a 'crash', there is a great buying opportunity close here.



The market was tricky today - it broke through the earlier morning lows, and flushed out people like me who stop loss when that happens. Now we are back to 1221ish on the S&P 500. So one could say a 'double bottom' intraday has been created, although a tricky one. I'll be watching these last 50 minutes closely.

Intraday Double Bottom Test Here

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Important moment here as we go back to retest the lows earlier in the day.  As I wrote earlier, either we break and we're in bad shape, or we hold and it could be a very good thing.

If we break the lows of the day,  I'd be stopping out of positions put on earlier today and going back to cash.


Ok, Now We're Panicking

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Down 3%.... things are flushing out...

EDIT 11:48 - 3.4%

EDIT 11:55 AM: Good conditions for a snap back as its getting 'egregious' out there... only problem is Europe is nutso.  But closed for the day.

EDIT 11:58 AM - on Twitter just posted if you are going long, go with a stop out versus low of the day.  I would be doing that here. Might get a retest of days low - if it breaks, have to go out again.  If we bounce, this could be a nice play to make 'fast money'.


Fugly

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Indeed the ECB says they have been buying Irish and Portuguese bonds, but the market doesnt seem to be too content with this after all.
  • The European Central Bank intervened in markets buying Portuguese and Irish bonds while its president, Jean-Claude Trichet, told journalists the bank's bond-buying program was not dormant.
  • Traders quoted by Reuters said the central bank was buying the bonds in the secondary market just after Trichet said, answering a question about its SMP program: "I would not be surprised if by the end of this teleconference you will see something on the market."
  • Trichet refused to comment when being challenged as to why the ECB bought only Portuguese and Irish bonds, not Italian ones.


Thus far the S&P 500 has held yesterday's lows, but with relatively "meh" data on the economic front it is surprising to see such a dramatic drop.  Time to start a new QE rumor? One a day cannot hurt.  For now Europe dominates.

Overheard....

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Amazing statistic by CEO of Careerbuilder.com this morning on CNBC

45% of people have taken a pay CUT in their new jobs vs 23% who have received a pay INCREASE. 

That's mind blowing, and I only wish we could see that trend over time.  It continues to point to the slow erosion of the middle class via structural factors we've outlined countless times the past 4 years.




No Follow Through

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While we are waiting the weekly jobless claims, futures are not looking like there is going to be any real follow through on yesterday's QE3 celebration in the afternoon.  While off the worst levels of the overnight session, most of yesterday's gains look to be erased at the open barring a material change in futures in the next hour or so.  Therefore, it appears yesterday afternoon was some combination of selling exhaustion (we're very oversold), and short sellers covering on the QE3 discussion.



Both the ECB and BOE kept interest rates steady, which was expected.  The ECB press conference today may be a form of catalyst as the marketplace is pressuring Trichet to reinstate sovereign debt purchases, which apparenly have not been utilized the past four months.  With both Italy and Spain the current focus, it would seem like Trichet would open the door to this which might appease markets.  The 'big bailout' fund (ESFS) is not yet funded, and not looking to be operational until end of year - so the market is looking for a bridge in the meantime:

  • "It is to some extent anticipated in markets that the ECB could be some kind of bridge until the EFSF is fully implemented. As we know, the EFSF is not ready before the end of this year to buy up in the secondary market, but it would be a massive positive event in markets if the ECB stepped in and put away its reluctance to act in the market," Danske Market chief analyst John Hydeskov told CNBC on Thursday morning.


Outside of that Japan intervened overnight in the currency markets as the dollar has weakened tremendously versus the yen.  Being a heavy exporting country, this is not good for Japan.
  • The Japanese yen plunged Thursday after Tokyo intervened and the nation’s central bank stepped up its monetary easing.  The action in Tokyo, which came a day after Switzerland acted to push down its own currency, marks the first time Japan has stepped into the market since the aftermath of the devastating March 11 earthquake.
  • Later in the day, the Bank of Japan announced that it was adding to its asset purchases — such easing tends to weaken currencies — even as it said that Japan’s “economic activity has been picking up steadily.”

Gold and to a lesser degree silver continue to rocket, as fiat currency debasement is the only solution governments and central bankers seem to know.


Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Nice Reversal

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Not sure if that was *the* reversal but with expectations low for Fridays job reports, and whispers of QE now surrounding bears at every corner, it was a positive day.  Ending on the high was a positive.  I'd mention the moving averages but once we get going upward they don't seem to matter...

[Video] Former Fed VP Kohn Supports QE3 as Long as Inflation Slows - Market Rejoices

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Here we go again! QEinfinity!  Donald Kohn (ex VP of Fed) hinted in an interview he'd support QE3 if inflation stayed subdued.  The market loves it.  Gold has been sniffing this (and more European bailouts) for weeks.  My prediction of QE by this winter is looking better by the moment.

The first two rounds of QE worked so well (I mean that 0.4% Q1 GDP was a charmer) so let's do another....

However, there will never be another 20% correction allowed in the history of the US stock market because QE will continuously be employed. ;)

Video below...





  • The U.S. economy faces a risk of falling back into recession and the Federal Reserve might need to consider a new round of securities purchases to deal with it, even though it isn’t in a strong position to address a slowdown, three former top officials at the central bank said.
  • In an exclusive interview with the Wall Street Journal, Donald Kohn, Vincent Reinhart and Brian Madigan – the last three directors of the Fed’s powerful monetary affairs committee — put the risk of a new economic contraction at between 20% and 40%. Madigan and Kohn said the Fed should consider a third round of bond purchases only if inflation slows from recent elevated levels and if the economy continues to underperform. But they cautioned a new purchase program, dubbed QE3, would not represent a cure-all.
  • Madigan, who advises Barclay Capital and teaches at Georgetown University after retiring from the central bank a year ago, said the Fed’s $600-billion bond purchases that ended in June had a “relatively modest” positive effect on the economy. “Purchases of that order of magnitude could be helpful at the margin,” he said in his first public interview since leaving the key position at the Fed.
  • Kohn was the most optimistic, saying the odds of a new recession following the severe downturn of 2008 and 2009 stood around 20%. Kohn, the Fed’s no. 2 official until Sept. 2010, still believes the economic slowdown in the first half was mainly due to temporary factors such as high food and gas prices and the impact of Japan’s earthquake on the global supply chain. But even he’s starting to lose faith in this forecast.
  • Fears that a new recession may be around the corner are hitting global financial markets and sent U.S stocks down for the ninth straight session Wednesday. U.S. consumers cut spending in June at the fastest pace in nearly two years, raising concerns that the economy is stalling largely because of underlying weakness following the financial crisis, not one-off factors. Economists have started to downgrade their forecasts for faster growth in the second half, after gross domestic product rose by less than 1% in the first six months of the year.
  • Kohn said the Fed still has some options to support the economy, but “they’re kind of limited”. He expects the central bank, which holds a policy meeting Aug. 9, to wait and see whether the recovery is really losing steam before taking any action. If that’s the case — and inflation is coming down — then he’d give “very serious consideration” to a new round of bond purchases.
  • The bond purchases can help the economy by keeping borrowing rates, which are tied to U.S. Treasurys, low and by driving investors to riskier assets like stocks. But they’ve been attacked by Republicans at home and foreign government officials for fear they’ll spark runaway inflation and have lead the U.S. dollar to lose too much value.
  • Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke told Congress last month that he’s prepared to act if economic weakness persists. But he’s also signaled that, in order to buy more bonds, the Fed must see a risk of deflation. Though there have been hints that consumer prices are cooling off, many measures of inflation remain above the Fed’s informal target of close to 2.0%.
  • The U.S. government’s jobs report for July, to be released Friday, is expected to show the unemployment rate to have remained at a lofty 9.2%. Total nonfarm payrolls are forecast to have increased by only 75,000 last month, with continued layoffs seen in state and local governments.
  • While relieved that a government default was avoided, the former Fed officials were critical of a deal approved by Congress Tuesday that allows the government to borrow more now in exchange for budget deficit cuts of as much as $2.4 trillion over the next decade.
  • Reinhart, who said he gives Congress “a very low grade” like most Americans, believes the odds of a credit downgrade by rating companies have not changed following the debt deal. Standard & Poor’s was looking for 10-year budget cuts of $4.0 trillion to confirm the U.S. top-notch AAA rating.
  • Kohn noted the deal leaves lots of uncertainty over the path of fiscal policy, making it harder for the Fed to decide what to do with monetary policy. The debt deal doesn’t specify what happens to the payroll tax cut enacted in Jan. and passes on the key long-term decisions of cutting the deficit to a bipartisan committee.
  • While more bond purchases could help the U.S. economy at the margin, Madigan said that providing more explicit guidance on how long the Fed’s short-term interest rate remains close to zero — another easing option mentioned by Bernanke — would not be so effective.
  • The Fed funds rate, or the rate at which banks lend to each other overnight, will probably stay at a record low at least until the middle of 2012, according to both Madigan and Reinhart. The Fed drove the rate down to zero at the end of 2008 to fight the financial crisis, leaving it with fewer ammunitions to lift the economy.
  • “We’re flying the plane slower and closer to the ground, so we’re less resilient to adverse shocks,” said Reinhart, who puts the odds of a new recession at 40%. Following a financial crisis, seven out of 15 countries studied by Reinhart have experienced two recession over a 10-year period.

Reuters: China's Shortcut to America via Reverse Mergers

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Anyone who has been paying attention to markets the past 6 months has seen the large uptick in blowups by Chinese small caps, almost without exception companies that made it to the U.S. via reverse merger. Reuters has a quite fascinating in depth report on the reverse merger market, specifically focusing on the path many Chinese companies have taken to get backdoor listings (rather than using IPOs).  [Jun 23, 2011: List of  Chinese Reverse Mergers]  Definitely an interesting read for those not familiar with this sort of process, and eye opening in a multitude of ways.  Aside from the history of it all, it is quite amazing to see how prevalent shell companies are in this country.  Some snippets below:

  • A spate of spectacular collapses of Chinese stocks listed on American exchanges has cost U.S. investors billions of dollars. The fiasco has sparked multiple investigations. Accusations are swirling in Washington and Beijing.  It all began with an email sent out of the blue a decade ago to a Texas businessman named Timothy Halter.
  • The email came from Shanghai native Zhihao "John" Zhang. The former medical student introduced himself and asked: Was Halter interested in helping bring Chinese companies to the U.S. stock market? Zhang proposed using a backdoor method that the Texan had mastered for American firms: buying dormant shell companies listed on U.S. exchanges. Soon, Halter and Zhang brought two Chinese firms to market in America: a manufacturer of power-steering systems and a maker of vitamins, weight-loss supplements and household cleaners.
  • The email led to a boom for a niche industry of advisers who specialize in a brand of deals, called the "reverse merger," that use shell companies to give clients easy entry into U.S. capital markets. More than 400 Chinese companies seized the chance.
  • Leading the way was Halter, a slim, salt-and-pepper-haired man who played a direct or indirect part in 23 deals; staked his name on at least 20 other deals done by his Shanghai partner, Zhang; and paved the way, through conferences in China, for dozens of other deals.   His firm, Halter Financial Group, threw splashy "summits" to promote the industry, including a gathering headlined by former President George W. Bush in 2010. Its website boasts: "Reverse Merger Experts!" But deals birthed by Halter and his imitators are now blowing up.
  • Investors have alleged widespread accounting irregularities and other problems at dozens of the Chinese companies that reverse-listed in the U.S., causing share prices to nosedive. Since March, some 30 Chinese firms have seen their auditors resign and at least 25 have been delisted from U.S. exchanges.
  • Reuters interviewed nearly 100 industry participants and examined financial records of dozens of Chinese companies to paint the most detailed picture yet of the network of dozens of players involved in the reverse-mergers boom.
  • That industry hinges on a handful of leading "shell brokers" such as Halter who purvey paper companies; investment banks who specialize in financing a firm after a reverse merger; and auditors, usually small shops, who are lightly regulated in the U.S.--and not at all in China and Hong Kong.
  • The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, the U.S. auditing watchdog, issued a report in March about potential problems with the audits of Chinese companies formed through reverse mergers. The Securities and Exchange Commission has set up a working group to examine Chinese reverse mergers, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation has opened its own broad investigation, say people familiar with the situation.
  • The Chinese reverse-merger boom and bust offer insight into a little-understood corner of American business: the widespread use of shell companies, which can offer their owners a way to minimize regulatory scrutiny. The U.S. in recent years has called for much greater transparency in global business transactions. But on American shores, opaque shell companies are rife.
  • A reverse merger hinges on a shell company-a firm without meaningful assets or operations, used as a vehicle for transactions-that's already listed on a stock exchange.A deal typically starts with a so-called shell broker, anyone from a small shop to a larger firm such as Halter's. Brokers acquire shells, often domiciled in a secrecy-friendly state such as Delaware, Utah or Nevada. The broker then sells the U.S. shell to an operating company seeking to trade on a U.S. exchange-a transaction which, unlike an initial public offering, isn't overseen by regulators.
  • The acquiring firm thus becomes a publicly-traded company, with access to U.S. investors - but without the time, expense and scrutiny of a traditional initial public offering. Companies are incorporated under state rather than federal law, and so the federal overseer of stock flotations, the Securities and Exchange Commission, doesn't as a matter of course review reverse mergers until after the deal is done.
The article goes on from there ...

First Real Panic Selling

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For the first time in this selloff, we are seeing some real panic and people finally dumping some of the momentum names.  That's incrementally bullish.  I was hoping for a gap down to start the day to make it a bit 'easier' but this is doing the trick.

The S&P 500 broke the yearly intraday lows, post ISM release and we're going to get a snapback rally at some point.  People just don't want to put their hands out yet to catch the falling knife. 



I pulled the S&P 500 chart farther out than usual just to show how darn far The Bernank was able to affect the market with QE2 nearly a year ago.  Ironically, Jackson Hole Wyoming is only a few weeks away.

One of my favorite gauges - the % of S&P 500 stocks below their 50 day moving average was at a yearly low of 14% coming into the day.  Obviously this figure is lower at this very moment as we experience another selloff.



I'm more bullish today than I have been the past few weeks (again for at least a bounce).  That said crashes come from oversold conditions, so one must always have that in the back of your mind. (I'm not calling for a crash - its a low probability event)

The perfect bull scenario is a bad morning, that ends with a rally to take the market to highs of the day.  It's not always that easy, but if you see a day like that - it's a good thing.

ISM Non Manufacturing at Lowest Level in 17 Months at 52.7

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Not too surprisingly, we have a weakening ISM Non Manufacturing figure - it fits in with the rest of the data.   The reading of 52.7 is down from last month's 53.3.  (Estimate was 53)  It is still expansionary as its over 50, and for the first time in a long time we see the non manufacturing reading higher than the manufacturing - probably because the service sector is slower to adjust to economic conditions.

On the negative front new orders fell, inventories rose, and employment fell.  On the positive side some pressure in prices subsided.

WHAT RESPONDENTS ARE SAYING...
  • "Sales and customer traffic recovered slightly, pulling even with last year after trending lower for several months. Discretionary spending per customer has continued to decline in all areas of the operation." (Arts, Entertainment & Recreation)
  • "Sales volumes are steady. Input costs are increasing." (Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing & Hunting)
  • "Business outlook remains steady, but concerns about the second half of the year remain." (Professional, Scientific & Technical Services)
  • "Municipal government has not bounced back at a similar pace to the private sector." (Public Administration)
  • "New home construction is still very slow. Repair and remodel is the only bright spot." (Wholesale Trade)
  • "Commodities cooling off and dropping a bit." (Retail Trade)
ISM NON-MANUFACTURING SURVEY RESULTS AT A GLANCE
COMPARISON OF ISM NON-MANUFACTURING AND ISM MANUFACTURING SURVEYS*
JULY 2011
  Non-Manufacturing Manufacturing
Index Series
Index
Jul
Series
Index
Jun
Percent
Point
Change
Direction Rate
of
Change
Trend**
(Months)
Series
Index
Jul
Series
Index
Jun
Percent
Point
Change
NMI/PMI 52.7 53.3 -0.6 Growing Slower 20 50.9 55.3 -4.4
Business Activity/Production 56.1 53.4 +2.7 Growing Faster 24 52.3 54.5 -2.2
New Orders 51.7 53.6 -1.9 Growing Slower 24 49.2 51.6 -2.4
Employment 52.5 54.1 -1.6 Growing Slower 11 53.5 59.9 -6.4
Supplier Deliveries 50.5 52.0 -1.5 Slowing Slower 16 50.4 56.3 -5.9
Inventories 56.5 53.5 +3.0 Growing Faster 6 49.3 54.1 -4.8
Prices 56.6 60.9 -4.3 Increasing Slower 24 59.0 68.0 -9.0
Backlog of Orders 44.0 48.5 -4.5 Contracting Faster 2 45.0 49.0 -4.0
New Export Orders 49.0 57.0 -8.0 Contracting From Growing 1 54.0 53.5 +0.5
Imports 47.5 46.5 +1.0 Contracting Slower 2 53.5 51.0 +2.5
Inventory Sentiment 59.5 58.5 +1.0 Too High Faster 170 N/A N/A N/A
Customers' Inventories N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 44.0 47.0 -3.0
* Non-

ADP Employment at 114,000 v 100,000 Expectation

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On the surface 114,000 should be a pretty good number.  The only problem is last month ADP came in at 157,000 while the government data barely was above zero.

The ISM non manufacturing data at 10 AM will be more interesting to me today.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Sliced Through June Lows

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I will shortly become more short term bullish (for a bounce) as we've broken the support from June.  Now that this is broken a lot of people expecting support to hold here, will throw in the towel.  Yearly intraday low (March 2011) could beckon.

We have ISM Services tomorrow (ADP employment in the premarket) and then the employment report Friday.  Expectations have been lowered significantly so short of a total bomb (which is plausible), the bar is very low to get a 'better than expected' figure.  That might be a catalyst for a snapback rally. 

I still would like to see some more panic among the momo leaders - sometimes you get that, and sometimes you don't before the market clears.  If we did it would be incrementally positive for a bounce.  As would a gap down tomorrow ....


Fun fact - the S&P 500 is now down for the year.

[Video] Marc Faber: 'The Bear Market is Starting'

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Only one man's opinion but one who generally has a pretty good sense of market timing. 

8 minute video - email readers will need to come to site to view




  • The bear market is on its way back, economist and contrarian investor Marc Faber, the editor and publisher of The Gloom Boom & Doom Report told CNBC Tuesday.  "The bear market is starting. When you compare equities to bonds and cash I don't think equities are very positive," Faber said in an interview.
  • "The Treasury market is telling you that the economy is in recession," said Faber. "So if the bond market is telling you that the economies of the Western world are weakening, but at the same time the stock market is still relatively high, I think the stock market is vulnerable." 
  • He added his voice to those criticizing politicians in the US and elsewhere over the current problems. "The politicians are all useless individuals. Nobody is reducing the problems in the US or Europe, just putting on a band aid and postponing the problems endlessly," he said. "Some analysts think that there's a chance economic data will surprise on the upside but I think, if anything, it will be on the downside," Faber added.  He believes that some companies will start to disappoint in the second half of this year.
  • Faber argues that China disappointing "is a much bigger risk for the global economy than the US because the US is no longer a major commodities buyer".   He believes that the impact of a decline in Chinese growth on the oil price could be critical for major commodities producers like Canada, Australia and the Middle East.  "If commodity prices are falling, then commodity producers will buy fewer goods from China," he pointed out. "This is something that the world central bankers can't deal with."
  • Food price inflation is more of a problem in emerging markets than in the developed world as food is typically a much bigger part of annual spend in poorer countries, Faber pointed out, arguing that this could lead to worse than expected growth in China.   Faber, who describes himself as "ultra-bearish", said that he thinks that precious metals are the best place to be at the moment.
  • Despite worries about major euro zone economies including Italy, he is relatively bullish on the survival of the euro. "What surprises me more is actually the strength of the euro and that it has not collapsed yet," he said   He believes that peripheral economies which drag down the euro will eventually be "chucked out" of the single currency. "I would have chucked out Greece three years ago, straight away, and it would have been much cheaper," Faber said.
  • Gold's position as a safe haven will continue to keep prices close to their recent historical highs, Faber believes. He said that he would buy gold if it falls below $1500 per ounce again.

Herbalife (HLF) Continues its Amazing Run

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There have been a handful of companies that I have missed, or chosen to stay out of, the past few years - and Herbalife (HLF) is one of them.  Nutrion/weight loss companies have a history of big runs (Nutrisystem was the last darling of this sector) and then blow ups but Herbalife has prevailed for quite a long time without the blowup.  The direct distribution model seems to be very effective with this sort of product.

Short sellers appear to be squeezed again with yet another beat... the company is following the Apple (AAPL) model for sandbagging guidance and then blowing away that figure, as it offered substantially lower guidance just six weeks ago.
  • Earnings for the company rose to 88 cents a share for the quarter, from 65 cents a share, a year ago. Analysts on average had expected the company to earn 75 cents per share.
  • Revenue rose 28 percent to $879.7 million, while analysts expected revenue of $829.4 million.

Asia Pacific sales also grew very nicely... as did Mexico.
  • The company's revenue from Asia pacific rose about 38 percent to $237.1 million, while Mexico revenues rose about 41 percent to $113.9 million.
Guidance
  • For the year, Herbalife now expects to post net income of $2.97 to $3.07 per share, on revenue growth of 22 percent to 24 percent, implying revenue of $3.33 billion to $3.39 billion. Its prior guidance was for earnings between $2.77 and $2.89 per share. Analysts were expecting net income of $2.91 per share on revenue of $3.26 billion.
Full report here.

Herbalife Ltd., a network marketing company, sells weight management, nutritional supplement, energy, sports and fitness, and personal care products worldwide. It offers science based products in four principal categories: weight management; targeted nutrition; energy, sports, and fitness; and outer nutrition.

No position

Break of 200 Day Exponential Moving Average but Getting Oversold on 7th Day of Selling

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I though they rest on the seventh day?  Apparently not.

We are seeing the 7th day of selling in a row, which has taken the market down nearly 5.5%.  While much of this will be blamed on sovereign debt issues I think it has a lot more to do with the global slowdown that the market is finally beginning to accept.  We've had horrid economic news of late - with last Friday's GDP announcement for Q2 and revision of Q1, the unemployment data from roughly a month ago, and US ISMs dropping significantly.  Also yesterday were the foreign PMI reading which showed significant slowdowns in Europe and depending if you listen to the private HSBC report or the government report out of China, signaled either contraction or a very light expansion in Chinese PMI.

Earnings season has been solid as usual, but the first chinks in guidance have begun to appear - i.e. Caterpillar saying they saw some slowing in China, and many consumer oriented multinationals pointing to the weakening U.S.  The big question as we noted in the ECRI piece last week was, will earnings expectations prove to be too rosy and will there be a mean revision downward closer to the "Main Street economy".  Many of our largest companies have relied on massive cost cutting (still a benefit) along with foreign sales (signs of weakness beginning), to create an earnings story that has totally disconnected from Main Street.  They've also benefited from massive U.S. government intervention and stimulus which has filtered through to their revenue line - that is obviously slowing, at least at the state and local level.

The S&P 500, after bouncing smartly off the 200 day exponential moving average yesterday, has retested that level and broken below for now.  As always the close is more important than the intraday action so it will be interesting to see if the dip buyers come in later today as they attempt to do most days.  Obviously the lows of June are also in play here in the 1260s area.  A break below that would be very troubling.



That said, we're reaching very oversold levels so a cursory bounce at the minimum would seem likely in the coming days.

PIMCO's Bill Gross - Kings of the Wild Frontier

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PIMCO's Bill Gross outlines the paths the U.S. can 'take care' of its long term debt.  Already we have embarked on quite a few such as currency devaluation (i.e. stealing the value of your savings), and crushing the savers of the country with little interest paid on said monies.  This is a good letter to pass along to friends who don't follow this type of stuff closely, and want to see what is in store for them down the road while distracted by circus and bread.


From PIMCO:

Kings of the Wild Frontier
  • Nothing in the Congressional compromise reached over the weekend makes a significant dent in our $1.5 trillion deficit.
  • In addition to an existing nearly $10 trillion of outstanding Treasury debt, the U.S. has a near unfathomable $66 trillion of future liabilities at “net present cost.”
  • Aside from outright default, there are numerous ways a government can reduce its future liabilities. They include balancing the budget, unexpected inflation, currency depreciation and financial repression.
 “Over the years we’ve had some fun together – killin some ‘bars,’ drinkin moonshine – some even in these chambers. (Whiskey that is – the ‘bars’ I’ve seen once or twice, but only when I was plum drunk). But the time for funnin is over. They’ll be no jokes from David Crockett today.” 
Davy Crockett Speech to Congress, 1830
Figurative coonskin cap on head, I echo the sentiments of Davy Crockett – Indian fighter, Alamo defender and Tennessee Congressman – not necessarily in that chronological order. The debt ceiling may have been raised and the palpable sighs of relief heard across global financial markets, but the fun times are over. They’ll be no jokes from Bill Gross today, nor across this land for years to come I suspect. Even though the U.S. has managed to avert a debt crisis and perhaps a ratings downgrade, there remains a stain on our reputation, a scarlet “A” for budgetary “Abuse,” that will not disappear. The whole world was watching, and what they saw was a dysfunctional government taking its country to the financial precipice and backing off at the very last moment. “Shades of a Banana Republic,” as former Reagan budget director David Stockman opined somewhat harshly last week. We may not be Greece just yet, but Mr. Stockman is looking in the right direction.

Nothing in the Congressional compromise reached over the weekend makes a significant dent in our $1.5 trillion deficit. “Out year” fantasies, as opposed to “current year” realities, is an apt description of the spending cuts that characterize this compromise. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) estimates that future deficits will be reduced at most by .5%, and if so, it would be welcomed, but that .5% comes with no new taxes and a continuation of the belief that we don’t have to pay for our trespasses. Like many a Banana Republic, we may one day be invoking the Lord’s Prayer, pleading – “Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors,” yet at the same time looking towards the heavens á la Saint Augustine with a fervent “let me be chaste, but let it be tomorrow.”

Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner noted last week that it would be unthinkable that the U.S. would not meet its obligations on time. Now that the timeliness has temporarily been put aside, an investor must logically ask how we will meet our obligations, and how much they really are. In addition to an existing nearly $10 trillion of outstanding Treasury debt, the U.S. has a near-unfathomable $66 trillion of future liabilities at “net present cost.” As shown in the following table from a Mary Meeker “USA Inc.” study, and validated by the Department of Treasury and Congressional Budget Office (CBO) calculations, the combined present cost “payment due” from Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security is over six times our current obligations of Treasury debt. The press and most professional investors are accustomed to measuring “paper” debt as opposed to walking/living liabilities in the form of people. I call these liabilities “debt men walking” because as long as 330 million living Americans require promised entitlements – the $66 trillion that wear shoes are as much of a liability as the $10 trillion on paper.

Admittedly, as Meeker’s table (Figure 1) points out, we can address these liabilities by improving the efficiency of our healthcare system, reducing benefits, raising retirement ages, increasing tax rates or a combination of all of the above. We likely will. So reduce that $66 trillion if you care to, but the subjective remainder still hangs over financial markets like a Damocles sword. How will we meet these obligations as Secretary Geithner asked?
Aside from the unthinkable outright default, there are numerous ways that a government – especially a AAA rated one – can employ to reduce its future liabilities. Highlighted below are the prominent tools that can significantly affect investor pocketbooks:
  1. Balance the budget and/or grow out of it
  2. Unexpected inflation
  3. Currency depreciation
  4. Financial repression via low/negative real interest rates
Let me address each of them in brief:
  1. Balance the budget/growth – The current Congressional compromise is but one small step for fiscal solvency. There is no giant leap for mankind anywhere on the horizon. Trillions of further spending cuts, and yes trillions of tax hikes, are necessary to stabilize our “official” debt/GDP ratio of 90% or so. One important detail to keep in mind: projected deficits in 2012 and 2013 of 7-8% of GDP rely on OMB growth estimates of 3%+ in the next few years. Recent trends give pause to these estimates as does PIMCO’s New Normal, which believes 2% not 3% is closer to reality. If so, deficits move right back up to near-double-digit percentages of GDP. Likewise, should interest rates ever rise from current 2% average levels, a 100 basis point increase raises the deficit by 1% and erases any hoped for gains. Sisyphus would be familiar with this seemingly unsolvable dilemma.
  2. Unexpected inflation – While markets are global these days, figures sometimes lie and policymakers often figure. Focusing investors’ attention on statistics emphasizing “core” or “chain-linked” methodologies can entice investors to stay home, or in the case of foreign nations, to “invest American.” Central bankers, not just in the U.S., but the U.K., have long been arguing for a reversion of headline 3% CPI numbers to the 2% or lower “core” standard expectation. “Patience,” they argue, but “prudence” might be the better watchword. If so, then the expected “unexpected” inflation would mimic the old Roman custom of coin shaving or its substitution with base metals instead of silver or gold. Inflation is the result no matter how you coin it, which puts more money in government coffers to pay their bills and less money in your pocket to pay yours.
  3. Currency depreciation – High deficits, both fiscal and trade, combined with low interest rates for extended periods of time produce declining currency valuations against more prosperous, and more policy conservative competitor nations. Few Americans are aware that the dollar’s recent 12-month depreciation of over 15% is an explicit tax on their standard of living. Uncle Sam, the government overseer, benefits enormously: one rather clever way for the U.S. to pay its bills to foreign creditors is to pay them in depreciated dollars. The Chinese and other offshore holders wind up getting not only .05% interest on their Treasury Bills, but 12 months later – voila! – their Bills are worth only 85 cents on the dollar in global purchasing power. The Chinese should be reading Shakespeare, not Confucius – especially the second half of “neither a borrower nor a lender be,” when it comes to U.S. dollars.
  4. Financial Repression via low/negative real interest rates – I have commented on this Carmen Reinhart, commonsensical technique in prior Outlooks. If the Treasury is borrowing money from you or PIMCO at .05% for the next six months and CPI inflation is averaging 3%, then lenders/savers are being shortchanged beyond even rather egregious historical examples. The burden of “sixteen tons” of debt á la Tennessee Ernie Ford is considerably reduced at 5 basis points of annual interest. “Loading” coal or debt in this case at near 0% yields doesn’t make the borrower another day older, nor deeper in debt. Actually it’s a shot of Botox for the borrower, but a shot of lead for the lender. Duck!
By using these four life rafts available to U.S. and other AAA sovereign borrowers, one can almost imagine a half century from now, that they remain solvent – although chastened perhaps with a lower credit rating. Based on historical example at Moody’s and Standard & Poors, it just might take 50 years for them to downgrade U.S. credit, but be that as it may, you and PIMCO as savers and savings intermediaries can take precautionary or even retaliatory measures to preserve purchasing power. Favor countries with cleaner “dirty shirts” and higher real interest rates: Canada, Mexico, Brazil and Germany come to mind. Shade equity and fixed income investments away from dollar based indexes towards those of developing nations with stronger growth prospects. Purchase commodity based real assets before reserve surplus nations do. And above all, don’t be lulled to sleep by Congressional law makers that promise a change in Washington. The last change I believed in was on Election Day 2008, and that turned out to be more fiction than reality. Davy Crockett, where are you? You may have been drinkin’ whiskey in those Congressional Chambers and those “bars” may have been half fiction, but you were a coonskin hero of a forgotten age, a hero the likes of which we have yet to see in 21st century Washington. We’re stuck with the new Kings and Queens of a wilder frontier.
William H. Gross
Managing Director

Consumer Spending Falls for First Time Since September 2009, Personal Incomes Barely Gain

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As always take any data out of the government with many grains of salt, but according to Washington D.C. we have seen the first reduction in spending since fall 2009 , while incomes continue to stagnate.  Income was up 0.1% but adjusted for inflation obviously are not keeping up with price increases.  Again much of this is structural as global companies pit wages in the U.S. versus those of foreigners, especially Asians.  Over time consumption can only suffer.

The only long term positive was an increase in the savings rate, but for an economy now build on consumption, what is good for the individual is not good for the general economy, at least in the near term.

The market was already down this morning ahead of this punk data, as we ping pong from one sovereign debt situation to another.  With the U.S. kicking the can down the road, now we return to Italy and Spain.

The ECRI is looking genius again for the call 3-4 months ago for a material slowdown in the U.S. economuy.


Via Bloomberg

  • Consumer spending in the U.S. unexpectedly dropped in June for the first time in almost two years as a slump in hiring caused households to retrench.  Purchases decreased 0.2 percent, after a 0.1 percent gain the prior month, Commerce Department figures showed today in Washington. The median estimate of 77 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News called for a 0.1 percent increase.
  • Incomes grew at the slowest pace since November and the savings rate climbed.  The lack of jobs combined with wage gains that have failed to keep pace with inflation raise the risk of further cuts in consumer spending, which accounts for 70 percent of the world’s largest economy.
  • “Consumers ended the quarter on a pretty poor note,” said John Herrmann, a senior fixed-income strategist at State Street Global Markets LLC in Boston, who projected spending would drop. “The third quarter is looking very soft too. Consumers are facing lackluster wage growth in this phase of still-high gas prices.”
  • Incomes climbed 0.1 percent in June following a 0.2 percent gain the prior month that was revised down. Economists had forecast incomes would rise 0.2 percent, according to the Bloomberg survey. Wages and salaries were little changed, the weakest reading since November.
  • The savings rate climbed to 5.4 percent, the highest since September, from 5 percent.
  • Weekly earnings adjusted for inflation dropped 0.9 percent in the 12 months ended June on average, according to figures from the Labor Department.

Monday, August 1, 2011

Bloomberg: Bad Debts Beginning to Snare Banks in Brazil, China, and India

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You never quite know when the bad debt is going to start poking its ugly head out from within the python that is the banking system but we've been waving the red flag for a few years about the steps China took to avoid a slowdown in 2009 [Feb 16 2009: Is China Pulling an Alan Greenspan?] [May 27, 2009: How is China Spending their Stimulus... and How Many Loans Will go Bad?] and more recently [Jun 2, 2011: China Now Beginning to Feel Hangover from Lending Boom - Government May Assume Some Local Debt].  When you blow out money in every direction, much will be misallocated. . [Mar 29, 2011: [Video] An in depth Look at China's Empty Cities] [Jan 14, 2011: [Video] Behold China's Nearly Empty Mega Mall] [Nov 13, 2009: Ordos - China's Empty City]


It wasn't just China - more recently we've seen some bad behavior amongst the Brazilian consumer, many of which had access to credit for the first time.  They began acting like Americans circa 2004.  [Jan 12, 2011: Canada and Brazil Taking on U.S. Characteristics in Debt Exposure]


Brazil's economy grew at a 8.4% clip in the first nine months of 2010—its fastest pace in more than 15 years—powered in part by a sharp increase in government-subsidized loans and a rapid expansion in consumer credit. That can be a lethal cocktail.

The data in Brazil are troubling: Late payments on credit cards and other consumer loans jumped 23% in November from a year earlier.  The country has witnessed a fivefold expansion in consumer credit over the past eight years


And... [Mar 25, 2011: Brazil's Housing Carnival Stokes Bubble Woes]

Apartment prices are popular dinner table -- and beach -- conversation in Rio, anecdotes of humble doormen and taxi drivers becoming real estate brokers are common, as are stories of people snapping up apartments without seeing them.
3,300 new brokers were registered in Rio state last year, a nearly ten-fold increase from 2005.

The explosion of credit in recent years has raised concern that Brazil is nurturing a new breed of sub-prime consumers who are not financially astute enough to manage their debts and who could default as the economy cools and interest rates rise.

Canada and Australia also seem to be in some form of credit bubbles - especially housing related - but strong natural resource backstopped economies seem to have shielded them (thus far) from any pain.  Again, knowing when exactly these 'good times' turn bad is very difficult to time - even if you see the train coming.

Whatever the case, it seems much of the BRIC is reaching a hangover level as the financial companies in these countries suffer.  The stock markets have been acting poor for all of 2011, and if one believes in 'efficient markets' (I find the theory doubtful in many ways), one should be asking what the stock markets are forecasting about the economies.  It's all coming together for a very fun 2012....

Bloomberg has a very detailed piece on the situation in Brazil, India, and China... some snippets
  • Banks in the biggest emerging markets are losing the confidence of investors as loans turn sour after a two-year credit binge.
  • Brazil’s financial shares have lost more this year than counterparts in crisis-stricken Europe as consumer defaults hit a 12-month high in June and borrowing costs climbed to 46 percent.
  • Bank stocks in China are trading at lower valuations than global emerging-market indexes for the first time since 2006. The country faces a financial crisis with bad debt that may jump to 30 percent of total loans, Fitch Ratings said.
  • Chinese lenders expanded credit at a record pace in 2009 and 2010, making more than 17.5 trillion yuan ($2.7 trillion) of new loans as the government moved to offset a collapse in exports during the global recession. The surge in loans exceeded credit expansions in the U.S. before its financial crisis, in Japan before its stock and property bubbles collapsed in 1990 and in South Korea before the Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s, according to Fitch.
  • About a third of local government financing vehicles, used to get around laws prohibiting direct borrowing, don’t have cash flow to service their debt, according to China’s banking regulator.
  • In India, the cost of insuring banks against default has climbed to the highest level in a year. Loan-loss provisions at State Bank of India (SBIN), the nation’s largest lender, rose 77 percent in the first three months of 2011, while net income fell 99 percent.
  • Bad loans “are going to rise because we will have to pass on the rate increase,” the bank’s chairman, Pratip Chaudhuri, told reporters in Mumbai after the central bank increased borrowing costs on July 26. “Interest-rate sensitive sectors like real estate and education loans will most definitely be affected,” Chaudhuri said.
  • Loans to Brazilian shoppers, Chinese infrastructure projects and Indian developers have fueled the global economic recovery and turned emerging-market banks into some of the world’s biggest companies by market value. Now increased debt burdens threaten growth.
  • Brazil’s annual credit-growth rate accelerated to as high as 34 percent in September 2008, the fastest since at least 1995, before moderating. The pace has picked up again, exceeding 19 percent for 11 months through June, central bank data show.
  • Loan payments by Brazilian consumers climbed to 26 percent of disposable income in March, up from 24 percent a year earlier. The rising costs of debt signals Brazil’s consumers are “overstretched,” Neil Shearing, a senior emerging-markets economist at Capital Economics in London, wrote in a July 12 report. A retrenchment may drag down Brazil’s economic growth rate to 2.5 percent in 2013, from 7.6 percent last year, according to Shearing.
  • “The people doing the borrowing are the people in the lower echelon in terms of income, and that’s worrisome,” Simon Nocera, a co-founder of San Francisco-based hedge fund Lumen Advisors LLC and a former economist at the IMF, said in an interview. Nonperforming loans “will be higher than previous credit cycles.”

Russia is showing some issues as well:
  • Lenders in other emerging economies are also showing signs of stress. Bank of Moscow needed the biggest bailout in Russian history last month after racking up at least 150 billion rubles ($5.4 billion) of unsecured bad loans. The $14 billion rescue of the country’s fifth-largest bank signaled Russian lenders’ health may be “substantially worse” than most investors judge

Sohu.com (SOHU) Hit Hard Despite Solid Earnings Report

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An interesting situation between Sohu.com (SOHU) and Sina (SINA) the past few quarters.  Despite having far better financial growth and metrics, Sohu has lagged Sina because the latter owns Weibo.  Must be frustrating. 

This morning Sohu.com reported another excellent quarter of 36% revenue growth, and a Non GAAP EPS up 27% to $1.21.  Of course if your income is rising slower than your revenue, expenses are surging - in this case 43% on a non GAAP basis.  Doesn't seem to be a problem at Amazon.com (AMZN) which reports lower earnings year over year but still gets rewarded by investors for "growing at all costs".  Other companies are not as fortunate.
  • The increases in both GAAP and non-GAAP operating expenses were mainly due to increases in both headcount and average compensation and higher expenses associated with marketing activities in the second quarter of 2011.
Full report here.

Their 2 main business lines - gaming (51% of sales) and ads (34% of sales) both grew well, at 31% and 27% respectively.  Their search engine, Sogou, while less than 10% of sales is growing rapidly at 252% year over year growth.

Even with an increase in guidance for Q3, the stock - after opening flattish - is being bludgeoned, but is coming in nicely to support.   Generally companies who have nice earnings but are still punished are attractive purchases as they pull back to support (of course assuming the general market does not implode).



No position

There is That Touch of the 200 Day on New CBO Estimates Deficit Plan Will Only Shave $2.1T Over 10 Years

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Looks like a new report that the CBO estimates that the "$2.5T" deficit plan will only really be $2.1T (thus potentially angering some on the GOP side) helped push the S&P 500 exactly to the 200 day exponential moving average as discussed about 30 minutes ago.  We've had a small cursory bounce as we wait to see how this level holds.


Obviously like much of late 2008 and early 2009, headlines out of D.C. are more important than traditional metrics.

As obnoxious, lawmakers are supposed to vote on a 73 page deal to create a framework for a 10 year plan in less than 24 hours.

Via AP

  • A new study says the debt and budget bill backed by President Barack Obama and congressional leaders would save taxpayers at least $2.1 trillion over the coming decade.
  • The Congressional Budget Office analysis says the initial down payment of spending cuts — tight “caps” on the operating budgets of Cabinet agencies like the departments of Defense and Education — would produce more than $900 billion in savings over 10 years.
  • The rest of the savings would come from a special bipartisan committee that would make recommendations for the rest of Congress to vote on later this year. There’s no way to predict what the panel will come up with, but CBO credits at least $1.2 trillion more in savings because the legislation contains a special enforcement mechanism.

Avoided a Test of the 200 Day EMA Friday, but Looking Likely Today

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Interesting action the past two days, even within a technical lens.  I had not looked at the 200 day SIMPLE moving average Friday but that is essentially where the market fell to, before the mid morning reversal in anticipation of a weekend debt deal.  The 200 day EXPONENTIAL moving average was not close to being tested.

However with the bipolar action today, we have broken through the simple moving average, and look keen on giving that 200 day exponential a run for the money.



There is still a lot of headline risk later this week as its the big week of economic data (ISM Mfg, ISM Services, Monthly Employment), so trying to game short term moves on random headlines is not a game one should be playing.

-------------------------

Effectively this debt limit is/was a side show - the U.S. economy has been reliant on drugs and steroids for years on end, and as the most recent batch of injections have slowed down (even with never before seen easy monetary policy) the economy is huffing and puffing.  All the Wall Street economists who came into the year singing songs of 4% GDP for 2011 must be shaking their head. 

Oh well, now they have another excuse for misdiagnosing how poor the economy is under the steroids - they can blame the Q3 weakness on 'uncertainty over the debt ceiling' - it's always one thing or another, rather than admitting the patient has structural issues.

Market Crumbles on Horrid ISM Manufacturing Figure

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Wow, what a terrible number.  On the back of the Q1 revision of GDP, and poor Q2 GDP - along with deteriorating unemployment data, one wonders if the economists are going to look back at this period and say we are back in recession.  (not the 'technical recession' of two quarters of 'official GDP' being negative)

ISM Manufacturing tumbled to 50.9 from 55.3, and versus the 54.3 expectation.  50 is the line between expansion and contraction.

New orders came in below 50 at 49.2; first contraction since June 2009.

Employment dumped from  59.9 to 53.5.

Once more prices paid dropped dramatically but its a steep price to pay for lower inflation.

The market turned the premarket surge into a selloff.

WHAT RESPONDENTS ARE SAYING ...
  • "Inflation pressures have finally slowed down." (Chemical Products)
  • "With products sold internationally, the business conditions we are currently experiencing are declining from abnormally [high] record-breaking levels. Business conditions are currently flattening to more normal volumes, while trending slightly downward." (Machinery)
  • "Market conditions — Europe weak, U.S. soft, Asia strong." (Computer & Electronic Products)
  • "Demand from automotive manufacturers continues to improve." (Fabricated Metal Products)
  • "Export sales very strong, while domestic sales are sluggish." (Paper Products)
  • "The looming debt ceiling has government agencies backing away from spending. Forecasting a slowdown in demand in the short term." (Transportation Equipment)
  • "Generally seeing a slowdown, which is typical this time of year. Hopeful that this is seasonal only." (Plastics & Rubber Products)
  • "Most industrial customers seem to be sustaining their business. Export orders continue to remain strong. Price pressures persist, especially with commodity materials." (Chemical Products)
MANUFACTURING AT A GLANCE
JULY 2011


Index
Series
Index
Jul
Series
Index
Jun
Percentage
Point
Change


Direction
Rate
of
Change

Trend*
(Months)
PMI 50.9 55.3 -4.4 Growing Slower 24
New Orders 49.2 51.6 -2.4 Contracting From Growing 1
Production 52.3 54.5 -2.2 Growing Slower 26
Employment 53.5 59.9 -6.4 Growing Slower 22
Supplier Deliveries 50.4 56.3 -5.9 Slowing Slower 26
Inventories 49.3 54.1 -4.8 Contracting From Growing 1
Customers' Inventories 44.0 47.0 -3.0 Too Low Faster 28
Prices 59.0 68.0 -9.0 Increasing Slower 25
Backlog of Orders 45.0 49.0 -4.0 Contracting Faster 2
Exports 54.0 53.5 +0.5 Growing Faster 25
Imports 53.5 51.0 +2.5 Growing Faster 23
OVERALL ECONOMY Growing Slower 26
Manufacturing Sector Growing Slower 24
*Number of months moving in current direction.

*

*
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