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Showing posts with label Economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Economy. Show all posts

Mixed Labor Data Messages Clarified

mixed labor data messages clarified
It Still Spells Trouble

Weekly Jobless Claims have produced an improving trend over the last month and continued telling that same story at latest check. However, the Labor Department's Employment Situation Report for November, published last week, still showed an increase in the unemployment rate and a moderated rate of net job addition. So what gives then? Well, keep reading...


Our founder earned clients a 23% average annual return over five years as a stock analyst on Wall Street. "The Greek" has written for institutional newsletters, Businessweek, Real Money, Seeking Alpha and others, while also appearing across TV and radio. While writing for Wall Street Greek, Mr. Kaminis presciently warned of the financial crisis.

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Mixed Labor Data Messages Clarified



wall streetAmericans must be confused by the mixed messages offered by the Labor Department. While weekly jobless claims clearly seem to be moderating, the monthly unemployment rate just spiked again. Weekly Jobless Claims for the period ended December 4, fell 17K to 421K, down from 438K the week just prior. Still, the latest Labor Department data showed the unemployment rate increased to 9.8% in November, up from the 9.6% rate seen through the prior three months. We will clear up this inconsistency for you here so you can concentrate on logical consistencies of the day, like holiday parties and foreclosure notices.

The first thing you must understand is that weekly jobless claims will occur even in the best of economic environments. There will always be a business failing, or downsizing or consolidating for whatever reason. In order to see the unemployment rate change for the better, we need a weekly flow of jobless claims somewhere short of 400K, or closer to 300K.

The size of the labor force is always increasing also, raising the bar so to speak as America's youths graduate into working age and begin seeking employment. Considering the tough environment, we also have pressure from retirees returning to work these days. When it comes down to it, we need economic growth to increase demand for employees. That can come from increased consumer spending, but also from the growth of business and industry where opportunity may lie untapped. This is why President Obama places so much hope in alternative energy. It can be a replacement industry for coal and pick up the slack from a mature US auto industry. Further, the auto industry, as well as all US manufacturing can benefit from a fairer international trade playing field, another of the administration's good goals (note South Korean trade deal and pressure on the Chinese with regard to their currency).

The four-week moving average of weekly initial jobless claims illustrates the favorable trend we outlined above. The claims average slipped another 4,000 this last week, to 427,500, the lowest it has been in two years. Furthermore, the seasonally adjusted insured unemployment rate improved anther two-tenths of a point, to 3.2% for the period ended November 27. This is the kind of data that gave economists the confidence they exhibited in setting their non-farm payroll forecasts for November at +168,000, based on Bloomberg's survey. This is precisely the reason why the market was so surprised on Friday when payrolls instead measured +39,000.

The good news relayed by the weekly claims data seems to be that companies are laying people off at a slower rate, but that message was absent in the latest monthly layoff data. Challenger, Gray & Christmas reported that announced corporate layoffs surged to an 8-month high in November, reaching 48,711. It was the highest announced job-cut total since March, when companies announced layoffs of 67,611. Seasonal influence to the November disaster may have played a role according to Challenger, but given that this year's period was just 3.3% short of the prior year count, we are not so sure. It is more likely that there is a cyclical factor at play, and the good news is that it's a lagging indicator.

Government and nonprofit employers were at the forefront of firing in November, announcing 10,761 layoffs through the month. In fact, while overall announced layoffs dropped 60% this year to date, the government and non-profit sector have led the full year's downsizing, cutting 138,979 jobs. Obviously, this is the direct result of heightened pressure on governments, municipal, state and federal, to cut costs to balance budgets or otherwise positively impact deficits.

Flying within radar, but not often spoken of is the decrease in charitable contributions that follows downturns in economic activity. Layoffs in this sector should lag general economic decline, and the same goes for government, which is reactionary. One step the government might take in providing stimulus is by instituting a firing freeze at all government levels. These can be controlled at the federal level, and subsidized otherwise. Keep people working, and you keep them sharp and spending at normal rates.

We could call the lag in government and charitable layoffs good news, if these same two factors played important roles in the increased unemployment rate in November. Indeed, government job decline of 11,000 affected November's data, but the reasons for the sharp miss were much broader. That said, Challenger noted a historical tendency for late-in-the-year cuts, and also said increased hiring announcements offered some offset. To me this sounds like the data-minder was simply molding its qualitative reporting to fit the positive consensus outlook for the Labor Department data, which was yet to be disproved (reported two days later).

Inspection of the Employment Situation Report showed big reductions in Retail Trade (-28.1K), Manufacturing (-13K), Financial Activities (-9K) and Construction (-5K), complementing the government (-11K) and other services (-8K) drops. The big retail industry shrinkage was a shocker to many, but understood within short time. Retailers had added to staff earlier this year, in order to best exploit the intensified deal-seeking community. There were earlier-than-Black Friday deals run, and extended hours offered on Black Friday and after, which needed to be staffed for. This reported decline might reflect a temporary lull in part-timers, who could be rehired before Christmas (heard first here). The moderation in manufacturing, at this point, has been well-documented here, and it goes on within ongoing catastrophic environments in the finance and construction fields. Look for increasing M&A activity to drive change for Wall Street in 2010, barring a problematic war with Iran.

We like to look into the bottom line numbers to get to the truth. When we do that for November's employment data, we discover that the unemployed count (numerator) increased by 276K, to 15,119,000. The Civilian Labor Force (denominator) also increased, as it should, but by only 103K, to 154,007,000. Oftentimes in the past, change in the unemployment rate has been impacted by suspect change in the size of the labor force.

Biased Data Producers Should Be Audited!

We find it funny that no matter what party controls the White House, economic data seems to favor its needs. You will recall how economic data (especially with regard to jobs), while bad, fell off a cliff almost immediately after George W. Bush lost the presidential election. We have to wonder if the data flow was held up in Atlas-like fashion by biased Bush-backers running these agencies. A lot of these jobs are filled by politicos, or active supporters of the candidates post election. This time around, just as President Obama needed populous support to get tax breaks cut off for the rich, and while the GOP held hostage unemployment insurance extensions, unemployment unexpectedly spiked sharply and nonfarm payrolls severely missed forecasts. The result was intensified pressure on the government to extend unemployment insurance further, which favored the President and the Democrats, considering the GOP's positioning. Hey this seems to happen on both sides, and I'm just saying… Someone needs to look into this.

Under-Employment

The underemployment rate offers a better forecasting tool than unemployment for the American economy, because it shows how stressed American consumers really are. The under-employment rate takes into account part-time workers, who would rather be working full-time (and oftentimes once were). These people are thus spending a lot less as they seek to sustain their old lifestyles, meaning homes they cannot really afford and cars that do not fit their current income. The part-timers count declined last month by 182K; the impact to the labor rates here depends on whether the part-timers replaced their hours with full-time work or hit the jobless line instead. Since unemployment increased, the latter seems to be the case this time around. Job losses may have been driven here by the declines in weak sectors this month. Companies fire part-timers first, just as they hire them first. Temporary workers increased in numbers in November though, by 40K.

The under-employment rate also adds back into the calculation the group of folks that the government deems removed from the labor force, simply due to long-term unemployment induced depression that leads them to stop job search activity over a short span of weeks. We think they still count, and we know they are impacting GDP.

Thus, if we add back the 2.531 million (previously 2.602 mln.) displaced workers to the labor market, and include the 8.972 million (previously 9.154 mln.) underemployed part-timers in the unemployed count, adjusted unemployment reaches ((15.119M + 2.531M + 8.972M) / (154.007M + 2.531M)) * 100 = 17.0 %. That's equal to October's rate, and compares to September's 17.1% rate, 16.7% in August; 16.5% in July and June; 16.6% in May; 17.1% in April; 16.9% in March; 16.8% in February; and 16.4% in January. You can see clearly here that the factors that impact underemployment but not unemployment shifted to the unemployed pool, which factors in both calculations. Thus underemployment held steady, while unemployment increased.

In conclusion, while some comfort can be taken from the fact that we seem to have stopped bleeding jobs, we remain at risk of reopening the wound. Furthermore, the burden of a large pool of long-term unemployed Americans acts as a major drag to economic growth. It thus becomes a leading factor, versus the lagging indicator it is often labeled. Thus, the mixed message provided by the two labor reports is consistent with reality. Neither data-point is reporting in error or misleading economic forecasters. Rather, both offer insight into a complex labor situation. To put it simply, we're still troubled.

FYI:
The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending Nov. 20 were in Alaska (6.1 percent), Puerto Rico (5.5), Oregon (4.4), Nevada (3.9), Pennsylvania (3.9), California (3.7), Idaho (3.7), Montana (3.7), New Jersey (3.7), Arkansas (3.6), Wisconsin (3.6), and Connecticut (3.5).

The largest increases in initial claims for the week ending Nov. 27 were in Wisconsin (+7,545), Iowa (+2,789), Idaho (+1,810), Indiana (+1,667), and Washington (+1,260), while the largest decreases were in Texas (-8,742), California (-8,320), Florida (-7,027), Georgia (-5,823), and North Carolina (-4,171).

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Please see our disclosures at the Wall Street Greek website and author bio pages found there. This article and website in no way offers or represents financial or investment advice. Information is provided for entertainment purposes only.

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GDP Revised Higher for Third Quarter (Q3) 2010

GDP revision third quarter Q3
But Enthusiasm Tempered

Third quarter GDP got a hot revision higher today, up to 2.5%, from 2.0% when initially reported. The spurt beat economists' expectations too, which were set at 2.4%.


Our founder earned clients a 23% average annual return over five years as a stock analyst on Wall Street. "The Greek" has written for institutional newsletters, Businessweek, Real Money, Seeking Alpha and others, while also appearing across TV and radio. While writing for Wall Street Greek, Mr. Kaminis presciently warned of the financial crisis.

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GDP Revised Higher for Third Quarter (Q3)



Wall street economistAs expected by economists and reported here in our weekly copy published Monday, one driver of GDP adjustment higher was an upward revision to exports. However, running counter to economists' views, these gains were partly offset by a downward revision to private inventory investment.

The export gains should continue, aided by the Fed's quantitative easing affect on the dollar, at least for as long as that holds. European comments by the likes of Angela Merkel, calling into question the future of the euro recently, have helped to balance currency in favor of Europe's international traders. Meanwhile, uncertainty in a rich neighborhood in Asia, threatening South Korea, and kindling too near to Japan and China, also had the dollar gaining ground Tuesday.

Looking again at the factors involved in the +0.5% adjustment to GDP, the downward revision to private inventory investment is reflective of the end of inventory restocking and a stalling American marketplace. For as long as the US economy bears the weight of close to 10% unemployment and high-teen underemployment, you can expect that situation to hold true.

What economists had not expected nor mentioned as far as we could tell, was the upward adjustments to personal consumption expenditures and state and local government spending that were seen in today's data, which helped to lift GDP growth. The price factor within PCE was unchanged, and so it was the volume of spending that was shifted higher. That's good news, but its reliability moving forward is called into question given waning consumer sentiment.

Meanwhile, strengthened state and local government spending seems improbable, and incapable of being sustained in the tax-light environment that exists today. Federal government stimulus helped in the past, but we are not sure we can expect more of that with more fiscally conscious Congressmen making the calls in DC.

Also, business investment was a key driver of third quarter growth, and that seems set to stall on more recent trouble in housing, employment, and consumer sentiment and spending.

In conclusion, we do not feel completely comfortable with the message this GDP reports seems to transmit, given the mixed data reaching the wire over the past few weeks. An environment of soft American demand for goods and services seems more realistic moving forward given housing values slipping further and the pace of home sales staggered; with stocks reconsidering valuation post the pre-election driven gains; under intensified geopolitical stresses; and while still bearing the weight of heavy unemployment. Quantitative easing has been the government's ace card in its sleeve, but today's FOMC meeting minutes release revealed a somewhat split group of decision makers. Thus, the GDP revision was well-muted by the tandem of Korean conflict and Fed fighting.

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Article should interest investors in: NYSE: DIA, NYSE: SPY, Nasdaq: QQQQ, NYSE: DOG, NYSE: SDS, NYSE: QLD, NYSE: NYX, Nasdaq: NDAQ, NYSE: ICE, Nasdaq: SERAX, Nasdaq: SERBX, Nasdaq: SERCX, Nasdaq: SERNX, Nasdaq: FEUFX, Nasdaq: FEEEX, Nasdaq: FAEAX, Nasdaq: FBEAX, Nasdaq: FIEUX, Nasdaq: FECAX, Nasdaq: IERAX, Nasdaq: XRNEX, Nasdaq: PBEUX, Nasdaq: UEPIX, Nasdaq: UEPSX, Nasdaq: PEUGX, Nasdaq: RYAEX, NYSE: CEE, NYSE: RNE, NYSE: PEF, NYSE: GUR, NYSE: EPV, NYSE: VEA, NYSE: DFE, NYSE: DEB, NYSE: IEV, Nasdaq: ANEFX, Nasdaq: CNGAX, Nasdaq: HNEAX, NYSE: BAC, NYSE: GS, NYSE: AIG, NYSE: WFC, NYSE: MS, NYSE: C, NYSE: DB, NYSE: CS, NYSE: UBS, NYSE: FNM, NYSE: FRE, NYSE: MCG, NYSE: MCO, NYSE: TD, NYSE: PNC, NYSE: STD, AMEX: GLE, NYSE: BCS, NYSE: GLD, NYSE: XLE, NYSE: XLF, NYSE: BJV, NYSE: SZI, NYSE: BPD, NYSE: IEL, NYSE: PBN, NYSE: CGW, NYSE: LVL, NYSE: FRI, NYSE: PBP, NYSE: RSU, NYSE: RMM, NYSE: REA, NYSE: RFL, NYSE: RHM, NYSE: RTG, NYSE: RSW, NYSE: RMS, NYSE: REC, Nasdaq: PDOWX, Nasdaq: XDPOX, Nasdaq: XDPDX, Nasdaq: NDUAX, Nasdaq: NDUBX, Nasdaq: IDJAX, Nasdaq: NJCRX, Nasdaq: UDPIX, Nasdaq: UDPSX, Nasdaq: UWPIX, Nasdaq: RYLDX, Nasdaq: RYIDX, Nasdaq: RYCWX, Nasdaq: ONEQ, Nasdaq: QCLN, Nasdaq: QQEW, Nasdaq: QQXT, Nasdaq: QTEC, Nasdaq: NASDX, Nasdaq: NDXKX, Nasdaq: POTCX, Nasdaq: DXQSX, Nasdaq: DXQLX, Nasdaq: FNCMX, Nasdaq: INQAX, Nasdaq: MOTAX, Nasdaq: XQQQX.

Please see our disclosures at the Wall Street Greek website and author bio pages found there. This article and website in no way offers or represents financial or investment advice. Information is provided for entertainment purposes only.

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G-20, Divided We Fall

G-20 Divided We Fall
President Obama said, "Instead of hittin home runs, sometimes we're gonna hit singles. But they're really important singles." This was the positive spin that unwound the two-day summit of the Group of 20 Nations (G-20). However, the end result of the Seoul meeting was neither the consummation of an expected trade deal with the South Koreans nor a resolution on the trade imbalance with China. The latter issue weighs heavily on the agenda of the US Administration.

Our founder earned clients a 23% average annual return over five years as a stock analyst on Wall Street. "The Greek" has written for institutional newsletters, Businessweek, Real Money, Seeking Alpha and others, while also appearing across TV and radio. While writing for Wall Street Greek, Mr. Kaminis presciently warned of the financial crisis.

(Relevant Tickers: NYSE: DIA, NYSE: SPY, Nasdaq: QQQQ, NYSE: DOG, NYSE: SDS, NYSE: QLD, NYSE: NYX, Nasdaq: NDAQ, NYSE: ICE, Nasdaq: SERAX, Nasdaq: SERBX, Nasdaq: SERCX, Nasdaq: SERNX, Nasdaq: FEUFX, Nasdaq: FEEEX, Nasdaq: FAEAX, Nasdaq: FBEAX, Nasdaq: FIEUX, Nasdaq: FECAX, Nasdaq: IERAX, Nasdaq: XRNEX, Nasdaq: PBEUX, Nasdaq: UEPIX, Nasdaq: UEPSX, Nasdaq: PEUGX, Nasdaq: RYAEX, NYSE: CEE, NYSE: RNE, NYSE: PEF, NYSE: GUR, NYSE: EPV, NYSE: VEA, NYSE: DFE, NYSE: DEB, NYSE: IEV, Nasdaq: ANEFX, Nasdaq: CNGAX, Nasdaq: HNEAX, NYSE: BAC, NYSE: GS, NYSE: AIG, NYSE: WFC, NYSE: MS, NYSE: C, NYSE: DB, NYSE: CS, NYSE: UBS, NYSE: MCG, NYSE: MCO, NYSE: TD, NYSE: PNC, NYSE: STD, AMEX: GLE, NYSE: BCS, NYSE: GLD, NYSE: XLE, NYSE: XLF, NYSE: BJV, NYSE: SZI, NYSE: BPD, NYSE: IEL, NYSE: PBN, NYSE: CGW, NYSE: LVL, NYSE: FRI, NYSE: PBP, NYSE: RSU, NYSE: RMM, NYSE: REA, NYSE: RFL, NYSE: RHM, NYSE: RTG, NYSE: RSW, NYSE: RMS, NYSE: REC, Nasdaq: PDOWX, Nasdaq: XDPOX, Nasdaq: XDPDX, Nasdaq: NDUAX, Nasdaq: NDUBX, Nasdaq: IDJAX, Nasdaq: NJCRX, Nasdaq: UDPIX, Nasdaq: UDPSX, Nasdaq: UWPIX, Nasdaq: RYLDX, Nasdaq: RYIDX, Nasdaq: RYCWX, Nasdaq: ONEQ, Nasdaq: QCLN, Nasdaq: QQEW, Nasdaq: QQXT, Nasdaq: QTEC, Nasdaq: NASDX, Nasdaq: NDXKX, Nasdaq: POTCX, Nasdaq: DXQSX, Nasdaq: DXQLX, Nasdaq: FNCMX, Nasdaq: INQAX, Nasdaq: MOTAX, Nasdaq: XQQQX)

G-20, Divided We Fall



Greek writerAs quickly as the US could get started complaining, China redirected attention to the US Federal Reserve's recently announced capital markets actions, labeled QE2 by Wall Street. Characterizing China's argument can be simplified to its pointing the finger of blame back at its accuser. While promoted as a strategy to spur economic advance, the Fed's quantitative easing will also serve to devalue the dollar and drive US export demand. If this is not trade war, I do not know what is. And in its quarrel, China has found a strange ally, Germany, which is also struck down by American currency devaluation.

President Obama's singles hitting reference addressed progress in global financial regulation and efficiencies in aid provision to poor nations. More importantly, he may also be conveying his approval for a plan for the G-20, through the IMF, to analyze the effects of trade imbalance on the global economy and local economies. Clearly, the US would benefit from a global acknowledgement, based in economic fact, that China is cheating. By unfairly, and against free market pressure, keeping its currency cheap, China reaps great economic benefits at the expense of other trading partners and competitors.

The argument has grown heated recently, thanks to rising voices back west, including the qualms of Treasury Secretary Geithner, the Democrats in Congress, and the President himself. In the past, a Republican led American government had been cautious about treading on the feet of the dragon, but a new brazen knight has taken over the kingdom by way of valor. Obama is now faced with the challenge of his presidential political career, restoring economic confidence before 2012. Thus, he wields the once forbidden blade for the sake of fairness and the restoration of his kingdom.

The Chinese Yuan has appreciated a bit since the US government began insinuating it would play currency hardball, and certainly following the declaration of QE2 by the independent Fed. Many hopeful global leaders applauded the use of the G-20 forum to work through issues like these, but the fact is that the US and China appear already engaged in a sort of bilateral currency warfare, however cold it may still be. My concern is that given some time to dwell on the US action, and to debate and deliberate it, the EU and emerging nations like India will likely counter US and Chinese maneuvers with actions of their own before any civilized study is concluded. Thus, the race to the bottom will begin. The result: Fiat currency value would dissipate globally, and the gold standard would be re-established.

While the cost of a loaf of bread is already equal to a year's salary in some very poor nations, the inflation that could ensue as currency manipulation is complemented by rising demand for scarce resources in an increasingly globally developing world is terrifying to me. Global cooperation could quickly deteriorate in such an environment, given likely civil unrest and political pressures. Unstable leadership could easily give way then to radical reform, and usher in popular nationalists. Such individuals could be politically wise, but otherwise ignorant or even dangerously selfish. The same mechanisms that allowed Hitler to rise to power would be in place once again, and the angry crowds would cheer for it all.

Instability would replace global organization, and chaos could follow. In such an environment, world war reenters the equation, and given the unfolding situation in Iran, and the importance of its oil reserves to China, a match sits ominously waiting to light the fire.

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(Article interests investors in: NYSE: DIA, NYSE: SPY, Nasdaq: QQQQ, NYSE: DOG, NYSE: SDS, NYSE: QLD, NYSE: NYX, Nasdaq: NDAQ, NYSE: ICE, Nasdaq: SERAX, Nasdaq: SERBX, Nasdaq: SERCX, Nasdaq: SERNX, Nasdaq: FEUFX, Nasdaq: FEEEX, Nasdaq: FAEAX, Nasdaq: FBEAX, Nasdaq: FIEUX, Nasdaq: FECAX, Nasdaq: IERAX, Nasdaq: XRNEX, Nasdaq: PBEUX, Nasdaq: UEPIX, Nasdaq: UEPSX, Nasdaq: PEUGX, Nasdaq: RYAEX, NYSE: CEE, NYSE: RNE, NYSE: PEF, NYSE: GUR, NYSE: EPV, NYSE: VEA, NYSE: DFE, NYSE: DEB, NYSE: IEV, Nasdaq: ANEFX, Nasdaq: CNGAX, Nasdaq: HNEAX, NYSE: BAC, NYSE: GS, NYSE: AIG, NYSE: WFC, NYSE: MS, NYSE: C, NYSE: DB, NYSE: CS, NYSE: UBS, NYSE: MCG, NYSE: MCO, NYSE: TD, NYSE: PNC, NYSE: STD, AMEX: GLE, NYSE: BCS, NYSE: GLD, NYSE: XLE, NYSE: XLF, NYSE: BJV, NYSE: SZI, NYSE: BPD, NYSE: IEL, NYSE: PBN, NYSE: CGW, NYSE: LVL, NYSE: FRI, NYSE: PBP, NYSE: RSU, NYSE: RMM, NYSE: REA, NYSE: RFL, NYSE: RHM, NYSE: RTG, NYSE: RSW, NYSE: RMS, NYSE: REC, Nasdaq: PDOWX, Nasdaq: XDPOX, Nasdaq: XDPDX, Nasdaq: NDUAX, Nasdaq: NDUBX, Nasdaq: IDJAX, Nasdaq: NJCRX, Nasdaq: UDPIX, Nasdaq: UDPSX, Nasdaq: UWPIX, Nasdaq: RYLDX, Nasdaq: RYIDX, Nasdaq: RYCWX, Nasdaq: ONEQ, Nasdaq: QCLN, Nasdaq: QQEW, Nasdaq: QQXT, Nasdaq: QTEC, Nasdaq: NASDX, Nasdaq: NDXKX, Nasdaq: POTCX, Nasdaq: DXQSX, Nasdaq: DXQLX, Nasdaq: FNCMX, Nasdaq: INQAX, Nasdaq: MOTAX, Nasdaq: XQQQX)

Please see our disclosures at the Wall Street Greek website and author bio pages found there. This article and website in no way offers or represents financial or investment advice. Information is provided for entertainment purposes only.

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Increased Unemployment Lost in Employment Report Translation

Unemployment Increased!
increased unemployment in employment report October 2010
A day late and a dollar short for Democrats now vacating their DC offices to make room for Tea Party and other Republican opportunists, the Labor Department reported jolly good news today… or so the popular press will have you believe.

Our founder earned clients a 23% average annual return over five years as a stock analyst on Wall Street. "The Greek" has written for institutional newsletters, Businessweek, Real Money, Seeking Alpha and others, while also appearing across TV and radio. While writing for Wall Street Greek, Mr. Kaminis presciently warned of the financial crisis.

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Increased Unemployment Lost in Employment Report Translation



jobs dataNonfarm Payrolls climbed by 151,000, exceeding both the economists' consensus forecast for 60K and the top end of the forecast range at 97K (based on Bloomberg's survey). Still, unemployment stuck at 9.6%, souring the soup a bit. Furthermore, a closer look at the data shows underemployment still at 17%. Meanwhile, the unemployed count actually increased in October, while the size of the labor force conspicuously declined. If this is good news, I have to reevaluate where I fit in this weird world. The report is definitely not overwhelmingly positive.

The Employment Report for October 2010 blew economists out of the water Friday with a blowout jobs creation figure. The nation's economists expected a positive result, given census workers are now long gone and cannot skew the headline figure any longer (they cost 5K jobs this month). Nonetheless, as the President restated, private nonfarm payrolls (thus excluding government jobs) jumped by 159K, and are up 1.1 million since December. In fact, October marked the 10th straight month of private sector job growth, and four months above the 100K level - the first time for this in four years. But keep reading…

Job additions were mainly driven by the service sector, which we remind you makes up 90% of American GDP these days. Private services industries added 154K jobs on net in October, with Retail Trade adding 27,900 ahead of the start of the holiday shopping season. Wholesale Trade contributed another 7,300. Professional and Business Services contributed 46,000, reinforcing data offered by the Monster Employment Index earlier this week. If the service sector is ready to grow now, then we would have something to be thankful for later this month besides a tasty turkey. The feeling has been that employment would have to improve some first, but it seems possible that the hangover from the real estate & related exotic investment instruments bubble contributed some to consumer malaise. Perhaps Americans are finally starting to feel normal again.

There was some sour news within the services sector though. Financial Activities for one, shed another 1,000 jobs; sorry friends, Wall Street is not inviting you back to the party just yet. Transportation and Warehousing data from the Establishment Survey disagreed with news we received from Monster Worldwide (NYSE: MWW); those jobs were not found in this data. Neither did Information (IT) contribute to the spike this month. And within Professional and Business Services, which we celebrated above, most of those jobs were found in the Temporary Help category. That is a good thing, since this is where the baby is born, but it's also troublesome that companies are not ready to make long-term commitments yet.

There was a weird twist to the news out of the goods producing group. Construction actually added 5,000 jobs in October, while Manufacturing, which was an early driver of economic recovery, followed our old forecast for softness and shed 7,000 jobs last month. Note that this news conflicted with data released earlier in the week from ISM. But manufacturing looks to be getting enough lift from export demand to keep it revving. Motor Vehicle & Parts makers added 3.3 million jobs, but Durable Goods makers shed 3K jobs in aggregate. Nondurables Makers cut 4K jobs in October.

Education and Health Services added 53,000 jobs, with 34K of those coming from the Healthcare and Social Assistance sectors. In other less followed groups, Mining & Logging added 7K jobs, while Leisure & Hospitality shed 5K.

Another positive that might be overlooked today was the tenth of an hour increase in private nonfarm payroll hours worked, taking the eater of capacity to 34.3 hours per week. As this figure increases, pressure rises on companies to add workforce. Industrial Capacity Utilization has been recovering of late, but still has plenty of leeway. That said, today's news is still enthusing. Over the past 12 months, this important barometer has increased by 1.7%.

Despite the improvement in the rate of job creation, the unemployment rate stuck stubbornly at 9.6%. All signs point to a slow grind toward mid-single digit unemployment, which is unfathomable at this point. It could take years before we see anything near the sub-5% rate of unemployment enjoyed for most of the last decade, if we ever see it again.

Part-timers who would rather be working full-time hours fell by 318K in October, to sit now at a still too high 9.154 million. That figure is not that far off from the prior year count, which measured a horrible atmosphere. Another 2.602 million people (up from 2.548 million in September) are counted in a category labeled "marginally attached" to the labor force, and are excluded from the unemployment rate. Within this group, there were some 1.219 million Americans (up from 1.209 Mln.) labeled "discouraged workers," because they believe there are currently no jobs available for them.

Underemployment Rate

We have been a pioneer in the reporting of the "Underemployment Rate," which perhaps we coined. There was another metric that made less sense to us, which preceded this metric; we tweaked the number to develop the Underemployment measure you find here monthly (and everywhere else now too). The math follows:

Our underemployment figure includes part-timers who would rather be working full-time. This adjustment also adds back "discouraged" and marginally attached workers, who are not counted as part of the workforce or unemployed. If we add back the 2.602 million displaced workers to the labor market, and include the 9.154 million underemployed part-timers in the unemployed count, adjusted unemployment reaches ((14.843M + 2.602M + 9.154M) / (153.904M + 2.602M)) * 100 = 17.0 %. That's down slightly from September's 17.1% rate, but compares poorly to the 16.7% measured in August; 16.5% in July and June; 16.6% in May; 17.1% in April; 16.9% in March; 16.8% in February; and 16.4% in January.

Adding insult to injury, the count is favorably impacted by a decrease in the labor workforce to 153,904,000 from 154,158,000 in September. Meanwhile, the total number of unemployed Americans increased in October to 14,843,000, from 14,767,000. This while some 9 million plus Americans are barely making enough to pay their bills working part-time, and another 2.6 million have given up altogether. Even without the contradiction shown here and the conspicuous change to the labor force, the situation remains intolerable. This report might have helped some Democrats keep their jobs, but let's be clear: it does not depict good news.

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Article should interest investors in Paychex (Nasdaq: PAYX), Manpower (NYSE: MAN), Robert Half International (NYSE: RHI), 51Job Inc. (Nasdaq: JOBS), Monster World Wide (NYSE: MWW), Korn/Ferry International (NYSE: KFY), Administaff (NYSE: ASF), Kforce (Nasdaq: KFRC), TrueBlue (NYSE: TBI), Dice Holdings (NYSE: DHX), Kelly Services (Nasdaq: KELYA), SFN Group (NYSE: SFN), CDI Corp. (NYSE: CDI), Cross Country Healthcare (Nasdaq: CCRN), On Assignment (Nasdaq: ASGN), AMN Healthcare Services (NYSE: AHS), Barrett Business Services (Nasdaq: BBSI), Hudson Highland Group (Nasdaq: HHGP), StarTek (NYSE: SRT), RCM Technologies (Nasdaq: RCMT), VirtualScopics (Nasdaq: VSCP), American Surgical (OTC: ASRG.OB), Medical Connections (OTC: MCTH.OB), iGen Networks (OTC: IGEN.OB), St. Joseph (OTC: STJO.OB), General Employment Enterprises (NYSE: JOB), Total Neutraceutical (OTC: TNUS.OB), TeamStaff (Nasdaq: TSTF), Stratum (OTC: STTH.OB), Purespectrum (OTC: PSRU.OB), Corporate Resource Services (OTC: CRRS.OB), Bank of America (NYSE: BAC), J.P. Morgan Chase (NYSE: JPM), Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS), Citigroup (NYSE: C), Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS), Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC), TD Bank (NYSE: TD), PNC Bank (NYSE: PNC), General Electric (NYSE: GE), Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT), McDonald's (NYSE: MCD), Alcoa (NYSE: AA), American Express (NYSE: AXP), Boeing (NYSE: BA), Caterpillar (NYSE: CAT), Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO), Chevron (NYSE: CVX), DuPont (NYSE: DD), Walt Disney (NYSE: DIS), Home Depot (NYSE: HD), Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ), IBM (NYSE: IBM), Intel (Nasdaq: INTC), Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ), Kraft (NYSE: KFT), Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO), 3M (NYSE: MMM), Merck (NYSE: MRK), Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT), Pfizer (NYSE: PFE), Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG), AT&T (NYSE: T), Travelers (NYSE: TRV), United Technologies (NYSE: UTX), Verizon (NYSE: VZ), Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM). Today’s EPS report list highlights news from American International Group (NYSE: AIG), Washington Post (NYSE: WPO), Ventas (NYSE: VTR), Coventry Health Care (NYSE: CVH), American Tower (NYSE: AMT), AerCap Holdings (NYSE: AER), Allied Healthcare (Nasdaq: AHPI), Arbor Realty Trust (NYSE: ABR), Beazer Homes (NYSE: BZH), Brookfield Asset Management (NYSE: BAM), Cadence Pharmaceuticals (Nasdaq: CADX), Central European Distribution (Nasdaq: CEDC), Dish Network (Nasdaq: DISH), Doral Financial (NYSE: DRL), Entech Solar (Nasdaq: ENSL), Fortress Investment (NYSE: FIG), FTI Consulting (NYSE: FCN), Hooper Holmes (AMEX: HH), IAMGold (NYSE: IAG), Icahn Enterprises (NYSE: IEP), Liberty Media (Nasdaq: LINTA), Nathan’s Famous (Nasdaq: NATH), Novavax (Nasdaq: NVAX), Princeton Review (Nasdaq: REVU), Rand Capital (Nasdaq: RAND), Rosetta Resources (Nasdaq: ROSE), Sabre Holdings (NYSE: TSG), Superior Industries (NYSE: SUP), TETRA Tech (NYSE: TTI), Toyota (NYSE: TM) and YRC Worldwide (Nasdaq: YRCW).

Please see our disclosures at the Wall Street Greek website and author bio pages found there. This article and website in no way offers or represents financial or investment advice. Information is provided for entertainment purposes only.

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Employment Report Preview - October 2010

Employment Report Preview
Jobs Report Forecast

Over the course of the last two days we've received several employment data points that help us to form expectations heading into the Labor Department's Employment Situation Report, which is due Friday morning. Economists are looking for unemployment to stick at 9.6%, and nonfarm payrolls to increase by 60K when October's jobs data is reported. However, we think that a negative report would produce little threat to the trend of stocks in the near-term, which should tend higher. A positive data point, which is more likely as economic growth progresses, should only support stocks. The only threat is that this might all already be priced in, but we viewed today's nonaction by the ECB and BOE as catalyst for further market rise (see our other reports).


Our founder earned clients a 23% average annual return over five years as a stock analyst on Wall Street. "The Greek" has written for institutional newsletters, Businessweek, Real Money, Seeking Alpha and others, while also appearing across TV and radio. While writing for Wall Street Greek, Mr. Kaminis presciently warned of the financial crisis.

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Employment Report Preview



business writerThis morning's economic releases offered a counter perspective to better data released yesterday. Investors have, therefore, been left confused. Fear not though dear readers, as none of it may matter now that QE2 has been set forth. Economists will likely discount any poor news tomorrow as a result, and so good news can only be supportive to the rally already begun two months ago on the shoulders of QE2 and Republican Congressional victory. Thus, we see little risk heading into Friday's release.

Unemployment Insurance Claims

Weekly Jobless Claims were reported Thursday for the week ended October 30, and as we noted earlier this morning in our premarket report, claims spiked back up above the 450K mark. At 457K, the news soured market hopes, lifted last week by the report noting claims had fallen to 437K (revised from 434K). Economists were looking for 443K this time around, but these weekly forecasts are usually useless, and we recommend you ignore them.

The four-week moving average for the weekly claims figure helps us find truer direction. This week's check on the average shows it increased by 2,000, to 456K. The insured unemployment rate, for the period ended October 23rd, dipped a tenth of a point to 3.4%. Some 42K less folks were receiving benefits as of the 23rd, but 4.34 million still were. Do not get too excited by the change in this count, as it leaves out more than two-thirds of the overall unemployed pool, which in September numbered 14.8 million. Furthermore, this excludes the "underemployed," or those folks working part-time jobs who would rather be working full-time, and also the disenchanted, who have given up hope altogether.

Not much changed in September or October as far as the weekly jobless numbers run, and so we cannot really look forward to much positive change in the Employment Report. Still, we can read modest positive into the outlook, given the declining number of insured unemployed. Keep in mind though, that laborers may simply be moving into part-time work, which would not change underemployment, nor would it impact consumer spending in a significant enough manner.

We regularly like to pass on the following data for your informational purposes and individual use:

The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending Oct. 16 were in Puerto Rico (5.8 percent), Alaska (5.0), California (4.1), Oregon (4.1), Pennsylvania (4.1), New Jersey (3.9), Nevada (3.7), Connecticut (3.6), Wisconsin (3.6), Arkansas (3.5), and South Carolina (3.5).

The largest increases in initial claims for the week ending Oct. 23 were in California (+3,755), Illinois (+3,710), Pennsylvania (+2,256), Georgia (+1,593), and Michigan (+1,480), while the largest decreases were in Kentucky (-1,699), Florida (-1,615), Puerto Rico (-1,153), Indiana (-1,095), and Alabama (-1,087).

Monster Employment Index (MEI)

Monster World Wide (NYSE: MWW) reported on online job demand this morning, and the trend matched the message offered by several other data points recently. It was that same old "bouncing around the bottom," as the October MEI fell two points, to a reading of 136. The MEI sat at 136 as recently as August, but had run to as high as 141 in June. Though the reading slipped against September, it was still worlds apart from the environment that existed last year, when it stood at 120. The MEI reached its 12-month low of 114 in January of this year.

What does this all mean? Generally, it says the number of available positions found via online databases has slipped some, though not much. We would prefer to see more jobs available of course, but this data alone does not threaten new recession or higher unemployment. Neither does it offer hope for much improvement in the labor market. Remember, however, that employment is a lagging indicator. Though this time around, it is an anchor to economic recovery, causing significant drag and keeping V-shaped recovery from the probability equation completely. It is, therefore, acting as a leading indicator or obstacle.

During October, online job availability rose in 10 of the Index's 20 industry sectors and in eight of the 23 occupational categories monitored by Monster. That means it did not rise in the other 10 sectors and other 15 occupational categories. In fact, it may very well have fallen in those other sectors.

Monster reports that job demand improved in trade and related sectors. The most notable gains came in transportation and warehousing, as that business showed growth in job demand to its highest level of the year. This is probably a beneficiary of soft dollar policy and rising export demand.

The report indicates that online recruitment activity expanded for both the wholesale trade and retail trade sectors, and Monster notes that other consumer-driven groups, like accommodation and food services and arts, entertainment, and recreation, were relatively stable over the longer term.

It seems Monster sees or is trying to portray a better consumer mood and activity than we've generally seen represented in data, excluding today's Chain Store Sales which we've yet to review. It's common knowledge and general consensus that economic growth should persist, excluding the Iran event (which sure seems likely to occur before long). What we cannot read from here is whether solid traction is available below the mud we currently trudge through.

Monster reported, "Among occupations, year-over-year demand trends moved upward for legal and computer-related professionals, as exhibited by the annual growth in the broader information; and finance and insurance industries. Online job demand was relatively tempered for most other white-collar occupations."

I can see why legal opportunities have increased, given all the lawsuits filed against debt burdened Americans who cannot manage to pay their bills anymore. It is a shame how much pressure intensifies upon people already knocked to their knees, and the vipers and crows will find their true justice some other day for their hard-balling poor folks. I get the jobs in legal, but in finance? Really? Maybe corporate finance, but we have not seen any change in capital markets opportunities as yet.

Arizona recorded the highest annual increase in job opportunities as far as states go (boy could that real estate market use it too), while Portland and Boston looked hot for metropolitan regions. Washington D.C. was the only city to record an annual decrease in job opportunities. Hey, we thought all those House seats were simply turned over to new representatives. Bad news Charlie! Maybe they fired the guy who sweeps discrepancies under the rug. All in all, only 13 of the 28 metro markets measured saw increased job opportunities in October. State wise, the most job opportunities per capita existed in: Delaware, Alaska, Arizona, Vermont, Montana, Connecticut, Maryland, Rhode Island, Wyoming, and Virginia.

Challenger's Job-Cuts Report

Job cuts occur even when the economy is growing, and so this report is not likely to help much in forecasting labor market gains. However, it does offer some insight and even reason to cheer. In its latest report, Challenger noted October announced layoffs of 37,986. That compared with September's 37,151. More importantly, employers have declared 62% less layoffs this year-to-date, versus the comparable period from a year ago.

The most cuts last month came in the entertainment and leisure sector, as one should expect. Boardwalks are not as busy along the Northeast Coastline once Labor Day passes, and local amusement parks also see less traffic once school starts. Unfortunately, government and non-profit jobs have been going by the way side, and that continued last month (-4,749 cuts). This was the lowest such count since January though, but given stresses remaining on state and municipalities, and the dearth of coins for tin cans, this group should continue to struggle. Still, the pace of these cuts has improved, so perhaps the discrepancy sweeper can keep his job after all.

What we can take from all this is that perhaps we have hit rock bottom, or at least a safe plateau, as far as jobs go. We are operating at a point where few firings will occur barring new catalyst against economic activity. In other words, the bleeding has stopped, though partly because we almost ran out of blood.

ADP Private Employment Report

ADP's monthly data point comes closest to representing the change depicted in the following day's Labor Department report. ADP reported its estimate for private nonfarm payrolls for the month of October yesterday, and the news was moderately positive. According to ADP, private sector jobs likely increased on net by 43K in October. At first blush, that is not exciting news, but September's data showed a decline of 2K jobs, and that was revised from a drop of 39K.

It is not as if the trend in jobs has shown steady rise though. In fact, since the job market first showed improvement in February, this monthly report has offered readings ranging from a -2K to +65K. October's mark sits just off the average change since February, which is +34K.

In Conclusion

Given that the Labor Department report will finally be rid of the effect of the shedding of census workers and related large public sector cuts, we are almost guaranteed to see an increase in jobs Friday. In fact, economists forecast nonfarm payrolls increased by 60K last month, based on Bloomberg's survey. Economists' forecasts range from -2K to +97K, so just about nobody is looking for a dip in the labor market here. Unemployment is forecast to sit at 9.6%. There is no forecast for the Underemployment Rate, but we remind you that it deteriorated in September, to 17.1%, from 16.7% in August. We think there is a good chance it will moderate a bit here. So, with an hour left to trade, The Greek would be a buyer into any late day weakness that might come on fear of the Employment Report.

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Article should interest investors in Paychex (Nasdaq: PAYX), Manpower (NYSE: MAN), Robert Half International (NYSE: RHI), 51Job Inc. (Nasdaq: JOBS), Monster World Wide (NYSE: MWW), Korn/Ferry International (NYSE: KFY), Administaff (NYSE: ASF), Kforce (Nasdaq: KFRC), TrueBlue (NYSE: TBI), Dice Holdings (NYSE: DHX), Kelly Services (Nasdaq: KELYA), SFN Group (NYSE: SFN), CDI Corp. (NYSE: CDI), Cross Country Healthcare (Nasdaq: CCRN), On Assignment (Nasdaq: ASGN), AMN Healthcare Services (NYSE: AHS), Barrett Business Services (Nasdaq: BBSI), Hudson Highland Group (Nasdaq: HHGP), StarTek (NYSE: SRT), RCM Technologies (Nasdaq: RCMT), VirtualScopics (Nasdaq: VSCP), American Surgical (OTC: ASRG.OB), Medical Connections (OTC: MCTH.OB), iGen Networks (OTC: IGEN.OB), St. Joseph (OTC: STJO.OB), General Employment Enterprises (NYSE: JOB), Total Neutraceutical (OTC: TNUS.OB), TeamStaff (Nasdaq: TSTF), Stratum (OTC: STTH.OB), Purespectrum (OTC: PSRU.OB), Corporate Resource Services (OTC: CRRS.OB), Bank of America (NYSE: BAC), J.P. Morgan Chase (NYSE: JPM), Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS), Citigroup (NYSE: C), Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS), Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC), TD Bank (NYSE: TD), PNC Bank (NYSE: PNC), General Electric (NYSE: GE), Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT), McDonald's (NYSE: MCD), Alcoa (NYSE: AA), American Express (NYSE: AXP), Boeing (NYSE: BA), Caterpillar (NYSE: CAT), Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO), Chevron (NYSE: CVX), DuPont (NYSE: DD), Walt Disney (NYSE: DIS), Home Depot (NYSE: HD), Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ), IBM (NYSE: IBM), Intel (Nasdaq: INTC), Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ), Kraft (NYSE: KFT), Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO), 3M (NYSE: MMM), Merck (NYSE: MRK), Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT), Pfizer (NYSE: PFE), Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG), AT&T (NYSE: T), Travelers (NYSE: TRV), United Technologies (NYSE: UTX), Verizon (NYSE: VZ), Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM).

Please see our disclosures at the Wall Street Greek website and author bio pages found there. This article and website in no way offers or represents financial or investment advice. Information is provided for entertainment purposes only.

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Quantitative Easing II (QE2)

Quantitative Easing II QE2
We provide for you here a verbatim copy of the Federal Reserve's FOMC Policy Statement regarding Quantitative Easing II (QE2). We have also republished the Federal Reserve of New York's statement on how it will execute these treasury security purchases.

Our founder earned clients a 23% average annual return over five years as a stock analyst on Wall Street. "The Greek" has written for institutional newsletters, Businessweek, Real Money, Seeking Alpha and others, while also appearing across TV and radio. While writing for Wall Street Greek, Mr. Kaminis presciently warned of the financial crisis.

(Relevant Tickers: NYSE: DIA, NYSE: SPY, Nasdaq: QQQQ, NYSE: DOG, NYSE: SDS, NYSE: QLD, NYSE: NYX, Nasdaq: NDAQ, NYSE: ICE, Nasdaq: SERAX, Nasdaq: SERBX, Nasdaq: SERCX, Nasdaq: SERNX, Nasdaq: FEUFX, Nasdaq: FEEEX, Nasdaq: FAEAX, Nasdaq: FBEAX, Nasdaq: FIEUX, Nasdaq: FECAX, Nasdaq: IERAX, Nasdaq: XRNEX, Nasdaq: PBEUX, Nasdaq: UEPIX, Nasdaq: UEPSX, Nasdaq: PEUGX, Nasdaq: RYAEX, NYSE: CEE, NYSE: RNE, NYSE: PEF, NYSE: GUR, NYSE: EPV, NYSE: VEA, NYSE: DFE, NYSE: DEB, NYSE: IEV, Nasdaq: ANEFX, Nasdaq: CNGAX, Nasdaq: HNEAX, NYSE: BAC, NYSE: GS, NYSE: AIG, NYSE: WFC, NYSE: MS, NYSE: C, NYSE: DB, NYSE: CS, NYSE: UBS, NYSE: FNM, NYSE: FRE, NYSE: MCG, NYSE: MCO, NYSE: TD, NYSE: PNC, NYSE: STD, AMEX: GLE, NYSE: BCS, NYSE: GLD, NYSE: XLE, NYSE: XLF, NYSE: BJV, NYSE: SZI, NYSE: BPD, NYSE: IEL, NYSE: PBN, NYSE: CGW, NYSE: LVL, NYSE: FRI, NYSE: PBP, NYSE: RSU, NYSE: RMM, NYSE: REA, NYSE: RFL, NYSE: RHM, NYSE: RTG, NYSE: RSW, NYSE: RMS, NYSE: REC, Nasdaq: PDOWX, Nasdaq: XDPOX, Nasdaq: XDPDX, Nasdaq: NDUAX, Nasdaq: NDUBX, Nasdaq: IDJAX, Nasdaq: NJCRX, Nasdaq: UDPIX, Nasdaq: UDPSX, Nasdaq: UWPIX, Nasdaq: RYLDX, Nasdaq: RYIDX, Nasdaq: RYCWX, Nasdaq: ONEQ, Nasdaq: QCLN, Nasdaq: QQEW, Nasdaq: QQXT, Nasdaq: QTEC, Nasdaq: NASDX, Nasdaq: NDXKX, Nasdaq: POTCX, Nasdaq: DXQSX, Nasdaq: DXQLX, Nasdaq: FNCMX, Nasdaq: INQAX, Nasdaq: MOTAX, Nasdaq: XQQQX)

Quantitative Easing II (QE2)



FOMC Policy Statement

Release Date: November 3, 2010


For immediate release

Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in September confirms that the pace of recovery in output and employment continues to be slow. Household spending is increasing gradually, but remains constrained by high unemployment, modest income growth, lower housing wealth, and tight credit. Business spending on equipment and software is rising, though less rapidly than earlier in the year, while investment in nonresidential structures continues to be weak. Employers remain reluctant to add to payrolls. Housing starts continue to be depressed. Longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable, but measures of underlying inflation have trended lower in recent quarters.

Consistent with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability. Currently, the unemployment rate is elevated, and measures of underlying inflation are somewhat low, relative to levels that the Committee judges to be consistent, over the longer run, with its dual mandate. Although the Committee anticipates a gradual return to higher levels of resource utilization in a context of price stability, progress toward its objectives has been disappointingly slow.

To promote a stronger pace of economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at levels consistent with its mandate, the Committee decided today to expand its holdings of securities. The Committee will maintain its existing policy of reinvesting principal payments from its securities holdings. In addition, the Committee intends to purchase a further $600 billion of longer-term Treasury securities by the end of the second quarter of 2011, a pace of about $75 billion per month. The Committee will regularly review the pace of its securities purchases and the overall size of the asset-purchase program in light of incoming information and will adjust the program as needed to best foster maximum employment and price stability.

The Committee will maintain the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent and continues to anticipate that economic conditions, including low rates of resource utilization, subdued inflation trends, and stable inflation expectations, are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate for an extended period.

The Committee will continue to monitor the economic outlook and financial developments and will employ its policy tools as necessary to support the economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at levels consistent with its mandate.

Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were: Ben S. Bernanke, Chairman; William C. Dudley, Vice Chairman; James Bullard; Elizabeth A. Duke; Sandra Pianalto; Sarah Bloom Raskin; Eric S. Rosengren; Daniel K. Tarullo; Kevin M. Warsh; and Janet L. Yellen.

Voting against the policy was Thomas M. Hoenig. Mr. Hoenig believed the risks of additional securities purchases outweighed the benefits. Mr. Hoenig also was concerned that this continued high level of monetary accommodation increased the risks of future financial imbalances and, over time, would cause an increase in long-term inflation expectations that could destabilize the economy.


New York Fed's Statement on Purchases of Treasury Securities

November 3, 2010


On November 3, 2010, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) decided to expand the Federal Reserve’s holdings of securities in the System Open Market Account (SOMA) to promote a stronger pace of economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at levels consistent with its mandate. In particular, the FOMC directed the Open Market Trading Desk (the Desk) at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to purchase an additional $600 billion of longer-term Treasury securities by the end of the second quarter of 2011.

The FOMC also directed the Desk to continue to reinvest principal payments from agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities into longer-term Treasury securities. Based on current estimates, the Desk expects to reinvest $250 billion to $300 billion over the same period, though the realized amount of reinvestment will depend on the evolution of actual principal payments.

Taken together, the Desk anticipates conducting $850 billion to $900 billion of purchases of longer-term Treasury securities through the end of the second quarter. This would result in an average purchase pace of roughly $110 billion per month, representing about $75 billion per month associated with additional purchases and roughly $35 billion per month associated with reinvestment purchases.

The Desk plans to distribute these purchases across the following eight maturity sectors based on the approximate weights below:

Nominal Coupon Secs. by Maturity Range*
TIPS**
1½ -2½ Yrs 2½-4 Yrs 4-5½Yrs 5½-7Yrs 7-10Yrs 10-17Yrs 17-30Yrs 1½-30Yrs

5%

20%

20%

23%

23%

2%

4%

3%


*The on-the-run 7-year note will be considered part of the 5½- to 7-year sector, and the on-the-run 10-year note will be considered part of the 7- to 10-year sector.
**TIPS weights are based on unadjusted par amounts.


Under this distribution, the Desk anticipates that the assets purchased will have an average duration of between 5 and 6 years. The distribution of purchases could change if market conditions warrant, but such changes would be designed to not significantly alter the average duration of the assets purchased.

To provide operational flexibility and to ensure that it is able to purchase the most attractive securities on a relative-value basis, the Desk is temporarily relaxing the 35 percent per-issue limit on SOMA holdings under which it has been operating. However, SOMA holdings of an individual security will be allowed to rise above the 35 percent threshold only in modest increments.

Purchases associated with balance sheet expansion and those associated with principal reinvestments will be consolidated into one set of operations to be announced under the current monthly cycle. On or around the eighth business day of each month, the Desk will publish a tentative schedule of purchase operations expected to take place through the middle of the following month, as well as the anticipated total amount of purchases to be conducted over that period. The schedule will include a list of operation dates, settlement dates, security types to be purchased (nominal coupons or TIPS), the maturity date range of eligible issues, and an expected range for the size of each operation.

The Desk expects to conduct the November 4 and November 8 purchase operations that were announced on October 13, and it plans to publish its first consolidated monthly schedule on November 10 at 2:00 p.m.

Purchases will be conducted with the Federal Reserve’s primary dealers through a series of competitive auctions operated through the Desk’s FedTrade system. Consistent with current practices, the results of each operation will be published on the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s website shortly after each purchase operation has concluded. In order to ensure the transparency of our purchase operations, the Desk will also begin to publish information on the prices paid in individual operations at the end of each monthly calendar period, coinciding with the release of the next period's schedule.

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(Relevant Tickers: NYSE: DIA, NYSE: SPY, Nasdaq: QQQQ, NYSE: DOG, NYSE: SDS, NYSE: QLD, NYSE: NYX, Nasdaq: NDAQ, NYSE: ICE, Nasdaq: SERAX, Nasdaq: SERBX, Nasdaq: SERCX, Nasdaq: SERNX, Nasdaq: FEUFX, Nasdaq: FEEEX, Nasdaq: FAEAX, Nasdaq: FBEAX, Nasdaq: FIEUX, Nasdaq: FECAX, Nasdaq: IERAX, Nasdaq: XRNEX, Nasdaq: PBEUX, Nasdaq: UEPIX, Nasdaq: UEPSX, Nasdaq: PEUGX, Nasdaq: RYAEX, NYSE: CEE, NYSE: RNE, NYSE: PEF, NYSE: GUR, NYSE: EPV, NYSE: VEA, NYSE: DFE, NYSE: DEB, NYSE: IEV, Nasdaq: ANEFX, Nasdaq: CNGAX, Nasdaq: HNEAX, NYSE: BAC, NYSE: GS, NYSE: AIG, NYSE: WFC, NYSE: MS, NYSE: C, NYSE: DB, NYSE: CS, NYSE: UBS, NYSE: FNM, NYSE: FRE, NYSE: MCG, NYSE: MCO, NYSE: TD, NYSE: PNC, NYSE: STD, AMEX: GLE, NYSE: BCS, NYSE: GLD, NYSE: XLE, NYSE: XLF, NYSE: BJV, NYSE: SZI, NYSE: BPD, NYSE: IEL, NYSE: PBN, NYSE: CGW, NYSE: LVL, NYSE: FRI, NYSE: PBP, NYSE: RSU, NYSE: RMM, NYSE: REA, NYSE: RFL, NYSE: RHM, NYSE: RTG, NYSE: RSW, NYSE: RMS, NYSE: REC, Nasdaq: PDOWX, Nasdaq: XDPOX, Nasdaq: XDPDX, Nasdaq: NDUAX, Nasdaq: NDUBX, Nasdaq: IDJAX, Nasdaq: NJCRX, Nasdaq: UDPIX, Nasdaq: UDPSX, Nasdaq: UWPIX, Nasdaq: RYLDX, Nasdaq: RYIDX, Nasdaq: RYCWX, Nasdaq: ONEQ, Nasdaq: QCLN, Nasdaq: QQEW, Nasdaq: QQXT, Nasdaq: QTEC, Nasdaq: NASDX, Nasdaq: NDXKX, Nasdaq: POTCX, Nasdaq: DXQSX, Nasdaq: DXQLX, Nasdaq: FNCMX, Nasdaq: INQAX, Nasdaq: MOTAX, Nasdaq: XQQQX)

Please see our disclosures at the Wall Street Greek website and author bio pages found there. This article and website in no way offers or represents financial or investment advice. Information is provided for entertainment purposes only.

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Hyperventilating About Q3 GDP?

Q3 GDP
Not Me! Over Dramatizing Maybe, but Not Hyper- ventilating

Your favorite old hyperventilating blogger has been quite busy lately, formulating the great idea that will save the economy. That said, we ran over on publishing this tally of Q3 GDP, that if you haven't seen yet, is worth your while.


Our founder earned clients a 23% average annual return over five years as a stock analyst on Wall Street. "The Greek" has written for institutional newsletters, Businessweek, Real Money, Seeking Alpha and others, while also appearing across TV and radio. While writing for Wall Street Greek, Mr. Kaminis presciently warned of the financial crisis.

(Relevant Tickers: NYSE: DIA, NYSE: SPY, Nasdaq: QQQQ, NYSE: DOG, NYSE: SDS, NYSE: QLD, NYSE: NYX, Nasdaq: NDAQ, NYSE: ICE, Nasdaq: SERAX, Nasdaq: SERBX, Nasdaq: SERCX, Nasdaq: SERNX, Nasdaq: FEUFX, Nasdaq: FEEEX, Nasdaq: FAEAX, Nasdaq: FBEAX, Nasdaq: FIEUX, Nasdaq: FECAX, Nasdaq: IERAX, Nasdaq: XRNEX, Nasdaq: PBEUX, Nasdaq: UEPIX, Nasdaq: UEPSX, Nasdaq: PEUGX, Nasdaq: RYAEX, NYSE: CEE, NYSE: RNE, NYSE: PEF, NYSE: GUR, NYSE: EPV, NYSE: VEA, NYSE: DFE, NYSE: DEB, NYSE: IEV, Nasdaq: ANEFX, Nasdaq: CNGAX, Nasdaq: HNEAX, NYSE: BAC, NYSE: GS, NYSE: AIG, NYSE: WFC, NYSE: MS, NYSE: C, NYSE: DB, NYSE: CS, NYSE: UBS, OTC: FNMA.OB, OTC: FMCC.OB, NYSE: MCG, NYSE: MCO, NYSE: TD, NYSE: PNC, NYSE: STD, AMEX: GLE, NYSE: BCS, NYSE: GLD, NYSE: XLE, NYSE: XLF, NYSE: BJV, NYSE: SZI, NYSE: BPD, NYSE: IEL, NYSE: PBN, NYSE: CGW, NYSE: LVL, NYSE: FRI, NYSE: PBP, NYSE: RSU, NYSE: RMM, NYSE: REA, NYSE: RFL, NYSE: RHM, NYSE: RTG, NYSE: RSW, NYSE: RMS, NYSE: REC, Nasdaq: PDOWX, Nasdaq: XDPOX, Nasdaq: XDPDX, Nasdaq: NDUAX, Nasdaq: NDUBX, Nasdaq: IDJAX, Nasdaq: NJCRX, Nasdaq: UDPIX, Nasdaq: UDPSX, Nasdaq: UWPIX, Nasdaq: RYLDX, Nasdaq: RYIDX, Nasdaq: RYCWX, Nasdaq: ONEQ, Nasdaq: QCLN, Nasdaq: QQEW, Nasdaq: QQXT, Nasdaq: QTEC, Nasdaq: NASDX, Nasdaq: NDXKX, Nasdaq: POTCX, Nasdaq: DXQSX, Nasdaq: DXQLX, Nasdaq: FNCMX, Nasdaq: INQAX, Nasdaq: MOTAX, Nasdaq: XQQQX)

Hyperventilating About Q3 GDP?



Real GDP was reported last week for the third quarter, but it came in as expected and offered neither reason to buy nor sell heading into this week's elections and Fed meeting. Gross Domestic Product increased 2.0% in Q3, right in line with the views of economists surveyed by Bloomberg, though up only slightly from the 1.7% growth reported in Q2. Now this was the "advance" estimate, and is subject to decent sized revision, given much of the determinant data has yet to be recorded.

The drivers of GDP growth were found in personal consumption expenditures (PCE), private inventory investment, nonresidential fixed investment, federal government spending, and exports; these factors were partly offset by a negative contribution from residential fixed investment. Imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, increased.

In the recent past, we have been critical of our nation's economic drivers here, since they have been dominated by government stimulus and interest rate actions, and not by real and natural economic activity. This quarter we show consumption pickup to 2.6%, versus a rate of 2.2% in Q2. That was a good thing to see, but not steady nor sure.

Growth was driven by a gain in motor vehicle sales for one. Bloomberg's Tom Keene, whom I listen to each morning and appreciate much for his insight, delivery and especially his considerate character (never a negative tone or note from Tom), said autos are in stealth recovery (something like that). He is right, as motor vehicle output added 0.42 of a percentage point to the Q3 change, compared with a 0.06 subtraction to Q2 GDP. At the same time, I see auto sales still well short of pre-recession levels, and I am not sure I would be buying into GM's IPO just yet (let's see how they want to price it).

Durable Goods again were a positive for the economy, though the 6.1% increase in spending was less than Q2's 6.8% gain; the contribution to GDP was not as spectacular as this number implies either. Americans are not going to buy washing machines for homes just lost, nor will a jobless man afford one to replace the old clunker that still works.

The rate of increase in nondurable goods spending also softened, to +1.3%, short of the 1.9% increase in Q2. Thus, the quarter's warnings seen in consumer confidence figures and other data proved true to the bottom line. But the difference was made up for elsewhere.

Services dominate American production, and the line item improved to 2.5% growth, up from Q2's 1.6% increase. I wonder, however, how much benefit this got from the fraudulent foreclosure crusaders, who instead of helping troubled households, put them to the streets. Also, the census workers fit the services bill, but were captured in government spending contribution, which was significant this quarter. I know debt collectors are working hard busting the balls of the broken down, so maybe they made up some of the gain too. I guess it's better than joining the unemployment line, but the legal hawks are just ruthless characters, or so I hear.

The small acceleration in real GDP in the third quarter (+ three-tenths) primarily reflected a sharp deceleration in import growth and accelerations in private inventory investment and in PCE that were partly offset by a downturn in residential fixed investment and decelerations in nonresidential fixed investment and in exports (I know that's a run-on sentence, but it's right off the report - you don't need a GED to work for the government it seems). In any event, this mess of a sentence is not good news for you. If import growth is down, then Americans are buying less of even the cheap stuff.

Inventories keep rising (fastest since 1998), but as my favorite columnist, Barron's Alan Abelson noted, it is while final demand slumps (+0.6% last quarter). Perhaps we are stocking up just in time to put everything on special sale (read bankruptcy driven inventory unload). Are you Christmas shopping this year? Where from? How have things changed?

I hope I'm included in the group of "hyperventilating, wild-eyed bloggers…" Alan mentioned in his column this week (a must read; it makes the $5 spend for Barron's worthwhile on its own). Hey, I shared a few drinks with a Barron's scribe this weekend too, and a Golden Globe Award winner as well (I've uttered those words about a hundred times since). It just rolls off the tongue nicely. See my Facebook page for details and a photo soon, and join if you are not a "friend" yet.

I believe I need not harp on housing here again, given last week's overwhelming coverage of the sector. To summarize, it still sucks. The pace of growth in both exports and imports moderated, offering perhaps an omen for the global economic outlook. Barron's got it right though, the key to Q3 was the buildup in inventory, as it contributed 1.44 percentage points to the third quarter change. If this stuff they filled the warehouses with doesn't sell, then the economic factor will be removed in ugly fashion in the quarters ahead. Do you think ugly enough for recession?

While investment in equipment and software contributed 0.8 to GDP, that was down from a 1.52 percentage point contribution in Q2. You'll recall that not too long ago, every strategist hoping for a bonus was playing up the business investment numbers. However, we were attributing them to big cash on balance sheets and a need to replace aged equipment (just see our "Interesting Reads" section at the blog.

Most economists seem to agree with our view that economic demand is null and void, and many of us are also not expecting much from the remaining Fed arsenal (read QE2). It really is going to take innovative thinking to revive and restore the economy, but don't you worry, your loyal hyperventilating blogger is working on something of that sort to save us all (if anyone in DC will have a hear).

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(Article should interest: NYSE: DIA, NYSE: SPY, Nasdaq: QQQQ, NYSE: DOG, NYSE: SDS, NYSE: QLD, NYSE: NYX, Nasdaq: NDAQ, NYSE: ICE, Nasdaq: SERAX, Nasdaq: SERBX, Nasdaq: SERCX, Nasdaq: SERNX, Nasdaq: FEUFX, Nasdaq: FEEEX, Nasdaq: FAEAX, Nasdaq: FBEAX, Nasdaq: FIEUX, Nasdaq: FECAX, Nasdaq: IERAX, Nasdaq: XRNEX, Nasdaq: PBEUX, Nasdaq: UEPIX, Nasdaq: UEPSX, Nasdaq: PEUGX, Nasdaq: RYAEX, NYSE: CEE, NYSE: RNE, NYSE: PEF, NYSE: GUR, NYSE: EPV, NYSE: VEA, NYSE: DFE, NYSE: DEB, NYSE: IEV, Nasdaq: ANEFX, Nasdaq: CNGAX, Nasdaq: HNEAX, NYSE: BAC, NYSE: GS, NYSE: AIG, NYSE: WFC, NYSE: MS, NYSE: C, NYSE: DB, NYSE: CS, NYSE: UBS, NYSE: FNM, NYSE: FRE, NYSE: MCG, NYSE: MCO, NYSE: TD, NYSE: PNC, NYSE: STD, AMEX: GLE, NYSE: BCS, NYSE: GLD, NYSE: XLE, NYSE: XLF, NYSE: BJV, NYSE: SZI, NYSE: BPD, NYSE: IEL, NYSE: PBN, NYSE: CGW, NYSE: LVL, NYSE: FRI, NYSE: PBP, NYSE: RSU, NYSE: RMM, NYSE: REA, NYSE: RFL, NYSE: RHM, NYSE: RTG, NYSE: RSW, NYSE: RMS, NYSE: REC, Nasdaq: PDOWX, Nasdaq: XDPOX, Nasdaq: XDPDX, Nasdaq: NDUAX, Nasdaq: NDUBX, Nasdaq: IDJAX, Nasdaq: NJCRX, Nasdaq: UDPIX, Nasdaq: UDPSX, Nasdaq: UWPIX, Nasdaq: RYLDX, Nasdaq: RYIDX, Nasdaq: RYCWX, Nasdaq: ONEQ, Nasdaq: QCLN, Nasdaq: QQEW, Nasdaq: QQXT, Nasdaq: QTEC, Nasdaq: NASDX, Nasdaq: NDXKX, Nasdaq: POTCX, Nasdaq: DXQSX, Nasdaq: DXQLX, Nasdaq: FNCMX, Nasdaq: INQAX, Nasdaq: MOTAX, Nasdaq: XQQQX)

Please see our disclosures at the Wall Street Greek website and author bio pages found there. This article and website in no way offers or represents financial or investment advice. Information is provided for entertainment purposes only.

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The Fed & Bernanke's Economic Delusion

Fed Bernanke's economic delusion
Bernanke's Vision

Federal Reserve Chairman Benjamin Bernanke delivered an important speech Friday. It was highly anticipated and critically important in the minds of market soothsayers. In the end, Bernanke did not really have much to say with regard to an imminent employment of quantitative easing measures. However, what he did have to say about the current state of economic affairs and the view he and the Fed have of the future troubled me greatly.


Our founder earned clients a 23% average annual return over five years as a stock analyst on Wall Street. "The Greek" has written for institutional newsletters, Businessweek, Real Money, Seeking Alpha and others, while also appearing across TV and radio. While writing for Wall Street Greek, Mr. Kaminis presciently warned of the financial crisis.

(Relevant Tickers: NYSE: DIA, NYSE: SPY, Nasdaq: QQQQ, NYSE: DOG, NYSE: SDS, NYSE: QLD, NYSE: NYX, Nasdaq: NDAQ, NYSE: ICE, Nasdaq: SERAX, Nasdaq: SERBX, Nasdaq: SERCX, Nasdaq: SERNX, Nasdaq: FEUFX, Nasdaq: FEEEX, Nasdaq: FAEAX, Nasdaq: FBEAX, Nasdaq: FIEUX, Nasdaq: FECAX, Nasdaq: IERAX, Nasdaq: XRNEX, Nasdaq: PBEUX, Nasdaq: UEPIX, Nasdaq: UEPSX, Nasdaq: PEUGX, Nasdaq: RYAEX, NYSE: CEE, NYSE: RNE, NYSE: PEF, NYSE: GUR, NYSE: EPV, NYSE: VEA, NYSE: DFE, NYSE: DEB, NYSE: IEV, Nasdaq: ANEFX, Nasdaq: CNGAX, Nasdaq: HNEAX, NYSE: BAC, NYSE: GS, NYSE: AIG, NYSE: WFC, NYSE: MS, NYSE: C, NYSE: DB, NYSE: CS, NYSE: UBS, OTC: FNMA.OB, OTC: FMCC.OB, NYSE: MCG, NYSE: MCO, NYSE: TD, NYSE: PNC, NYSE: STD, AMEX: GLE, NYSE: BCS, NYSE: GLD, NYSE: XLE, NYSE: XLF, NYSE: BJV, NYSE: SZI, NYSE: BPD, NYSE: IEL, NYSE: PBN, NYSE: CGW, NYSE: LVL, NYSE: FRI, NYSE: PBP, NYSE: RSU, NYSE: RMM, NYSE: REA, NYSE: RFL, NYSE: RHM, NYSE: RTG, NYSE: RSW, NYSE: RMS, NYSE: REC, Nasdaq: PDOWX, Nasdaq: XDPOX, Nasdaq: XDPDX, Nasdaq: NDUAX, Nasdaq: NDUBX, Nasdaq: IDJAX, Nasdaq: NJCRX, Nasdaq: UDPIX, Nasdaq: UDPSX, Nasdaq: UWPIX, Nasdaq: RYLDX, Nasdaq: RYIDX, Nasdaq: RYCWX, Nasdaq: ONEQ, Nasdaq: QCLN, Nasdaq: QQEW, Nasdaq: QQXT, Nasdaq: QTEC, Nasdaq: NASDX, Nasdaq: NDXKX, Nasdaq: POTCX, Nasdaq: DXQSX, Nasdaq: DXQLX, Nasdaq: FNCMX, Nasdaq: INQAX, Nasdaq: MOTAX, Nasdaq: XQQQX)

The Fed & Bernanke's Economic Delusion



economic columnistFed Chairman Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Geithner reintroduced uncertainty into the market equation Friday. A slew of economic data hit the wire Friday morning, including a planned address by the Fed Chairman on the prospect of quantitative easing. However, the Chairman's speech seemed to work more towards preparing the market for what it already expects, than it did toward giving it what it wants.

Retail sales data for September proved stronger than expected, and inflation remained tame, so stocks sprinted into the open. However, it feels as though the delay in Treasury Secretary Geithner's report on our foreign trading partners, especially China, has kept fear alive in the hearts of traders. Geithner's delay certainly implies a harsh but true description of China's foreign currency manipulation could be due, though it is clearly not preferred by the government. The potential repercussions of this possibility has traders and investors of all sorts uncertain, and uncertainty acts as a weight on stocks.

Bernanke's Address

The Chairman's speech did not offer the rescue ship the investment community was counting on, but he said it was in nearby port if need be. He began by reassuring the community that the economy is still on pace for growth, with the "preconditions for it in place." He voiced expectations for moderate growth as time progressed.

The speech itself was intended to target the topic of monetary policy in a low inflation environment, and so the Chairman discussed the many nuances and difficulties in his current work. Indeed, while lowering the Fed's target rate to spur the economy, he would like to also see the bond market avoid disaster and equity values find further supports. While the Fed's mandate does not target stocks nor bonds, the economic play of the two is of course still important for consideration. And so, a little bit of inflation is now regarded a desirable spice for the economic gourmet. Bang!

What got me fired up to write this critical review of the Fed and Bernanke's economic vision is the deluded view the economic minders seem to have. The Fed has been one of the poorest forecasters of economic developments in recent times. After all, it failed to see the housing bubble it was building with its low rate policy. However, when cornered, Alan Greenspan will point to crooked mortgage brokers and greedy banks as the culprits. In more recent times, the latest Fed Chairman publicly stated that the mortgage and real estate crisis would be contained within the industry it served. That was a troubling failure of vision, and the disaster spread into a global financial crisis of fathomable (not by the Fed though) proportions. Or perhaps, US government advisors asked the Chairman to refrain from yelling "fire" in the theater… though flames were spreading at the time.

Once again, the Fed seems to have its blinders on, as the Chairman's speech was full of deluded impressions of the current economic environment. Hey, I'm not apologizing for telling the truth. This type of writing is why I have a following. It is because of our willingness to tell the story that bank and other institutionally paid economists and strategists are too afraid to tell. That's because it might lead you to take your capital out of the hands of their portfolio management team, and cost them their jobs.

Bernanke said that household spending should benefit from stronger household finances, further easing of credit conditions, and pent-up demand for consumer durable goods. I have issue with this statement.

Inadequate Income

The unemployment benefit compensation and emergency part-time work 17% of Americans find themselves surviving on now, are not likely strengthening their household finances. In fact, overleveraged Americans would be lucky if their income resources were even enough to stop the bleeding of their money. Under the illusion of continual employment and eventual prosperity, we have purchased homes, automobiles and all sorts of things we thought we needed with credit, and those payments likely now exceed the income generated by government supports and through the bussing of tables. Thus, can we really say household finances have strengthened? It's more like American families are facing a harsher reality day by day.

Unsteady Housing & Assets

Home prices look about ready to slip again, and without economic growth, equities might not even hold their ground, let alone appreciate further. So, with the wealth effect reversed, can we say household finances have strengthened, or that even the perception of household wealth has improved?

Credit Fallacy

Bernanke also stated that further easing of credit conditions were an aid to the consumer. So, why then does consumer credit contract almost each and every month it is reported? Credit has not eased, or else record low mortgage rates would be spurring the real estate market. Instead, underwater mortgages that near or exceed the value of the properties they stand against, and poorly rated credit risks (people), cannot even refinance their current loans, let alone buy a new one or purchase one for junior. Furthermore, banks have come under high scrutiny and broad regulation, so find me a banker these days who will go out on a limb now. I think they are as scarce as the pheasant are in my Pennsylvania hunting grounds.

Hopeful Demand

Thirdly, Bernanke talks about pent-up demand for household durables. You know, I think poor folk just call that wishing, and go on washing their clothes the old fashioned way. If the washing machine is broke, but Joey is still sitting idle, well than Susan will be washing the clothes in the bathtub. That is not pent-up demand; that's surviving, and nothing is going to lead a family without means to buy that new machine except a new job. Even then, the machine won't come until the refrigerator is full, the bills are caught up and some savings put in place. Pent-up demand? I call that wishing, because without a job, there will be no release of demand.

Greed is Good in the Corporate HQ

Bernanke says that similarly business investment in equipment and software should be driven rapidly by rising sales, the need to replace old equipment, strong balance sheets and low financing costs. In the case where the equipment is necessary for the generation of sales, it will be replaced and upgraded. But, you can count on corporate masters, those being you and me the shareholders, to demand EPS and dividends before new desks for the cubicle impaired. This is capitalism, where stocks are rewarded for making higher profits, not for making employees feel like human beings. Face it! That's the way you like it, so stop turning your eye from it. And don't be so surprised when you hear about some loose cannon doing in all his supervisors one angry afternoon. That said, I would still rather be working in a cubicle in Jersey City than in a sweat shot in Bangalore.

Companies will Acquire One Another

So I say don't look for "rapid" spending from corporations, except in the acquisition of each other. There will be more of that use of the over-cashed balance sheets than there will be of the addition of Windows 8 and the new desk machine with the paper thin monitor. Oh, and after these companies acquire one another, they go about the business of creating synergies, which usually includes the laying off of redundant responsibilities and the poor saps who fill them. Thus, that would seem to weigh against economic growth, and certainly against employment in the near-term. The long-term might offer another sunny story, but don't look for companies to place spending above higher profits, because this ain't heaven.

Also, low financing also goes a long way toward paying out dividends. It has been figured out long ago that a good bit of leverage adds value to an organization, when it is manageable. A low cost of capital, certainly creates economic value; but how will that economic value be distributed? So who gets richer? That's right, the rich. That is especially true now that the little guy has been near permanently scared out of the stock market. Hey, but it's a good thing right? After all, without the rich building companies, the little guys would not have work. I'm being cynical, in case you’re blind. Trickle down should not translate into look down, or beat down. History shows us that mindfulness of the peasants plays smartly too, since the masses are made of them (read us). In case you haven't noticed, we're growing restless. Meanwhile, bank managers paid back the government at the cost of equity holders so that they could pay themselves bonuses. Hey, Fed-provided liquid capital markets and solvency served them well.

Public Sector Farce

The Chairman says that the public sector is improving as well. He says tax receipts in state and local governments have started to recover, which should allow their spending to rise gradually. He says the contribution of federal stimulus to overall growth should decline at a pace that does not derail economic activity. Woe there horsey!

Since when have tax receipts improved? In New York City, we are seeing more crime in unattended subway stops, fires burning longer due to greater distances for scarcer firemen to travel, and even less charitable contributions to the stubbornly needy who refuse to leave Utopia like the mayor might prefer. Yet, major extraordinary projects like the second avenue subway and the new tunnel from Jersey somehow survive these tough times? Oh well, I guess that's thanks to poor Benjamin, who gives an arm each day to the MTA in order to travel into the city to make some money serving people. Hogwash Bernanke! Hogwash! You should have been with me the other night sitting with a hobo, once a handyman, in a coffee shop until two in the morning, so they would not kick him out into the rain, where nobody would find him until he had been long dead, since those jobs have been shed too.

As far as the government stilts being slowly taken away as to avoid derailing the economy:

Well, the Chairman must bed early, because he seems to be missing the political campaign that clutters the airwaves. It harps on wasteful spending and fiscal prudence, and it scares even those bold enough to consider change from changing the tax code for the rich. The wealthy are not putting those costly (to us) dollars back to work in the economy, as one might hope. That's because they don't need another yacht as badly as we need another loaf of bread. Democrats need to drum up one more ounce of courage before their party ends, and allow the Bush tax cuts to expire on income earned above $250K. At least address the higher end, with consideration for small businessmen. Why can't we let them expire on the super-wealthy, and pass a new bill at the same time, giving tax breaks to small businessmen earning up to a million? Why hasn't a compromise come about!!!? It's because politicians care more about their seats in DC than they do about you and me.

I also believe the Chairman must have missed the fact that housing is about to double-dip in the absence of the homebuyers' tax credit. Cash-for-Clunkers was a hit too, but I don't see car sales running near 14 million today with it gone. And some of these government aids were corrupted along the way, and so efforts to keep people from devastating foreclosure instead allowed predators to misguide and steal from the needy.

Foreign Trade Supports?

Doesn't Bernanke hang out with Geithner anymore, since the G-man moved on to head the Treasury? Otherwise, why would the Chairman include continued support from our foreign trading partners as a catalyst for growth, given Geithner's engagement of China on the yuan. There's no guarantee when it comes to the Chinese; there's a reason we've been so cautious to begin with.

A Hint of an Idea

Finally some sobriety, as the Chairman addressed the modest economic growth he sees, and the jobless recovery it entails. And so, further monetary stimulus remains under consideration. He did not say much more than before, in repeating that the Fed is considering expanding its stake in long-term securities. Did you note though, that the Chairman used the qualifier "if warranted?" This suggested that QE2 is by no means a done deal. Lest we remind you that the market thinks it is, and that a letdown seems in store in one way or another.

A Shotgun of a Tool to Use

Empirical evidence suggests QE2 should act as effective economic stimulus, we agree. But Bernanke warned that we have little experience in this means of action, and so we translate to read, we might overshoot. The risk of this is that our conservative Fed might err greatly with its new weapon and unleash an uncontainable virus upon us all by charging the economy up and inflation out of control. This is why many Fed members are openly talking about a careful ratcheting up of quantitative easing. While this makes sense, it also seems to offer the risk of adding less than enough boost to the economic engine.

Either way, we see volatility increasing and uncertainty overwhelming the market, which is bad news for stocks. Only the economic life we pursue can rescue us, and perhaps this can only come naturally and with time, or by means of further creative thinking. Maybe quantitative easing will work, and maybe it will not. One thing is certain, that man will go on making monsters and monstrous mistakes. It's all we can do to try. I've been critical of the Fed today, but I've also been supportive of it in the past. We call it like we see it.

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