Precious Metals Surge As QE3 Now Merely A Formality
We dont have real time pricing on spam, but luckily we do on gold and silver. And to all those who BTFD in the past 2 weeks as we suggested, congratulations. Next up: another futile CME margin hike which will do nothing but confirm that a standalone gold standard is imminent.Summarizing Wall Street's Kneejerk Response To The NFP Report
Little surprise to the payroll report on Wall Street, which is now united in its call that the only option is for the Fed to do more QEn+1Goldman's Response To The NFP Miss: Here Comes QE3
Not a lot of commentary in Jan Hatzius' response to the horrendous NFP number, although what he says, speaks volumes: "BOTTOM LINE: We now look for the FOMC to announce a lengthening in the average maturity of its balance sheet at the September 20-21 meeting."Birth Death Adds 87K To Today's NFP Miss, 491K Jobs In Past Year Due To "Statistics"
Take Green (i.e. double zero), and subtract from it the Birth Death adjustment and presto: you have reality, or what we predicted earlier today- a negative NFP print. Also, for the seasonal sticklers Birth Death has added 491k jobs in the past year: no seasonality here.
NFP Misses, Prints At 0 As In Unchanged! Unemployment Rate 9.1%, Birth Death Adds 87K
Key Highlights:
- At 0, the NFP number is a plunge of 85K, from a downward revised July, which was previously at 117. This is the biggest drop since September 2010
- The Household Survey saw an increase of 331K in the number of employed
- Average hourly earnings for all employees on private nonfarm payrolls decreased by 3 cents, or 0.1 percent, to $23.09. This decline followed an 11-cent gain in July. This is the first time the avg hourly earnings have been negative MoM since January 2008
- Underemployment, U-6, rose to 16.2%, from 16.1% in July
- The labor force rose to 153.6 million in August.
- Ironically the only good news in the report, was what many have been indicating is a negative for months: namely that the Labor Force Participation rate actually rose for the first time in months from the nearly 30 year low of 63.9% to 64.0%
Goldman Reiterates The Case For A Very Disappointing NFP Number
With just half an hour left until the NFP report, all bets should have been made by now if the number will come above the consensus of 68K, or well below it. One who is confident the number will be a big disappointment is Goldman's Jan Hatzius and team who lists the following reasons for why the number will not meet Wall Street's traditional permabullish outlook: Weakened hiring, due to a deterioration in households' assessment of the labor market, weaker real time economic employment indices, fewer online job ads, moderate ADP employment gains; the picture is not better on the demand side as jobless claims remain low, and announced job cuts are rising. There is always a strawman in the form of the Verizon strike which would cut about 45,000 people from the NFP, but laslty, and most importantly, Income tax receipts have dropped substantially in recent weeks: an indication that either employees are paying less in taxes, or there are just less of them. Goldman's summary: "Taken together, our models suggest a deceleration in the pace of payroll growth in August. We therefore expect a gain of 25,000 in the 's report (revised down from 50,000 previously)." Also, let's not forget that the Fed needs some ammunition if it wishes to proceed with announcing QE3 at the September 21 FOMC meeting- yesterday's ISM certainly did not provide it.Bloomberg Interview: The European Crisis
Admin at Marc Faber Blog - 2 hours ago
Listen to the latest Bloomberg Radio interview here: *Marc Faber Says EU
Should Have Let Greece Fail*
*Marc Faber is an international investor known for his uncanny predictions
of the stock market and futures markets around the world.*
The Price Of A Commodity Will Never Go To Zero
Admin at Jim Rogers Blog - 2 hours ago
The price of a commodity will never go to zero. When you invest in commodities futures, you're not buying a piece of paper that says you own an intangible piece of company that can go bankrupt. *Jim Rogers is an author, financial commentator and successful international investor. He has been frequently featured in Time, The New York Times, Barron’s, Forbes, Fortune, The Wall Street Journal, The Financial Times and is a regular guest on Bloomberg and CNBC.*
Frontrunning: September 2
- White House sharply cuts U.S. growth forecast (Reuters)
- U.S. judge pans rush in BofA $8.5 billion mortgage pact (Reuters)
- Italy cobbles together austerity compromise (FT)
- Fresh Scrutiny of BofA (WSJ)
- Fed asks BofA to list contingency plan: report (Reuters)
- Germany backs calls to widen IMF currency basket (FT)
- U.K. Warns Scotland on Costs of a Split (WSJ)
- U.S. Is Set to Sue a Dozen Big Banks Over Mortgages (NYT)
- US Deficit forecast falls below estimates (FT)
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