Wednesday, May 2, 2012

America's "Safest Long Term Investment" Is Gold - Gallup

Americans feel “gold is the safest long term investment” today, a Gallup survey has found. Gold was favoured over four other types of investments perceived as the best long term choice for American investors today. 28% of the American public choose gold as their favoured investment of choice today.  Real estate followed in second place, with 20% seeing it as the best long term investment. Paper  assets were less popular with savings accounts and certificates of deposits (CDs) tied with stocks and mutual funds at 19%. Bonds came last at 8%.  This suggests that the American public may not be as uninformed when it comes to investing as is often suggested. According to Gallup, "investing in gold has gained in popularity in recent years as low interest rates have made traditional savings instruments less attractive, and instability in the stock and real estate markets has undermined the mass appeal of those options."  "Meanwhile, the rising trajectory of the price of gold over the past several years apparently offers more of the returns and stability investors seek." While some may find the Gallup poll findings worrisome from a contrarian perspective, it is not.

 

Europe's Scariest Chart Just Got Scarier-er

We were the first to note the dire state of youth unemployment in Europe here, and reiterated here, as this terrible social situation just goes from bad to worse this month. Whether youth unemployment is a proxy for sales of PlayStations or for the much more critical likelihood of widespread social unrest and eventually the dissolution of Europe's political compact is unclear but one thing is for sure - Europe's leaders will be watching this chart and quaking as nation after nation breaks to all-time high levels of joblessness for the critical tinder-box of Under-25 year-olds. The Euro-zone youth unemployment rate is back over 22% for the first time since September 1994. With Spain and Greece over 50% (and rising) and Italy now joining Ireland over 35% at the same time as Germany's youth unemployment falls below 8% for the first time since May 1993 - one can only surmise the rising tensions between the haves and the have-nots (even as Germany's PMI disappoints).




ADP Misses Big, Prints Lowest Increase Since September; Manufacturing Jobs Post Shocking Decline

Those hoping Goldman's NFP forecast of 125,000, well below consensus, is wrong, may have to reassess their thesis following the just released ADP number which came as a big disappointment to consensus of 170,000, instead printing at only +119,000, to 110,590. (The previous improvement was also downward revised from +209K to +201K). This was the lowest sequential change since September 2011, and confirms once again, the declining trends last seen in... 2011. It was also the biggest miss in 11 months. Luckily, as the scatterplot below shows, ADP is completely meaningless when predicting NFP so our gut reaction would be to expect a beat in NFP based on this print considering the whole Schrodinger economy and what not (see China). However, on an apples to apples basis, one thing is certain: record warm winter payback is a bitch. And finally, that whole Obama export renaissance is not doing all too hot: goods producing sector: -4,000 in April, while manufacturing jobs declined by -5,000. But, but, the soaring ISM..... oh forget it.





And So The World Burns: Global April PMI Summary


No need for much commentary here, suffice to say that those who thought Italy's massive drop in PMI from 47.9 to 43.9 in April was bad, apparently have not seen Hungary, Australia, Norway or Switzerland. The good news? Turkey is doing well to quite well... which likely explains why they are trying to confiscate the people's gold.
 







Today’s Items:

First…
It Looks Like The Global Economy Is Rolling Over
http://www.businessinsider.com
Export are slowing to Europe, Asia, and the U.S. Add to this, the Dallas FEed and Chicago PMI weak numbers and the air is going out the world’s economic balloon. So, hang on because the ride is going to get more bumpy.

Next…
Why U.S. House Prices Won’t Recover
http://www.smartmoney.com
With the huge shadow inventory, is it any wonder that housing prices are dropping like a rock. In fact, after adjusting for inflation, housing prices have actually returned to 1986 levels. That’s because the natural rate of price appreciation for houses is zero after inflation.

Next…
The Velocity of Money Is Coming?
http://thedailybell.com
Sooner or later there will be tremendous price inflation with the euro and the world’s perceived reserved currency… the U.S. Dollar. The idea, by the Central Banks, may be to create an “order out of chaos” strategy where people will have to use IMF bogus currency.  The only problem with that insane idea is the fact that the BRICS are already using gold as payment for oil.

Next…
Missouri Politicians Aim to Simplify Use of Gold as Money
http://www.goldmoney.com
Missouri is trying to follow Utah’s example for gold and silver to be used as money.  This plan is similar to a law passed in Utah, which allows citizens to use a bank card “backed” by physical gold and silver. Another reason to keep stacking.

Next…
21 Unanswered Questions That They Don’t Want You To Look Into
http://www.prisonplanet.com
Here are a few…
1. Why are federal government agencies stockpiling massive amounts of food and ammunition?
2. Why is Wall Street laying off thousands of workers if the economy is getting better?
3. Why is the Milwaukee Red Cross being told to prepare for an evacuation of Chicago?
4. Why is cesium-137 from the Fukushima nuclear disaster still showing up in milk in Vermont?
Inquiring minds want to know…

Next…
5 Men Arrested
http://news.yahoo.com
As we approach that Reichstag moment, where the U.S. Constitution is totally thrown out the window, we get to enjoy more scare tactics from the FBI, and other government agencies, as 5 men were arrested, and ordered jailed, for planning to blow up a bridge near Cleveland.  Legitimate or propaganda… You decide.

Next…
New Obama Slogan
http://www.washingtontimes.com
Although unlikely an accident, it turns out that Obama’s re-election slogan “Forward” has had a long association with European Marxism during the 19th and 20th century. Seriously, is any one surprised?

Next…
EPA Boss Resigns
http://orangepunch.ocregister.com
Well, Al Armendariz, the EPA regional boss who wanted to crucify oil companies, has resigned. This fool’s resignation is a good start; however, how about an investigation on all of his cases where he may have acted inappropriately and fine him accordingly?


Finally, Please prepare now for the escalating economic and social unrest. Good Day

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We Are Not Powerless: Resisting Financial Feudalism

The pathway of dissent is to resist financial feudalism and its enforcer, the expansive Central State. Here are twelve paths of resistance any adult can legally pursue in the course of their daily lives:
  1. Support the decentralized, non-market economy
  2. Stop participating in financialization
  3. Redefine self-interest to exclude debt-servitude and dependence on consumerism and the Central State
  4. Act on your awareness that the nature of prosperity and financial security is changing
  5. Stop supporting distant concentrations of capital that subvert democracy by using their gargantuan profits to buy the machinery of State governance and regulation
  6. Stop supporting the debt-and-leverage based financial aristocracy
  7. Transfer your assets out of Wall Street and into local enterprises or assets that do not enrich and empower Wall Street.
  8. Refuse to participate in consumerist status identifiers and the social defeat they create
  9. Vote in every election with an eye on rewarding honesty and truth and punishing empty promises
  10. Stop supporting inflationary policies such as “money creation” by the Federal Reserve and Federal deficit borrowing
  11. Become healthy, active and fit
  12. Embrace self-directed coherent plans and construct a resilient, diverse ecology of identity and meaning





The Federal Reserve Has Zero Credibility

Admin at Jim Rogers Blog - 25 minutes ago
Mr. Bernanke has zero credibility as far as I am concerned. The Federal Reserve has zero credibility. -* in a recent video interview with the WSJ * *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.* more »

 

I Think That The Markets For The Next 1-2 Months Will Be Going Lower

Admin at Marc Faber Blog - 32 minutes ago
If you would build an advance/decline line of all stock markets in the world, it would be in a downtrend. And I think that the markets for the next one-two months will be going lower. - *in ET* * * *Related, iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index ETF (EEM), iShares Russell 2000 Index ETF (IWM) * * * *Marc Faber is an international investor known for his uncanny predictions of the stock market and futures markets around the world.* more »

 

India: Fiscal Deficit And Government Debt

Admin at Marc Faber Blog - 37 minutes ago
The situation in India is a situation where the fiscal deficit is essentially very high and obviously the government debt is increasing. The rating agencies do their ratings. I don’t pay much attention to that. But obviously although they have a time lag, they probably are in the right direction in terms of downgrading India. - *in Economic Times* Related, WisdomTree India Earnings Fund ETF (EPI) *Marc Faber is an international investor known for his uncanny predictions of the stock market and futures markets around the world.* more »

 

Wall Street climbs as economy fears ease

Eric De Groot at Eric De Groot - 2 hours ago
Small and large cap stocks total return indices already set new all-time highs in February and March, respectively. Chart 1: Small Cap Stocks Total Return Index (SCSTRI) and Z Scores of Secular Trends Chart 2: Large Cap Stocks Total Return Index (LCSTRI) and Z Scores of Secular Trends Headline: Wall Street climbs as economy fears ease NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks rallied on... [[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]] more »

 

I Like To Buy Neglected Assets

Admin at Marc Faber Blog - 11 hours ago
*I like to buy assets that are neglected. In Arizona you can buy a beautiful house for 150,000 USD. This is undervaluation. - in Bloomberg TV* * * *Marc Faber is an international investor known for his uncanny predictions of the stock market and futures markets around the world.* more »

 

The First Panacea For A Mismanaged Nation Is Inflation Of The Currency

Admin at Marc Faber Blog - 11 hours ago
“The first panacea for a mismanaged nation is inflation of the currency; the second is war. Both bring a temporary prosperity; both bring permanent ruin.” - *Dr. Faber quoting Ernest Hemingway in the CFA Institute Middle East Investment Conference* *Marc Faber is an international investor known for his uncanny predictions of the stock market and futures markets around the world.* more »

 

Western Democracies: Are People Really Free?

Admin at Marc Faber Blog - 11 hours ago
We have democracies in the Western World but are people really free? - *in a recent RT video interview* *Marc Faber is an international investor known for his uncanny predictions of the stock market and futures markets around the world.* more »

 

The Next Slowdown Is Going To Be Even Worse

Admin at Jim Rogers Blog - 11 hours ago
I’m not the only person who knows this is all a scam built on sand; we have problems and they’re going to be worse. In 2002, America had a slowdown. In 2008, the slowdown was worse, because the debt was so much higher. Well, the next slowdown is going to be even worse because the debt is going to be that much higher. *Related, SPDR S&P 500 Index ETF (SPY)* *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 re... more »

 

My Favorite Saying

Admin at Jim Rogers Blog - 11 hours ago
Try, try again. Persevere. - *favourite saying* *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.* more »

 

I Shorted Treasury Bonds Again

Admin at Jim Rogers Blog - 11 hours ago

I shorted Treasury bonds again a little while ago, and my timing has never been very good in that market. I’m down a little bit, not much. - *in a recent video interview* *Related, ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasuries ETF (TBT)* *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.*




US Factory Orders Post Biggest Decline Since March 2009

That March factory orders declined 1.5% was not very surprising: the market was expecting a decline of 1.6%. However, this is not good news as the prior February increase of 1.3% was revised lower to 1.1%, netting out as a negative two month change. Where this number was troubling is that this 2.6% swing brought the index to its biggest decline since March 2009 when the pumping of trillions started.




TBAC Unanimously Recommends Start Of Floating Rate Treasury Issuance

As we suggested yesterday, the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee (basically Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan, and the rest of the buy and sell side) did indeed come out with a unanimous decision, having decided to recommend FRNs. This simply means that Wall Street is either desperate to telegraph a surge in short-term rates, or, even worse, if actually anticipating a surge in short-term rates and is doing all it can to hedge before it happens. Nonetheless, "system limitations would prevent any possible issuance of FRNs until 2013" while those wondering what the reference rate will be will have no answer for a while: "In discussing the best index, the member recommendations were divided, with 4 members voting for Treasury bills, 3 members voting for a general collateral rate, and 6 members voting for the federal funds effective rate." Finally, anyone wondering why the market acted odd yesterday, i.e., experienced a freak sell off in the afternoon, the reason is that Brian Sack was also present at the TBAC meeting, and away from his trusty BBG terminal.




The Divergence Becomes Distinct

We have said, for months now, that Europe and the United States were heading in two different directions. That became quite clear today as the manufacturing numbers for Europe were dismal while unemployment for the entire Eurozone reached 10.9% which is up 9.1% from last year. The entire Continent is in a recession, with the exception of Germany, and we think their next release, in mid May, will show that they have joined the rest of their brethern. Austerity has its costs and two of them are increased unemployment and a decline in demand for goods and services which is then exacerbated by the drop in the number of people that are working. In the months ahead, for both political and economic reasons, we will see a flight back to American assets as the picture in Europe becomes both clearer and obviously worse. All of this, however, will affect American corporations and our banks so that expectations should be lowered in coming quarters for American earnings and profits. As “no man is an island,” no region of the world will be exempt from the European recession just as Europe was not exempt from our financial crisis.




Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: May 2

In the early hours of the European session, continental markets opened higher, reacting to yesterday’s positive performance in the US. Sentiment quickly turned as continental Europe released its respective Manufacturing PMI figures, with even the core European nations recording declines in the sector and lower-than-expected readings. Despite the poor data, some major cash markets are clinging on to positive territory, as the CAC and DAX indices both trade higher. The Spanish and Italian markets, however, tell a different story. With both their respective PMIs recording significant declines, both now trade lower by around 2% apiece. Against the flow of bad Eurozone news, the UK has released an expectation-beating Construction PMI figure, going somewhat against last week’s breakdown of the official GDP statistics. Markit research cites strength in commercial work and new orders as the main driver for the growth. The downbeat data from Europe has taken its toll on EUR/USD, currently trading lower by over 90 pips, but the pair has come off the lows in recent trade. GBP/USD has mirrored the moves in the EUR and trades lower by over 40 pips, however some support has been gained from the strong Construction PMI. 



Draghi Straits - Money For Nothing

The question for investors is how likely Draghi unleashes some new money and gives the market another brief relief rally? I’m not sure he is able to do anything meaningful and right now I believe the market will fade over the course of the day as realization sets in that not much can be done. I’m not quite ready to put this trade on, but am looking closely at going long Spanish stocks versus short German stocks. The belief that Germany will be fine while Spain is a disaster seems too common and priced in. I’m not quite there on that trade, but it is only that am looking at very closely.




Overnight Sentiment: Europe Is Open


For those who follow the overnight session and know very well that the only factor there is whether Europe is open or closed (like yesterday), we have three words: Europe was open. As BofA summarizes: "Yesterday's stronger than expected ISM manufacturing sparked a solid rally in the S&P 500. Around mid-day the index was up about 1.2%; however, the markets slowly faded throughout the rest of the day ending up 0.6%. Our equity strategy team things that the S&P is roughly at its fair value given the macroeconomic backdrop and the continued troubles in the Euro area." It is hardly rocket science that Europe will continue to drag on the world. The only question is how long before this nexus of global trade drags everyone else down, because as hard as they try the US and the BRICs simply can not pull away from the tractor beam of the European black hole.




Frontrunning: May 2

  • European Unemployment Rate Rises to Highest in Almost 15 Years (Bloomberg)
  • Chinese Activist Leaves U.S. Embassy (WSJ)
  • China April bank loans slide 30 pct from March-paper (Reuters)
  • Moody's warns against lack of tax hike in Japan (Reuters)
  • RIM CEO Bets on BlackBerry Without Keyboard to Challenge Apple (Bloomberg)
  • European visits focus on boosting trade (China Daily)
  • Martin Wolf- After the bonfire of the verities (FT)
  • German Jobless Unexpectedly Up in April as Crisis Flared (Bloomberg)
  • Romney Refuses to See China Progress on Yuan (Bloomberg)
  • Bolivia Following Argentine Takeover Deepens Regional Divide (Bloomberg)
  • Plosser Says Fed Must Guard Against Long-Term Inflation (Bloomberg)
  



Eurosis Is Back With A Bang: PMIs Collapse, Unemployment Surges To Record


Yesterday we poked fun of Goldman for suggesting that the reason for the late-day sell off was "Prudent profit-taking as folks remember Europe isn’t closed tomorrow." Turns out Goldman could not have been more right: around 4 am Eastern this morning Europe reported a series of economic updates which showed that the European economy continues to be nothing but a slow motion trainwreck and is getting far worse. Starting with final April Eurozone Manufacturing PMI which printed at 45.9 vs an initial print of 46.0, a 9 month low with a core breakdown is as follows:  Italian manufacturing PMI 43.8 at a 6 month low, est 47.1 (prior 47.9), German manufacturing PMI at a 33 month low 46.2 vs initial 46.3 (prior 48.4), France manufacturing PMI 46.9 vs initial 47.3 (prior 46.7), which also followed Italy by recording sharpest drop in manufacturing new orders in 3 yrs in April, and so on as can be seen in the chart below. As every sellsider who has opined so far this morning, these numbers are all "hugely disappointing."

 



Sixth Month-In-A-Row Of Chinese Manufacturing Contraction As Jobs Fall Fastest In 3 Years

Confirming what we already knew last night, HSBC just announced their final manufacturing PMI (revised slightly higher from the flash PMI) but confirming - via their data - that China is now in its sixth month of manufacturing contraction. Of course this is entirely irrelevant as last night China itself pointed out via its manufacturing PMI data that all was well and in fact the Chinese economy is expanding at its fastest in 14 months. The April HSBC print was modestly higher than the March print (so green shooters will be happy with their second derivatives) but the divergence between HSBC and China on this data point remains vast and digging into the sub-indices we see manufacturing output decreased for the second month in a row, new business fell marginally, but employment was down at the fastest rate in over three years as the need to streamline workforce numbers was cited by many as a response to lower output requirements.




Of Generational Cycles, Kondratieff Waves, And Credit Expansion

While cycle or wave analysis is often dismissed for its tough-to-utilize-going-forward nature, Charles Hugh-Smith and Gordon T. Long expertly and thoroughly discuss a myriad of critical processes that the world (and endogenously or exogenously human beings and markets) transitions through in this clip. The intersection of Hugh-Smith's four critical trends (generational (or Fourth Turning), wage-inflation/stagnation, credit expansion/contraction, and energy extraction/depletion) is where we find ourselves as he notes directly that the generational cycle (of four twenty-year cycles culminating in massive geopolitical upheaval) is due to climax in the not-too-distant future. This presentation, which builds on the idea of behavioral changes and the generational knowledge transfer that for instance is now missing from the last great depression (do we need to learn the lesson of "excess credit is bad" once again?), is akin to 'everything you wanted to know about long-waves in social, political, and economic cycles but were afraid to ask'.




Is Central Planning About To Cost The Jobs Of Your Favorite CNBC Anchors?


Something funny happened when last August CNBC hired access journalist extraordinaire Andrew Sorkin to spiff up its 6-9 am block also known as Squawk Box: nothing. At least, nothing from a secular viewership basis, because while the block saw a brief pick up in viewership driven by the concurrent (first of many) US debt ceiling crisis and rating downgrade, it has been a downhill slide ever since. In fact, as the chart below shows, the Nielsen rating for the show's core 25-54 demo just slid to multi-year lows. And as NY Daily News, the seemingly ceaseless slide has forced CNBC to start panicking: "CNBC insiders tell us executives at the cable business channel are “freaking out” because viewership levels are down essentially across-the-board, particularly with its marquee shows, “Squawk Box” and “Closing Bell." “Their biggest attractions have become their biggest losers,” says one TV industry insider familiar with the cable channel’s numbers. According to Nielsen ratings obtained by Gatecrasher, from April 2011 to April 2012, “Squawk Box” is down 16 percent in total viewers and 29 percent in the important 25-54 demographic bracket that advertisers buy." Yet is it really fair to blame the slide of the morning block's show on just one man?


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