Saturday, May 29, 2010

Investors Intelligence Bulls Minus Bears Survey

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Perfect Contrary Indicator for the Scam Market: Investors Intelligence Bulls Minus Bears
Date: Sat, 29 May 2010 10:24:30 -0700
From: Jas Jain
Perfect Contrary Indicator for the Scam Market: Investors Intelligence Bulls Minus Bears


As you can see from the attached chart Bulls Minus Bears has proven to be a fantastic contrarian indicator for the Scam Market. It seems that when this reading is above 35 it is a good time to sell, or go short, and when this is below -20 it is a good time to buy, or be net long. The latest peak in this indicator was on 05/05/10!!!!!!!!!!!! I wish I had gotten out of my hedge against my short positions on that date.

Only morons can be made to believe that Corporate Crooks of America (since late 1990s when the old stock market was turned into the Scam Market) would make money for them. The investment made in breeding Americans into dopes has paid handsomely for CCA, led by Bankrupters and Fraudsters of New York City, under the rule of Financial Nazis of America. America's ruin is unstoppable. Please note that since I warned people about the Scam Market and advised them to avoid it, it had not gone anywhere. Crooks have cashed out trillions since then!!! So, who was on the losing end?


Happy Memorial Day.
Jas

Kirk Here:   I think the way I look at AAII and II sentiment is far more useful than Jain's simple weekly subtraction.  Check out the charts at my links below and see for yourself:
Happy Memorial Day!

Friday, May 28, 2010

Home Prices Still Have Far To Fall says Jain for past 12 years

Kirk Here (message from Jas Jain follows)

Jas has been telling me this since I met him in 1998. I tried to get a mutual friend to move here (Los Altos) but Jas talked him out of it. My argument was he'd save on private school payments to more than offset higher taxers, etc...  My house in Los Altos roughly doubled at the peak and is up 50 or 60%, give or take from 1998.   Our friend's house in Sunnyvale is back to about what it was then plus he had to pay for private schools for two kids.. probably much more than the cost to move and upgrade neighborhoods while my mortgage payment all that time was less than the cost to rent my home.  The payment on my house has been less than renting a nice 2b/2b apartment here for over a decade too.... before tax savings.    If my house falls 75%, it will probably be "break-even" with renting had I taken Jain's advice, sold my house, paid massive capital gains taxes and rented.  Owning a place you like to live is wise.  If it goes down in value and you still like living there, so what?   I might pay it off or keep a loan for an inflation hedge. 

FWIW, I sold real estate twice in the past few years near the top and only own my home now and a small amount in an REIT index fund recommended in my newsletter.  Homes are not a good investment here because renting is still cheaper but the tax breaks to own make them valuable.

FWIW2, the BEST market timing indicator on the planet is bottoms occur when Jas makes many emails with too many references to certain religions that I refuse to post at the same time he calls those of us smart enough to cash in on Cisco options or whatever to buy homes in Los Altos names.   Ding - ding - ding.... I sold a bunch of equities in April and in the last week I've started to buy back SOME and they are all up as I type.


Since 12/31/98 "Kirk's Newsletter Explore Portfolio" is UP 161% (a double plus another 61%!!) vs. the S&P500 UP a tiny 6.8% vs. NASDAQ UP a tiny 2.6% (All through 5/28/10)

In 2009, "Kirk's Newsletter Explore Portfolio" gained 33.5% vs. the DJIA up 18.8%
As of 5/28/10, the explore portfolio is up 0.5 YTD vs. DJIA down 2.9%!

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: FWC: IMF Economist Argues Home Prices Still Have Far To Fall
Date: Fri, 28 May 2010 10:58:38 -0700
From: Jas Jain

IMF Economist Argues Home Prices Still Have Far To Fall - Real Time Economics

"Loungani said his analysis of prices and rents in U.S. metro areas suggests that many markets on the West coast and in parts of the Northeast could yet see prices plummet a further 30-40%."

 

I agree. In the expensive zip codes in Silicon Valley I expect a price drop of 80% from the peak prices reached in 2007, $600-$1,000 PPSF. They have been supported by the stock prices of the leading tech companies, but during the depression (we are closing in on the double-dip recession) all the stock options gains would evaporate and there would be no support for high-end home prices. Expect PPSF to fall to $150-$200 in Los Altos and Palo Alto within four years because by then depression would be in full swing after govts having exhausted all their stimuli. I know it is hard for sillies to imagine that. This may be the last time for people to sell homes at pretty good prices in these areas.

Jas

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IMF Economist Argues Home Prices Still Have Far To Fall - Real Time Economics

  • May 27, 2010, 4:29 PM ET

IMF Economist Argues Home Prices Still Have Far To Fall

Dour predictions about the housing market aren't the norm anymore, as many economists have grown optimistic that home prices will begin rebounding strongly next year.

But International Monetary Fund economists Prakash Loungani has found plenty of reasons to remain glum.

Loungani, at a National Economists Club luncheon in Washington Thursday, presented his analysis of housing busts since 1970 in the countries that make up the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. His prediction: Home prices will fall much farther and for much longer.

On average, the previous housing slumps lasted 18 quarters, with prices dropping 22% from peak to trough. By contrast, the current housing slump has lasted only 14 quarters, during which prices have dropped just 15%.

But the latest boom was so much bigger than the previous ones that it's logical to anticipate an even more brutal downturn, Loungani argued. Prices rose 113% over 41 quarters, compared with 39% average price increase over 39 quarters seen in the previous booms. Loungani likened the current cycle to a rollercoaster which has roared up a steep hump and now needs to come down again.

"A lot of adjustment has taken place in house prices, so we shouldn't discount that. But it's true that we shouldn't declare victory too soon. We've now had a fresh shock from what's happening in Europe," he said after the luncheon.

Loungani marshaled other evidence that home prices are still inflated. He found that prices in OECD countries in 2009 were substantially out of whack with rents and incomes in those countries compared with average values from 1970 to 2000. In the long run, he argued, incomes and rents will act as weights on home prices, bringing them back to earth.

Price-to-rent and price-to-income ratios were well above historical values in all OECD countries except Japan, Germany and Switzerland, according to Loungani's analysis. New Zealand, Australia, the Netherlands and Belgium saw the biggest misalignment with historical price-to-income values, while Canada, Sweden, Norway and Australia saw the largest gaps in price-to-rent values.

Loungani said his analysis of prices and rents in U.S. metro areas suggests that many markets on the West coast and in parts of the Northeast could yet see prices plummet a further 30-40%.



Real Estate

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Jas Jain Dow 10,000 Comments from 1998

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: My Comments On Dow 10,000 More Than Twelve Years Ago
Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 16:40:00 -0700
From: Jas Jain
My Comments On Dow 10,000 More Than Twelve Years Ago

Below is my commentary of April 22, 1998. As I recall, Peter Eliades published something similar (anomalies of Dow 100, 1,000, 10,000) later that year. You will notice a very different style back then.

Jas

-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-

Sermons for the Nerds: Bonus Supplement

Wednesday, April 22, 1998

 

Timely History Lessons

Now that the bull parade is talking about Dow 10,000 it is time to pay another visit to the Old Woman History.  The deca-levels 100 and 1000 have shown some real curios behavior: a lot of congestion for may years followed by some serious headache.  Let us look at it, shall we.

1. The Dow first approached 100 level in 1914 and never seem to quite stay at or above it till 1924 when it seemingly crossed 100 for what seemed like for the good.  That translates into a ten years of congestion on the chart at the 100 level.

2. This bit of intoxication caused the bull to become rambunctious in the late 1920s.

3. Dow fell almost 90% to 41 in 1932 and it wasn't until the U.S. entered the war that the Dow finally went and stayed above 100 in 1942. Twenty-eight years of 100 to 100!

4. Dow first approached 1000, 950-970 level, in the late 1965, but couldn't quite hit the millennium mark till early 1973.  But that lasted no more than a good nap for the beast.  It wasn't until 1983 that the Dow crossed 1000 for what now seems like for the good.  We shall see if this [Dow 10,000] would have better luck than its predecessor.  Who knows about the second coming?

Shalom aalekum (peace on earth).

Rabbi Jazzman

Synagogue of Never Take a Break from History Lessons


Real Estate

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Committee for Monetary Research and Education Address

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: FWC: Governments Are Born Stoic And Die Epicurean
Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 09:24:59 -0700
From: Jas Jain

Governments Are Born Stoic And Die Epicurean

"Despite 400 years of history laughing at this notion, Chairman Bernanke is the latest acolyte of the desperate need to do something about an almost typical post-bubble contraction.

"This time around, interventionists have more than bet the farm on the ancient notion that throwing credit at a contraction will make it go away. Misallocation of capital is the problem, not the solution. This brings us to the greatest irony of all. Only those who have not thoroughly read financial history are capable of concluding that financial history can be altered."

 

Absolutely no policymaker, e.g., Bernanke, an egomaniac and a history moron (morons draw wrong conclusions from history, that suits them or their theories, and dopes listen to bad experts), or policymakers, can avert the Greater Depression fully baked in the US economic cake. Bernanke is part of the problem.

Jas

-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-
http://www.safehaven.com/article/16925/governments-are-born-stoic-and-die-epicurean

 

Governments Are Born Stoic And Die Epicurean

By: Bob Hoye | Wed, May 26, 2010

 

Address to the Spring Dinner of the
Committee for Monetary Research and Education (cmre.org)
May 20, 2010

The phrase modifies an observation by Will Durant, who was an historian practical enough to appreciate the irony often found in history. More specifically, the long history of those who keep coming up with claims that financial history can be successfully altered provides exquisite irony. Over and over again.
In response to the liquidity crisis in the early 1620s, Edward Misselden, personally decided that throwing credit at a credit contraction would make it go away. Despite 400 years of history laughing at this notion, Chairman Bernanke is the latest acolyte of the desperate need to do something about an almost typical post-bubble contraction.
This time around, interventionists have more than bet the farm on the ancient notion that throwing credit at a contraction will make it go away. Misallocation of capital is the problem, not the solution. This brings us to the greatest irony of all. Only those who have not thoroughly read financial history are capable of concluding that financial history can be altered.
Two of the longest running policy blunders will help make the point. In the late 1940s as long-dated treasuries rose above 3 percent there was a concerted effort to keep rates down. The theory was that the Treasury would buy enough bonds out of the market that rates could be lowered. As the saying goes "Nonsense so blatant that only an intellectual would fall for it".
Not too daunted by trying to keep rates at 3 percent, a massive effort was made in the 1960s to keep rates from rising above 6 percent. Despite being aggressively promoted as "Operation Twist" and due to the currency issued rates soared to 15 percent in 1981.
The next monstrous failure was the long official bear raid on gold that culminated with the then Chancellor Brown selling UK reserves down to the low at 252 dollars. The recent high has been 1249. For a grand name, perhaps the failed policy could be called "Operation Barbarous Relic".
How could such blunders be made?
Let me illustrate with a traveling salesman story from the 1930s:
This takes place as a guy who knows little about cars is driving along a remote country road. Naturally, his troubles begin as daylight is fading and eventually the engine dies.
Compelled to do something, he lifts the hood and with a dim flashlight stares at the engine. Suddenly from the field beside him, he hears a very deep voice saying, "Tap the fuel pump with your flashlight and if it goes click, click, click, you'll get your fuel pressure back."
Startled, he looks into the gloom and all he sees is a horse. Nevertheless, he tries it and before driving away looks around again and sees nothing but the horse.
Somewhat shaken, he stops at a tavern to calm his nerves. A local sitting next to him at the bar inquires about his distress and he tells the story.
The local, after a considerate pause, asks him what colour the horse was.
Our friend says "white". The local says "You're lucky, the black horse knows diddly-squat about cars."
The guys running things know diddly-squat about the markets.
Particularly that the history of financial manias shows a methodical transition from boom to bust. As Fed chairman, Alan Greenspan, naively advised that a bubble could not be identified as such until it was over. The next official blunder was when a bubble was finally recognized judicious application of yet more credit would prevent serious adversity.
Even cartoonists during the 1720 bubble had no problem calling that speculative fury a bubble.
To be serious, the mob of policymakers are in hot pursuit of another major blunder which is "Stimulus", or as the Trillion Dollar Euro bailout is being called "Shock and Awe". With little doubt this will eventually be seen to be just as foolish as "Operation Twist" or the mindless bear raid on gold.
The reason why this mob of policymakers is in hot pursuit of yet another blunder is that from time to time society needs a "philosopher king". What's worse - there will always be someone who would be a philosopher king and the charismatic Obama literally forced Germany to go along with the scheme to bailout Greece. As Zorba said in the movie, this will be the "full catastrophe".
There is long history to such disastrous leadership.
In the 1970s, Barbara Bell published some papers on drastic setbacks in ancient Egyptian central government under the relentless pressure of declining harvests from declining Nile floods. She pointed out that the pharaoh was a type of divine king who "holds his sovereignty by virtue of his magic powers". Sounds like the regard for Greenspan and Bernanke.
At the height of the manias in 1873 and in 1929, the commanding skills of the treasury secretary were celebrated. This was the ability to buy bonds out of the market to prevent bad things from happening, or when a crash is on to prevent it from running forever. The amazing thing about the body of interventionist thought is that it does not understand that markets clear - eventually and always - no matter how arbitrary governments are.
Of course, the power behind the pharaoh was a priesthood of advisors. Who, as poorer seasonal floods brought hardship and eventually famine would promote a new pharaoh who was sure to fix the problem. What follows bears upon the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989.
The ancient governing classes were protected by palace guards, who were not of the governing classes. With mounting popular dissatisfaction the guards joined the public and laid down their spears. Smaller and more fractured central government followed.
Authoritarian politics thrives during booms and loses ground during contractions. There was an important high in commodity prices in 1988 and the subsequent decline signaled the possibility of change. The Berlin Wall came down in November 1989 registering extreme dissatisfaction with corrupt and fat government. The underlying condition was that the guards protecting the governing classes were of the oppressed public and laid down their rifles when East Germans wanted to go shopping in West Germany. With this the dictator, Erich Honecker, had to change the law permitting the state to murder Germans when they wanted to go to another part of Germany.
That attempt to reform a murderous police state saw no bloodshed and has been remarkably successful. It marked the end of a long and particularly nasty experiment in authoritarian government.
As ugly as they are, there has been only three great experiments in bullying government. In the Third Century Rome was corrupted from a republic to a brutal police state. All it took was two great wars with the state not relinquishing its authority in between.
In the Sixteenth Century the prevailing organization was the Catholic Church and it was also corrupted by authoritarian ambition.
In the Twentieth Century, bureaucracies and their politicians in all countries became ambitious. Inspiration was provided by Marx, Lenin, Roosevelt and Keynes. Ideas of command and intervention are nothing new and one of the great examples was the New Deal run in Old Rome. Price and wage controls were backed by the sword. In a series of crackpot controls, Rome was "New Dealed" to death.
The other characteristic of each Tyrannical Century was chronic monetary depreciation. Tribute and taxation, even confiscatory taxation, could not satisfy the demands of unlimited government.
As if a century of intrusive and at times murderous governments is not bad enough. Each has been accompanied by chronic inflation. In the Third Century the best estimate is a forty-times increase in basic prices. In 1900, England was the senior economy and by late in the century prices had been inflated by a factor of forty.
There seems to be two kinds of severe inflation. Those that afflicted the Weimar Republic, or banana republics. Then there is the one that afflicts the senior economy. In their own way, each can be considered as a hyperinflation.
But before expanding this, I would like to address some comments to the liberals at this meeting, who may be upset with having Roosevelt and Keynes mentioned with Marx and Lenin.
Murray Gell-Mann, the modern physicist, crafted a remarkably elegant definition of an authoritarian or totalitarian system:
"That which isn't prohibited is compulsory."
And that pretty well describes the intrusive politics of Marx and Lenin, Roosevelt and Keynes and any other charismatic missionary of big government.
There is another common feature. Each great experiment lasted for around one hundred years. Ours started in the early 1900s which was the height of disciplined classical liberalism. In so many words, limited and therefore stoic government. It was also the end of that Great Depression and with the prospect of a long expansion ahead there would have been some trend towards collectivism of some kind.
But, even with knowledge of previous tyrannical centuries, there is no way of knowing that the next one hundred years would provide such a political horror show.
Fortunately, there is enough of a recurring pattern to recognize the symptoms of ending action. The main ending event is that even with the ability to depreciate the state will run out funds. As attributed to Margaret Thatcher, "Eventually, socialists run out of other people's money".
Our research team's approach is to anticipate change in financial markets. On April 22 we published our check list for an important top.
It seems appropriate to make a check list for the end of a Tyrannical Century.
First point, has government been expanding relative to GDP? Yes - in 1900 all levels of government were taking about 5 percent of GDP. Stoic was good, and now the take is around 40 percent, with the current administration growing at a destabilizing rate. This is becoming very much "in-your-face" as the private sector has been suffering rising unemployment and lower wages as government expands its employees and their wage rates. Government is now epicurean.
At the end of the Third Century, the population of Rome itself was almost one million, with almost 500,000 on welfare. Rome's corruption from a republic to a police state was assisted by confiscatory taxation and chronic depreciation. Much of it to support a greedy bureaucracy and its clamoring dependents. Quite like the Twentieth Century.
Second check, in the past hundred years the trend has gone through and beyond the brutality of Orwell's "Big Brother" in Russia to the bitter comedy of "Animal Farm" with the current administration.
Third, have there been signs of political excess? The left is saying that America has become ungovernable. No, it is the administration that has become ungovernable. Naturally, the Democrats and the mainstream media consider that energetic opposition is seditious or rebellious. I wonder if political scientists are working on a term to describe a popular movement determined to get the federal government back to the constitution?
Fourth, each great experiment in central control has ended when the markets would no longer tolerate deliberate currency depreciation, dislocating intrusions and confiscatory taxation. Markets are no longer tolerating endless debt issue. This is now the case for sovereign debt and will soon be the case for more senior countries.
There is an old saying from the old and notorious Vancouver Stock Exchange, and is that so long as it is going up the public will believe the most preposterous story. Then, when the price fails belief fails and is followed by remorse.
It is not too big a step to consider that so long as government credit is expanding too many will believe in its bounty and blessings. Or will be complacent. However, the changes in the financial markets that began in 2007 are reducing the market's abilities to fund ambitious government. In April our work noted the change in the money markets that would soon afflict corporate bonds, stocks and commodities.
This week's setback is likely the next step in the typical post-bubble credit revulsion, which on the near term is an impartial adjudication on the great European bailout. President Sarkozy's notion that a Trillion dollar fix would "confront speculators unmercifully" reveals bureaucratic hostility to market forces rather than understanding.
With considerable volatility, global markets are step by step taking away the ability to fund reckless government. In the US, the Tea Party movement is beginning to instruct Washington on the abuse of the thrifty tax payer. As the success of the movement builds, the Tea Party will find its leader. In the 1770s it was George Washington; a well-to-do farmer. Perhaps on this reformation the leader could be the equivalent of Lech Walesa in Poland; a stalwart from the union movement.
By way of summary, the forces in play are immense, and a hundred years of unfettered credit expansion culminated in the biggest financial mania in all of history. Going into the top of the bubble the establishment ignorantly boasted that the false prosperity of the boom was sustainable and problems could be isolated. The rebound out of the initial crash has been natural and exaggerated by the "stimulus" laid on by ambitious leaders.
It seems very likely that the big "Stimulus" will be as successful as earlier grand schemes such as "Operation Twist" to keep rates from rising to 15 percent, or the endless bear raid on gold now named "Operation Barbarous Relic".
The markets can no longer afford the debt that was issued during the voluntary mania and will not be able to service recent excesses that have been coercively imposed. All five previous post-bubble contractions changed the world and this one will continue to the point of forcing a bear market in ambitious government. Think of it as a bear market for epicurean governments.
On the positive side, the thwarting of centrist ambition will release another renaissance of thinking independent of serving statist ambition. In the Sixteenth Century, ambition often use astrology to back its weighty decisions and as the one of the biggest banks in history noted in a few of its market letters - it was mainly the state that funded alchemy.
Over time, all the institutions of authority were examined. Impartial inquiry turned astrology into astronomy and alchemy into chemistry. Eventually, independent research will fully understand that interventionist economics is just a front for the ancient need for astrology and alchemy.
History is reentering an exciting period for the individual and regionalism. It will be challenging and rewarding for thrift and prudence. It will also be intellectually rewarding for those who are independent of state corruption.
What about those who are eagerly predicting the collapse of America? They will be the losers, as "America" has been the recent holder of the baton of freedom and prosperity. Originally it was held and passed on from Greece to Rome. As Rome became corrupt the baton moved to Northern Italy as the financial center also moved to Northern Italy. In the Fifteenth Century the money center voluntarily moved to Augsburg, a great silver mining camp - as was ancient Athens.
Compelled by trade, it moved to the Netherlands with Bruges, Antwerp and Amsterdam. Then the baton of freedom and prosperity moved to London and New York.
America is unlikely to collapse and be encompassed by unrelenting globalism. That is the old story.
Quite likely it will be the long experiment in authoritarian government that is exhausting itself as it demands ever-greater amounts of money as politicians jump from one crisis to the next. Quite likely this will also exhaust the thrifty taxpayer and markets that will eventually become increasingly critical of financial adventurers in policy.
As in past examples, the trappings of big government that have been so un- American will be thrown off.
These conclusions may prompt incredulity, but as we used to say on the old Vancouver Stock Exchange - "Remember where you heard it."

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Marc Faber’s Market Outlook

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Marc Faber's Doublespeak & Market Call That Fit the Day
Date: Tue, 25 May 2010 17:05:39 -0700
From: Jas Jain

Marc Faber's Doublespeak & Market Call That Fit the Day


 
Dr. Faber appeared on Bloomberg two hours after the market close in the US. He said the following: With strong USD and falling Treasury yields Fed would print even more money! For years he has been saying that Fed's printing money would lead to USD being worthless currency and US Treasury yields would skyrocket, i.e., Treasuries would become worthless. Talk about doublespeak.

 

Also, Dr. Faber called for a rally in the US Scam Market from an oversold condition. For quite some time he has been calling for a 20% correction. I don't know from what level, but he is now calling for a rally based on today's close, IMO. Had the market closed near the low he would have repeated his call for the 20% correction and then a bounce of the oversold condition. He is definitely in the proganda business and he does his that ave very easy access to Bloomberg and CNBC.

Jas



Thursday, May 20, 2010

James Galbraith‘s Statement to members of the Senate Judiciary Committee

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: FWC: I write to you from a disgraced profession
Date: Thu, 20 May 2010 10:35:15 -0700
From: Jas Jain

I write to you from a disgraced profession

"Latter-day financial economics is blind to all of this."

 

I write to you, dear readers, from a respected profession of an economics crank that focuses on People's Behavior rather than theories that could be made to fit those in power as has been done all thru the ages. In the case of America, my focus has been, in that order:

  1. American People, especially, those who are "educated."

2.      America's Ruling Elite

  1. America's Priestly Class, which now consists of E-CON-mists and Political "Scientists"

 And you know what my observations and conclusions are on these three.

Sincerely,

Jas

-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-

http://rwer.wordpress.com/2010/05/18/i-write-to-you-from-a-disgraced-profession/

 

I write to you from a disgraced profession

May 18, 2010

The following is the text of  James Galbraith's written statement to members of the Senate Judiciary Committee delivered a few days ago.

 

Chairman Specter, Ranking Member Graham, Members of the Subcommittee, as a former member of the congressional staff it is a pleasure to submit this statement for your record.

I write to you from a disgraced profession. Economic theory, as widely taught since the 1980s, failed miserably to understand the forces behind the financial crisis. Concepts including "rational expectations," "market discipline," and the "efficient markets hypothesis" led economists to argue that speculation would stabilize prices, that sellers would act to protect their reputations, that caveat emptor could be relied on, and that widespread fraud therefore could not occur. Not all economists believed this – but most did. 

Thus the study of financial fraud received little attention. Practically no research institutes exist; collaboration between economists and criminologists is rare; in the leading departments there are few specialists and very few students. Economists have soft- pedaled the role of fraud in every crisis they examined, including the Savings & Loan debacle, the Russian transition, the Asian meltdown and the dot.com bubble. They continue to do so now. At a conference sponsored by the Levy Economics Institute in New York on April 17, the closest a former Under Secretary of the Treasury, Peter Fisher, got to this question was to use the word "naughtiness." This was on the day that the SEC charged Goldman Sachs with fraud.

There are exceptions. A famous 1993 article entitled "Looting: Bankruptcy for Profit," by George Akerlof and Paul Romer, drew exceptionally on the experience of regulators who understood fraud. The criminologist-economist William K. Black of the University of Missouri-Kansas City is our leading systematic analyst of the relationship between financial crime and financial crisis. Black points out that accounting fraud is a sure thing when you can control the institution engaging in it: "the best way to rob a bank is to own one." The experience of the Savings and Loan crisis was of businesses taken over for the explicit purpose of stripping them, of bleeding them dry. This was established in court: there were over one thousand felony convictions in the wake of that debacle. Other useful chronicles of modern financial fraud include James Stewart's Den of Thieves on the Boesky-Milken era and Kurt Eichenwald's Conspiracy of Fools, on the Enron scandal. Yet a large gap between this history and formal analysis remains.

Formal analysis tells us that control frauds follow certain patterns. They grow rapidly, reporting high profitability, certified by top accounting firms. They pay exceedingly well. At the same time, they radically lower standards, building new businesses in markets previously considered too risky for honest business. In the financial sector, this takes the form of relaxed – no, gutted – underwriting, combined with the capacity to pass the bad penny to the greater fool. In California in the 1980s, Charles Keating realized that an S&L charter was a "license to steal." In the 2000s, sub-prime mortgage origination was much the same thing. Given a license to steal, thieves get busy. And because their performance seems so good, they quickly come to dominate their markets; the bad players driving out the good.

The complexity of the mortgage finance sector before the crisis highlights another characteristic marker of fraud. In the system that developed, the original mortgage documents lay buried – where they remain – in the records of the loan originators, many of them since defunct or taken over. Those records, if examined, would reveal the extent of missing documentation, of abusive practices, and of fraud. So far, we have only very limited evidence on this, notably a 2007 Fitch Ratings study of a very small sample of highly-rated RMBS, which found "fraud, abuse or missing documentation in virtually every file." An efforts a year ago by Representative Doggett to persuade Secretary Geithner to examine and report thoroughly on the extent of fraud in the underlying mortgage records received an epic run-around.

When sub-prime mortgages were bundled and securitized, the ratings agencies failed to examine the underlying loan quality. Instead they substituted statistical models, in order to generate ratings that would make the resulting RMBS acceptable to investors. When one assumes that prices will always rise, it follows that a loan secured by the asset can always be refinanced; therefore the actual condition of the borrower does not matter. That projection is, of course, only as good as the underlying assumption, but in this perversely-designed marketplace those who paid for ratings had no reason to care about the quality of assumptions. Meanwhile, mortgage originators now had a formula for extending loans to the worst borrowers they could find, secure that in this reverse Lake Wobegon no child would be deemed below average even though they all were. Credit quality collapsed because the system was designed for it to collapse.

A third element in the toxic brew was a simulacrum of "insurance," provided by the market in credit default swaps. These are doomsday instruments in a precise sense: they generate cash-flow for the issuer until the credit event occurs. If the event is large enough, the issuer then fails, at which point the government faces blackmail: it must either step in or the system will collapse. CDS spread the consequences of a housing-price downturn through the entire financial sector, across the globe. They also provided the means to short the market in residential mortgage-backed securities, so that the largest players could turn tail and bet against the instruments they had previously been selling, just before the house of cards crashed.

Latter-day financial economics is blind to all of this. It necessarily treats stocks, bonds, options, derivatives and so forth as securities whose properties can be accepted largely at face value, and quantified in terms of return and risk. That quantification permits the calculation of price, using standard formulae. But everything in the formulae depends on the instruments being as they are represented to be. For if they are not, then what formula could possibly apply?

Bill Gross Record on US Treasuries

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Bond King's Record on US Treasuries IS Nothing Short of Horrible
Date: Thu, 20 May 2010 08:55:37 -0700

Bond King's Record on US Treasuries IS Nothing Short of Horrible

David Rosenberg (my favorite economist, a rare honest man in a profession dominated by crook's agents); 05/20/10:

 "According to Bloomberg, Bill Gross is now back buying Treasuries after dissing them a month ago."

 

This born-and-bred American dope (Bill Gross) raised his range for 10-Year Note to 4.0-6.5% after he hired that another born-and-bred American dope, Alan Greenspan, in 2006 after his term expired, who said that 10-Year Note rate would be in 6-8% range. Since than Grossly ill-informed Bill has made many bad calls on the US Treasuries. Greenspan and Gross, both Financial Nazis of America, qualify as economics morons because at 6% on 10-Year Note the super-leveraged global economies would collapse and we would be in depression shortly after that. Only in a nation of dopes do we call these morons Bind King and Maestro. There is a reason why Americans are born-and-bred dopes in the areas of economics, investments and political system. They listen to experts!!!! Democracy brought German Nazis to power in Germany and Financial Nazis to power in America. Only ignoramuses think that Financial Nazis could save the US economy and the current system. Their primary tool has been FRAUD!

 

If I may be permitted some immodesty, my record on US Treasuries is second to none. I am no expert, merely a crank.

Jas

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Core CPI Inflation Rate…

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: Core CPI Inflation Rate…
Date: Wed, 19 May 2010 14:56:12 -0700
AS: "Jas, The raw CPI is lower than it was almost two years ago! I'm sure that stable prices are going to cause people to lose faith in the dollar any day now.  I better dump my treasuries and buy some over-priced commodity funds to preserve my purchasing power.  It's a well accepted fact among inflationists that Asians have an insatiable appetite for unaffordable real estate!  Just ask Jim Rogers, Peter Schiff and Mark Faber.  ;)"

 

Three more months to go and we should have 2-Year Headline CPI rate (Jul'08-Jul'10) that is negative. It could happen in two months but that would be cutting too close. I recall some born-and-bred American dopes telling us that the USD would be a tissue-paper currency. It is the intellectual dishonesty of these people that bothers me. They never acknowledge that they don't understand certain aspects of the US economy and policies. Messers Faber, Rogers and Schiff are a bunch of morons with zero understanding of the monetary policy and debt issuance in the US. Even when the federal govt is running massive deficits and the Fed balance sheet ballooned nowhere in the process "Printing Money" takes place. Swapping one form of debt with another and lending money to banks in the process does nothing to increase demand for goods and services until that money is loaned for consumption purposes, which could be inflationary. Housing ATMs were inflationary but they have been practically shut down.

 

Inflating is going to be lot harder than people imagine. Bond vigilantes are powerful and vigilant. I am one of them! Scam Lovers are powerless sissies. These addicts still can't kick the habit. Before the Scam Market, stocks were one of the best inflation hedges. USTs are great deflation hedge. Get ready for headlines like Lowest Inflation In 50 Years, or Lowest Inflation In 60 Years. As soon as the relapse of the US economy is confirmed the 10-Year yield would head towards 2% and then break that barrier.

Jas

 


Core CPI Inflation Rate, 0.94%, at 49-Year Low; Soon It Would be Hugging the Flat Line

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Core CPI Inflation Rate, 0.94%, at 49-Year Low; Soon It Would be Hugging the Flat Line
Date: Wed, 19 May 2010 06:11:20 -0700
Core CPI Inflation Rate, 0.94%, at 49-Year Low; Soon It Would be Hugging the Flat Line

6-Month Core below 0.5% annual rate and is the lowest since 1957 for which we have the data.

 

No, we are not Japan; we are something else! "We" are shouting fire when we are under blizzard conditions and would be under 10 feet of snow. The fire engines are going to be buried, but they were unnecessary to begin with.

 

Mobsters in control of the US economy want controlled inflation around 3%, but they are running out of ammunition to keep it up. The inflation rate for the past three years is 1.7%. I love deflation and I am glad that mobsters, as expected, are losing this battle. We can only hope that one day the mobsters are gunned down, a fate that they deserve. As Debt Pushers they are the enemies of honest and hardworking American People. Shame on all those that defend the mobsters.

Jas

Kirk Here:  Read the full release here or http://www.bls.gov/news.release/cpi.nr0.htm
Consumer Price Index -April 2010

On a seasonally adjusted basis, the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) declined 0.1 percent in April, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Over the last 12 months, the index increased 2.2 percent before seasonal adjustment.

The index for energy decreased 1.4 percent in April and accounted for the seasonally adjusted decline in the all items index. The indexes for gasoline and natural gas both decreased significantly, outweighing increases in the indexes for fuel oil and electricity.

The food index increased 0.2 percent in April, while the index for  all items less food and energy was unchanged.

and

The continuing stability of the index for all items less food and energy (core inflation) has resulted in an increase over the last 12 months of 0.9 percent, the smallest 12-month increase since January 1966.

Who doesn't buy food and energy?  Talk about cherry picking the data to make a point.

This data was calculated BEFORE the announcement that a trillion dollars will be printed by central banks to bail out the European Union, much of it printed by our Federal Reserve to buy Euros.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Jim Cramer: Governments ARE In-Charge of the Markets [and the Economy]



-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Cramer: Governments ARE In-Charge of the Markets [and the Economy]
Date: Tue, 18 May 2010 12:12:28 -0700
From: Jas Jain

Cramer: Governments ARE In-Charge of the Markets [and the Economy]

That is the reason that Cramer (Jim Cramer Fan Club) says that he can't make a call on any stocks today! Cramer is right about the role of the governments, but he is not telling people to avoid the Scam Market as I HAVE BEEN TELLING PEOPLE FOR MORE THAN DOZEN YEARS. My primary conclusion back then was that government was allowing the fraud by disallowing the accounting rules determined proper by the accounting board that were meant to protect the shareholders. Politicians, prodded by Corporate Crooks of America, prevailed over the regulators, in this case an advisory board of professionals. Warren Buffett at the time came in support of the accounting board and against the politicians led by Boxer and Feinstein (both serving the interests of Silly.con Valley Crooks). American governmental powers over the economy and the markets are in the hands of an organized gang. What business an ordinary American has in the Scam Market?

 

It is the (government supported) fraud, stupid!

Jas

PS: BTW, the European politicians are blaming the markets!


More Info
Jim Cramer Fan Club
Amanda Drury Fan Club

Milton Friedman Jim Cramer Fan Club
Amanda Drury

Richard Russell: Sell Everything Liquid

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: FWC: Dow Theorist Richard Russell: Sell Everything Liquid, You Won't Recognize America By The End Of The Year
Date: Tue, 18 May 2010 08:56:11 -0700
From: Jas Jain

Thanks, Lando, for the link. Another born-and-bred American dope that forgot to retire in time. Warren Buffett should have retired in 1997, or before he bought Gen Re in 1998. He has turned BRK into a giant Ponzi scheme that now is depended upon the US economy avoiding the depression. It can't and the dope doesn't understand why. In his fantasy world America would keep growing like it "always" has. -- Jas

-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-

Dow Theorist Richard Russell: Sell Everything Liquid, You Won't Recognize America By The End Of The Year

 Joe Weisenthal | May. 18, 2010, 8:57 AM

 

http://www.businessinsider.com/dow-theorist-richard-russell-sell-everything-liquid-you-wont-recognize-america-by-the-end-of-the-year-2010-5#ixzz0oIQbMKSR

 

WHOA!

Richard Russell, the famous writer of the Dow Theory Letters, has a chilling line in today's note:

Do your friends a favor. Tell them to "batten down the hatches" because there's a HARD RAIN coming. Tell them to get out of debt and sell anything they can sell (and don't need) in order to get liquid. Tell them that Richard Russell says that by the end of this year they won't recognize the country. They'll retort, "How the dickens does Russell know -- who told him?" Tell them the stock market told him.

That's pretty intense!

Update: By popular demand, here's more on what he sees in the market. The gist is that the markets recent gyrations are telling him that the economy is in trouble:

And I ask myself, "Am I seeing things? The April 26 high for the Dow
was 11205.03. The Dow is selling as write at 10557 down 648 points
from its April high. If business is even better than expected, then
why is the Dow down over 600 points? And why, if there were 674 new
highs on the NYSE on April 26, were there only 20 new highs on Friday,
May 14? And if my PTI was 6133 on April 26, why is it down 17 points
since its April high?

The fact is that I've been seeing deterioration in the stock market
ever since early-April, and this in the face of improving business
news
. The D-J Industrial Average is composed of 30 internationally
known top-quality blue-chip stocks. These are 30 of "America's biggest
companies." If Barron's is so bullish on the future of America's
biggest companies, then why isn't the Dow advancing to new highs?

Clearly something is wrong. But what could it be? Much as I love
Barron's, I trust the stock market more.
If I read the stock market
correctly, it's telling me that there is a surprise ahead. And that
surprise will be a reversal to the downside for the economy, plus a
collection of other troubles ahead
.

About Dow Theory -- First, we saw the recent April highs in the
Averages. Then we saw a plunge in both Averages to their May 7 lows --
Industrials to 10380.43, Transports to 4298.12, next a short rally. If
ahead, the two Averages turn down and violate their May 7 lows, that
would be the clincher. Such action would signal the certain resumption
of the primary bear market.

Just as for years I asked, cajoled, insisted, threatened, demanded,
that my subscribers buy gold, I am now insisting, demanding, begging
my subscribers to get OUT of stocks (including C and BYD, but not
including golds) and get into cash or gold (bullion if possible). If
the two Averages violate their May 7 lows, I see a major crash as the
outcome. Pul - leeze, get out of stocks now, and I don't give a damn
whether you have paper losses or paper profits!

Feldstein: Our Own Economy May be Running Out of Steam

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Feldstein: Our Own Economy May be Running Out of Steam
Date: Tue, 18 May 2010 08:39:22 -0700

Feldstein: Our Own Economy May be Running Out of Steam

This was reported on Bloomberg in a promo for his appearance. I think that the "may be" could be replaced by is. Separately, Teddy Weisberg had this to say, "Zero-interest rate policy is a proxy for the economy being on life support." I agree. It is a terminally sick economy. How is a professional e-CON-meister to know. He is bullied by few quarters of data propped up by govt programs.

 

An economy under the management of an organized gang of extremists with mobster morality cannot have a good future. All that the cabal can do, and is doing, is to postpone the disaster—the Greater Depression—by propping things artificially now and making things worse later. Borrowing from the future is a very bad idea because one day that future arrives in a bad shape. The cabal is making it possible for a small group of people to make a killing now so that they would not have to worry about when the bad future arrives for the rest. What a system!

Jas



Real Estate


DEFLATION THE PRIMARY TREND - David Rosenberg

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: FWC: DEFLATION THE PRIMARY TREND by David Rosenberg
Date: Tue, 18 May 2010 06:54:43 -0700

David Rosenberg; 05/17/10:

DEFLATION THE PRIMARY TREND

            Credit is contracting.

            Wage rates are stagnating.

            Money supply growth is vanishing

            The U.S. dollar is strong.

            Commodities have peaked.

            U.S. home prices are rolling over … again.

            Lumber prices tumbling (down nearly 17% from April 2010 highs)

            Wal-Mart is cutting prices on 10,000 items.

            Home Depot just cut prices on flowers, fertilizers, lawn equipment and outdoor furniture.

            Taco Bell is offering two dollar combo meals.

            The April U.S. retail sales report hinted at deflation in groceries, electronics, apparel and sporting goods.

Given all these, the U.S. bond market looks poised to outperform. Nuff said.

 

All the while, the list of morons who have are predicting higher inflation and 6% and higher rate on 10-year Note (the leveraged global financial system would collapse before this rate is reached!) keeps growing. Marc Faber has been on this list for years and so is Jim "Mouth from the South" Rogers. There is no "Printing of Money" going on in the US. The current growth in the public debt is highly deflationary for the future! Learn from the Greeks. The household debt is already contracting. It is the debt, stupid!


Jas

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