Posts tagged ‘Economy’

Todays pivot info, Fed and Fed agency announcements

By , 13 August, 2009, No Comment
ESU9
For 08/13/2009

How To Use
Symbol R1 R2 Pivot S1 S2
ESU9 1013.75 1025.25 999.75 988.25 974.25

Todays Fed and Fed Agency Announcements

Retail Sales
[Report][Star]
8:30 AM ET
Jobless Claims
[Report][djStar]
8:30 AM ET
RBC CASH Index
[Bullet
9:00 AM ET
Money Supply
[Bullet
4:30 PM ET
Some interesting announcements on today’s docket, especially early on in the day.  Again, some possible market volatility as the market digest where we stand in the current recession.

Todays Pivot and Economic Announcements

By , 10 August, 2009, No Comment
ESU9
For 08/07/2009

How To Use
Symbol R1 R2 Pivot S1 S2
ESU9 1005.25 1015.50 997.50 987.25 979.50

Most of the important announcement will occur later in the week such as Industrial Production, CPI and a host of other less important announcements.

Todays Fed amd Fed Agency Announcements:

from the baselineThe Baseline Scenario

By , 6 August, 2009, No Comment

What happened to the global economy and what we can do about it

Larry Summers, Economic Recovery, And Ben Bernanke


In a memo to Congress on Tuesday, Larry Summers – the head of the White House National Economic Council – laid out his view of where we are and what is likely to happen next in our economic recovery.

His tone was more upbeat than we’ve heard in recent utterances, although he has been heading in this direction for a while – contrast this April speech with this appearance in July.

What is beginning to turn the economy around?  Summers claims great effects from the fiscal stimulus Recovery Act, but much of that money has not yet been spent.

He also puts weight on “an aggressive effort to tackle the foreclosure crisis.”  There have been sensible steps in that direction, but so far the effects have been decidedly modest.

The main explanation has to be that the administration prevented the financial system from collapsing.  In an economy as large and diverse as that of the United States – with much more government spending than at the time of the Great Depression – as long as the entire provision of credit does not disintegrate, we will recover.

Summers refers to “A Financial Stabilization Plan”, but this is ex post grandiosity.  In fact, the government simply demonstrated unflinching support for all big financial firms as currently constituted.  We the taxpayer effectively guaranteed all these firms debts, unconditionally.  Once the market figured out that the Treasury, Federal Reserve and other officials could pull this off, the panic was over.

But this victory brings also real danger.

Rahm Emanuel, the White House Chief of Staff, put it well recently, “The [finance] industry is already back to their pre-meltdown bonuses.  We need to make sure we don’t slip back to risky behavior where the institutions have all the upside and the taxpayers have all the downside, which is why we need regulatory reform.”

Summers does not shy from this issue.  In his letter to Congress he says we need, “Comprehensive reform of the nation’s financial regulatory system so that a crisis like this never happens again,” and “Financial regulatory reform is vital to preventing against (sic) the asset market bubbles that have characterized previous recoveries.”

There are, however, three problems with what he proposes.

First, he says that the administration “has unveiled a sweeping set of regulatory reforms.”  But the reality is more modest.  There will be some slight strengthening of capital requirements, somewhat more attention paid to “systemic risk” (although this is not well defined), and mildly tougher regulation of derivatives.  Most of this amounts to essentially business as usual.

Second, to the extent that the administration does have a few good ideas – for example on a new consumer protection agency for financial products – it has let opposition build to the point where the lobbyists may well be able to prevent progress.  The time to push for change was earlier this year, when banking was still in political disarray; now the sector is stronger than even on Capitol Hill.

Third, the administration can’t even bring its own regulatory agencies along with its modest reforms.  Last week, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner expressed extreme frustration with the efforts of these agencies to block reform.  This week, appearing before the Senate Banking Committee, the same people were still in serious blocking mode.

Even the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben Bernanke, does not seem to be on board with reform as proposed by Geithner and pushed by the White House.  It’s not clear if Bernanke has become too close to the banking industry or too captured by his staff, but in any case Treasury feels that he is not fully on board.

If the administration really wants to put the economy on a path to sustainable bubble-free growth, it looks increasingly likely that it will want to replace Bernanke when his term is up early next year.

Secretary Geithner is the most plausible replacement.  He was previously head of the New York Fed and vice chair of the Federal Open Market Committee, so he knows the system intimately.  He has spearheaded all the financial rescue efforts of the past few years; better than anyone he knows what went wrong.  The markets see him as a safe and friendly pair of hands.

And, increasingly, if he wants any kind of real reform, it looks like Secretary Geithner will have to go to the Fed and implement it himself.

ES Emini Trading and the Recent Rally

By , 4 August, 2009, No Comment

The market has shot up to extraordinary levels in recent months on news that…ah…ermm…earnings are down. Huh? It’s true, the economy as whole has stopped the free fall we experienced early in the current year, and we have had a steady stream of “it’s not as bad as it could have been” kind of economic reports. But this news is hardly the stuff of “green shoots” some economists have portrayed.

This article is an eye-popper

By , 30 July, 2009, No Comment

Europe’s banking system is in far worse shape than the US. The losses may be bigger, and their capital to meet those losses is certainly less. Europe’s banks have been much more aggressive in funding emerging-market expansion than US or Japanese banks. Western European banks have lent $4.5 trillion to various emerging-market countries, businesses, and consumers.

Steep Slowdown in Stock Trading this Summer: Will the current rally flop?

By , 26 July, 2009, 1 Comment

The number of shares traded on the major exchanges has begun to slow to a trickle, when compared with past years. It is not unusual for trading to slow in the summer. In fact, the volume and number of shares traded generally is less in the summer, as opposed to the beginning of the year. But this year the trading has been especially slow.

A little change from emini contracts: Let’s look at oil

By , 23 July, 2009, No Comment

People don’t look much at supply and demand these days, and they talk about it even less, but it is good ol’ supply and demand that determines the price of all material in a capitalist society. Oil is no exception, and demand has been off for quite some time, hence, the unusually large amount of surplus in our current supply. To combat this, several oil company economists have issued a few reports that indicate the supply is not nearly as large as is being reported, but my gut instinct is to not trust oil company economists.

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