• 27Feb

     

     

     

     

    The Geithner and Obama speech fiasco of the last two weeks have been a significant advantage for day traders because of the volatility reactions, and there have been multiple retracement levels in the major indexes and energy ETFs, in addition to some excellent contra trades in the GDX because of the fear reactions. After the latest speech by Obama, the markets are seeking support and guidance…answers that make sense, we aren’t getting them yet so why would any traders go out long here?

    The Congress had to close its cafeteria and outsource it because it was supposedly losing $18 million, and now they are in charge of our major banks and brokerage firms, so how confident are you about that? I would imagine there will be some mini runs on deposits from C and BAC when they are formally nationalized in the next week or so, and that will generate more volatility for traders.

    Unless the energy stocks reverse from this Over Sold condition, there is not much chance of a sustained reversal, because it “ain’t” going to come from the financial stocks. It will continue to be a traders market for quite some time, and based on what this Government has proposed so far, or in the case of Geithner, not proposed, the S&P500 can easily take out 700 to the downside, either before, or after a technical bounce.

     

     

    Key indicators are pointing to additional selling here.
    Keep an eye on the US Dollar here. The selling in GOLD is setting us up for a potential bounce in Gold soon and more pain in the equities markets.

    Technical bounce is long over due - we are extremely oversold.

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  • 25Feb

    Traders Tax Bill

    You may have heard or seen the bill that’s now in the House of Representatives which proposes to place a ¼% transaction tax (a stamp tax) on every trade you do. That means it will cost you ½% round trip to do a trade. The writers of the bill state it will pay off a good amount of TARP and also the income will be used to fund some health initiatives.

    Obviously if this bill is passed, its game over for active trading, the exchanges (especially the CME) and many of the online brokerage firms who rely upon trading volume to grow their businesses.
    This bill if passed will cause serious damage to the financial markets.

    Here is the link to the Petition to block the Traders Tax Bill.
    After you sign it, please send this to as many of your friends in the industry that you know. The petition was just recently put up and already nearly 30,000 people have signed it. The more people who sign this, the better.

    http://www.rallycongress.com/no2tradertax/1536/

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  • 25Feb

     

    We will rebuild!

     

    The most oversold conditions we have seen in a decade as of yesterday (Monday) Tuesday 02/24/09 we saw a rally that many would atribute to Federal Reserve Board chief Ben Bernanke delivered a simple message Tuesday: Fix banks first and economic growth will follow.

    “If there is one message that I’d like to leave you with, if we’re going to have a strong recovery, it has got to be on the back of a stabilization of the financial system. It is black and white,” Bernanke told the Senate Banking Committee.

    “If we don’t stabilize the financial system, we’re going to flounder for some time,” said the top U.S. central banker.
    Bank stability stands as the key ingredient for ending the recession, Bernanke said.
    Only with the return of some measure of financial stability is there a “reasonable prospect that the current recession will end in 2009 and that 2010 will be a year of recovery,” Bernanke said.

    ‘Most securitization markets remain shut, other than that for conforming mortgages, and some financial institutions remain under pressure.’Ben Bernanke, Federal Reserve chairman

    If financial conditions improve, the stimulus package and ultra-low interest rates will support growth and low gasoline prices will support consumer spending.

    “If financial conditions improve, the economy will be increasingly supported by fiscal and monetary stimulus, the salutary effects of the steep decline in energy prices since last summer, and the better alignment of business inventories and final sales, as well as the increased availability of credit,” Bernanke said.
    A full recovery from the severe downturn is not expected for two or three years, Bernanke said.
    At the moment, downside risks to the forecast predominate, Bernanke said. The soft economy and week financial institutions are still caught in a downward spiral with the potential to wield tremendous “destructive power,” he said.

    This cycle, known in Fed parlance as an “adverse feedback loop,” was one of the worst fears of Fed officials in 2007 and 2008. The fact that it has arrived with such force has officials scrambling for a response.

    “To break the adverse feedback loop, it is essential that we continue to complement fiscal stimulus with strong government action to stabilize financial institutions and financial markets,” Bernanke said.
    The global nature of the recession is another downside risk, Bernanke said. This may drag down U.S. manufacturing and financial markets more than expected

    Although you wouldn’t know it from the behavior of the stock market, the economic outlook is turning just a bit less gloomy.
    Prosperity may not be just around the corner, but statistical evidence is mounting to suggest that the worst of this recession may soon be past.
    And before you inundate me with email alleging that I am out of touch with the real world, let me say right at the top that I am not for one moment saying that the economy has stopped sliding. I am only suggesting that it appears to be contracting at a slower pace.
    Clearly, this has nothing whatsoever to do with the stimulus package that the president signed into law last week. As a matter of fact, if the recession does end within the next few months, it will probably be in spite of this package, rather than because of it.
    If you want a policy to credit, it’s monetary policy. The combination of liquidity that the Federal Reserve has pumped into the economy, along with its special lending programs and capital injections into the banks, is largely responsible.
    But you want more than assertions; you want proof. And here it is:
    The Conference Board’s index of leading economic indicators has risen for two months in a row.
    Producer prices have increased for two straight months.
    Consumer prices rose in January — the first monthly gain in six months.
    The Baltic Dry Index, which measures the cost of shipping key raw materials like copper, steel and iron, has more than doubled from its recent lows.
    Existing-home sales rose in December, and participants in our weekly survey think that another rise took place in January.
    Pending home sales went up in December.
    Builders’ confidence inched up this month.
    Thanks to lower interest rates, applications for both new mortgages and refinancings of existing mortgages are rising.
    Real hourly earnings rose 4.5% in December following a 3.3% increase in November.
    An index of consumer expectations rose in January.
    Retail sales shot up by 1% in January — the first monthly rise since June.
    The decline in consumer credit moderated in the latest month.
    New orders for consumer and nonmilitary capital goods went up in January.
    The ISM index of manufacturing went up last month.
    The ISM index of services rose last month for the second month in a row.
    The money supply is soaring, a sign that there’s plenty of liquidity in the economy.
    The 3-month London interbank offered rate, a measure of banks’ willingness to lend to each other, has dropped to 1.2% from close to 5% a number of weeks ago.
    Other measures of the state of the financial markets, like the TED spread and the 2-year swap spread are down, as well.
    Prices of credit default swaps for banks have fallen from their peaks.
    The corporate-bond markets are thawing out, too; some $127 billion in dollar-denominated debt was issued in January, the most for any month since last May.
    Some securities on banks’ books are starting to recover in value.
    All this said, the economy is still a long way from a pink-cheeked state of health. But remember, you’ve got to crawl before you can walk. And it looks like the economy is about to do just that.

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  • 24Feb

    Bailout Bank Blows Millions Partying in L.A.
    A bank that received $1.6 billion in bailout money just spent a fortune last week in L.A. hosting a series of lavish parties and concerts with famous singers.
    Northern Trust, a Chicago-based bank, sponsored the Northern Trust Open at the Riviera Country Club in L.A. We’re told Northern Trust paid millions to sponsor the PGA event which ended Sunday, but what happened off the golf course is even more shocking.

    Northern Trust flew hundreds of clients and employees to L.A. and put many of them up at some of the fanciest and priciest hotels in the city. We’re told more than a hundred people were put up at the Beverly Wilshire in Bev Hills, and another hundred stayed at the Loews Santa Monica Beach Hotel. Still more stayed at the Ritz Carlton in Marina Del Rey and others at Casa Del Mar in Santa Monica.

    Here are the highlights:

    - Wednesday, Northern Trust hosted a fancy dinner at the Ritz followed by a performance by the group Chicago.

    - Thursday, Northern Trust rented a private hangar at the Santa Monica Airport for dinner, followed by a performance by Earth, Wind & Fire.

    - Saturday, Northern Trust had the entire House of Blues in West Hollywood shut down for its private party. We got the menu — guests dined on seared salmon and petite Angus filet. Dinner was followed by a performance by none other than Sheryl Crow.

    There was also a fabulous cocktail party at the Loews. And how’s this for a nice touch — female guests at the Chicago concert all got trinkets from….TIFFANY AND CO.
    As for what all that costs, well the company isn’t talking. We spoke with a rep from the band Chicago who said Northern Trust paid them around $100,000. A House of Blues source told us it cost more than $50,000 to close the joint down last Saturday night. As for Sheryl Crow’s fee, her rep didn’t get back to us. Earth, Wind & Fire acknowledges payment but won’t say how much.

    As for the golf tournament, a rep from the PGA told us Northern Trust wrote one big fat check in order to sponsor the event. That check covers part of the $6.3 million purse, the advertising costs for the spots on CBS (which broadcast the final two rounds of the tournament) and operating costs. The rep says the fee was negotiated and is confidential.

    Lots of people from Northern Trust went to the golf tourney … in special Mercedes that shuttled them to and from the hotels. But for those who weren’t into golfing, they could spend a few hours at the Northern Trust seminar on the credit crunch.

    Now how’s this for outrage? Northern Trust laid off 450 workers in December, 4% of its workforce.

    Here’s what’s absolutely amazing — the United States Government flat out gave Northern Trust the $1.6 billion in bailout money, and the bank didn’t even request it!

    Northern Trust gave us a statement yesterday before going total radio silence. A rep for the bank acknowledges they paid for the events, but that the bailout money did not pay for the events. He claims it was paid out of the bank’s operating expenses. Here’s Northern Trust’s full statement to us.

    Perhaps we’re missing something, but money is money. How can they spend like this when they’re using taxpayer’s money, whether they asked for it or not? And where the hell is Congress in all of this? Is there any oversight or accountability?

    Your tax dollars, hard at work. Thomas Jefferson was right — “A little rebellion now and then is a good thing.”

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  • 23Feb

     

     

    BREAKING NEWS:  Major stock market indexes staggered to their lowest levels in more than a decade.

    The major market indexes have staggered to their lowest levels in a decade, pulled lower by investors rapidly waning confidence. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell to April 1997 levels Monday, while the Dow Jones industrial average, down about 215 points, reached its levels of October 1997 as investors succumbed to their growing worries about a recession that has no end in sight.

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  • 20Feb

    FDIC, regulators shut down Oregon’s Silver Falls Bank

    Silver Falls Bank, of Silverton, Ore., was closed Friday by state regulators and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. It was the 14th bank to fail so far this year and the 39th since the beginning of the current credit crisis. Citizens Bank of Corvallis, Ore. will assume all of the deposits of Silver Falls Bank, the FDIC said. Silver Falls Bank had three branches. As of Feb. 9, the bank had total assets of approximately $131.4 million and total deposits of $116.3 million. Citizens Bank did not pay a premium to acquire the deposits of Silver Falls Bank.

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  • 19Feb

    Fed says US economy will get worse in 2009
    Fed says American economy will get worse in 2009, no sign housing market will stabilize

    The Federal Reserve warned Wednesday that the nation’s crippled economy is even worse than thought and predicted it would deteriorate throughout 2009, with no sign that the housing market will stabilize.

    The Fed’s bleak estimates indicated that unemployment could climb as high as 8.8 percent this year and that the economy would contract for a full calendar year for the first time since 1991.

    The central bank’s latest projections came hours after a separate report showed that new home construction and applications for future projects both fell to record lows last month.

    Still, some economists saw a silver lining in the otherwise dismal housing report: Scaled-back building should reduce the number of unsold homes and contribute to an eventual housing recovery.

    The reports raise the stakes for the plan President Barack Obama announced Wednesday to curb foreclosures and ease the broader U.S. housing slump that sent the economy into recession.

    The Fed’s latest forecast says the unemployment rate will climb to between 8.5 and 8.8 percent this year. The old prediction, issued in mid-November, estimated that the jobless rate would rise to between 7.1 and 7.6 percent.

    Many private economists believe the current 7.6 percent jobless rate — the highest in more than 16 years — will hit at least 9 percent by early next year even with the $787 billion stimulus package signed into law Tuesday by Obama.

    The Fed also believes the economy will contract this year between 0.5 and 1.3 percent. The old forecast said the economy could shrink by 0.2 percent or expand by 1.1 percent.

    The last time the economy registered a contraction for a full year was in 1991, by 0.2 percent. If the Fed’s new predictions prove correct, it would mark the weakest showing since a 1.9 percent drop in 1982, when the country had suffered through a severe recession.

    The grim outlook represents the growing toll of the worst housing, credit and financial crises since the 1930s. All of those negative forces have plunged the nation into a recession, now in its second year.

    “Given the strength of the forces currently weighing on the economy,” Fed officials “generally expected that the recovery would be unusually gradual and prolonged,” according to documents on the Fed’s updated economic outlook.

    In another sign of the troubled economy, production at the nation’s factories, mines and utilities fell 1.8 percent last month, more than economists expected. That figure, the third monthly drop in a row, was dragged down by a 23 percent drop in production at auto plants and their suppliers.

    Meanwhile, construction of new homes and apartments plummeted 16.8 percent in January from the previous month, the Commerce Department said, falling to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 466,000 units, a record low. Analysts expected a pace of 530,000 housing units.

    Building permits, a measure of future activity, also sank to a record low pace of 521,000 units in January, a 4.8 percent drop from the prior month.

    “Conditions in the market for new homes have not been this bad since the 1930s, and they continue to worsen,” said Patrick Newport, an economist at IHS Global Insight in Lexington, Mass. He predicted that housing starts would remain depressed for months to come.

    But other economists saw some glimmers of hope in the report. The sharp cuts in new home building should help reduce inventories of unsold homes, which reached record levels last year, and stabilize home prices, which have been battered by a flood of foreclosed homes on the market.

    Abiel Reinhart, an economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co., said that reduced homebuilding lowers economic growth in the short run, “but it does help get inventories down to more reasonable levels.”

    Builders have cut the number of new homes on the market for almost two years, Newport said, but sales have fallen even more quickly. As a result, the Commerce Department said last month that it would take 12.9 months to sell all the new homes on the market, the longest on record.

    That could drop closer to five to six months by the end of this year, Reinhart said, levels that are consistent with a more stable market.

    The housing sector also got a boost Wednesday from the Obama administration, which unveiled a $75 billion effort to prevent up to 9 million Americans from losing their homes.

    The plan also will double the size of the lifeline the government is providing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to $200 billion each as a way of reassuring financial markets of the viability of both mortgage finance giants.

    David Crowe, chief economist for the National Association of Home Builders, said the administration’s foreclosure program plus help for first-time home buyers included in the stimulus measure would have an impact.

    “I do think we will see a bottom in 2009 and by the end of this year we will start to see the beginning of a recovery,” he said. “But it will be a slow recovery because of the significant overhang of empty houses for sale.”

    The Fed was more pessimistic when it released a set of new economic projections and the minutes of its Jan. 17-19 meeting.

    Members of the Fed’s open market committee “saw no indication that the housing sector was beginning to stabilize,” the minutes said.

    While falling home prices and historically low mortgage rates have made homes more affordable, the Fed said, “concerns that house prices may fall further appeared to be holding back potential buyers.”

    Despite the lower unemployment and overall economic projections from the Fed, Joshua Shapiro, chief U.S. economist at MRF Inc., said the growth estimates for this year and next remain “much too optimistic.”

    The Fed forecast calls for the jobless rate to dip to between 8 and 8.3 percent next year, and to between 7.5 and 6.7 percent in 2011. The normal range for unemployment is around 5 percent.

    Employment is usually the last piece of the economy to heal once the country is out of recession and in recovery mode. Businesses are usually reluctant to ramp up hiring until they feel confident that any recovery has staying power.

    Under the Fed’s new projections, the economy should grow between 2.5 and 3.3 percent next year and by as much as 5 percent in 2011, which would be considered robust.

    Shapiro is not convinced. The central bank’s forecasts are in the “‘hope springs eternal camp,’” he said.

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  • 15Feb

    U.S. stocks close with weeky losses as financials bleed

    U.S. stocks on Friday closed down on the week, with financial shares pacing the declines, as investors retreated in the face of a long weekend and uncertainty over how much the government would help ailing banks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 82.35 points, or 1%, to end at 7,850.41, giving the blue-chip index a weekly drop of 5.2%. The S&P 500 fell 8.35 points, or 1%, to 826.84, off 4.8% from the week-ago close. The Nasdaq Composite shed 7.35 points, or 0.5%, to end at 1,534.36, down 3.6% on the week.

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  • 15Feb

    Sherman County Bank of Neb. fails, 10th closure in 2009

     The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and state regulators on Friday shut down Sherman County Bank of Loup City, Neb., the tenth bank failure of 2009 and the 35th since the start of the current credit crisis. All deposit accounts have been transferred to Heritage Bank, Wood River, Neb. and former Sherman County Bank locations will reopen as branches of Heritage Bank on Tuesday. In addition to assuming all of Sherman County Bank’s $85.1 million deposits, Heritage Bank agreed to purchase about $21.8 million in assets. The FDIC will retain the remaining assets for later disposition.

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  • 11Feb

    ERY solid trade for us on Tuesday +13.40%
    FAS + 26% Tuesday!

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