Tuesday, August 30, 2011

More Hopium On The Way

Our down trending economy and markets may have begun to levitate again with Chairman Bernanke’s Jackson Hole speech last week when he announced the Fed would keep interest rates at zero for two more years (that would be 4.5 years total.) I believe this is just the beginning of “QE3” (generally defined as more money printing.)

Because there is some opposition to more stimulus and money printing (including three of the Federal Reserve’s Presidents and members of Congress,) the Government and the Federal Reserve have to “justify” more spending. In other words, there has to be enough “pain” to justify more spending and interfering with the economy. I believe we will get more fiscal stimulus and more money printing because we have, over the years, turned our economy (and education, health insurance, parenting, retirement, etc. etc. over to the government) and stimulus and money printing are the only way they know how to fix things. Besides, there is an election coming soon and fixing will take time.

There are two data points coming this week that may give the government the “justification” they need. One is the ISM-Manufacturing Report on Thursday. I suspect it will be more negative than expected. The second is the jobs report on Friday. I think the consensus is for about 75,000 to 100,000 jobs. However, the data over the past month is so negative that we may see a much smaller number and even a negative number for August or September. A negative number will defiantly get attention.

These events will be followed up by President Obama’s speech on September 5th when he will tell us what his “plan” is for restoring the economy and creating jobs. I believe it will be a bigger, more expensive program than we have had to date. It will have to get through Congress, but did I mention an election is coming soon.

Also, on September 21st Chairman Bernanke will announce the decisions made by the Federal Reserve Board. If the data is bad enough, we should get QE3 almost immediately. If the data is not bad enough, we may have to wait. But we should not have to wait very long as the economy is sliding further into recession.

In summary, we may get some bad news with the ISM-Manufacturing Report and the August Jobs Report which would negatively impact the market. But, that would be immediately followed up by the President’s new stimulus plan and the Federal Reserves’ money printing plan. This hopium will levitate the market, if big enough, until +/- next Labor Day. Another short-term “fix” and a worsening long-term problem.

Friday, August 12, 2011

Are You Ready For Labor Day?

A lot has happened over the past week or so. I just want to cover the Federal Reserve meeting today. Fed Chairman Bernanke stated after the meeting that we are basically in a recession (my interpretation) that will last for some time; and that he will hold interest rates down until at least mid-2013. This is the normal Keynesian and Keynesian-Lite reaction to a “consumer spending gap” (a reduction in consumer spending.). Fiscal and monetary policy has been doing this (low rates and printing money) for several years now and it is not working very well.

We know that increasing the money supply increases the GDP, but maybe low interest rates and printing money are not our problem and in fact, may be prolonging our problem. However, I think the Fed believes we are still stuck in a “liquidity trap” (over simplified: I (individual, bank, company) have some money and I could borrow more, but I don’t want to spend it or buy on time or invest it because I don’t know what the future holds and if I will be able to pay it back in this uncertain economy.)

The Fed believes, to get out of this liquidity trap, they need to continue to keep rates low and flood the economy with new money which will encourage people to spend and invest. Many think this might be difficult to do now considering the recent debt debate. But this is all the Fed and the government know how to do. They can’t create jobs or fix the housing foreclosure problem or expand free trade agreements, etc. Besides, that’s what a lot of people (like Paul Krugman, et. al.) are demanding. They want the government to do something”.

Now we have a second quarter revision to GDP on August 26th. I think GDP will be revised down from 1.3% to under 1% and maybe down to as little as 0.5%. Since we are obsessed with GDP that is a problem. Two quarters under 1% growth when we need 3% growth to effect jobs growth and unemployment.

Then we have another Fed meeting on August 29th. I expect Chairman Bernanke to announce that additional help (accommodation) will be coming soon. Then throw in the fact t that Congress gets back to “work” after Labor Day and the Presidential Election season is underway.

Therefore, my assumption of Scenario One (Print Until You Drop) is that the economy may not turn up but GDP (the arithmetic model we call the economy) will turn up on new fiscal and monetary initiatives. This will then “lead” the market higher.

There are a lot of implications to this scenario on the upside and the downside for both equities and income securities. Start now to position yourself for what is coming.

Monday, August 1, 2011

We Again Kicked the Can, But the Road is Now Going Down Hill

The “Debt Deal” will likely pass the House and Senate today. It does not reduce the budget or spending very much. Here’s why. The base line or assumption is that the budget will grow about 7% every year (that means a 7% increase is priced in.) So, if the 2011 budget is 3.6 trillion, next year the budget will start out at $3.6 plus $250 billion or $3.85 trillion (assuming no more wars, etc.)

Therefore, in 2013 when the debt ceiling is reached again, the deficit will be $16.6 trillion rather than the $14.2 we have today; and the budget for 2014 will start at $4.1 trillion. Unless we have a national discussion about why we are spending this much money and reach a national consensus, we will continue to let politicians keep spending and monetizing our debt. If you create enough inflation to make previous debts meaningless, is that a default?

At the same time, the global economy, at a minimum, is contracting or slowing down. Therefore, the euphoria that passing the debt ceiling brings will be very short lived. We will have to immediately focus on the economy again and jobs. And there seems to be only one thing the government knows how to do, spend money and pass regulations. Also, it is only 15 months until election so stimulus and QE3 will have to be set up and implemented quickly.

Unfortunately, what we really need is for the government to get out of the way.