habe news auf
www.immobilienblasen.blogspot.com/
müßt euch unbedingt den bericht von ground zero in florida durchlesen.
so sieht ein crash und sicher kein soft landing oder cooling down aus.
gruß
sparki
| Strategie | Hebel | |||
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This is a very cute, tricked-out cottage near the fairfax/san anselmo border. There's a real nice front porch and yard. The house shows very well!! Flash hot water system, heated bathroom floor, solar powered attic fan. Outbuilding for office or storage, plus small garage.
A "tricked-out" 1 br 1 ba, 629 sq ft cottage? Whatever... $599,000.
MFG Leonora
1 bedroom, 1 bath plus storage/guest house. Early stinson beach cottage. Affectionately called the mouse hole fixer upper in desireable beach area. Conventional septic system.
Quick! Run, don't walk! This is your one and only opportunity to buy the Stinson Beach "mouse hole". What are you waiting for? What, it's a POS you say? Are you nuts? This is Marin, MARIN! Everyone, ev-re-one wants to live here. So what if it's a 1 br 1 ba, 374 sq ft cottage (built 1934) on the verge of falling over asking $685,000 ($1832/sq ft)? In Marin, the house doesn't matter; no one buys for the house. Besides, living in a small place is so chic now don't ya know.
MFG Leonora
Technical Analysis
Lows Are In, but It's No Time to Buy
By Harry Schiller
TheStreet.com Contributor
7/28/2006 3:51 PM EDT
Repeat after me: I will not buy multiweek highs, I will not buy multiweek highs, I will not buy multiweek highs. Those with this tendency should look at how things have been going for them over recent weeks and months: not very well, and it won't get better.
Though this strategy sometimes works with individual stocks and even some commodities, it's a recipe for whipsaws and losses when it comes to the stock indices, especially the S&P 500 futures, which play by their own rules. So when do you buy? The best and simplest approach is probably to buy at or near support when everyone else is selling. Further simplified: Buy bad news. It really does come down to that. But give the bad news a chance to really take hold and turn everyone bearish, triggering oversold readings and heightened bearish sentiment in favorite indicators like the VIX. That has occurred several times over recent weeks, and as the chart of the VIX below illustrates, there were plenty of opportunities to buy shakeouts and then be quickly rewarded for those bold moves into the market. The mistake many make is getting bearish at the lows when everyone is yakking about how awful things are, or turning bullish at a multiweek high (for instance, now) as lots of (potential) good news gets discounted by the market. As you can see in the VIX/SPX chart below, the VIX again spiked to a multiweek high back on July 18 -- not coincidentally, as the market (the S&P cash) was retesting its lows for the year. That was the time to step up to the plate. If you didn't, buying now is likely to just compound the problem.| VIX Heading toward complacency |
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| Source: OptionsXpress |
| S&P Futures Stalling at the July 12 gap |
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| Source: Lind Waldock and Nathanael Lan |
| Nasdaq 100 Bouncing off support at 1475 |
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| Source: Lind Waldock |
Four Investors' Fairy Tales...and Five Ugly Realities About the Coming Severe U.S. Recession.Nouriel Roubini | Aug 07, 2006Given the recent flow of dismal U.S. economic indicators (Q2 GDP report, July payrolls, service ISM, etc.) I am now taking the view that the odds of a U.S. recession by year end have increased from my previous 50% to 70% now. While I have been arguing for the last few months that the risks of a U.S. recession are growing, most investors and the Fed are still in a delusional mode of denial and believe in four fairy tales that are now, unfortunately, slipping by the moment into the dustbin of wishful dreams:
I have spent the last few months debunking these four fairy tales (see my recent blog writings here and here and here and here and here and here). But now some elaboration is needed as more market folks starting to get a reality check into Fairy Tale #1, but they are still in denial mode by believing in Fairy Tales #2, #3 and #4. So, here are Five Ugly Realities that will determine the coming U.S. recession, the Fed failed policy response to it, the equity and financial market implications of it, the global economic consequences of it, and the disorderly rebalancing of the unsustainable global current account imbalances. Ugly Reality #1: The Probability of a U.S. Recession is now 70%. I had been predicting since last fall a sharp U.S. economic slowdown in the U.S. in 2006; I changed my call last June to one of an outright recession - with 50% odds - by early 2007. Given the flow of data of the last few weeks - effectively all of them heading south - I now am increasing my subjective odds of a U.S. recession by year end to 70%. I have reviewed in my latest writings the flow of macro indicators for the U.S. economy: both their headlines and details are simply ugly. At these indicators suggests that the Three Ugly Bears that I warned of since last fall are becoming uglier by the day: the housing slump is becoming a real bust; oil is headed higher and higher and could be soon well above $80; and inflation – both core and headline - is rising further forcing policy makers across the world to increase interest rates. Housing alone is now enough to cause a severe U.S. recession since, as I have argued:
On top of the housing bust, the rising oil prices are adding another severe stagflationary shock to the economy. And the interest rate increases "in the pipeline" (to use the Bernanke term) still have to negatively affect the economy as the economy today is reacting - given the long lags of monetary policy - to the effects of a Fed Funds at 4%, not the current 5.25% whose effects will be felt only in 6-9 months. The growing awareness that we are not going to have a soft landing but a severe recession is now clearly spreading among economist, market folks and, even, some policy makers. Last week, super-blogger and leading macroeconomist Brad Delong warned of a recession and even a possible "meltdown". Today, Paul Krugman in the New York Times picks up the theme with the subtle headline "Intimations of Recession" and the not-so-subtle concerned text starting with "Suddenly people have started talking seriously about a possible recession. And it’s not just economists who seem worried." Also today, the Financial Times is covering the wide-ranging debate in the blogosphere on my recession call. While Rich Miller on Bloomberg headlines with "Bernanke's Ride on Interest Rate `Escalator' Risks Recession" and explains how market folks are now seriously worried about a recession. And my Recession Barometer – based on mention of the words “recession” or “stagflation” in Google News is now high and rising (over 5,000 for “recession”). This leads me to the second ugly reality. Ugly Reality #2: A Fed Pause or Even Easing in the Fall Will Not Prevent the Coming Sharp U.S. Recession. Again, markets and investors are well behind the curve on this issue as they are still debating whether the Fed will pause tomorrow August 8th at the FOMC meeting and whether the Fed will have to tighten further in the fall as inflation is still rising or rather pause as inflation may soon peak. The real policy issue now is not anymore whether the Fed will pause or not tomorrow at the August 8th FOMC meeting. It is obvious that the Fed will pause for sure on the 8th - in spite of still rising inflation - as there are strong signs of a severe economic slowdown. The policy issue is not even, anymore, whether the Fed will pause in the fall rather than increase rates further in face of rising inflation. There is, at this point, little doubt - save for a real nasty spike in core inflation - that the next Fed move will have to be an easing, as early as at the September FOMC meeting or as late as November 2006: the sharp U.S. slowdown in growth in Q3 (to as low as a 1.5% growth in the current quarter, on the way to a 0% growth rate by Q4 and an outright recession by Q1 of 2007) will force the Fed to start reducing the Fed Funds rate in the fall. While most market folks are still way behind the curve in being aware that the Fed will not only pause tomorrow but that its next move will be a reduction in the Fed Funds rate, the real and only meaningful policy issue now is whether the coming Fed pause tomorrow and Fed easing in the fall will prevent the coming U.S. recession. My answer to that question, as detailed in my long July 31st blog, is a clear no: as the title of my blog put it "Why a Fed Pause or Even An Easing Will Not Prevent the Coming U.S. Recession I will not repeat now all my detailed arguments on why the Fed easing in the fall will not prevent the coming recession. But let me repeat at least some of the key arguments as they do not seem to have registered yet in the market assessment of what a Fed ease would mean. There are at least five main reasons why a Fed Funds rate cut in the fall will not prevent a U.S. recession:
Ugly Reality #3: A Fed Monetary Easing in the Fall Will Not Rescue the Stock Market: Expect Instead a Bear Market in Equities by Year End. The markets are still in the delusional hope that the Fed easing will come to their rescue. Afterall, the Greenspan-Bernanke's "Asymmetric Asset Bubble Principles" of doing nothing when asset bubbles are rising while aggressively easing monetary policy when bubbles are bursting first created the tech stock bubble of the 1990s and then the housing bubble of the 1990s. But, the Fed is now running out of bubbles to create, as stocks and housing are the two main sources of wealth for U.S. households. Indeed, slowly but surely markets are now realizing that Fed will not be able to rescue the economy this time around and that the recession will be more severe than in 2001. Typical of the knee jerk reaction of Panglossian markets and of Goldilocks-blinded investors to bad economic news, the stock market rallied at the time of the Q2 growth report and, again but briefly, after the payroll figures on Friday. This typical suckers' rally always occurs at the beginning of an economic slowdown that leads to recession. The first reaction of markets to such bad news is always as stock market rally in the belief that a Fed pause and then easing will rescue the economy. This is always a suckers' rally as, over time, the perceived beneficial effects of a Fed ease meet the reality of the investors realizing that an ugly recession is coming and that the effects of such a recession on profits and earnings are first order while the effects of the Fed easing on the economy and stock market are - in the short run - only second order. That is why you can expect another suckers' rally tomorrow when the Fed eases and another one in early fall when the Fed will actually reduce the Fed Funds rate. But, as the flow of lousy macro news builds up day by day in a tsunami of mounting probability of a severe recession, the markets will in due time crash when the unstoppable wave of news and macro developments hits hard a weakened and vulnerable economy; then you will see a serious bearish market in equities and the collateral damage - even the risk of a systemic crisis - and debris will be ugly. And, in this recessionary and bearish world for U.S. equities, expect all other risky assets to underperform (see my detailed discussion here): credit risks and premia will sharply increase, emerging markets equities, fixed income and currencies will all slump (especially those of large current account deficit countries), other G7 equity markets will start drifting down, non-oil commodities will be severely pushed down by the US recession and global economic slowdown; and the US dollar will sharply fall (more on this below). In summary, in 2006 cash will be king. This bearish call for non-US risky assets across the world depends on the fourth Ugly Reality. Ugly Reality #4: The World Will not Decouple from a U.S. Slowdown/Recession Because When the U.S. Sneezes the World Gets the Cold. There is a now another fairy delusion in the market that the rest of the world will somehow weather the coming U.S. recessionary tsunami. While the U.S. shores may get trashed by the mounting forces of rising oil, busting housing and rising inflation leading to higher interest rates, there is the wishful hope among investors that the rest of the world shore are safe from these mounting risks. The argument now presented in the most reputable research shops of the most reputable global investment banks is that, even if the U.S. slows down the world will "decouple" (to use the arguments strongly presented by Goldman Sachs) from the U.S slowdown and will keep on growing at a perky rate in Asia, Europe, emerging markets and Latin America. The argument is that there is enough domestic demand momentum in the four leading Asian economies (China, India, Japan and Korea) and there is now such a resilient recovery of growth in the Eurozone, starting with Germany that the rest of the world can happily weather the U.S. recessionary tsunami. In JP Morgan's terminology, this "decoupling" is termed as the "rotation in global growth" from U.S. to Asia and the Eurozone. Others refer to it as the "locomotive" switch with a switch in the growth locomotive from the sputtering U.S. one to the perky ones in EU and Asia. I have already written extensively twice - starting with by my June 14th essay 12 Reasons Why the World Will Not De-Couple From the Coming U.S. Growth Slowdown…Or “Why When the U.S. Sneezes the World Gets the Cold” - on why the world will not decouple from the U.S. recession. The markets are still in the hope of a U.S. soft landing and in the hope that, if a soft landing is at risk, the Fed will come to the rescue. The reality that the coming U.S. economic developments will hit and hurt the rest of the world has not yet registered in the minds of investors where the "decoupling" or "rotation" fairy tales still dominate. But there will be no decoupling as (to repeat my 12 arguments):
And in my recent blog last week, I elaborated in more detail how these 12 specific factors will lead to a slowdown of growth in China, Japan, the rest of Asia, Europe, emerging markets and Latin America. The world will not be able to decouple from the US slowdown. The effects of the US slowdown on global growth may be delayed by quarter or two, as Asia and Europe are now in a cyclical recovery; but each one of these region has its own individual macro vulnerabilities that will rapidly emerge and spread once the US slowdown and recession is underway. Ugly Reality # 5. The Risk of a Disorderly Rebalancing of the Global Current Account Imbalances is Rising: One Cannot Rule Out a Hard Landing of the U.S. Dollar and an Episode of Systemic Financial Risk. The scenario of a US hard landing that I have described above did not even mention the issue of the large US current account deficit and the risks to the U.S. dollar. Indeed, as my co-author Brad Setser points out in his most recent excellent blog, the scenarios of a U.S. hard landing can be based on two very different arguments: either a U.S. “consumer burnout” or a “foreign flight” by foreign investors. The four ugly realities that I have analyzed above are based on the “consumer burnout” view of the U.S. hard landing. But I do not rule out a situation where a hard landing starting from a “consumer burnout” may lead to a harder landing because of “foreign investors’ flight” from U.S. assets. Indeed, in 2005 Brad Setser and I analyzed the risks of a hard landing of the US economy based on the “foreign flight” argument; we argued that the BW2 regime of vendor financing of the US twin deficits would unravel by 2005-2006. Instead, my argument – since last fall - of the Three Bears (slumping housing, rising oil prices, and rising inflation leading to rising interest rates) smashing the Goldilocks of high growth and low inflation is based on a “consumer burnout” thesis about the U.S. hard landing. However, I still do believe that while the consumer burnout is now the first trigger of the US hard landing, once this US recession is underway the risks of a foreign investors’ flight will be very large: so we may end up with a double whammy of consumer burnout and foreign flight. It is important to note that last year the BW2 regime did not unravel mostly because of cyclical factors. In 2005, the US dollar appreciated – in spite of the downward gravitational force of a larger US current account deficit – mostly because of cyclical and temporary factors: interest rate differentials favored the US dollar as the Fed was on the tightening path while ECB and BoJ were on hold; US growth was still perky while Eurozone and Japanese growth were still mediocre; the Homeland Investment Act (HIA) boosted repatriation of US foreign profits; there were lousy political news in Europe; and the returns on US assets – especially housing and bonds – was still high. This year, instead, the structural gravitational forces pushing down the dollar are aligned with the cyclical factors that are now turning against the dollar: the Fed will soon pause and then ease while ECB and BoJ have just started to tighten; US growth is slowing down while – so far – Eurozone and Japanese growth are recovering; the HIA has expired; the US administration is in serious domestic and foreign affairs trouble and looks more lame duck by the day; US equities and housing are slumping. This is why the dollar started to fall in the spring as the reality of cyclical factors turning against the dollar started to sink in. But during the global market turmoil of May-June the dollar temporarily recovered because of transitory factors: Bernanke was flip-flopping by signaling that the Fed was not done yet, while the BoJ kept on postponing the timing of its phase-out of ZIRP; and panicky and risk-averse global investors rushing out of emerging markets sought the relative safety of US Treasuries. But this was all temporary: indeed, the paradox and irony of investors fleeing currencies of countries with large current account deficits (Turkey, Hungary, Iceland, and India, South Africa) to find safe haven in the currency of the country with the largest current account deficit in human history – the US – became soon evident. And as soon as the reality of the coming US recession and the Fed pause and then easing sinks in the investors’ minds you can expect that the dollar will start falling at an accelerated pace, as it has in the last week. At that point, consumer burnout may well trigger foreign flight. It is clear now that foreign central banks are seriously getting tired of accumulating trillions of US dollar assets on top of the trillions that they have already accumulated; the expected capital losses on these dollar assets will be massive – double digit as a % of GDP – once the dollar starts to fall relative to RMB, Asian currencies and other current members of BW2 that have – even last year – financed about 50% of the US current account deficit. And once foreign central banks signal that their willingness to accumulate dollar reserves is slowing down, foreign private demand for US dollar assets will fall even more sharply than the official demand. In fact, carry-trading Asian and other BW2 countries’ investors will then face the risk of sharp capital losses on their holding of dollar assets; i.e. private foreign demand for dollar assets is complementary, not substitute for official demand. Thus, our 2005 prediction for an unraveling of BW2 by 2006 is still on track to be fulfilled. Once this happens, the dollar may start to fall at a rapid pace at the worst of all times this coming fall, i.e. when the US economy is slowing down, when the risks of trade protectionism in the US Congress are surging, when the threats of asset protectionism are rising (see Unocal-CNOC case and the Dubai Ports case; and now the growing pressure for a protectionist reform of the CFIUS process, and when acrimonious U.S. mid-term elections are coming. Then, the risk that the row between the US and China on the RMB currency revaluation issue will lead to an actual trade war – as Schumer is now asking for a vote on his China tariffs bill by September 30th – will increase. Then, the risks are that such a toxic mixture of macro, financial and political events will lead to a financial meltdown. In conclusion, markets, investors and policy makers will soon wake up from the delusional dreams and the fairy tales they have been indulging into for too long and will face the five ugly realities that I described above: 1) the U.S. will experience a sharp slowdown followed by a severe recession; 2) the Fed will pause and then ease in the fall but such easing will not be able to prevent the U.S. recession; 3) after a suckers’ rally following the Fed pauses and easing, stock markets will enter into a bearish contraction phase; and other risk assets will also experience sharp drops. In 2006, cash is king; 4) the rest of the world will not decouple from the U.S. recession and there will be no “rotation” in global growth as the rest of the world will sharply slow down – after a short lag – following the U.S. recessionary lead; 5) the risk of a disorderly rebalancing of the growing global current account imbalances is increasing with serious consequences for the U.S. dollar and with the growing risk of dangerous global trade and asset protectionism. Then, in this most volatile and dangerous macroeconomic, financial and geopolitical situation, the risk of a US recession turning into a systemic financial meltdown cannot be ruled out. There are serious similarities between the situation today and the forces that led to the stock market crash – 20% in one day – in October 1987…But the risk of a financial meltdown is a topic that deserves its own separate discussion in my next blog....Stay tuned at www.rgemonitor.com
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| Strategie | Hebel | |||
| Steigender DAX-Kurs | 5,00 | 10,00 | 19,98 | |
| Fallender DAX-Kurs | 5,96 | 10,00 | 19,99 | |
| Wertung | Antworten | Thema | Verfasser | letzter Verfasser | letzter Beitrag | |
| 58 | 19.305 | BP Group | B.Helios | newson | 24.12.25 12:40 | |
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| 2 | 143 | Ist BP unterbewertet? | Salim R. | HSO50 | 25.04.21 03:50 |