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- Wall Street Breakfast -Sample
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know Newsby SA Editor Rachael Granby- Bank trio becomes duo. Wells Fargo (WFC) will become the largest U.S. bank by branches with its bid for Wachovia (WB), after Citigroup (C) withdrew from compromise negotiations late yesterday on concerns about the quality of some of Wachovia's assets. Wells Fargo, with a bid valued at $11.4B, expects the purchase to be completed by the end of the year, and denies it will have to absorb assets shakier than originally thought.
- Government considers next steps. As the financial crisis continues to worsen, the U.S. government is considering two dramatic steps to turn around, or at least slow, the damage: guaranteeing billions of dollars in bank debt and temporarily insuring all U.S. bank deposits. The moves, which would mark the government's most extensive intervention to date, are in discussion stages only.
- Credit stays frozen. As frozen credit markets refuse to thaw, the cost of default protection on corporate bonds reaches new global records amid investor concerns the credit crisis will trigger corporate failures as companies struggle to finance their businesses. Interbank lending remains limited, and borrowing from the Fed's expanded discount window continued its trend of setting new highs every week, as the total daily average rose to $420.2B vs. $367.8B last week.
- Oil demand withers. The International Energy Agency warned Friday worldwide oil demand...
- The Macro View -SampleSeeking Alpha - The Macro ViewMarket Outlook
- An Outcry from Emerging and Developed Markets Alike by Jonathan O'Shaughnessy
- Long Term, Financials Look Good by Michael Filloon
- Round 3 of the Recession: Main Street by Paul Fekula
Oil Price- Oil Below $75: Increased Chance of OPEC Production Cuts by Money Morning
- Oil Down 48% from Highs by Bespoke Investment Group
- Oil & Gas Headed Lower as Economy Strikes Consumers by Michael Filloon
Economy- Long Term, Financials Look Good by Michael Filloon
- Round 3 of the Recession: Main Street by Paul Fekula
- Reality Bites As Stocks Continue To Collapse by The Mole
- Investing Ideas -SampleSeeking Alpha - Investing IdeasCramer's Picks
- Farewell Financial Bear Raids - Cramer's Mad Money (10/14/08) by SA Editor Joan Wickham
- Better Picks - Cramer's Lightning Round (10/14/08) by SA Editor Joan Wickham
- Perhaps Industrials... Cramer's Stop Trading! (10/14/08) by SA Editor Joan Wickham
Long Ideas- Utilities Beginning to Generate Interest for Longs by Joe Kunkle
- The Long Case for Encore Capital by Value Investor Insight
- 2009: The Year of the Channel for SaaS Vendors? by Jeff Kaplan
- Two Global Infrastructure Investment Opportunities in ETFs by Investment U
- Market Behaves Sanely - Fast Money Recap (10/14/08) by SA Editor Joan Wickham
Short Ideas- Why Short Sellers Are the Heroes of Wall Street by Investment U
- Salesforce.com: Pricey and Coming Down Fast by Charlie Bottle
- Google: 3Q Results Reveal Chinks in the Armor by Mark Krieger
- Jim Cramer's Picks -SampleBetter Choices - Cramer's Lightning Round (10/15/08)by SA Editor Rachael GranbyStocks discussed in the lightning round session of Jim Cramers Mad Money TV program,
Wednesday, October 15.Bullish Calls:Continental Resources (CLR) -- "This is a remarkable decline. All of the high quality ones are down so much, I can't go against it. This is where you pull the trigger.
3M (MMM) -- The moment this stock starts yielding 5%, I'm a buyer. Until then, keep your powder dry.Bearish Calls:Computer Sciences (CSC) -- This is a company that was going to be bought, but they passed up the chance. Now I don't want to buy it."Email continues...
Annaly Mortgage (NLY) -- I think this is a business model that needs to borrow money. Definitively do not buy."
Northrop Grumman (NOC) -- You can't own the defense stocks right now. If I had to own one, I'd look at Lockheed Martin (LMT) with its good dividend. - Stocks & Sectors -SampleSeeking Alpha - Stocks & SectorsInternet
- eBay: Q3 Looks Good but Q4 Guidance Disappoints by Greg Feirman
- Is Google Feeling Lucky? by Sam Gustin
- Why Today Could Suck for Tech by Kevin Maney
Media- A Triple Financial Whammy Afflicts Newspapers by Ken Doctor
- Three Years On, Buying MySpace Looks Like One of Murdoch's Smartest Bets by Erick Schonfeld
- How Will Arbitron Fare in This Market? by Sreeni Meka
Telecom- Ten Ways to Invest in Louisiana by Stockerblog
- Earnings Preview: Electro-Optical Engineering by theflyonthewall.com
- Shared Docks Via WiFi All the Rage by Dean Bubley
Financial- Switzerland Strengthens Its Banks; Short Interest Remains Low by Jessica Johnson
- Reality Bites As Stocks Continue To Collapse by The Mole
- LIBOR Shows Worst Is Yet to Come for Credit Markets by Keith Fitz-Gerald
- Global Markets -SampleSeeking Alpha - Global MarketsChina
- An Outcry from Emerging and Developed Markets Alike by Jonathan O'Shaughnessy
- USANA Health Sciences Inc. Q3 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
- Perfect World Announces Share Repurchase Program by Trader Mark
- China: Hot Money Inflows Down, Nervousness Up by Michael Pettis
India- Indian Economy Has Much to Cheer About by Equitymaster
- India: RBI Cuts Cash Reserve Ratio by Equitymaster
- India: Markets Continue Downward by Equitymaster
Japan- Sanyo Enters Thin-Film Market, Goes Up Against Sharp by Greentech Media
Asia- Four International Dividend Stocks to Watch by David Hunkar
Eastern Europe- Reality Bites As Stocks Continue To Collapse by The Mole
- Alternative Energy Investing -SampleSeeking Alpha - Alternative EnergyAlternative Energy
- Seven Stocks for an Impending Apocalypse by H.J. Huneycutt
- Solar Shares Under Pressure From Credit Crunch and Pricing by Eric Savitz
- Trina Solar Looks Good, Though Market Yawns by Trader Mark
- The Electric Car Market: Wise Energy Use Stocks by Tom Konrad
- Investing in the Power of the Sea
- ETF Daily -SampleSeeking Alpha - ETF DailySector ETFs
- Too Early To Buy Homebuilders ETF by Larry MacDonald
- Utilities Beginning to Generate Interest for Longs by Joe Kunkle
- Two Global Infrastructure Investment Opportunities in ETFs by Investment U
New ETFs- First Trust Launches Infrastructure ETF with Global Reach by Index Universe
- Overview and Analysis of the Global Generic Drug Industry by Mike Havrilla
Emerging Market ETFs- Brazil Is the Best of BRIC by Carl T. Delfeld
- Playing the Market in Difficult Times by Jason Hamlin
- The Daily Dispatch -SampleSeeking Alpha - Daily DispatchWall Street Breakfast
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News by SA Editor Rachael Granby
US Market- An Outcry from Emerging and Developed Markets Alike by Jonathan O'Shaughnessy
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News by SA Editor Rachael Granby
Housing & Real Estate- Too Early To Buy Homebuilders ETF by Larry MacDonald
- Another 'Root Cause' That Isn't: Tumbling Home Prices by Tim Iacono
Transcripts- TrueBlue, Inc. Q3 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
- Polycom, Inc. Q3 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
ETF- Too Early To Buy Homebuilders ETF by Larry MacDonald
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Housing Solution: Crashing Home Prices or Cheaper Mortgages?
Sky-high housing costs at insane DTI levels --like we *still* have in CA-- encourages people to take on massive levels of debt they will never pay off, and to become captive to the banking and real estate industry. This "stimulates" the economy, when people must work 2-3 jobs apiece and spend every dime they have to service that hungry 'gator.
What do you people think would happen if people stopped getting mortgages at 10-11X HH incomes? Utter chaos, desolation... Max Max, that's what! Why... without monster mortgages people might begin... (*gasp*) SAVING again --the Horror! The absolute worst outcome for our economy is for housing along the bubble coasts to come down to a level truly affordable for working or middle-class family incomes. We must do *anything* to prevent this!
Please write your Congresscritter and demand that they man those ramparts!
MORE BAILOUT SCHEMES to protect high prices & executive bonuses!
MORE ARTIFICIALLY CHEAP MONEY from the Fed!
MORE COMPLICATED, DODGY LOANS to help prop up those prices!
The Shallowest Generation
Baby boomers have footed the bill for trillions of dollars in US foreign aid for decades - tell me what other country has done even a fraction of that?
Baby boomers have paid for the 'war on poverty' by the Great Society - just look at the great standard of living the 'poor' people have in this country. As one person in India trying to get into the US said "I want to live in a country where the poor people are fat".
This hardly sounds like selfishness to me."</i>
Oh, Lordy... so many fictions, where to start?
Boomers did not actually *pay* for any of the above, which is one of the reasons why per-capita government and personal debt levels are at all-time highs, as the author has already pointed out.
Aid to the poor --aka old school "socialism"-... went out of vogue during the Reagan Administration ('Welfare Cadillac Queens' and whatnot) and social program defunding accelerated under following administrations including Clinton's (welfare reform). Unfortunately, corporate socialism and unchecked military spending more than made up for any savings, by a huge margin.
As a Gen-Xer, I have been geniunely "poor", as in one unemployment or min-wage paycheck away from homelessness --and not for laziness, lack of skills, education or willingness to take menial jobs, either. I doubt many non-blue collar/minority Boomers can relate, hence the warped view of the "great standard of living" U.S. poor supposedly enjoy.
Boomers were born into an America of broadly shared prosperity, virtually free higher education, cheap housing and medical care, high manufacturing output, a large trade surplus, an expanding middle class, and an almost debt-free government.
Boomers are leaving my (and future generations) with prosperity for the very few, sky-high college costs mostly financed with debt, a massive housing bubble, the most expensive per-capita medical costs ever, a shrinking manufacturing base, an enormous trade deficit, a shrinking middle class, and government in hock to the tune of $11 Trillion + $53Trillion more in future unfunded liabilities.
I wish I had written this article. Kudos to the author for a job well done, and the courage to tell it like it really is, without pulling any punches.
Fed Losing Credibility?
The Biggest Bubble of Them All
I read the article, and stand by my original assertion: no WEAPONS-GRADE uranium found in Iraq to date.
"WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The United States secretly shipped out of Iraq more than 500 tons of LOW-GRADE uranium dating back to the Saddam Hussein era, the Pentagon said Monday.
...He said yellowcake uranium is a commonly traded commodity used for nuclear power generation. It is NOT ENRICHED and cannot be used without first going through a complicated enrichment process, he said, but because of the unstable nature of Iraq, the United States and the Iraqi government decided it should be moved out of that country. Iraq has no nuclear power generating plants."
The Biggest Bubble of Them All
Despite what you may have gleaned from listening exclusively to Fox News, Rush and Laura Ingraham, we never found any weapons-grade uranium or other WMDs in post-war Iraq. Pre-war Iraq was also one of the least radicalized and most secular Arab-dominated countries... until we invaded it. The supposed "link" to OBL has also been conclusively discredited. The two men clearly detested one another. But then, reality has a known liberal bias, so facts don't count to the "Base".
Yes, Saddam was an evil murderous dictator... in a world full of evil murderous dictators. Where to draw the line? Are we to be the world's policeman for all foreign governments?
"Now...about the bubbles facing the U.S. -- we have a bubble of moral bankruptness that is causing MANY of our troubles:
1) People complain about the HUGE cost of healthcare? The spread of STDs, early and unwed pregnancies, drug and alcohol addictions, obesity, and more...are ALL due at least in part to moral character issues."
Uh-huh... so STDs, unplanned pregnancies, drug & alcohol addiction was completely unkown to pre-New Deal America, then? People in previous centuries must have been angels, I suppose. And the fact that 2/3rds of healthcare costs go to bureacracy, lobbying, advertising, malpractice insurance and end-of-life care is totally irrelevant too.
You do have a point on obesity; however, I suspect that the Green Revolution and the resulting abundance of cheap, high-sugar foods has a little more to do with that.
"2) Worried about government debt? Maybe we should reconsider entitlement government -- again, a moral and character issue! Those who are mentally and physically able should earn their own way. Period. The government as an entitlement machine fosters this moral delinquency that is our entitlement nation! We won't shrink the national debt by remaining on this socialist path. And incidentally, has any people ever retained their freedom by continually expanding their dependence on government? By very definition, it is impossible to do so!!"
Wow, finally a statement I can (mostly) agree with. However, I suspect that "SCC" --like many neocons-- does *not* include Wall Street bailouts, discretionary military expansionist spending, or corrupt no-bid government contracts as a form of "entitlement"...
U.S. Socialism is only for the rich & powerful, dont'cha know.
Hottest Potato in Washington: The Homeowner Bailout Plan
Ahhh... the "choosy beggar" syndrome. Here's a thought: if underwater borrowers don't want to accept some taxpayer profit-sharing as part of a bailout on taxpayers' dime --F*** 'em. That alone should weed out a huge chunk of the greedbag speculator component.
Return of Weimar Monetary Policies?
Actually, it should be, "this Monday, October 13".
The Next Bubble?
Actually, not true. Quite a few practical uses for gold, including non-corrosive electrical contacts (your PC likely has quite a few of them). By contrast, there truly is no "intrinsic value" for fiat currency --aside from the value of the paper it is printed on.
In any case, it's not the "practical uses" for gold that has fueled its meteoric rise over the past 6 years. It is gold's perceived value as an inflationary hedge and "safe haven" for preserving your purchasing power during financial crises --such as the one we're experiencing now.
You cannot easily "debase" gold by "printing" a lot more of it at will. It has to be mined, and cannot be produced everywhere on earth. It's recent rise reflects (well justified) insecurity about the financial system and fiat currency, not speculators' sudden interest in the metal. Its inherent scarcity renders it enemy #1 of inflationists and monetarist gamblers everywhere, which is a good reason why prudent investors should always have some.
The Unwinding of the Moral Hazard Trade
The government SHOULD leave such "investors" out in the cold. In fact it should not be bailing out *anyone*, barring FDIC/NCUA-insured retail depositors.
Why should being rich and politically connected automatically guarantee a taxpayer bailout? Is that what you call "capitalism"... I must have missed class the day they taught socialism-for-the-rich = free-market capitalism.
Global Coordinated Rate Cut: Nice Try, but the Party Is Over
MS was predicting a housing/credit-bubble induced worldwide recession 3+ years ago. Feel free to trawl his archives if you don't believe it: globaleconomicanalysis.../
The only major point on which he and like minded bloggers differed was whether or not it would be an inflationary or deflationary recession.
Home Ownership: The Ideal That Refuses to Die
Uhhh.. point taken, but I think what you mean here is the ILLUSION of homeownership. If you take out a 107% LTV NINJA loan, you "own" *nothing*. In fact, you very likely owe more than the place is worth, as 16% of the country now does --and rising.
In any case, based on the personal testimonials published daily in the local RE propaganda rags (known as "newspapers"... it seems that (_gasp_) RENTING is a fate WORSE THAN DEATH for some people. Many FBs seem to feel that paying 3X rent for the same damned house is far preferable to renting and thus becoming an Untouchable / social leper.
Fed Funds Rate Irony
"You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means" --Inigo Montoya
The current Fed chairman wholeheartedly believes that the Great Depression was caused by deflation --or rather, the Hoover-era Fed's "allowing" deflation to take root-- and does not assign any special importance to the massive overleveraging and stock market gambling that preceded the 1929 crash.
Naturally, if one refuses to recognize the *cause* of a market panic and assigns all the blame to a *symptom*, then the Fed's actions might SEEM ironic, even though they are not.
It is also interesting that your chart only goes back to 2000 vs. say 1980, which would show that today's 2% is still shockingly LOW by historical standards.
Don't Blame Deregulation For This Crisis, It's All About Lack of Regulation
Examples of true business regulation that is actually *beneficial* to the average taxpayer and consumer:
Slavery outlawed
Child labor laws
Anti-racketeering laws
Anti-Trust laws
Anti-discrimination/in... laws
Anti-pollution laws
OSHA/worker safety laws
FDA food safety inspections
Examples of NON-regulation corporate handouts ("socialism for the rich") frequently mistaken for actual regulation:
TARP
Bear-Stearns/AIG bailouts
Nationalization of Phonie & Fraudie
Fed's 2% (soon to be 1% or 0%)
MID for non-owner-occupied flip houses, HELOCs and cash-out refis
Roubini Was Right
Yeah, Chris B is right on --Dow 36,000 here we come!!
What's Wrong with This Suggested Solution to the Mortgage Mess?