View Full Version : Hell Day
SassyLady
06-01-2012, 08:42 PM
Reality/Truth beginning to set in?
3475
Feeble hiring by U.S. employers in May roiled markets and dimmed the already-cloudy outlook for an economy that appears to be following Europe and Asia into a slowdown.
Employers added a seasonally adjusted 69,000 jobs last month, the smallest increase in a year, and estimates for the two previous months were lowered. The politically salient unemployment rate inched up to 8.2% from 8.1% in April, and the report immediately became a flash point in a presidential race focused on the candidates' job-creating credentials. President Barack Obama and Republican nominee Mitt Romney sparred over the numbers in back-to-back appearances where each made his case to voters.Stock markets tumbled on the report. The Dow Jones Industrial Average notched its worst showing of the year Friday, falling 274.88 points, or 2.2%, to 12118.57. Investors snapped up U.S. Treasury bonds instead, pushing down yields to the lowest level on record yet again. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note finished at 1.467%. Bond prices and yields move in opposite directions.
Friday's jobs numbers caught the White House and the Obama campaign by surprise.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303552104577440023931752902.html?m od=WSJ_Home_largeHeadline
Missileman
06-01-2012, 08:45 PM
Reality/Truth beginning to set in?
I read the actual unemployment rate is 14.8 when you figure in those who quit looking and those underemployed.
SassyLady
06-01-2012, 08:54 PM
I read the actual unemployment rate is 14.8 when you figure in those who quit looking and those underemployed.
Or those that have transferred to disability. Imagine what it really is.
fj1200
06-01-2012, 10:43 PM
Reality/Truth beginning to set in?
Naw, just another notch in the BO "achievement" tally.
Kathianne
06-01-2012, 11:00 PM
Lead off article at RealClearMarkets:
http://money.msn.com/top-stocks/post.aspx?post=cfdbd09f-5ed0-41ee-80bd-9de89e5e007c
Economy is worse than you think
The global slowdown infecting Europe and China has hit the US. But there's good news: Investors now have a beautiful opportunity to profit from the chaos.
By Anthony Mirhaydari (http://money.msn.com/keyword.aspx?author=x97589e2e9b10002ed083e4c0176d7 532412752a47e42b982) 12 hours ago
It has begun. After months of warning that a warmer-than-normal winter was skewing the economic data to the upside, seasonal factors are reversing. What's being revealed is an American economy suffering from the same ailment that's already affected Europe and China. The May payroll report came in well under expectations as cyclical, goods-producing payrolls fell for the first time in nine months. Factory activity is slowing. Home sales are cooling just as more distressed properties hit the market.
It's an ugly picture. But Wall Street is already looking ahead to new stimulus measures from the Federal Reserve at its June 19 meeting and the inflation that another round of money printing will create. That's boosting the fortunes of precious metals and related mining stocks, as expected. But it also sets the stage for another bout of confidence-crushing inflation.
To summarize, things are getting worse now. They are likely to get better, at least for stocks, once the Fed and the European Central Bank yield to the inevitable and unleash another flood of cheap cash. But the tailwind should last only for a few months before deep-rooted inflationary pressures (from a drop in labor productivity and an increasing in rental housing demand) and speculative fever (hitting food and fuel prices) damage consumer confidence again.
http://media-social.s-msn.com/images/blogs/00120065-0000-0000-0000-000000000000_00000065-0763-0000-0000-000000000000_20120601162101_060112_income.png
This was the dynamic that has helped short-circuit growth over the past few months -- a repeat of the dynamic that played out in mid-2011 -- keeping real, inflation-adjusted disposable income down at 2010 levels via higher prices on things like gasoline. With work-based pay declining (down 0.2% last month, down two of the past three months) people have been drawing on savings and using credit cards again to maintain spending.
This can't last.
Wall Street expects that a round of quantitative easing -- which is simply printing money and using it to buy long-term bonds in the open market to push down interest rates -- will ignite a big rally in risky assets as traders pull cash out of bonds and into stocks. The Fed hopes this will encourage fresh economic growth via the wealth effect from higher stock prices and lower borrowing costs.
While this strategy worked great in late 2008 and early 2009, it's not working so well anymore, because circumstances have changed. Fear over the eurozone crisis has already pushed interest rates very low, with the 10-year Treasury yield dropping into the 1.5% range. In early 2011, the 10-year yield hit a high of 3.8%. Credit is already cheap enough.
http://media-social.s-msn.com/images/blogs/00120065-0000-0000-0000-000000000000_00000065-0763-0000-0000-000000000000_20120601162031_060112_inflation.png
Also, inflation continues to creep higher. Each iteration of the Fed's policy easing pushes inflation to new post-recession highs before consumers fall away, and inflation drops as the economy slows again. Rinse and repeat.
The risk is that the Fed will lose control and encourage a round of nasty stagflation as inflation pops, the economy slows and the Fed is left powerless. That's because its actions are cumulative. The money supply (the M2 measure) has increased 33% to nearly $10 trillion since the recession started in late 2007. Yet the economy, in inflation-adjusted terms, has only now expanded over its pre-recession peak.
To summarize, since 2007 we have nearly 8 million fewer full-time workers and the economy is only 1.2% larger, yet we have trillions of dollars in extra cash floating around and the lowest interest rates in human history.
Without even getting to the problems in Europe (structurally flawed monetary union, banking woes, uncompetitive economies) or China (overdependence on exports, bad real-estate loans), the situation is scary. It's scary because after all that's been done via stimulus measures, we have so little to show for it.
Eventually, the economy will seize and policymakers will be out of options. We're not quite there yet, since overall inflation has cooled over the past few months, giving the Fed and ECB room to maneuver. They might not be so lucky next time...
It goes on like that, sentence after depressing sentence. Good news though for people with money, at the end.
fj1200
06-01-2012, 11:03 PM
Lead off article at RealClearMarkets:
http://money.msn.com/top-stocks/post.aspx?post=cfdbd09f-5ed0-41ee-80bd-9de89e5e007c
It goes on like that, sentence after depressing sentence. Good news though for people with money, at the end.
The Fed can't do any more. The fiscal failures are piling up too high.
SassyLady
06-01-2012, 11:04 PM
One of the reasons why I'm thinking of renting out my home. The rental market is rising and it is a good way to ride out the current situation until market stabilizes.
I'm moving in with dmp and Mary. :coffee:
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