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Old 15-08-11, 01:35 AM
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Default World Bank chief Zoellick says markets in danger zone

World Bank chief Zoellick says markets in danger zone

BBC News - World Bank chief Zoellick says markets in danger zone

World markets have entered a "new danger zone", the president of the World Bank has warned.

Robert Zoellick said investors had lost confidence in the economic leadership of several key countries.

Speaking at the Asia Society's annual dinner in Sydney, he also said that the global economy was going through a "multi-speed recovery".

Developing countries were now the source of growth and opportunity, Mr Zoellick said.

In the past two weeks, global stock markets have suffered massive falls on fears about the state of leading economies.

The US had its AAA debt rating cut for the first time in its history by the rating agency Standard & Poor's, following a long and bitter row in Congress over a plan to raise the US debt ceiling to ensure the country avoided a default.

In Europe, rumours emerged that France would also have its top-notch rating downgraded, although this was widely denied, while Italy announced its second austerity plan in as many months.
'Fragilities of recovery'

"What's happened in the past couple of weeks is there is a convergence of some events in Europe and the United States that has led many market participants to lose confidence in economic leadership of some of the key countries," Mr Zoellick said.

"I think those events combined with some of the other fragilities in the nature of recovery have pushed us into a new danger zone. I don't say those words lightly."

He said he was making the point so that policy makers would take it seriously.

On the US, he said markets were not afraid that the world's biggest economy faced an imminent problem, but that they had got used to the US "playing a key role in the economic system and leadership".

The eurozone faced more serious problems, he said, with a lot of member states "moving from drama to trauma".

But he said Australia was in a much better position than other developed countries because of structural reforms it had already undertaken.

On China, he said the appreciation of the yuan would would help reduce inflationary pressures in the country.
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Old 15-08-11, 01:38 AM
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HFT 2.0: Wall Street Gyrations Negatively Impacts Main Street

By The Curmudgeon

http://www.fiendbear.com/Curmudgeon6.html

Because High Frequency Trading (HFT) between computers has replaced the specialist system of making a market in individual securities, the global equity markets are no longer orderly or in any way rationale. Nor do markets adhere to time tested techniques, like technical analysis, macro or micro fundamentals, sentiment indicators, historical price patterns, time cycles/ seasonality, etc.

As stated in a previous FiendBear article (http://www.fiendbear.com/Curmudgeon5.html),

Americans don't have a chance “investing" - a term which has become an oxymoron. They have nothing to base their investment decisions on now, with computer generated RISK ON/ RISK OFF trades dominating the action. This results in tight correlations of asset classes, which defeats the diversification purpose of asset allocation.

Conventional wisdom suggests that "investors" just buy a variety of index funds. And suffer through two 50% declines (2000-2002 and 2007-2009)? Give me a break!

When the computers powered by technical traders take over, these "investors" see their nest eggs shrink by thousands of dollars in minutes for no valid reason! The whole market has become one big "flash crash" waiting to happen! The up and down moves this week tell the story of computer trading run amok! How long can the majority of "investors" reasonably be expected to endure the fear this extreme volatility has caused?

It's easy for a trader on Wall Street to shrug off a 5% or 6% loss in a day, because he or she is trading other people's money. It's not as easy for a Baby Boomer hoping to retire in a few years (or already retired) watch the losses mount and assume the market will just go back up eventually. The last 10 years have been flat for the S&P 500, despite all the up and down market gyrations. Do we have to wait another 10 years? That will be too late for many boomers in retirement!

This is ultimately a very bad thing for public companies and the U.S. economy as a whole. While Wall Street investment banks have plenty of cash to invest, surely public companies would be better off if Main Street was also eager to invest in stocks.

Main Street was "scared straight" after the 2008-2009 meltdown, which resulted in $200B net redemptions from US equity mutual funds. And just as fund inflows started to pick up this year, the market has been hit with a very sharp decline - without much, if any change in the fundamentals. What's worse, there were no technical warning flags (check the volume, breadth, and other technical indicators on July 21- the day before this decline started)!

This sort of volatility will also have spillover effects on the U.S. economy. It's always scary to see the Dow fall by 500 (or more) points repeatedly -- even if it rises the next day. Because you have to wonder: what if it doesn't rise tomorrow, but continues to fall? This sort of erratic stock market behavior is terrible for consumer confidence. Americans worry that their savings aren't safe, so they'll likely cut spending, just in case.

The problem stock market is now more like a stadium in which a big game is being played than a legitimate marketplace where people can invest in companies they believe will grow market share, sales and earnings.



CAVEAT EMPTOR!



The Curmudgeon

Curmudgeon is a retired investment professional. He has been involved in financial markets since 1968 (yes, he cut his teeth on the 1968-1974 bear market), became an SEC Registered Investment Advisor in 1995, and received the Chartered Financial Analyst designation from AIMR (now CFA Institute) in 1996. He managed hedged equity and alternative (non-correlated) investment accounts for clients from 1992-2005.
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Old 18-08-11, 03:48 AM
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The rise of the new gilded age – Massive market volatility is a dramatic sign of an unhealthy economy – 14 of the 28 biggest percent declines since 1950 in the S&P 500 have come after 2008. Two of those volatile days have occurred in August of 2011.


Massive stock market volatility is not a good sign for the economy and like an EKG is telling us something is troubling the heart of the nation. The most tumultuous times in the stock market have occurred during times of great economic uncertainty. August of 2011 has quickly brought back the troubling memories of 2008 and 2009 when the economy was melting down like the Wicked Witch of the West. For the middle class the recent stock market rally was nothing more than a sideshow. The real underlying economy has been falling apart like pulled pork for years so it is no surprise that we are witnessing massive volatility in the stock market yet again. Drops of 600 points followed by surges of 500 points are not healthy. What one would expect out of a mature economy is steady and solid growth, not volatility that is reminiscent of a hot streak in Las Vegas. That is however a large part of the problem with our current financial system. You have many investment banks that thrive on this kind of volatility making billions of dollars on options, derivatives, and futures even if these tools increase the underlying risk in the real economy. For all of the drama of the last week, the markets were changed only by one percent but the rapid reversal is signifying that market volatility is back in fashion again.

Big losses during economic bad times
Below is a chart of the biggest percent declines for the S&P 500 since the 1950s. If you have any doubt that this is the worst crisis since the Great Depression this should put those doubts to rest:


Out of the top twenty-eight biggest percentage decline days fourteen occurred from 2008 and after. 50 percent of the most dramatic days for the S&P 500 (in the last 60 years) have occurred from 2008 onward. In fact, eleven of those days occurred in 2008 alone. One day from 2009 makes the list but 2011 already has two of those days (both in August by the way). These declines happened during the pangs of the Great Recession. The fact that we now have two 2011 dates back on the chart is not a good thing. This kind of massive market volatility reflects the uncertainty being present in the real economy where people make real things and consume real products. The Federal Reserve is running out of options and people are losing confidence in a central bank that is primarily concerned at protecting the interests of the too big to fail banks. These are the same banks that benefitted and largely caused the systemic risk that we are now facing. Where is the debate about real and serious financial reform in all this political theatre?
Market sentiment is shifting rapidly as the VIX indicator, a measure of market volatility is racing up rapidly:

The VIX is now back to levels seen in April when European contagion and debt problems were going viral but also shows a trend that is looking like 2008. Things are more problematic for middle class Americans since the unemployment rate is 9.2 percent and the underemployment rate is much higher, nearly twice the headline rate. What is missed in all the talk of jobs is the fact that many Americans have taken up jobs in lower paying fields and are thus counted as fully employed. This is a dark reality of the new era of low wage capitalism:

Source: NELP
This is a very important chart because it tracks jobs lost starting in 2008 and what has been added in the so-called recovery. Over 3.5 million higher wage jobs were lost from January of 2008 to February of 2010. Since that time, only 179,000 higher wage jobs have been added (or 5 percent of what has been lost). Of the 3.2 million jobs lost in the mid-wage industries only 468,000 jobs have been added. Yet the dominant growth comes from the lower-wage sectors. 2 million jobs have been lost but 613,000 have been added. What the chart doesn’t show however is how many of those who lost higher wage jobs are now finding themselves taking jobs in the lower-wage industries. This is simply more evidence showing the crushing blow being leveled at the middle class.
So what are we to make of this market volatility? First, the reality is that most Americans do not own any sizeable amount of stocks to make a difference. The majority of the American public is simply trying to get by with a paycheck from a job. Data from SNAP which tracks food stamp usage shows that 46 million Americans are now receiving food assistance. This is a group that isn’t tracking a hedge fund portfolio but is simply trying to get by to the next day. It is amazing how many fellow Americans are one day away from being put out on the street with no food. Yet the system is still eagerly trying to bailout more of the banking giants as if they needed more support. The volatility is coming from a financial system that simply does not reflect the interests and the success of the economy. Just remember the example of the billionaire hedge fund manager that made billions by betting on the failure of Americans and housing. At some point these individuals begin hoping that demise is imminent and may even create securities that exacerbate this problem. Their profits are interlinked with the failures in the real economy.
Bubbles are not normal but if we look at the S&P 500 over the last couple of decades we get a story of two massive bubbles:

It doesn’t take a charting genius to figure out where the volatility entered the system. If we do not reform the banking system why are we to expect anything different? This crushing volatility that brings back memories of 2008 should come as no surprise. In fact, we should expect the same bailout talk of quantitative easing part three from the Federal Reserve and more politicians helping out their banking colleagues. Most people know the script at this point and market volatility is not a good sign for the majority of Americans.
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"Inter arma silent Musae"--when the weapons speak, the muses fall silent.

An't nanum hearm deth, doth hwaet ye willath.

It is forbidden to kill; therefore all murderers are punished
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Old 20-08-11, 03:13 PM
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Armageddon Can Wait

By Bill Bonner

Armageddon Can Wait

08/19/11 Poitou, France – Until August 15, 1971, wealth was tallied in units of a real and natural thing – gold. It measured out the world’s other real things – its resources and its output. Its main advantage was that it couldn’t be diddled. That turned the authorities against it; they couldn’t make more of it.

Nuestra Senora de Atocha, a Spanish galleon, sank in a storm off the Florida coast in 1622. When it was found in the 1970s, its treasure of gold doubloons was just as valuable as it was when the ship left Havana 350 years before.

But, post 1971, we have a new, avant-garde money system. Wealth is counted up in pieces of paper…or as electronic ‘information.’ Each unit has no real value of its own. It only represents a claim against real goods and services. And each year, it purchases fewer of them.

What is most remarkable about this freakish new money system is that it is always on the road to Hell but never seems to get there. Since 1971, paper currencies have lost value at a breakneck speed. You’d think their necks would be broken by now. In 1972, we bought a gallon of gasoline for 25 cents. Now, it is 16 times that much. Gold has gone up 50 times…for a 98% loss to the dollar holder. If this pattern continues for another 40 years, a gold doubloon will buy about what it does today. A dollar will buy nothing.

And then, along came S&P with more bad news: not only is the dollar disappearing, but if you lend money to the US government you might not get it back. The stock market took the news badly. But bond investors bought with even more lusty recklessness than before. It was as if they really didn’t want the money back anyway. Yields on US 10-year notes fell from around 3% to scarcely more than 2%, giving investors a negative real yield.

But the fall in yields should not come as a surprise. Japan’s government debt lost its Triple A status in 2002. Yields did not rise. Instead, they stayed between 1% and 2%. Then, last week, Japanese 10-year notes – IOUs of the most deeply indebted nation on earth – reached an all-time high. Yields fell below 1%, briefly.

You may think that investors have lost their minds. But no more than usual. It’s not the nominal rate that investors care about; it’s the real rate. For 20 years, stocks and property in Japan have gotten hammered. Bond buyers are the only ones who’ve made any money. Deflation takes prices down. Even a zero interest rate gives them a positive return. And it isn’t even taxable.

And now the US Fed follows in Japan’s footsteps. The Fed announced last week that it would continue to lend money for two more years, asking little more than a ‘thank you’ in return. Zero is the going rate at the Fed’s lending window – just as it is in Japan.

When Richard Nixon implemented his new monetary system, 4 decades ago, he set in motion a huge expansion in the world’s supply of cash and credit. Gold was limited. Paper money was left to run wild. Ben Bernanke famously announced how it worked in a 2002 speech, entitled “Deflation: Making Sure it Doesn’t Happen Here,” he explained:

…the US government has a technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many US dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost. By increasing the number of US dollars in circulation, or even by credibly threatening to do so, the US government can also reduce the value of a dollar in terms of goods and services, which is equivalent to raising the prices in dollars of those goods and services. We conclude that, under a paper-money system, a determined government can always generate higher spending and hence positive inflation.

Bernanke made it sound like a piece of cake. He should have appended a footnote. Inflating is easy when the credit cycle is expanding. When an economy transforms itself from grasshopper to ant, it gets harder. People switch from borrowing, spending and investing to exterminating debt and hoarding cash. That’s why none of the stimulus measures – fiscal or monetary – has done any significant good. And it is why no policy adjustment, short of debt cancellation or hyperinflation, will make any damned difference.

The whole situation is one for the history books. Four decades of paper money – with effectively no limit on credit expansion – have created mountains of debt in all the developed countries. Now, private sector debts are being sloughed off and asset prices wobble – making investors fearful and skittish. The more they sweat, the more they seek the safety of US Treasurys, and the lower interest rates go. Low rates delay Armageddon…if Japan is any indication…almost indefinitely. The economy continues on the road to Hell…and picks up speed. When it finally arrives, we don’t know. But we bet the price of gold will be higher when we find out.

Regards,

Bill Bonner
for The Daily Reckoning
__________________
"Patriotism means being loyal to your country all the time and to its government when it deserves it."-- Mark Twain

"Inter arma silent Musae"--when the weapons speak, the muses fall silent.

An't nanum hearm deth, doth hwaet ye willath.

It is forbidden to kill; therefore all murderers are punished
unless they kill in large numbers and to the sound of trumpets. -Voltaire

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