Tuesday, July 22, 2008

1

   Tuesday - Jul 22,  2008

8:30 AM ET:  Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank President Charles Plosser spoke on the economy and monetary policy early this morning. Plosser spoke out strongly for the Fed to take early action against rising inflation and that the Fed should not necessarily wait for financial markets to fully stabilize. The bottom line is that some regional Fed bank presidents are leading the charge to remove some of the Fed's currently easy monetary policy soon in order to fight inflation. There is even a hint that he sees some Fed officials as talking tough but not acting tough against inflation as needed. We can expect hotter debates on raising interest rates by a number of regional Fed presidents at the August 5 FOMC meeting.

Plosser is one of the first Fed district bank presidents to counter the argument that the Fed must wait on financial stability before raising rates.

"Keeping policy too accommodative for too long worsens our inflation problem. Inflation is already too high and inconsistent with our goal of - and responsibility to ensure - price stability. We will need to reverse course - the exact timing depends on how the economy evolves, but I anticipate the reversal will need to be started sooner rather than later. And I believe it will likely need to begin before either the labor market or the financial markets have completely turned around."

His outlook for inflation is well above the Fed's implicit comfort zone of 1-1/2 to 2 percent inflation. "My outlook is that headline personal consumption expenditure (PCE) inflation will remain near 4 percent in 2008, reflecting in part the increase in energy prices. I expect core PCE inflation to be around 2-1/2 percent this year." His outlook for 2009 is still above the Fed's preferences. "In 2009, as energy and other commodity prices level off, I expect both measures of inflation to be lower - in the 2 to 2-1/4 percent range by the end of next year - provided we set monetary policy appropriately to restrain inflation and keep inflation expectations well-anchored." Plosser emphasizes that the Fed has the resolve to keep inflation from coming unanchored as during the 1970s.

"I want to emphasize that what we have been seeing in the economy this past year, and in my own outlook going forward, is very different from the 1970s, because I see the Fed as committed to keeping inflation expectations well-anchored. I agree with a statement Fed Chairman Bernanke made in June that the Fed will strongly resist an erosion of longer-term inflation expectations, because an "unanchoring" of those expectations would be destabilizing for economic growth as well as inflation."

The Philly Fed president ends his speech by focusing on the importance of tracking headline inflation and basically challenging other Fed officials to back up their anti-inflation talk with action.

"Since energy price increases have been so persistent in recent years, I do believe more attention should now be paid to measures of headline inflation in setting monetary policy. I don't believe we can be sanguine that the behavior of core inflation will keep the public's inflation expectations well-anchored in the face of persistently high headline inflation. To keep inflation expectations anchored means that monetary policymakers will have to back up their words with action."

The latter are clearly fighting words by a regional Fed president. Expect a heated debate at the August 5 FOMC. -- R. Mark Rogers

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Fw: The World Will Not End - John Mauldin's Weekly E-Letter

 

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Thoughts from the Frontline Weekly Newsletter
The World Will Not End
by John Mauldin
July 18, 2008
Visit John's MySpace Page

In this issue:
The World Will Not End
Take a Deep Breath
9% Growth in Housing or a 4% Loss?
A Little Stress

Housing starts rose 9% and the market cheerleaders proclaimed that we have seen a bottom. But not if you look at the actual numbers. New unemployment claims were OK, but not if you look at the actual numbers. And inflation was simply ugly, no matter what numbers you look at. However, oil is down and there is reason to think it may have further to go on the downside. We cover all this and more, as we first look at why the world is not going to end.

Take a Deep Breath

It is easy to find bad news these days, and the torrent that seems to keep coming can ruin a person's summer (or winter, for my southern hemisphere readers). The credit crisis, as noted last week, is nowhere near an end. Housing, as we will see, is actually getting worse. Foreclosures, auctions, government bailouts, higher taxes, inflation, the price of energy and food - the list goes on and on.

I thought, since so many think of me as a rather bearish person, I would show you my more optimistic side. Yes, I am bearish in the short term, for reasons I have documented at length in this letter. But long-term I am a wild-eyed optimist.

With all the negative news thrown at us today, why is the United States not in the midst of a deep recession? How, many of you ask, can I be so sanguine as to suggest a milder recession and a Muddle Through Economy?

First, things are somewhat different now than in the '70s and early '80s. Back then, a great deal of the US and developed world economies and their resulting employment were linked to manufacturing, which was largely geared to domestic sales. Exports were a much smaller part of the economy for most businesses. When the economy and consumption slowed down, manufacturers laid employees off rather rapidly. Unemployment would soar and a V-shaped recession would occur.

Now, the number of people employed in manufacturing is less in percentage terms than it was back then, and more of what is produced in the developed world is bought by a growing developing world. Exports from the US are booming. The number of TEUs (the large containers on ships: Twenty-foot Equivalent Units) moving through the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach is up 23% in May year over year and up 26% since the beginning of the year. Because of the weak dollar, imports are down by 7% year to date. It is export growth that is keeping the US from sliding into the usual deep recession.

So, not only is manufacturing not down as in usual cycles, it is up quite handsomely for many products, except of course for automobiles, which are not just in a recession but facing a depression. But that growth in exports is keeping unemployment from going to 9%.

But let's take a longer-term outlook. My view has been, and is, that we are in for a period of very tepid growth that will last through at least 2009. We have to work our way through the after effects of the twin bubbles of housing and the credit crisis bursting. There is no magic Fed wand. That simply takes time. No (rational) government or Fed policy is going to change the facts on the ground (although they can make things worse). But, in the fullness of time, we will in fact get through this.

If you look back over the decades, things are getting better. Goldman Sachs estimates about 70 million people a year worldwide are entering the "middle class" and that by 2030 two billion people will be in a far better condition than the poverty they experience today. That will also keep demand steady for all sorts of products and services produced in the developed world, even as our population (except for the US) declines.

The old joke is that a recession is when your neighbor loses his job and a depression is when you lose yours. And a rise in unemployment and lower corporate profits are no laughing matter. But the simple trend is that we will adjust and free markets in America and the world will grow, as they have always done.

My daughter and business partner Tiffani is getting married in three weeks on 08-08-08. Next year there will be 2.3 million weddings in the US, at an average cost of $30,000 (we have helped increase the average this year considerably). That is $72 billion on weddings. And many of those new families start with the need to find a place to live, furnish a home, and build their nest.

Tiffani and her fiancée are an example. They have bought a home at a pretty good price in an older neighborhood that is fast becoming trendy, as there are a lot of wonderful restorations and teardowns. They have lived rather simply and find they "need" all sorts of items to make their house a home. Each day sees another delivery of gifts from their registry and a smile on her face.

(Sidebar: When I first got married I seem to remember getting three toasters and not a lot of other things we needed. Now, couples register online for what they need and want, and when an item is bought it is taken off the list. How cool is that?)

Last year a record 4.3 million babies were born in the US. Each of them will need all sorts of "stuff" - food, education, and places to live - in (hopefully) 20-25 years.

Yes, consumers are cutting back, but they are still buying the basics. (See more below.) Manufacturing in the US is starting to make a comeback, with the lower dollar and management driven to compete globally. In free-market economies, every economic slowdown is followed by a period of solid growth driven by innovation. The point is that life goes on. Births, weddings, eating, living and enjoying friends and family. It is all part of the cycle.

The next 20 years are going to see the most powerful wave of technologically driven growth the world has ever seen. The accelerating pace of technological change did not slow down last century through multiple world wars, scores of "minor" wars, a depression, all sorts of natural disasters, and an unbelievable amount of government folly. Why should that trend stop now?

As we add two billion people to the middle class, we are also going to bring the internet to even billions more. The explosion in information and creativity that we have seen in the last 20 years will double and double again. A small percentage of those people are going to invent amazing new technologies, new drugs, and create companies that will make life better for all of us.

That is one reason that technological growth will continue to accelerate. We will simply be throwing more people at an ever wider array of problems, and they will be able to share their discoveries at the speed of light.

We are on the verge of a revolution in biotechnology that is going to truly revolutionize medicine. No one in 20 years will look back on today as the good old days. And it will probably create yet another stock market bubble, but that is a story for another letter.

US diplomats are talking to Iran. Iraq may actually work out. In most places of the world, most people are better off today than they were 20 years ago. There is still a lot of progress to be made, but the point is that we are making it. There is a ton of opportunity for those prepared to look for it. It may not be in the usual places, it may not be where we would like it to be, but it is there. World GDP will have roughly doubled (or more) by the end of the next decade.

Yes, I know there are a lot of problems. Really big scary ones. I write about a lot of them all the time. But go back to any year ending in 8 for the last 100 years. When were there not problems? And in most times and places, the problems were bigger. And in the next ten years? There will be lots of problems. Some will be the same old problems and some will be new. I am not certain why mankind seems to have a need to find new ways to create mischief and lose money when the old ways work so well. But those too will pass.

So, when you read about current problems - and I will point some out in the next few pages - just remember that things will work out. Markets will adjust, and the world will be a better place. Things will work out better for you as an individual if you anticipate the problems and make the proper adjustments, as much as possible, in advance.

The next 20 years are going to be the most exciting time that the human race has experienced. Yes, there will be issues, but we will adjust. That is what we do. And now, let's look at some of the adjustments going on in the markets.

9% Growth in Housing or a 4% Loss?

When the news flashed on my screen that housing construction had jumped by 9%, I raised an eyebrow. That did not make sense given other data I was looking at. Immediately the media was full of talking heads and stories about the turnaround in housing and the end of the slowdown. I must admit to being a little confused.

Then we find the rest of the story. Asha Bangalore from Northern Trust actually took the time to read the details. It turns out that New York City had a change in its construction codes, and that affected what is considered a housing start in the Northeast, especially in multi-family construction, which "jumped" 42% because of the code change. If it were not for the change, housing starts nationwide would have fallen by 4%. Because of the code change,  housing starts jumped 102% in the Northeast. However, single-family starts nationwide declined 9.3% in June, to an annual rate of 647,000 units. That level of single-family starts is the lowest since January 1991. Look at the following chart from Northern Trust. Does this look like a 9% increase?

Housing Starts

More Government Statistical Fun

Each week we see a release of initial unemployment claims. This week initial claims jumped to 366,000 on a seasonally adjusted basis. But what are the real underlying numbers? Every Thursday, I get a thorough review of the actual data from John Vogel, going back and looking at trends over the past 8 years in the non-seasonally adjusted data. That can be more interesting.

This week the actual number of initial claims of unemployment was 475,954, compared to 383,839 last year (2007). And the number of actual claims has been trending up. Taking the three first weeks of the current quarter, we are still below the recession years of 2001-3; but the trend is not what you would like to see, and given the decline in consumer spending (see below) it is likely to continue to trend up.

The actual data is very "noisy" and jumps all over the place, hence the use of seasonally adjusted numbers for public consumption. Economy.com thinks the difficulty may be in accounting for auto-related plant shutdowns in the seasonally adjusted number. Vogel speculates that employers are no longer waiting until the end of the quarter to lay personnel off but are doing it at any time in the quarter.

Given the issues, it is likely we will see a rise in the number back toward the 400,000 range (SA) that we saw earlier last month. But just be aware that there can be something really different in the actual numbers.

Below is a graph from economy.com showing where the employment problems are. The majority of the states are seeing payroll employment drop.

Employment Is Falling Sharply in South and West

Fannie and Freddie and Bears, Oh My!

Let me see if I have this straight. It is OK to short oil but not OK to short Fannie Mae? Or is it that it is OK to be long Freddie Mac but not long oil?

Oh, those evil speculators. As Barry Ritholtz points out, why is it that management blames speculators when their stock is being pummeled, when the usual reason is that management made some very bad decisions?

And let's not forget the importance of rumors. We all know rumors can bring down a stock. So, let's start one. Let's start a whisper campaign that Goldman Sachs is going to have to take down $100 billion in losses next quarter, and then we can all short the stock. What would happen is that we would all lose our money when we had to cover, because there was no basis in fact.

The best way for a company to deal with short selling is to increase earnings and blow the shorts out of the water. Good management trumps rumors.

This week the SEC has made it more difficult to short Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and other large financial firms. They are actually going to enforce the rule already on the books that says you must actually be able to deliver the shares you are shorting.

"Naked" short selling has been against the rules for some time. (That is, short selling a stock that you cannot actually borrow to sell.) Institutions make rather tidy sums offering the shares they own to short sellers for a price.

Making it more difficult to short Fannie or Freddie is not going to do one thing for their balance sheets, which is the real source of their problem. As former Fed governor William Poole said a few weeks ago, they are basically insolvent. Five-year bonds sold by Fannie Mae yield 90 basis points (0.9%) more than US Treasuries of similar maturity, almost double the average over the past 10 years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That spread, which translates to $90,000 in extra annual interest per $10 million of bonds, exists even after Treasury Secretary Paulson signaled the US would ensure the debt is repaid by offering larger amounts of backup financing and potential capital infusions.

Given Paulson's guarantee, why would you buy US bonds when you can get the same guarantee and almost 1% more?

Fannie and Freddie are private companies where the profits go to shareholders and losses go to taxpayers. There are a lot of people (including your humble analyst) who have complained about the current set-up. Basically, they were allowed to leverage their capital beyond what even your most leveraged hedge fund would think prudent. How could the value of homes go down? Leverage up and show huge profits, pay monster salaries and bonuses to management who did nothing but increase risk, and spend $170 million on lobbyists to make sure that no one changes the rules.

Paulson had no realistic choice but to do what he did. But the true point is, he should have never had to make that choice. A real regulator would not have let them leverage their capital to the extent they did. If taxpayers have to invest one penny before shareholders are wiped out, then there is no justice. Fannie and Freddie should be broken up into several much smaller firms which are not too big too fail, their shares floated to new owners, and taxpayers should get preferred shares until they are made whole. And the implicit, but now explicit, guarantee should be taken away.

And while we are on regulators, it is time for Bernanke and Paulson and SEC chairman Cox to force the credit default swap (CDS) market to move to a regulated exchange. If there is a major risk to my happy news scenario at the beginning of this e-letter, it is the credit default swap market collapsing. That is why Bear Stearns had to be rescued, and why other firms like them are too big to fail.

If the CDS markets were on an exchange like any futures contract, Bear could have been allowed to fail. It would have been a sad day, but the Fed would not have had to risk $30 billion. Greenspan was wrong when he said these derivatives did not need to be regulated. They are good for the markets, and I think they are necessary. But let's put them on an exchange where there is clear transparency and the entire economy of Western Civilization is not put at risk by some cowboys who decide to leverage up.

A Little Stress

This is my first really big wedding. As I said, it is as carefully planned as the Normandy invasion and about as expensive. I can really understand now when brides talk about stress. But poor Tiffani has had a triple dose. She moves next week into their new home (kind of). But then, there is not a lot to move.

Of course, we have also started on our new book project, and the response to our survey has been rather large. For those of you who want to do personal interviews, we will get back to you. As a reminder, we are doing on online survey about investors of all sizes and backgrounds. If you take the ten minutes to fill out this thought-provoking survey, we will give you a link to a recent speech I made about what I think is a new asset class that is being created because of the credit crisis. The link is here: http://survey.frontlinethoughts.com/index.php?sid=12431&lang=en

But then the real stress started a few weeks ago when FINRA (the former NASD) called and said it is time for an audit. We get one about every 3-4 years. It is about as stressful as any part of the investment business, and Tiffani has to deal with 98% of it, as Dad is clueless. So, she has spent very long hours getting ready for the audit. Yesterday, after three and a half days, we had our exit interview, and it went about as well as we could have hoped. But the timing would have been better either earlier or after the honeymoon. Oh, well.

We have had an audit from some regulator every year for the last five years. Just part of the business, but it does create some stress. We are due for an NFA audit sometime soon. I just hope they do not come when Tiffani is on her honeymoon in some fairly remote places in South Africa.

Below is a picture of Tiffani and Ryan in front of their new home. Dad is proud. You can see a lot more pictures (some VERY funny ones) if you care, at their wedding web site at http://www.fatedlove888.com/Site/888.html

Tiffani and Ryan

It is time to hit the send button. I see a Batman movie with the kids in my future. It should be a great weekend.

Your having fun being an optimistic analyst,

John Mauldin
John@FrontLineThoughts.com

Copyright 2008 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved

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Friday, July 18, 2008

2


Fed's Hoenig Finds Bitter Inflation in Colorado Chocolate Plant

By Vivien Lou Chen

July 18 (Bloomberg) -- For Thomas Hoenig, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, chocolate isn't as sweet as it used to be: The cost of almost every ingredient has gone up.

``Commodities across the board have pressured us,'' said Bryan Merryman, the chief financial officer of Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory Inc., as he led Hoenig on a two-hour tour of the company's Durango, Colorado, factory this week. ``There are a lot of pressures in our system that we haven't seen before.''

Nestled on the western slope of the Rocky Mountains about 400 miles (643.6 kilometers) southwest of Denver, the 53,000- square-foot (4,770-square-meter) factory offers a glimpse of how Fed policy makers gather anecdotes that shape their views on the economy. Hoenig, one of 12 regional Fed presidents, said he takes road trips two or three times a year. The factory visit supports his worries about inflation, he said.

``When you see a business like this one, where everything it uses has been accelerating in price, you see what it does to a business person,'' Hoenig, 61, said. The July 15 visit ``reinforced the way I think, because I'm on record as being concerned about inflation,'' he said.

A day after the trip, the Labor Department reported a 5 percent increase in consumer prices for the 12 months ended in June, the most in 17 years. Fed policy makers are trying to fight inflation and economic weakening. Growth for the six months ended in March was the slowest in five years.

Rocky Mountain's sales began to slow in September, Merryman said. Now, ``our business is certainly in a recession. I don't know what the catalyst is going to be for a turnaround.''

Rising Costs

Cocoa prices have risen 10 percent annually for five or six years, and fuel and corn syrup are climbing at annual rates of 30 percent or more, Merryman said.

The central bank is facing the biggest U.S. financial crisis since the Great Depression, according to the International Monetary Fund, amid collapsing home values and lack of credit for many borrowers. Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke told the Senate Banking Committee in Washington on July 15 that risks have increased for U.S. growth and inflation.

Durango, best known for whitewater rafting, kayaking, and access to five major ski areas, has largely been shielded from the ``peaks and valleys'' of the real-estate market because of economic diversity, said Gary Derck, chief executive and president of the company that manages the Durango Mountain Resort.

The Old West city of about 15,000 people has a college and a medical center and acts as a center for the oil and gas industry in the U.S. Southwest.

Donning Hair Nets

Hoenig and the Kansas City Fed's Denver branch directors donned hair nets and peppered Merryman with questions on the tour as they watched workers make Rocky Pop caramel corn and raisin clusters.

Rocky Mountain's revenue for the fiscal first quarter ended May 31 dropped to $7.1 million from $7.3 million a year earlier as fewer customers visited its more than 300 stores. Rocky Mountain shares have dropped 45 percent this year to $8.72 yesterday on the Nasdaq Stock Market.

With chocolates priced at $19 a pound, Rocky Mountain positions itself between Godiva Chocolatier Inc., owned by Yildiz Holding AS of Turkey, and See's Candies Inc., owned by Berkshire Hathaway Inc.

While states such as California, Florida and Nevada were hit by falling real-estate values during the past year, the Kansas City Fed's district has been insulated by surging farm incomes and farmland values. The district includes Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Wyoming and parts of New Mexico and Missouri.

`Modest' Growth

Economic growth in the seven-state area has been ``modest,'' with higher gasoline and food prices limiting spending at malls in April and May, according to the Fed's most recent summary of current economic conditions in the region.

Anecdotes like the ones gathered at the Rocky Mountain factory make their way into the Fed's so-called Beige Book report and are a part of a give-and-take process of gathering and sharing information, Hoenig said.

``The Fed is not just a Washington-centric institution,'' he said. ``It's an institution that has 12 regional banks reaching out for information and sharing information with citizens.''

Hoenig, who makes 50 to 60 mostly private speeches a year, said he plans to make trips to Oklahoma City and Scottsbluff, Nebraska, later this year.

``What the reserve banks hear from their contacts can provide the Fed with an early warning of changes that may not show up in the published statistics for several weeks or even months,'' said Al Broaddus, former president of the Richmond Fed.

`Emotional Recession'

While Durango Mountain Resort is expecting a 20 percent year-over-year rise in lodging rates and volume from June to September, some families aren't staying extra nights or buying vacation homes, Derck said.

``We think we have an emotional recession that's preventing even folks whose personal situations are better off than a year ago from investing, spending and enjoying life,'' he said before meeting with Hoenig at the French restaurant Chez Grand-Mere. ``People who are affluent and well-off have a brain, too, and have the same psychology: They don't know what the next shoe is to drop.''

To contact the reporter on this story: Vivien Lou Chen in San Francisco at vchen1@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: July 18, 2008 01:01 EDT

1

July 18, 2008

Armed and Dangerous

This week, with the nation's financial infrastructure crumbling before our very eyes, the nation's top two economic policy makers made their way to the Congress for an extraordinary episode of political theater. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the quasi-government entities that form the backbone of America's gargantuan mortgage market, appeared to be cracking. To the somewhat bewildered members of Congress, Ben Bernanke and Henry Paulson offered radical remedies to save the lenders. Despite the fact that the proposed policies would thoroughly redefine America's supposedly capitalistic pedigree, the moves were presented as wholly inevitable, and in the end, benevolent and costless.

If you are looking for a new chapter in American history, it has just begun.

The most memorable moment in the episode came when Secretary Paulson explained that the best way to minimize the chances that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will need a government bailout would be for Congress to grant the Treasury unlimited authority to lend to the two institutions. His analogy: When the bad guys see a bazooka on your hip, you are less likely to be challenged to a gunfight.

At its heart Paulson's argument assumes the GSE's problems are simply a function of confidence. He believes that if the U.S. Treasury signals that it will stand behind both firms to the bitter end, then investors would have no reluctance in buying their bonds. But assuring that creditors will be repaid (albeit with cheaper dollars) does nothing to address the root cause of the problem, which is that both firms are losing money on their loan portfolios, and on the loans that they insure. Paulson's plan actually assures that Fannie and Freddie's losses will be even larger, and puts American taxpayers, or more precisely wage earners and savers, directly on the hook. The longer these two entities remain in business, the more bad loans they will buy or insure, and the more money taxpayers will lose.

In theory, Fannie and Freddie were originally created to help provide affordable housing. In reality, like all government programs, they achieved the opposite. Rather than making houses more affordable, they merely enabled buyers to overpay for them. The result is that American homeowners are now saddled with staggering amounts of debt, as easy credit made it possible for buyers to bid prices to dazzling heights. So while a record number of Americans now own homes, they have bankrupted themselves in the process.

Without the help of Fannie and Freddie, and now the full faith and credit of the United States, American home buyers would be facing much steeper mortgage interest rates. This is particularly true given that our ability to borrow is now dependent on access to the global savings pool. Without the implicit, and now explicit, government guarantee, foreigners would be much less willing to extend cheap credit to Americans. If we had to rely solely on our shallow domestic savings pool and individual credit worthiness alone, rates would be significantly higher. Since home prices are a function of the ability of buyers to pay, higher interest rates would mean lower prices, thus making houses themselves more affordable.

Even the tax deductibility of mortgage interest has achieved a similar result. By subsidizing home buying, and encouraging renters to become buyers instead, the government has artificially increased demand for houses, causing prices to rise. In the end, the benefits of the mortgage tax deductions are limited to those who benefit from inflated home prices. This includes realtors, who earn higher commissions, governments that collect higher property taxes, and those who owned their homes prior to the loophole being enacted who cashed in on the gains.

At present, the best the government can do for housing and the economy is to leave both alone, cease interference in the free market, restore sound money, and allow capitalism to work.

Unfortunately, the laws of capitalism are now demanding that home prices continue to fall precipitously. But, based on the speed in which our government, public and financial institutions are willing to abandoned free market principals at the first whiff of economic pain, the likelihood that this impulse will take hold is increasingly remote. So hunker down as the United States finds itself on the express track to state socialism with Paulson's Bazooka locked, loaded and pointed right at us. When the government pulls the trigger the blast will blow the dollar, and what's left of our capitalist economy, to smithereens.

For a more in depth analysis of our financial problems and the inherent dangers they pose for the U.S. economy and U.S. dollar denominated investments, read my new book "Crash Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse."

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

1

Annual housing price decline now tops 25 percent

UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITERS

12:50 p.m. July 15, 2008

San Diego County housing prices dropped a record 25.3 percent on a year-over-year basis last month to stand at $370,000, DataQuick Information Systems reported Tuesday.

It was the lowest overall median since May 2003 and contrasted sharply with the all-time peak of $517,500 set in November 2005.

Single-family resale homes dropped to $405,000 from $420,000 in May and $565,000 in June 2007. Resale condos posted a median $259,000, down from $287,750 in May and $397,500 in June 2007.

Newly built homes rose from $435,000 in May to $490,000 last month, continuing a trend analysts attribute to the near-absence of newly converted condo projects on the market. Those former apartments typically sell for much less than newly constructed condos and houses and dominated the new-housing market until the recent downturn.

Sales topped the 3,000 level for the first time since August in a usual seasonal upswing of activity during spring and summer months. The total stood at 3,077, up from 2,979 from May but down 12.3 percent from year-ago levels. It was the 48th straight month of year-over-year declines in sales activity, a trend that began in July 2004.

Meanwhile, evidence is growing that bargain hunters are bidding more than the asking price for some properties, mostly foreclosures that banks are trying to resell quickly.

HouseRebate.com said 17 percent of all sales countywide in the 30-day period ending June 26 were sold at price higher than the original listing price. A year ago, the overbidding percentage was only 6.5 percent.

HouseRebate CEO Brian Yui said interest is concentrated in houses priced at $500,000 or less. "Things are moving quicker and buyers are dealing with realistic sellers," Yui said.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

2

The Multifront War
Over Investor Confidence

By JOSEPH SCHUMAN
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL ONLINE

European and Asian markets are tanking today, and so is the dollar, the latest signs that the U.S. government's full engagement on the Fannie-Freddie front hasn't ended a much broader assault of investor uncertainty on the financial markets.

Investor confidence levels are so unstable that sources tell the New York Post that Lehman Brothers chief Dick Fuld is seriously thinking of taking the besieged Wall Street firm private. Rumors about Lehman's solvency in the wake of Bear Stearns's implosion earlier this year have shattered the firm's stock price, "attracting hungry vultures hoping to snap up the ailing fixed-income shop on the cheap," as the Post puts it. One source tells the paper that Mr. Fuld's "idea is why sell to someone else at so cheap a price when they could buy themselves." The insight from these undescribed sources coincides with a report from a Fox-Pitt bank analyst suggesting Lehman could go private by paying a 25% premium on its stock price. Still, as The Wall Street Journal cites analyst Brad Hintz as saying, "the strengthening of Lehman's funding base and balance sheet combined with the continued support of the Federal Reserve, means that the firm should be able to survive any confidence crisis ahead."

Like the unsubstantiated doubts about Lehman's solvency, it is market uncertainty about the capital levels of government-sponsored mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac -- amid a surging if not yet overwhelming foreclosure rate in the U.S. -- that pushed the Bush administration to act so forcefully over the weekend. While key members of Congress yesterday said they would quickly act on proposals to give Treasury and the Federal Reserve more latitude to financially back Fannie and Freddie, along with more government oversight, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd tried to assure investors the problem was less financial than mental. "The fact is that Fannie and Freddie are in sound shape. We're trying to deal with fear," he told reporters, as The Hill reports.

That seemed to help, at least temporarily, since investors yesterday bought $3 billion in short-term debt in a Freddie auction that drew more bids than usual and thus allowed the company to offer lower yields and keep down its borrowing costs, as The Wall Street Journal notes. This confidence stems from the powerful promise Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson essentially made to back Fannie and Freddie on Sunday, however much he expressed a preference for keeping their shareholder-owned structures. As BusinessWeek's Michael Mandel argues, the two seem to be "on the inevitable road to being bailed out, nationalized, and shrunk," since the placement of "the full faith and credit of the U.S. government behind two private financial companies" can't be undone. Still, if Mr. Paulson's weekend moves helped shore up short-term confidence in Fannie and Freddie's ability to keep pumping money into the housing market, they didn't solve long-term worries about their capitalization, the Journal says.

The rescue of Fannie and Freddie came "after Wall Street executives and foreign central bankers told Washington that any further erosion of confidence could have a cascading effect around the world," officials tell the New York Times. And yet, the start-and-stop market cascades tied to the mortgage crisis that began early last year were at it again today. Yesterday's fall in U.S. banking stocks today is translating into hefty losses in Shanghai, Singapore, Hong Kong and Japan, and in London, Frankfurt and Paris, too. The dollar reached a new low against the euro, which was buying more than $1.60, and U.S. stock futures are down ahead of the market open in New York.

1

Oppenheimer's Whitney Cuts Wachovia, Gives Bleak Outlook
Last update: 7/15/2008 8:14:49 AM
     DOW JONES NEWSWIRES   
Oppenheimer & Co.'s Meredith Whitney cut her investment rating on Wachovia Corp. (WB) shares as she projected the bank's mortgage portfolio will fall by 9% sequentially and its total on-balance sheet loans will decline by "at least" 5% by year end.
Separately, Whitney issued a bleak outlook, as she expects bank stocks to keep heading lower until asset valuations "get real."
In a note to investors Tuesday, Whitney cut her rating on Wachovia underperform from perform, citing Oppenheimer's "dramatically diminished earnings outlook for the company."
Shares of Wachovia slid 14% in recent pre-market trading to $8.50. Regional bank National City Corp. (NCC), which took the rare step Monday of issuing a statement that it was "experiencing no unusual depositor or creditor activity," fell another 7% pre-market to $3.50. It's down 77% this year and 21% this month.
Whitney outlined capital as a chief concern, saying Oppenheimer believes Wachovia may have reduced its portfolio by $50 billion in the second quarter. Oppenheimer is expecting Wachovia to report a second-quarter loan-loss allowance of about $9.5 billion.
Whitney called Wachovia's problem the "denominator effect," with losses growing while assets decline, resulting in higher loss ratios, lower assets and lower net interest income.
"In this very real scenario, expenses simply cannot come down fast enough, seriously jeopardizing WB's ability to grow earnings," Whitney said, adding, "We fear that WB simply cannot cut costs fast enough to mitigate capital erosion."
Wachovia has already said it expects to report a second-quarter loss next week of $1.23 to $1.33 a share.
Oppenheimer lowered its estimate for a 2008 loss to $1.35 a share, and projects a 2009 loss of 35 cents a share. That compares with mean estimates of analysts polled by Thomson Reuters for earnings of $1.04 a share for 2008 and $2.37 a share for 2009.
In the broader outlook on banks released by Oppenheimer, Whitney said banks will need to "swiftly address true asset values and adjust their books accordingly" before financial markets will be able to stabilize.
She wrote that banks' carrying valuations on mortgage-related assets are "still too high," with banks like Wachovia using assumptions from the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight rather than Case-Shiller. Whitney noted that Freddie Mac (FRE) and Fannie Mae (FNM) no longer use OFHEO as a guidepost "as it has been proven far more unreliable than any other estimate."
The weak outlook for Wachovia comes as new Chief Executive Robert K. Steel is trying to immediately start cleaning up the mess he inherited at the U.S. bank. But investors are worried about how long it could take and what will be left.
U.S. banking stocks were hammered Monday amid concerns triggered by the government seizure of IndyMac Bancorp Inc. (IMB) and fears holdings of securities issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will have to be written down, hurting earnings. Wachovia shares fell below $10 and are now down 37% in July alone.
-By Donna Kardos, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-5963; donna.kardos@dowjones.com
Click here to go to Dow Jones NewsPlus, a web front page of today's most important business and market news, analysis and commentary: http://www.djnewsplus.com/al?rnd=9kELB4HUXOiD3Tf5%2BJpKQA%3D%3D. You can use this link on the day this article is published and the following day.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 15, 2008 08:14 ET (12:14 GMT)

Fw: Inflation Is Not The Problem - John Mauldin's Outside the Box E-Letter

 

Sent: Monday, July 14, 2008 11:52 PM
Subject: Inflation Is Not The Problem - John Mauldin's Outside the Box E-Letter

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Volume 4 - Issue 38
July 14, 2008



Inflation Is Not The Problem
by James Montier and Albert Edwards

This week we are going to do something unusual for Outside the Box. Normally I take an essay and send it to you to read. Today I am going to give you a link and strongly suggest you click to it. Long time readers are familiar with friend and comrade James Montier, who along with Albert Edwards, migrated to Societe Generale earlier this year. They are co-heads of Global Cross Asset Strategy and based in London.

Kate Welling does some of the best interviews anywhere in her Welling@Weeden letter, and this one of Montier and Edwards is typical of her immensely enjoyable style. She gave my good friend Prieur du Plessis permission to reprint the letter, and I provide you with a link to his blog and if you scroll down 6 short paragraphs you get the link to the letter, which includes the graphics and is much more fun than just me cutting and pasting. You can also subscribe to Prieur's blog if you wish. Once a week he provides a very useful review of what was written the previous week.

Montier and Edwards speak quite forcefully about the problems they see in the market today, and they are truly Outside the Box thinkers.

"They are, in a word, skeptics, and at this juncture most deeply skeptical of any and all notions that 'the worst is over.' The recession, which has barely begun, is more likely to be deep than shallow, market valuations are hideously expensive and the -flation policymakers should be worried about starts with de-, not in-. For their reasons, keep reading, if you dare."

The link is: www.investmentpostcards.com/2008/07/05/market-fundamentals-are-appalling/

And no, despite the picture, they are not twins separated at birth.

John Mauldin, Editor
Outside the Box


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John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA) which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS) an FINRA registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. Millennium Wave Investments cooperates in the consulting on and marketing of private investment offerings with other independent firms such as Altegris Investments; Absolute Return Partners, LLP; Pro-Hedge Funds; and Plexus Asset Management. All material presented herein is believed to be reliable but we cannot attest to its accuracy. Investment recommendations may change and readers are urged to check with their investment counselors before making any investment decisions.

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Monday, July 14, 2008

3

Former Fed Poole:Govt Plan A Nationalization Of Fannie, Freddie
Last update: 7/14/2008 2:04:58 PM
     By Michael S. Derby     Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES   
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--The federal government's plan to rescue housing finance firms Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE) amounts to a nationalization of those troubled firms, a former Federal Reserve official said Monday.
In an interview with Dow Jones Newswires, William Poole, who led the St. Louis Fed until this spring, said the government's move over the weekend to support the firms was "absolutely necessary," given that their collapse would be catastrophic for the broader financial system. The government's actions mean Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are "in de facto receivership," Poole said.
But at the same time, the government's steps also mean debt issued by these two quasi-government agencies effectively ranks equal with U.S. Treasurys.
"De facto, the obligations of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are now full faith and credit obligations of the U.S. government" because the two firms "are not going to be allowed to fail," Poole said.
The Treasury's plan means that for all practical purposes, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac "are being nationalized," if only on a temporary basis.
Following a week of turmoil and plummeting stock prices, the Treasury Department late Sunday said it would seek from Congress the authority to buy equity in the firms as needed, along with approval to increase the line of credit the firms have with the government. The Federal Reserve joined the effort and said it would allow the two firms to borrow directly from the central bank if necessary, at discount window terms.
The show of support appears to have worked, at least temporarily, given the successful auction of short-term debt by Freddie Mac Monday morning.
Both companies continue to insist that they hold adequate capital reserves and maintain access to capital markets in general. Their stock see-sawed sharply Monday as investors first welcomed the government's rescue plan before renewed concerns sent the shares lower again.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are firms set up by the government to ensure the smooth functioning of the mortgage market, and they have been ensnared by the troubled conditions seen in the housing sector. Last week, the firms saw their share prices fall sharply amid broad concerns over their capital cushion.
The two firms have long been controversial for having an implicit government support for their activities, and that perception has allowed them to borrow at lower rates.
Poole, now a scholar with the Cato Institute, has long criticized Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, over what he sees as a series of short-comings. In the interview, he stressed his views are those of an observer, and are informed by the expertise he gained at the St. Louis Fed.
Poole also said that the Fannie and Freddie intervention, coming on the back of Fed efforts to save foundering investment bank Bear Stearns last March, has seriously compromised Wall Street's ability to assess risk.
The nation is now in "a very bad situation" in terms of moral hazard concerns, Poole said. Creditors "know that they will be protected in the event of any adverse circumstances," he added.
It's now clear some companies have been deemed too big to fail, although there's little clarity what the threshold is for government intervention. Poole warned that with the government saving both agency lenders and investment banks, the impulse to intervene "could spread to systemically important non-financial firms" like large airlines or car companies.

2

Credit Managers See Spreads Widening, Defaults Rising
Last update: 7/14/2008 10:36:30 AM
     DOW JONES NEWSWIRES   
Credit portfolio managers believe the next three months will see credit spreads widening and defaults continuing to rise, according to a new survey by the International Association of Credit Portfolio Managers.
In addition, a companion index "strongly suggests credit defaults will rise over the next 12 months."
The anticipation that spreads will widen is a break from prior predictions of near-term tightenings, which happened in the second quarter as those surveyed expected. Spreads, or risk premiums, began widening last month.
"Sentiment has clearly changed," said Som-lok Leung, the association's executive director. "Spreads tightened during the spring after widening significantly with the onset of the credit crisis. Now, once again, portfolio managers believe investors will demand wider spreads, partly because managers expect real risk to rise in the form of higher defaults."
The survey questioned credit portfolio managers at 87 leading banks and other financial institutions in 16 countries. Their readings were based on a scale of 100 to negative 100, with 100 showing positive growth, zero showing no change, and negative 100 showing high defaults and wide spreads. The survey for the end of June had an outlook of negative 69.1. A March survey was at 14.8.
Results were most pessimistic among corporate borrowers and individual consumers, as well as in real estate. The index scores for June were -78.6 for corporate borrowers, -79.5 for the consumer sector and -81.6 in real estate.
The association started conducting the quarterly survey last year, but decided with the latest survey to begin releasing the findings. Leung said doing so will allow investors to "benefit from the collective views of professional credit portfolio managers."
-By David Benoit, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-2472; david.benoit@dowjones.com
Click here to go to Dow Jones NewsPlus, a web front page of today's most important business and market news, analysis and commentary: http://www.djnewsplus.com/al?rnd=D7LvL%2Bn4Z64nTbfN829c4w%3D%3D. You can use this link on the day this article is published and the following day.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires

1

Food Stocks For Profit-Starved Investors
Last update: 7/14/2008 6:58:04 AM
     By Anjali Cordeiro     Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES   
Dairy prices are soaring and cereal boxes are shrinking. Even candy prices are heading higher. There are few bargains left in grocery aisles, but investors may still be able to spot some deals among food stocks.
Companies that make milk, cheese and cereal have been hurt by inflation because they are paying more for raw materials like grain and for fuel. But despite these pressures, some of these packaged-food makers have managed to keep growing their profits and sales.
Food makers aren't hit as badly as some industries by a slowing economy - people keep eating in good economies and bad. And some food companies are even helped by consumers' efforts to shun restaurants and eat at home more as the economy slows.
(This story and related background material is also available on The Wall Street Journal Web site, WSJ.com.)
The Dow Jones Wilshire U.S. Food Producers Index is down 8.9% for the year (and only slightly more from the Oct. 9 stock-market high). That is better than the Dow Jones Industrial Average's year-to-date drop of 16.3%, including a decline of 1.7% last week.
Wall Street analysts expect soaring commodity prices to continue to make life difficult for packaged-food manufacturers, but they say companies with strong brands and the ability to control costs internally will be able to weather the difficult combination of a slowing economy and rising inflation.
     Household Names   
One of food analysts' favorites picks is General Mills Inc. (GIS), maker of household names like Cheerios, Hamburger Helper and Haagen Dazs ice cream.
"I'm not sure there is a company in the food industry executing as well as General Mills," says Stifel Nicolaus analyst Chris Growe. In mid-June the Minneapolis food company hiked its earnings guidance for its fiscal year, as higher-than-expected sales helped offset higher costs.
Besides General Mills, Growe has buy ratings on Kellogg Co. (K), the maker of Apple Jacks and Pop Tarts, and ketchup producer H.J. Heinz Co. (HNZ).
These three stocks deserve to trade at higher prices relative to company earnings than the average food stock because of their strong performances, he says. Instead, Heinz is right at the food industry's average price-to-earnings multiple of about 16.8, Growe says, while Kellogg and General Mills are just below.
"They have been producing the strongest growth across the food industry," Growe says about the three companies. Because of their strong brands he believes they "have the best ability to raise prices."
Growe isn't as bullish on the rest of the food sector. He believes the sector as a whole is already pricing in much of the benefits these companies will see from consumers eating more of their meals at home. On a price-to-earnings basis food stocks have historically traded at a 3% discount to the broad consumer group that includes makers of tobacco, household products and beverages, but they are now trading at an 11% premium, he says.
Analysts have some concerns that branded food companies could lose market share to cheaper private-label or store brands in the weakening economy. Longbow Research analyst Alton Stump says food companies whose products are seen as far superior to private-label items are in the best position to raise prices to pass along higher commodity costs.
     Not Different Enough?   
Stump, for instance, has a sell rating on Del Monte Foods Co. (DLM), which sells canned food. Consumers don't appear to care very much if they buy private-label cans of corn or Del Monte branded ones, he says.
On the other hand, he sees buying opportunities in a number of smaller food companies that are dominating or gaining share in the categories they are focused on.
He has a "buy" recommendation on Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Inc. (GMCR), which makes both coffee packets for single-cup brewing machines and single-cup coffee machines. Single-cup brews are doing well and Green Mountain is gaining share in the coffee category, he says.
Other stocks he likes are Diamond Foods Inc. (DMND) and B&G Foods Inc. (BGF).
Diamond has an attractive nut business, which has been growing in volume and the company has been successful in passing on its costs to consumers, Stump says, while B&G Foods has attractive brands in areas like sauces and marinades and is buying new ones at low prices.
In a recent analysis of food-industry trends, Wachovia analysts found that wealthier families are still buying branded food products. But the research indicated that the lower 40% of earners are trading down to private-label brands in categories like dairy. That trend could translate into better results for some private-label food manufacturers.
     Private-Label Picks   
The private-label industry "is well positioned to take much-needed pricing increases and data suggests it is doing just that, which augurs well for margins," said Wachovia analyst Jonathan Feeney in a research brief to clients.
Among the private-label manufacturers that Feeney recommends are TreeHouse Foods Inc. (THS), a retail supplier of private-label pickles and soups, and Ralcorp Holdings Inc. (RAH), a maker of private-label cookies and crackers.
TreeHouse is a pricing leader in its sector, raising prices more than enough to offset dramatic commodity costs, the analyst says. Ralcorp, meanwhile, reported a strong quarter in May, the Wachovia analysts say.
Wachovia is also bullish on companies that sell chicken and meats. Many of these stocks have recently been hurt by concerns about rising prices of commodities, particularly corn, used as animal feed. But Wachovia analysts say that pork and turkey seller Smithfield Foods Inc. (SFD) and Tyson Foods Inc. (TSN), a processor of chicken, beef and pork, should both benefit from strong global food demand.
-By Anjali Cordeiro, Dow Jones Newswires; anjali.cordeiro@dowjones.com
Click here to go to Dow Jones NewsPlus, a web front page of today's most important business and market news, analysis and commentary: http://www.djnewsplus.com/al?rnd=D7LvL%2Bn4Z64nTbfN829c4w%3D%3D. You can use this link on the day this article is published and the following day.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Fw: $1.6 Trillion in Losses and Counting - John Mauldin's Weekly E-Letter

 

Sent: Saturday, July 12, 2008 2:05 AM
Subject: $1.6 Trillion in Losses and Counting - John Mauldin's Weekly E-Letter

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Thoughts from the Frontline Weekly Newsletter
$1.6 Trillion in Losses and Counting
by John Mauldin
July 11, 2008
Visit John's MySpace Page

In this issue:
$1.6 Trillion in Losses and Counting
Banks Start to Reduce Their Lending
Take Freddie Mac. Please.
The Ugly Muddle Through
Once Again, the BLS Numbers Paint a False Picture
Las Vegas, Maine, and a Wedding

It seems that with each passing month the estimates for losses in the international banking system keep rising. This time last summer the largest estimates (from credible sources), if memory serves me correct, were around $400 billion, give or take a few months. By the end of the year it was in the neighborhood of twice that. Then last quarter we saw estimates approaching $1 trillion. Last week, the number being broached was $1.6 trillion, by Bridgewater Associates, one of the top, and more credible, analytical firms in the world. In this week's letter we look at the implications of that projection, analyze recent lending patterns by banks, briefly touch on the implications of the recent unemployment numbers, and end with a few comments on the bear market. It will make for an interesting letter. Warning: remove sharp objects from your vicinity before reading.

But first, I need your help, and in return I would like to give you a link to a recent speech I gave, where I speak about what I think is the development of an important new asset class, one which will come about precisely because of the problems I am writing abut today. I have not yet written about this topic in public, and the speech has been well-received. I think you will like it. Now, as to how you can help me ...

I get to travel a lot with my daughter and business partner Tiffani (actually she runs the business) and meet new people. Over the years, she has become as fascinated as I have with their individual stories. Everyone has a story to tell or a lesson to teach. We have decided to write a book about those stories, looking at the differences in perspective between old and young, retired and working, those who are wealthy and those who aspire to wealth. What are the differences in attitudes, in work habits, in how you manage money, in how you look at the future, and a score of other items? How do all of these things correlate?

We have created a totally anonymous online survey seeking answers to these questions and more. We hope to get at least 10,000 people to fill out the survey; and we are eager to see what we find as we pore over the resulting data and engage in a lot of in-depth analysis. Are the rich really different? Is there a difference in people from Europe, Asia, Latin America, Africa, and the US? I think we will find some very interesting information. Please note: this is not just a survey for millionaires. We want everyone, of all income levels and ages, to take the survey, so we can get a true representative sample.

You can get to the survey page by clicking here. It will take about ten minutes to complete, and I think that going through the questions will make you think about your own situation. Some have told us the survey is quite thought-provoking. If you have attempted to take the survey and had problems, we think we have worked out the bugs.

At the end of the survey, you will be sent to a page with the speech. If you cannot listen to it immediately, then simply save the page or the address. And of course, you can just take the survey to help us.

Also, Tiffani and I want to do live (mostly by phone) interviews with 200 millionaires, of all shapes and sizes and locales. We will interview you for about 30 minutes, and then you can have equal time asking me anything you want. Since I will have learned a lot about you, those questions can be as detailed or as general as you like. We want at least 20% of the interviews to come from outside the US. We will use those interviews in the book, but will attach no identifying items or real names. If we use something from your interview in the book, we will let you see it first. If you are interested in being one of the interviewees, just drop Tiffani a note at eu@2000wave.com and she will get back to you and work out the details.

I am really excited about this project and even more so about working with Tiffani. We will report back to you on what we find. Thanks for your help. And if you have any questions, please feel free to reply to this email.

$1.6 Trillion in Losses and Counting

One of the great privileges I have is getting to read a wide variety of economic research. While I get a lot of material direct from the source, I also have a wide network of people who read other sources and send me what they think is important. When Ambrose Evans-Pritchard wrote this week about a report done by Bridgewater Associates, it got my attention, and fortunately this report was sent to me by a few friends. In my book, Bridgewater is one of the top analytical groups in the world. I pay attention and give strong credence to what they write. And this report is quite sobering.

First, let's look at what Evans-Pritchard wrote in the London Telegraph:

"Bridgewater Associates has issued an apocalyptic warning to clients that bank losses from the worldwide credit crisis may reach $1,600bn [$1.6 trillion], four times official estimates and enough to pose a grave risk to the financial system.

"The giant US hedge fund said that it doubted whether lenders would be able to shoulder the full losses, disguised until now by 'mark-to-model' methods of valuing structured credit.

" 'We are facing an avalanche of bad assets. We have big doubts as to whether financial institutions will be able to obtain enough new capital to cover their losses. The credit crisis is going to get worse,' said the group in a confidential report, leaked to the Swiss newspaper Sonntags Zeitung.

"Bank losses on this scale would have far-reaching effects. Lenders would have to curtail loans by roughly 10-to-one to preserve their capital ratios. This would imply a further contraction of credit by up to $12,000bn [$12 trillion] worldwide unless banks could raise fresh capital."

Let's look at some of the details in the report. First, these losses are not all subprime. In fact, more than half of it is from corporate liabilities, around $800 billion. About $550 billion of the corporate losses have yet to be written off. As an example, Bridgewater estimates losses on commercial loans to be as much as $149 billion, none of which has been written off.

Better than 90% of the losses from subprime assets that are on the books have already been written off. That is good. But Bridgewater estimates that there are losses lurking in the prime and Alt-A loan portfolios that could be much bigger than the subprime problems, as those loan books are more than six times the size of the subprime. Quoting:

"The US commercial banks are in a position to suffer the greatest losses, because the core of their portfolio is risky US debt assets. In order to get a sense of their expected losses we examine both their loan book and their securities portfolio and price each type of asset out based upon a reference market. If we use this current market pricing as a guide, there is a long way to go, as these institutions have only acknowledged about 1/6 of the expected losses that they will incur as a result of the credit crisis."

I could go on, but the details are not important. The bottom line is that they estimate there is at least another $1.1 trillion of losses that will have to be written off by institutions all over the developed world, including very large potential write-offs from insurance companies.

Banks and investment institutions worldwide may need another $400 billion in capital infusions. But where they are going to get it is the problem. They have burned through the usual suspects, and burned is the correct word. Any sovereign wealth fund or large investor who has put money into an investment or commercial bank has watched their investment take large losses in a very short time. How likely are they to be willing to belly back up to the bar with more money, on anything except very dilutive terms to current shareholders? The answer is obvious.

And let me be clear. There are some very large commercial and investment banks which are simply going to be absorbed, as regulators move to keep the entire system working. Bear Stearns is not a one-off deal. I think it is likely we will see at least one European bank nationalized. Losses the size that Bridgewater describes are beyond ugly. They are life-threatening for more than one major institution. More on this later.

Banks Start to Reduce Their Lending

Further, let's revisit a theme I have written about on several occasions over the past year. As banks incur losses, they either have to find new capital or reduce their lending in order to maintain their capital ratios, or some combination of both. And what we are seeing is that lending is starting to actually decrease.

Earlier this year lending rose as normal, even though anecdotal reports told of tightening lending standards and reduced loan lines. The tightening of standards did not seem to be affecting actual loans being made, which was odd. But this was partly illusion, as banks were taking back loans they had spun off in SIVs, taking capital away from their traditional loan business. This gave the appearance of expanding loan capacity. Evidently, this bringing back of off-book loans is now being worked through, as evidenced by this analysis by good friend and analyst par excellence Greg Weldon, who slices and dices the data to give us this view (www.weldononline.com):

"[looking at the chart below] ... FOR SURE, the recent decline strongly suggests that the risk of a US recession has intensified CONSIDERABLY, as defined by what amounts to one of the largest nominal credit contractions in DECADES, at (-) $154.3 billion, and a clear-cut violation of the uptrend in place since at least 2001."

Bank Credit of All Commercial Banks

Greg goes on to suggest that bank credit could contract a further $6-700 billion over the next nine months, which is a contraction of about 8%. Healthy economies have a rising rate of bank credit, which is one source of expansion. When banks have to reduce their lending, it reduces the growth of the economy or can put it into outright recession.

And if the Bridgewater report is anything close to right, Greg is being an optimist, which is not his normal milieu. Now, do I think worldwide credit will shrink $12 trillion, as Evans-Pritchard suggests? (Note, that was not a suggestion or conclusion by Bridgewater.) Not in my worst nightmares. Capital will be raised, and the various central banks of the world will do what is necessary to give banks the time to work through their problems.

But in the meantime, the trend toward lower lending is likely to continue. And lower lending is going to be a huge headwind for an economy that is already struggling.

This week Ben Bernanke suggested that the "temporary" Term Auction Facility might be extended into 2009. Let me suggest that it will be extended into at least 2010 before it is no longer needed. Banks are going to need to be able to take their illiquid paper and convert it into liquid Treasuries against which they can make loans and continue to function.

As I have written for a long time, it is all about buying time. In 1980, every major bank in the US was technically bankrupt, as they all had large amounts of Latin American bonds in their portfolios, at a size far larger than their capitalization. When the Latin American countries started to default, if the Fed had made the banks mark their portfolios to market, it would have been a disaster of biblical proportions. There would have been no American banks left standing. The US economy would have gone into a deep depression.

Instead, with a wink and nod, they let them keep the bad bonds on their books at face value, which they all did. Then in the latter part of the decade, starting with Citibank in 1986 (cue the irony), they began one by one to write off the bad loans, but only when they had enough capital to do so. It took six years (or more) of profits and capital raising to get to where they could deal with the problems without imploding themselves and the economy of the US at the same time.

Today is only different in the details. The Fed and central banks around the world are allowing banks to buy time to work through their problems. There really is no other option. That extra $1.1 trillion that the research by Bridgewater says will have to be written off? You can take it to the bank, pardon the pun, that it will not be written off this quarter. This is going to be an ongoing process that will take several years at a minimum. Just like in 1980, the regulators are going to allow banks to write down their losses as they can, except in the most egregious of circumstances, in which case those banks will be "absorbed," a la Bear Stearns.

Treasury Secretary Paulson said Thursday that no bank is too big to fail. That is for public consumption. The fact is that there are any number of banks that are too big to fail, depending upon (and borrowing from my favorite linguist, Bill Clinton) what your definition of fail is. If by fail you mean that shareholders are wiped out, then he is correct, there is no institution too big to fail. If by fail you mean that the operations and debt obligations will be allowed to collapse, then there are institutions whose collapse would pose major systemic risk to the world markets. They cannot be allowed to collapse.

Take Freddie Mac. Please.

(Cue Henny Youngman) Take Freddie Mac. Please. Its shares are down almost 90%. "Freddie Mac owed $5.2 billion more than its assets were worth in the first quarter, making it insolvent under fair-value accounting rules. The fair value of Fannie Mae [down 78%] assets fell 66 percent to $12.2 billion, data provided by the Washington-based company show, and may be negative next quarter, former St. Louis Federal Reserve President William Poole said." (Bloomberg) Poole asserted that these institutions are essentially on a short path to insolvency.

But in the same story, Senators Schumer and McCain both said Freddie and Fannie would not be allowed to fail. Even curmudgeonly former Fed Vice-Chairman Wayne Angell (someone whom I sincerely respect), said on CNBC yesterday that the government regulator of the GSEs (Government Sponsored Enterprises) ought to get some money from Congress to buy preferred stock and then get even larger amounts from the public through an offering of preferred stock. He said that Congress ought to learn about its responsibilities with regard to a GSE; and the public ought to realize that we are in for a long, tough fight. (He also expects the second half of 2008 to be no better than the first half, and he sees 1% growth in 2009.)

I wrote the above paragraph, and a few I deleted below, on Thursday, as I am on a plane to Las Vegas and need to finish the letter in order to attend a conference. I wrote with suggestions about how a collapse of the two Government Sponsored Enterprises might be handled. Last night, the New York Times broke a story that government officials are looking at how to go about taking over operations at Freddie and Fannie, should worse come to worst. Then this morning, the Wall Street Journal in its lead story elaborated on this theme.

The basic problem is that both Fannie and Freddie need more capital, and perhaps far more than their current market capitalization. Where to find it? What investor wants to try and catch this falling safe, without government guarantees? The Journal article quotes numerous people with various ideas about what to do. Most of their ideas will potentially cost US taxpayers.

And make no mistake. The problems with Fannie and Freddie have to be solved. They are now doing 80% of the mortgages in the US. Without them the housing market would grind to a halt quickly and housing prices would drop even beyond Gary Shilling's pessimistic views.

Not to mention that the world has assumed the implicit backing of the government in buying the paper of Freddie and Fannie. How easy would it be to finance US debt if this paper was allowed to default? The implications are serious. I understand the arguments for allowing them to fail, and I think shareholders should bear the risk they take on when buying equity.

A very reasonable idea was broached by Steve Forbes on a BizRadio program this afternoon, which Dan Frishberg graciously allowed me to co-host. He suggests breaking Fannie and Freddie into eight smaller companies, giving them whatever backing they need in the form of public financing to start business, and then cut them off to sink or swim on their own, with much tighter capitalization controls. Remember, this is one of the more free-market conservative thinkers.

The authorities are slowly losing control. All they can do is crisis manage. There are no good solutions, only expedient ones. And we must all hope they choose the best among a handful of not particularly pleasing options. Allowing the system to devolve into chaos is not an option. The Fed and whatever administration comes in will do the same as the current group, which is to buy time so that the wounds can heal, and hopefully put in place rules to prevent another such occurrence.

(Sidebar: I will go into greater detail in a later letter, but regulators need to move NOW to create a Credit Default Swaps Exchange. A problem/crisis in that unregulated market is actually a far bigger problem than the current subprime crisis. Why do you think Bear Stearns was not allowed to go into bankruptcy? There are banks that are too big to fail, despite what Paulson says for public consumption.)

There are a lot of conflicting opinions, which you can read at www.bloomberg.com if you care. Some say Fannie and Freddie will have to lose $70 billion before the regulators step in. Poole says they are insolvent now, using fair market accounting methods. I don't know, and neither do 99.9 % of the shareholders. At this point Fannie and Freddie are not an investment, they are a gamble. Sitting here at Caesar's in Vegas, and reading the opinions, makes me think I have better odds at the tables below me.

I hope that when (not if!) taxpayer money is used, it is at market rates and means that shareholders are last in line, if at all, to recoup any money. For those of us who for years have called for tighter regulation and increased capitalization of the GSEs, as well as a clear removal of any government backing, implicit or explicit, being able to say "I told you so" does not feel all that good. Freddie and Fannie cannot be allowed to go out of existence. They are too tightly wound into the core and fiber of the US economy.

What can and should happen is that shareholders bear their losses, taxpayers pick up the bill, and when they are healthy again, as they will be at some point, another public offering should be done to hopefully recoup the losses to taxpayers. Or perhaps an auction with some guarantees to a potential buyer, but a complete removal of implicit government guarantees on future loans, and higher capitalization requirements. There are any numbers of ways to lessen the ultimate cost to the taxpayer.

What I fear is that politicians will use the opportunity to prop up the mortgage markets with taxpayer guarantees and create much larger losses, which could quickly mount into the hundreds of billions if not properly dealt with. A new populist-oriented administration could find this problem on their desk as they take office.

I would not want to own any stock in the financial sector. There is going to be a continual stream of write-offs over the coming year, at a minimum. Yes, some banks are better managed and will avoid the real life-threatening problems. Some will be like JP Morgan and end up with solid assets backed by government guarantees.

But which ones? Do you want to trust the analysts that have been telling you there is value in the financials at each step, all the way down? The management who insists they are in good shape, then raises capital at dilutive prices? The very people who did not see the problems to begin with, telling you that they are now solved?

The "value" that analysts optimistically see in various financial stocks is evaporating with each quarter, as they slowly write down ever more losses. With another potential $1 trillion to be written off or absorbed through earnings from profitable parts of the business, there is more pain to come. Investing in financials today is like trying to catch a falling safe.

The Ugly Muddle Through

Goldman Sachs published a report Thursday in which they suggest the most probable scenario for the next 12 months is GDP growth between -0.25% and 0.25%, or basically zero. Wayne Angell, mentioned above, expects the second half of '08 to be no better than the first half and for GDP growth to be 1%.

In the Bridgewater report mentioned above, they estimate that the net worth of US-based assets is down about 13% since January 2007, a total loss of almost $8 trillion. This is hitting pension plans, corporations, and consumers, making them think twice about planned investments and expenditures.

Earnings estimates are being cut with each passing month. The P/E ratio for the S&P 500 is currently at a sporty 23. Historically, in times of rising inflation, the stock market goes through "multiple compression." That means P/E ratios fall more than earnings. If multiples fell just 20%, back to 18, which is still above long-term trends, the market would see another 20% drop from here. Even with earnings growth, the market is going to have a challenge rising in the current environment.

Sidebar: A number of you have written questioning my source for the P/E ratio, as you read or hear different numbers from what I write. You can indeed find estimates of forward P/E ratios as low as 12 a year from now. That is a lot different than the 23 I cited above.

There are two basic types of earnings that are reported. One is "operating earnings," or what I call EBBS, or Earnings Before Bad Stuff. Then there is "reported earnings," which is what the corporations report on their tax forms. Not all that long ago, in the mid-'90s, operating earnings and reported earnings were generally in line with each other. Companies would deduct genuine one-time, unusual losses from their reported earnings to give us operating earnings. And such a system has a valid basis for existence. If something is truly one-time, maybe an investor should overlook it when evaluating the company's potential.

But then the media and analysts started using the operating earnings as the primary number, and companies began to game the system. More and more items were considered one-time. One of the more egregious examples was when Waste Management Systems declared that painting the garbage trucks was a one-time extraordinary expenditure and should be accounted as such. Today the difference between as-reported and operating earnings can be 20-40% or more! It seems there are many losses that management assures us are just one-time items.

Standard and Poor's has a web page where you can see a spreadsheet of historical data and projections for both types of earnings. That is the source of my data. It is at http://www2.standardandpoors.com/spf/xls/index/SP500EPSEST.XLS?GXHC_gx_session_id_=5350992f205e73e4& .

Analysts' estimates do tend to get brighter the further out one looks on the table. But if the growth scenarios mentioned above come about, and banks have to curtail all sorts of lending, the earnings projections are going to be way too high, as they have been for the last 12 months. That is going to mean more pain for the stock market.

I think it is quite likely we see the Dow slip below 11,000. (Ok, I wrote that Thursday!) As I said on Kudlow the other night, another 10% drop in the market would take us only to the average bear market. A "9 handle" on the Dow seems quite possible, if not likely. (Note: when someone says "a 9 handle," they mean that the first number in the index or stock price is a 9. The first number is the handle.) The risk is to the downside, given the tepid potential growth of the economy.

Once Again, the BLS Numbers Paint a False Picture

I almost get tired of writing this each month, but it is important, and I will do it quickly. The unemployment number from the BLS last week showed a loss of 62,000 jobs. Private sector jobs were off by 91,000, with the government showing growth of 29,000.

But once again, the birth/death ratio of estimated new jobs was 177,000. As The Liscio Report noted: "... without the b/d's contribution, private employment would have been down by something like 268,000. It added 29,000 [new jobs] to construction, 22,000 to professional and business services, and 86,000 to leisure and hospitality. Given the weakness of the economy and the crunchiness of credit, we doubt that there are enough startups around to match these imputations."

Revisions to the prior two months were a negative 52,000. When they do the final numbers a few years from now, we will find that the revisions will be in the hundreds of thousands for the first half of the year. We have now had five consecutive months of downward revisions, which is typical of recessions.

Unemployment held steady at 5.5%, but that masks an underlying and growing problem. There has been a huge increase in the number of people working "part-time for economic reasons" and a large number of people who are discouraged and not looking for a job but would like one. These two categories are not counted as unemployed. If you add them into the equation, the unemployment or underemployment number goes to 10.3%! (per Greg Weldon)

As I warned above, this has not made for pleasant reading. But it is reality, and we need to deal with it.

And let me say that even given the above, I am a long-term (and even mid-term) optimist. We have to work through some serious problems, but we will. Valuations are going to be low once again, and it will be time to become bullish. And researching and writing my book on how the world will change in 20 years makes me very optimistic. No one in 20 years will think of today as the "good old days." The changes that are in front of us will be amazing. So, simply take a deep breath, be conservative today, and get ready for a really wild and fun ride.

And speaking of investment banks, I need an introduction to someone who is deeply involved in the creation of Exchange-Traded Notes. Drop me a line.

Las Vegas, Maine, and a Wedding

I am at Freedom Fest in Las Vegas, and want to hit the send button so I can attend the sessions and see a lot of old friends. I really think it will be good fun. I have dinner with Frank Holmes of US Global tonight, and look forward to it. Frank is the consummate gentleman and always very interesting.

And speaking of dinner, I was with Barry Ritholtz (of Big Picture fame) last week, and we agreed we are psyched about going to Maine at the end of the month for David Kotok's annual fishing extravaganza. Lots of good friends, wine, and conversation - and I will get to collect on at least one of the group bets we made last year predicting markets, etc. And I was way wrong, but everyone else was even more wrong. Go figure. I will tell you all the details after the trip.

Daughter Tiffani's wedding is getting closer. 08-08-08. Less than a month, and a lot of coordination to be done. It is at the point where I am sitting in on meetings. Flowers cost what? Fireworks? Credit lines are being squeezed. But it is going to be so much fun!

Remember, the markets are not where you live. If your investments keep you up at night, sell until you can sleep. Life is to be enjoyed, and I am doing my part. So have fun this week! And call some friends and share a few laughs.

Your wishing he could be a bull analyst,

John Mauldin
John@FrontLineThoughts.com

Copyright 2008 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved

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