Breakout Fails to Achieve Escape Velocity

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By Jack McHugh - April 30th, 2009, 11:10PM

Good Evening: After blasting off and reaching breakout altitudes this morning, U.S. stocks fell back to earth in the afternoon. That most of the major averages finished Thursday just about where Wednesday left off could easily be attributed to noise and random motion. But before we dismiss today’s action with a casual shrug, it may be worth examining why today’s breakout attempt failed.

U.S. March Consumer Spending Fell More Than Forecast
Unemployment rate heading to 9% in April

U.S. stock index futures were up strongly this morning in response to some large gains overnight in Asia and some decent gains in Europe. A parade of earnings reports contributed to the good mood early on, as positive results for Dow, First Solar, Visa, and Comcast more than offset disappointments from Exxon, Travelers, and Procter and Gamble. At 8:30 edt, a bevy of economic releases were deemed a mixed bag and thus didn’t interrupt the festivities (see above). The weakest piece of data was a drop in consumer spending in March, a figure which ran counter to yesterday’s GDP data portraying U.S. consumers as being on the mend. Personal income levels were also weaker than expected, but employment costs were well contained. The number cited most in this motley bunch was a drop in jobless claims figures during the latest reporting week. Any drop in this statistic is welcome, of course, but it should be remembered that jobless claims are still well above the 600K mark, a level first breached only a couple of months ago (and more than a year into the recession). BAC-MER economist, David Rosenberg, breaks down the jobless claims data above, and he thinks they show next week’s unemployment number will hit the 9% mark.

Stocks Rise Worldwide, Pushing S&P 500 to Best Month Since 1991

Equities opened to the upside and, depending upon the average, were between 1% and 3% to the good in the early going. NASDAQ was the early leader, possibly due to some reaching for beta by portfolio managers that were concerned the rally was starting to get away from them. Headlines such as those you see above were scrolling across terminals all morning and probably contributed to this sense of “stocks are breaking out and I’m not long enough!” With the S&P within a good push or two from breakeven for 2009, stocks paused for a breather as lunchtime approached. Chrysler was forced into bankruptcy, but few were surprised by this outcome.

Obama Says Chrysler Holdout Lenders Speculated on U.S. Bailout

What did surprise and disappoint quite a few investors, however, was President Obama’s reaction to the Chrysler saga. Mistaking senior creditors for what he called “a small group of speculators”, our President had the following to say: “A group of investment firms and hedge funds decided to hold out for the prospect of an unjustified taxpayer-funded bailout…”They were hoping that everybody else would make sacrifices and they would have to make none…“Some demanded twice the return that other lenders were getting” (source: Bloomberg article above). In response to this broadside, a group of senior creditors dubbing themselves the “Committee of Chrysler Non-TARP Lenders” said they were treated like junior creditors, contrary to “long-recognized legal and business principles.” (op.cit.)

The more investors read this war of words over Chrysler, the less they felt like celebrating the ongoing equity rally and the more they felt like taking profits. The major averages retreated all the way back into red territory before struggling back to finish mixed. In a break from their recent pattern, the Dow Transports (+1.2%) and the Russell 2000 (-0.8%) moved in opposite directions. As for what this divergence means, I will only say that of the two indexes, the Russell 2000 has been the more dependable directional leader since October of 2007. Treasury prices were likewise flattish, though it should be noted the longer dated maturities did edge lower. In keeping with today’s theme, the dollar also finished virtually unchanged. Marching to their own drummer, commodities rose and the CRB index finished with a modest gain of 0.6%

So what, if any, directional clues did the stock market give us in first breaking out and then falling back? Obviously it is too soon to say, but the action and the spat over Chrysler did leave many market participants with a bad taste in their mouths as they headed home. Just as stocks were breaking out and achieving the type of “escape velocity” that might enable them to orbit at prices above unchanged for the year, gravity inconveniently pulled them back down. President Obama’s harsh words for Chrysler’s creditors were shocking to many who think he should know a bit more about contract law and the bankruptcy process. Our president did, after all, graduate from Harvard Law School and he also taught at the University of Chicago Law School.

If the verbal spitball throwing contest over Chrysler had taken place in one of Mr. Obama’s old classrooms, we could chalk it up to the passion of the educational process and move on. But he is now the President who represents all of us, debtors and creditors alike. As for his interpretation that some creditors were holding out “for the prospect of an unjustified taxpayer-funded bailout”, I can only offer a simple “gee…I wonder where the creditors got that idea?” Starting with Bear Stearns and not ending with the TARP, the many bailouts offered from Washington require a scorecard in order for one to keep track. The resulting bailout mentality has the unintended consequence of causing behaviors among investors to shift in directions Adam Smith’s invisible hand might not have otherwise silently guided them. I wish Paul Volcker would pull Mr. Obama and the rest of his economic team aside and explain to them why the rule of law is so vital to commerce and industry. Contract disputes and bankruptcy proceedings take place in the courts precisely because those venues are apolitical and less prone to partisan wrangling.

U.S. Stress Test Results Delayed as Early Conclusions Debated

And, finally tonight, if the last story you see above is true and the results of the stress test will now have to be delayed, then I fear another of Washington’s offers to help may yet go awry. The stress test was supposed to help us all by improving transparency, but, according to the story, the process seems to be taking a political turn toward opacity. After worrying for weeks about what the stress test results would mean for our nation’s largest banks, market participants recently came to the conclusion that the test was rigged to be passable and therefore was much ado about nothing.

If this story about the delay is true and is not just media hype, then brows may start to knit once more and the concerns about the health of our banks could start to resurface. Since, like the Russell 2000, the banks have been directional leaders, today’s 2% drop in the BKX may be telling us the upside breakout was just a head fake. Of course, the bulls could always decide to ignore this stuff and move another rocket into launch position come Friday morning. I see the odds tilted toward a market that for now doesn’t reach escape velocity, but rather tips over in a terminal velocity dive toward a retest of the March lows. The prudent will be prepared for either outcome.

– Jack McHugh

Obama Budget Cuts Visualization

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By Barry Ritholtz - April 30th, 2009, 8:30PM

How much is the $100 million dollars in budget cuts compared to the federal budget as a whole? This video imagines the budget as $100 in pennies to provide the answer.

The 1980 Chrysler Bailout

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By Barry Ritholtz - April 30th, 2009, 8:12PM

A friend reminded me about this section of the book. This is an excerpt from early draft of Bailout Nation: How Greed and Easy Money Corrupted Wall Street and Shook the World Economy. Given the bankruptcy filing today, it is totally suitable.  (The final version is thematically similar, but different in actual content).

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The current no strings attached bailout demands of the Big 3 stands in stark contrast to the 1980 Chrysler deal. Regardless, the subsequent decades post-bailout reveals the deal wasn’t particularly good for either the industry or the firm’s employees.

In the 1950s, Barron’s described the Detroit automakers as the big two and a half – with Chrysler, the perennial sales laggard, as the half. When the embargo hit, Chrysler suffered the most of the Big Three.

By the mid-seventies, the company was hemorrhaging cash. Chrysler lost $52 million in 1974, and a record $259.5 million in 1975. As smaller, less expensive and more fuel-efficient from Japan and Europe gained increasing market share in 1970s, Chrysler found itself in an ever-deepening hole. It looked like they might have to declare bankruptcy.

As soon as the energy crisis ended, it was back to business as usual. 1976 a hugely profitable year: the company’s net income was $422.6 million. 1977 was profitable, but less so: $163.2 million net income. By late 1978, they were running in the red again, losing $204.6 million. The fall of the Shah of Iran and a new US Oil embargo sent prices higher once again. By 1979, Chrysler was looking at its first billion dollar annual loss.

Management decided to was time to visit their Uncle Sam.

Read the rest of this entry »

Death of a Radio Giant; Fear of Technology

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By Barry Ritholtz - April 30th, 2009, 7:30PM

Two fascinating entertainment stories caught my eye today — if you have any interest in Entertainment, Technology or Digital Media, then go these out:

Clear Channel Communication is teetering:

“Clear Channel, the nation’s largest radio station operator and an outdoor billboard company, last year became the biggest leveraged buyout ever in the media business, after it was taken private by Thomas H. Lee Partners and Bain Capital. Now its revenues are plunging and so is its cash flow, making it harder to meet the payments on the billions in debt accumulated in the process of buying out its public investors…

Clear Channel was on track to become the biggest default among media companies and therefore the biggest workout ever in the industry… The company’s options may be limited. Many financially pressed concerns have been able to persuade creditors to exchange debt for equity and thus avoid a default and a bankruptcy filing… The company has $16 billion of bank debt, on which it pays variable rates, and $6 billion more of junior debt. The holders of the junior debt and the equity holders would absorb the first loss in the event of a bankruptcy, so the banks have some protection and less incentive to negotiate.”

That’s a shame . . .

These guys destroyed radio, and deserve to die. Its a shame most of the executives who put together this ugly behemoth have long since moved on. They should have been waterboarded.

• RealNetworks’ CEO Rob Glaser throws a fire bomb at technophobic entertainment execs:

“Hollywood is missing out on a marvelous opportunity, says RealNetworks’ CEO Rob Glaser. Real has presented the film industry with a means to inject renewed interest in DVDs, which is waning, Glaser said minutes after testifying at a hearing in federal court on Wednesday. Real has developed two different kinds of software, RealDVD and Facet, that it says streamlines the movie-viewing experience by enabling owners to duplicate DVDs and store the copies on hard drives.

But the studios, much like they’ve done since the Sony Betamax case, are resisting technological advancement and have rejected the opportunity Real offers, Glaser said. He thinks he knows why.
“Some of the studios are very progressive,” said Glaser, who founded the public company in 1994. “Some of them are scared. It’s been my experience that often the scared voices overwhelm the progressive voices.”

Fascinating stuff . . .

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Previously:
Radio’s Wounded Business Model (July 20th, 2004)

http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2004/07/radios-wounded-business-model/

iPod shuffle = new radio ? (January 15th, 2005)

http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2005/01/ipod-shuffle-new-radio/

Sources:
Radio Giant Faces Crisis in Cash Flow
GERALDINE FABRIKANT
NYT, April 29, 2009

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/30/business/media/30clear.html

Real’s Glaser: Some studio chiefs ’scared’ of tech
Greg Sandoval
C.NET April 29, 2009 4:31 PM PDT

http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-10230578-93.html?tag=nl.e703

Q&A: Janet Tavakoli

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By Barry Ritholtz - April 30th, 2009, 6:00PM

Our guest is Janet Tavakoli, author of Dear Mr. Buffett: What an Investor Learns 1,269 Miles from Wall Street.” She describes her meetings with investor Warren Buffett prior to the economic downturn. Program from Sunday, April 19, 2009.

See this also:

http://www.tavakolistructuredfinance.com/CSPAN.html

Charlie Rose: Lionel Barber, editor “Financial Times”

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By Barry Ritholtz - April 30th, 2009, 4:15PM

The 14 Most Strident Critics of Obama

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By Barry Ritholtz - April 30th, 2009, 2:30PM

I found this piece — which was published at Salon while I was on vacay — to be amusing:

“Meet the Cassandras, 14 economists, bloggers, politicians and businesspeople of all political stripes who have become the most strident critics of President Obama’s stewardship of the economy . . .

I find this terribly ironic. All I heard during W’s reign of error was what a partisan basher I was. Mind you, I was not an objective critic of bad policies, nor a skeptical observer of a cynical, media manipulating outright bullshitter — it was I who was partisan.

Funny, none of those same accusers seem to mind when I critique Team Obama. (Projection is a funny thing).

Back to Salon:

“Here’s a guide to the prophets of doom. We’ve identified them, attempted to ascertain the moment when they first turned against the White House, and summarized the basic points of their critique. We’ve included economists, members of the business community, bloggers and, just for fun, two of the most anti-Obama Republicans we could dig up.

I find this sort of stuff terribly amusing . . .

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Source:
The prophets of doom
Andrew Leonard
Salon, Apr. 16, 2009

http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2009/04/16/cassandras/index.html

Waves and Tides Next Frontier for Energy Exploration

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By Barry Ritholtz - April 30th, 2009, 1:15PM

Several companies are developing technologies that aim to generate energy from ocean waves. (Pretty cool looking)

4/23/2009

Markets During Presidential First Terms

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By Barry Ritholtz - April 30th, 2009, 11:45AM

Sy Harding (who you may know from his prescient 1999 book Riding the Bear) had an interesting piece in Barron’s over the weekend.

Sy wrote:

There’s a strong tendency for each new presidential administration to do whatever it takes to make sure the economy and market will be strong when reelection time rolls around four years later. As the table below shows, of the 19 bear markets since 1917 — I define a bear market as one in which stocks fall at least 20% — 15 ended in the first or second year of a presidential term, so that the economy and stock prices had recovered by the time the next election took place. . . .

The sole president who didn’t see the bear depart until his fourth year in office was the unfortunate Herbert Hoover, who wasn’t re-elected. So, the odds seem good that the current bear market will conclude in the first or second year of the Obama presidency.”

15 of 19 seems like not bad odds, and if you look at the last 4 — 3 of them came during a president’s second term.

Statistically speaking, 2010 looks like a pretty good bet for the end of the Bear market, according to Harding. One caveat: Just because the Bear ends doesn’t mean a new bull starts right away.

My 1973 thesis is still playing out according to schedule, which puts us now somewhere in 1974. Even when the bear was dead, markets still needed another 7 years for a new bull to begin . . .

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Source:
Thank You, Mr. Obama
SY HARDING
Barron’s April 25, 2009

http://online.barrons.com/article/SB124062166589055461.html

Chicago PMI

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By Peter Boockvar - April 30th, 2009, 11:45AM

Joining the less bad party that other regional surveys have experienced,
the April Chicago PMI was 5 pts better than expected at 40.1, up from
31.4 in March, which was the worst since 1980. 50 is the breakeven
between expansion and contraction so we are still clearly in recession
territory but the slowing pace of deterioration obviously has been the
focus. New Orders rose to 42.1 from 30.9, Backlogs rose to 36.9 from
21.3, while inventories remained extremely lean, falling to 30.6 from
34.9, the lowest since 1982. Employment rose by 3.7 pts to 31.8.
Notwithstanding the recent rise and stability in commodity prices,
particularly in the CRB raw industrials index, Prices Paid fell to 28.4
from 34.1, the lowest since 1949. The national ISM figure is out
tomorrow and it’s expected to rise to 38.4 from 36.3 and that would be
the highest since Oct.

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completeness cannot be guaranteed. This report is for informational
purposes only and under no circumstances is it to be construed as an
offer to sell, or a solicitation to buy, any security. At various times
we may have positions in and effect transactions in securities referred
to herein. Any recommendation contained in this report may not be
appropriate for all investors. Trading options is not suitable for all
investors and involves risk of loss. Although the information contained
in the subject report (not including disclosures contained herein) has
been obtained from sources we believe to be reliable, the accuracy and
completeness of such information and the opinions expressed herein
cannot be guaranteed. An options disclosure document may be obtained
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