IL, CA, NY, NJ cds continue to rise

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By Peter Boockvar - June 28th, 2010, 12:45PM

Forget again for a moment the European sovereign credit issues, the cost of credit protection for US municipalities Illinois, California, NY and NJ continue to rise and are up sharply over the past week. Illinois 5 yr CDS is at a fresh record today at 370 bps, up 10 bps on the day and higher by almost 60 bps from one week ago. CA is trading at 350 bps, up 5 bps on the day and now up 50 bps over the past week. NY is quoted at 290 bps, up 6 bps and up almost 50 bps since last Monday. New Jersey is up 1 bps on the day at 281 bps but that is up 30 bps over the past week. CA, NY and NJ are at the highest levels since April ’09. For comparison, Spain is quoted at 267 bps, Portugal, Hungary and Croatia all trade at about 325 bps, Bulgaria at 352 bps, Dubai at 483 bps, and Greece at 1025 bps.

Chicago Fed: Best Days Behind Us?

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By Invictus - June 28th, 2010, 11:45AM

The Chicago Fed’s National Activity Index – one of my favorite measures — printed this morning.  The monthly number edged down slightly, and the 3-month moving average, which the folks in Chicago tell us to focus on, rose somewhat.

Here, however, is the money shot from the release (my bold):

May’s CFNAI-MA3 suggests that growth in national economic activity was above its historical trend. Moving above +0.20, the index’s three-month moving average in May also reached a level historically associated with a mature economic recovery following a recession. With regard to inflation, the CFNAI-MA3 in May indicates limited inflationary pressure from economic activity over the coming year.

So here’s the Chicago Fed letting us know that we may well have seen the best of what this “recovery” had to offer.  I would note that the Personal Consumption and Housing sub-component of the index continued to be mired in negative territory, subtracting 0.42 from the overall print.  Now, this is not to imply that a double dip is a foregone conclusion, though that is certainly one outcome.  At the very least, it argues for a very slow growth scenario.>

Chicago Fed National Activity Index

click for larger charts

Having composed this post, I decided to reach out to my contact at the Chicago Fed to inquire specifically about their use of the word “mature.” He told me that I should read it as if it were “ongoing,” and pointed me to the headline of their piece — Index Shows Economic Activity Continued to Expand in May. I suppose that whether they should have substituted the word “ongoing” for the word “mature” may be a matter for linguists (cunning and otherwise). This may be hair-splitting and nit-picking, but I personally infer a meaning from the word “mature” that it appears the Chi Fed may not have meant to convey. What say you linguists — what does “mature” imply to you?

‘All Hat, No Cattle’ Wall Street Reform

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By Barry Ritholtz - June 28th, 2010, 10:57AM

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Source:
‘All Hat, No Cattle’ Wall Street Reform Imperiled by Sen. Byrd’s Death
Aaron Task
Yahoo Tech Ticker, June 28, 2010 10:38am
http://finance.yahoo.com/tech-ticker/%27all-hat-no-cattle%27-wall-street-reform-imperiled-by-sen.-byrd%27s-death-509828.html

2010 World Cup Rankings

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By Barry Ritholtz - June 28th, 2010, 10:00AM

Terrific interactive data dump in the Sunday NYT, ranking various FIFA world cup teams by 10 separate metrics:

FIFA world ranking
Goals per game
Goals allowed per game
Shots per game
Shots on goal per game
Touches per game
Touches allowed per game
Touch difference per game
Touches in attack
Touches resulting in complete pass

2010 World Cup Rankings

click for interactive table

Note– the print version, which is also color coded, is far superior to the digital version.

Word Origins: “Austerians”

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By Barry Ritholtz - June 28th, 2010, 10:00AM

Sometime over the past two weeks, the word “Austerians” burst onto the blogosphere.

A play on the fiscal reserve of the “Austrian” school of economic thought (Friedrich Hayek or Ludwig von Mises) the phrase Austerians referred to the desire to slash government spending and cut deficits during a time of economic weakness or recession.

Economix credited the term to Mark Thoma (who blogs at Economist’s View). His first mention appears to have been on Thursday, June 17, 2010 at 04:23 AM in “Paradox of Thrift” versus “Confidence in the Markets”.  I mentioned Thoma and the word coinage in Martin Wolf’s FT discussion “When Should Fiscal Tightening Begin?“.

That started an email deluge as to the origin of the word. Several readers told me it was much older than June 17, 2010. So I pinged Professor Thoma, and he said he had no idea about the origin –  he was just trying to make a somewhat dry discussion of budget balancing during difficult economic times more entertaining — not create a new phrase.

Mark noted that someone in his comment stream  claimed to have heard this used earlier at Naked Capitalism. So I pinged Yves Smith, and she directed me to Rob Parenteau, of The Richebacher Letter.

Rob wrote back that he had been using the phrase for quite some time. He directed me to a BNN TV interview where he used the phrase (about 3 minutes in) on the afternoon of June 10, 2010 to refer to the region previously known as the Eurozone as Austeria.

Rob also wrote:  “I next used it and the phrase “Austerian Economics” in the third and second to last paragraphs of the June 11, 2010 Richebacher Weekly letter published by Agora Financial for subscribers. And yes, it was a yank on the Austrian School bias toward deflation uber alles.”

I don’t know Rob, or get the Richebacher Letter — but Yves does, and she confirms he has been using the phrase since April.

There you have it — etymological mystery solved.

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Source:
SqueezePlay : June 10, 2010 : G20 Votes for Great Depression
BNN.CA June 10, 2010
http://watch.bnn.ca/thursday/ShowAllClips/#clip312053

Politician vs Market

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By Peter Boockvar - June 28th, 2010, 8:08AM

In the Travel Channel show Man vs Food, a food eating contest pits Man vs a huge amount of food and/or something very spicy typically within a specific amount of time. While Man mostly wins, the quantity of food and its spice creates a limit that not even Man can overcome. What we are seeing playing out now is Politician vs Market where the debate of spending vs saving to generate growth is the daily topic and highlighted at the G20 meeting. What we’re seeing in Europe are not politicians who all of a sudden decided to put their budgets on a diet but a market that is forcing it on them as its either that or face a higher cost of funding. Big supply alone today from Italy, Belgium, France and Germany has European bond yields higher across the board notwithstanding the weekend commitment to halve deficits over the next few years. Germany said they will expand their bank stress tests to 100 banks as 3 mo Euribor moves to fresh 9 month high.

Are Home Prices Too High — or Too Low?

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By Barry Ritholtz - June 28th, 2010, 6:40AM

Several readers expressed surprise that I still believed home prices remain too high, as discussed in the A Closer Look at the Second Leg Down in Housing last week.

Paul Kasriel, in a recent Daily Global Commentary — “The U.S. Housing Market – Post-Tax Credit Give-Back or Something More Fundamental” — argued the exact opposite. In that piece, he wrote:

“Is there any reason to believe that after a couple of months, home sales will pick up again? Yes.

Why? Because with mortgage rates at rock-bottom levels and with house prices very low in relation to household incomes, housing is about as an attractive a purchase as it has been in the past 40 years.

Are we on the eve of a renewed housing boom, given this attractiveness? No. But are we likely to slip back into a full-fledged housing recession? No. Two steps forward, one step backward.”

I always enjoy it when someone whose methodology I respect is on the opposite side of an analytical debate from me. I would much rather argue against a smart mathematical or economic or psychological thesis, than the usual partisan frippery.

So which is it? Are house prices low or high relative to income? What’s the basis of Kasriel’s homes-are-cheap statement?

To find out, I pinged Paul as to the basis of his Housing is cheap thesis. Here is what he wrote back:

“The chart below illustrates why I think owner-occupied housing on a national basis is cheap. The “yield” on owner-occupied housing continues to be above the cost of financing a home purchase. This is actually a rare occurrence. Of course, if the market value of owner-occupied housing were to fall more, all else the same, the purchase of a house would become even more attractive.”

Nominal Imputed Rent versus Home Purchase Price

click for larger chart

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That is an interesting, data driven analysis. Kasriel’s point is that for any potential home buyer, the cost of buying a home is less than what it would cost to rent the equivalent home. Hence, in his analysis, homes are cheap. Think of it as using dividend yield of a stock to determine if its cheap or dear relative to Treasuries.

Might home sales pick up again in a couple of months? Perhaps, but I doubt it. I simply do not see any compelling reason for the marginal home buyer to make that purchase. By September, we will be fighting seasonal factors. The exception is the key bubble bust regions, where foreclosures are driving prices as much as 50% off the peak prices.

But I am unconvinced about prices in general. My problem with imputed rent is that it is not independent of demand for home purchases; Imputed rents interact with home prices, credit availability, pricing trends, employment, etc.

Indeed, one can easily imagine a scenario where: 1) Home prices are thought of trending lower; 2) Credit is tight; 3) Employment is weak; 4) Wages are flat. This would create an environment of relatively soft demand for home purchases (sending their prices lower) At the same time, this would increase demand for rental units.

There are other factors thyat might also pressure prices lower. As we saw last cycle, even very low mortgage rates are no guarantee of home price appreciation. Home buyers have figured out that as rates rise, it caps RE gains. And the move from 1% in 2004 to 5% in 2006 set up not only the end of price appreciation, but home price collapse as well. Perhaps buyers are aware that with the Fed at zero, there is nowhere for rates to go but up. That means price appreciation will be modest at best, and negative at worst.

Bailout Tally (and Subsidization) Report

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By Barry Ritholtz - June 27th, 2010, 6:19PM

Bailout Tally Report

Bailout Tally May 2010

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Bailout and Subsidization Type Report

Sub 032010

Weekend Reads

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By Barry Ritholtz - June 27th, 2010, 2:30PM

I have a ton of work to get through today, but here are the readings that I found interesting . . .

• Grading Financial Regulatory Reform (TBP)

• WSJ gets surprisingly Bullish on the recovery:
. . . . .
-Factories Grapple With How Fast to Ramp Up (JUNE 20, 2010)
. . . . . -Seeing Economic Rebound, Firms Step Up Spending (JUNE 25, 2010)

• Martin Wolf: Why it is right for central banks to keep printing (FT.com)

• Fannie And Freddie: Where Do We Go From Here?  (NPR)

• Ben Bernanke needs fresh monetary blitz as US recovery falters (Telegraph)

• Jay Rosen on Why the American Press Sucks (Press Think)

• BP Oil Spill Boosts Infographic Industry, Creates Jobs (Reformed Broker)

• Scott Adam’s Exobrains (Dilbert.com)

• Cartography of the Strange: (Book at AMAZON, Review at GOOD)

• On the 1 year anniversary of Jackson’s death, The “Thriller” Diaries (Vanity Fair)

What’s on your weekend reading list ?

US Ranks Last in Health Care vs AUS, CAN, GER, NETH, NZ, UK

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By Barry Ritholtz - June 27th, 2010, 12:00PM

This continues to be fascinating:

“The U.S. health system is the most expensive in the world, but comparative analyses consistently show the United States underperforms relative to other countries on most dimensions of performance. Among the seven nations studied—Australia, Canada, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States—the U.S. ranks last overall, as it did in the 2007, 2006, and 2004. Most troubling, the U.S. fails to achieve better health outcomes than the other countries, and as shown in the earlier editions, the U.S. is last on dimensions of access, patient safety, coordination, efficiency, and equity. The Netherlands ranks first, followed closely by the U.K. and Australia.”

At least the US soccer team had a good world cup run . . .
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click for larger graphic

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Hat tip: Stick with a Nose

Sources:
Mirror, Mirror on the Wall: How the Performance of the U.S. Health Care System Compares Internationally
Karen Davis, Ph.D., Cathy Schoen, M.S., and Kristof Stremikis, M.P.P.
Commonwealth fund, June 23, 2010  <br>http://www.commonwealthfund.org/Content/Publications/Fund-Reports/2010/Jun/Mirror-Mirror-Update.aspx

Mirror, Mirror on the Wall (PDF)

Interactive Data/Graphic

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