Originally posted by: Jhhnn
From LK-
There is no certain equation to downturns. Excess slack can be taken up by investors who are buying cash, as is the case right now. I do fully expect prices to keep going down throughout the winter, but I also think that we are no less than 5-7% from the trough.
That's not what the trends indicate, at all-
http://www.newgeography.com/co...e-correction-continues
They're using that nasty "free fall" language, and that's what the chart indicates...
More pertinent info-
http://www.google.com/publicda...nemployment+rate+graph
Notice U-6, here-
http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.t12.htm
Not to worry, though. The FRB is printing money so fast that the presses are smokin'-
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123739788518173569.html
First the tech bubble, then the real estate bubble, now the FRB bubble.
What nobody wants to talk about is that the economy is pretty much snakebit given the shift of income to the tippy-top and productive jobs overseas... Trickle down economics, Reaganomics, are the biggest con job in the history of finance. It never would have gotten off the ground without huge structural deficits.
In your zeal to bash anything positive you've exposed a very big problem in your argument.
1. S&P-CS is NOT in a "free fall" contrary to your link (which is 9 months old, doof). I track the S&P-CS monthly with a very extensive spreadsheet, mainly for professional purposes. see below.
http://i21.photobucket.com/alb...LgndKiller/Jul-YOY.jpg
http://i21.photobucket.com/alb...ndKiller/Jul-Index.jpg
http://i21.photobucket.com/alb...ul-MonthlyMovement.jpg
http://i21.photobucket.com/alb...iller/Jul-FromPeak.jpg
Doesn't look like a freefall to me. As I said before, I think that the index will decline for the winter, mainly because when it falls, it will fall faster than the seasonal adjustments (which I didn't post SA numbers or charts).
2. Unemployment is high, no doubt about it. However, I believe the fears of a "jobless recovery" are bullshit. The economy is a self-sustaining cycle, both on the down and up. You notice that jobs are still being shed, mainly because as things work down, especially in increasing productivity, less people are needed. As orders pick up (and they are, especially for inventory), you'll see that trend reverse. As more companies order, more people are needed (when productivity is stressed), thus more people are hired, creating more need for goods/services, perpetuating the cycle.
I know it's all cool to avoid logic and join the herd, but it's pretty pathetic.
3. The big joke behind your Treasuries link is that the Fed's holdings of treasuries were actually at a LOW point prior to their purchases. They were doing nothing but returning to the norm that has existed for decades (as a % of treasuries float, and balance sheet). The more interesting play, that you failed to link to, was their purchases of RMBS. The bank for banks would naturally do this, since it's main function is to ensure liquidity in the market, which it has done admirably.
I do love how you call it "printing money", when you fail to mention the money that was destroyed, most likely more than $10TR of it. But then again, that wouldn't fit with your nice, pat, doomsday scenario, would it?
I can just see the little gears in your head turning, resisting the use of logic and data. It must be awfully tiring.