Thursday, May 29, 2008

The Sarcasm Oooooozes

"It's good to know we're in a strong economy with no inflation, as as the government says."

"We're in a rip roaring economy as far as the government goes."

Both said by the white male host on Squawk Box on CNBC this morning. I'll post the link later if I can find it.

Friday, May 16, 2008

U.S. Housing Starts: When Good News Is Bad

U.S. Housing Starts: When Good News Is Bad

U.S. housing starts unexpectedly rose 8.2% in April, retracing more than half the prior month’s decline. Starts rose in three of four major geographical zones. Moreover, the first upturn in building permits in five months signals potentially higher starts ahead. But that’s where the good news ends. All of the gain in starts stemmed from the volatile multiple-units section, while the steadier detached segment extended a year-long slide to a new 17-year low. Multiples are actually up in the past year, as homeowners downsize or morph into renters. But the truly bad news is that the surge in condo/townhouse construction adds to an already bloated stock of unsold homes. Sales of single-detached new homes sank 8.5% in March and are down 37% in the past year, falling nearly as fast as the 42% plunge in single starts in April. Unless sales spiked higher in April, which is highly unlikely given recent grim reports from homebuilders, the overhang of new detached homes likely stayed at a 27-year high of 11 months (at the current sales rate), almost double the norm. Meantime, the months’ supply of resale condos has topped a year. This can only mean that builders will need to slash prices further to stoke demand, after median prices slid the fastest in 38 years (13.3% y/y) in March. But who wants to buy when prices are falling this quickly and the bottom is nowhere in sight?

The Bottom Line: Despite the surprising upturn in starts and permits in April, the underlying trend in homebuilding remains downwards. Starts may need to fall towards 800,000, as in previous housing downturns, before the inventory glut is absorbed and prices stabilize. While residential construction might not slice another full percentage point from GDP growth in Q2, it may well do so in the second half of the year.

BMO Capital Markets Economics - Sal Guatieri

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Bullish on earnings?

Bullish on earnings?
Call it human nature, but it is fascinating to see how everyone loves to strip financials out of the earnings pie to declare that the rest of the profit picture is running at +7.4% YoY; not nearly as scary as the -17.2% overall trend. But nobody ever stripped out financials during the 2003-06 boom. And nobody seems willing to strip energy sector earnings out of the 1Q profit results – on
score, earnings have plunged 24%. Maybe the best way to portray the situation is to look at corporate earnings without the two bookends – financials and energy – and what we get is a +3% earnings growth rate. Not bullish; not bearish.

- ML Research, David Rosenberg

Friday, May 9, 2008

First

First post... will post ideas about trades up here, time permitting.

Best luck to all you traders out there.