European Stocks… Little Change on Fed Fears

By HY Markets Forex Blog

European Stocks saw little change, after the Stoxx Europe 600 index fell at its most in five weeks and investors worries over the possibility that the Federal Reserve (Fed) may begin to taper its stimulus as soon as September as the US economy is showing signs of improvement.

European Stocks & Expected Reports

The pan-European Euro Stoxx 50 gained 0.05% to 2,837.41 at the time of writing, while the German DAX dropped 0.10% to 8,367.60 at the same time. The French CAC 40 advanced 0.19% higher at 4,101.13, while the British FTSE 100 added 0.09% to 6,489.30.

Some major economic reports and new from the Eurozone is expected to be released later today, including  reports on the consumer prices, trade balance data and the current account data.

Economists are expecting the current account to report an additional €19 million in the month of June, up from €14.6 in May.

While with the consumer prices in the Eurozone, analysts are expecting a drop of 0.5% in the month of July on a monthly basis, while prices are predicted to remain unchanged at a 1.6% threshold annually.

Earlier this week economic data released shows that the Federal Reserve (Fed) may begin to scale back on its bond-buying program as early as September.

Reports showed that unemployment figures came down by 320,000 in the week ending August 10, the lowest since 2007.

Policymakers have stated that if the unemployment rate keeps reducing, they would consider on when to start scaling back on its monthly bond-buying program.
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US Equity Futures Open Green

By HY Markets Forex Blog

US Equity Futures opened in  green on the last day of the trading week, as  investors focus on the mixed series of US macroeconomic data, with speculation that the Federal Reserve (Fed) may delay cutting the its stimulus program until December.

Following the massive fall in the previous session, Wall streets’ S&P 500 rose 0.25% to $1,659.95 at the time of writing.

Investors worries about when the Federal Reserve (Fed) would begin to taper its bond-buying program, as the September Federal Open Market Committee meeting is approaching.

A series of mixed data’s of the world’s largest economy’s indicators has left investors worried the Fed will proceed with scaling back its stimulus program. Analysts are predicting the quantitative easing (QE) program is highly likely to begin on tapering by September, as the US economy is showing signs of recovery and growth.

On Thursday, reports from the Department of Labor shows that the unemployment figures in the US dropped to its lowest level since January 2008*, dropping to 320,000 from previous record of 15,000.

The Fed have prioritize two major goals to achieve before they would start tapering its quantitative easing (QE) program, which  are price stability and the drop in unemployment and reinforcing full employment .

US Equity Futures – DoL Figures Released

Figures from the last reports released by the Department of Labour shows that the US Consumer Price Index advanced 0.2% in the month of July from June and a gain of 2.0% from July of 2012.

Regardless of the driven speculations that the Fed will begin its tapering its monthly bond-purchasing program soon, some analysts are saying the Fed would not begin until the industrial production rate meets the Federal Reserve’s expectation of a 0.3% increase.

Investors are keeping an eye on the expected Census Bureau, where analysts are expecting to see this month’s figures at approximately 945,000.

The US Bureau of Labour Statistics is also expected to publish its Unit Labour Costs index that measures the total costs that is required to produce a unit of output.

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Friday Charts: The Most Baffling Government Chart Ever

By WallStreetDaily.com

When Friday rolls around, we roll out the charts in the Wall Street Daily Nation.

After all, a picture is supposed to be worth a thousand words. So we figure, why not embrace it?

This week, we’re serving up a timely snapshot on the unhealthiest balance sheets in the world.

We’re sharing the most mind-boggling government streak ever. It’s up to 88 days (and counting). Quick, somebody call the Guinness Book of World Records!

And last, but not least, we’re providing another dollop of evidence why one internet stock should be avoided at all costs. That is, if you’re investing for the long term.

Take a look and be sure to let us know what you think!

Everything’s Bigger in Texas China?

China boasts the world’s largest population. It ranks as the world’s number one air polluter. And – surprise, surprise – it also tops the list for the largest balance sheet expansion by a central bank over the last decade.

As Richard Bernstein (of Richard Bernstein Advisors) says, “China’s lending policies have been so out of control that the balance sheet of the People’s Bank of China is now roughly 50% bigger than the Fed’s.”

So now we know why Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has embarked on a historic asset-purchase program. He’s a fierce competitor and simply wants to make sure we keep up with China. It’s the only logical explanation for QE Infinity, right?

Look Who’s Cooking the Books Now!

When you see the next chart, you’re going to wonder how this is even possible…

The Treasury Department’s Financial Management Service reports that – for 88 days in a row – the federal government’s debt remained at exactly $16.699396 trillion. That’s just $25 million shy of the official debt ceiling limit set in May 2013.

Yet, in the month of July alone, the government ran a $98-billion deficit.

How exactly did the government fund operations if it didn’t take on a single new penny in debt?

Turns out, the answer to the mystery is contained in this letter from the Treasury Secretary, Jacob Lew.

Ever since May 17, he’s been using “the standard set of extraordinary measures” to prevent the Treasury from exceeding the legal limit. Or, more plainly, he’s essentially been cooking the government books.

So when the politicians start ramping up the rhetoric about the debilitating impact of hitting the debt ceiling limit, ignore them. We already did. Even if the Treasury Department keeps publishing daily reports here to try to convince us otherwise.

To Yahoo or Not to Yahoo

I’ve railed against the long-term investment prospects for Yahoo! (YHOO) before.

I know, I know. Not the best call, considering that the stock is on a tear – up almost 40% this year already.

The company can’t fight gravity, though. Or, more specifically, it can’t indefinitely overcome the undeniably bearish fundamentals working against it.

Like the company’s all-time low (and still shrinking) share of web search traffic. Or its lack of quarterly sales growth since late 2009.

And now this: the ever-dwindling amount of time people spend on Yahoo’s site.

As the company becomes increasingly irrelevant, it’s only a matter of time before the stock does, too.

After all, as the famed value investor, Benjamin Graham, observed, “In the short run the market is a voting machine, but in the long run it’s a weighing machine.”

Now, if you think Graham doesn’t have a clue what he’s talking about, go ahead and bet on Yahoo. I won’t.

That’s it for this week. Before you go, though, let us know what you think of this weekly column – or any of our recent work at Wall Street Daily – by going here.

Ahead of the tape,

Louis Basenese

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Original Article: Friday Charts: The Most Baffling Government Chart Ever

Flipping a Home for Profit Is Back?

By Profit Confidential

150813_PC_michaelWhen I turn on the TV or read a newspaper, reporters are touting how robust the U.S. housing market has once again become. Voices on the radio “sing” a similar tune. Some are saying the “rebound” in the housing market will continue for a while. Charts of home prices rising in Phoenix, Arizona and Las Vegas, Nevada are all over the media.

It seems like flipping a home for profit is back!

When I look at and hear all this, I keep asking myself, “Am I missing something here? Is the housing market actually as great as we are being told?”

I’m on the opposite side of the fence: when I hear about the housing market in the U.S. economy these days, it reminds me of years past. I remember going to parties and functions and all you heard was how home prices were rising…seemed like everyone was getting either a vacation home or a second home.

Back then, this prompted me to look at the fundamentals of the housing market and, as most of my long-term readers know, I turned bearish on the housing market in 2006, advising my readers to jump from real estate in 2006.

Now when I look at the fundamentals, the conclusion of my analysis is different from what we are being told by the mainstream.

For the housing market to improve and have sustainable growth, we need first-time home buyers to be active in the marketplace. Investors and speculators are there to profit—they’ll run quickly when returns diminish. A first-time home buyer stays in the house he/she buys for the long term.

We are not seeing this.

In 2012, institutional investors jumped into the U.S. housing market and bought vast amounts of empty homes to rent. This created demand and caused home prices to go up—economics 101.

But why aren’t first-time home buyers entering the housing market? First-time home buyers are struggling to the point where they can’t keep up with their own expenses; forget thinking about buying a home.

Prices of goods and services consumers buy continue to go up. Milk, eggs, bread, butter and other food prices are going up, either through higher prices or smaller-sized packaging. Going to the same restaurant you went to last year will surely cost you more today. Consumers are spending more and more on their basic needs and they are becoming cost-savvy—not by choice, mind you.

Consumers are shying away from the purchase of non-essential goods. Sales at furniture and home furnishing stores in the U.S. economy declined 1.4% in July compared to June. Sales at electronics and appliances stores declined 0.4% in the same period, and have been stagnant since the second half of 2012. (Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, last accessed August 13, 2013.)

The jobs created in the U.S. economy since the Great Recession have been in the low-paying service and retail sectors—the lowest paying jobs.

Mortgage rates have also recently increased sharply. This morning, the bellwether 10-year U.S. Treasury hit a yield of 2.75%; that’s almost one full percentage point higher than this day last year. The standard 30-year U.S. mortgage is closing in on five percent for the first time in years! Higher interest rates are a huge threat to the housing market recovery.

And we have a significant portion of homeowners living in homes under negative equity; i.e. their home is worth less than their mortgage.

With potential home buyers in trouble and interest rates rising, the housing market faces a huge problem. That’s exactly what the price collapse of new homebuilder stocks has been warning us about. The Dow Jones U.S. Home Construction Index, which includes all the major public new-home builders, is down 25% in just the past three months!

It’s no surprise that I remain very skeptical about the so-called recovery in the U.S. housing market. My opinion will change when I see the average American getting back on his feet (getting a job that he has skills for and increasing his ability to spend), interest rates falling, and real economic growth happening—all things that will not happen for years, if they ever do happen at all.

What He Said:

“Consumer confidence does not change overnight. In the U.S., 70% of GDP is based on consumer spending. And in my life, all the recessions I have seen or studied have only come to an end when consumers started spending. With consumer sentiment getting worse, and with the U.S. personal savings rate at near record lows, it may take two or three years for consumers to start spending again.” Michael Lombardi in Profit Confidential, February 25, 2008. By the end of 2008, the rest of the world was realizing the recession would be much longer and deeper than they thought.

Article by profitconfidential.com

They’re Not Popular, But These Stocks May Offer Opportunity After All

By Profit Confidential

150813_PC_georgeChinese stocks listed on the Shanghai Composite Index (SCI) are down over seven percent this year, and unless things change, it will be the third year since 2010 that the index moves lower.

These are clearly not the best of times for Chinese stocks, but that doesn’t mean there is not a buying opportunity out there for some Chinese stocks trading on U.S. exchanges.

For instance, just the other day, I discussed the added benefits from small-cap stocks and talked about China-based Phoenix New Media Limited (NYSE/FENG). This stock has had a nice run up this year, surging 129%, including a 14% pop on Monday. While situations like FENG are not the norm with Chinese small-cap stocks this year or in the recent few years, they are also not as rare as you might think.

In the Chinese education space, TAL Education Group (NYSE/XRS) has been one of many Chinese education plays that have sizzled on the charts this year—up 34%.

In China’s often talked about real estate sector, where some have been calling for a bubble to materialize for years now, there have been some excellent Chinese stocks. One of these companies, Xinyuan Real Estate Co., Ltd. (NYSE/XIN), which I highlighted here in February (read “Why the Money May Be with China’s Real Estate”) is up over 70% since.

PC_Aug15_Graph1Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

In the social media space, a stock that looks interesting on the chart is Renren Inc. (NASDAQ/RENN), which is appearing to be forming a bullish cup and handle and could break higher.

PC_Aug15_Graph2Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

Another China-based business to consumer e-commerce play that looks interesting is E-Commerce China Dangdang Inc. (NYSE/DANG).

PC_Aug15_Graph3Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

The stocks I have mentioned are only a few of the numerous China plays that can return big if you have the stomach for the volatility and risk.

The key is the financial numbers that are presented by the companies. I hope that these numbers can be trusted to risk our capital in these stocks.

While there are those who still believe Chinese stocks are not worth a look and the best days are behind them, I’m not one of them and continue to firmly believe there will be excellent buying opportunities for speculators in Chinese stocks. You just need to be careful and stay away from companies that do not have a decent history of financials. Also look at the governance, as many of these stocks will need to be audited by auditors approved by the SEC.

So instead of running for the exits when you see Chinese stocks, you may want to take a closer look.

Article by profitconfidential.com

How to Play the Bakken Oil Boom While Oil & Gas Companies Are at Their Highs

By Profit Confidential

150813_PC_mitchellWhen scanning the stock market for new opportunities, I’m always looking for spinoffs that are potential investments or trades in industries or related to specific sectors that are considered “hot.”

The problem with “hot” sectors or specific stocks themselves is that they are typically expensive. A burgeoning stock market sector like Bakken oil offers liquidity and opportunity, but because many of these stocks are “in demand,” or highly visible to institutional investors, share prices can be way out of whack with reality. That’s why a spinoff industry that’s benefitting from the Bakken oil production boom can actually be an even better investment opportunity.

Long-time readers of this column know of my affinity for railroad stocks as long-term investments. The two I like specifically are Union Pacific Corporation (UNP) and Canadian National Railway Company (CNI); according to their trading history on the stock market, they’ve been worth accumulating when they’re down.

But having travelled through the Bakken oil region and put eyes on the infrastructure and the activity surrounding it, railroad services seemingly offer good growth potential—especially now with pipeline capacity unable to keep up with the amount of oil coming out of the ground.

The business of railcars and railroad services has been around a very long time. Four companies worthy of investigation are American Railcar Industries, Inc. (ARII), The Greenbrier Companies, Inc. (GBX), FreightCar America, Inc. (RAIL), and Trinity Industries, Inc. (TRN).

Many of these companies have been in business a long time, but with railroad companies doing well and demand for petroleum railcars soaring, many of these mature businesses are experiencing solid growth in revenues and earnings. They are worth looking into if you are interested in spinoff investments related to the Bakken oil boom and in other domestic oil regions.

The oil and gas equipment and services area is dominated by the big players, and Wall Street is continuously boosting earnings expectations among most corporations within the group.

Back in April in this column, we considered Chart Industries, Inc. (GTLS), out of Garfield, OH, which is a company in the natural and industrial gas storage business. Bakken oil isn’t the only area benefitting from horizontal drilling and fracturing. The natural gas build out is an investment theme that I’m particularly fond of, and a company like Chart Industries is a great spinoff to play this investment theme. (See “This Is an Investment Theme Worth Paying Attention To.”)

Many Bakken oil companies are experiencing substantial production growth right now, and their shares are richly priced. This is why spinoff opportunities are so valuable as an equity investor. You get the same benefit of the economic activity taking place, with less risk as an operator and typically lower prices as an investor.

The Bakken oil boom certainly has a shelf life and, as is the case in the investment business, timing is everything.

Railroad stocks are fully valued and trading right close to their all-time record highs. But several railroad services companies are not, and I feel they now make for attractive opportunities. As the boom matures, it’s the spinoff trades that are the better investments.

Article by profitconfidential.com

Ponzi Scheme of the Fed Printing and Government Spending; How Long It Will Go On

By Profit Confidential

gold bullionThe U.S. government registered a budget deficit of $98.0 billion for the month of July. Total revenues received by the government in the month accounted for $200 billion, and it spent $298 billion. (Source: Department of the Treasury, Bureau of Fiscal Service, August 12, 2013.)

So far in the government’s fiscal year, which began in October of 2012, the U.S. government has incurred a budget deficit of $607 billion. In addition, it received $2.28 trillion and spent $2.89 trillion.

While politicians will certainly try to spin the declining budget deficit into something good, we continue to move into unchartered waters. Let me explain.

When a government registers a budget deficit, it has to come up with money to pay for its expenses. Usually, to fund its expenses, it goes out and issues bonds, thus increasing the national debt. At this point, this process has become problematic for the U.S. economy.

Over the past four years, our national debt has skyrocketed to an unprecedented level due to multiple years of trillion-dollar budget deficits. We are the nation with the highest nominal national debt.

The four risks to a ballooning budget deficit…

So far in the fiscal year, October 2012 to July 2013, the U.S. government has paid interest of little more than $370 billion on the debt it has issued. This amount has increased almost 15% from the same period in the last fiscal year, when it was $322 billion. For the entire fiscal year, the government expects to pay interest of $414 billion.

But we all know interest rates are rising. This morning, the 10-year U.S. Treasury yields 2.71%. Last year at this time, the yield was only 1.73%.  Interest rates on the bellwether U.S. Treasury have jumped 57% in 12 months! The government’s interest expenses over the next few years could double; sending its budget deficit sky-high.

Next, we have U.S. cities and states struggling to pay their bills. Detroit going bankrupt is just the tip of the iceberg. Will the federal government need to bail out these cash-strapped “sub” governments? When push comes to shove and civil unrest comes into play, the government may have no choice but to bail out cities and states that can’t pay their bills, again pushing up its budget deficit.

Finally, the student debt time bomb is a real threat. For the first time in history, student debt, much of it government-guaranteed loans, has surpassed $1.0 trillion, and students are struggling to make their payments. At what point will the government bite the bullet on student loans and just include those losses in its budget deficit?

I could add in natural catastrophes, the postal service, the cost of ObamaCare, antiquated infrastructure and more government expenses in the pipeline, but I’ll just stop here.

Comparing our debt to our gross domestic product (GDP), our national debt currently sits at about 105% of GDP. (But have no fear; the Japanese debt-to-GDP is 205%, so we have a long way to go before the Ponzi scheme really blows up.)

The only problem—at what point do our creditors say enough is enough and demand higher interest rates on U.S. bonds? Well, that’s not a problem as long as the Federal Reserve keeps printing new money and giving it to the government.

But more money in the system causes inflation, hurts the stability of the currency, and kills the buying power of the consumer. This Ponzi scheme of the Federal Reserve printing money and giving to the government to pay its bills will eventually end very, very badly.

Michael’s Personal Notes:

Back in 2011, when the price of gold bullion was marching towards the $2,000-per-ounce mark, it was becoming difficult for the average investor to get into the “gold game” without paying a high price. Since the beginning of this year, we have seen gold bullion prices come down and we are seeing investors running to buy the precious metal.

I have written many times in these pages how demand for gold bullion here in the U.S. is strong, especially when we look at rising sales from the U.S. Mint. But this is only part of the picture. When we look at what’s happening in the biggest gold bullion-consuming countries, we can really get a feel for gold bullion demand.

According to the Chinese Gold Association, 706 tonnes of gold bullion were consumed by the Chinese economy in the first half of this year. In the same period a year ago, consumption of the precious metal in the second biggest gold bullion-consuming nation was only 460 tonnes. (Source: Reuters, August 12, 2013.)

In India, despite the efforts of the country’s central bank and the government to reduce gold bullion consumption, the official numbers state that imports of the precious metal increased to $2.9 billion in July from $2.45 billion in June. (Source: Reuters, August 12, 2013.)

The demand for gold bullion in India is so extreme that it’s at a point where it is causing a boom in imports of the precious metal into neighboring countries like Pakistan. Imports into that country increased 386% in the first half of the year.

Looking at the technical side as shown on the chart below, there is bullish sentiment in the precious metal’s price. Gold bullion looks to have support at the $1,275-per-ounce level. At the same time, for the first time since late July, gold bullion prices have closed above their 50-day moving average.

Gold Spot Price Chart

Chart Courtesy of StockCharts.com

The prospect of a higher gold bullion price is strong, and continues to gain strength. With that said, I see great opportunities in the gold mining sector. The risk/reward ratio for investing in well-managed gold mining companies is much better than overall market risk.

What He Said:

“A Stock Market’s Obituary: It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. After a strong and courageous battle, the Dow Jones fell victim to a credit crisis and finally succumbed on Friday, October 3, 2008, when it fell decisively below the mid-point between its 2002 low and its 2007 high.” Michael Lombardi in Profit Confidential, October 6, 2008. From October 6, 2008 to November 27, 2008, the Dow Jones Industrial Average experienced one of its biggest two-month losses in history.

Article by profitconfidential.com

As Gold Prices Languish, Demand for Gold Bullion Skyrockets

By Profit Confidential

Back in 2011, when the price of gold bullion was marching towards the $2,000-per-ounce mark, it was becoming difficult for the average investor to get into the “gold game” without paying a high price. Since the beginning of this year, we have seen gold bullion prices come down and we are seeing investors running to buy the precious metal.

I have written many times in these pages how demand for gold bullion here in the U.S. is strong, especially when we look at rising sales from the U.S. Mint. But this is only part of the picture. When we look at what’s happening in the biggest gold bullion-consuming countries, we can really get a feel for gold bullion demand.

According to the Chinese Gold Association, 706 tonnes of gold bullion were consumed by the Chinese economy in the first half of this year. In the same period a year ago, consumption of the precious metal in the second biggest gold bullion-consuming nation was only 460 tonnes. (Source: Reuters, August 12, 2013.)

In India, despite the efforts of the country’s central bank and the government to reduce gold bullion consumption, the official numbers state that imports of the precious metal increased to $2.9 billion in July from $2.45 billion in June. (Source: Reuters, August 12, 2013.)

The demand for gold bullion in India is so extreme that it’s at a point where it is causing a boom in imports of the precious metal into neighboring countries like Pakistan. Imports into that country increased 386% in the first half of the year.

Looking at the technical side as shown on the chart below, there is bullish sentiment in the precious metal’s price. Gold bullion looks to have support at the $1,275-per-ounce level. At the same time, for the first time since late July, gold bullion prices have closed above their 50-day moving average.

Gold Spot Price Chart

Chart Courtesy of StockCharts.com

The prospect of a higher gold bullion price is strong, and continues to gain strength. With that said, I see great opportunities in the gold mining sector. The risk/reward ratio for investing in well-managed gold mining companies is much better than overall market risk.

What He Said:

“A Stock Market’s Obituary: It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. After a strong and courageous battle, the Dow Jones fell victim to a credit crisis and finally succumbed on Friday, October 3, 2008, when it fell decisively below the mid-point between its 2002 low and its 2007 high.” Michael Lombardi in Profit Confidential, October 6, 2008. From October 6, 2008 to November 27, 2008, the Dow Jones Industrial Average experienced one of its biggest two-month losses in history.

Article by profitconfidential.com

Sri Lanka holds rate, says market rates should fall further

By www.CentralBankNews.info     Sri Lanka’s central bank held its benchmark repurchase rate steady at 7.0 percent, as expected, and said there was room for market rates to fall further and the reduction in lending rates so far had been inadequate to reflect the central bank’s policy stance and low inflation.
    The Central Bank of Sri Lanka, which has cut rates by 75 basis points since December last year, said inflation is expected to remain in single digits during the rest of this year and in mid-single digits in 2014 and this would be “conducive for sustained economic growth and improved domestic and international investor confidence.”
    Global developments have been reasonably encouraging, the central bank said, and the “positive developments in advanced economies, if continued, would augur well for domestic economic growth as a result of a stronger performance of the external sector.”
    However, the bank added that the “wide fluctuations of currencies of trading partners and competitors in the international market would need to be closely monitored in order to address any adverse effects on Sri Lanka’s external balance in the period ahead.”
    Exports from Sri Lanka showed some turnaround in June, recording a positive year-on-year growth after a decline seen in the past 15 months, while imports also rose in June so the trade deficit rose.
    But inflows to commercial banks and to the stock market along with foreign direct investment inflows showed that foreign investor confidence had remained “unchanged despite the volatility caused by global markets reacting to the prospects of the tapering of quantitative easing by advanced economies,” the central bank said.
    Inflation in Sri Lanka eased further in July to 6.1 percent from 6.8 percent in June and core inflation fell to 3.1 percent from 4.3 percent, continuing the declining trend seen since March after headline inflation approached 10 percent in the second half of 2012 and first few months of this year.
    Sri Lanka’s Gross Domestic Product rose by an annual 6 percent in the first quarter, down from 6.3 percent in the fourth quarter.

    www.CentralBankNews.info

Arrow launches Dow Jones global yield exchange-traded fund

Arrow launches Dow Jones global yield exchange-traded fund (via Futures Magazine)

OLNEY, MD, May 08, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) — Arrow Investment Advisors, LLC, the advisor to Arrow Funds, today announced the launch of its first exchange traded fund (ETF). The Arrow Dow Jones Global Yield ETF (nyse arca:GYLD) debuts as the only…

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