Friday, March 25, 2011

Home Sales Tank / Mid Eastern Craziness - The Week In Review

We do not recommend trades in this report, not equity, fixed income nor foreign exchange. Our job is to identify near - to- intermediate term change in the economy, those events which are not yet priced in. We isolate these for our clients and they take it from there.

All of us know now that the US economic engine is accelerating. This was not as obvious months ago when we highlighted this prospect for clients. Sure, it has not all fed down quite yet, we haven’t all felt it, but it’s there and on the way (short of the potential Mid East retardant). This, in spite of the administration’s bungling. So this is a good thing.

Yet how can we say this when this very week we saw figures related to housing which were in the tank? Well, it is known this sector is going nowhere; it’s priced in. That is why New Home sales Wed at a record low did not stir the markets. And one reason for that it that banks are more immune to this reality, having raised $300 bln in new equity in the last two years.

Of course homeowners are not immune, which is why forecasters figured last year that massive imbalances in housing would dampen spending ahead. This, along with their lack of appreciation of traction to be secured by Nov/2, led to their forecasting mega miss. We advised our clients that homeowners would spend anyway, which they did.

Let us move to offshore.

Fiscal events in Japan have concluded quickly this week. A rescue package is gaining critical mass, the currency has stabilized.

US firms have very little equity exposure to Japanese companies, a good thing. Next, there will be disruptions in supply lines for sure, but these are already priced in. There will be internal argument over funding for resuscitation also. We predict the Bank of Japan will support the effort but they adamantly deny it at the moment. For the US the event will amount to either a wash or modest spark.

Finally, we know the Mid East, not EU considerations provides the primary potential retardant to US growth. To restate the obvious, it is foolish at the moment to be constructive on energy prices. Events this week simply support our view for an expanding transformation, one painful and destructive in its youth yet constructive for all of us as it approaches middle age.

Robert Craven

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