Friday, June 21, 2013

Have You Seen The Spike In Mortgage Rates Lately?

Here's something you might not have noticed or thought about if you're not in the market for a new home.

Mortgage rates have been shooting up.

M&G investments notes that Wells Fargo just upped its rates to 4% and that rates have been shooting up.

The rise in rates in the US is a good sign. It means the market is anticipating a recovery, and that monetary policy is starting to yield some juice.

But this is still interesting to watch. Let's see how long it will fake for this to really bleed through into the general media, and we start getting stories about how a once-in-a-lifetime chance to buy a home is about to pass you by.

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UGLY Retail Sales Report From The UK

A survey of retailers out of the UK is UGLY.

From CBI.org.uk, here's the announcement.

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29th May 2013

Retail sales fell at their fastest rate in more than a year in May, according to the CBI’s latest monthly Distributive Trades Survey.

The survey of 69 retailing firms saw the steepest fall in annual sales since January last year – showing growth in retail activity has weakened persistently during 2013.

Overall sales volumes remained below average for the time of year and orders fell faster than at any point since November 2011. 

The detailed findings show that grocery sales were broadly flat on a year ago, reversing last month’s rise. There were falls in sales across most other sub-sectors, including clothing and footwear.

Retailers are reporting a slightly brighter outlook, expecting sales to rise modestly next month and the business situation to improve over the next quarter.

But firms are planning to scale back their investment for the year ahead – with investment intentions now the weakest since the start of last year.

Barry Williams, Asda Chief Merchandising Office for Food and Chair of the CBI Distributive Trades Survey Panel said:

“Retail sales growth has weakened since the start of the year as households continue to feel the pinch, with wages failing to keep pace with the cost of living.

“There is positivity from retailers this month, however, with sales expected to rise in the coming months.”

The survey was conducted between 24th April and 15­th May 2013.

Key findings:

23% of firms reported that sales volumes were up on a year earlier and 33% said they were down - the resulting balance of -11% was the lowest since January 2012 (-22%), disappointing expectations last month of a much slower decline (-6%).8% reported sales volumes to be above average for the time of year and 25% below – with the resulting balance of -17% below expectations (-11%).21% placed more orders with suppliers than they did a year ago and 46% fewer, with the resulting balance of -25%, down on expectations of -15% and the lowest since November 2011 (-25%).Grocers’ sales were broadly flat (-3%) after a rise last month (+20%). Other sub-sectors reporting year-on-year falls included clothing (-21%); footwear & leather (-11%); specialist food & drink (-45%); non-store (-4%; the first fall since August 2011); and durable household goods (-67%). Sales of furniture & carpets (+71%) and recreational goods (+57%) rose.Sales volumes are expected to rise modestly in June, with 29% of firms expecting an increase versus 20% predicting a fall, resulting in a rounded balance of +10%.16% of retailers expect business conditions to improve over the next three months and 7% expect them to deteriorate, giving a rounded balance of +10% - similar to the optimism expressed in the February quarterly survey (+12%).41% of retailers are planning to cut back on investment over the next year relative to the past twelve months, compared with 18% planning to raise capital spending – the balance of -23% is the lowest since February 2012,33% of retailers reduced employment in the year to May and 33% increased employment, giving a rounded balance of 0% - a slight improvement on the year to February (-7%) and in line with expectations (-1%).

The survey also heard from 57 wholesalers and 11 motor traders.

28% of wholesalers reported sales volumes to be up on last year and 34% said they were down, giving a balance of -6% - in line with expectations and driven in part by the fastest decline in food & drink sales since February 2009. However, wholesalers expect sales to rise solidly next month (+22%) and expect to raise investment marginally in the year ahead (+5%).

56% of motor traders reported sales volumes to be up on a year earlier and 37% said they were down, giving a rounded balance of +18% and undershooting expectations of stronger growth (+53%).

1. Firms responding to the Distributive Trades Survey (DTS) are responsible for a third of employment in retailing. The survey includes measures of sales activity across the distributive trades. It was first introduced in 1983 and the retail results form the UK component of the EC survey of retail trades.

2. The survey was conducted between 24th April and 15th May. 137 firms took part, of which 69 were retailers, 57 were wholesalers and 11 motor traders.

3. A balance is the difference between the percentage of retailers reporting an increase and those reporting a decrease.

4. The latest Asda Income Tracker was published on 27th May 2013 – showing household spending power at a 12 month low as wage growth sees steepest decline since the start of 2008:


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DAVID ROSENBERG: 4 Reasons To Be Worried About This Market

As David Rosenberg mentions in his most recent note, the idea of a correction has now become the contrarian case with almost everyone expecting a continued rally, or a correction to be met with a “buy the dip” mentality as the Fed jumps to the rescue to any market decline. 

So yes, we all know the bull view and how right it has been for so long.  That said, he cites 4 reasons to be concerned in his latest note:

The trailing P/E multiple for the S&P 500 just reached 16X for the first time since April 2010, a level that touched off a near-term correction.  Sentiment readings are right off the chart.  Market Vane bullishness just hit the 70% level for the first time since (ahem) June 22, 2007.Leverage has staged a big revival, with margin debt in April jumping 1.3% to $384.4 billion.The net speculative long position for S&P contracts on the CME remain near record highs at 37,449 contracts at last count – an 88% surge at an annual rate just so far this year!

Now, please feel free to use the comments section to mock the idea that a stock market can go down….

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USA Today Has A Huge Front Page Story About The Bull Market And All The Wealth That's Getting Created

CNBC's Carl Quintanilla has a very interesting observation in a tweet: "Market rally getting bigger and bigger play."

He points to the latest cover of USA Today, which has one of the bigger front page splashes about the stock bull market we can recall seeing in a long while.

Via Newseum, here's the whole thing:

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Markets Are Lower As Japan Crumbles Again

After yesterday's screaming rally around the world, today is decidedly weaker.

Markets are off everywhere.

In Europe, Italy is off 0.6%, France is off 0.9%, and Germany is down 0.8%.

US futures are all pointing to a lower open.

And the big story again is Japan, where markets can't get any love.

After ending the normal trading day flat, Nikkei futures have continued to crumble all morning, as you can see in this chart via FinViz:

The ongoing weakness in the Nikkei, which was can't-lose just a few days ago, is clearly the most interesting story in world markets, as it coincides with the Abenomics experiment, which is the most interesting economics experiment in the world.

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One Critical Commodity Is Having A Worse Year Than Gold

Sam Ro | May 29, 2013, 7:59 AM | 1,908 |

Here's a chart that Deutsche Bank includes in its periodic "Equity View" report.

It's the year-to-date and month-to-date returns of the world's most important asset classes.

There aren't too many surprises here.  Japan's Nikkei is leading stocks and the yen is lagging the currencies.  High yield bonds are leading the credit markets as investors reach for yield.

One area that may surprise some is commodities.  Gold has experienced a very widely reported sell-off.  But iron ore is actually having a worse year.

Iron ore is sensitive to activity in China, where tons of the metal is used in the country's massive ongoing infrastructure projects.

Earlier the month, we learned that manufacturing activity stalled.  Perhaps, this is contributing to the sell-off.

asset returnsDeutsche Bank

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Bitcoin Users Will Freak Out When They See The Cruise Missile The Justice Department Just Fired Against Another Digital Currency

Rob Wile | May 28, 2013, 4:31 PM | 16,889 |

Today, the Department of Justice arrested the founders of Liberty Reserve, a digital currency service, and charged them with money laundering. 

Created in 2006, Liberty Reserve was both a virtual currency — its denomination was called "LR's" — and an allegedly illict wire transfer service. According to DOJ's complaint, the scope of Liberty Reserve's operations was almost exclusively limited to criminal activity.

But as the FT's Stephen Foley Tweeted, the text of DOJ's complaint is a cruise missile across the bow of Bitcoin users:

Here's the key language from the complaint (in bold):

Acting Assistant Attorney General Mythili Raman said: “As charged, Liberty Reserve operated, on an enormous scale, a digital currency system designed to provide cyber and other criminals with a way to launder their profits without leaving a trace. The company’s very purpose was to launder its users’ criminal proceeds through the U.S. and global financial system.

Secret Service Special Agent-in-Charge Steven G. Hughes said: “These arrests are an example of the Secret Service’s commitment to investigate and apprehend criminals engaged in the misuse of virtual currencies to conduct global monetary fraud. Cyber criminals should be reminded today that they are unable to hide behind the anonymity of the Internet to avoid regulated financial systems.

Until just a few months ago, Bitcoin was known as much for its facilitating illicit activity as its mathematical and philosophical underpinnings. Bitcoin exchanges offer the same kind of anonymity and trace-less transactions as Liberty Reserve, and its users praise it for its ability to circumvent regulated financial systems.

We already know the CFTC is interested in Bitcoin. If the government now has the above-mentioned types of "virtues" in its crosshairs, Bitcoin users should be pretty concerned.

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