Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Tacking Tangible

The market indexes have been on quite some run.

If I could get a handle on all the lines of action going on on Wall Street, not only would I be a ventriloquist, I would be beyond wealthy. I am not.

The FED has increased the money supply by engaging in monetizing the debt, otherwise considered printing money, and that has resulted in excess money chasing too few assets, pushing the asset prices higher.

Due to the abysmal housing market, which cannot gain ground due to a horrendous job market and extensive regulation through Dodd-Frank, real estate investing has not been the avenue of choice for investors.  Gold and the stock market has.

A review of the NASDAQ after the close today shows the index increasing five year highs, and this has been a great run if you have been along for the ride. Take a look, but note the market level variance from the relative strength:


Weekly NASDAQ chart/Investors.com
While markets are forward looking and do not always reflect the current status of the economic realities on the ground, given our economy, it is reasonable to conclude the stock market should not be lurching into a parabolic assault on historical highs.  With an employment participation rate having retracted to levels not seen since the Reagan administration, a manipulated unemployment rate parked at levels not witnessed since The Great Depression, governmental assaults on small business, class warfare on the wealthy and putrid growth in the Gross Domestic Product, one has to wonder why the dichotomy between the capital markets and the reality on the ground.

As the excellent blog Zero Hedge accurately pointed out, many economic measures are breaking down, and while the Case Schiller Housing Index has shown signs of life depending on how you analyze the data, even though a shadow inventory remains, the housing market remains bottoming.


If housing is improving, with the state of the economy, one must conclude rising investor participation as first time home buyers are scarce.  If investors are becoming more interested in real estate, what market has fallen into disfavor and why? The stock market?

Indications are yes.

In fact, as BloombergBusinessweek reported, some $114 billion US Bank deposits have been withdrawn, at the fastest pace since the September 11, 2001 attacks

Apparently, few know why.

Paul Miller, a bank analyst with FBR Capital Markets, cautions against reading too much into the Fed’s weekly data. “It’s a noisy database,” he says.  No kidding.  With a media complicit in propaganda, and the FED intervening in market action in unprecedented levels, it is most difficult to accurately value equities.  It is the FED behind the curtain who is crowding banks out of the mortgage origination market and setting unreasonable credit requirements for lending practice, handicapping the housing market even with manipulated easy money.

But is there a correlation between rising housing investment and what looks to be a topping out of the DOW and NASDAQ?  Further, in anticipation of a market collapse, would tangible assets such as real estate become the favored investment?

Without government interaction, even though they have been replenishing their balance sheets borrowing free money from the Fed, banks could not withstand a major economic collapse.  Further, unwinding the hypothecation would be catastrophic.  If the clients of Jon Corzoine at MF Global are any indication, get your money while you can.  Maybe investors are.

No matter what market developments lay in store for us, a few things are certain in my view.  The housing market remains broken and cannot recover without a recovering job market. The market has been compromised and true evaluation is not possible. And, unfortunately and most notably, the rule of law and trust of the marketplace, integral for the survival of a free market capitalist system, has been violated.

As I have previously mentioned, until the rule of law is reestablished with the government becoming a bystander, allowing the FED to resume normal open market operations, the market place will remain compromised and a playground for the crony crowd.

Given the increasing turbulence, while I don't know what I am having for lunch tomorrow, I sense a major storm brewing both port and starboard. Caveat Emptor.

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