Economic Survey Proves, Most Economists Are Worthless

If the article below does not prove that the economists are no better than clowns in forecasting future events, nothing else will. I don’t know why the profession exists, but I guess someone must get paid for taking past events and forecasting them into perpetuity. If you have wondered why 99.5% of the economists, including Bernanke, Greenspan and Yellen missed the 2000, 2007 and the rest of the bubbles, wonder no more.

In the past I used to think that they really know, but for one reason or another, mislead the public into believing that everything is fine. However, after watching them in action for some time, I am really beginning to think that they believe in their interpretation of reality and their “lets print our way to prosperity” approach.   Making them not only reckless, but pretty damn stupid. 

Based on the survey, the economy is about to accelerate because the weather is getting better, the emerging markets distress is over, the stock market correction is over, the unemployment rate is collapsing, corporations are hiring by the millions and only sunshine and flowers are on the horizon. Yet, you know better dear reader.  

EconomistsMessedUp

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Economists: U.S. will see better growth in ’14

Despite some disappointing economic news recently, economists surveyed by USA TODAY expect the recovery to accelerate this year.

The U.S. economy is headed for stronger growth in 2014 that will steadily chip away at the unemployment rate, top economists predict in a largely optimistic USA TODAY quarterly survey.

The jobless rate, which dipped to a five-year low of 6.6% in January, will fall to 6.3% by the end of the year, their median forecast indicates.

Job gains, which averaged 194,000 a month last year, will reach a monthly average of 200,000 this year, they predict. Employers added 113,000 jobs in January, well under many economists’ forecasts, the government reported last week.

The economy got off to a slow start in January as a result of financial turmoil in emerging markets, a stomach-churning drop in stock prices and extreme winter weather that kept many shoppers at home. But the economists surveyed expect growth to accelerate after a weak first quarter, reaching a solid 2.8% rate for the year.

“I think we will regain momentum and not fall on our face,” says Diane Swonk, chief economist of Mesirow Financial, drawing a contrast with previous ups and downs in the five-year-old recovery.

Many of the 40 economists surveyed Feb 5-6 recently cut their first-quarter forecasts. Most of the change is due to the adverse January weather and an expected pull-back in business stockpiling after firms aggressively replenished shelves in the second half of 2013.

While growth late last year was driven largely by the stockpiling, this year’s expansion will be fueled by higher consumer and business spending, says Dean Maki, chief U.S. economist of Barclays Capital.

“It’s more durable,” he says.

Many were anticipating a breakout year in 2014, signaling a new course for a generally sluggish recovery. Households have shed much of the debt they amassed during the mid-2000s real estate bubble. A stock run-up and rising home prices have made consumers feel wealthier. And the effects of federal spending cuts and tax increases are fading, while state and local governments are poised to increase outlays after years of austerity.

Several economists say those improving fundamentals remain intact. Some see financial troubles in emerging markets such as Turkey and Brazil as risks to the USA’s outlook. Chris Varvares of Macroeconomic Advisers has trimmed his growth forecast, saying the turmoil could curtail U.S. exports and stock prices, crimping business investment and consumer spending.

But more than eight in 10 of those surveyed said January’s stock sell-off and emerging markets’ woes have not caused them to be less optimistic about growth this year. Sixty-four percent said their 2014 forecasts are more likely to prove too conservative than too rosy.

Maki says the recent stock swoon pales compared to last year’s market gains and is unlikely to hurt consumer spending this year. Rising interest rates may cause Americans to buy smaller homes, but they shouldn’t deter purchases, he says.

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Economic Survey Proves, Most Economists Are Worthless Google

Shocking Truth Wall Street Doesn’t Want You To Know

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Today’s 5 Minute Podcast Covers The Following Topics: Shocking Truth Wall Street Doesn’t Want You To Know

    • Why you are better off managing your own money. 
    • How you can outperform the best of money managers with ease. 
    • The secret behind financial media and why you should tune them out. 
    • What to do to double your portfolio performance virtually overnight. 

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Why Stocks Are Poised For Huge Losses In 2014

Yahoo Finance Writes: Stocks poised for huge gains in 2014: Top strategist

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Even though 2014 has started off with a whimper for the markets, Jonathan Golub, Chief US Market Strategist at RBC Capital Markets, believes that stocks could hit record highs this year.

“If we’re looking at an economy that’s probably going to grow at 2.5% this year – which is a very reasonable number,” says Golub, “that should be enough to drive something between 7% and 8% or more of earnings growth.”

“If you look at valuations, [stocks] still look very cheap relative to bond,” says Golub. “You add those two together and I don’t see why you wouldn’t have a double-digit return this year.” Golub says history shows stocks can still have a good year after a great year. In 2013, the S&P 500 had return of 29%. 

“If you look at the 10 best years over the last 75, the average return has been about 14% following really great years,” says Golub.

Read The Rest Of The Article Here

The article above represents a prevailing view on Wall Street today. With bearish sentiment at an all time low, NO ONE sees any potential downside. If you are to listen to the main stream financial propaganda machine and most of the large banks, the stock market is going to the moon and beyond. 

Yet, for any reasonable investor this time period should represent a perfect opportunity to pause and reflect on where we really are. Let’s think about this for a second….

Is our economic recovery real?

NO. The main street is not feeling any type of an economic recovery. With poverty rates being at 50 year highs and with “real unemployment” pushing over 15%, only financial entities have been able to benefit from any type of an economic recovery.  Once again, the perceived economic recovery has been driven by massive infusion of credit into the financial system through QE, low interest rates and speculation.    

Is the stock market overpriced?

Absolutely. While everyone will have their own definition of “overvalued”, as a value investor, I cannot find anything to invest in.  Everything is overvalued and the prices I see today are reminiscent of 2000 and 2007 time frames.  However, if you enjoy buying $1 bills for $5, go for it.

Is there extreme Bullish sentiment?

Yes. Most sentiment indicators show that most bears have been killed. Some of the bullish sentiment readings are at an all time highs. Higher than 1987, 2000 and 2007.  

What does history teaches us about such times?

Well, the history teaches us that such times are dangerous. Listen, there is no doubt that the market is overpriced and highly distorted by credit and speculation. This cannot continue for an indefinite period of time. No matter what, the markets always readjust themselves.  As my mathematical work clearly indicates, the bear market is about to start in 2014. Get yourself ready. 

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Why Stocks Are Poised For Huge Losses In 2014

PIMCO Shares a Valuable Tip

CNBC Writes: Gross: The stock market and asset prices are ‘bubbly’

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Bill Gross, the co-chief investment officer of Pimco, said he thinks the stock market and “all asset prices are bubbly.”

“Bond prices, stock prices … and profit margins are bubbly to the extent that [if] any of them can be sustained, I guess, is the ultimate test,” Gross said on CNBC Wednesday.

He said the Federal Reserve‘s QE program is a “rather blunt instrument in terms of elevating, and perhaps, bubbling stock prices.”

“Margin debt is at historic levels to the extent that they want to simmer down equity prices [but] they don’t have to attack it through tapering … they can raise margin requirements.”

“The bond market is bubbly because the policy rate at 25 basis points is artificially suppressed. Investors and savers are not receiving what they have historically … in historical terms would probably be around 2 to 2.5 percent,” he said.

I have very little to add here. Mr. Gross is right on the money. I have been saying this for a while as well, everything is overpriced. Big time. The only thing I will add into the mix is my timing and mathematical work. Once again, it is predicting the beginning of a severe Bear Market that will only end  in 2016. There is no stopping it. 

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Why The Philippine Economy Is About To Collapse

Forbes Writes:  Here’s Why The Philippines Economic Miracle Is Really A Bubble In Disguise

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The Philippines’ bubble will most likely pop when China’s economic bubble pops and/or as global and local interest rates continue to rise, which are what caused the country’s credit and asset bubble in the first place. The resumption of the U.S. Federal Reserve’s QE taper plans may put pressure on the Philippines’ financial markets in the near future. Another global economic crisis (as I expect) also puts remittances at risk.

As I’ve been saying even before this summer’s EM panic, I expect the ultimate popping of the emerging markets bubble to cause another crisis that is similar to the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis, and there is a strong chance that it will be even worse this time due to the fact that more countries are involved (Latin America, China, and Africa), and because the global economy is in a much weaker state now than it was during the booming late-1990s.

Read The Rest Of The Article

The article above is a MUST read for anyone living in the Philippines. Even though Philippines was the fastest growing economy in the world in the 3rd quarter of this year, the party is about to end.  I am sorry to say, but the Philippine economy is about to go through a major decline/contraction/collapse.   

I love the Philippines and I wish the economic backdrop was different, but the reality is hard to ignore. The article above is right on the money, providing outstanding reference points and data. Once again, I highly encourage you to read it.  Instead of commenting on the points in the article, allow me to introduce the Philippine stock market technical picture into the equation.

From technical side the market looks very weak. It looks like it is about to break down to the downside. Big time.  The market has tried on multiple occasions to go higher,  but was unable.  A breakdown below 5,500 level would indicate that the bear market in the Philippines in back. The problem is (a huge problem) is that there is no real technical support until it gets to about 2,000. That would be a 66% decline from today’s market prices. In other words, the stock market is predicting a devastating full on economic collapse in the Philippines.

Why do we care about this and what does it have to do with the Philippine economy? The stock market is a leading indicator. As it goes, the economy ALWAYS follows.  If we break down below 5,500 level, I would expect the Philippine economy to be in a recession within 6 months.  Everything else will follow. 

***In reality, this is a worldwide issue. A massive credit bubble is indeed here (driven by the US Fed and unsustainably low interest rates) and it will play a major role in the demise not only of the US Economy, but all emerging markets. Including China. As I have stated on numerous occasions, the US bear market will start in March of 2014.

When it does, anyone and everyone who relies on cheap credit to grow their economies will pay the price.  Unfortunately, that includes the Philippines. It is simply unavoidable. Get ready. 

P.S. PLEASE DONATE TO TYPHOON HAIYAN VICTIMS HERE

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Larry Summers Predicts Doom And Gloom. I Agree.

 BusinessWeek Writes: Larry Summers Has a Wintry Outlook on the Economy

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Larry Summers, the man who was almost chairman of the Federal Reserve, is surprisingly gloomy about U.S. growth prospects. In a recent speech at the International Monetary Fund, he suggested the U.S. might be stuck in “secular stagnation”—a slump that is not a product of the business cycle but a more-or-less permanent condition.

Summers’s conclusion is deeply pessimistic: If he’s right, the economy is incapable of producing full employment without financial bubbles or massive stimulus, both of which tend to end badly. The collapse of the debt-fueled housing bubble led to the financial crisis of 2007-09, and some policymakers worry that the Fed’s easy-money policy is setting the economy up for another fall. Witness the Dow Jones industrial average at 16,000.

“Conventional macroeconomic thinking leaves us in a very serious problem,” Summers said in his speech. “The underlying problem may be there forever.” He added: “We may well need in the years ahead to think about how to manage an economy where the zero nominal interest rate is a chronic and systemic inhibitor of economic activity, holding our economies back below their potential.”

Read The Rest Of The Article Here

Mr. Summers is right on the money.  Exactly as I have argued before, we now know the true reason behind his candidacy withdrawal from FED Chairmanship role.  Unlike Janet Yellen who is a cheerleading fool who believes she can control the markets, Mr. Summers has a clear view of what’s coming.

He doesn’t want to be at the helm of the next substantial economic and financial market downshift that will start in 2014. Further, he is very well aware that the FED is the primary source of the problem. Instead of creating economic stability and an environment that is conducive to productive capital allocation, the FED’s have blown bubble after bubble in order to give the appearance of economic stability. Yet, any such economic stability is a mirage at best.  In reality it is a ticking time bomb. 

If we can learn anything from history, every financial bubble eventually bursts. Some spectacularly so and some with the whimper. As my timing work illustrates, the bear market will start in early 2014 and complete itself in 2017. I expect to see some fireworks as the market deflates back to where it should be. 

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Fed’s Biggest Crime

AFP Writes: Fed’s Biggest Win? Bailing Out Subprime Companies

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One of the quieter, yet most emphatic, successes of the Federal Reserve’s long-running easy-money campaign has been the way it has bailed out subprime corporate borrowers. It’s almost as if the Fed has made it “too hard to fail” for mid-sized to large companies with lower credit ratings.

By keeping short-term rates at zero indefinitely and exchanging a fresh $85 billion a month for Treasury and mortgage bonds held by banks and investors, the Fed has stoked investor risk appetites, compressed debt costs dramatically and loosened credit conditions for most decent-sized borrowers. 

Junk-bond yields have fallen so far they no longer merit their longtime euphemism of “high-yield debt.” Junk benchmarks now yield around 5.7%, levels that high-grade companies used to be pleased to borrow at. Through most of the 30-year history of the modern junk-debt market, yields were in the double-digits, and in the panic of late-2008 they exceeded 20%.

Read The Rest Of The Article

I am beyond sick of this stupidity.  This is equivalent to saying that the Federal Government has won the war on drugs by artificially lowering the market price of cocaine.  No difference.

When will people learn that there is no free lunch in financial markets or anywhere else for that matter. Yes, the scheme might work for a while but when it eventually blows up the economic fallout from such a destabilization will be far worse than simply letting these “subprime companies” fail to begin with. We do not need to go far to see the outcome.  This has already been tried by Japan since the early 1990’s where they have done anything they could to keep Zombie banks and companies alive by following the same idiotic rationale.

The outcome? Well, almost 25 years of deflation and an economy that went from one of the most efficient and powerful economies in the world to a shell of its former self. That is the outcome of economic stupidity. Now the same outcome faces the US Economy. Thanks a lot for your brilliance FEDs.    

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China Wants 7.2% Economic Growth, I Just Want A Ferrari For Christmas

BusinessWeek Writes: China Needs 7.2% GDP Growth for Jobs, Says Premier

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Thanks to the Workers’ Daily, we now know a little bit more about how Chinese economic growth translates into jobs creation—or at least how top Chinese officials view that crucial equation.

Speaking at a national congress for China’s official trade union two weeks ago, Premier Li Keqiang said that China needs economic growth of at least 7.2 percent in order to ensure adequate employment, the Beijing-based newspaper reported on Nov 4. “The reason why we want to stabilize growth, in the final analysis, is to preserve jobs,” Li said at the union meeting on Oct. 21.

Li also pointed out how important the rest of the world remains for ensuring adequate employment in China. All told, China has some 30 million workers who are directly dependent on China’s export industries, and an additional 100 million serving in supporting industries, Li said. “If exports fall rapidly, it will create an employment problem,” he said.

Read The Rest Of The Article Here

China is going to be an exciting case to watch and study over the next couple of years. It is no doubt understandable that Chinese officials want fast economic growth rate, but we don’t always get what we want.  Particularly, considering my forecast for the US Economy and its financial markets.

At least at this stage, I do not believe that 7.2% economic growth is feasible for China over the long run.  Not even close. The problems stems from the fact that about 25-50% (some claim much more) of Chinese economic growth over the last decade came from capital misallocation and pointless infrastructure projects.  Also known as, empty cities, rail networks, roads to nowhere, etc….  That is one of the reasons Chinese banks are sitting on a time bomb called bad loans that thus far they have been able to ignore.  The problem for China is, there isn’t that much more infrastructure or capital misallocation work left to do and bad loans increasingly becoming a huge problem.  As such, I believe China has no room left for 7.2% economic growth.

Add to that an upcoming global recession (based on my work), subsequent export slowdown and China finds itself sitting on a powder keg of economic trouble. What happens if all of the issues above come home to roost at the same time and instead of 7.2% economic growth China ends up with 2-3% or god forbid even goes negative.  With massive unemployment and certain public unrest  it would be fascinating to see how China comes through.  Will its communist government be able to survive or will Chinas pain be so great that a new political system will be established.

That is why it will be so exciting to watch China over the next few years.

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Bill Gross Shares A Valuable Tip

CNBC Writes: Gross: The stock market and asset prices are ‘bubbly’

 drastically-overpriced-investwithalex

Bill Gross, the co-chief investment officer of Pimco, said he thinks the stock market and “all asset prices are bubbly.”

“Bond prices, stock prices … and profit margins are bubbly to the extent that [if] any of them can be sustained, I guess, is the ultimate test,” Gross said on CNBC Wednesday.

He said the Federal Reserve‘s QE program is a “rather blunt instrument in terms of elevating, and perhaps, bubbling stock prices.”

“Margin debt is at historic levels to the extent that they want to simmer down equity prices [but] they don’t have to attack it through tapering … they can raise margin requirements.”

“The bond market is bubbly because the policy rate at 25 basis points is artificially suppressed. Investors and savers are not receiving what they have historically … in historical terms would probably be around 2 to 2.5 percent,” he said.

I have very little to add here. Mr. Gross is right on the money. I have been saying this for a while as well, everything is overpriced. Big time. The only thing I will add into the mix is my timing and mathematical work. Once again, it is predicting the beginning of a severe Bear Market that will only end  in 2016. There is no stopping it. 

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Derailed Recovery

Forbes Writes: Mixed Messages For Bernanke Shouldn’t Derail QE Taper, Despite Lower Inflation

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As investors intensify their scrutiny of the Federal Reserve, economic indicators continue to send out mixed messages.  Inflation, as measured by the CPI, eased once again in August, according to theBureau of Labor Statistics, but remains relatively anchored, indicating Chairman Ben Bernankeand the FOMC could be closer to tapering quantitative easing, possibly on Thursday.

Mixed economic indicators continue to baffle a market that seems to have prepared for a reduction in the Fed’s supportive asset purchases, or QE.  Inflation, one of the main monetary factors observed by Fed officials, has been consistently low, yet not alarmingly so.  Over the past 12-months, CPI is up a meager 1.5%, down from 2% in July.

While the U.S. economy has remained relatively resilient, with GDP growing 2.5% in the second quarter, it is by no means out of the woods, as the labor market remains weak and financial conditions have tightened, particularly in mortgage markets which are closely scrutinized by the Fed, Goldman Sachs’ economics research team said.

The Federal Reserve, which is in the midst of a transitional period as Chairman Bernanke’s term expires early in 2014, is looking to reduce its level of asset purchases to avoid inflating asset bubbles and creating further imbalances.  Investors are looking for the FOMC to cut down on QE on Thursday, possibly reducing asset purchases by $5 to $10 billion to $75 to $80 billion a month.

In order to continue with the plan laid out by Bernanke in his previous conference, in which the Fed expects QE to end by mid-2014, Fed officials will want to see a pickup in inflation that strengthens their view that deflation is not a looming problem.  “While the stabilization in core [CPI] is likely sufficient for Fed officials to start the tapering process [Thursday], officials are counting on some acceleration in coming quarters,” explained Jim O’Sullivan, chief economist at High Frequency Economics, who added, “such acceleration will likely be needed for a full wind-down of QE and will almost certainly be needed before the tightening cycle begins.”

Read The Rest Of The Article Here

A very good overall summary of the existing US Economic and Financial Market state that comes to a wrong conclusion.  It somehow assumes that the Fed and US Government are in control of the US Economy and will direct it into whatever direction they wish to improve existing metrics and to maintain the course.

However, that is a fools assumption.  They are not in control of anything. The 2007-2009 meltdown was a clear example of that. No matter what they have tried,  the market kept going down until it hit its March 2009 technical bottom and reversed itself. If that doesn’t convince you of the fact that they have no control, nothing will.

Now, the article states that the policies the Fed has instituted are design to avoid future financial asset bubbles and volatility associated with it. What it fails to mention is that we are ALREADY in the largest financial credit bubble of all time. Bigger than 2007.  And guess what, it was done on purpose by the Fed to avoid a deeper recession.

As Fed cut back on QE, interest rates will go up and in doing so will collapse the real estate market, the stock market and the overall economy.  Oh, I forgot to mention something. It will not be fast and will most likely take years. However, the process itself has already started. Get your affairs in order.  

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