Except that apparently, an ox is a castrated bull. Crudely snipped, then all set to toil 24/7 its entire sad, sexless life, and, when too old or weak and no longer of any use to its owners, slaughtered and consumed by those for whom he'd been working. (Sound/feel familiar?)
But all's well in the overnight markets, at least - we have the S&P500 up the last 3 days we've been away, with mega-buck M&A, a storming 52% of companies that've reported coming in ahead of expectations (BTE!), Leading Indicators bottoming and existing home sales on the up-and-up!
Except...
From my new BFF, David Rosenberg of Merrill in his must-read Morning Market Memo:
Don’t be fooled by the home sales data
The resale data for December came in better than expected to be sure at 4.74 million units, a 6.5% bounce from the 4.45 million print in November. But distressed properties accounted for 45% of all sales, according to the National
Association of Realtors, so this is not exactly ‘organic’ activity as much as
investors looking for a deal on foreclosed units – look for these to be put back on
the market at the first hint of revival (or will be converted to rentals). So the sales
activity did indeed help drag the inventory backlog to 9.3 months’ from 11.2
months’ in November, but then again, we know that this data is also undercounted
by as much as 15% as property holdings at the banks are not counted in this data
(i.e. the unsold inventory is still close to 11 months’ supply). Moreover, median
home prices deflated 2.7% in November – the sixth month in a row of decline
during which they have sunk at a record 33.5% annual rate (median home values
are no higher today than they were in December 2002). The YoY trend is -15% so
as you can see, the trend is becoming even more negative.
Don’t be fooled by the leading indicator either
Another case where the devil was in the details. Yes, yes, the LEI managed to
rise 0.3% in December after two months of hefty declines. First, half of the 10
components were negative and three were flat. The real money supply soared
(of course as the CPI deflated) and added 0.99% to the headline, and the steeper
yield curve added 0.22%. So basically, a deflating CPI and a rise in bond yields
is supposedly good for the economic outlook (come again?). So outside of the
curve and real M2, the LEI would have declined 0.9% in December. Very
lopsided. Moreover, we see that the coincident-to-lagging index, which has this
habit of leading the leader, actually dipped for the second month in a row to 91.9
from 92 in November and 92.3 in October.
Hmmm...
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Meanwhile, more (and more) layoffs.
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