Silverbird
Well-known member
What is Berneke smoking? There still is too much toxic reused debt out there. What we need is cleanup on aisle 6 so we can get past there to see what's on the invesment shelves on aisle 12!
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Tomorrow's headline:Bernanke: Recession may end in '09; Stocks climb
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090224/ap_on_bi_st_ma_re/wall_street
When a car buyer still owes money on a vehicle he is trading in, the dealer promises to pay off the outstanding loan, then resells the vehicle. But as more dealers go out of business, some are sticking consumers with the bill. Lenders can then go after the previous owner who thought the debt was paid, or repossess the car from the new owner who assumed it came with clear title.
"It's devastating for people when it happens because they have two car payments and they can't afford them," said Rosemary Shahan, president of Consumers for Auto Reliability and Safety, a Sacramento-based nonprofit that lobbies on behalf of vehicle owners. "Their credit is destroyed for no fault of their own because the dealer defaulted."
Regulators in California and other states, including Florida, Iowa and Washington, are seeing a surge in consumer complaints. They warn the problem is sure to grow this year because of the deepening recession and continued trouble in the auto industry.
About a quarter of all car buyers are vulnerable because they still owe money on their trade-in or lease when they buy another vehicle, according to industry tracker Edmunds.com. It's become more common for a driver to owe money on a trade-in as people stretch their car payments over six or seven years to make them more affordable.
Tobin’s Q ratio compares the market value of companies to the cost of their constituent parts, CLSA Ltd. strategist Russell Napier said.
The ratio, developed in 1969 by Nobel Prize-winning economist James Tobin, indicates the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index is still too expensive relative to the cost of replacing assets, said Napier. The S&P may plunge another 55 percent to a trough of 400 by 2014, the strategist said.
Napier, who teaches at Edinburgh Business School, based his S&P 500 forecast on the Q for U.S. equities as well as the 10- year cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio, another measure of long-term value.
Before the trough in 2014, investors are likely to see a so-called bear market rally for the next two years as central bank actions delay the onset of deflation, he said.
The Q ratio on U.S. equities has dropped to 0.7 from a peak of 2.9 in 1999, and reaching 0.3 has always signaled the end of a bear market, said Napier. The Q ratio for U.S. equities has fluctuated between 0.3 and 3 in the past 130 years.
When the gauge is more than one, it indicates the market is overvaluing company assets, while a Q ratio of less than one signifies shares are undervalued because it is cheaper to buy companies than to build them from the ground up.
At the end of the four largest U.S. bear markets in 1921, 1932, 1949 and 1982, the Q ratio fell to 0.3 or lower, and history is likely to repeat, said Napier.
Quantitative Easing
Andrew Milligan, the Edinburgh-based head of global strategy at Standard Life Investments, which oversees about $190 billion, said for now central bank efforts to fight deflation will push the market higher.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke’s indication that he will use “quantitative easing” to prevent deflation points to a stock market rally that may last for the next two years, Napier said. The government’s efforts will eventually fail as ballooning government debt devalues the dollar, causes investors to flee U.S. assets and takes the S&P 500 to its eventual bottom in 2014, Napier said.
Bloomberg is being disingenuous. The trade balance is narrowing because of less imports, not growing exports. A narrowing trade balance is good IF exports are rising.
I have to say that I have never been as uncomfortable about the joint prospects for the market and the economy as I am now. I hope that I am terribly wrong on both counts. Better to be wrong, miss a few percent in gains, and take a constructive position than to see the misery that indications suggest. On the market, I continue to believe that stocks are vulnerable to a crash. On the economy, I believe that the U.S. is in recession - one that threatens to be global in scope, and there is increasing reason to believe that overleveraged, undersaving consumers are about to shift their spending patterns in a fairly profound way. My reasoning will be clear in the upcoming report, but all I can say is that the U.S. trade balance may be about to show a stunning "improvement." And those of you familiar with economics know that that is not good news.
A narrowing trade gap is likely to remain one of the few bright spots, even as shrinking economies in Europe and Japan and a rising dollar cause U.S. exports to slump.
You raise an interesting point, first the ARMs go down the tubes causing the financial issues we're in. Now, we watch as companies can't get loans to do business and the only way to stay afloat is to lay off people. Now here's the ugly truth, less jobs, less income generating households. The people with fixed loans are looking for work but there isn't any out there. Now the foreclosure homes are people who didn't cause the mess in the beginning. TALK ABOUT A VICIOUS CIRCLE!!!!what I dont understand is that the fed interest rate is pretty low and the banks get easy fed loans, but the creditcard and 30 yr mortgage interest rates are still pretty high. ppl lose jobs and houses, and they got no money to pay for food and cloth and so they use credit cards to pay. The govt should at least ask banks to lower interest rates and let ppl with arm refinance to a low fixed mortgage. Once ppl max out credit cards and lose home, there will be another market crash.
I like democracy, you have to convince people. That's better than I rule, you're stuck (monarchies and oligarchies). I don't think there is an easy solution. It's an artificial system created to facilitate the exchange of goods and services, with everyone getting their piece...or supposed to be that...without endangering or killing people through shoddy crap and rewarding the good stuff. We have to keep adjusting it, keep finding problems to fix, but need to beware that we don't know everything about manufacturing or industry and need to let all those smart guys innovate, those line workers make cares, those air traffic controllers work without crashing planes, let the mine owners get the ore out without leaving piles of junk that make everyone sick or kill their workers....That is assuming that whoever thought of the solution had the power to implement that solution and actually cared enough about everyone else that they'd follow through with it. The "problem" with democracy is that if someone really has the best answer, they need to convince everyone else that it is the best answer.
If there was a simple solution, I'd think someone would have found it by now and implemented it, whether us or some other country. So far haven't seen it.