Thursday, September 29, 2016

Friday September 30 20916 Housing and Economic stories

TOP STORIES:

Stocks Fall as Deutsche Bank Leads Rout in Lenders; Bonds Climb - (www.bloomberg.com) Stocks almost erased their monthly advance as Deutsche Bank AG sank on speculation it will need to raise capital. Bonds climbed as traders awaited a U.S. presidential debate tonight. Financial companies dragged down global equities after a media report said the German government wouldn’t step in to back the nation’s largest lender, fueling investor concern about its finances. Treasury yields declined to a two-week low, and the yen led gains among its Group-of-10 peers as investors sought safer assets. Emerging-market shares slumped after Turkey’s credit rating was cut to junk by Moody’s Investors Service. Oil surged as Saudi Arabia’s offer to cut output opened the door to a future OPEC deal.

In Miami Condo Glut, Preconstruction Resale Market Freezes up - (www.wolfstreet.com) But total existing residential sales fell 3.3% year-over-year to 2,389 units. Why? Condos! Existing condo sales – not including the new construction market – plunged 13.6% year-over-year to 1,150 units. Yet the median price, at $215,000, is still up 5.7% from last year. Cash transactions for all sales plunged by nearly 9 points, from 49.6% a year ago to 40.7% in August (national average = 22%); 25.7% of single-family home sales were cash, and 56.8% of condo sales. The report: Miami’s high percentage of cash sales reflects South Florida’s ability to attract a diverse number of international home buyers, who tend to purchase properties in all cash.

Saudi Arabia Bails Out Banking System After Interbank Rates Hit 2009 Highs – (www.zerohedge.com) As Bloomberg reports, The Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency, as the central bank is known, is giving banks about 20 billion riyals ($5.3 billion) of time deposits “on behalf of government entities.”It’s also introducing seven-day and 28-day repurchase agreements, as part of its “supportive monetary policy.” It didn’t provide further details. The announcement, which comes as the kingdom prepares for its first international bond sale, is the latest step by the central bank to ease a cash crunch in the banking system. The Saudi Interbank Offered Rate, a key benchmark for pricing loans, has surged to the highest in seven years after the plunge in oil prices forced the government to withdraw money from the country’s banking system, squeezing liquidity. The cash crunch risk undermining bank’s ability to lend to businesses, adding to the strain facing economic growth at a time when the government is cutting spending to shore up its public finances. The economy will likely expand 1.1 percent in 2016, according to a Bloomberg survey, the slowest pace since 2009.

Cost to taxpayers on loan forgiveness could skyrocket – (www.cnbc.com) A program to encourage student-loan borrowers to go into public service may come with a hefty price tag. If you take out a federal student loan, you may qualify for public service loan forgiveness. (If you borrow from a private lender, you are not eligible for the program.) Some qualified borrowers will be able to use this benefit starting next year. The ultimate cost of the program is difficult to determine. Since 2012, borrowers could certify with the Department of Education that their employment would qualify them for public service loan forgiveness. The number of borrowers who have been certified by the department has grown rapidly, to 431,853, as of June 30, 2016 (see chart below).

Deutsche Bank's Pain Is Germany's Too – (www.bloomberg.com) Berlin is trying to distance itself from Deutsche Bank and the threat of a $14 billion U.S. fine that would likely force the bank to raise capital. This makes sense politically ahead of an election year. It also, effectively, calls the U.S. authorities' bluff: if the fine is too big, German taxpayers won't step in to help. But the danger is that deepening investor concerns over the health of the country's No. 1 bank spiral out of control -- and circle right back to Berlin. As unpalatable as it may be politically, the market sees Germany and Deutsche as joined at the hip.




Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Thursday September 29 20916 Housing and Economic stories

TOP STORIES:

Canadian Housing Bubble, Debt Stir Financial Crisis Fears - (www.wolfstreet.com) Everyone is fretting about the Canadian house price bubble and the mountain of debt it generates – from the IMF on down to the regular Canadian. Now even the Bank for International Settlement (BIS) and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) warn about the risks. Every city has its own housing market, and some aren’t so hot. But in Vancouver and Toronto, all heck has broken loose in recent years. In Vancouver, for example, even as sales volume plunged 45% in August from a year ago – under the impact of the new 15% transfer tax aimed at Chinese non-resident investors – the “benchmark” price of a detached house soared by 35.8%, of an apartment by 26.9%, and of an attached house by 31.1%. Ludicrous price increases!

Deutsche Bank Woes Sparks Concern Among German Lawmakers - (www.bloomberg.com) Deutsche Bank AG’s finances, weakened by low profitability and mounting legal costs, are raising concern among German politicians after the U.S. sought $14 billion to settle claims related to the sale of mortgage-backed securities. At a closed session of Social Democratic finance lawmakers this week, Deutsche Bank’s woes came up alongside a debate over Basel financial rules, according to two people familiar with the matter. Participants discussed the U.S. fine and the financial reservesat Deutsche Bank’s disposal if it had to cover the full amount, according to the people, who asked not to be identified because the meeting on Tuesday was private. While the participants -- members of the junior party in Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government -- didn’t reach any conclusions on the likely outcome, the discussion signals that the risks have the attention of Germany’s political establishment. The German Finance Ministry last week called on the U.S. to ensure a “fair outcome” for Deutsche Bank, citing cases against other banks where the government settled for reduced fines. A spokesman for Deutsche Bank declined to comment.

Exclusive: Regulators Expect Monte Dei Paschi to Ask Italy for Help-Sources - (www.reuters.com) European regulators expect Italian bank Monte dei Paschi di Siena will have to turn to the government for support, three euro zone officials with knowledge of the matter said, although Rome would strongly resist such a move if bondholders suffered losses. Less than two months after the Tuscan lender announced an emergency plan to raise 5 billion euros of fresh capital, having come last in a health check of 51 European banks, there is growing concern among European regulators that the cash bid will fall short. While the bank is determined to see through the capital raising, if it were to disappoint, it would be left with a capital hole. Now euro zone authorities are considering whether state support would have to be tapped after what bankers have described as slack interest in the bank's share offer.

US-EU Trade Talks "De Facto Dead" - (www.zerohedge.com) President Obama was hoping to get two trade agreements in the waning days of his administration. However, this week the German Economy Minister stated the US-EU TTIP  talks were “de facto dead”. The US-Asia TPP talks have been dead as a doornob for some time. Both deals were allegedly about free trade. In fact, neither was. Nonetheless, that both deals died after years of negotiation is systematic of a bigger problem: rising protectionism everywhere, led by the US and EU.

The Average Federal Employee Is Compensated $123,160 – (www.dailycaller.com) The average federal employee compensation is $123,160 per year, according to a new study by the Cato Institute. The study shows two major trends: the first being that there is a staggering differential in federal pay and benefits packages and private sector pay and benefits packages; the second being that the differential between these two groups is now growing even larger. It uses Bureau of Economic Analysis data to reach its conclusions. Currently, the federal government employs around 2.4 million Americans. Since the 1990s, federal employees have outstripped private sector growth rates in compensation and benefits packages, the study reports.




Tuesday, September 27, 2016

Wednesday September 28 20916 Housing and Economic stories


Deutsche Bank Woes Sparks Concern Among German Lawmakers - (www.bloomberg.com) Deutsche Bank AG’s finances, weakened by low profitability and mounting legal costs, are raising concern among German politicians after the U.S. sought $14 billion to settle claims related to the sale of mortgage-backed securities. At a closed session of Social Democratic finance lawmakers this week, Deutsche Bank’s woes came up alongside a debate over Basel financial rules, according to two people familiar with the matter. Participants discussed the U.S. fine and the financial reservesat Deutsche Bank’s disposal if it had to cover the full amount, according to the people, who asked not to be identified because the meeting on Tuesday was private. While the participants -- members of the junior party in Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government -- didn’t reach any conclusions on the likely outcome, the discussion signals that the risks have the attention of Germany’s political establishment. The German Finance Ministry last week called on the U.S. to ensure a “fair outcome” for Deutsche Bank, citing cases against other banks where the government settled for reduced fines. A spokesman for Deutsche Bank declined to comment.

Exclusive: Regulators Expect Monte Dei Paschi to Ask Italy for Help-Sources - (www.reuters.com) European regulators expect Italian bank Monte dei Paschi di Siena will have to turn to the government for support, three euro zone officials with knowledge of the matter said, although Rome would strongly resist such a move if bondholders suffered losses. Less than two months after the Tuscan lender announced an emergency plan to raise 5 billion euros of fresh capital, having come last in a health check of 51 European banks, there is growing concern among European regulators that the cash bid will fall short. While the bank is determined to see through the capital raising, if it were to disappoint, it would be left with a capital hole. Now euro zone authorities are considering whether state support would have to be tapped after what bankers have described as slack interest in the bank's share offer. "There is clearly an execution risk to the capital raising," said one official with knowledge of the rescue attempt, adding that the bank's value, about one ninth the size of the planned 5 billion euro cash call, would be a turn-off for investors.

In Dramatic Twist, Wells Fargo Said To Retaliate, Fire Whistleblowers Who Exposed Bank's Illegal Practices – (www.zerohedge.com) Wells Fargo admitted to firing 5,300 employees for engaging in illegal, fraudulent tactics. Now, CNN is reporting that it spoke with numerous former Wells Fargo workers around the country who tried to put a stop to these illegal tactics. "Almost half a dozen workers who spoke with us say they paid dearly for trying to do the right thing: they were fired", CNN says, which if confirmed would promptly make this a criminal case, which implicate virtually every senior management member, as such retaliatory practices would suggest not only awareness of what was happening at the bank, but also an even more dramatic response by management seeking to keep these practices under wraps. Some of the named witnesses made it very clear that the narrative spun by Stumpf in Senate was a lie: "I endured harsh bullying ... defamation of character, and eventually being pinned for something I didn't do," said Heather Brock, who was fired earlier this month as a senior business banker at a Wells Fargo branch in Round Rock, Texas.

Suitcases of Cash: China Travel Data Hint at Capital Outflow - (www.bloomberg.com) Chinese tourists seem to be packing more than just sunscreen and cameras on vacation. The data discrepancy suggests they’re also shifting cash by buying homes while studying abroad, signing up for life insurance products in Hong Kong, or opening deposit accounts to squirrel money offshore, Setser said. That’s bad news for the global economy. "Right now, the world as a whole needs Chinese demand for its goods and services far more than it needs Chinese demand for bank deposits and bonds," said Setser, now a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York. "It helps us understand how the slowdown in China over the past few years is impacting world growth."  

EU Banks May Need Rescue Funds Equaling Twice ECB Capital - (www.bloomberg.com) The euro area’s biggest banks will be asked to earmark funds equivalent to more than twice their minimum capital requirements to make sure a possible emergency doesn’t cost taxpayers, according to Elke Koenig, head of the Single Resolution Board. The Brussels-based SRB, the resolution authority for 142 banks including Deutsche Bank AG and BNP Paribas SA, will use the minimum capital requirement set by the European Central Bank as a proxy for funds that would be needed to absorb losses and allow recapitalization in a crisis, Koenig said in an interview this month. The ECB last year set an average requirement for the highest-quality capital of 9.9 percent of risk-weighted assets.






Monday, September 26, 2016

Tuesday September 27 20916 Housing and Economic stories


Debt buybacks boom as companies cut borrowing costs - (www.ft.com) Klépierre, a French commercial real estate company on Monday joined a growing list of entities taking advantage of low borrowing costs and buying back their existing debt. Companies are replacing existing bonds with new debt, offering investors less interest despite holding on to their money for longer. The practice reflects central bank policies that have pushed down the cost of long-term borrowing, giving companies the chance to refinance at some of the lowest rates on offer ever, and the limits of a policy when many businesses do not need fresh capital. “Companies are taking the view that new issue market conditions are extremely good and not to be missed,” said Vijay Raman, head of liability management at Société Générale.

SEC charges hedge fund manager Leon Cooperman, Omega Advisers with insider trading - (www.cnbc.com) Billionaire Leon Cooperman and his Omega Advisors hedge fund were charged Wednesday with insider trading, the Securities and Exchange Commission announced.  The SEC accused Cooperman of buying into Atlas Pipeline Partners ahead of a deal, using his status as one of its largest shareholders to acquire nonpublic information about an upcoming transaction. "We allege that hedge fund manager Cooperman, who as a large APL shareholder obtained access to confidential corporate information, abused that access by trading on this information," said Andrew J. Ceresney, director of the SEC's Division of Enforcement. "By doing so, he allegedly undermined the public confidence in the securities markets and took advantage of other investors who did not have this information."

Mexican Peso Plunges against Dollar, in Toxic Cocktail of Forces - (www.wolfstreet.com) On Monday morning the world’s tenth most traded currency, the Mexican peso, set a historic precedent that few Mexicans will welcome. For the first time ever, one US dollar fetched as many as 20 Mexican pesos in some of the nation’s banks, including its biggest, Bancomer, following eight consecutive days of losses. Of all the international currencies tracked by Bloomberg, only the Surinamese dollar fell more against the U.S. dollar last week. The peso also holds the dubious distinction of being the worst performing major emerging market currency of 2016, having lost close to 12% of its value.

$195 Billion Asset Manager: "The Time Has Come To Leave The Dance Floor" - (www.zerohedge.com) "When the supposed solutions to the Fed’s dilemma are merely new “problems,” you know you are approaching the cycle’s end... long-term investing is predicated on not just knowing where the happening parties are during the reflationary parts of the cycle but more importantly, knowing when the time has come to leave the dance floor. In our view, that time has already come."

US election: Are we in for an October Surprise? (opinion) - (www.cnn.com) As September comes to an end, presidential-election observers are beginning to wonder if there will be an October Surprise. In a campaign where the unexpected has become normalized, both parties -- but particularly Democrats -- suspect that the next month could bring a shocking revelation. The notion of an October Surprise gained widespread popularity in the 1980 election, when Ronald Reagan's campaign feared that President Jimmy Carter would announce a resolution to the Iran hostage crisis only weeks or days before Americans went to vote. While Carter was in fact working on an end to the crisis, irrespective of the election, the Iranians did not release the hostages until after Reagan's inauguration.




Sunday, September 25, 2016

Monday September 26 20916 Housing and Economic stories


Meet the affable bear who expects the S&P to tumble to 20-year lows - (www.marketwatch.com) If you’re buying stocks today, says noted permabear Albert Edwards, you need a psychiatric evaluation. Edwards, global strategist at Société Générale told MarketWatch in an early September interview that the stock market, bolstered by easy money, has valuations at “nosebleed” levels even as labor costs are rising and corporate profits are falling. That, he says, points toward a U.S. economy on the brink of recession — and an S&P 500 set to plummet to 550, a level not seen in more than two decades, in response. At the core of his forecast is the belief that the economy goes in cycles — or, as he says, that “recessions come along with regular monotony.” “This is the weakest recovery on record in the U.S.,” said Edwards, who is based in London. “Everything you expect to see at the end of an [economic] cycle is apparent.”

Deutsche Bank’s Riskiest Bonds Fall to Lowest Since February - (www.bloomberg.com) Deutsche Bank AG’s riskiest bonds dropped to the lowest since a marketwide rout in February as a potential $14 billion bill to settle a U.S. probe into mortgage-backed securities reignited capital concerns. The lender’s 1.75 billion euros ($2 billion) of 6 percent additional Tier 1 bonds, the first notes to take losses in a crisis, fell four cents on the euro to 72 cents, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That extended the decline since the U.S. Department of Justice’s initial settlement figure was announced last week to 11 cents. Deutsche Bank’s bonds and shares have tumbled because of concerns that settling the Justice Department probe may lead to a capital shortfall, even if the Frankfurt-based lender is able to negotiate a smaller bill. A reported plan to securitize billions of dollars of corporate loans may do little to help.

Credit Spreads Widen - (www.mishtalk.com) The present calm in high-yield markets is entirely unwarranted and at odds with where we are in the US credit cycle. Corporate debt to GDP in the US is at all-time highs. In the past, whenever corporate debt reached around 42-45% of GDP, the US approached a recession. Today rates are lower, but corporate debt is already above 45% of GDP. Some investors prefer to look at net debt minus liquid assets, but even there, the measure is higher than in 2001 and 2008 (also the top 50 companies hold two thirds of all cash, so aggregate figures are highly misleading).

Is This Why Deutsche Bank Is Crashing (Again)? - (www.zerohedge.com) Deutsche's dead-bank-bounce is over. The last few days have seen shares of the 'most systemically dangerous bank in the world' plunge almost 20%, back to record lows as the DoJ fine demands reawoken reality that the €42 trillion-dollar-derivative-book bank is severely under-capitalized no matter how you spin asset values. However, another question looms - Is Deutsche Bank cooking its derivatives book to hide huge losses...

China Risks $375 Billion of Shadow Banking Losses, CLSA Says - (www.bloomberg.com) China’s shadow banking could lead to losses of $375 billion, according to CLSA Ltd. estimates of likely levels of bad debt. The brokerage estimated the potential bad debt ratio for “bank-related shadow financing” at 16.4 percent, or 4.2 trillion yuan, in a report released to the media in Hong Kong on Tuesday. Assuming a 40 percent recovery rate left a potential loss of 2.5 trillion yuan. “Shadow financing is banking reform gone wrong given that the key driver of growth has been the banks circumventing regulations to protect their margins,” analyst Francis Cheung wrote in the report. “Shadow financing has grown rapidly, benefiting from implicit government guarantees despite being a channel for credit to higher-risk industries.”




Thursday, September 22, 2016

Friday September 23 20916 Housing and Economic stories

TOP STORIES:

Why Hanjin’s Zombie Collapse Won’t Be the Last One - (www.wolfstreet.com) Hanjin Shipping Co. filed for the equivalent of bankruptcy protection in South Korea on August 31 and over the past two weeks in the US and dozens of other countries. Some of its ships are still idling at sea, trying to out-wait the uncertainty, and being seized by creditors. Some have made it to port and are being unloaded. Others have already been sold at fire-sale prices. When US Bankruptcy Judge John Sherwood asked Hanjin lawyer Ilana Volkov if the carrier was liquidating, she said: “There is no clear visibility yet on what will happen with this business.” The seventh largest container carrier in the world is not the only carrier in financial trouble. Another huge Korean carrier, HMM, was restructured and bailed out earlier this year, with creditors, including the Korean taxpayer, taking a big hit. The state-owned Korean Development Bank is now its largest shareholder.

German Protesters Gather to Oppose Transatlantic Trade Deals - (www.bloomberg.com) Protesters gathered in seven German cities on Saturday to oppose transatlantic trade agreements between the European Union and the U.S. and Canada. More than 320,000 people turned out, the organizers said in an e-mailed statement. In Munich, thousands met on the central Odeonsplatz square and adjoining Ludwigsstrasse in heavy rain as the annual Oktoberfest opened just a few miles away.  “There is no bad weather, there are only bad trade agreements,” Karl Baer of the Munich Environmental Institute said in opening remarks before a crowd wielding signs and flags of organizations including the Green party, labor unions, local farmer groups and non-governmental organizations such as Attac and Greenpeace.  Protesters argue that the trade agreements would favor industrialized agricultural processes over craft-based food production that’s not genetically engineered. They say the deals would cost thousands of jobs and lead to lower standards in employment and food safety.

Warning Indicator for China Banking Stress Climbs to Record - (www.bloomberg.com) A warning indicator for banking stress rose to a record in China in the first quarter, underscoring risks to the nation and the world from a rapid build-up of Chinese corporate debt. China’s credit-to-gross domestic product “gap” stood at 30.1 percent, the highest for the nation in data stretching back to 1995, according to the Basel-based Bank for International Settlements. Readings above 10 percent signal elevated risks of banking strains, according to the BIS, which released the latest data on Sunday. The gap is the difference between the credit-to-GDP ratio and its long-term trend. A blow-out in the number can signal that credit growth is excessive and a financial bust may be looming.

Wells Fargo's Chief Risk Officer Of Scandal-Plagued Group Leaves For "Personal Reasons" - (www.zerohedge.com) What a difference a week makes. Just days after it was revealed that Carrie Tolstedt, the supervisor in charge of Wells Fargo's infamous consumer banking group where employees falsified and fabricated more than 2 million customer accounts was leaving the bank on "golden parachute" terms, quietly collecting a $125 million parting gift in the process, moments ago Bloomberg reported that Wells Fargo's top risk manager in the same division has taken a leave of absence and was replaced in that role. As Bloomberg first reported, Claudia Russ Anderson, who began a six-month leave Monday, was succeeded in August by Vic Albrecht, who held a similar job in the wealth-management division, Richele Messick, a spokeswoman for the San Francisco-based company, said in a phone interview. Anderson’s leave was announced to staff in June, said Messick, who didn’t elaborate when asked whether it was tied to a U.S. investigation into the bogus accounts. “Claudia decided to take a personal leave of absence for personal reasons,” Messick said. The leave takes effect a day before Chief Executive Officer John Stumpf is scheduled to testify before the Senate Banking Committee.

 

Heavy-Equipment Glut Weighs on Machine Makers - (www.wsj.com) Used machinery is flooding the secondhand market, piling more pain on equipment makers battling slack demand from any customer that mines, moves or refines commodities amid a global slump in the value of everything from coal to corn. Instead of buying a new $500,000 bulldozer or $300,000 excavator, many construction firms and other equipment users are renting or entering longer-term leases for machines to expand their fleets or replace worn out equipment, dealers and analysts say. Dealers, in turn, are keeping smaller inventories of new wheel loaders, backhoes and other machinery. That is hurting sales for Caterpillar Inc., Volvo AB, Deere & Co. and other manufacturers.