
Disclosure: Long PCU
Targets: 17.20, 19, 22
Stop: 14
Incoherent Blathering




Home improvement is at 1.21% of GDP, off the high of 1.3% in Q4 2005 - but still well above the average of the last 50 years of 1.07%. Maybe lenders are boosting home improvement spending fixing up all those damaged REOs!
This would seem to suggest there is significant downside risk to home improvement spending over the next couple of years.
Dec. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Congress will use the remaining $350 billion in a U.S. bank-rescue package to force the Bush administration and President-elect Barack Obama into providing foreclosure aid as the pace of people losing their homes soars.Lawmakers will agree to release the funds in exchange for Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Obama agreeing to programs that cut interest rates and forgive a portion of a mortgage’s principal, House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank said in a telephone interview yesterday.
“The Democrats are finally getting it, that this administration is not going to do anything to help homeowners, and they are getting more proactive,” John Taylor, president of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, said in a telephone interview. “Paulson has had the chance to do something like this all along, but has chosen not to. I think he’ll do it if a quid pro quo is held over him.”
Frank, a Massachusetts Democrat, said in the interview he’s drafting legislation with Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd that would release the remaining $350 billion in exchange for foreclosure help, aid for General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC and provisions to hold banks accountable for stepped up lending to consumers.
Frank also plans to revise Hope for Homeowners passed by Congress in July. The program, run by the Federal Housing Administration, is aimed at helping about 400,000 homeowners by insuring as much as $300 billion in refinanced loans after servicers forgive part of the loan balance. Few lenders have signed up because banks must cut a large portion of the loan and pay high fees.Frank said he’s ready to act on the legislation during the final month of the Bush administration, without waiting until Obama’s Jan. 20 inauguration. “Why wait three weeks? Let’s do it,” Frank said. “We’re in a crisis now. How many people’s homes will be foreclosed?”
Today I noticed one of my options had a bid/ask of 0.00/0.05 and I couldn't figure out why the market was valuing this asset accordingly. I double-checked all my data and had my staff re-run all the data through the WOPR Computer to make sure my models were correct, and indeed they were. I immediately got on the horn with the brokerage wanting to get to the bottom of this. Well let me tell you the guy who answered tried telling me the options were worthless. Can you believe? So I kindly explained my models were showing a valuation much larger than they were and I would like to have these moved off balance sheet and into Tier 3 for now. Apparently this guy has never heard of Tier 3 options (everyone does is, it's the latest thing) because we went back and forth for about 5 minutes before he put me on hold to speak to his supervisor after I threatened to do something silly like open an account with with that guy who flies the black helicopter on tv. They must have been looking at all the commissioned trades I've made because I was on hold for about 45 minutes. When they finally returned [both the supervisor and the rep], I heard them snickering and they told me that I'm such a valued customer that if I check my account this weekend they'll move it to "Tier 3" for me, no longer appearing in my "normal account" and therefore will not be on the balance sheet.
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$ uptime8:07am up 640 day(s), 20:38, 3 users, load average: 0.23, 0.24, 0.25

Disclaimer: I have a long position in JEC.



$25 Oil
Crude traded below $50 for a fourth straight day, down from a record $145.29 in July. It may fall below $25 next year if the recession that’s slashing fuel demand around the world spreads to China, Francisco Blanch, commodity strategist at Merrill Lynch, wrote in a report today.
In Cramer News:
TheStreet.com Cramer: We Need Some Failures 12/02/08 - 10:41 AM EST




Source: Voltage Creative
China’s manufacturing contracted by the most on record and export orders slumped as a slowdown in the world’s fourth-biggest economy deepened.
The Purchasing Managers’ Index fell to a seasonally adjusted 38.8 in November from 44.6 in October, the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said today in an e- mailed statement. Export orders, output and new orders all contracted by the most since the survey began in 2005.
China’s export orders declined to 29 in November from 41.4 in October, the survey showed. A reading above 50 reflects an expansion, below 50 a contraction. The output index fell to 35.5 from 44.3, while the index of new orders dropped to 32.3 from 41.7.
Weaker demand for Chinese goods and a slump in construction are undermining growth. China last month announced a $586 billion stimulus package and the biggest interest-rate cut in 11 years to revive the economy and counter the risk of spiraling unemployment and social unrest.
Where There Is Opportunity - I was interested to see that retail traders opened a large number of accounts and increased their trading at E*Trade, even as customer assets dwindled. This pattern also manifested itself at Ameritrade and at Schwab. Indeed, according to one report, eight of the ten busiest days at Scottrade were during October, with the number of new accounts running three times the average level. It appears that volatility is bringing out the speculative sentiment among individual traders. Perhaps in response to the growing interest in trading, Scottrade has begun a program of free trader education at their branch offices. It's an interesting venture; over time we may see retail brokers developing their customers much like prop firms develop their traders.