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Cash for Clunkers

Since most of you are paying the taxes to support certain “stimulus” plans, you had might as well get yours.  The “Cash for Clunkers” program is pretty attractive for those who are thinking about buying a new car and have a clunker that is worth very little.

From what I understand the qualifications are as stated below:

  • Any car with 18 mpg or less and was manufactured within the last 25 years is eligible
  • The car must have been registered to the same owner for a period of not less than 1 year
  • The car is in drivable condition
  • The car is continuously insured
  • No customer income limitations
  • Limit 1 per customer

This offer is effective from July 2009 through November 1 2009

If you buy a new vehicle that has a 10mpg improvement you get $4500
If you buy a new vehicle that has a 4mpg improvement you get $3500.

From what I understand, the dealer will actually cut the check and the dealer gets paid back by the government.

Posted in Media.


S&P Testing 950 Barrier

As I stated on July 15th, the S&P 500 looked as if it would test the 950 barrier and today that is the case.  It will be interesting to see how this retest plays out.  If we can remain above 950 I might be swayed to the slightly bullish camp even though I do not necessarily see it in the fundamentals.  Retests like this are psychologically important because it can sway bears to stop being bearish or it can sway bulls to stop being bullish.  That truly is a lot of what technical analysis is about, just the psychological defeat that ensues after failing to make a new level or breakout from a current channel.

One thing that I would like to point out today is the Credit Suisse “Fear Barometer”.  This index measures the index skew for 3 month S&P 500 options.  What this means is that they sell a 3-month call option out of the money by 10% and calculate how for out of the money they can buy a 3-month put option.  Right now a 10% out of the money call option is able to purchase a 17.09% out of the money put option.  This was as high as 18.8% back at the end of June 2009 which was about the same as the high back in June of 2008 before the market tanked.

Often people look at the VIX to support bullish or bearish support, but I think the Credit Suisse Fear Barometer is a much better gauge of market sentiment.  If people in the options markets are bullish, then they should be willing to buy call volatility at a price that is comparable to put volatility.  When they desire puts more than calls, as is the case right now, then they do not see a lot of upside and are more fearful of the downside.  This particular index does not give me a lot of comfort going into the fall trading season.

Just remember that September and October have historically been bad months for the equity markets.  Either this breakout above 950 will be the start of a sustained bull market or the next bloodbath is about to begin and this 950 level was everyone’s last chance to get out at a decent level price.  It really all depends on if they economy is beginning to turn, or if some of the positive earnings were just some stimulus induced gasps for air.  Only time will tell.

S&P 500 and its Fear Barometer

S&P 500 and its Fear Barometer

Posted in Markets, Technical Analysis, Trading Ideas.

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Swap Spreads. How does this make sense?

Besides the massive volatility and never before seen governmental intervention in the markets, there has been one particular area that has befuddled me.  For those not in the fixed income markets, LIBOR based swap rates are supposed to be the interest rates at which financial institutions of a AA rating are able to lend to each other.  There are different rates for different countries, but here we will focus on US $ based LIBOR.

There are some fundamental truths in how this should work.  For one, the rate should be tied to the government treasury rates as financial institutions often borrow from the government to fund financial transactions.  The “swap spread” is defined as the difference between swap rates and government treasuries.  Take the 30 year swap yield, subtract the yield on 30 year treasury bonds and you have the 30 year swap spread.  What this spread should tell you is the risk of AA financial institutions versus the government.  We would expect that financial institutions should carry more bankruptcy risk than the US government.  In fact, in times of major financial distress, such as the LTCM blowup we saw 30 year swap spreads skyrocket to 1.5% and up.  In general, 30 year swaps spreads are usually stable at about 40-50 bps, or about .5%.

So that was a long winded way of getting to the problem.   Starting in November of 2008, 30 year swap spreads turned negative – implying that it was less risky to borrow for 30 years from JP Morgan than from the US government.  Not only did they turn negative, but they turned massively negative all the way to -59bps on November 20th, 2008.  They went positive in December, but then slid back into negative territory and have stayed there since.  Right now we are sitting at about -20bps.

So what is going on here?  Every time an investment banker from the interest rate desk has come by I have asked them the same thing.  The answers I get are always varied, but never adequate.  I have even heard some suggest that the government is more risky over a 30 year time period than financial institutions, which I find hard to believe even if taking into consideration the massive government debt.  The most plausible explanation is that we are seeing a technically driven demand/supply event where pension funds and insurance companies are hedging their interest rate exposures with swaps almost exclusively on the long end of the curve which has driven down the yield artificially.

The natural follow-up to the supply/demand equation is: why isn’t a big hedge fund or investor taking the other side of this trade?  Sell swaps and buy treasury futures.  This seems like a massive no-brainer to me.  Maybe because the banks will not provide good short swap levels to hedge funds?  Maybe the banks are artificially keeping swap rates below treasuries so that they can build up their own massive position on the long end of the curve and make a boatload of money when swap spreads revert back to the mean?  That’s my feeling…

SwapSpreads

Posted in Markets, Trading Ideas.

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S&P 500, Rebounding to 950

I am not a devoted practitioner of technical analysis, but I do try to look at some bigger barriers and setups as I impose my own fundamental view.  With that in mind, I would like to say that it definitely has not worked for what seemed like a slam dunk.  The S&P 500 had an impressive rally that started from the low on March 9th from 666 all the way up to 956.  The 950 level seemed to be a strong barrier as it tested it repeatedly in June.  It seemed as if the S&P lost steam between May and early July, setting up a nice two month head an shoulder pattern with a neckline at about 900.  The market seemingly roared through that on July 7th, but could not seem to break much below the 200 day moving average.  We are currently roaring back upward on a vertical trajectory that seems to imply another test of the 950 level.

So technicals aside, what happened?  Goldman Sachs reported strong earnings and Intel had a strong showing.  My thoughts on Goldman are known, but I am a little skeptical of Intel.  How is it that Intel has such a rosy view of the future but Dell had a dismal outlook?  Oh, and Merrill said the recession was over…that could not be stated in their benefit could it?  SPX

Posted in Markets, Technical Analysis, Trading Ideas.

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Goldman Posts Record Profits on….Everything

The earnings release is pretty amusing considering the dichotomy between Goldman and everyone else.  It currently seems that most large companies can only make a profit by dramatically reducing costs and capital expenditures.

Goldman on the other hand has set aside enough compensation in Q1 and Q2 to pay every one of its 29,000 employees $773K on an annualized basis.

I have known a lot of smart people in my life and I believe that very smart people can do quite well when they put their abilities to the test.  I also know that no single person or single organization is smarter than everyone else (e.g. LTCM).  For one organization to do incredibly well while the world struggles raises a red flag in my mind.

“Behind every great fortune is a great crime”

Posted in Conspiracy, Politics.

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