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CIT Group…FAIL.

The inconsistencies shall continue.  CIT Group is a 100 year old commercial lender that is finding itself in a very tight spot.  Management had continued to claim that they were easily able to pay all maturing debts for another 12 months until this last weekend when they came out and suggested that they would not be able to make August payments without cash from the government.  As with all bank-like institutions, CIT faces a possible run on their current cash and will probably see their own liquidity crunch in the next few days which will be resolved with bankruptcy, seizure, or bailout.  With the government involved we have often found the process rather random so bondholders and equity holders have bolted for the door.  Countrywide – coerced sale, Bear Stearns – Forced sale, Lehman – Bankruptcy (gift to Barclays), Merrill – coerced sale,  AIG – Bailout, Citigroup – Bailout, Washington Mutual – seizure and forced sale (it was more of a gift to JP Morgan).  I guess it all depends on who is involved with the companies and how they are viewed by the Fed.  There are endless conspiracy theories involving Goldman’s involvement with AIG (unhedged CDS exposure) as well as their disdain for Lehman Brothers.  I do believe that those with the ears of the Fed have a lot of power in deciding who goes bust and who gets a taxpayer subsidized free pass.  If that is the case, the $3B loan facility that Goldman has with CIT might come into play….

Regardless of the outcome, this issue will be clarified in the next few days.  It is amusing that the government originally made an equity stake in CIT and is now saying that they will receive nothing more.  I am all for letting companies fail, but I am not for the cherry-picking that the government has done over the last few years.  I just hope that the businesses that have lending facilities with CIT have another place to get their loans, otherwise we are going to see a string of defaults from the medium and small businesses that just found that their credit was taken away with CIT Group’s BK.

What is even more aggravating is that the government has continuously used the “too big to fail” rationale.  Why is this aggravating?  Because by propping up the large institutions (BofA, Citi) while letting the smaller guys fail (Merrill, Lehman, CIT?) they are making sure that this will be the case in the future as well.  Why not just take Citi and split it up?  It would be a mess in the short run but much better for our financial health in the long run.  In the mean time, I am not going to be buying any equity shares in CIT Group…

Posted in Markets, Politics.

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Stocks lose .5%, Head News Sources Must Explain!

One thing that never ceases to annoy me is the relentless updating of news rational for the market moving a few points.  Stocks were down less than half a percent today and as usual, every major financial news source must explain why.  It would be very refreshing if they stated “Stocks moved today due to noise”.  The VIX is still at about 30%, so we should be experiencing 2% daily moves on a regular basis.  With that in mind, half a percent is not worth mentioning.

Markets are CRUMBLING!

Markets are CRUMBLING!

Posted in Markets.

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Fixed Income Rally

The fixed income markets have rallied tremendously in the last few months as credit concerns have eased.  I am still hesitant to jump into high yield credit, especially after the recent rally, but investment grade credit still looks pretty attractive.  Spread levels on AA and A corporates still remain at all time highs and we would have to see some serious defaults in the investment grade space to negate the premium being paid on these bonds.  The obvious concern is locking in low interest rate levels now by buying corporate bonds, but there are ways to hedge that risk as we will explore later.  Look at LQD or CFT as ways to capitalize on corporate credit in a cheap and easy way.

Just be glad your portfolio was not in asset backed home equity….

ABS to the MOON!

ABS to the MOON!

Posted in Markets, Trading Ideas.


Putting the Market in Historical Perspective

Does anyone else think that 1 1/2 years is rather quick for the market to reach its final bottom in the 2007/2009 credit crisis? In order for that to be the case, the bottom would have been established on March 9, 2009 at 676.53 after 18 months, a similar slide to the bear markets of 68-70 or 73-74. I find that hard to believe. The bottoming process during the Japanese asset bubble and great depression took over 30 months to synthesize all data into the market. It seems likely that this crisis will be no different. It could be that we do nothing but retrace to the lows of March, but I do think those who are hoping for a continuous rally from here might be a little too optimistic.

BearMarkets

Posted in Markets, Trading Ideas.

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Deflationary Times

Inflation and hyperinflation seem to be the majority of talk in the public media.  In order for the United States to see inflation we need growth, lower unemployment and stable or rising housing prices.  I do not see any of those conditions currently and it is difficult to see them on the near horizon.  Deflation is our big fear now because every day that passes makes it look more like a Japanese scenario.  For now I will not be shorting Treasuries or buying gold.  There will be a time for that, but we need to see some economic prospects.

Do you see inflation?

Do you see inflation?

Posted in Economics.

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