Stock Market & Economic Analysis - Unbiased, Objective, and Slightly Rebellious

Mar
13

Stock Market Summary for March 12th 2008

By Chuck
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BREAKING NEWS

We have late breaking news to provide to you. At 11:27pm (US Eastern Standard Time) it was announced that "Carlyle Capital", a hedge fund and a subsidiary of the famous Carlyle Group has been unable to reach a deal with their lenders after getting margin calls. Tonight Carlyle Capital is broke and has gone into ‘default’. Billions of dollars have been lost in an instant tonight and many investors have just lost a ton of money. Remember that hedge funds are NOT insured so their clients have lost big time.

CARLYLE CAPITAL UNABLE TO REACH ACCORD WITH LENDERS; SAYS REMAINING DEBT "SOON TO GO INTO DEFAULT"

- Carlye Capital says that its lenders to take possession of assets.
- The only assets held in the Company’s portfolio as of today are U.S. government agency AAA-rated residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS). During the last seven business days, the Company received margin calls in excess of $400 million. As the Company was unable to pay these margin calls, its lenders proceeded to foreclose on the RMBS collateral. In total, through March 12, the Company has defaulted on approximately $16.6 billion of its indebtedness. The remaining indebtedness is expected soon to go into default.
- Overall, it has become apparent to the Company that the basis on which lenders are willing to provide financing against the Company’s collateral has changed so substantially that a successful refinancing is not possible.

On this news the S&P Futures have dropped dramatically in the matter of minutes. World markets are also selling off at an accelerated pace on this news.

(This late breaking news came in while I was working on tonight’s commentary and decided it was so important it had to go at the top of the page. What follows below is my original commentary for tonight)

 

Global Markets are once again selling off tonight as more and more investors and traders are seeing the true picture of what the Federal Reserve’s action yesterday really means. And what it means is that the Federal Reserves action yesterday was truly desperation to save the economy from a crash. I said last night and I will say it again here now, the Federal Reserve is in a panic mode now as the financial system is falling apart at the seems. The risk of bank failures continues to rise in spite of the Federal Reserve’s actions.

Home prices in the United States have grown way out of proportion with reality during the 1990’s and early 2000’s. Now that housing prices have hit a "reality check" and are dropping, the countless hedge funds and banks are caught holding onto assets that are backed by mortgages and other forms of real estate investment packages which are blowing up on them almost on a daily basis. Banks and other financial institutions have relied heavily for many years on the premise that housing prices would just continue to rise forever and everything would be ok. In the late 90’s and early 2000’s banks and mortgage companies would jump at the chance to buy ‘packaged’ mortgages and other types of assets that were backed by the value of real estate. They simply could not get enough of it. And once they got it they would repackage it again and sell it to another buyer for an even greater profit. Now with the collapse of the entire US housing market the banks, mortgage companies, and other financial institutions can’t unload these assets and they continue to lose value. Credit has built this country up and it is credit that will bring it to its knees as it has all come back to bite them in the ass.

The Federal Reserve’s new ‘Term Securities Lending Facility" that was instituted yesterday is a last ditch effort to give the banks and financial institutions some cash by using these declining assets as collateral. But the money being handed out is only for 28 days and worse yet the collateral continues to decline in value even further. The fact that the Federal Reserve is accepting this "toxic paper" as collateral will not provide any additional value to it as some have suggested it might. It simply leaves the Federal Reserve holding the bag of assets which continue to decline day by day. Buyers on the open market for mortgage (residential or commercial) backed securities is drying up. And each time another financial institution decides to exit the mortgage playing field it leave one less bidder at the table. When the number of bidders depletes so does the potential value of the assets.

The market today was trading slighly in the green for most of the day but what is more important was that the volume was about 15% less than what it was yesterday during the ‘big rally’ as the media keeps touting it as. One of the prime rules in technical analysis is ‘watch the volume’. Volume tells us strength of any move and the volume yesterday on the big rally was no where near levels that would signal any confidence.

It all boils down to this… the Federal Reserve is trying to inflate assets in order to restore the financial system. But the real estate assets can’t be artificially inflated. What they are doing is akin to pumping air into a balloon that has a hole in it. Nothing will inflate the assets and they simply must reach their own bottom, wherever that may be. In the process of trying to inflate assets artificially they have actually created an even bigger mess that still gets worse each day.

This afternoon President George W. Bush was quoted as saying :

WOULD "ABSOLUTELY" LIKE TO SEE A STRONGER DOLLAR; US DOLLAR IN A PROCESS OF "ADJUSTING"

Adjusting? What the hell are you smoking Mr. Bush? Look at this chart Mr. President and you tell me where you see ‘adjusting’!

us dollar 3_11_08

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(US Dollar - Daily chart)

Oh, and by the way Mr. Bush. Tonight the US dollar has hit another all time low, twice!

A question was raised today concerning the Fed’s actions and technical analysis of the charts. The short answer to the question is no. Economic events and other market moving news all are a part of the bigger puzzle which technical analysis encompasses. I am still putting together an article which I will post in the coming days on the subject of technical analysis in which I will go over some of the basics along with different methods that can be used and why some methods don’t work at different times.

We are still short the Dow Jones Industrials by our holding of the Ultrashort (symbol: DXD). Our entry price on the Dow was at 12750 and we are currently at a gain of 9.1%.

2 Comments

2

Chuck,

As always a brilliant overview of the collapsing U.S.
financial system. You should be writing for the NY Times, but because you lay-out the truth….they’d never hire you.

Wait till the Commercial Real Estate sector hits the commode.

Then we have some Real Problems.

As Lisa would opine: ” Whatta freakin Mess.”

Glad I purchased the SDS in yesterday’s afterhours. Faded
it for a nice profit this morning; after the abysmal Retail Sales
data.

Have a Super Day my Friend,

Noel

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