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Real Estate > UrbanDigs
First Stock Shock; Second Economic Data
UrbanDigs | Thu, 01/24/2008 - 5:32am |
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Stocks are one thing, real economic data is another. Lets stay ahead of
the curve and look out to the economic reports that will be released
soon. Here is a schedule of the more important market moving releases
that are coming:
HOUSING
TODAY ---> Existing Home Sales
JAN 28th ---> New Home Sales
FEB 7th ---> Pending Home Sales
ECONOMY
TODAY ---> Initial Jobless Claims
JAN 29th ---> Durable Goods Orders
JAN 30th ---> GDP (advance)**
JAN 30th ---> FOMC Statement
JAN 31st ---> Personal Income & Outlays
FEB 1st ---> Employment Situation
FEB 1st ---> ISM Mfg Index
Now seriously, do you think these reports are going to far exceed
expectations? Chances are, unemployment is going to rise, jobless claims
will start to rise (may be lagging closer to mid 2008), gdp will fall,
and homes data will either stay bad or get a bit worse. Anything better
than that will be viewed ultra positively! So, there is a lot coming
that we will need to digest and trust me on this one, if these reports
do come in on the disappointing side, the chatter in the media will
change from whether we will go into a recession to how severe will the
recession be!
Its clear that our fed is favoring growth over inflation right now to
deal with this crisis and its also clear that we have more rate cuts
coming! Totally different situation over at the ECB in Europe whose
primary reason for existence is to guard against inflation; rate cuts
won't come over there until growth is clearly slowing or things get real
hairy.
While we undergo stock shock right now, prepare for the data reports and
how the street interprets them. In addition, watch out for the
proverbial 'other shoe to drop' in the credit markets that may result in
all banks/brokerages writing down way more losses than expected; i.e.
more bond insurer downgrades, disruptions in CRE secondary markets,
rising defaults in other areas of debt markets (alt-a, prime, credit
cards, auto loans, helocs, etc..). That will certainly cause a second
shock wave through equity markets, especially if we see problems arise
in global economies/markets.
Luckily for us, yesterday's rally was most likely a result of a rumor
that the NY State Insurance Association is in talks with major banks to
help bailout the bond insurers; a rescue plan of up to $15 Billion. I just don't see how that will have any effect given the hundreds of billions of dollars worth of CDO's/CMO's, etc held and insured on the books of these financials.

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