Me thinks Mr. Market has finally figured it out.
Maybe.
This morning Citibank's announcement of Prince's departure - which clearly was bad news - was interpreted as bad news.
The Futures had their high of the day at midnight, and despite some heroic pump attempts, were sold.
Does anyone remember back in APRIL when I opined that any mortgage that was originated with fraud as its foundation was subject to being put back, irrespective of the expiration of a "rep and warranty" time period?
Well, guess what kids - six months later, the media is (finally) getting it:
"But if parts of the origination process are found to be fraudulent, investors can potentially force lenders to buy the mortgages back at the original price. If the assets have suffered delinquencies and have dropped in value, the lender takes a financial hit."The Bulls on The Street subscribe to this thing called "magical thinking", in that they believe that people can commit fraud and get away with it by shoving off the cost on someone else, attaching a very short "warranty period" which will expire before the bomb goes off.
In short, the entire "Real Estate boom" that "powered our economy" over the last five years is one giant ball of fraud.
A ball of fraud that turns out to have a nuclear core, and it is now starting to "rapidly disassemble."
If you're a "Bull" in the market today you have to be willfully ignoring this.
Is that smart?
How well does magical thinking work in general?
Let's cut the nonsense - CNBC is still pumping "tech tech and more tech". How does tech survive when a huge part of the tech sales go into the financial area, and every company in that space appears to have a significant amount of exposure to these "putbacks", either directly or indirectly - and what's left is consumer sales which have been fueled by phantom "income"!
I don't get it.
I understand being bullish on the economy - when its strong.
I understand being bullish on tech - when both consumers and businesses have lots of money to spend on your products, and get tangible benefit from them.
I understand being bullish on America, because in general, its been a winning bet.
But let's cut the BS.
The "recovery" from the 2003 lows has not been driven by "solid earnings", "a solid economy" and "a solid consumer."
It has been driven by organized fraud in the housing market, from appraisals to "subprime" mortgages to pumping "interest only" and "negative amortization" loans (which brokers knew where unaffordable once they reset or recast) to outright false claims of phantom income by borrowers.
All of this produced phantom economic activity which fueled the export business - China's making things we consume but our consumption is unsustainable!
By best estimates, 6.5 trillion dollars worth has been withdrawn from their "household ATM" by US consumers in the last four years and spent.
To put perspective on this the US GDP last year was about $13 trillion dollars.
Let's presume that 20% house price appreciation over the last four years is "about right" given 3-4% real wage growth. So the rest - 80% - is the product, direct and indirect, of fraud.
That makes roughly $5 trillion over four years of phantom money that wasn't real wealth created by real economic activity.
That's 9.6%, roughly, of our GDP on an annualized basis!
But for this fraud we would have been in a deep and long recession for the last FOUR YEARS.
Now this has to be unwound. To the tune of five trillion dollars.
People talk about how the "subprime problem" is "contained" and then they put a number on it - $100 billion, $50 billion, even $200 billion.
That too is a Chimera.
The real issue is the $5 trillion in so-called "wealth" that was spent but unearned, and as a consequence was been replaced by DEBT on consumer balance sheets.
That debt now requires service and will for years if not decades to come, unless it is written-down en-masse!
Obviously, to try to unwind this "all at once" would crash our economy instantly.
50% losses in the stock market? Try 75% and an almost-certain deflationary depression.
Of course that's unrealistic.
We're not going to take the medicine in "one gulp" any more than we got the benefit from the fraud in "one gulp".
But it is beyond question that we will take the pain and cost of unwinding this mess.
It cannot be avoided.
To the extent that "The Media" refuses to address this they are complicit. To the extent that "analysts" keep spouting "buy buy buy" they are complicit in robbing your wealth. To the extent that investment banks and others on "The Street" continue to hold so-called "Level 3" assets which they claim whatever mark they can get a computer to spit out, they too are complicit.
The entire premise of this "expansion" over the last four years has been fraudulent.
There was no actual expansion. No real wealth created. No real economic activity advance.
Instead, the truth is that our "price/earnings" ratios in the market have been propped up by consumer spending that was wholly built upon a fraudulent foundation. It has been a Chimera; the idea that you can create something from nothing.
I'm tired of it. You should be tired of it. You should not tolerate this from the media, from the regulators and from the politicians.
Politicians will pander to their donors and try to pander to you, yet those donors are why we are here.
But for the "cooking" of financial instruments there was no market for these securities as there was no profit to be made!
Will you wake up? Will you get involved in signing The Petition? Will you write your own letter to Congress and The President? Will you tell your Rep and Senator that you're tired of the fraud and nonsense, that these "financial gamesters" need to be led off in handcuffs - and if they don't start demanding that the law be enforced, you will vote them out of office?
Or are you going to cower under your bed and run some stupid conspiracy theory while your savings are inflated into oblivion (and then what's left is taxed!), your salary fails to keep pace with rising prices, and your debt load goes to the sky?
Heh, its only money, right?
Yours, of course.
Your retirement.
Your children's future.
Nothing to worry about right?
Ok..... you choose.
In the latest display of "stupid" in the tech space, here's a prime example from Google's announcement on their "cell foray":
"Confirming its long-rumored foray into the mobile market, Google said Monday it is developing a free cell phone software package so the Internet search leader can more easily peddle ads and services to people who aren't in front of a PC."If you read the article in detail, you'll find that what they're doing is producing a "stack" - which isn't really an operating system, but rather a user interface and/or "set of packages" - to run on what are now known as "smartphones". Or maybe it is an operating system. Not that it really matters.


Discuss The Capital Markets along with daily technical analysis with our Gold Donor program.
Where We Are, Where We're Heading (2012) - The annual 2012 Ticker
The content on this site is provided without any warranty, express or implied. All opinions expressed on this site are those of the author and may contain errors or omissions.
NO MATERIAL HERE CONSTITUTES "INVESTMENT ADVICE" NOR IS IT A RECOMMENDATION TO BUY OR SELL ANY FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO STOCKS, OPTIONS, BONDS OR FUTURES.
The author may have a position in any company or security mentioned herein. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.
Looking for "The Best of Market Ticker"? Check out Ticker Classics.
Visit the forum to discuss this and other investing-related topics; see the FAQ on the forum for information about Gold Donor status including access to our technical analysis video server.
Market charts, when present, used with permission of TD Ameritrade/ThinkOrSwim Inc. Neither TD Ameritrade or ThinkOrSwim have reviewed, approved or disapproved any content herein.
Market Ticker content may be reproduced or excerpted online provided full attribution is given and the original article source is linked to. Please contact Karl Denninger for reprint permission in other media.