Stocks Open Lower for the Week

Major indices around the world continued the weakness displayed on Friday. U.S. indices are off over 2% and very near some critical support areas. We are watching 
Dow: 9,083
SPX: 979
Nasdaq: 1,936
NYSE: 6,374
Russell: 550
Trans: 1,170
DAX: 5,176
Nikkei: 4,596
FTSE:10,332
HSI: 20,371
*****30 Hour work week the new normal 
Economic analysts were out in full force last week as headline data pointed to a recovery in employment. Although people may have started finding jobs, we question the quality of work being found by new workers. 
After the Japanese financial crisis in the late 1980s, many of Japanese workers ended up working on temporary jobs that didn’t have good salaries and benefits. Perhaps the U.S. is entering a similar phase.

Over the past year and a half companies have slashed budgets and expenses. Businesses are more likely to hire low cost temporary help until the economy starts to show significant changes. Part-time jobs usually have lower pay and part-time jobs don’t have many of the benefits that full-time jobs have.
In past recessions, businesses would hang onto valued employees and many times increase their salary levels. This recession has proven different. There is a large number of highly educated people competing for menial jobs. This has given businesses an opportunity to hire skilled workers at bargain rates. 
*****An insider’s look at the housing numbers. 
Inside Mortgage Finance sponsored a nationwide survey of 1,556 real-estate agents in mid-June. Their results bring up important data that contradicts many of the figures we have been reading in the past few weeks.
They unanimously acknowledge that the low end of the market is cranking. This area of the market is primarily driven by foreclosures, first-time buyers, and investors. The numbers show that near 43% of homebuyers are first-time homebuyers, 29% are current homeowners, and another 29% are investors.  
Unfortunately, their findings show that the high end of the market is dead. This area of the real estate market remains very weak because sellers are still in denial, existing homeowners aren’t trading up, and there are fewer foreclosures and forced sales at the high end. 
For those who already own houses, "affordability" is not a particularly meaningful measure of housing-market health. The main reason is because existing home owners cannot sell their current property at break-even levels, let alone a little profit. 
*****No Inflation 
Last week CPI came in about as expected. Although prices are rising slightly, CPI remains negative taking into account year over year changes. 
A sign of confidence that U.S. inflation should remain under control is that foreign governments have been switching out of shorter-term U.S. government bills and into longer-dated bonds. Last week, when the U.S. government issued $75 billion in new bonds, 10-year notes made up the largest percentage since 2005. 
*****Managed America 
So there’s where we are: shorter work weeks (read: less take-home pay), home values gone bust, homeowners stuck in their homes, and inflation initially non-existent. These are some of the themes I recently shared with investors in my Managed America: Investing in the New Economic Reality. During the presentation I shared with investors some of our top holding for the new economy and the strategies we’ll employ for profits in the months and years ahead. The presentation is in replay mode and is open access (free): click HERE to watch now
Ian Wyatt
Editor
Daily Profit
 
 

 

 

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