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I have been away from the trading desk, and the stock market's bloodbath,
during the past few days as I am on a business visit in Geneva. Just as well,
but I can nevertheless associate with the frustration of the trader in the
animated image (hat tip: Rob Fraim).
In order to allow me a bit of extra time to consult with the Suisse gnomes
(disguised as private bankers), I am only doing a shortened version of "Words
from the Wise" this week. Although I have managed to compile some very interesting
excerpts from news items and quotes from market commentators, I will not be
doing my customary review of the financial markets' movements and economic
statistics.
Confusion and irrational fear characterized financial markets during a remarkable
week, with the CBOE Vix Index (the so-called "fear gauge") spiking above 70
for the first time. According to data from Bespoke,
the week's US stock market crash of 18.2% ranks second as the worst Monday-to-Friday
movement for the Dow Jones Industrial Average since 1900. Amid the dumping
of stocks on all bourses, the US dollar, Japanese yen and precious metals were
the only safe havens. (Also see related posts: Stock
market performance round-up: Crash of 2008 and Stock
market decline in perspective.)
The realization that the economic damage from the credit crisis was intensifying
weighed on investor sentiment. Selling of equities therefore persisted despite
a litany of initiatives announced by governments and central banks around the
globe, aiming to boost liquidity and restore confidence in the banking system.

Source: Slate
The media headlines were cluttered with reports of various actions being taken
to alleviate the financial turmoil (as dealt with comprehensively in the news
section of this post). However, none was as succinctly formulated as that of
the Central Bank of Jamaica (hat tip: Barry Ritholtz's The
Big Picture).

Next, a tag cloud of the text of the plethora of articles I have read during
the past week. This is a way of visualizing word frequencies at a glance. As
the saying goes: A picture paints a thousand words ...

As far as the outlook for stocks is concerned, Paul Kedrosky (Infectious
Greed) said: "I am trying very hard to look through all of this to see
what things look like on the other side. And I can see faint outlines, for
sure, but that other shore still seems awfully far away."
On the other hand, Tim Bond, head of global asset allocation at Barclays Capital,
was quoted in the Financial
Times as saying: "We believe global equity markets are starting to offer
a long-term buying opportunity that is typically only seen once in a generation.
We are not calling the bottom in the bear market today, but we do suggest that
the low will be seen within the next two or three weeks."
Bond also suggested that returns from equities purchased during this interval
may well be extremely higher over the next year and could - if history is any
guide - turn out double-digit long-term returns over the next decade.
As a sign of these extraordinary times, mulling through my head at the moment
are the lyrics of Peter Gabriel's song "Perspectives": "I need perspective,
'cos I'm facing the wall. I need perspective, 'cos I'm not that tall. I need
perspective, heard the trumpet call. Don't trust my eyes, want to know where
things fall."
Having said that, I yesterday summarized my views in a post as
follows: "Nobody really knows what happens next, although some indicators are
starting to signal that a bounce may not be all that far off. But stock markets
are unlikely to find a cycle low before measures are implemented to stem the
decline in confidence. It may take a while yet before we see the bear's corpse,
but look out for a 90%
up-day as a signal of the completion of the selling climax."
Economic reports
Click here for
the week's economy in pictures, courtesy of Jake of EconomPic
Data.
| Date |
Time (ET) |
Statistic |
For |
Actual |
Briefing Forecast |
Market Expects |
Prior |
| Oct 7 |
2:00 PM |
FOMC Minutes |
Sep 16 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| Oct 7 |
3:00 PM |
Consumer Credit |
Aug |
-$7.9B |
$5.2B |
$5.0B |
$5.2B |
| Oct 8 |
10:00 AM |
Pending Home Sales |
Aug |
7.4% |
- |
-1.2% |
-2.7% |
| Oct 8 |
10:35 AM |
Crude Inventories |
10/04 |
8123K |
NA |
NA |
4278K |
| Oct 9 |
8:30 AM |
Initial Claims |
10/04 |
478 |
475K |
475K |
498K |
| Oct 9 |
10:00 AM |
Wholesale Inventories |
Aug |
0.8% |
0.5% |
0.4% |
1.5% |
| Oct 10 |
8:30 AM |
Export Prices ex-ag. |
Sep |
. |
NA |
NA |
NA |
| Oct 10 |
8:30 AM |
Import Prices ex-oil |
Sep |
- |
NA |
NA |
NA |
| Oct 10 |
8:30 AM |
Trade Balance |
Aug |
- |
-$58.0B |
-$59.0B |
-$62.2B |
In addition to Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke speaking at the Economic Club of
New York on Wednesday, October 15, next week's economic highlights, courtesy
of Northern Trust, include the
following:
1. Retail Sales (October 15): Auto sales dropped to an annual rate
of 12.5 million in September from 13.7 million in August. Non-auto retail sales
are expected to show noticeable weakness. Reflecting these aspects, the headline
retail sales number is projected to have fallen 0.7% in September after a 0.3%
drop in August. Consensus: -0.6% versus -0.3% in August, non-auto retail
sales: -0.3% versus -0.7% in August.
2. Producer Price Index (October 15): The Producer Price Index for
Finished Goods is predicted to have dropped 0.4% in September reflecting lower
energy prices, while the core PPI most likely moved up 0.1%. Consensus:
-0.4%, core PPI +0.2%.
3. Consumer Price Index (October 16): A 0.1% increase in the CPI is
our forecast for September following a 0.1% drop in August. The core CPI is
expected to have moved up 0.1% after a 0.1% gain in August. Consensus:
+0.1%, core CPI +0.2%.
4. Industrial Production (October 16): The 1.0% drop in the manufacturing
man-hours index in September suggests a 0.8% decline in industrial production.
The operating rate is projected to have dropped to 77.9 in September. Consensus:
-0.8%; Capacity Utilization: 77.9 versus 78.7 in August.
5. Housing Starts (October 17): The elevated level of inventories of
unsold new homes points to another monthly drop in housing starts (870,000
versus 895,000 in August). Consensus: 880,000.
6. Other reports: Inventories (October 15), NAHB Survey, Philadelphia
Fed Survey (October 16), Consumer Sentiment Index (October 17).
Click here for
a summary of Wachovia's weekly economic and financial commentary.
A summary of the release dates of economic reports in the UK, Eurozone, Japan
and China is provided here.
It is important to keep an eye on growth trends in these economies for clues
on, among others, the trend of the US dollar.
Markets
The performance chart obtained from the Wall
Street Journal Online shows how different global markets performed during
the past week.

Source: Wall
Street Journal Online, October 10, 2008.
Now for a few news items and some words and charts from the investment wise
that will hopefully assist in guiding our investment portfolios through these
troubled times. And do remember to heed Charles Kirk's (The
Kirk Report) words: "The best we can do is manage our risk, stay opportunistic,
keep our emotions in control, and keep our eyes open for signs that the worst
is really behind us."
That's the way it looks from Cape Town (or rather from next to Lac
Léman in Geneva). Au revoir.

Source: Slate
CNBC: Gloom, Boom and Doom economy
Discussing the market sell-off, with Marc Faber, the Gloom, Boom & Doom
Report author.

Source: CNBC,
October 7, 2008.
John Authers (Financial Times): Grim anniversary for US equities
"US stocks saw their second worst week on record as markets around the world
plunged in an indiscriminate sell-off."

Source: John Authers, Financial
Times, October 10, 2008.
Fox Business: Ron Paul - "Rescue Plan is not good"

Source: Fox Business (via YouTube),
October 10, 2008.
BBC News: Credit crisis - world in turmoil

"As global markets fall sharply, BBC News looks at the regions of the world
most affected to see what governments are doing to alleviate the financial
turmoil.
"The US Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank, the Bank of England, and
the central banks of Canada, Sweden and Switzerland took the unprecedented
step on October 8 of co-ordinating a half-point percent cut in interest rates
in an effort to ease the credit crunch."
Click here for
the full article.
Source: BBC News,
October 9, 2008.
Bloomberg: G-7 commit to "all necessary steps" to stem global meltdown
"Group of Seven finance chiefs, meeting after stocks plunged and as a global
recession looms, vowed to prevent the failure of vital banks while failing
to unveil new initiatives for thawing credit markets.
"'The current situation calls for urgent and exceptional action,' the finance
ministers and central bankers said in a statement after talks in Washington
yesterday. They pledged to 'take all necessary steps to unfreeze credit and
money markets' without detailing how that would be accomplished.
"Signaling they would intervene to avoid a repeat of last month's collapse
of Lehman Brothers, the officials promised to ensure major banks have access
to cash and are able to tap public funds for capital. By refraining from specific
fresh measures such as embracing a UK plan to guarantee loans between banks,
they still run a risk of disappointing investors."
Source: Simon Kennedy, Bloomberg,
October 11, 2008.
MarketWatch: US recapitalization plan for financial firms
"As the financial crisis threatens to spiral out of control, US Treasury Secretary
Henry Paulson is taking extraordinary steps through the extensive authority
granted to him under emergency rescue legislation.
"With the legislation's main mechanism - an auction system to purchase bad
mortgage-based securities - still weeks away from implementation, Paulson now
plans to make big capital injections into large financial institutions and
get equity in return.
"In a news conference Friday evening, following the Group of Seven meeting
in Washington, Paulson said the plan is to offer a term sheet for needy banks.
The government will not get voting rights status for its injection in most
cases. Paulson said the government's efforts were focusing on 'liquidity' needs
and 'systemic risk'.
"Paulson said recapitalization was now 'necessary' and would let 'taxpayer
dollars go further', because it is a 'more efficient' use of capital than the
auction process, which is meant to deal with illiquid assets.
"'This a plan I am quite confident will work,' Paulson said."
Source: Albert Bozzo, CNBC,
October 10, 2008.
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Coordinated Move of Central Banks Necessary
But Temporary Panacea
"The Federal Reserve Bank, European Central Bank, Bank of England, Bank of
Canada, Swiss National Bank, and Sveriges Riksbank (Bank of Sweden) implemented
a coordinated cut of their main policy rates this morning. Excluding the Swiss
National Bank, the other central banks reduced the benchmark rates 50 bps.
"The People's Bank of China eased monetary policy 27 bps and the central bank
of the United Arab Emirates lowered the repo rate 50 bps, while the Bank of
Japan issued a statement of support. Norges Bank (central bank of Norway) sat
out today's round but announced it would bring its next policy meeting forward
by two weeks, to October 15, when it will 'consider rates' in the face of recent
developments.

"The most important message from this historic action is that central banks
are standing ready to provide liquidity to prevent a systemic implosion of
the global financial infrastructure arising from growing perceptions of counterparty
risk. The world's major central banks are using all tools at their disposal
to prevent a replay of the Great Depression.
"Is today's action the elixir that will fix the wide array of financial and
economic problems that have crept across the globe? The honest answer is 'no'.
Are additional coordinated actions likely? Possibly, but the nature of the
action will be related to the monetary policy options available to each nation."

Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust
- Daily Global Commentary, October 8, 2008.
Financial Times: Moscow to pump $37 billion into biggest state institutions
"Russia on Tuesday stepped up efforts to tackle the financial crisis with a
commitment to pump $37 billion in long-term loans into its biggest state banks,
amid signs that the turmoil was spreading to the real economy.
"Even as Dmitry Medvedev, the president, unveiled the plan to offer the five-year
loans - mainly through Sberbank, the state-controlled bank - three big Russian
companies announced cutbacks in production because of a shortage of finance.
"Investors shrugged off the rescue plan amid mounting fears that the state
funding would not find its way to the real economy. A previous state package
to boost liquidity by more than $100 billion is being hoarded by the biggest
banks instead of being lent out to entities most in need of cash.
"'The bigger problem is question marks over future growth,' said Chris Weafer,
chief strategist at Uralsib investment bank. "The lack of financial lubrication
is causing the economy to grind to a halt. These funds need to be ramrodded
into the system."
Source: Charles Clover and Catherine Belton, Financial
Times, October 8, 2008.
Eoin Treacy (Fullermoney): Concerted efforts required to revive confidence
"Central banks and governments are finally coming to the realisation that this
is a global crisis and requires a global solution. The simultaneous rate cuts
announced this week were a signal that this is now starting to happen. However,
investors have lost faith in the ability of the authorities to deal with this
problem. It is going to take further concerted efforts to revive confidence
and a commitment to tackling the central themes of this crisis, i.e. rising
foreclosures and the drying up of liquidity in the money markets.
"The focus of the current panic is that banks are unwilling to lend to one
another because they don't trust their counterparties or because they need
the cash themselves. If government agencies take shares in their respective
banking sectors, thus adding capital, the question will remain outstanding
as to whether it is enough. If however, governments guarantee loans made between
banks, it will almost certainly get the market moving once more. This approach
runs the risk that suspect institutions will survive when they would normally
have gone bust. However, given the extreme nature of this crisis, this question
of moral hazard is going to be put off for another time.
"The best indicators of liquidity remain the TED spread and the OIS spread.
Both made new highs today and remain in accelerating uptrends. The VIX also
hit another new high today and further indicates that fear is the overriding
emotion gripping investors right now. Stock markets are unlikely to find an
important low until these spreads begin to contract."
Source: Eoin Treacy, Fullermoney,
October 10, 2008.
Financial Times: UK Treasury unveils bank rescue
"Britain's largest banks are to be part-nationalised after the government took
the momentous decision to pump tens of billions of pounds of public money into
the sector to avert a banking collapse.
"The government is to put up to £250 billion into the banking system
in an effort to keep banks lending. It will also offer a guarantee to banks
issuing medium term debt, which could mean backing a further £250 billion
of bank borrowings. But it is likely to demand dividend cuts and the end of
big bonuses at the banks in return.
"Under the plan, announced by the Treasury on Wednesday, seven leading banks
and the Nationwide Building Society will initially apply for £25 billion
in permanent capital to raise their Tier One capital ratios, with a further £25
billion available as a stand-by and for other eligible institutions. The banks
have agreed to conclude their recapitalisation by the end of the year.
"The banks involved are Abbey, now part of Santander of Spain, Barclays, HBOS,
HSBC, Lloyds TSB, Royal Bank of Scotland and Standard Chartered as well as
Nationwide. Other UK banks and building societies are invited to apply for
the scheme as well.
"Referring to 'extraordinary market conditions', the Treasury said it would
provide at least £200 billion under its £200 billion special liquidity
scheme 'until markets stabilise'.
"The government will also, for a fee, guarantee new short and medium term
debt issues by the banks to help them refinance wholesale funding obligations
as they fall due. It said it expected the take up of this guarantee to be of
the order of £250 billion."
Source: Financial
Times, October 7, 2008.
Financial Times: Germany guarantees savings to avert panic
"Germany said on Sunday it would guarantee all private German bank accounts
- currently worth €568 billion - in a dramatic move to prevent panic withdrawals
as fears over he worldwide financial crisis spread to Europe's largest economy.
"'We want to tell people that their savings are safe,' Angela Merkel, chancellor,
said at an unscheduled press conference on Sunday. The scheme would cover existing
accounts and others which savers might open.
"German government officials also late on Sunday said the country's commercial
banks had agreed to inject an extra €15 billion of liquidity into Hypo
Real Estate, the ailing German mortgage and public sector lender, raising the
bail-out agreed last week to €50 billion, the largest since the outbreak
of the financial crisis. The original rescue attempt had threatened to collapse
after it emerged at the weekend that the full extent of Hypo's funding gap
had not been disclosed."
Source: Bertrand Benoit and James Wilson, Financial
Times, October 6, 2008.
John Authers (Financial Times): Fed to start buying commercial paper

Click here for
the full article.
Source: John Authers, Financial
Times, October 7, 2008.
CBS News: Wall Street's shadow market
Steve Kroft looks at some of the arcane Wall Street financial instruments that
have magnified the economic crisis.

Click here for
the full article.
Source: CBS
News, October 5, 2008
Bloomberg: Lehman bondholders get little insight on price from CDS auction
"Lehman Brothers bondholders didn't get a clear indication of how much they
will recover in the firm's bankruptcy from an auction of insurance on its debt,
two analysts said.
"Yesterday's auction determined that investors who bet on a default of Lehman's
debt by buying derivatives called credit default swaps should get 91.375 cents
on their dollar. The price was set by auction administrators Creditex Group
Inc. and Markit Group Ltd., with 14 financial institutions bidding. That figure
was calculated based on an 'inside market midpoint' price of 8.625 cents on
the dollar for Lehman's debt.
"The auction has little to do with what bondholders will recover once Lehman's
bankruptcy, filed September 15, has been fought out in court by creditors,
said Matt Dundon, managing director of distressed analysis at Miller Tabak
Roberts Securities.
"'I take very little directionality on the ultimate value of the bonds from
the CDS auction,' Dundon said.
"Kevin Starke, an analyst with CRT Capital Group LLC said there are too many
unknowns so far in the Lehman case to accurately predict recoveries."
Source: Tiffany Kary, Bloomberg,
October 11, 2008.
Reuters: NY Fed calls Friday meeting for CDS players
"The Federal Reserve Bank of New York said on Wednesday it has summoned participants
in the $55 trillion credit derivatives market to a meeting on Friday, which
sources say will focus on determining which clearing house the market will
support.
"Calls for regulation and centralized clearing of credit default swap trades
have gathered steam in the wake of Lehman Brothers' failure last month.
"Critics charge that credit default swaps are central to the spreading fears
in the markets and pose systemic risks, as the market's private nature makes
it impossible to know the size of a counterparty's exposures and where they
are distributed."
Source: Reuters,
October 8, 2008.
BCA Research: Policy response - timeliness is key
"In a recent Special Report, we highlight that it took a massive policy response
in prior real estate/financial sector crises (e.g. Norway, Sweden, Finland,
Japan and the US) before markets stabilized. In fact, in each episode conditions
did not stabilize until the vast majority of struggling institutions were supported
or dissolved. In three instances the government needed to extend a blanket
guarantee for the entire banking system. Moreover, the longer policymakers
delayed a sizable bailout package, the greater were the economic and banking
sector losses.
"Bottom line: History suggests that a rapid and sizable policy response (that
deals with the majority of problem loans) is needed when faced with a banking
crisis. Hesitation allows a negative economic feedback loop to develop, ultimately
leading to greater cleanup costs. This is already evident in the US and Europe,
where recessionary pressures are intensifying."

Source: BCA Research, October 6,
2008.
Bloomberg: Treasury to hire asset management firms to jumpstart rescue
"Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is hiring as many as 10 asset-management
companies to join the lawyers and bankers he is recruiting to kickstart the
government's new $700 billion bank-rescue program.
"The Treasury began implementing the plan within an hour of Congress yesterday
giving Paulson the powers he sought to combat the US financial crisis. Paulson
is seeking to assemble a team to determine which toxic securities to target,
how to value them and how to buy them. BlackRock, Pimco and Legg Mason are
seeking to become money managers for the program, people familiar with the
matter said.
"'This is something that, for a typical company, would take no less than five
years,' said Lynn Turner, a former chief accountant at the Securities and Exchange
Commission. 'Anyone who thinks they can do this in two weeks is insane.'
"Ed Forst, the former Goldman Sachs executive Paulson hired to head the transition
team, started work last week and is charged with helping establish the new
Office of Financial Stability."
Source: Rebecca Christie and Robert Schmidt, Bloomberg,
October 4, 2008.
Financial Times: IMF sees greatest shock since 1930s
"The financial crisis will drive down global economic growth to its lowest
since 2002 with a big risk it will drop even further, the International Monetary
Fund has warned.
"Though Olivier Blanchard, the fund's chief economist, said that the chance
of another Great Depression was 'nearly nil', the IMF said that the US and
European economies were mainly already in or close to recession.
"'The world economy is now entering a major downturn in the face of the most
dangerous shock in mature financial markets since the 1930s,' the IMF said.
'The situation is exceptionally uncertain and subject to considerable downside
risks.'
"The fund said that global growth was likely to slow to 3.9% in 2008 and 3%
in 2009, sharply down from 5% last year. Some economists regard 3% or 2.5%
global growth as equivalent to a world recession, given the trend rates of
growth in the global economy, but Mr Blanchard said that such definitions were
unhelpful.
"The IMF chief economist's optimism that the world would avoid a repeat of
the Great Depression of the 1930s was based on an expectation that governments
would follow the right policies. European governments were having difficulty
in coordinating their response to the crisis and more action was needed to
shore up their shaky financial systems, he said."
Source: Alan Beattie, Financial
Times, October 8, 2008.
CNBC: Lazear on the global economy
"Discussing the market slide and the $700 billion bailout package with Edward
Lazear, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers."

Source: CNBC,
October 7, 2008.
Barry Ritholtz (The Big Picture): Fix the credit problem, not its symptoms
"Why are markets reacting so negatively to a near $1 trillion bailout? The
short answer is that the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department have been
focusing on the wrong issues. They have been treating falling asset prices
- a houses, stocks, bonds - as well as the lack of confidence between banks,
as the actual issue. This is the wrong approach. Falling asset prices and
a lack of confidence are a result of the underlying problem. You don't
cure alcoholism by getting rid of a hangover; you cannot resolve confidence
issues by merely cutting rates.
"The primary problem is that banks are refusing to extend credit to each other.
Why? Because they do not understand the liabilities of their counterparties.
Translated into English, that means they don't know if the other bank whom
they are dealing with will still to be standing tomorrow.
"The thing roiling markets today is not the lack of confidence; It is capital,
or more accurately, the lack thereof. Thanks to a series of very poor
trades - excessively leveraged and absurdly risky to boot - banks are now
dramatically undercapitalized.
"As we have seen in just about every historical financial crisis, the shortage
of capital is the underlying cause of monetary mayhem. Too much debt, too little
equity, makes any financial system cease to function.
"So what would solve it? The first step to accomplish this is triage. Identify
the banks that cannot survive, and like Old Yeller, 'gently' put them down.
Euthanize the bad ones so the good ones can survive. Nationalize 'em, sell
their accounts to strong banks, and prevent further liabilities to the FDIC
(which insures all accounts up to $250,000).
"Next, recapitalize the banks that can survive by buying preferred stock.
That is what Warren Buffett did with General Electric and Goldman Sachs when
he made his investments. The Treasury should announce a matching program, where
any private investment into a Bank is matched by the government, dollar for
dollar, and on the same terms. This fixes not merely a balance sheet issue
(like TARP does) but the actual capital structure at the root of the current
crisis. And it does so on terms that are good for the taxpayers too.
"As this process eliminates the bad banks and recapitalizes the good banks,
normal lending will resume. Defaults and insolvency will no longer paralyze
the financial industry. This is how Sweden resolved its financial crisis in
the nineties, and how England just started to address their problem this past
week.
"The good news is that the US is that there are signs the US is starting to
move towards the Swedish / British / Buffett model. The bad news is that it
has taken this long to even begin contemplating this.
"When banks know their counterparties are not in danger of going belly up
tomorrow, they will begin lending again. Confidence will return once the underlying
problem is resolved, and not a minute before."
Source: Barry Ritholtz, The
Big Picture, October 10, 2008.
Richard Russell (Dow Theory Letters): Fiat empire - Why the Fed violates
the US Constitution

Source: Richard Russell, Dow Theory
Letters, October 6, 2008.
Casey's Charts: Market mayhem has the Fed off balance
"The Fed has resorted to new extremes in this financial crisis by selling off
and lending its good assets, US Treasuries, in exchange for toxic waste. The
result: the Federal Reserve's balance sheet has been completely restructured
- including innovative off-balance-sheet hocus-pocus - and looks like it's
headed for exhaustion.
"As the government's primary tool for stabilizing the US banking system, the
Fed is now in dire need of a new source of lending to bail out other troubled
banks."

Source: Casey's Charts,
October 8, 2008.
Bespoke: $700 billion and what it can buy
"Since the financial rescue package was signed into law last week, financial
markets across the world have taken the pace of their declines to a higher
gear. This has prompted people to ask what the Treasury is waiting for. Yesterday
afternoon in a press conference, Secretary Paulson said that it 'will be several
weeks before our first purchase'.
"As shown in the chart below, when the TARP plan was first announced in September,
that $700 billion was equal to less than 40% of the S&P 500 Financial sector's
market cap. Today, that $700 billion represents over 55% of the sector's market
cap. At this rate, by the time the Treasury opens up its wallet and starts
spending that $700 billion, they might be able to buy the entire sector!"

Source: Bespoke,
October 9, 2008.
Bill King (The King Report): Adjusted monetary base and reserves soaring
"The Adjusted Monetary Base has soared from $873 billion on September 10 to
$1.017 trillion as of Wednesday. The compound annual rate of growth since August
13 is 114.2%. It's not Weimar, but it is Argentinean.

"Adjusted Reserves are up 768.1% compounded annually since July 30. This is
beyond Argentina."

Source: Bill King, The
King Report, October 10, 2008.
BBC News: US debt clock runs out of digits
"The US government's debts have ballooned so badly the National Debt Clock
in New York has run out of digits to record the spiralling figure. The digital
counter marks the national debt level, but when that passed the $10 trillion
point last month, the sign could not display the full amount.
"The clock's owners say two more zeros will be added, allowing the clock to
record a quadrillion dollars of debt. Douglas Durst, son of the late Seymour
Durst - the clock's inventor - hopes to replace the Manhattan clock with its
lengthier replacement early next year. For the time being, the Times Square
counter's electronic dollar sign has been replaced with the extra digit required."
Source: BBC News,
October 9, 2008.
CNBC: Bernanke on the US economy

Click here for
part 2 of the video.
Source: CNBC,
October 7, 2008.
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Sluggish labor markets - part of scenery
"Initial jobless claims fell 20,000 to 478,000 during the week ended October
4, 2008. Jobless claims filed following hurricanes Gustav and Ike led to a
part of the advancing trend of claims seen in the past few weeks. The decline
in the latest week reflects fewer initial claims in the hurricane stricken
regions. Nevertheless, the elevated levels of both initial and continuing claims
are consistent with levels seen in recessions."

Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust
- Daily Global Commentary, October 9, 2008.
Zillow Survey: US homebuyers worried about interest rates
"I was a little surprised to hear it, but US adults who are in the market for
a new home, or who plan to be in the market soon, are most concerned about
interest rates.
"Interest rates were most often cited as a financial worry by US adults who
plan to buy a home within the next two years, according to a Zillow survey,
which was fielded by Harris Interactive. 68% of adults who plan to buy a home
in the next two years said interest rates were a concern, while 63% said local
property taxes were a worry, and 57% cited purchase price (respondents could
choose more than one answer).
"Of those planning to buy a home within the next two years, 94% said they
had at least one financial worry about buying a home. For people who plan to
buy in three years or more, those worries changed a bit."

Source: Katie Curnutte, Zillow,
October 7, 2008.
Bespoke: We can't get no ... satisfaction
"A Gallup poll released today showed that just 9% of Americans are satisfied
with the way things are going in the United States. As shown in the chart below
(from gallup.com), this is the lowest reading in history. Mid-1992 and mid-1979
were prior lows for the poll, but this is the first time satisfaction has dropped
below 10%. These low levels are usually indicative that change is coming, and
politically, that's just what we got in 1980 (Reagan) and 1992 (Clinton). There's
no reason to believe the outcome will be any different in this election either
at this point."

Source: Bespoke,
October 7, 2008.
Continue to
Part II
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