The Big Picture |
- 40% of Americans Are Now Independents
- TBP Site Update: G+, Search, Mobile
- 10 Mid-Week PM Reads
- The New 2012 Porsche 911
- 100 Years of New York Real Estate
- Earnings Estimates
- If more QE, Evans says $600b
- McCulley: We Are In a ‘Liquidity Trap!’
- Profound and Pervasive Misconduct in Mortgage Servicing
- 10 Wednesday AM Reads
| 40% of Americans Are Now Independents Posted: 11 Jan 2012 10:30 PM PST A Stunning 40% of Americans Are Now Independent. Ron Paul Polls Highest Among Independents, and Independents Would Vote for Paul Over ObamaIndependents Prefer Ron PaulWhile mainstream pundits desperately cling to their mantra that Ron Paul is "unelectable", the numbers show a different story. Gallup finds a record high-high 40% of all Americans now identify as independents. This is higher than the 31% of Americans who identify as Democrats and 27% as Republicans. And which candidate do independents like? According to a new CBS poll, they like Ron Paul. As Forbes notes:
Admittedly, Forbes notes that – if the general election were held today – Romney could beat Obama, and Paul couldn't:
However, given that the CBS poll has a 3% margin of error, Romney and Paul are statistically tied in a match-up against Obama. And Romney's Gordon Gekko background is just starting to get air time in this campaign. And watch this short video. And while I don't believe that anyone should be discriminated against based upon their religion, the more protestants learn that Romney is a Mormon, the less they like him. So – despite the mainstream's attempts to sideline Paul as "unelectable" – I think that once the facts are aired, Paul would do better against Obama than Romney. |
| TBP Site Update: G+, Search, Mobile Posted: 11 Jan 2012 05:45 PM PST I’ve made a few tweaks, as you may have noticed. If there are any problems, please bring them to my attention. 1. Google Search restored (yeah!) 2. G+ added to share bar at the end of every post. 3. Mobile iPhone version. Note this is user definable, with a toggle (Desktop/Mobile) button at the bottom of site. Or, you can choose your link Note that if you cannot switch, log out and log back in, the default is desktop. BTW, that is a cheap off the shelf plugin for iPhones. If anyone has a better suggestion for mobile phones/tablets, I am all ears! |
| Posted: 11 Jan 2012 01:39 PM PST My afternoon train reading:
WhatTF are you reading? > Awaiting a Greek Payout
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| Posted: 11 Jan 2012 12:15 PM PST Watch the all new Porsche 911 (991) being put through its paces at the Porsche Experience Centre Silverstone. Gordon Robertson explains some of the new cutting edge technology developed for the car while also exploring how it remains true to its iconic 911 roots. For more visit: http://www.porsche.co.uk/origin |
| 100 Years of New York Real Estate Posted: 11 Jan 2012 11:30 AM PST Last fall Prudential Douglas Elliman turned 100 years old and they asked me to write an article for their Elliman magazine. If you've been living in a cave, I've been writing their housing market report series since 1994. What started as a simple project morphed into a fun, albeit gigantic, research project. I learned a lot about the evolution of the Manhattan housing market, largely through the amazing incredible New York Times archives. This was right about the time of my web site revision and semi-necessary hiatus so I am cleaning out my desk of posts I have been itching to write so please indulge me. The article I wrote for Douglas Elliman was beautifully presented by their marketing department and prominently inserted in their Elliman magazine (and iPad app!). Diane Cardwell of the New York Times in her "The Appraisal" (an incredible column name BTW) penned a great piece: In an Earlier Time of Boom and Bust, Rentals Also Gained Favor that originated from my article and zeroed in on the 1920s and 1930s to draw a comparison to the current market. Click to enlarge: Source: Change is Constant: 100 Years of New York Real Estate |
| Posted: 11 Jan 2012 09:00 AM PST The Wall Street Journal – Earnings Pessimism Could Be Overdone MarketBeat (WSJ Blog) – Herd On The Street: Company Analysts All In This Together
Comment There is an option (c). Companies are so good at guidance that analysts wait for investor relation departments to tell them what to estimate and follow their lead. This would be our choice. FactSet Research Systems Inc. – Earnings Insight Comment The chart above shows the percentage of S&P 500 companies that report earnings above estimates in the earnings "pre-season" (cyan). The final percentage of S&P 500 companies that beat earnings estimates once all the number have been reported is shown in dark blue. The earnings "pre-season" takes place before Alcoa reports each year (which happened yesterday), the unofficial start of the earnings season. A FactSet Research Systems Inc. research report dated December 23, 2011 noted that, of the 21 companies who actually report "pre-season" earnings, 57% beat the mean estimate for Q4 2011. As the chart above shows, this is the lowest percentage since the end of the 2007 to 2009 "Great Recession." FactSet also notes (page 4): …. However, there is one trend in the data that may offer some predictive value for the Q4 2011 earnings season. In the nine quarterly "pre-seasons" where the percentage of companies reporting actual EPS above estimated EPS was below 80%, the final percentage of companies beating estimates was higher than the "pre-season" percentage for each quarter. If history is any indication, we should expect the final number to be higher, but only marginally so. This suggests that this earnings season will have the smallest actual number of earnings beats since the end of the recession three years ago. In other words, this metric is suggesting a relatively poor earnings season. Source: |
| Posted: 11 Jan 2012 08:29 AM PST In what I believe is the 1st time a Fed member has quantified the size of potentially more QE, the ultra dove Evans says it could be $600b, in what would likely be in the MBS space, in a Q&A after a speech. Evans dissented in the past few FOMC meetings in 2011 in that he wanted more QE. He however doesn’t vote in 2012 but there will still be plenty of doves on the committee to follow thru. As I wrote earlier today, further artificially suppressing the level of interest rates is not the solution to a deleveraging cycle, time and debt paydown/writedown is. However, central bankers and politicians don’t have the luxury of time and thus patience and it’s why QE will continue to be their preferred answer. At some point they’ll realize it doesn’t work but how much damage will have already been done to the value of paper currencies and resultant inflation before they do? |
| McCulley: We Are In a ‘Liquidity Trap!’ Posted: 11 Jan 2012 08:03 AM PST Wednesday, 11 January 2012 7:37 AM ET Better monetary policy and better coordination between monetary and fiscal policy is worth underwriting risk, says Paul McCulley, former PIMCO portfolio manager/Global Interdependence Center managing director ~~~ |
| Profound and Pervasive Misconduct in Mortgage Servicing Posted: 11 Jan 2012 08:00 AM PST I think I am in love. With a Federal Reserve Governor. Have a read of this speech from Fed Governor Sarah Bloom Raskin, titled Creating and Implementing an Enforcement Response to the Foreclosure Crisis.
She quotes Shakespeare as to why we need to support the law, why enforcement against rogue banks is crucial to society. Now, it should not be a big deal that a central banker believes in the rule of law. (Hey, that J.D. from Harvard Law wasn’t a waste of time after all!). Perhaps it even is an indictment of the past decade that its even noteworthy. But Goddamit, its a start. It is an improvement over the lawlessness, the refusal to prosecute bank crimes, lawlessness, perjury, as this administration and its banker toady Treasury Secretary have unfortunately made into official policy. Go read the speech. > Previously: |
| Posted: 11 Jan 2012 07:00 AM PST My morning reads:
What are you reading? > Dividends Rising |
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