The Big Picture |
- 10 Monday PM Reads
- Education Still Matters . . .
- Sell Side Consensus Indicator Still Extremely Bearish
- 10 Monday AM Reads
- Housing Score: Barron’s 1, Ritholtz 2
- Five Dumb Moves to Avoid
- Lamborghini Veneno
| Posted: 01 Apr 2013 01:30 PM PDT My afternoon train reads:
What are you reading?
Major Asset Classes Q1 2013 (as of March 31 2013) |
| Posted: 01 Apr 2013 11:30 AM PDT |
| Sell Side Consensus Indicator Still Extremely Bearish Posted: 01 Apr 2013 08:30 AM PDT Click to enlarge
I’ve shown this chart several times over the past year, but its worth repeating: The Street remains very bearish by historical standards. Note this is not at all a short term indicator; and does operate with a bit of a lag.
Source: |
| Posted: 01 Apr 2013 07:00 AM PDT My morning reads:
What are you reading?
Mom and Pop Run With the Bulls |
| Housing Score: Barron’s 1, Ritholtz 2 Posted: 01 Apr 2013 04:00 AM PDT In 2008, Barron’s published a cover story by Jonathan Laing calling a housing bottom titled “Bottom’s Up: This Real-Estate Rout May Be Short-Lived.” It was not just that it was wrong. Rather, it was how it got the bottom call wrong: The analytical process was flawed, as it ignored data, misunderstood and misstated history, with the author engaging in all manner of wishful thinking. It was not at all what one would call rigorous. This was surprising, as the usual skepticism Barron’s was renown for was nowhere to be seen. The net result of that flawed process was a housing bottom call less than 18% from the top. Ultimately, the U.S. residential real estate market lost twice that amount, falling 35%, with specific bubble areas dropping 40, 50 even 60%. All told, a disastrously premature bottom call. As a comparison, my own housing analysis, made in 2005 and repeated in January 2008, was that US housing could fall 25-35%. It was based on simple historical prices, credit bubbles, and (eventually) included Reinhart and Rogoff data. There were other bullish real estate articles in Barron’s during the slide, and eventually, they got it right: In March, 2012, the article Ready to Rebound (by the same author), struck a similarly bullish tone. Kudos to Jonathan Laing and Barron’s, as they were correct last March and again repeating the call in September 2012 (Happy at Last). Meantime, I remained skeptical of the recovery as little more than Fed driven and manipulated bank bailouts. Regardless, home prices rose appreciably, gaining ~8% since then. I publicly admitted my error in my annual mea culpas (here and here). Now here’s where things get interesting: In this weekend’s Barron’s, there was a bit of chest pounding about their Housing call: As We Predicted, Home Prices Are Ascending:
To which I call foul. Noticeably omitted from this article was any mention of that 2008 bottom call. Prices remain far far below their original call. Doubling down? This was more of a tripling down. Despite years of ZIRP, bailouts, QE, foreclosure abatements, bank settlements, HAMP, subsidies, extended delinquencies, non foreclosure-defaults, and dumping bad mortgages on GSEs, etc.* Home prices are rising, inventory is tight, unemployment is falling, rates are near record lows. Given all of the above, it would be a huge cause for concern if sales and prices were not going up. Hence, we are reminded that if one make the same call repeatedly over the course of 5 years — one will, like the proverbial broken watch, eventually get it right. The problem with broken clock calls is they are useless to investors. More on this in the future . . .
Previously: Why Barron's Housing Cover Is So Terribly Wrong (July 12th, 2008) Cheapest Homes in 40 Years? Not Even Close (April 25th, 2011) Barron's Cover Calls Housing Bottom (Yet Again) (September 10th, 2012)
________________ * I am also compelled to point out the ill advised reliance of National Association of Realtors Housing Affordability Index (See NAR Housing Affordability Index is Worthless). It is a work of such breathtaking cheerleading and is so deeply flawed that it found homes were “unaffordable” but one month during the entire 2001-06 boom which preceded the collapse. |
| Posted: 01 Apr 2013 03:30 AM PDT Brett Arends has a short, smart column in the WSJ this weekend, with five simple pieces of good advice:
The full article is worth your time.
Source: |
| Posted: 01 Apr 2013 02:00 AM PDT The perfect April Fools vehicle — the redonkulous Lamborghini Veneno:
Click to enlarge Source: Daily News |
| You are subscribed to email updates from The Big Picture To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
| Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 | |






0 comments:
Post a Comment