Monday, May 18, 2009

Housing Crash Links

– Posted in: Links Rick's Picks

Posted by Rick for Don Cephus, here's a good list of housing crash links from patrick.net: More high-end properties sitting on the market (sfgate.com) Multimillion Dollar House Price Cuts (finance.yahoo.com) No sign of foreclosures slowing (nctimes.com) Silicon Valley Foreclosures To Accelerate (viewfromsiliconvalley.com) Las Vegas house prices plummet toward ZIP (lasvegassun.com) Mass auctions of foreclosed houses not as successful as billed (tampabay.com) Deep Property Depreciation Still Ahead (seekingalpha.com) States like California, Arizona and Florida still have far to fall (businesswire.com) Worst Is Yet To Come (finance.yahoo.com) Personal Credit Crisis Of NY Times Economics Reporter (nytimes.com) Who, Me? Yes You, Greenspan! (lewrockwell.com) $8000 tax credit not actually for downpayment (boston.com) Real Estate Developer Sues Banks That Loaned It Money (businessinsider.com) Mortgage modifications make housing dead asset class for years (fieldcheckgroup.com) TARP is a "sham" and a ripoff to taxpayers (huffingtonpost.com) 99 Years in Prison for Mortgage Fraud. Not a Typo (nationalmortgagenews.com) America Forgot Lessons It Taught China (nytimes.com) China's yuan 'set to usurp US dollar' as world reserve currency (telegraph.co.uk) Anatomy of an economic meltdown (sfgate.com) Jeff Walser, FDIC Economist, Charged With Attempted Bank Robbery (huffingtonpost.com) If you come across other good housing stories, please mail the link to p@patrick.net.

U.S. Dollar May Be Firming

– Posted in: Rick's Picks

Check out today's analysis of the Dollar Index (DXY), since it lies within easy distance of a bullish threshold on the hourly chart. If we're in for a period of strength in the dollar, it's going to catch a lot of leverage artistes with their pants down.

GS – Goldman Sachs (Last:134.41)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

Goldman's narrow failure to surpass an autumn peak at 142.00 on the last rally spike suggests that the bear rally's days are numbered. Getting short could prove tricky, however, since we want to avoid doing so if the stock still has one last lunge left, as it well may. One way we'll be able to judge for ourselves whether this is likely is by observing the price action on a modest decline to _____. That is the midpoint support of

Gloomy Picture Perhaps Worse Than It Seems

– Posted in: Free

Gloomy forecasts have generally held sway at the Committee for Monetary Research and Education's annual spring dinner, but this is the only time we can recall when there were no optimists on the dais bold enough to challenge a consensus now gloomier, probably, than at any time since the 1930s. Jim Grant's off-the-cuff talk was about as sunny as the evening's presentations got, and even he was unwilling to allow much more than a ray of hope that everything would somehow turn out all right. Bob Hoye, on the other hand, was unequivocally bearish:  "The chances of anyone fixing this mess," he told the crowd, "are literally zero." But the scariest talk of the night came from Bill Beach, director of the Heritage Foundation's Center for Data Analysis.  If you find today's economic news too depressing to imbibe, he said, "things are even darker than they seem." A self-described data junkie who loves to delve into the statistical facts behind the headlines, Beach says today's economic numbers are so appalling that he's "scared to death" to look at them.  What is most extraordinary about these times, he said, is that government at all levels has never been so willing to take on more debt. As a result, said Beach, our children will be paying back interest and principal for many, many years to come. How much do we owe?  Beach asked one person in the room to stand up.  That one person -- one among a hundred in the banquet room of New York City's Union League Club that night - could be said to represent the $182 billion required to bail out just one insurer, AIG. But if you add in the expenses the federal government will incur maintaining Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid over the next 20 years, you'd