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OT: Hey, Foot, good news. Construction expanded in June. Just what you need...more houses to sell (lol). Here's Karl Denninger's report on the subject. Two
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This is not "good news":
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) - New construction of U.S. houses expanded for the second straight month in June after hitting a record low in April, the Commerce Department estimated Friday. Starts rose 3.6% in June to a seasonally adjusted 582,000 annualized units stronger than the 531,000 pace expected by economists surveyed by MarketWatch. This is the highest level of starts since last November. Starts of new single-family homes rose by 14.4% to 470,000 in June, while starts of large apartment units fell 29.4% to 101,000. Building permits, a leading indicator of housing construction, rose 8.7% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 563,000. This is the highest level of permits since December.
How do you sell down the existing inventory, including the hidden inventory of foreclosures, when these fools are still building houses?
I get it - its summer, that's when you break ground on houses. This allows you to get the framing and exterior up before it gets cold and snows.
But we have millions of homes that have been foreclosed or will be foreclosed, and we have an insane amount of existing "listed" supply on the market. In the apartment/condo marketplace in some markets there is literally five or more years of supply! Go down to Miami and take a drive around at night - brand new buildings, open, occupied, with four or five lights on at night.
Really.
Also...there's going to be an enormous need for healthcare professionals when the swine flu epidemic really commences. WHO predicts it will happen this fall and most governments, whether national, state or local, are mostly unprepared. Two
It's easy...especially when they're spending your $billions (lol). Two
d-k, I'll be paying more attention to those triangles in the future. Seems like we've seen a few of them during the past couple of days. Two
Yup, gloe, you're right. Got out of QID with a few a couple of cents loss. Tell me to be more patient (lol). Two
Gleno, have you noticed how many times the Qs have hit 37.43-37.44 and then dropped back? Sign of a s-t topping process? Two
Wow, you're right, RCKS. It's almost as if AAPL is a surrogate for the Qs? I'm looking at my 1-min and 5-min charts for both and they're practically identical. Two
LOL, RCKS. I'd do that if I was an unscrupulous fellow. It must be very difficult for a guy like Santelli, who really knows and understands how the market works, to hold back and not say what he thinks. Sometimes he slips, of course, and is too candid...which I'm sure results in his being warned by management. The guy I'd really like to talk with is his sidekick, "Wolfman." You know this guy could tell some stories. Two
At some point, Fox, Da Boyz want to make money off the recent bulls, don't you think? They can't make as much money if prices only stay in a tight range, such as they are today. A brief correction is in order, I'd say. Two
Yes, really. You can't be around the stock market and see all the shenanigans going on year after year without suspecting--strongly--that something is very, very wrong and crooked. These CNBS dolts know damn well what's going on. (Or is it possible they could be that dumb?) Two
The sad thing, Fox, is that I think Joe, Mark, Becky, Carl, Lies-man and the others DO know what's going on, but they've been bought and have to play the entertainment charade. I've often thought of inviting Rick Santelli to a bar and, after many beers, asking him to give me his candid impressions of the stock market and his CNBS associates. Now that would be an interesting conversation. Two
Gleno, how about this: the government is the banks. And the government makes money (literally) no matter what happens. Two
Sure did, Fox! I had a Q sell signal right before yesterday's close (about 3:52) and took a small QID position. The futures this morning made me regret that purchase. But now I'm thinking it may be all right(?). Time will tell. Two
Gleno, I had a QID buy signal--a strong one--around 10 a.m. But it has been an "iffy" deal and I've been watching carefully. I never understood OE week? Da Boyz have brought prices up, obviously, so wouldn't they make more money if they now took down prices...at least for a day? Two
Hi, Fox. During Paulson's testimony this morning, one of the Senators actually winked at him when he was finished. In Barney's case, it wouldn't stop there. He'd wink and bend over his desk. Opps! I shouldn't have written that. Sorry. Two
mkmny, here's a comment re. CNBS by Ty Durden at ZeroHedge. Two
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The CNBC Business Model
Posted by Tyler Durden at 9:54 AM
Whit the recent elimination of anything even remotely approaching journalistic rigor or analysis, and its substitution with endless propaganda and the pitching of "hope" as an investment conduit, many have been scratching their heads over the question of just how it is that CNBC is still on the air, let alone make money: after all selling hope is a very expensive process.
I provide the answer.
Below is an early segment from CNBC in which Joe Kernan provides his analysis of Schwab's just released results. As the video quality is pretty bad (yeah, I know, sorry) I will summarize how it works:
1. Intro - Kernan: Glowing review of Schwab's EPS "beat"
2. Kernan: "Schwab is a fine, fine company and a fine individual."
3. Kernan: "...and quite a sponsor for us."
4. Kernan: "...and we are ready to just be sponsored on Squawk Box."
5. Conclusion - Kernan: "...I don't think you can have too much [of Schwab]."
6. Cut to Charles Schwab Commercial.
So now you know.
Of course, the producer doesn't want to lose his/her job. There's very strict news management at that station. Keep in mind that GE Financial, after a lot of lobbying, got $billions in TARP money. The Obama administration is waging a propaganda war that controls the media almost as stringently as the Bush administration did. The financial stakes are a lot higher now, of course, because of the nation's rapidly dwindling economy. The folks who are running this propaganda war are trying to convince you that the economy has "turned the corner," that "green shoots" are sprouting everywhere, that unemployment is getting better, etc. Ask any American whether he/she believes this and they'll tell you they don't. The problem is that our Congressional representatives are stupid, corrupt and totally ineffective. Which means nothing gets changed or improved. Sad. Two
What do you think happened on CNBS? The station is owned by GE and it's Da Boyz' mouthpiece. What you saw was censorship, pure and simple. Can't have someone telling the truth, can we? Two
The "apologists" in Congress were interviewed on various business shows this a.m. and defended "Paulson the Patriot" who they said had defended the nation's "economic honor" by taking "bold and decisive" moves to correct the banking problem. Paulson is as guilty of fraud as Madoff, maybe even worse, but he'll walk away from the hearings with his honor and $hundreds of millions in his accounts. And after the hearings, Congress won't do a thing about real bank and fiscal reform. Two
You wonder who's buying the long side of the indexes at this moment? Two
Now...why do I think they're going to close the NDX exactly on 1500? Hmmmm. Two
With such light vol., there are few real "investors" out there playing today's charade. It's all a bunch of guys like you and I trying to outmanuever the automated trading programs run by the big banks. Two
For example, the RSI-5 on the 60-min NDX chart is now at almost 95. That's prime reversal territory. Or so they say (lol). Two
capt, can't tell you how many reversal signals I've had on the 5-min and 60-min NDX charts. But every one has been a lie. I suspect this goes up into the close(?). Two
Hey, smartone. Thought you'd be interested in Karl Denninger's take on INTC. So this is why the market is rallying today? Two
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Tuesday, July 14. 2009
Posted by Karl Denninger in Company Specific at 21:25
(Page 1 of 380, totaling 1140 entries) » next page
Intel: Too Much, Too Far, Too Fast
And too euphoric:
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Intel Corp's quarterly results and outlook blew past Wall Street forecasts on better-than-expected consumer demand for PCs, especially in Asia, setting an auspicious tone for the technology sector.
Uh, well......
Sure, if you just read the PR on the earnings.
Someone filed that story before the conference call, or simply ignored it.
The strong growth came in Asia, specifically China, which blew out a huge stimulus program. Ok.
But it was specifically stated on the conference call that US consumer sales were weak, and repeating what DELL said earlier, so are enterprise sales.
The quote that was chosen is rather humorous:
Smith told Reuters that computer markets were strengthening and there were "pockets of relative strength" in consumer PC markets, as well as in the Asia Pacific and in China.
Pockets of relative strength.
Yes, there are. Netbooks in particular are relatively strong - a new, very-low-cost alternative to laptops. $300, 400, 500 machines - not the $1,000+ machines previously sold, and they're replacing the demand that used to be filled by those $1,000 machines! That's not so good.
Neither is this:
Executives warned that the corporate market remained weak, and Intel does not expect much change in the second half.
Heh wait a second - I thought this was a bullish report for capital spending and the chip sector? No? IBM's primary market is to enterprise customers, not consumers.
The bigger problem for Intel is its P/E - now well over 20, its just too high - unless we get a very strong economic recovery.
If you're in the Dennis Kneale camp on that, have at it. I'm going to pay close attention to the reaction in the real market tomorrow when the stock opens for trading by the pros - not the aftermarket daytrader games of the evening, with most of that volume happening before the conference call began.
I admit to being surprised by my first glance through the earnings release. I sure couldn't figure out how those numbers got hit, with the exception of margin expansion - that was easy: layoffs. It was only when I went through the full PDF, all 10 pages, that it became clear.
Sequential revenue was up $879 million dollars. But compared to a year ago it was down $1.4 billion - and remember, the recession began in December 2007!
So no, Dennis and the rest, this earnings report does not tell us that we "turned the corner." Quite to the contrary; it tells us that the recession is deeper now (for Intel) than it was in the second quarter of last year.
Additionally, selling price, even excluding the Atom, was down slightly on a per-piece basis, telling us that customers are "shifting down" the price scale.
Also important was guidance: The firm intends to continue to spend heavily on R&D (good), up slightly. It expects a "seasonal" expansion in demand and revenue (in other words they believe people will still buy computers to go back to school, etc.) But capital spending is expected to be down by 10% or $500 million, which does not bode well for expansion of output capacity (nor for semiconductor fab equipment suppliers!)
Some of the improvement in results also appears to be a fairly normal inventory shift - about $240 million of it, in fact. Not exactly small potatoes, and backed out of the results the luster dims a bit.
One thing cannot be argued with - enterprise efficiency. Gross margin expansion may not be good for the fired employees (when that's how it happens) but one cannot argue with the impact on the balance sheet - it is clearly and without exception positive. Let's give credit where due; this is one place that Intel excels, and they're not losing their touch in cost management.
The other interesting split is the business mix - Asia went from 51% to 55% of revenue from last year, while Japan and the Americas remained the same. Who lost ground? Europe. Do we have a little problem brewing over in Euroland perhaps? Hmmmmm.... some of this may be related to the EU fine, but I'd love some more color on that.
Near the bottom of the report is, in fact, where that margin expansion came from in stark relief - the company went from 82,500 employees last quarter to 80,500 this quarter - they laid off 2,000 people, or about 2-1/2% of their staff. This isn't a big number, but its real, and it certainly contributed to gross operating margins. Yes, even mighty Intel is not immune to the layoff monster.
Finally, on the last page, we find the y/o/y scoresheet, and the basis of my call: from Intel's perspective, the recession is simply not over.
In what they call the "Digital Enterprise Group" (PCs, servers, etc) revenue is down 17% from Q2/2008 for CPUs and 30% for chipsets and motherboards (more on this in a second.)
In the mobile processor segment revenue declined 7%, with chipsets and subassemblies down 12%.
The chipset and motherboard revenue decline in the "primary" group is, in my opinion, quite significant. Intel is known as a premium board and chipset; I own several. They tend to be toward the high end of the price spectrum, but are high-quality as well.
These are the boards that go into servers and enterprise-class machines - most home users don't wind up with them simply because there are much less-expensive products from other manufacturers that will work with Intel's processors. Assuming Intel hasn't abandoned that market (I doubt it!) this would imply a very significant deterioration in server and enterprise system sales - far more than the topline decline from 2008 to 2009 would otherwise suggest.
In fact, it implies rather strongly that there may be as much as a thirty percent decline in enterprise-class shipments compared to 2008.
"Green shoots" eh?
Uh, no.
Without CapEx coming back any believed "recovery" will be fleeting at best.
This is not a bad report, but the embedded reality on business-class sales, which was born out in comments on the conference call and echoes what DELL said earlier in the day, paints a rather dark picture.
Bottom line: Intel knocked the cover off the ball with superior business management, not on the prospect or hint of economic recovery.
Invest accordingly.
RCKS, your count is probably a good one. Whatever happens, it looks to me like we're in a topping process...which could happen today, followed by a small drop tomorrow and a bounce back on Friday. It sure looks like they want to touch the NDX high of June 11. The question in my mind is whether the price stops there and turns down or continues up? Two
spdpro, as I look at the daily charts for both JPM and GOOG, I see topping patterns. Sure, there might be some upside potential on those charts. But I don't think there's much(?). JPM is up almost four percent today, and GOOG is up almost three percent. Anything JPM announces is a lie, of course, especially if they announce record profits. Two
POKERSAM, I admire your trading skills and ability to follow your trading program. That takes discipline. We all make trading decisions that go against us. It's part of the game and the market is full of deception that confuses even the best traders and best trading strategies. Those who post here should realize that we're all on the same side: our goal is to make money and to help each other accomplish that goal. Keep on.... Two
Not sure? But the stock is up about 2.4 percent (same as NDX) today and still has some room left on the daily charts. But if it does a moonshot, I think it will top and fall. But only when Goldman wants it to drop. Two
It sure looks that way, Gleno. But my trading instincts tell me there's a good possibility we're going to see a s-t top today. I wonder if they're going to test the 6/11 NDX high of 1512? Then drop it? Two
2-bit, I got out well before the close, thanks. My policy is to try to get out of failed buy/sell signals as close to my entry price as possible (of course, I still have to pay a small trading fee). Lots of fakeouts on the way up today. Going into tomorrow, the Qs have to be way overbought. I can't help think they'll be a pullback in the morning. The Bradley turn dates are 7/14 and 7/15. Perhaps the indexes top tomorrow? Two
2-bit, I always use the 1-hour chart, as well, and you're right. Could be more upside tomorrow. Thanks. Two
I think you're right, Gleno. Bailed out at parity and will wait (patiently) for next signal. Two
My daily charts suggest the INDU/NDX will go down, and the 5-min charts support that notion. But Da Boyz don't want anyone to know it, do they? Which makes me think any downside will be quick affair. Two
Interesting, Gleno, and I see what you mean. Thanks for sharing. Two
Talk about propping, the Qs are at the same level they were at the high at 10:05 this morning. Price hasn't moved more than about five-ten cents in either direction in nearly four hours. Two
Gleno, tell me it isn't so (lol). I have the Q HOD at 35.73 or thereabouts. My signals wouldn't like it if the price went to 35.85. Two
I agree, blasher. Looks to me like there's a greater possibility of the indexes dropping now, but only for a short time. I'll be somewhat surprised if they don't drop this afternoon? It always makes me wonder why Da Boyz string everyone along for protracted periods when there's little price movement? No one makes much money during such periods. Two
And it might, Bob. Always ready to bail if required. But I think we're going down soon. Two
Well, there were a few fakeouts on the way, but I got an even stronger QID buy signal at 11:55. They're not letting it down easy, but I think it's going down nonetheless. Anyone else in QID at this point? Two