Timing & trends

The pace of U.S. home construction declined more than forecast in January, indicating an unusually harsh winter probably played a role in slowing projects.

Housing starts fell 16 percent to an 888,000 annualized rate following December’s revised 1.05 million, the Commerce Department reported today in Washington. The decrease was the biggest since February 2011. The median estimate of 84 economists surveyed by Bloomberg called for 950,000. Permits for future projects showed a smaller drop, a sign activity may stabilize as the weather improves.

The coldest January in two decades probably limited groundbreaking for homebuilders as construction dropped to a record low in the Midwest. At the same time, a strengthening labor market in 2014 may help the housing industry pick up from a slow start to the year even as borrowing costs rise.

“A lot of it is weather, obviously,” Richard Moody, chief economist at Regions Financial Corp. in Birmingham, Alabama, said before the report. Still, “the story is better job and income growth and you have all this pent-up demand. You’re seeing household formation start to improve and inventories have been pared down.”

Estimates (NHSPSTOT) for starts in the Bloomberg survey ranged from 880,000 to 1.04 million. The December reading was revised up from a previously estimated 999,000 pace.

 

 

192 Lasers Deliver a Nuclear Fusion Breakthrough

An incredible breakthrough happened last week that took me back to my early fascination (and education) in theoretical physics.

It revolves around the most famous physics formula ever written: E=mc2.

As Einstein posited in his now famous 1905 paper, “Does the Inertia of an Object Depend upon Its Energy Content?” energy and mass are different forms of the same thing.

It was the cornerstone of his special theory of relativity. And, as they say, the rest is history.

Just below the surface, however, there was another startling
realization.

….click HERE or on the image to continue reading

fusion

 

 

Standard & Poor’s 500 Index companies are exceeding analyst sales forecasts by the most since 2012, a sign rising consumer demand is fueling economic growth as the bull market approaches its sixth year.

Led by banks, utilities and drugmakers, sales beat analyst predictions by 1.2 percent this earnings season, the highest margin in almost two years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The performance came as economists raised their estimate for GDP expansion to 2.9 percent in 2014, up from 2.6 percent at the start of the year, even after snowstorms helped lead to lower-than-projected data on retail sales and payrolls.

The combination will lift earnings enough to fuel more gains for the S&P 500 as manufacturing improves and employment recovers, according to Jonathan Golub, the chief U.S. market strategist at RBC Capital Markets LLC. He sees the S&P 500 climbing 13 percent from last week’s close to 2,075 this year. Companies from Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. to Nvidia Corp. surpassed revenue forecasts in the fourth quarter by twice the rate as the previous period on stronger-than-estimated demand for everything from drugs to computer chips.

“We’re starting to see revenue growth in a lot of companies as we sift through all the rubble,” Dan Veru, chief investment officer who helps oversee $5 billion at Palisade Capital Management LLC, said by phone. “The best news in that is that those sales expectations are low. And when expectations are low companies have a tendency to beat those expectations.”

The S&P 500 advanced 2.3 percent last week as comments by Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen fueled optimism the economy can weather further stimulus cuts and Congress voted to increase the nation’s debt ceiling. The index is down 0.5 percent this year after a 30 percent gain in 2013. S&P 500 futures were little changed at 9:15 a.m. in London today.

Gold And Silver Shorts Were The Real Demise For Bear Stearns

In this excerpt, precious metals market analyst Ted Butler describes an important finding in the gold market. The real reason Bear Stearns went under in 2008 has never been revealed in public. JP Morgan, bailing out the bankrupt investment bank Bear Stearns, as well as the Federal Reserve, remained vague. Ted Butler reveals in this article his findings based on facts and data. This article was published in Ted Butler’s latest newsletter to its premium subscribers.

Six years ago the well-known investment bank Bear Stearns imploded. In February 2008, Bear Stearns stock traded as high as $93; by mid-March the insolvent company agreed to be taken over by JPMorgan for $2 a share (later raised to $10 after class-action lawsuits). In the annals of Wall Street, there was hardly a more sudden demise than the fall of Bear Stearns. The cause was said to be a run on the bank as nervous investors pulled assets from the firm. Bear Stearns was said to be levered by 35 times, meaning it had equity of $11 billion and total assets of $395 billion. This is a very small cushion if something negative suddenly appears.

Something negative did hit Bear Stearns in the first quarter of 2008; although there are remarkably few details of what went wrong. Since Bear had a significant presence in sub-prime mortgages and that market was in distress, it is assumed the fall of the firm was mortgage related. That may be true, but there was no general stress in the stock market through mid-March 2008 reflecting a credit crisis. Was there instead some specific trigger behind the company’s sudden collapse?

I believe that sudden and massive losses and margin calls of more than $2.5 billion on tens of thousands of short COMEX gold and silver contracts were the specific triggers that killed Bear Stearns. Let’s face it – Bear was so leveraged that a sudden demand of more than $2.5 billion in immediate payment for any reason could have put them under. Bear Stearns’ excessive gold and silver shorts on the COMEX are the most plausible reason for the sudden demise. Bear Stearns did fail and due to a sudden cash crunch was acquired by JPMorgan for a fraction of what it was worth two months earlier. Bear Stearns was the largest short in COMEX gold and silver at the time. The day of Bear Stearns’ demise coincides precisely with the day of the historic high price points in gold and silver. That is also the same day the biggest COMEX gold and silver short would experience maximum loss and a cumulative demand for upwards of $2.5 billion in cash deposits for margin. It was no coincidence the music stopped for Bear Stearns that same day.

Gold prices rose from under $800 in mid-December 2007 to $1,000 in mid-March 2008, a gain of more than $200. Silver prices rose from under $14 in mid-December to $21 when Bear Stearns failed on March 17, 2008. That was a gain of $7. This was the highest price for silver and close to the highest price of gold since 1980. Obviously, a $200 rise in the price of gold and a $7 rise in the price of silver is not good if you are the biggest gold and silver short.

The concentrated short position of the 4 largest short traders in silver was at an extreme level of more than 300 million ounces. In contrast, the concentrated long position of the 4 largest long silver traders was a bit above 100 million ounces. In COMEX gold, the big shorts held two and half times what the biggest longs held.Since we know that Bear Stearns was the largest short in COMEX silver and we also know how much gold and silver prices rose in that time period, all that has to be established is how many short contracts Bear Stearns held. That would tell us how much money they had to come up with in margin money. All market participants on the COMEX, including the leading clearing member (which Bear Stearns was), must deposit additional funds daily to cover adverse price movements.

Thanks to historical Commitments of Traders report (COT) data from the CFTC, in the relevant time period (December 31, 2007 to March 17, 2008) the net short position of the 4 largest gold and silver shorts on the COMEX averaged 165,000 contracts and 60,000 contracts respectively. My analysis indicates Bear held 75,000 net gold contracts short and 35,000 net silver contracts short. Those are minimum numbers, as I think Bear’s position could have been higher.

A $200 adverse price move on 75,000 COMEX gold contracts would result in a mark to market loss and margin call of $1.5 billion. A $7 adverse price move on 35,000 COMEX silver contracts would result in a mark to market loss and margin call of $1.2 billion. Bear Stearns had to come up with $2.7 billion because gold and silver prices rose sharply in the first quarter of 2008 and the company bet the wrong way. That it couldn’t come up with all the margin money for the losses in gold and silver, is the most visible reason it went under.

gold silver price bear stearns 2008

What happened to Bear Stearns was exactly what I had warned the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) about continuously for the twenty years before the event. Aside from the manipulative impact that a concentrated market corner would have on price, the biggest risk was what would happen if the largest short ran into trouble. The facts in the case of Bear Stearns indicate that the worst did occur. The biggest short did go under. During the relevant time period, I was in private email contact with CFTC Commissioner Bart Chilton who indicated that the Commission was considering silver matters closely and that there would be a finding published soon. The subsequent CFTC finding was released on May 13, 2008 and completely denied anything was wrong on the short side in COMEX silver due to large traders.

Here’s the problem – the report lied. It conveniently ignored the failure of the largest COMEX gold and silver short seller, by only considering events through Dec 31, 2007 and not through the March 17, 2008 date of Bear Stearns’ failure, a clear lie of omission. How could the CFTC issue a report on large traders on the short side of silver and overlook that the largest short trader of all went under because of that short position? It has taken me some time to see all this in the proper perspective. What I now see is deeply disturbing, but it answers many questions. Even though I petitioned the CFTC about the illegality of the concentrated short position in COMEX silver for decades, they disregarded those warnings. Then Bear Stearns went under for precisely the reasons I warned about. Subsequently, the CFTC kept it quiet and denied all allegations.

Any regulator worthy of the name should have known that a lopsided, large trader mismatch was dangerous on the short side. Having misjudged just how dangerous the situation was, the CFTC and the CME Group put in motion a scheme to save the shorts and punish gold and silver investors. By arranging, with the Federal Reserve Chairman and Treasury Secretary, to have JPMorgan take over Bear Stearns’ silver and gold short positions, the US Government embarked (or continued) on a journey of allowing price manipulation, in stark violation of commodity law.

Since Bear Stearns was a failure that threatened the financial system, it necessarily invited the involvement of the nation’s highest regulators, the Treasury Secretary and the chairman of the Federal Reserve, as the historical record indicates. Both had to be aware of the gold and silver margin problem at Bear Stearns. Additionally, since Bear Stearns was the leading clearing member of the exchange, you can be certain that the CME Group was more than aware. The CME was the one issuing the margin calls to Bear. Also, there is no way that JPMorgan wasn’t aware of Bear Stearns’ gold and silver predicament. Yet none of this was made public.

These facts indicate that everyone at the top had to be aware that excessive gold and silver shorting was at the center of the Bear Stearns fiasco. Since the Feds requested JPMorgan’s assistance, there can be no question that JPMorgan demanded (and received) permanent immunity from future gold and silver allegations. This explains how they have been able to establish market corners in gold and silver today that commodity law prohibits. Had not the U.S. Treasury Secretary, the Fed chairman, the CFTC, and the CME agreed to JPMorgan’s takeover of Bear Stearns’ gold and silver positions, the excessive market concentration and manipulation in these markets could not have continued.

The interference of the U.S. Government in the Bear Stearns affair explains what was previously inexplicable: why the CFTC couldn’t find anything after investigating a silver manipulation for five years, and why the CFTC and CME were deathly quiet in reaction to the giant price smashes in gold and silver, particularly the two 30% price smashes within days in silver in May and September of 2011.

What baffles me today is that no well-known journalist from outside the gold and silver world has yet picked up on what is an easy-to-document story of epic historical proportions. It’s the story of why Bear Stearns went under, and how the gold and silver price manipulation continued since the day JPMorgan took over Bear. I think the story has Pulitzer Prize written all over it.

More from Ted Butler:

 

 

This is an excerpt from Ted Butler’s premium service. Readers are highly recommended to subscribe to the service on www.butlerresearch.com as it contains the highest quality of gold and silver market analysis. Ted Butler is specialized in precious metals markets analysis for 4 decades.

Top Stories
Actavis nears acquisition of Forest Labs for up to $25B – WSJ. Actavis (ACT) is in advanced negotiations to buy fellow pharmaceuticals provider Forest Laboratories (FRX) for up to $25B, the WSJ reports, adding that the deal could be announced today. The figure is above Forest’s market cap of $19.3B. One reason for the tie-up is to allow the companies to better negotiate with customers amid consolidation between hospitals, insurers and doctors. Forest’s shares were +2.3% premarket.

Nikkei surges after BOJ boosts loan facilities. The Bank of Japan has surprised markets by expanding lending facilities that are designed to spur corporate investment by offering low-interest loans to commercial banks in the hope that they will lend the money to businesses. At a policy meeting, the BOJ also maintained its program of increasing the monetary base by ¥60-70T a year. The boosting of the lending facilities comes after data yesterday showed that Q4 GDP growth slowed to a less-than-expected 0.3% on quarter from 0.5% in Q3. The move helped weaken the yen and cause the Nikkei to surge 3.3%.

H-P knew of Autonomy methods long before writedown – FT. Hewlett-Packard’s (HPQ) senior management was aware of Autonomy’s controversial hardware sales practices months prior to a whistleblower flagging them, the FT reports. If true, the report could undermine HP’s claims that Autonomy officials hid the information. The whistleblower’s actions helped prompt H-P to sharply write down the $11.1B acquisition.

Top Stock News
BHP earnings surge 31%. BHP Billiton’s (BHP) underlying FH1 profit jumped 31% to $7.76B and exceeded consensus of $6.9B, helped by a rise in the company’s earnings from its iron-ore operations, cost cuts and the improving global economy. Revenue increased 5.9% to $33.9B. BHP declared a dividend of $0.59 for the period and said that its strong cash flow could enable it to consider a substantial dividend increase in the future. Shares were +2.25% premarket.

Airline misery continues as snow storms pound on. Airlines have cancelled over 500 flights for today as the freezing weather continues relentlessly. The latest storm has dumped snow on the Midwest and is expected to be similarly beneficent to the Northeast and mid-Atlantic states. The latest cancellations add to 1,379 flights that were scrubbed for the President’s Day holiday yesterday and over 4,440 that were delayed. More than 7,500 flights were scrapped on February 13.

Healthcare services firm MultiPlan sold for reported $4.4B. Private-equity firms BC Partners and Silver Lake have agreed to sell MultiPlan, a provider of services that help big health insurers manage the claims process, to a consortium comprising Starr Investment and Swiss firm Partners Group. The financial terms of the deal weren’t disclosed, although reports said the price was $4.4B. Starr is an affiliate of C.V. Starr, which is part of an insurance and investment group led by former AIG (AIG) chief Maurice “Hank” Greenberg.

News Corp wins $800M back from Australian tax man. News Corp (NWSA) has received a rebate of A$882M ($796.62M) from Australia’s tax authorities after it won a legal battle over A$2B in forex losses that it suffered during a restructuring in 1989. The Australian Tax Office had refused to allow the deduction but was defeated in the country’s Federal Court in July. The payment has only just come to light, although News Corp received the money at the end of last year.

AngloGold Ashanti replaces chairman. AngloGold Ashanti (AU) Chairman Tito Mboweni has stepped down, due to his “increasing portfolio of professional commitments,” and is being replaced by nonexecutive director Sipho Pityana. Mboweni, who is a member of the African National Congress’ National Executive Committee, will leave AngloGold Ashanti as nonexecutive director at the company’s annual shareholders meeting in May.

Top Economic & Other News
German investor confidence falls sharply. The German ZEW survey of investor confidence has dropped to 55.7 in February from 61.7 in January and missed consensus that was also 61.7. However, the current situation print has surged to 50 from 41.2. The decline in the headline figure was probably caused by recent uncertainties, such as weak U.S. labor and other economic data, and the volatility in emerging markets, ZEW says, adding that the fall “must not be overstated.”

U.K. CPI falls below BOE goal. U.K. inflation has fallen below the Bank of England’s target of 2% for the first time since November 2009, dropping to 1.9% on year in January from 2% in December and undershooting consensus that was also 2%. The data comes after BOE Governor Mark Carney said last week that with spare capacity in the economy high and inflation benign, the bank has scope to maintain interest rates at a record-low of 0.5% for a while yet.

PBOC drains $7.9B from financial system. The People’s Bank of China has drained $7.9B from the country’s financial system by selling 48B yuan in repurchase contracts, the first such transaction since June. The PBOC made the tightening move after weekend data showed that aggregate financing soared to a record 2.58T yuan ($425B) in January from 1.23T yuan in December despite the bank’s attempts to rein in lending.

Italian President asks Matteo Renzi to become PM. Florence Mayor Matteo Renzi, the head of Italy’s center-left Democratic Party (PD), was due to start talks with the leaders of other parliamentary groups today after he was yesterday asked by President Giorgio Napolitano to try to form a government. Renzi’s nomination comes after the PD ousted incumbent PM Enrico Letta last week following Renzi’s machinations.

Top Ideas: Movers and Great Calls
1) On December 16, Stephen Simpson, CFA, argued that copper miner First Quantum Minerals (OTCPK:FQVLF) was trading at an “appealing price,” as growing production and declining costs underpinned the bull case. Shares are +19.3% since. Read article » 
2) In April, fund manager Thomas Finser predicted a sharp turnaround for laser-vision correction specialist LCA-Vision (LCAV). After a buyout offer on Thursday, the stock may have more room to run, as it trades above the offer price and is +61.9% since Finser’s call. Read article »

Top Ideas To Watch
1) High-end mattress retailer Select Comfort (SCSS) has 70% upside ahead, as a new product and marketing campaign should drive a rebound, writes Shaun Currie, CFA. Read article »
2) Helix Investment Research says investors should look to SoftBank (OTCPK:SFTBY), not Yahoo, for exposure to Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, and in the process receive a company undervalued based on its other equity stakes and core earnings.Read article »

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