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FALSE
HOUSING: GOLD HEADWIND
by Jim Willie CB
May 16, 2007
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The
newest deceptions are with jobs and housing. Each is much worse than
reported. The housing decline might be as much as 15% worse than
reported, which leads to much bigger job loss than is reported. Most of
the home construction job loss is under the table, to people not on
state jobless insurance programs, and to immigrant workers paid in cash.
Both fall through the statistical cracks in those home frames and
plywood floors underlayments. A quick preface on the two biggest
corrupted statistics first, since of paramount importance. The US
Federal Reserve will likely respond to more rapid job loss, and to more
rapid home sector erosion decline. When they do, expect an official rate
cut sequence to resemble that of 2001. As in, sharp & sudden. The
signals surround us, that the major powers are in the process of
permitting the USDollar to fall.
Premeditated
doctored and falsified economic statistics are the laughing stock of the
USGovt reporting system. The are the tarnish on a once respected emblem.
The two most important chronically corrupted pulse measures for the
USEconomy are the Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) on the economic growth, and the Consumer
Price Index (CPI) on the price inflation. The GDP is lifted
improperly by 4% to 5% in order to conceal the ongoing fight with a
recession since the 2000 stock bust. The enabling device is a
ridiculously low price inflation figure which might be wrong by 7% to
8%. Most reported growth is merely improperly adjusted price inflation.
Be sure that the practical benefit from suppressing the CPI is to keep
Social Security payments down, along with federal pensions related to
agency workers, military retirees, and those who used to sit on judge
benches. The direct market motive is to sell USTreasury Bonds and other
debt securities, while painting a picture of fiscal health for a nation
far more sickly than official statistics reveal. Lying
has become an institutional feature of US government, if not corporate
life.
The
objective is to achieve plausible deniability of falsehood by means of
abstruse goofy confusing indefensible methods behind the calculations.
Like who besides math/stat jocks knows the effect of using a geometric
average rather than simple arithmetic average? Doing so drops the CPI by
at least 1%, a useful gimmick. Does
anyone realize milk and cheese were absent from the March CPI carefully
crafted calculation founded in convenient deception? If an item
rises, remove it or substitute it. We all buy milk and cheese. Former
USFed Chairman Arthur Burns starting the nonsense, which has taken a
life of its own. He first removed volatile food & energy from the
CPI, now a standard practice. The moral of the CPI/GDP story is that if
you lie by at least 5% on the CPI, you not only save on the USGovt
budget deficit but you enable a 5% lie on the economic growth. Who wants
to report the USEconomy is stuck in a recession, now at minus 2% to 3%
decline?
HOUSE
SECTOR IS CRASHING
Every
reason looms large that housing data is equally inaccurate as most other
major economic statistics. Whether intentionally falsified or
incompetently calculated by the National Assn of Realtors (NAR), it is
irrelevant. Call it financial engineering. My guess is again a
premeditated doctoring of the statistics, since their motive is so
clear, to sell homes. In a worse declining market, sales would halt,
pure and simple. We are in an age
where those parties with the worst, most egregious, vested interest are
given charge of assembling, calculating, and reporting their own
statistics. This is laughable. Imagine the mafia in charge of
reporting on crime levels, or children in school reporting on actual
valid sickness and missed days in class.!
Both
existing home sales and new home sales data are providing misleading
national sales information. The new home curve ball involves
cancellations, which are not properly recorded in current data. The
housing market has declined much more sharply than is being reported,
like 13% to 15% worse. When looking to confirm data, a
triangular method is effective, meaning related and supporting
information must be consistent. It is not. Look to other sources of
information, and attempt to confirm or refute the aggregate. One
inconsistency is possible, but not a set of inconsistent figures that
presents itself. Independent research outfit John Burns Real Estate
Consulting sampled 181 key counties with just over half of the US
population where the large home builders are active. Their work is the
most comprehensive and well organized to cross my desk (thanks to
intrepid hound Kevin F).
Home
sales have fallen 22% on a 12-month basis versus the prior 12 months, in
reality. On a simple year-over-year monthly comparison, the decline is
even worse. Contrast that to a mere 10% in the compromised NAR reports.
It is hard to call theirs or USGovt’s work analysis, when it is more
like a fraudulent marketing promotional effort.
1)
Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) seasonally adjusted purchase
application index is down 18% from its peak in September 2005. Not all
applications are accepted, and oftentimes people fill out more than one.
So how could reported sales have fallen by less than 18%, by NAR data?
This not only makes no sense, but nobody seems to question it.
Applications are NOT final sales, and furthermore, canceled sales make
for even worse final sales figures. Go with confirmed sale closings,
which is available but not utilized by the NAR. Suspect a vested
interest in keeping a favorable spin!
2) DR
Horton and Lennar, two largest homebuilders in the United States, have
announced orders being down 27% to 37%, on an annual basis. The parent
company of the group Century 21 serves as another excellent triangular
data point. Their subsidiaries Coldwell Banker and ERA accounted for
roughly 1.9 million brokerage related transactions in 2006 compared to
2.3 million in 2005. That comes to an annual decline of 18% nationwide.
The NAR state data does cite big corrections in three major states: 28%
drop in Florida, 24% drop in California, and a 28% drop in Arizona. The
independent data shows the sales have probably dropped by 34%, 27% and
38%, respectively on final sale basis.
So
the housing decline is much worse than reported, LIKE TWICE AS BAD. See
their report (click here).
Spin versus reality might look like this, in a great chart composed by
JBREC.

TWO FALLOUT FACTORS ON
JOBS
Many
workers in the home construction industry do not typically participate
in the state unemployment insurance programs. The construction firms
wish to keep their labor expenses down, and payment in cash accomplishes
that objective. Paying immigrant workers in the special trades also is
done on a cash basis more than is recognized by those who actually trust
official data compiled by compromised bureaucrats and party apparatchiks
eager to follow orders or even impress via new clever deceptions. So
the official job loss data collected by the US Dept of Labor does not
count those cash basis jobs. That is convenient. Financial
engineering. Not only do Ripple Effect job
losses occur with those involved in carpets, light fixtures, faucets,
landscaping, and so on, but their lower or missing paychecks act like a
contagion agent back home.
Remittances
are payments made by many types of immigrant workers outside the United
States to other lands, simple cash disbursements like to family members
via bank wires. Agriculture and construction are the two biggest sectors
with such workers. The Mexican families have seen the biggest brunt of
the slide, joined by those in central American locations, alongside
Dominica and some South American nations. Between 2000 and 2006, almost
20 thousand Latino workers were added in cement masonry alone, with
another 72k as drywall hangers, another 140k as painters, according to
the US Dept of Labor Statistics. The Mexican economy has felt the impact
in pockets. Even Brazil has seen a dropoff, from $330 million in
remittances in February 2007 versus a monthly average of $446 million a
year ago. In previous reports, it has been noted that job cuts are
under-reported among home builders. Remittances are the evidence. A tiny
fraction of the workers sending less money home are inside the state
system of state unemployment insurance. Not only is contagion evident in
the USEconomy and US mortgage banking industry (all denied loudly), but
that contagion extends to Latin America south of the border. The
problems have spread to the overall economies in the entire hemisphere.
The Wall Street Journal provides this excellent graphic.

THE JOBBED JOBS REPORT
(AGAIN)
How
does MINUS 229 THOUSAND JOBS sound for April ??? Take away the
indefensible nonsensical but convenient Birth-Death model addition of
317 thousand jobs for the month, all nicely hidden and never cited, and
that is what you see. Look instead to the Household Survey, and no
better. You see MINUS 463 THOUSAND JOBS. Flick a switch, trigger a
statistical device, and poof, just weak jobs creation during the current
recession. Financial engineering.
The
jobs picture confirms troublesome growth signals. The official
promotional piece known as the ‘March Jobs Report’ explained
non-farm job growth rose by a mere 88 thousand jobs, far below the 125
to 150k required to keep pace with the population. It was the weakest
report in three years. Worse still was the downward revision by 26k jobs
in January and February. Revisions down are an accurate forward
indicator generally, a signal of weakness ahead. Look to the trend, and
downward revisions mean things are changing for the worse. The 0.4% drop
in average hours worked is another confirming bad signal.
Here is the GIANT LULU.
The Birth-Death Model actually added 317k jobs. ON WHAT BASIS??? From a
housing decline and related fallout? Without that indefensible lift, the
March jobs figure would have been MINUS 229 THOUSAND.
The +95k B-D adjustment from leisure & hotels, and the +49k
adjustment from construction seem way off, very contrived. The labor
participation rate fell by 0.2%, which means fewer people even look for
work. That kept down the jobless rate, which is a measure of state
jobless insurance collection only. People are dropping out of the
system. A huge 262k rise (5.8%) was seen in people NOT counted in the
labor force who would like to have a job. Sounds like a jobless person
to me!!!
The
interesting U-6 all-inclusive statistic (unemployment +
under-employment) rose to 8.2% from 8.0% in April. The Shadow Govt
Statistics folks believe the jobless rate is closer to 12% in the United
States. A final point is that immigrant construction workers are not
included in the official statistics. Their numbers are ‘mucho mas en
realidad’ (much more in reality, just using my newfound Spanish
skills) than what is reported. The ripple effects are now beginning to
take a bite. Related niches to home building and remodeling, related
niches to home lending, these are shedding jobs in droves. Refer to
carpets, faucets, lighting, furniture, appliances, landscape, plumbing,
wiring. Refer to loan officers, property appraisers, title search,
legal, home inspectors.
Next
come contradictions. The Institute for Supply Mgmt (ISM) Manufacturing
index for April was 54.7, up from the 50.7 in March. Here is where the
data does not jibe. The diffusion index measures employees on mfg
payrolls. It fell to 53.4% in April from 58.1% in March. The
surprise positive ISM index jump to 56.0 in April from 52.4 in March
SHOULD BE DISMISSED. The direction of these two series goes in
opposite directions. Financial engineering. Job losses of 19k in mfg,
11k in construction, and 26k in retail testify to broad weakness. The
fact remains that 3.2 million factory jobs have vanished since 2000, led
by the car and downstream industries. The ISM seems doctored heavily.
This chart and the contradiction were offered by Paul Kasriel of First
Northern, grabbed with gratitude.

RETAIL SECTOR CONFIRMS
SLOWDOWN
The
investment community and public at large is told that USEconomic
activity is slowing, housing remains in trouble, job growth is worse
than anemic, but the jobless rate is nice & low, and manufacturing
is perking up. SOUNDS LIKE RUBBISH. With a 30% decline in annual housing
starts, we have seen very little in lost construction jobs in the
official statistics.
Even
the retail sector is weak, at its lowest growth rate in three years,
caught in a certain downtrend. Big negatives in sales were announced
last week in the retail arena by chains, from Aeropostale to Abercrombie
& Fitch, each more than 10% down, even Wal-Mart at minus 3.5% was
the worst showing in 27 years. In the retail group, 80% missed their
forecast. The April retail sales (excluding cars) was minus 0.2%, but
terrible weather might have hurt those sales. We are near the low end of
retail sales growth levels when a recession last hit. The following
graphic is provided by the excellent data compilers and analysts at
Contrary Investors.

STAGFLATION STRAIGHT
JACKET
To
compound the suspicions that STAGFLATION is upon us, the GDP Deflator is
now running at 4.0% annually, more than double the 1.7% shown in the
previous Q4. The positive news is the 2.0% growth in business investment
for Q1. That rebounds from the last Q4 of 2006. The
trend has been for US corporations to invest more in stock buybacks than
in equipment to expand the business capital base, just like what has
been quantified here among the large energy companies. Also the
March factory orders showed a surprising +3.1% lift. It should be noted
carefully that the bulk of the new orders for computer and business
equipment were from OVERSEAS DEMAND, not US-based demand.
An
aside on gasoline and fuel costs generally. They crimp consumer spending
elsewhere. Sure, never under-estimate the resilience of US spenders.
Well, unless gasoline becomes a problem. It is a unique cost, since IN
OUR FACES EVERY DAY, on television every day, in newspapers every day,
the things that Joe Sixpack & Soccer Moms pay attention to. Just
yesterday, a phone call came from a friend in a coastal US city. He
reports a rash of boat sales from owners who cannot afford to pay the
higher fuel costs (thanks, Tim S). So higher costs have begun to force
yet more liquidations of assets. How will recreational vehicle sales do?
Badly, but distressed sales of currently owned RV’s will shoot up. We
have not yet heard from the truckers, who are a loud rough tough bunch.
Gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel are the other weak links in a growing
monstrously long list of weak pressure points in the USEconomy. Their
prices rise with the falling USDollar, compounded by monumental
irresponsibility among gasoline refiners and USGovt officials beholden
to environmental causes. We keep clean surroundings but lose jobs.
The
specter of stagflation puts the USFed in a horrible bind. They have been
facing the double barred dilemma, to rescue the USDollar with a rate
hike or to rescue the Housing sector with a rate cut. Their inaction led
them directly into the nightmare of STAGFLATION, with little in the way
of policy options. AS THE USFED STRUGGLES WITH ITS TOTAL ABSENCE OF
POILCY OPTIONS, COST INFLATION WILL RAGE INSIDE THE USECONOMY AS THE
RELEASE VALVE, WHILE THE HOUSING CRISIS WORSENS TO KILL JOBS. Now two
years past the initial USFed initial interest rate hikes, the system has
had ample time to send higher prices systemically throughout the
economy. Plenty of resistance remains, like price ceilings imposed by
China and India via outsourcing. However, the kicker is new price
explosions from the gasoline side. People must get to work. Companies
must receive shipped supplies. All transportation types must function
along commercial arteries, from car to truck to railroad to ocean
vessels to airplanes. Homes and buildings must be lit and kept cool.
Make
no mistake. The USFed has four
storms brewing, each powerful, each blocking a change in policy, plagued
by one ancillary risk like a hemlock chaser. They are reviewed,
analyzed, and developed in the May Hat Trick Letter.
- USDollar
decline
- housing
market distress
- mortgage
cancer contagion
- teetering
credit derivative structure
- trade
war with China
The
USFed is in an unmanageable position, sure to breed havoc upon any
change, and maybe havoc without any change! To say the USFed is stuck in
policy quicksand is a gross understatement. They are in a straitjacket
on a platform above quicksand inhabited by mobile adaptive crocodiles!!!
A
rate cut is coming, with the USFed kicking and screaming, together with
denying reality and adding indefensible credibility to utterly false
economic reports. They need a smoking gun to point to, so as to shed
full responsibility for their indecision and to defended credibility.
The USDollar decline both confirms the expectation and leads the actual
decision. The US$ decline seems
an approved event. If you need that smoking gun, look no further
than the decline in the 3-month Treasury Bill yield. It is analyzed in
the May HTL report, along with the lack of market expectation evident in
Fed Funds futures. The TBill opens the door for the USFed to cut
interest rates. Bond traders have begun to push down yields in the
short-term USTreasury. The USFed
would then follow, more obedient to the bond market than understood.
Thanks to Lance Lewis, posting on Minyanville, for the graph of the
2000-2001 timeframe comparison. We are seeing a repeat event to 2000
pattern right now.

POTPOURRI
The Hat Trick
Letter issue for May is out. Among a host of other markets reported on,
stories include the IBM gigantic layoff, which will be difficult to hide
in the jobbed Jobs Reports. It includes the Executive Decree which
authorizes intelligence czar Negroponte to permit NO DISCLOSURE by large
corporations who do the USGovt bidding in market manipulation, in the
name of national security. In other words, a knee-jerk assessment, is
that fraud is in the US national interest. It includes the story about
EuroNext, which moves us one step forward to the full integration of
financial markets. It links US and European financial markets. Their
control will certainly be made easier. It includes a Special Report on
the Credit Market Derivatives, some information on their complex
structure, and evidence of meltdown events in progress. It includes an
update on the German juggernaut economic success story and the
contrasting European housing bubbles in England and Spain.
Does anybody
of sound mind and clear thought process now doubt my claim made in the
last two years that the European Union economy is stronger than that of
the United States? They chose not to wreck their economy by pumping
housing equity via debt into it. Europe does not possess a SUBPRIME
MORTGAGE market, complete with associated toxic collateralized bonds. My
forecast made in 2005 and 2006 was that in time, THE USECONOMY WOULD BE
THE WEAKEST IN THE INDUSTRIAL WORLD. We are here, but the USFed Keystone
Cops are caught in a policy nightmare. When they awaken to act, gold
will zoom toward $1000 in price, along with silver toward $30. An urgent
interest rate cut cycle will occur, come hell or high water with the
doomed USDollar.
In
fact, as analyzed in the May report, the USGovt knuckleheads might want
a lower USDollar to ‘teach China a lesson’ akin to shooting Uncle
Same in the kneecap. Gold and silver are acting much like coiled
springs. To make matters worse, the energy market is looking strong,
both crude oil and natural gas. If not depletion, it is Nigerian
bandits. If not Saudi Ghawar on the downslope, it is Mexican Cantarell.
The US Military does its job in keeping Iraqi output low, making huge
demand on supplies for military equipment. The summer driving season
will draw more oil from inventories. The summer air conditioning season
is here, with more drain on electricity and natural gas fuel supplies.

©
2007 Jim Willie, CB
Editorial
Archive
Jim
Willie CB is a statistical analyst in marketing research and retail
forecasting. He holds a Ph.D. in
Statistics. His career has
stretched over 24 years. He
aspires to thrive in the financial editor world, unencumbered by the
limitations of economic credentials. Visit his free website to find articles from topflight authors at
www.GoldenJackass.com.
For personal questions about subscriptions, contact him
at “JimWillieCB@aol.com”
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