Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Britain: Cheap Chinese Goods Make Burglars 'Redundant'. "Not Worth Stealing"

Where would we be without research? From PhysOrg:

Globalisation, and particularly cheaper electronic goods from China and the Far East, has altered behaviour among Britain's burglars according research in progress at the University of Leicester.

James Treadwell, a lecturer in Criminology from the University of Leicester's Department of Criminology suggests that the incredible rise of the new superpower has made burglars 'redundant' due to the decline in cost of household goods traditionally targeted by thieves.

Treadwell is currently researching how has changed over time. He commented:

"The last decade has been a remarkable one where crime is concerned, with massive changes and shifts. If we look back to the 1980s and 1990s, the type of staple crimes would be, for example, very often burglary and car crime and those crimes worked because they followed a business model and it was possible to break into a house and steal a and sell that at a profit.

"Cheap labour in China has had an impact on the type of crime that's committed in the UK and the type of goods that are stolen today. Gradually, the prices of such goods has fallen so low as to they almost have no resale value. If you can buy a DVD player for £19.99, it's simply not worth stealing.">>>MORE

"Fiorina suggests California consider bankruptcy"

Because there is no protection afforded to states in the U.S. bankruptcy code, the only thing a state can do is default, which would eventually lead to a Federal court issuing a writ of mandamus (We command), "issued by a superior court to compel a lower court or a government officer to perform mandatory or purely ministerial duties correctly", i.e. ordering the state to raise taxes, cut spending and pay its damn bills.
If a California court issues the order it is called a mandate.
From the Los Angeles Times' PoliCal blog:

Republican U.S. Senate candidate Carly Fiorina suggested that the state of California should consider declaring bankruptcy, apparently unaware that states cannot do that under federal bankruptcy law.

The comments were first reported Tuesday in the Riverside Press-Telegram. Fiorina, the former head of Hewlett-Packard, hosted a business roundtable at a cement plant in Colton, Calif., and a businessman asked her if the state should consider filing for bankruptcy.

"I think it should always be considered," Fiorina replied. "Whether that is the right approach now, I don't know. I think bankruptcy, as a possibility, at the very least focuses the mind on what has to be done to salvage a situation."

Under federal law, municipalities can declare bankruptcy, as Orange County notably did in 1994. But states do not have the same ability.

A spokesman for one of Fiorina’s rivals in the GOP race to take on incumbent Sen. Barbara Boxer said the gaffe shows that Fiorina, who has never sought political office before and has failed to vote in many elections, is unprepared....MORE

German coalition agrees to delay solar cuts (FSLR; STP; YGE)

As we said in the Jan. 29 post "Germany aims to delay solar incentive cuts: sources say" (FSLR)"':

There's going to be a rush to get as many installations in as possible.
First Solar should benefit in the immediate term, they have the capacity and aren't shy about offering financing and/or rebates....
Yesterday FSLR regained a couple percent of the recent one-month 22.38% decline (intraday Jan. 7-Feb.8), the stock is flat in very early premarket trading.
From Reuters, Feb. 9:

* Solar incentive cut deeper than originally proposed

* Delay would benefit module, cell producers

* Agreement on farm land sites still needed

* No final decision yet

* Solar stocks gain worldwide (Recasts, adds analyst quote, updates stock prices

Germany's ruling coalition has agreed to delay cuts in solar power incentives by two months, parliamentary officials said on Tuesday, easing pressure on solar companies so they will have more time to sell components.

Support for new rooftop solar installations will be cut by 16 percent from June 1, said Hans-Peter Friedrich, parliamentary group leader for the Christian Social Union (CSU), the Bavarian sister party to Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU). The original plan was to introduce the cuts on April 1.

Solar stocks around the globe gained on the news, with shares of Q-Cells (QCEG.DE), SolarWorld (SWVG.DE), First Solar (FSLR.O), Suntech (STP.N), SMA Solar (S92G.DE) and Yingli (YGE.N) up 1.8 to 4.4 percent.

"It would certainly be positive for the sector if that was the case. The sector would be able to benefit from stronger growth in April, May and June -- a strong seasonal time for installations in Germany," said Ardour Capital analyst Adam Krop....MORE

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Transmission Builders and Suppliers (ABB; AMSC; BGC; PWR)

A handy table from Tom Konrad's AltEnergyStocks post "2010: The Year of the Strong Grid? Part II":

(...If Cash Flow from Operations (CFO) is positive, then T = (Total Liabilities (L) - Cash)/ CFO - the time it will take to pay off debt using internal cash flows and cash on hand. I consider anything less than a few years good....)

Company Current Ratio T P/E (trailing) Yield
ABB Group (ABB) 1.7 instantly 16.7 2.3%
American Superconductor (AMSC) 2.8 instantly N/A 0
Composite Technology Corp (CPTC.OB) 0.6 N/A N/A 0
CVTech Group (CVT.TO) 1.5x 7 years 24 0
General Cable (BGC) 2.1x instantly 12.3 0
Jinpan International (JST) 2.3x 6 months 10.6 0.6%
MasTec (MTZ) 1.7x 2 years 13.9 0
MYR Group (MYRG) 1.6x instantly 16.7 0
Pike Electric (PIKE) 2.3x 1 year 27 0
Quanta Services (PWR) 3.6x instantly 19 0
Resin Systems (RSSYF.PK)

I could not find current financial statements.

Siemens (SI) 1.2x 13 years 10 2.6%
Valmont Industries (VMI) 2.6x instantly 12.8 0.8%
Wesco International (WCC) 2.2x 2 years 9.2 0

...In general, the companies in this industry show a good deal of financial strength. The only ones in my list that I would eliminate from consideration on these measures are:

  • Composite Technology and Siemens, because of relatively weak current ratios. I also recently wrote about some other worries I have about Composite.
  • CVTech and Siemens because too much debt will constrain their flexibility.
  • ABB, MYR, Pike, and Quanta because they are too expensive from the standpoint of price to earnings.

The other financial strength measures are more important for negative earnings companies such as American Superconductor and Composite Technology. Since AMSC appears strong, other valuation measures should be considered to determine if it's overpriced before making a decision to purchase....MORE

Suntech looking to triple US sales, add dealers (STP)

From Reuters:

* Suntech aims for U.S. market share of 20 pct

China's biggest solar panel maker, Suntech Power Holdings Co Ltd (STP.N), aims to triple sales in the United States market and expand its dealer network this year, a Suntech executive told Reuters on Monday.

"Suntech has been more in a situation where there is more demand for our products than we had supply," Suntech Chief Strategy Officer Steven Chan said in an interview. "If we had the ability to produce more panels, we could sell the panels."

His comments come as the solar industry is hoping for a rebound this year after a difficult 2009 when prices for solar parts fell and the credit crisis choked off funding for new projects.

Investors fear that proposed subsidy cuts in Germany, the world's largest solar market, could cast a pall over the market.

But Chan expects any panel price reductions in countries other than Germany to be "very, very tempered" because of increasing demand.

He is confident Suntech would be able to grow its share of the U.S. solar power market to 20 percent in 2010 from about 15 percent last year.

Suntech is expanding its capacity and announced last month that it has selected the city of Goodyear in the Phoenix, Arizona, area for the site of its first U.S. plant.

Chan said he expects Suntech to get a boost from a growing U.S. solar market, which some analysts say could double in size this year. He also expects business to continue improving as financing gets easier.

The company plans to add another 50 dealers this year in the United States to bring the total number of dealers to over 300.

The U.S. plant will begin production in September with an annual capacity of 30 megawatts with potential to expand to 120 megawatts.

Suntech is expecting a boost this year from a further fall in prices of polysilicon, the material that is used in majority of solar panels.

Chan expects polysilicon prices to fall to a range of $35-$40 per kilogram from the current price of about $55 per kilogram....MORE

Is a HUGE "Head and Shoulders" Top Forming?

An interesting chart via The Market Oracle (the pertinent bit is in the middle):



"China Warns US Relationship Turning Increasingly Sour" and "Five ETFs For A Trade War With China"

There's an App for that.*
From AntiWar.com:

China’s Foreign Ministry warned again today about the possibility of worsening ties with the United States, slamming the Obama Administration for its plan to meet the Dalai Lama in a pending visit.

Chinese FM Yang Jiechi

The Chinese spokesman cautioned that the US should “realize the high sensitivity of Tibet-related issues” The Dalai Lama visit is far from the only incident in recent weeks causing tension.

China is also furious at an Obama Administration plan to sell several billion dollars worth of weapons to Taiwan, a plan announced last week. There have been calls for boycotts of American arms companies in retaliation.

The United States has criticized China over a cyber attack on Google.cn. Google has threatened to leave the nation in response to the attack and the US State Department has condemned China’s censorship of the internet.

All these incidents add up to a growing rift between the two nations, one which will almost certainly complicate administration attempts to push through sanctions against Iran. China has opposed the sanctions, and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has threatened China with “isolation” over their reluctance. Though the US threat is likely an empty one, in the current tense environment it might push China further away from supporting new sanctions.

From ETF Database:

Sino-American relations are quickly reaching a breaking point, as the Obama administration continues to spar with the People’s Republic of China over a variety of issues. The first clash was seen in the tariffs proposed on Chinese steel pipe manufacturers last year, followed by another dispute related to tire producers shortly thereafter. The Chinese took a hard line approach in their response, threatening to apply similar duties to American products such as agricultural goods, much to the dismay of American producers. Although tempers cooled over the winter, tensions are heating up between these two economic rivals following a series of recent developments....
...Although a trade war still seems unlikely at this point, the possibility is growing as relations are put under more pressure. Should America and China find themselves in a protracted trade dispute in which tariffs rise on a multitude of products, several ETFs could see a big move....

...Market Vectors Vietnam ETF VNM

If firms believe that prolonged tariffs will be imposed upon companies in China, they may try to move operations to low-cost Vietnam or chose to open up shop in Hanoi instead of Beijing. Vietnam offers multinationals cheap labor costs, a large market, and distance from the fraying relations between the two superpowers. This could allow Vietnam to sell products to both countries, allowing its manufacturing base to get a boost from any significant tariffs. This increased investment will also boost financials firms which stand to benefit from capital inflows as well as higher employment levels. The financials and industrials sectors make up more than 60% of VNM.

Global X China Consumer ETF CHIQ

In order to prevent a worsening unemployment situation that would be caused by American tariffs (some Chinese sources are estimating that over 100,000 Chinese would lose their jobs) China may have to significantly increase domestic consumption to pick up slack for decreased American purchases. If the government is able to spur consumption, it could have a huge impact on CHIQ which has about 21% allocated to consumer services and 28% to retail, two segments that are likely to see a boost in demand from increased spending.

Industrials Select Sector SPDR XLI

While tariffs are sure to hurt foreign manufacturing, they will likely help struggling American manufacturing firms that will be protected from low-cost competition in China. Firms such as General Electric and United Technology Group, which make up 18.3% of XLI, stand to benefit if double-digit tariffs like the 35% duty that was put on Chinese tires are applied to other products as well. These duties would go a long way to making American manufacturing competitive, at least domestically, which would help to boost the outlook of the entire industrials sector....MORE

*From PE Hub:

"Need venture capital for your iPad-related startup? There’s an AppFund for that."

From Big Money's The App Economy:

"Helicopter parenting more efficient than ever thanks to AT&T's kid-spying FamilyMap app. (GeekSugar)"

From TechCrunch:

  • “If you just murdered your friend and need to find the nearest city dump, there’s an app for that.”
  • “Your momma’s so fat, there’s an app for that.”
  • “If you want to write an app that makes fun of apps, there’s an app for that.”
  • “If you want to get your drunk roommate out of bed, there’s an app for that.”
  • “If your reading this, there’s an app for that.”

Feel Like Shaking A Baby To Death? There's An App For That.

Want To Avoid Swine Flu? There's An App For That Too.

Oh Berkshire Hathaway Fans: "'Black Swan' Author Nassim Taleb: Warren Buffett May Just Be Lucky" (BRK.B; BRK.A)

How to keep your name in the headlines by making a sophomore statistical point (sample size, error bars, confidence levels).
From CNBC:

Nassim Taleb says there isn't enough evidence to show that Warren Buffett's skill, and not his good luck, is responsible for the billionaire's enormous investing success over the decades.

Taleb is the author who gained fame and fortune writing about 'Black Swans' and the impact of other improbable events ahead of the subprime mortgage market's collapse.

In an "interrogation" interview that starts in the online magazine ai5000 and is continued on its website, Taleb is quoted as saying:

"I don’t want to spend too much time on Buffett. George Soros has 2 million times more statistical evidence that his results are not chance than Buffett does. Soros is vastly more robust. I am not saying Buffett doesn’t have skill—I’m just saying we don’t have enough evidence to say Buffett isn’t doing it by chance."

An expanded paperback edition of Taleb's Black Swan is scheduled for release in May....

I get a kick out of ai5000's motto:

Insight for the World's Most Sophisticated Asset Owners

"Siemens aims for 1/5 of world smart grids business" (SI)

From Reuters (India):

Germany's Siemens (SIEGn.DE: Quote) sees the world market for intelligent electricity networks roughly doubling to more than 30 billion euros ($40.98 billion) by 2014 and aims to take a fifth of that market.

A senior executive of the German engineering conglomerate said on Monday that intelligent electricity networks, also known as "smart grids", combine power distribution with information and communications technology, such as electric metering and billing systems, energy management and grid status monitoring.

These grids are seen as important in the future to integrate expected growing volumes of electricity from renewable energy resources, such as wind and solar power, into existing power networks.

Leif Getreuer, executive vice president at the group's Danish subsidiary Siemens A/S, gave the forecast in a briefing for journalists on Monday and said the Danish unit would play a big role.

Siemens had revenues of about 1 billion euros from the smart grids business in 2009.

"We aim to grow faster than the market, as one always does," Getreuer told Reuters....MORE

HT: earth2tech

"The Future of Building Materials"

From Mental Floss (on the blogroll, at left):

My home expansion was completed enough to move into in December, which was none too soon for me. We had the new rooms built the old-fashioned way, with wood structural supports, Masonite clapboard, and fiberglass insulation. If we had waited another year or two those building materials might have been completely different, considering all the space-age technology coming down the pike.

Aerogel

200_aerogelI wrote about Aerogel and its wonderful properties a couple of years ago. Aerogel is extremely lightweight, which is great not only for transporting materials, but also takes a load off of load-bearing building support structures. Industrial research is bringing the cost of Aerogel down to the point where it might be the new standard insulation material for buildings. The substance is fire resistant and insulates against heat and cold several times better than fiberglass. Three companies are either working on or already offering Aerogel insulation materials.

Spray-on Photovoltaic Paint

We’ve all thought about putting solar energy collectors on our roofs, but the initial cost of such a system is downright scary. Sure, it will pay for itself, but it may take quite a while. The solar energy industry may be in for a jolt from a form of paint that will allow manufacturers to spray solar cells directly onto building materials. The paint was developed at Swansea University while researchers were looking for ways to keep paint from degrading in sunlight. This new paint uses tiny dye-sensitive solar cells instead of silicon solar collectors, and can be sprayed onto metal sheets as fast as traditional paint. These steel sheets are then used for roofs and walls of large buildings. It should only be a matter of time before this technology is adapted for construction of family homes or even as a retrofitting on older homes.

Graphene

160grapheneGraphene is a wafer-thin board of bonded carbon atoms (actually only one atom thick). Scientists have developed a LECs (light emitting electromechanical cells) made of graphene that can be used for walls or ceilings that are lighting sources themselves. No lamps, no bulbs, and the amount of light can be adjusted for your needs. I don’t know whether you’ll be able to put nails in these walls -if not, well, a ceiling is where you need the light anyway. It’s not yet available as a building material, but soon someone will make a killing off this idea....MORE

Monday, February 8, 2010

Three Stocks that Didn't Go Down Today: Tesla, Solyndra, Codexis (CDXS; SOLY; TSLA) and a Money Management Story

That's because they're still putting their IPO's together.
As I was re-writing the headline I couldn't help thinking of Cheers' Cliff Clavin.*
From Greentech:

Greentech IPO Scorecard: Tesla, Solyndra, Codexis

For better or for worse, 2010 looks to be the year of the greentech IPO.

According to a study by Ernst & Young, 53 companies filed paperwork to hold initial public offerings in Q4 2009 -- the highest number of new registrants in a single quarter since 2007. That means that there are more deals in the IPO pipeline than there have been for more than two years.

And a number of those IPOs happen to be high-profile offerings in the greentech sector.

For several years I've been predicting that 2010 would be the year of the Greentech IPO. Surprisingly, especially to me, I seem to have been right.

Some facts and figures on the greentech IPOs now on-deck:

Solyndra

Solyndra's innovative photovoltaic glass cylinders are full of it -- full of vacuum, silicone and thin-film CIGS in a relatively low-efficiency configuration. Several of Solyndra's VC investors have told me that the real value for Solyndra is in the cost savings in the Balance of System. Will the institutional investors who drive the success of an IPO buy the Solyndra BoS story? Especially when the cost per watt of c-Si and FSLR CdTe continues to fall? And the cost of Solyndra's product seems somewhat bloated?

A lot rests on the shoulders of Solyndra: the perception of the viability of CIGS technology, the perception of the viability of VC investment in solar manufacturing, and the skill of the DOE in picking technology winners.

We parsed the Solyndra S-1 here.

GTM Research analyst Shyam Mehta did a masterful job at dissecting the Solyndra situation here.

Here is the Solyndra S-1.

An exploration of Solyndra's price per watt.

Tesla Motors

Like Solyndra and A123, Tesla is a "story stock." And like A123 and Solyndra, Tesla anticipates "continuing losses for at least the foreseeable future." A123 and Telas stand as proxy for the EV vison, Solyndra for the promise of new solar technologies....MORE

*When Cliff makes it to the Final Jeopardy question with an insurmountable lead, Alex Trebek asks the contestants to identify Archibald Leach, Bernard Schwartz and Lucille Lesueur and says

"Cliff, unless you've done something incredibly stupid like wagering everything, you've won"

Cliff bet all his money.

His answer was "Who are three people who have never been in my kitchen".

The categories for the game were:

CIVIL SERVANTS
STAMPS FROM AROUND THE WORLD
MOTHERS AND SONS
BEER, BAR TRIVIA
CELIBACY
Cliff's "Dream Board".
In the 2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions the categories of the Double Jeopardy round were:

Double Jeopardy! Round

Alex:
And for those of you who are fans of Jeopardy! as well as Cheers, that great comedy series, you will recognize our categories in this round...

CIVIL
SERVANTS

STAMPS FROM AROUND THE WORLD

MOTHERS & SONS

BEER

"BAR" TRIVIA

CELIBACY

From our February '08 post "MarketBeat Gets Vedic on Ambac (ABK; MBI)":

Five words I never thought I'd string together.*

And that answer for some reason reminds me of Cliff Clavin on Jeopardy!**:

"Who are three people who have never been in my kitchen?"

Years ago I introduced an Indian guy to a Chicago trader:
"Jerry, this is Siva Kumar"
"Huh....Not a local, huh."...

Here's Cliff:

California Prime Jumbo Mortgage Delinquency Rate Rises to 11.3%

Is it just me or does that seem like a big number?
From the Los Angeles Times' Money & Co. blog:

People who hold jumbo loans on pricey U.S. properties continued to struggle in January as more Americans lose their jobs and property values have plummeted, according to a report released Monday.

Jumbo loans were popular -- and often necessary to afford homes in pricey areas like Southern California -- during the heady years of the boom.

Jumbo loans are generally defined as being above certain conforming limits set by mortgage titans Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. (The conforming limit for single-family homes was $417,000 from 2006 to 2008 but was increased temporarily by federal lawmakers in early 2008 to $729,750 in certain high-cost areas, including Los Angeles County.)

Overall, delinquencies of 60 days or more on prime jumbo loans that were packaged into securities and sold to investors rose to 9.6% in January, up from 9.2% in December and 3.7% a year earlier, according to the report by the Fitch Ratings agency in New York.

California, which comprises 44% of the market, saw its delinquency rate rise to 11.3% in January from 10.8% in December and 4.1% a year earlier....MORE

Traders in biggest ever euro short

Mr. Fire Marshal, is it getting crowded in here?
From the Financial Times' Money Supply blog:

Traders and hedge funds have bet nearly $8bn against the euro, amassing the biggest short position in the single currency since its launch on fears of a eurozone debt crisis.

Investors increased their bets against the euro to record levels in the week to February 2, according to the latest figures from the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, which are often used as a proxy of hedge fund activity....MORE

"Income Correlates with Orgasm Strength"

Where would we be without research?
From Improbable Research (on the blogroll):

Income and orgasms are statistical food for thought, thanks to Pollet and Nettle:

Partner Wealth Predicts Self-Reported Orgasm Frequency in a Sample of Chinese Women,” Thomas V. Pollet and Daniel Nettle, Evolution and Human Behavior, vol. 30, no. 2, March 2009, pp. 146-151. (Thanks to Ig Nobel Prize winner Francis Fesmire for bringing this to our attention.) The authors, at Newcastle University, report:

“We investigated the relationship between women’s self-reported orgasm frequency and the characteristics of their partners in a large representative sample from the Chinese Health and Family Life Survey. We found that women report more frequent orgasms the higher their partner’s income is.”

Also at IR:
Saudi's Reject Pakistani Diplomat Whose Name Translates to 'Biggest Dick'

“The Dark Side of Management Decisions: Organisational Psychopaths,”

Dynamic Underclothing Microclimate
Don’t mess with Bond

What are the survival prospects for female characters in the James Bond movies? A new research project from Cleveland State University and Kent State University performed a quantitative content analysis for 195 female characters in 20 out of the 22 Bond films – uncovering in the process some clearcut predictors of their survivability.

“End-of-film mortality is predicted by sexual activity, ethical status (good vs. bad), and attempting to kill Bond.“

The research is slated for publication in the journal Sex Roles

Utility Infrastructure: Addressing the Aging Electric and Water Systems (ABB; BGC; PWR)

The three I'm most interested in are ABB, General Cable and Quanta. Although there's no immediate catalyst to greater-than-market returns right now they are on the screen.
From Equities Magazine via NASDAQ:

While the U.S. population in general continues to be enamored by the constant stream of new technology “toys” being offered on a daily basis, they pay little attention to the technology that powers the gadgets—the nation’s electric grid.

And while they spend untold millions of dollars a year on bottled water to drink—which, science is now showing, is often no safer than tap water and thousands of times more expensive, not to mention the ecological disaster of the discarded plastic bottles—they pay little attention to the water that comes into their homes for cooking, showering, and washing clothes and dishes.

In sum, people take the electric grid and the water infrastructure for granted. There is a serious problem with this thinking. These infrastructures were designed for lives of 40 to 50 years, but are both now 100 years old in certain parts of the country. The electric grid is collapsing over our heads, and the water infrastructure is disintegrating below our feet.
Governments, businesses and the public in general are finally starting to take notice, though, and they don’t like what they see. Despite the fact that they would like to continue to use money for more “fun” things, it is becoming increasingly evident that money absolutely must be spent on utility infrastructure. It’s much like the homeowners who enjoy spending discretionary income on remodeling and decorating projects, only to find that their homes’ foundations are cracking and must be repaired.

According to John Rogers, CFA, senior vice president and managing director of institutional research for D.A. Davidson & Co., things are on the move. “Much of the federal stimulus packages have been targeted at upgrading various types of infrastructure, such as roads and grids,” he says. In addition, according to Rogers, it seems that there is more “political will” and interest in spending on infrastructure. “Politicians in particular are getting more interested in funding some of it,” he notes....MORE

By William Atkinson

HT: Dr. Hazlett at The Climate + Energy Project.

"Which Organs Can I Live Without, and How Much Cash Can I Get for Them?"

From Popular Science:

First, a disclaimer: Selling your organs is illegal in the United States. It’s also very dangerous. Handing off an organ is risky enough when done in a top hospital, even more so if you’re doing it for cash in a back alley. No, really: Don’t do this. OK? OK.

There are many organs one can theoretically do without, or for which there’s a backup. Most folks can spare a kidney, a portion of their liver, a lung, some intestines, and an eyeball, and still live a long life. That said, donating a lung, a piece of liver or a section of intestines is a very complicated surgery, so it’s not done frequently on the black market. And no one’s going to make much cash on an eyeball. “In the U.S., there’s a fairly steady supply of donated corneas from corpses,” says Sean Fitzpatrick, director of public affairs at the New England Organ Bank. “There’s pretty much no market demand for eyes.” Giving up a kidney, though, is a relatively simple surgery that has netted desperate people a few bucks.

Now, black-market organ dealers don’t do a great job of filing taxes, but here are some prices based on rumored deals and reports from the World Heath Organization. In India, a kidney fetches around $20,000. In China, buyers will pay $40,000 or more. A good, healthy kidney from Israel goes for $160,000.

Don’t expect to pocket all that dough, though. “The person giving up the organ only gets a fraction of the fee,” says Sally Satel, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute think tank who studies the prices paid by legal and illegal organ-donor operations. After the organ broker—the guy who sets up your kidney-for-cash transaction—takes his cut, he needs to pay for travel, the surgeon, medical supplies and a few “look-the-other-way” payoffs. Most people get $1,000 to $10,000 for their kidney (probably much less than you were hoping for)....MORE

HT: Economix

S&P 500 Now 3 Standard Deviations Below 50-Day Moving Average (and Goldman's CFO Swings by) GS

From Bespoke Investment Group:

The S&P 500 is now nearly as oversold as it was at some of the worst points of the financial crisis. Below is a chart of the S&P 500's trading range using 3 standard deviations above and below the index's 50-day moving average. The index is currently trading right at the bottom of this range, which didn't happen that often during the last bear market. It definitely hasn't been this oversold at any point during the rally. The index is now down 9% from its closing high on January 19th, which is very close to the standard 10% correction.


That reminded me of a '09 post:
David Viniar, CFO of Goldman Sachs Blows Smoke at Journalists on AIG
I'm going to reprint the whole thing because there is talk, with Goldman's stock down, of the company going private. The bit on standard deviations in the markets is toward the bottom:

Goldman held their conference call with the journos and I am sure there will be commentary far more erudite than anything I could muster, so I will focus on just one small piece of the call. MarketBeat's David Gaffen has the link to Deal Journal's live-blog and says:

...David Viniar, CFO of Goldman Sachs, basically suggested that since nobody knew that AIG was a house of cards, nobody had any reason to suspect anything. “AIG was a triple-A rated company, one of the largest and considered one of the most sophisticated in the world,” he said. And in a response to a question on how Goldman allowed its exposure to AIG to get as large as it did, Mr. Viniar describes positions made in 2006 and early 2007 as if it was a different age, a more innocent time, when magical dwarves ruled the land, before the ring of power had been forged.

“It was a very long time ago,” Mr. Viniar says. “AIG at the time was one of the largest, strongest companies in the entire world, and they were very sophisticated, or appeared to be, a very sophisticated counterparty.” The firm later scaled back trades — by the end of 2007, according to Mr. Viniar....

My question is, "If Goldman Sachs were still a partnership, would they have entered into these transactions in the same size?"

The answer, of course, is no.

If partners equity were at risk, there is no way that they would have depended on ratings agencies to ascertain the strength of their counterparty.

Junior partners would be expected to run honey traps on AIG employees.

Lower level employees would hone their dumpster-diving skills.

Whatever it takes to gain competitive intelligence and safeguard the partnership's capital.

See also: "The optimal design of Ponzi schemes in finite economies"

Reading Mr. Viniar's words, I am reminded of his statement on market moves in August, 2007:

“We were seeing things that were 25-standard deviation moves, several days in a row”
Several folks, when they finally quit laughing, pointed out how blatently Mr. V was spinning.
Most however underestimated how infrequent 25SD events are, the most common guess being once in 100,000 years. Tee hee.
In a snappy little eight page paper "How Unlucky is 25 Sigma" we see that at 7 Sigma the odds are:
...The reader will note that as k gets bigger the probabilities of a k-sigma event fall
extremely rapidly:
• a 3-sigma event is to be expected about every 741 days or about 1 trading day
in every three years;

• a 4-sigma event is to be expected about every 31,560 days or about 1 trading
day in 126 years (!);

• a 5-sigma event is to be expected every 3,483,046 days or about 1 day every
13,932 years(!!)

• a 6-sigma event is to be expected every 1,009,976,678 days or about 1 day
every 4,039,906 years;

• a 7-sigma event is to be expected every 7.76e+11 days – the number of zero
digits is so large that Excel now reports the number of days using scientific
notation, and this number is to be interpreted as 7.76 days with decimal point
pushed back 11 places. This frequency corresponds to 1 day in 3,105,395,365
years....
The authors go on to describe the problems involved in computing numbers on the cosmological scales required for 25 standard deviations. A good read, both for the statistically challenged and for pros like Viniar, a very highly paid PR guy, in addition to his CFO duties.

Citi reinvents end-of-the-world insurance (C)

This is new? Long and Short Capital had some very interesting exotics a couple years ago.*
From Felix Salmon at Reuters:

In hindsight, one of the silliest and most dangerous excesses of the Great Moderation was the large number of companies — foremost among them AIG, although there were lots of monoline insurers in the same trade — basically selling insurance on the world coming to an end. It’s a great trade: either the world doesn’t come to an end, and you make lots of money, or the world does come to an end, and it doesn’t matter ‘cos you’re bust anyway.

Now, however, after seeing how that trade worked out, we’re wiser, and no large and leveraged financial institution would have the chutzpah to start selling world-coming-to-an-end insurance. Would they?

Credit specialists at Citi are considering launching the first derivatives intended to pay out in the event of a financial crisis…

“The great thing about the index is that it hedges your funding costs while being very simple to trade. I believe it will reduce the systemic risk in the industry, akin to how the advent of swaps means people don’t worry about interest-rate exposures any more – they just pay a fee to hedge it,” [says Citi's Terry Benzschawel].

Like a swap, the contracts envisaged by Citi would be entered into without an up-front premium, with money changing hands according to the index’s movements around a fair strike value.

I’d forgive you if your eyes started rolling after just the first four words: the phrase “credit specialists at Citi” is not exactly the kind of thing which instills enormous confidence in analysts and investors these days. After all, it was credit specialists at Citi who ended up losing the bank billions of dollars on trades which were meant to be too safe to fail. And this trade is in many ways even worse than the one put on by AIG, because Citi doesn’t even get any insurance premiums up front, but still needs to pay out enormously in the event of a crisis....MORE

When the Large Hadron collider was about to fire up we posted (April '08):

How many Nobel Laureates Does it Take to Make Change...And: End of the Universe Puts
...That is why Long or Short is now offering LHC End of the Universe Puts. It’s a simple put option wherein the buyer retains the write to sell the Universe at a strike price of “Existing”. Based on our Black-Holes model used to value all “end of the world” options, the July 2008 vintage options are currently priced at $20....
Followed by (Sept. '08):
Large Hadron Collider Starts Up, Earth Suvives, End of the World Puts Plummet

...UPDATE: The marketers at LoS Capital* are still pushing product:

...We continue to reiterate the importance of LHC End of the Universe Puts.

“The LHC is a discovery machine,” said CERN Director General Robert Aymar

If this is true and you extrapolate it out, it is only a matter of time until they discover the end of the Earth and existence as we know it. Who is to say they won’t do that tomorrow? Again, not us.

Recommendation: These securities do NOT benefit from the implicit guarantee of the US government, God or your locally relevant deity. Wink wink nudge nudge, but between you and me, they DO.

*At Long or Short LLC, we leverage our superior intellect and extensive investing experience to recommend explicit Long or Short positions and related abstract trades, which may or may not be possible with real world financial derivatives. We use science to improve the lives of the rich.
More About LoS

How big is the threat to carbon trading? (CAO.L)

I use Camco International (CAO) as a tracker for the group. It's Al Gore's favorite carbon trader.
After trading at £22 just prior to the Copenhagen gabfest the stock dropped to as low as £13.50 on Friday.
From the Financial Times' EnergySource blog:

The FT’s Tony Jackson chronicles some of the problems faced by the carbon market recently and concludes the whole system could be at risk - news that would of course be welcomed by some.

Carbon prices may have stabilised after the fallout from Copenhagen, he writes, but those hopes for a dramatic increase in the scale of the total global emissions trading has taken a blow in recent months, from Copenhagen and also from faltering efforts in the US.

Meanwhile, investment in the Clean Development Mechanism - offset projects that create credits that can be substituted for allowances - has fallen, as have low-carbon investments.

More worryingly, says Jackson, the scope of the scheme is being ‘nibbled away at’:

Begin with the mooted UK price floor for carbon.

Carbon traders hate that idea. The market is bedevilled by uncertainties already, without adding more. Where would the floor be set? How long for? And what would be the mechanism for changing it?

The problem is that the carbon price – about €13 a tonne today – is miles from the €50-€100 needed to make renewable power projects economic. Far better, analysts say, to impose a supplementary tax on fossil-fuel generators, or subsidise renewables directly.

Then there are all the proposals to tackle emissions without carbon trading at all - such as regulation to improve efficiency measures such as insulation as a way of reducing emissions.

And at the other extreme, such as creating an integrated European market for renewables, the job belongs to the public sector. In other words, subsidies again.

Nibble, nibble.

There’s the problem of offsets...MORE

LUMBER FUTURES SURGE BEFORE HOUSING’S LAST GASP

Either the commodity is wrong or the new housing biz is going to pick up.
From The Pragmatic Capitalist:

Lumber futures have surged nearly 60% since the beginning of October despite mixed signals in recent housing data (read Mike Farrell’s must read housing comments here). Random Lengths recently reported the continuing substantial weakness in housing as lumber production declined 23% vs 2008:

U.S. lumber production through November totaled 21.205 billion board feet, down 23.0% from the January-November 2008 figure, according to the Western Wood Products Association. Through the first 11 months last year, production in the West declined 22.3% compared to the same period of 2008; production in the South fell 23.7% during the same period. Nationwide, November 2009 production totaled 1.620 billion feet, down 16.6% from the November 2008 total and off 18.9% from October 2009.

Despite this, lumber futures hit 29 month highs last week as buyers anticipate the strong Spring building season. Lumber distributors have been forced to restock supplies as builders anticipate another strong Spring housing season largely due to the home buyers tax credit which ends April 30th.

lumber LUMBER FUTURES SURGE BEFORE HOUSINGS LAST GASP

Lumber futures are notoriously seasonal and this year’s price action likely points to strong demand in the housing market. While this bodes well for the near-term action in the real estate market it could also very well be the last gasp before the stimulus begins to run dry....MORE

Fannie Mae Freddie Mac in Limbo, Speculators, well, Speculating (FNM; FRE)

UPDATE: From Options Insider a look at the first story:

...If this is the case, the investor is extending the short put position out to the January 2012 contract and expecting the government agency to ultimately survive the next couple of years. In this scenario, the trader keeps the $0.40 in premium on the sale of the fresh batch of put options if Fannie’s share price rallies above $1.00 by expiration in 2012. But, there are a other possible explanations for the trade. It is possible that the open interest at the March $1.0 strike is unrelated to today’s activity. In this second scenario, the trader is essentially predicting that shares will erode ahead of March expiration....MORE
Original post:
Regular readers know we are long term bearish on the common equity of the former GSE's.

It is a lock that mortgages will continue to be originated and securitized, less so that Fannie and Freddie will survive in their current form and almost inconceivable that common shareholders will realize more than book value (a negative number).

The companies currently have negative cash flows and if and when they turn positive, the claims of the debtholders and preferred stock holders, including the U.S. Treasury, will suck up everything for the next decade.

Here are some of the recent takes on where this might end up. We have a lot of stuff on these two, If you are interested, do a 'Search Blog' using the keywords Fannie or the symbols FRE and FNM.
First up MarketBeat last Friday:

‘Hog-Wild’ on Fannie Mae Puts

In the world of options, it’s easy to stick out.

This afternoon’s Options Update from Interactive Brokers highlighted a large position traded Friday by an investor in Fannie Mae options.

“Mortgage financier Fannie Mae jumped onto our ‘most active by options volume’ market scanner after one investor went hog-wild with put options,” the note said.

The investor bought 118,000 March $1 put contracts at $0.15 a piece and sold 118,000 January 2012 $1 puts for $0.40 each. The trade brought a net credit of $2.95 million to the investor.

IB has two scenarios for the large trade.

  1. Open interest of 156,689 puts at the March $1.0 strike indicate the trader could be buying-to-close a previously established 118,000-lot short put position initiated back in September of 2009. If this is the case, the investor is extending the short put position out to the January 2012 contract and expecting the government agency to ultimately survive the next couple of years. In this scenario, the trader keeps the $0.40 in premium on the sale of the fresh batch of put options if Fannie’s share price rallies above $1.00 by expiration in 2012....MORE

Next up Bloomberg (via BusinessWeek) on the Government's investment in the two:

No Turning Back on Fannie, Freddie, Lockhart Says (Update1)

The U.S. investment in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac may be too deep to effectively transition the mortgage-finance companies out of government control and back into the hands of private investors, their former regulator said.

“I would love to figure out how to get there, but I think we may be too far along the line of government involvement,” James B. Lockhart III, who ran the Federal Housing Finance Agency and its predecessor agency from 2006 until August 2009, said in a Bloomberg Television interview today.

Lockhart, 63, said he wasn’t excited about putting the companies into conservatorship in 2008 and pushed back against suggestions to take the more drastic step of receivership. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the largest sources of money for U.S. home loans, were seized by FHFA 17 months ago because of their risk of failing and have since survived on $110.6 billion in taxpayer- funded aid.

“Most of that money will never be seen again,” said Lockhart, who is now a vice chairman for Invesco Ltd.’s WL Ross & Co. “They were just allowed to leverage themselves so dramatically.”>>>MORE

From Sunday's Washington Post:

Mortgage giants GSEs in limbo: In housing, a dangerous policy vacuum grows.

THERE IS NO END in sight to the federal bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. President Obama's fiscal 2011 budget proposal said as much in a few phrases that promised nothing more definitive than continued "monitoring" of the two mortgage giants, which have been operating since mid-2008 in the legal and organizational limbo known as government "conservatorship." The administration had said its plans for definitive reform could be expected "at the time of the budget," not in the budget itself, so technically this doesn't count as a broken promise or a blown deadline. Still, as the two agencies' chief regulator, Edward J. DeMarco, gently reminded congressional leaders on Tuesday, conservatorship was intended as a "timeout" during which policymakers could reinvent the entities. With an election year upon us, that timeout is looking more and more like a cop-out.

This is alarming. The Fannie-Freddie business model -- "government-sponsored enterprises" (GSEs) with private shareholders but a public purpose, promoting homeownership -- is a proven loser. In fact, Fannie and Freddie were in large part responsible for inflating the housing bubble that burst so disastrously in 2007. The market's perception (correct, as it turned out) that the GSEs enjoyed federal backing enabled them to take on far more risk than their capital bases could support.

Continuing to pump taxpayer money into Fannie and Freddie so that they can continue to securitize home mortgages -- the Treasury Department has covered $111 billion worth of their losses so far -- is justifiable as an emergency measure. Without it, the U.S. housing market would have collapsed: Fannie and Freddie now back the vast majority of new mortgages, and the homeownership rate has nonetheless fallen almost two percentage points from its 2004 peak of 69 percent....MORE

Finally, From the New York Times (Feb. 1, DealBook, Feb. 2):

Cloudy Future for Fannie and Freddie

The Great Bailout is mostly over for the banks. But for those troubled behemoths of the nation’s housing bust, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the lifeline from Washington just keeps getting longer, The New York Times’s Charles Duhigg writes.

Fifteen months after Fannie and Freddie were effectively nationalized, neither the Obama administration nor Congressional leaders see a quick solution to one of the thorniest problems in American finance: how to fix the twin mortgage giants without choking the flow of credit to homeowners and dealing a blow to a still-fragile housing market.

The administration had said for months that it would begin charting a new course for Fannie and Freddie when it released its budget proposal on Monday. The companies, crucial pillars of American housing, already have consumed over $112 billion of taxpayer dollars.

Bankers, builders and homeowners stand to win or lose from any plan for the two so-called government-sponsored enterprises, or G.S.E.’s. But, on Monday, that plan amounted to a single, ambiguous sentence from the White House:

“The administration continues to monitor the situation of the G.S.E.’s closely and will continue to provide updates on considerations for longer-term reform of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as appropriate.”

Treasury officials say more details may be forthcoming, although they decline to say when, The Times said. To many experts, however, the message is that Fannie and Freddie are likely to remain wards of the state for years.

And, given the alarm in some quarters over the mounting budget deficit, these two giants and their vast obligations are likely to remain conveniently — and controversially — off the federal books. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have obligations of $3.9 trillion to investors who bought bundles of mortgages that the companies assembled.

Powerful and often competing interests are grappling over the companies’ futures. Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle, eager to demonstrate their scorn for the companies, have called for their eradication. But few policy makers are willing to take aggressive steps that might weaken the housing market. On Christmas Eve, the White House quietly disclosed that it had, in effect, given the companies a blank check by making their federal credit line unlimited; the ceiling had been $400 billion.

For decades, Fannie and Freddie have played a central role in the housing market. But when the market began falling apart in 2008, so many of the home loans that Fannie and Freddie had bought or guaranteed went bad that the companies nearly went bankrupt. The government essentially took them over.

Today, many financial companies are pushing to shrink or even dismantle the two G.S.E.’s in hopes of expanding their own businesses into the resulting vacuum. Financial executives contend that the government does not belong in the housing market. Given the animosity directed at the financial industry in general, however, few will criticize the government publicly....MORE

Thursday, February 4, 2010

The Stock Market and the Battle of Jutland, part deux Alternative Energy Leads the Way Down (PBW)

Back in July 2007 we posted "The Stock Market and the Battle of Jutland":

"There's something wrong with our bloody ships today, Chatfield"

The words of Admiral David Beatty to his flag captain after HMS Queen Mary blew up.

16:00 hrs-16:05 hrs, Indefatigable explodes leaving two survivors.
16:25 hrs, Queen Mary disintegrates, nine survive.


13:38 hrs, DJIA down 291.82 not quite the tragedy it might feel like.
and on September 15, 2008:
Things that make you go "Hmmm" (AIG; LEH)

Watching Lehman crossing on the tape at two bits. The world's largest property casualty insurer in the $5's. Hmmm.

There's something wrong with our bloody ships today, Chatfield.*
*Comment of Admiral Beatty after seeing 2200 of his sailors disintegrate. Idiot.

He was, of course, promoted, appointed First Sea Lord and granted an Earldom.
We had a couple posts where the Admiral made an appearance...
Today I had the same feeling when I posted "Chinese Solar, Ag lead Declines (FEED; SEED; CSIQ; STP; TSL)". We have confirmation from Schaeffer's Research where the PowerShares WilderHill Clean Energy ETF (PBW) is the worst performer of the 23 sectors/indices they post in their daily wrap-up:

...The sector action maintained the negative bias we tracked throughout the day. The iShares Treasury Bond (TLT) led while the PowerShares Clean Energy ETF (PBW) and Amex Gold Bugs Index (HUI) lagged.

My midday post touched on how the broad market indexes were near their recent lows. As shown below, the SPX, DJIA, COMP, and RUT all closed below what should have been support....MORE

Correction and Bear Market Levels

The S&P 500 is currently at 1069.
From Bespoke Investment Group:

The S&P 500 is now down 7.11% from its closing high of 1,150.23 on January 19th. For those expecting this pullback to turn into a 10% correction, the level you're looking for is 1,035.2. For those looking for the pullback to turn into a new -20% "bear" market, the level you're looking for is 920.18. The 10% correction level would take the index back to its lows in late October. A new bear market would take the index back to where it was trading in mid-July.

Headline of the Day: ETF Edition (GLD; USO)

Today's award goes to StreetInsider:


Market Eye Chart



eyechart

Lifted from The Daily Bleat.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average is down 218, the NASDAQ is down 52.

Chinese Solar, Ag lead Declines (FEED; SEED; CSIQ; STP; TSL)

Here's TickerSpy's list of the worst groups you could own today:

1 Chinese Agriculture Stocks *CHAGR -7.1% -5.9% -16.7% -11.2%
13.1 198 track Index
2 Chinese Solar Stocks *CHSOL -6.6% -0.6% -22.8% -69.0%
32.4 840 track Index
3 Platinum and Palladium Stocks *PLTNM -6.6% -3.5% -10.4% -21.4%
14.1 159 track Index
4 Agricultural Chemical and Fertilizer Stocks *FERTL -6.4% -2.2% -10.4% +43.1% 0.9% 20.3 285 track Index
5 Industrial Metals and Minerals Stocks *METAL -6.0% -5.1% -13.7% -34.5% 1.2% 26.6 133 track Index
6 Canadian Mining Stocks *CAMIN -5.8% -3.6% -14.6% -13.8% 0.2% 32.5 93 track Index
7 Gold and Silver Stocks *GOLDS -5.7% -4.3% -15.8% -15.6% 0.2% 31.2 430 track Index
8 Coal Stocks *COALS -5.5% -6.1% -12.4% -25.0% 1.8% 27.6 270 track Index
9 Uranium Stocks *URANM -5.4% +3.1% -13.2% -54.9% 0.1% 17.5 292 track Index
10 Solar Stocks *SOLAR -5.3% -0.9% -23.0% -77.6%
28.5 439 track Index

I somehow managed to avoid the palladium stocks.

Euro Risks ‘Leg Lower’ to $1.3405: Technical Analysis

The USD/EUR is currently trading at 1.3783. In our November 18 post "Everybody's Dissing the Dollar" I said:

I don't have anything concrete I can point to but 1.50 EUR/USD almost feels as if someone has drawn a line in the sand. As more and more money piles into the trade without movement past that line you start to lose the mo-mo traders and the psychology can shift fast.

If the buck were to turn and head back to say, 1.20, the results for equities and gold would be painful.
I'm just sayin'...
The very next day we had "Goldman On The Dollar Carry Trade: "A 20% Reversal In Either 3 Months Or 3 Days" where we repeated the quote above.

On November 25 the Euro hit it's high for 2009 and we posted "Dollar Sliding Into New Trading Range":

From MarketBeat:

The euro hit a fresh high for 2009 at $1.5144 as selloff in the greenback took another big jump in New York afternoon trading....
Making this pronouncement from a week ago look a bit silly:
I don't have anything concrete I can point to but 1.50 EUR/USD almost feels as if someone has drawn a line in the sand. As more and more money piles into the trade without movement past that line you start to lose the mo-mo traders and the psychology can shift fast.

If the buck were to turn and head back to say, 1.20, the results for equities and gold would be painful.
I'm just sayin'...
It's either one of those "I may be in error but never in doubt" statements a rookie would never refer back to or it's a Maxwell Smart moment: "Missed it by thissss much".
[or it's like spring '08 when you said $1.53 and we went to $1.59 in July -ed]
I'm leaning toward Humble Student of the Markets' interpretation:
As good market analysts know, when the public gets on board a story, chances are everyone is already in the trade and the trend is likely to reverse soon. So it is with interest that I got the following viral email entitled "What good is a Dollar?"


The answers: Make a penguin
You get the idea. With investor bearishness on the US Dollar at an extreme reading, who is left to sell?
Followed by "Dollar: not dead, just smells funny" (DXY)" on Dec. 2 at 1.5052 and "Euro Faces ‘Bearish Setup’ Against Dollar: Technical Analysis" on Dec. 9 at 1.4717, then "Technical Analysis: Euro Faces More Weakness" on Dec 17 at 1.4348.

The point of all this is: If you get the big stuff right the rest is easy.
The fall off in gold, the sideways to down moves in stocks, churning in the oil markets all could be foreseen, if you got the currency move right.
Here's the latest, from Bloomberg:
The euro risks tumbling to $1.3405 should it close tomorrow below a weekly moving average, Commerzbank AG said, citing trading patterns.

Euro-dollar is “sitting” on its 200-week moving average, said Karen Jones, head of fixed-income, commodity and currency technical analysis in London. The level is currently at $1.3859, according to prices on Bloomberg. A weekly close below this would be “extremely negative,” Jones said.

“That would likely trigger another leg lower,” Jones said today in an interview. The euro would “target initially $1.3735, en route to $1.3405,” she said.

The euro fell 0.7 percent to $1.3792 as of 3:12 p.m. in London, depreciating to less than $1.38 for the first time since June 16. It has dropped 3.7 percent versus the dollar this year....MORE

Pay attention and be careful you don't get stung:

Scorpion:

Cree Slides As Merriman Turns Cautious On LED Sector (CREE)

The stock is down 4.69% at $57.13 and is down $5.48 ($8.75%) since it's Jan. 21 $62.61 close, the day we posted "Is Cree, Inc. (CREE) Likely to Burn Out?".
From Tech Trader Daily:

Cree (CREE) shares are under pressure this morning after Merriman Curhan Ford analyst Bill Ong turned cautious on the LED sector. He cut his ratings on both Cree and Aixtron (AIXG) to Neutral from Buy.

“We are taking a more cautious stance on the pure-play LED stocks as we believe Aixtron and Cree’s stock have priced-in a solid growth year for 2010,” he writes in a research note. “We are also concerned that the LED industry could reach an over capacity condition by mid-to-late 2010...MORE
Our January 19 post, "Cree Crushes Street Estimates; Stock Leaps (CREE)" has links to a lot of our CREE posts.

China’s Labor Edge Overpowers Obama’s ‘Green’ Jobs Initiatives (First Solar, Suntech) FSLR; STP

A smart angle on "greencollar" jobs.
From Bloomberg:

President Barack Obama is spending $2.1 million to help Suntech Power Holdings Co. build a solar- panel plant in Arizona. It will hire 70 Americans to assemble components made by Suntech’s 11,000 Chinese workers.

That gap shows the challenge Obama faces as he works to create “green” jobs. Asia makes more than half the world’s wind and solar energy equipment, and is gaining ground as U.S. factories lose out to cheaper labor and higher demand for clean energy. China for the first time topped the U.S. in wind-turbine manufacturing and installations last year, the Brussels-based Global Wind Energy Council said yesterday in a report.

Obama is giving billions of dollars in tax breaks to the wind and solar industries to create jobs in the U.S. even as production expands faster overseas. First Solar Inc., the world’s largest maker of thin-film solar-power modules, won $16.3 million to add 200 manufacturing jobs at its Ohio plant, yet 71 percent of its planned factory growth will go to Malaysia. The company employs 4,500 globally.

“The cost of manufacturing here is too expensive compared to Asia,” said Guy Chaffin, chief executive officer of Elite Search International, a Roseville, California-based executive search firm that has found employees for Tempe, Arizona-based First Solar and Solar Millennium AG. “As far as a flood of good jobs coming to the U.S., we’re not seeing it.”

To compete for clean-energy jobs, the U.S. must create demand by capping fossil-fuel pollution that contributes to global warming, Carol Browner, Obama’s coordinator of energy and environment policy, said yesterday at the opening of a three-day renewable-energy conference in Washington.

Cap-and-Trade Proposal

Obama backs a “cap-and-trade” system to limit carbon emissions and establish a market in pollution allowances, a proposal that passed the House and has stalled in the Senate. Congress is also debating measures, backed by the administration, that would require utilities to buy some of their power from renewable sources.

“Will batteries that power the next generation of hybrid cars come from South Korea or South Carolina?” Browner said. “The best way to take advantage of these opportunities is to put in place the right price signals here at home, create the demand here at home so that our companies will make the investment here at home.”>>>MORE

Previously:

Do Greencollar Jobs Pay $76,000/year or $12.00/hour?

Ten Best Green Jobs for the Next Decade
#1 Be Al Gore.
Just kidding, that's not on the list.
Kids, Some of These Green-Collar Jobs Pay Pretty Well

...Mayor's climate aide gets $160,000 a year

...San Francisco has at least two dozen other city employees already working directly on climate issues at a cost to taxpayers of hundreds of thousands of dollars.

...
"If there are 25 people working on climate protection issues for the city, that's a good start," Newsom spokesman Nathan Ballard said. "Ten years ago, there probably weren't any. It's smart policy to have one point person at the highest level of city government to coordinate all 25 of them."

...
In addition to the director of climate protection initiatives in Newsom's office, San Francisco has an Energy and Climate Program team of eight people in the Department of the Environment, who combined earn more than $800,000 a year in salary and benefits, including a "climate action coordinator."

Greencollar Jobs: Greenery may create jobs—but not the ones its boosters think

Discussion of greencollar jobs is usually short on specifics so I'll do a mini data-dump for you.
Three major wind companies have recently set up shop in Arkansas. Turbine maker Nordex will pay an average $17.00/hr. Blade manufacturer LM Glasfiber was recently advertising for production tecnicians at $12.13/hr. and Polymarin Composites will pay its 830 employees an average of $15.00. sources
In contrast there is a cottage industry that pays considerably more, from our May 30, post

"Green Collar Jobs: What Do they Pay?"

With all the political positioning of climate legislation as 'creating' jobs it is startling how reticent the proponents are about actual numbers. From doing due diligence I know some of the numbers but public sources that have specific wages that I can link to aren't common.

Some of the jobs are well paying. For example the insiders at First Solar have sold $1.1 Billion worth of stock in the last 15 months.
(bless those German hausfraus paying the feed-in tariff)

Climateer's "Quote of the Day": Productivity

...I attempted to make a similar point (albeit less productively) regarding energy, in a comment on Environmental Capital's December 10 post "Green Jobs: Are They Just a Myth?":

The key to greencollar jobs is inefficiency. The more labor intensive the energy production the more people you will employ.


Doing a reductio ad absurdum, you would construct a human powered generator.
At a spacing of one meter, a 950 mile diameter wheel would employ five million people.
At 1/10 horsepower per person you would generate 3 million kWh/day.
Of course paying even the minimum wage gets your cost up to the $90.00 kWh range (i.e $80,000/month for the average home’s usage) but you’ve put 5mm folks to work.


This is an extreme example but the concept is pretty well fleshed out in the literature.

Comment by Climateer - December 10, 2008 at 11:49 am

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

House bill would prevent EPA regulating carbon

UPDATE: The New York Times has more on Rep. Peterson's angle: "House Ag Chairman Backs Bid to Block EPA Greenhouse Gas Regs".
Original post:
These are very serious players. Peterson may be the most powerful member that most folks have never heard of.
From Reuters:

With congressional action on climate legislation in doubt, two House committee chairmen have filed a bill to block the government from regulating greenhouse gases under its own power.

The lawmakers say Congress, not "unelected bureaucrats," should set environmental policy. Congress has squabbled for months over a comprehensive climate change bill. Some members say the best bet is to encourage renewable energy production.

The Environmental Protection Agency cleared the way for regulation under air pollution laws a month ago, when it ruled that greenhouse gases endanger human health. EPA could act as early as March to offer regulations.

Efforts were being made in both chambers of Congress to derail EPA regulation. It normally takes months for Congress to agree on legislation.

Besides blocking EPA regulation of six gases, including carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide, blamed for global warming, the House bill, which was filed on Tuesday, would remove two roadblocks to greater use of biofuels.

The bill, which would face a tough fight in Congress and be opposed by the president, would adopt a broad definition of biomass -- including crops, trees, algae and manure -- that can be used in making renewable fuels.

It also would bar EPA, when it calculates if biofuels are cleaner than petroleum, from holding U.S. fuels responsible for forest clearing and cropland expansion overseas.

Armed Services Committee Chairman Ike Skelton, the lead sponsor, said the House bill "gets EPA under control" and strengthens American-made renewable fuels.

"I have no confidence that the EPA can regulate greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act without doing serious damage to our economy," said Agriculture Committee Chairman Collin Peterson. Peterson and Rep. Jo Ann Emerson are cosponsors....MORE

"Energy industry gushing over dealmaking" (Ten targets) APC; COG; DVN; RRC...

The targets include the usual suspects among the natural gas players plus a few names I haven't seen mentioned elsewhere.
From Dealscape:

The oil and gas industry is gaga over dealmaking, what with capital back, oil and gas prices stabilizing and Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM) agreeing to buy XTO Energy Inc. (XTO) in December for $41 billion.

At a Mergermarket energy M&A forum last week in Houston, there was talk of more shale gas plays like XTO, more joint ventures like Total SA's acquisition of 25% of Chesapeake Energy Corp.'s (CHK) Barnett shale assets as part of a $2.2 billion pact, and oil and oil sands transactions picking up now that oil prices are on the rise. But shale is what's driving the dealflow right now. "Gas resource plays are the flavor of the month," said Dallas Droppo, a partner at Blake Cassels & Graydon LLP in Calgary, who says Canadian companies are looking southward for deals.

Maynard Holt, co-president of upstream investment banking at Tudor Pickering Holt & Co. LLC, expects lesser-known foreign players, or what he calls "exotics," to start coming into the market next. "Outsiders are fascinated by the shale and want a piece of the pie," he said.

Sten Gustafson, a managing director at Deutsche Bank AG (NYSE:DB), expects oil services deals to also increase, with rig counts picking up and some distressed players still out there. "Nobody wants to waste a good crisis, and the capital markets are wide open," he said. "While valuations have recovered somewhat, there's still value to be had. I think we'll see M&A really soon."

Mergermarket went out on a limb, putting out a top 10 target list for 2010, including Devon Energy Corp. (DVN), Range Resources Corp. (RRC), Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. (NYSE:COG), Chesapeake, Marathon Oil Corp. (MRO), Murphy Oil Corp. (MUR), Newfield Exploration Co. (NFX), Anadarko Petroleum Corp. (APC), Occidental Petroleum Corp. (OXY) and Petrohawk Energy Corp. (HK)....MORE

S&P 500 and Nasdaq Break Above Intraday Downtrends

Lifted from Bespoke Investment Group:

With Tuesday's rally, both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have broken above their intraday downtrends that have been in place since their January highs. While the bulls would love to declare victory, there is still a lot of work to do before either of these indices get back to their levels of two weeks ago.

Climateer Line of the Day: Senator Kerry on Cap-and-Trade Edition

From Investors.com:


"...We’re talking about setting a target for the reduction of pollution, which is why we don’t call it cap and trade anymore.

It’s a pollution reduction target with a private investment incentive...
"
(emphasis moi)


Alrighty then.

A VERY Important Article for Solar Investors (I'm Talking to You First Solar, Trina Solar, Suntech and Sunpower) FSLR; SPWRA, SPWRB; STP; TSL; YGE

This is a few days old but worth the read if you have money in the sector. I sat on it because the group seemed to be bottoming.
I've been hearing similar rumblings (particularly on R&D) but The Street.com pulls it all together. A major piece by Eric Rosenbaum.
From TSCM:

Brave New Solar, or Grave New Solar?

There has been a debate within solar circles over the past year concerning the fate of the solar industry's bellwether stock, First Solar(FSLR Quote), and that debate boils down to this: Is First Solar still a growth stock?

In May of 2008, First Solar was trading at over $311. On Wednesday, First Solar closed at $114.

While the specific solar industry dynamics that have driven First Solar down do not define the solar industry -- it has been the rise of low-cost Chinese solar players that have been instrumental in changing First Solar's fortunes -- the question about First Solar's growth prospects may be one solar investors are forced to extrapolate onto the entire solar space, given recent political events in Germany and Italy.

By most accounts, Germany is still planning to move ahead with a bigger and faster feed-in tariff reduction than the solar industry expected, and Italy is planning to implement an 8 gigawatt (GW) cap on its solar industry by 2020 that would position it -- one of the the biggest growth markets for solar -- with a less-than-expected growth scenario.

Thus, are we in fact headed into a brave new world of solar, or do the political currents in Europe that are seeking to wipe out the lucrative feed-in tariffs -- which have served as a form of solar welfare -- spell doom for photovoltaic solar before it has a chance to evolve into a more mature industry?

Burt Chao, an analyst with energy firm Simmons & Company, doesn't view the public solar companies, first and foremost, as growth stocks with a high risk-high profit opportunity -- though many investors and capital markets players have acted as if that is the solar end-game. Chao, rather, thinks it is high time for solar to actually begin acting like a long-term energy play. The solar industry needs to reinvent itself to finally be a part of the renewable energy future.

"The fact that all of these companies are still alive and kicking is because of government subsidies," Chao said bluntly, adding, "There has been undisciplined, irrational growth for too long, and a pace of growth less frenzied is better for solar."

The solar industry has known that the reductions in feed-in tariffs would be coming, and solar executives have said all the right things in the past about the need to move past tariffs as a way of growing the solar industry. Still, the solar industry hasn't exactly walked the walked of evolving itself while the getting has been good on lucrative feed-in tariffs, which generate high rates of return for solar projects.

Case in point: analysts note that while solar stocks are considered technology growth stocks, there is virtually no research and development in the big public solar companies. There hasn't needed to be any.

Chao's hope is that the next outcome -- after what he thinks will be a painful period in solar, especially if China and the U.S. don't pick up the slack from the declining tariff regimes in Europe -- will be a more civilized and rational period of healthy growth for solar.

The potential implications of "Brave New Solar" are many: For one, a potential reclassification of the stocks away from their high-growth profile to a classification that better reflects long-term energy production and power purchase agreements. Steady, utility-like returns, which are pretty far from the current solar profile to which investors have become accustomed. Some analysts have even hypothesized about an era in which solar stocks are defensive plays, which, given the solar sector profile today, is not easy to imagine.

Secondly, there will be a period of protracted mergers and acquisitions as second-tier solar companies are absorbed or go bankrupt. Mehdi Hosseini, an analyst at FBR Capital Markets, said he doesn't expect the big public solar companies to go bankrupt -- particularly with the Chinese government unlikely to allow its solar cadre to fail -- but there will be many private solar players unable to make it, and that may mean the once-lucrative IPO market for solar -- which hasn't come back since the market downturn -- may never return to its former glory days.

On the other hand, there is the potential that new solar technologies emerge -- the industry equivalent of a disruptive technology that improves efficiency at a cost-effective level -- and pushes the current slate of big public solar companies to a position of weakness.

To that point, another big issue for solar is the potential need to ramp up the non-existent research and development among the public photovoltaic players, to improve efficiency and, as a result, increase returns in an era of declining feed-in tariffs and solar project returns.

These are all big "ifs" for solar, though, and there are skeptics who see the lack of current research and development as the doomsday indicator: the sector, they argue, has been acting like Nero, playing the feed-in tariff fiddle while the once-vast tariff empire burned.

Gordon Johnson, an analyst at Hapoalim Securities well-known for his bearish outlook on most photovoltaic players, believes that the recent political turn against solar is setting up the industry to be the next ethanol. "People assume you have to have photovoltaic solar, but that's not the case," Johnson said.

Johnson's point is not that investment in renewable energy will slow, but that the solar industry that has grown up on lucrative feed-in tariffs may not be entrenched enough within the global economy to ensure its survival.

"The cheapest renewable energy technology that emerges will be the most preferred, and right now, solar photovoltaic energy is the most expensive," Johnson said. Solar has received the most attention because it is one of the easiest forms of alternative energy to get up and running quickly, with low costs to build solar plants and low barriers to entry....MUCH MORE

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

The President's Budget: "Target-Rich Environment"

From the Columbia Journalism Review's The Audit blog:

We’re all for flood-the-zone coverage of the budget, so a tip of The Audit’s green eyeshade to The Wall Street Journal, which unfurls the story in full glory, with charts, breakdowns, analysis for individual federal departments and agencies, plus, for no extra charge, a handy Q & A on what it all means for taxpayers.

The package is here.

The politics analysis is here.

Bloomberg also goes big and includes a look at U.S. companies that would see their taxes go up if the blueprint is approved and implications for municipal bonds.

And far be it from me to scoff at any opportunity to ogle the, um, photogenic director of the Office of Management and Budget (insert wolf whistle here).

But lost in the shuffle, I’m afraid, is the jaw-dropping number that Obama is requesting for the Defense Department next year: $708 billion.

That’s seven oh eight. Billion. Cash money.

I know, I know. The defense budget is Washington’s version of Groundhog Day. Year in and year out, pork barrel politics make it impossible for the Pentagon to cut programs that the Pentagon itself doesn’t want or need. Apparently, people outside of Washington think this is strange....MORE

Russia celebrates 20 years of Golden Arches


From Foreign Policy's Passport blog who writes:
Yes, this post is largely an excuse to feature the above photo of Comrade Stalin munching on his McFries, but this week marks the 20th anniversary of the opening of the first Russian McDonalds. Lines famously stretched around the block at Moscow's Pushkin Square with curious Russian consumers anxious for the greasy, salty taste of Western capitalism....MORE

California muni bond market could see supply and demand shift under Obama proposals

From the Los Angeles Times' Money & Company blog:

The huge California tax-free municipal bond market has a lot riding on proposed tax changes in President Obama’s budget.

The administration’s call to restore higher tax brackets for the nation’s top income-earners, by allowing President George W. Bush’s tax cuts to expire as scheduled next Jan. 1, could fuel more investor demand for tax-free bonds. That would be good for current bond owners, and for muni issuers, if the result is to push down interest rates on new bonds.

But Obama also proposes to reduce the federal subsidy for a new breed of taxable muni bonds -- so-called Build America Bonds -- that some state and local borrowers began to issue a year ago in place of tax-free securities.

That lower subsidy could give borrowers, including California, less incentive to issue the taxable bonds. If they shift their borrowing back to the tax-free market, that would mean more supply of standard munis, which could put upward pressure on market interest rates.

For the country’s highest-income earners -- singles earning more than $200,000 and couples earning more than $250,000 -- the White House’s proposal to restore the top federal tax bracket of 39.6%, up from the current 35%, almost certainly should boost the appeal of tax-free munis. They’re the last legal tax dodge for many investors.

In the 35% tax bracket, a tax-free yield of 4.5% is worth the same as a 6.9% yield on a taxable investment. In the 39.6% bracket that 4.5% tax-free yield would be worth the same as a 7.4% taxable yield.

Obama also proposes to restrict high-income-earners’ tax deductions, which would give them more incentive to seek out investments that produce higher after-tax returns.

Meanwhile, the administration’s proposed changes to the Build America Bonds program could have a significant impact on the California muni market: The state and its municipalities have been big beneficiaries of that year-old program....MORE

A bad sign? "China Broker’s I.P.O. Aims for $2.4 Billion This Week"

Figures that a mid-tier firm would miss the top.
From the NYT's DealBook blog:

Huatai Securities, the mid-sized Chinese brokerage, will launch an initial public offering in Shanghai this week that could raise 16.5 billion yuan ($2.4 billion) in China’s largest offering this year, braving a mainland market straining under heavy new share offerings and tightening liquidity, Reuters reported.

China’s brokerages are gearing up to take advantage of financial reforms, including the imminent launch of margin trade and short selling, that will boost their business, improve liquidity and nudge Shanghai toward its goal of becoming a global financial center within a decade.

But the I.P.O. comes as the market is sagging under the weight of heavy share supplies, fed by authorities who have approved a steady stream of new share issues to keep the market cool and avert asset price bubbles, the news service said....LINK to original story.

From The Pragmatic Capitalist:

The most basic definition of a bull or bear market is the market’s position when compared to the 200 day moving average. Most chartists consider a market above the 200 day moving average to be in a bull market and a market below the 200 day moving average to be in a bear market. China’s Shanghai Index recently broke below the 200 day and appears to be following classic post bubble price action – a bursting bubble followed by a relief rally based on false hope which is ultimately followed by years of sideways or negative market action (think Japan circa 1995 or Nasdaq circa 2005). Without getting too technical and simply using this very basic definition the Shanghai index has now officially entered bear market territory.

SSEC IS THIS THE BEGINNING OF A NEW BEAR MARKET IN CHINA?

"Option Activity Alert: Bulls Have High Hopes for General Electric Company" (GE)

A few minutes to the close and the stock is trading up 3.85% at $16.88.
GE is an example of not letting your personal feelings get in the way of analysis. I don't much care for Jeff Immelt's quasi-fascist approach to corporate/government "partnerships" and don't think he's much of a manager. That said I've been more or less positive on the stock for the last 6 or 7 weeks.
In markets, it is what it is. See posts below.
From Schaeffer's Investment Research:

Call players are focusing on the stock's overhead February 17 call

Calls have become the options of choice lately on General Electric Company (GE: View sentiment for GEsentiment, chart, options). During the past five days, traders on the International Securities Exchange (ISE) have bought to open 20,019 calls on the blue-chip conglomerate, compared to 5,567 puts. The stock's five-day ISE call/put volume ratio of 3.60 reveals that bullish bets have nearly quadrupled their bearish counterparts during the past week.

GE SOIRGE's 10-day ISE call/put volume ratio arrived today at 1.79, as speculators have bought to open nearly two times more calls than puts during the past couple of weeks. This ratio ranks in the 70th annual percentile, revealing that traders have snapped up calls over puts at a faster pace only 30% of the time during the past year.

In keeping with this rising optimism, GE's Schaeffer's put/call open interest ratio (SOIR) fell today to its lowest level in months. The current SOIR of 0.91 indicates that calls outnumber puts among options set to expire within three months, and this reading ranks in the 14th annual percentile. In other words, short-term option traders have been more bullishly aligned toward the shares only 14% of the time in the previous 52 weeks.

In the front-month series, peak call open interest of 93,296 contracts can be found at the February 17 strike. With GE perched at $16.80 today, these calls are lying directly overhead. In fact, the February 17 call continues to be the center of attention in today's trading, with 21,000 contracts crossing the tape by midday. The majority of this volume has changed hands at the ask price, suggesting that new calls are being purchased here....MORE

Previously (chronologically from Dec 17, 2009):

Slimming Down at GE Capital (GE)

... Barclays’ Improved View on GE Capital..." Stock 'Bucks" the Market (GE)

Goldman Sachs Lowers Q4/FY09 Estimates On General Electric (GE)

Cheers! To a decade of innovation at General Electric’s labs (GE)

Schaeffer's "Three Stocks to Watch: General Electric" and "A Year of Living Sideways" (GE)
Long time readers know that I don't think much of current GE management. The stock is down over 50% since Jeff Immelt took over in 2001. Considering the assets he had to work with the result is pathetic.
That said the action last week was constructive. Here's a threefer...
General Electric Earnings: Five Analyst Takeaways (GE)

"Goldman Raises Target on General Electric"; "Morgan Stanley Believes 2011 Will Be A Strong Year" (GE)

American Superconductor FY Q3 Beats, But Stock Slides (AMSC; GRID)

Mystery/history? The stock was recently trading down 8.08% at $36.54.
From Tech Trader Daily:

American Superconductor (AMSC), a play on the wind energy market, this morning posted revenue for its fiscal third quarter ended December 31 of $80.7 million, up 95% from a year ago, and ahead of the Street at $76.7 million. The company posted non-GAAP profits of 20 cents a share, beating the Street by six cents....MORE
Previously:
Oct 29, 2009
American Superconductor Lifts Guidance; Stock Soars (AMSC)

Nov 12, 2009
Transmission: "Superconductors to Wire a Smarter Grid" (AMSC; PNM)

Nov 17, 2009
First Trust Rolls Out Electric-Grid-Linked ETF (GRID)

Nov 18, 2009
American Superconductor Discounting Contract Wins (AMSC)

Dec 23, 2009
Transmission: "An Electric 'Game Changer' Gets FERC Scrutiny " (AMSC; GRID; PNM)

"CREDIT SUISSE: BUY THE DIPS – THE BEAR ISN’T HERE YET"

Back on October 5th, following a 520 point (9898 to 9378 intraday) decline in the DJIA, we posted "Do not sell equities, Credit Suisse says" with the comment:

I am always skeptical of blanket statements from investment banks. We link to this one because we happen to agree (in the immediate term. Long term, who knows?)....
The Dow closed at 9599.75 on 10/5 and at 10,185.53 yesterday. Here's the chart of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, one month prior to and four months after that call (from BigCharts):



Here's Credit Suisse's latest, from Pragmatic Capitalist:

Strategists at Credit Suisse entered 2010 with a very cautious tone and an outlook similar to our own – 2010 would be a year of halves. The first half would be a continuation of the trends that helped the market surge in 2009 while headwinds would build near H2 2010 and result in market declines. The recent downturn in stocks hasn’t changed their outlook and they view the sell-off as a buying opportunity (see JP Morgan’s similar outlook here as well as Raymond James’ outlook here).

The team’s tactical indicators are mildly bullish at current levels and quickly approaching levels that were buys in 2009:

Our tacticals are mildly supportive of equities:
Interestingly, the % of nyse stocks trading above their 10-week MA (currently at 32%) is around similar levels where market bottomed during recent corrections (end of Oct it troughed at 30%, in early July 09 at 37%). Normally a buy signal is when this indicator falls below 20% but perhaps most of the correction has already occurred??

CS1 CREDIT SUISSE: BUY THE DIPS   THE BEAR ISNT HERE YET

Sentiment data also supports their bullish thesis as the majority of investors remain net bearish...MORE

While sentiment readings don't underpin our thinking, we happen to agree with the rest of their analysis.

[happen? go ahead, play the song -ed]

The Supremes:


"What on earth are oil investors thinking?" But Crack Spreads are Widening and Smart Buyers Want the Assets (CVX; USO; VLO; XOM)

Here are some of the refinery stories in our link-vault.
From today's FT Alphaville:

Over the last two trading sessions the two largest oil companies in the United States, Exxon and Chevron announced that in Q4 2009 they lost a combined $6.9 million day on turning crude oil into refined products. Wall Street traders reacted to this news yesterday by making NYMEX crude oil even more expensive than gasoline. To explain this seeming incongruity, an unidentified financial trader from Camp Mohawk Trading was quoted as saying. . . IT JUST DOESN’T MATTER, IT JUST DOESN’T MATTER!

That’s Stephen Schork of the widely-read Schork Report, reflecting upon the current illogical investment pattern gripping energy markets.

According to Schork there’s no escaping the fact that — despite some short-term gasoline bullishness — motor gas demand in the United States has undergone a radical and long-lasting transformation since the 2008 financial crisis.

As Schork states, there’s no denying the US economy began recovering in late 2009, but that recovery is producing a very different economy to the one we were used to back in 2007. Essentially, much of the gasoline expenditure US oil companies took for granted, has been “wiped off the map and is not coming back”....MORE

From 24/7 Wall Street (Jan. 12):

Magnifying Refinery Woes

The notion that an integrated oil giant is issuing an earnings warning with oil above $80.00 per barrel may seem ludicrous to most on the Street. Yet that is exactly what is happening at Chevron Corp. (NYSE: CVX). Chevron said that its earnings drop was due to further deterioration in its refining margins, but the issue is that this is not really new and is part of an ongoing theme we have seen in the industry. This will of course tie into Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM) and to ConocoPhillips (COP) because of the refining and exploration and production, but the real issue is that this only further highlights some of the major refineries like Valero Energy Corp. (VLO), and may highlight some of the issues to a lesser degree also at Marathon Oil Corporation (MRO), and Hess Corporation (HES).

You could perhaps make the same argument that Exxon Mobil Corp. and ConocoPhillips are in the same boat, particularly if you consider that Exxon Mobil is making that huge buyout of XTO Energy (XTO) to diversify more into natural gas. But Chevron did note that exploration and production (drilling) were in line with its expectations. The long and short of it is that the more refinery exposure, the more earnings risk exposure. Chevron did note that exploration and production were looking in-line with expectations.

Valero Energy Corp. (VLO) has been an awful performer of late, almost without regard to which direction oil prices are headed. Marathon Oil Corporation (MRO) and Hess Corporation (NYSE: HES) may have at least some of the same woes, but their stocks have held up far better and both are close to 52-week highs. In fact, Marathon and Hess may even be improperly painted with the same brush in most comparative data if you look at how these companies have performed. That really leaves Valero, and at $18.16 its 52-week trading range is $15.29 to $26.20. As Valero is more and more of a refining pure-play each year, you can look at what Chevron was saying about its business and interpolate the same concerns at Valero.

The hardest part of the rising oil prices is that for refineries they actually have a hard time passing down the cost increases. This is one of those issues that most of the people down on the retail level have a hard time fathoming because so many believe that oil prices are quasi-dictated by the oil companies....MORE
From Bloomberg (Feb. 1):

Crack Spreads Widen as Refineries Close in the U.S.
As refineries from New Jersey to New Mexico close at the fastest pace in three decades, traders in Singapore are profiting from a new plant on India’s west coast and a ship heading for Florida filled with jet fuel from Taiwan.

The so-called refinery crack spread in Singapore, representing the value of fuels minus the cost of crude oil, may climb 50 percent to as much as $4.50 a barrel this year, according to a Bloomberg News survey of five analysts. U.S. refinery margins will drop 30 percent by December, futures contracts on the New York Mercantile Exchange show.

That means higher profits for oil companies and traders in Asia, where consumption is growing 13 times faster than in Europe and the U.S. That’s also why Morgan Stanley can buy jet fuel in Taiwan and ship it 11,500 miles to Port Everglades, Florida, and still make money.

“Fundamentally Asia is now at the center of the physical oil products business, and in a few years Singapore can emerge as a major paper-trading center” for derivatives contracts, not just physical oil cargoes, said Akira Kamiyama, a Tokyo-based trader at Mitsui & Co., Japan’s second-biggest commodity supplier.

Oil consumption in Asia will grow 3.3 percent this year, compared with 0.26 percent in Europe and the U.S., where no new refineries have been built since 1976, according to the International Energy Agency in Paris. North American refiners will leave about 25 percent of plants idle by 2014, the IEA forecast in June.

U.S. Decline

The estimates for rising refinery profits in Asia would mark the biggest jump since 2003, when rates increased 89 percent to $3.95 a barrel from a year earlier, according to Deutsche Bank AG. The Frankfurt-based bank recommends investors buy Reliance Industries Ltd., the biggest refiner in India, and China Petroleum & Chemical Corp., or Sinopec.

As energy demand improved in Asia, Reliance jumped 58 percent in the past year to 1046.55 rupees in Mumbai trading, while Sinopec advanced 47 percent to HK$6.03 in Hong Kong. Valero Energy Corp., the biggest independent U.S. refiner, tumbled 24 percent to $18.42 in New York.

Valero is suffering after the crack spread from processing three barrels of crude into two barrels of gasoline and one of heating oil tumbled 46 percent in the past year in New York trading. The refinery margin will decline another 29 percent to $5.31 for December delivery from $7.47 a barrel for March, futures contracts on the New York Mercantile Exchange show....MUCH MORE

From Reuters (Jan. 22):

Oil baron O'Malley eyes Valero plant for U.S. return


The last time refining maverick Tom O'Malley bought the oil refinery in Delaware City, Delaware, he doubled his money in two years.

Now he may be vying to do it again.

An investment group led by O'Malley is in talks with Valero Energy Corp (VLO.N), the top independent U.S. refiner, to buy the assets of the shuttered 210,000-barrel-per-day Delaware City refinery.

If the deal goes through, it would mark O'Malley's reentry into the U.S. refining sector as it faces its worst crisis in decades. PBF Investments would acquire a refinery that was losing $1 million a day in November, when Valero said it was closing the plant for good.

Delaware City could be the first refinery purchase for PBF Investments, a $2 billion investment vehicle formed in 2008 to buy U.S. refineries. Petroplus (PPHN.VX), where O'Malley is currently chairman, started PBF along with private equity firms Blackstone Group (BX.N), and First Reserve Corp.

"Mr. O'Malley has a track record of buying refineries at low prices, running them for a few years, and then selling them," said Tim Evans, energy analyst for Citi Futures Perspective. "He certainly knows the refinery."

The sale could test O'Malley's vaunted reputation for turning around ailing assets, since it comes at a time when U.S. refiners are reeling from a third straight year of dismal margins, amid slumping fuel demand during a recession....MORE

Monday, February 1, 2010

Eric Savitz Turned 15,000 Today

Posts that is.
Back in 2008 we called him the "Hardest working man in Show Business", a line we repeated during the Feb. 2009 reporting season: "Eric Savitz , The Hardest Working Man In Show Business! And: Book-to-Bill Ratio at 0.10"

As of 6:32 p.m. PST, I counted 22 posts at Tech Trader Daily timestamped "February 25, 2009..."
and I have a feeling that this time of the quarter is what Mr. Savitz lives for. "I feel good..."
Here's his "15,000 Posts - And Counting":

Oh my.

A few minutes ago, I hit the “publish” button on Tech Trader Daily post number 15,000. A little back-of-the-envelope math finds that comes to about 11 posts a day for the last 1,348 days; back out the weekends (but not holidays) and you get about 15 posts a day since the thing got going in late May 2006....MORE

Obama budget outlines CO2 market without revenues

From Reuters:

The White House called on Monday for Congress to endorse a "comprehensive market-based policy" to fight climate change, while dropping from its proposed budget projected revenues from a cap-and-trade system many lawmakers oppose.

Last year the Obama administration forecast revenues of $646 billion in the years 2012-2019 from an emissions trading program that formed the crux of its proposal to fight global warming.

But the climate legislation is now stalled in the U.S. Senate and cap-and-trade, which sets limits on greenhouse gas emissions and allows companies to trade permits to pollute, may be cut from a final bill if one is passed.

"The $646 billion revenue projection is no longer in the budget," an administration official said.

"Unlike last year, we do not show an assumed amount of cap-and-trade revenue since the exact nature of the legislation remains in flux," the official told Reuters.

The budget tripled loan guarantees for new nuclear power plants to $54.5 billion, however, in a bid to win votes for the bill from Republican lawmakers.

The emissions trading system had been key to President Barack Obama's plan to reduce emissions blamed for global warming. He did not mention cap-and-trade last week in his State of the Union address, but did call for Congress to pass a comprehensive climate bill.

Some interpreted his omission of cap-and-trade as a signal that he would not actively pursue wide-ranging climate legislation this year.

The White House rejects that interpretation. The proposed budget for the fiscal year to September 30, 2011, said the administration would push for a market-based mechanism to reduce U.S. greenhouse gas emissions roughly 17 percent in 2020 and more than 80 percent by 2080 compared to 2005 levels.

That is in line with targets Obama has pledged at an international level.

The budget said businesses would have flexibility to find the least costly ways of cutting emissions, such as investments in offsets at farms or in clean energy project offsets abroad.

"I don't think you can read anything into the budget about the administration's wavering on a commitment on a comprehensive climate bill," said Evan Ard from Evolution Markets, a carbon and energy broker based in New York.

"The idea is to set a target for reducing emissions and setting up a program that hopefully allows you to do it at low cost, it's not about generating revenue."

The budget unveiled on Monday is subject to change by the Congress.

FORGING AHEAD

White House aides are working to advance climate legislation among lawmakers, and the budget includes the loan guarantees for new nuclear power plants as well as $545 million for capturing and burying carbon emissions from utilities to win over skeptical Republicans.

The official said the administration would insist any climate legislation be paid for without adding to the deficit. The deficit has become a major headache for the administration as it seeks fiscal responsibility while still needing to tend a fragile economic recovery....MORE

Obama Keeps Fannie, Freddie Off U.S. Budget, Counts Dividends (FNM; FRE)

That's an interesting approach to GAAP.
From Bloomberg:

President Barack Obama’s budget blueprint for the next fiscal year excludes the $6.3 trillion in liabilities of government-controlled Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and delays for a second time a decision on restructuring the mortgage-finance companies that were seized 17 months ago.

The companies may need $54.4 billion in U.S. Treasury Department preferred stock purchases to stay afloat in the current fiscal year, and $23 billion more for the year beginning in October, according to calculations made from the Obama administration’s fiscal 2011 budget proposal to Congress today.

“The administration continues to monitor the situation of the GSEs closely and will continue to provide updates on considerations for longer-term reform of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as appropriate,” the Obama administration said.

White House budget director Peter Orszag delayed a decision on whether to bring the companies’ $1.6 trillion in corporate debt and $4.7 trillion mortgage obligations onto the federal budget. As the director of the Congressional Budget Office, Orszag criticized the Bush administration for keeping Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s 2008 rescue off budget.

At the time, Orszag said “the degree of federal control over Fannie and Freddie is so strong, we are incorporating them into the federal budget.”

Obama’s budget plan classifies the GSEs as “non-budgetary” items and excludes from being counted as federal liabilities because “they are privately owned and controlled.” The administration counts $110.6 billion in taxpayer support already paid to the companies and $225 billion in GSE mortgage bonds purchased by the Treasury.

Dividends

So far, the companies have paid $6.8 billion in dividends to the Treasury on their borrowings....MORE

From Reuters:

Fannie, Freddie seen tapping $153 bln from Treasury

Mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are seen tapping about $153 billion from the Treasury Department by September of next year and then begining to repay about $7 billion per year thereafter, the White House said in its fiscal year 2011 budget proposal....

Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac-- "Accounting for Fannie: CBO and the White House debate how much to tell taxpayers." (FNM; FRE)

UPDATE: "Obama Keeps Fannie, Freddie Off U.S. Budget, Counts Dividends (FNM; FRE)"
Original post:
We'll post the relevant portions of the President's Budget when it becomes available.
In the meantime the Wall Street Journal has been taking a look under the hood of the mortgage biz:

The Congressional Budget Office has lopped $20 billion off its estimate of the cost of keeping Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac afloat for the next decade—to a mere $79 billion. That will have to pass for good news, even if the estimate comes loaded with caveats. The bigger story is why the White House continues to keep these wards of the state off-budget.

As the CBO notes in a recent background paper, the standards for when to include government-sponsored entities in the budget go back to the 1960s, when a Presidential commission laid out a set of questions.

To wit: "Who owns the agency?" (In the case of Fan and Fred, taxpayers.) "Who supplies its capital?" (Taxpayers.) "Who selects its managers?" (The federal government.) And finally, "Do the Congress and the President have control over the agency's program and budget, or are the agency's policies the responsibility of the Congress or the President only in some broad ultimate sense?" (The feds have control in every sense.)

Since Hank Paulson placed them in conservatorship in September 2008, Fan and Fred have stopped even pretending to be run for profit. Losses have mounted accordingly: Some $291 billion for taxpayers through 2009, $48 billion for the cost of new business in 2009 alone, and $21 billion more this year. Last August, CBO estimated the 10-year cost to taxpayers of keeping Fannie and Freddie afloat at $389 billion.

Yesterday's estimate reduces that by some 5%, but this assumes the companies will stabilize at a loss rate of nearly $8 billion a year on average over the next decade. CBO bases its projection on an expectation that the housing market will "normalize" as the recession ends. However, there is no more normal in a housing market that now depends almost entirely on government subsidies. The full cost of subsidizing mortgages via Fannie and Freddie, the FHA and Ginnie Mae remains hidden and off the official balance sheet, so there is little political pressure to stop the losses.

As the CBO notes, Fannie and Freddie "purchase mortgages at above-market prices," driving down interest rates and passing some of the savings to home buyers. That subsidy is felt right away, but the risks in providing it are stored up over time, and their real costs may not be felt for years or even decades—as was the case in the years leading up to their spectacular collapse in 2008.

Yet this is precisely the fiction that the Obama Administration seeks to preserve by keeping the cost of Fan and Fred off the government's books. The Administration's budget accounting assumes Fannie and Freddie are private companies. So under its preferred treatment, the only recognized cost to taxpayers is the money that is being pumped in to keep them afloat—$110 billion so far....MORE

They continue with "Fannie, Freddie Chase Bad Mortgages":

Lenders Like BofA, J.P. Morgan Repurchase Billions in Faulty Loans; Just a Drop in the Default Pool

It is payback time for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac on some mortgages sold to the finance companies by lenders.

Stuck with about $300 billion in loans to borrowers at least 90 days behind on payments, Fannie and Freddie have unleashed armies of auditors and other employees to sift through mortgage files for proof of underwriting flaws. The two mortgage-finance companies are flexing their muscles to force banks to repurchase loans found to contain improper documentation about a borrower's income or outright lies.

The result: Freddie Mac required lenders to buy back $2.7 billion of loans in the first nine months of 2009, a 125% jump from $1.2 billion a year earlier. Fannie Mae won't disclose its figure, but trade publication Inside Mortgage Finance said Fannie made $4.3 billion in loan-repurchase requests in the first nine months of 2009.

"Because taxpayers are involved, we're being very vigilant," said Maria Brewster, who oversees Fannie's repurchase team. "No taxpayer should have to pay for a business decision that caused a bad loan to be sold to Fannie Mae."

[Pushback]

The get-tough stance comes amid pressure on Fannie and Freddie to make the most out of more than $100 billion in taxpayer funds they got to stay afloat. The U.S. government took them over in September 2008.

The biggest losers are likely to be Bank of America Corp., J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. and other mortgage lenders when the housing bubble burst. Such lenders also are being deluged with loans kicked back to them by holders of mortgage-backed securities who uncover deficiencies with loans bundled into the pools. One common example: a borrower who said the loan was for an owner-occupied home but used it for a second house.

Overall, banks repurchased about $14.2 billion in loans from holders of mortgage-backed securities in the first nine months of last year, up from $3.6 billion a year earlier, according to Barclays Capital. The figures are based on data reported to regulators by federally insured banks and savings institutions.

Forced loan buybacks threaten to "wipe out a significant portion of the [loan] origination profits…made in the last year," said Nicholas Strand, a Barclays analyst.

Strong-arming lenders to swallow loans that were guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac helps cushion the mortgage-finance companies from defaults, though repurchases represent a sliver of all defaulted loans.

Fannie reported Thursday that borrowers of 5.29% of the loans it guarantees were at least 90 days behind as of November, up from 2.13% a year earlier. Fannie guarantees $2.9 trillion in loans.

At Freddie, such delinquencies reached 3.87% at the end of December, up from 1.72% a year earlier.

While growth in subprime defaults is slowing, defaults on prime loans are accelerating. Such loans account for 90% of all mortgages guaranteed by Fannie and Freddie.

"Delinquency rates are up, so it's not surprising" that buyback demands are up, said Brad German, a Freddie Mac spokesman. "Consequently, the number of loan put-backs will reflect that."

Keefe, Bruyette & Woods analysts warned this week that repurchases would "contribute to further weakness in mortgage banking profitability in 2010, which is difficult for an industry that will already have to cope with materially lower production volume.">>>MORE

Finally, "Mortgage Funds Brace for Major Shift"

The end of a U.S. program supporting the home-loan market could reduce returns to investors

There may be an Arctic front looming for mortgage-focused mutual funds as the Federal Reserve prepares to stop buying securities backed by home loans next month.

The Fed kept mortgage rates low in 2009 by acting as a buyer of securities issued by or backed by three government-controlled entities: the Government National Mortgage Association (known as Ginnie Mae), Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. These so-called agency securities provide funding for more than half of all U.S. home loans outstanding.

But the planned withdrawal of that government aid may cause mortgage rates to rise and the prices of mortgage securities—which move in the opposite direction—to fall, according to many money managers and analysts, potentially reducing returns for investors in mortgage-focused funds.

"Low underlying yields made even lower by an artificial and temporary market stimulus…just the prescription for bad fun," John Rekenthaler, vice president of research at Morningstar Inc., wrote in an online post titled "Bad Investment Ideas for 2010."

Some portfolio managers have cut their agency holdings ahead of the Fed's planned exit and started looking for returns in a much riskier part of the market: "non-agency" securities backed by "subprime" and other risky mortgages, the area that took such a massive beating in 2007 and 2008. Among those who say they have been selectively buying these securities recently are fund managers at firms including BlackRock Inc. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

Helped by Uncle Sam

The performance of agency mortgage securities has hinged on government backing for the past two years....

...Even with the government guarantees, however, rates on those agency securities didn't stabilize until the Fed committed to buying $1.25 trillion in Fannie, Freddie and Ginnie Mae securities in March 2009. (Earlier in the crisis, it had pledged to buy half that amount.)

Most mortgage-fund portfolio managers and analysts agree that the market's reaction to the Fed's withdrawal will be pivotal for returns this year. How disruptive it will be to financial markets remains a matter of debate.

Morningstar's Mr. Rekenthaler says he expects Ginnie Mae investments this year to "make about 4% in yield and then give that back in principal losses." He says that if he were a fixed-income investor, he would shift his money into corporate-bond funds, hedging that by betting against higher-quality bonds in a "barbell" strategy.

Curtis Arledge, co-head of U.S. fixed-income at BlackRock's portfolio-management group, says he thinks the Fed's withdrawal is largely reflected in current prices already, though he "wouldn't be surprised to see a little more volatility as that program evolves in 2010." He expects Ginnie Mae securities to hold their value this year without suffering principal losses....MORE