machinery

Mid-Week Update 12-09-09

In 2008, tight lending conditions hurt farmers’ ability to take on loans – preventing them not only from making capital expenditures on things like tractors and other machinery, but also hurting their ability to buy fertilizer. As demand weakened, fertilizer companies, including our Mosaic (MOS) and Potash of Saskatchewan (POT) took it on the chin with shares losing more than two-thirds of their value in some cases. Read more...

Red, white and mostly blue...: 07-03-08

America’s birthday is tomorrow, but few Americans are ready to celebrate. Beer sales this weekend are expected to reach their highest level for the year, but rather than raising a glass to our nation’s independence it seems more than a few people will be drowning their sorrows due to our dependence on Middle East oil.

 

Crude oil prices have topped $145 a barrel for the first time ever. And it’s starting to look like higher energy prices are starting to take there toll on the broad economy.

 

The Labor Department reported job losses of 62,000 in May, slightly more than expected. Moreover, another important employment market data point out today was that weekly initial claims for unemployment insurance rose to 404,000 in the latest reporting period. That brings the smoothed, four-week average for claims to their highest level since just after Hurricane Katrina. We’re watching this number closely as further increase could spell real trouble for the economy. And the upside of this data is that wag inflation is likely to remain in check.

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Market Update 06-09-09

The Treasury Department has approved ten banks to repay a combined $68 billion in TARP loans by buying back preferred shares from the government. Many banks who received bailout assistance are anxious to repay the loans not only to show investors that they are healthy, but also so they may operate more freely, in regards to salary levels and lending practices. Among the banks already approved are JPMorgan, U.S. Bancorp, BB&T, and Morgan Stanley. The number of banks having received a total of about $200 billion in TARP money stands at 600; 22 smaller banks had already paid back about $2 billion. Major banks are now allowed to repay the loans for the first time.
 
The repayment of TARP funds is an encouraging sign that the worst of the financial crisis may be behind us, and also lessens the fears of nationalization. However, the issue of the toxic assets remains as they are still on banks’ books and aren’t going away any time soon. Until there’s a method of adequately coping with and pricing them, we have the uneasy feeling that the other shoe could drop. In a sign that the financial sector isn’t out of the woods, Secretary Geithner noted that the funds returned may be needed to help other banks.
 
The economy is not out of the woods yet either.  The Commerce Department reported a worse-than-expected 1.4 percent fall in wholesale inventories for April. April was the eighth straight month of declines for the measure.
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Market Update 09-02-08

For weeks now, one of the biggest stories in the financial markets has been the strengthening U.S. dollar. But for all of the printer's ink and business television airtime devoted to the subject, it seems commentators have misread the situation. 

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RECESSION METER 03-12-07

We were pleasantly surprised last week when stocks staged a 1% rally. The advance/decline line was almost 2:1. That’s a pretty good showing compared with the week before.

Regarding the short-term, we don’t think the correction is necessarily over. But neither do we think a major bear market is beginning. We could see a return to the March 7 lows, or even a little lower. But a decline of more than 7-8% from the peak is unlikely. A 9-10% decline would be the absolute worst we could see, in our humble opinion.

As we have pointed out before, bear markets seldom begin right after the kind of Dow Theory Buy signal we had recently. (That was the signal in which a new high in Transports confirmed the new highs in all the other averages, including the Industrials.) Yes, corrections often occur after such a signal. We’re having one now. But the bull market will almost certainly resume before much ground is lost. Confirmed new highs tell us that the economy is on too good a footing to permit a bear market in the near future.

And speaking of the economy, let us share with you a little secret …

OUR MARVELOUS RECESSION METER

At TCI we use some very complex machinery for making economic predictions. At the moment, the overall readouts are pointing to a slowing U.S. economy.Read more...