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Friday, June 15, 2012

Morning Report

Vital Statistics:

Last Change Percent
S&P Futures  1327.5 1.3 0.10%
Eurostoxx Index 2179.6 31.4 1.46%
Oil (WTI) 84.02 0.1 0.13%
LIBOR 0.468 0.000 0.00%
US Dollar Index (DXY) 81.91 -0.078 -0.10%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 1.59% -0.05%  
RPX Composite Real Estate Index 179.8 0.3  

Markets are slightly better on speculation of further stimulus measures out of the world's central banks. We are seeing a tightening across the board with Euro sovereigns, particularly Greece. The US 10-year is yield is lower as well, with MBS up a few ticks. Today is Triple Witching, with the expiration of options and futures.

The Empire State Manufacturing Survey came in well below expectations, and dropped precipitously from May's number based on a steep drop in shipments. Overall, the report suggests that business activity is still expanding (slightly) but optimism is waning. Separately, capacity utilization fell from 79.2% to 79% and industrial production fell .1%.

Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies released their State of the Nation's Housing Market Survey yesterday. Punch line: The housing market appears to have turned the corner, however further economic weakness could stall it again. They note that housing construction is finally a positive contributor to GDP.  They also include a chart showing that the relative attractiveness of owning vs renting is as high as it has been since the early 70's:

As if we didn't have enough to worry about on the horizon, an ex-Soros advisor warns us about Japan, where he envisions a Japanese government bond default by 2017. The IMF is forecasting the Japanese debt to GDP ratio will increase to 245% by 2014. “The yen and the JGB market are in a bubble,” Fujimaki said. “With the gigantic debt Japan has accumulated, a thin needle, or even a gentle breeze may pop this. Events in Europe can possibly trigger this to blow up.”  While some people bemoan that we are potentially following the European track, Japan is the final stop on the track they propose.


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