REMINDER: All investment, economics, and finance related material now appears at the new IaconoResearch.com. For the time being at least, this has become a personal blog covering a variety of mostly unrelated topics.

Two Perspectives on the Economic Recovery

With the oil price at about $85 a barrel and rising, with gasoline prices at $3.00 a gallon and rising, and with a good portion of Main Street sitting out the huge stock market gains over the last year or so, it’s not hard to understand why the public at large is a bit cranky.

From the Chan Lowe archive at CBS News.

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Zachary Scheidt filed this report at Seeking Alpha in which he wondered how much the wave of mortgage defaults has benefited consumer spending. That is, for those individuals who decide to stop paying their mortgage but stay in their house until someone comes and kicks them out, how big a boost is all that extra mortgage money giving personal consumption, the group that accounts for two-thirds of the U.S. economy.

But with all the headwinds, and with all the negative publicity… the consumer, it appears, is beginning to step up to the plate and once again spend us into recovery.

It’s been quite a mystery to me for some time now. Exactly where is all this pocket change coming from – especially considering the difficulties we are seeing in other areas (savings rates are once again headed lower, consumer credit hasn’t expanded by any material amount, and despite positive payroll headlines, the underlying report is full of holes).

It wasn’t until this past week when a colleague mentioned the term strategic default did I realize what was likely occurring. Many consumers are spending their mortgage payments! It’s beginning to make sense in the most disturbing way. As homeowners face staggering payments on houses that have negative equity, a large number are simply deciding not to pay their mortgage bill, resigned to the fact that eventually they will lose their house.

And what happens with the money that would have been sent to the lenders? Well, an increasing mentality of “eat drink and be merry – for tomorrow we’re evicted” has set in.

Yes, one of the many oddities about our current economic situation in the wake of the burst housing and credit market bubbles is that many people are making more and more decisions that, ten years ago, would have sounded ridiculous.

This subject was discussed here in The New Foreclosure Trend – Non-Foreclosures not long ago. A back-of-the-envelope calculation revealed the amount of mortgage money freed up to spend on other things is in the billions of dollars per quarter.

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Fred Sheehan’s Take on the FCIC Hearing

Fred Sheehan, author of Panderer to Power: The Untold Story of How Alan Greenspan Enriched Wall Street and Left a Legacy of Recession was on Bloomberg yesterday talking about the morning session of yesterday’s Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission hearing.

He makes a good point about how the overall tone was much different than when the former Fed chief used to trudge up to Capitol Hill and talk to elected officials, many of whom hadn’t a clue about monetary policy or the financial system.

The details in this China Daily report are a bit hazy, but it does appear as though the idea of excluding home prices from the consumer price index in favor of some substitute that doesn’t go up as much isn’t going over so well in China.

China’s Consumer Price Index (CPI), a main measure of inflation, would be made more relevant to the dramatically rising home price since next year, said the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) on Wednesday.

The factors of mortgage loan rate and home prices would be given more weight when calculating CPI, Wei Guixiang, head of the statistics bureau’s urban, social and economic survey department, said at a press conference.

The move was regarded at a direct response to the uprising public criticism against housing-related data released by the bureau.

The statistics bureau has said that China’s average home prices rose by 1.5 percent for the whole of 2009. But observers reckoned that actual growth is much higher than the official rate. They said it could be 50 percent or even more as homebuyers have become more active after the economy shows solid signs of recovery.

Obviously, their best English speaker wasn’t on duty, but you get the idea.

Not having done this search in quite some time, it is very nice to see that my 2007 classic on this subject – How owners’ equivalent rent duped the Fed – still ranks highly. It comes in just behind an entry from the Bureau of Labor Statistics at #1 and ahead of Investopedia.

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GLD Inventory Nears Record High

The “tonnes in the trust” at the popular SPDR Gold Shares ETF (NYSE:GLD) rose by another tonne yesterday, the latest in a series of small additions in recent weeks, bringing the total to within three tonnes of the all-time high set last June at 1134 tonnes.

Interestingly, the entire move up last fall in the gold price – from around $950 an ounce to a new record high of over $1,225 an ounce – came as the GLD inventory simply moved back up to its mid-year high. This time around, inventory has been building while prices have consolidated around the $1,100 an ounce level with the action in recent days looking like a big move to the upside could be right around the corner.

Full Disclosure: Long GLD at time of writing.

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