Understandably, the nation’s best cartoon artists are so preoccupied with the Gulf Coast oil disaster that they have little time to think about things like the economy, financial markets, or other topics that are more germane to this blog, but this gem is worth sharing.

From the always entertaining Tom Toles archive (and blog) at the Washington Post.

Tagged with:  






California Lawmakers Blow…

It wouldn’t be summertime if the State of California wasn’t wrestling with another budget deficit and that’s what looks to be on tap, details of last night’s missed budget deadline provided in this report from Southern California Public Radio from which the shorter (and more descriptive) title above was extracted.

California lawmakers blow budget deadline

Midnight Tuesday night was the constitutional deadline for California’s legislature to pass a state budget. The legislature had to come up with a plan that closes a $19 billion deficit. That plan is a long way from getting done.

There’s a saying that lawmakers won’t pass a state budget until the temperature reaches 100 in Sacramento. It’s only in the mid-80s this week – but that’s not why the legislature missed the deadline.

It comes down to ideology: Democrats and Republicans disagree on how much to spend on government.

This ideological divide is why Democrats and Republicans are likely to blow past all the budget deadlines and spend another summer spewing hot air – no matter how high the temperature rises in Sacramento.

Let’s see. Last year they “temporarily” shifted June payrolls into July so they would be counted against the next fiscal year and they increased withholding rates so they would get more tax money sooner. What gimmickry will they think up this year?

Tagged with:  

More Dire Warnings from Matt Simmons

Matt Simmons talks to Bloomberg’s Lori Rothman about how crude oil is leaking into the gulf at a rate even faster than the latest upwardly revised government estimate and he reiterates his view that detonating a small nuclear device in order to turn the seabed rock into glass is the only way to stop the flow since the well casing is gone.

Also, this Ron Paul interview at CNBC via Dealbreaker is worth a look as it sheds some more light on comments made not long ago by Paul’s son, Kentucky Senate candidate Rand Paul.

Tagged with:  

One of the latest development in the nation’s housing crisis looks like it will further erode the already strained relationship between borrower and lender as banks seem intent on collecting on the losses they’re taking when underwater borrowers sell their property in a short sale or are foreclosed on. This story in the Washington Post has the details:

Over the past year, lenders have become much more aggressive in trying to recoup money lost in foreclosures and other distressed sales, creating more grief for people who thought their real estate headaches were far behind.

In many localities — including Virginia, Maryland and the District — lenders have the right to pursue borrowers whose homes have sold at a loss to collect the difference between what the property sold for and what the borrower owed on it, also called a deficiency.

Before the housing bust, when the volume of foreclosures was relatively low, lenders seldom bothered to chase after deficiencies because borrowers had few remaining assets to claim and doing so involved hassles and costs. But with foreclosures soaring, lenders are more determined to get their money back, especially if they suspect borrowers are skipping out on loan they could afford, an increasingly common practice in areas where home values have tanked.

“Lenders are not going after people who face a hardship,” said John Mechem, a spokesman for the Mortgage Bankers Association. “If they can’t pay their mortgage because they have a loss of income, there is no point in going after them.

“Those who had a second mortgage, such as a home-equity line of credit, in addition to their primary mortgage may find themselves particularly vulnerable, especially if they tapped into the equity line for cash.

From the banks’ perspective, this makes good sense, particularly in those cases where borrowers really abused the system by taking all the money that was being offered a few years ago by the very same banks that are now seeking redress. Of course, this makes the banks look like angry crack dealers or loan sharks which, to some degree, they are.

Tagged with:  

Housing Starts and Permits Plunge

The Commerce Department reported(.pdf) that new home construction tumbled in May following the expiration of the homebuyer tax credit in April, a development that surprised many forecasters for some reason. A look over at the Economic Calender at Yahoo! Finance shows that analysts missed these two by a country mile.

After an increase of 3.9 percent in April, housing starts fell 10.0 percent in May to an annual rate of 593,000 units, the lowest level since last December just after the first round of tax credits expired and well short of the expected 650,000+ units. Permits for new construction, an important leading indicator for the industry, fell 5.9 percent in May following an 11.0 percent plunge in April as homebuilders correctly anticipated the coming slowdown.

Tagged with:  

Wednesday Morning Links

MUST READS
EU denies €250bn Spain liquidity plan – Telegraph
China still has appetite for U.S. debt – CNN/Money
We’re in the eye of the financial storm – MarketWatch
Russia to Buy Canadian, Aussie Dollars for First Time – Bloomberg
S&P: Shadow Inventory to Take 3 Years to Clear – Housing Wire
The Beginning of the Great Deconstruction – newgeography
Moody’s, S&P get a study break – Fortune
What’s Choking Bank Lending? – Forbes

MARKETS/INVESTING
Oil hovers near $77 as stock rally slows – AP
Gold gains on bargain hunting; soaring stocks weigh – Reuters
Richard Russell: We’re in the “Dead Zone” – Pragmatic Capitalist
Dow Theory Sees Bull Market Near Death – MarketWatch
S&P 500 index flashes bullish signal to chart-watchers – LA Times
Americans are in a mood to sell their gold – Commodity Online
Jim Rogers: I Bought the Euro; Oil to Go Higher – CNBC

MISCELLANY
US mortgage demand jumps after tax credit payback – Reuters
Fed May Trim U.S. Growth Outlook on Europe Risks – Bloomberg
Is Merkel’s Government About to Crumble? – Spiegel Online
France to raise retirement age to 62 – MarketWatch
Banks Getting Worried About Rising Challenges to Foreclosures? – Naked Capitalism
Is Squatting a Viable Long-Term Solution for Housing? – Irvine Housing Bubble
SoCal home price up 22.5 percent over last year – Orange County Register
Barney Frank Sides With Bernanke, Fed Audit To Be Materially Curbed – Zero Hedge
Volcker: Too Big To Fail Lives Despite Reform Bill – HuffPost

 
© 2010-2011 The Mess That Greenspan Made