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A Twisted Outlook
From Fed policy to Europe to Obamanomics, it’s not a pretty picture.

By Larry Kudlow


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Stocks collapsed roughly 700 points over two days after the Federal Reserve launched its “Operation Twist.” The market correctly perceives that the central bank’s plan to swap $400 billion of short-term notes for long-term bonds adds no new reserves to the financial system. So it wasn’t QE3, that’s for sure. No stimulus. In fact, with the Treasury yield curve flattening, the Fed’s sterilized asset swap actually tightened financial markets.

The Fed should have listened to the GOP congressional leadership, which in a letter advocated no more stimulus and no more market-subverting interference.

But the real issue is the new FOMC forecast: “There are significant downside risks to the economic outlook, including strains in global financial markets.” That was the killer statement.

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So let me repeat: We are on the front end of a recession. The profits picture is very much in doubt. More Obamanomics tax hikes are in the air. Europe is unsolved. U.S. finances are a mess. All this is being discounted by slumping stocks.

Corporate credit risk spreads have been widening, which is a negative for the profits picture, as economist Michael Darda has pointed out. Profits are the mother’s milk of stocks. And the European funding markets have tightened substantially, as their much-wider financial-stress spreads all indicate.

Indeed, the European banking and sovereign-debt crisis is still a shoe waiting to fall. Greece may get bailed out again in a couple of weeks. But so far, the European Union’s authorities have not agreed on a bailout or bankruptcy plan to backstop debt-restructurings, or to recapitalize banks in the wake of those default restructurings.

Meanwhile, September purchasing managers’ indexes for European manufacturing and services teeter on the brink of recession. In Asia, Hong Kong shipping volumes are way down, and China’s PMI came in weak. The global transportation-delivery powerhouse FedEx just lowered its worldwide earnings and sales outlook.

And coming back home, the Obama $1.5 trillion tax-hike plan, and his veto threat for any deficit package that doesn’t include big tax hikes on successful earners, investors, and businesses, is another sword of Damocles hanging over the economy and the stock market.

Is the U.S. stock market now predicting recession? Well, the cyclical economic sectors are in bear-market mode, with roughly 25 percent declines since late April for energy, industrials, and materials. Banks, which are being hurt by credit downgrades and yield-curve flattening, are off over 30 percent.

How bad might the recession be? Well, it’s hard to say. But in all likelihood the answer is not so bad. The yield curve has narrowed from 10s to 2s, from nearly 300 basis points in March to about 150 basis points currently. But the curve is not inverted, and that’s important as a recession signal. And over the past ten years or so, the average spread has been about 160 basis points, not far from today’s reading.

Also, the U.S. banking system is flush with cash, as is corporate America. And for better or worse, interest rates in the Treasury market are negative (easy money). Business profits will slow significantly, but are still likely to rise a bit. And with oil dropping to about $80, a price shock that was a key slowdown factor is going away.

Housing is still in the tank, and consumer spending looks very iffy. And we had zero jobs and zero retail sales in August — two very bad signs. On the other hand, exports and business investment are still rising.

So it’s not 2008. Not by a long shot. But it’s not a pretty picture either.

Larry Kudlow, NRO’s economics editor, is host of CNBC’s The Kudlow Report and author of the daily web log, Kudlow’s Money Politic$.

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COMMENTS   6

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   09/23/11 00:42

I thought we were starting to come out of this, but if Larry Kudlow is pessimistic, the sky must really be falling.

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   09/23/11 01:21

Mr. Kudlow...you open and end this article with the same line..."it's not a pretty picture". However, reading between the lines, I envision, from your critical review, more of a 3 hour slasher-horror "Nightmare on Main Street" in vivid high definition and 3-D, featuring washed-up, has-been actors, a worn-out cliched third sequel script, and directed and financed by a bunch of corrupt cronies who continue to sell out everyone else's mothers, children, and grandchildren.

I have heard you are ever the optimist. I may be a financial simpleton...but Twisted Outcome feels more like a death grip to me.

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   09/23/11 10:55

It is not clear there was ever more than a niggling statistical recovery from the last recession, so the admission that we are entering another is not exactly earth-shattering.

Three things are clear:

* The Fed has shot away all its bolts.

* The Job Creators in the private sector are under attack by the Job Cremators currently in control of federal government policy.

* The Political Class will spend until there is nothing left of the economy to destroy.

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 cab
   09/23/11 12:01

"The Political Class will spend until there is nothing left of the economy to destroy"

... thus providing the pretext for greater government takeovers a la General Motors.

After all, never let a good crisis go to waste, as someone said a while back. Heaven help us.

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Andrew P
   09/24/11 04:09

Taken by itself, Ben's "operation twist" does not make sense. It is just rearranging deck chairs. But in context of enabling Obama's rumored plan to to do a mass automatic refi of all current mortgages in the US, it makes a lot of sense. The Fed's announcement that they will reinvest all mortgage proceeds in mortgages confirms this view. By cutting the 30 year rate to below 2%, Ben allows Obama to order Fannie and Freddie to refinance every current mortgage in the US at a rate of 2%, regardless of LTV. If they refinance $10 Trillion worth of mortgages, they can put a few hundred billion extra dollars into the pockets of voters - every year for 30 years to come. Bank and pension income will drop by a commensurate amount. Do the Obamacans have the competence to pull this off, given that all their previous mortgage mod programs were flops? This is the question.

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avenirv@hotmail.com
   09/26/11 13:11

and Gov. romney jaust said he will drastically increase the import duties thye very first day of his inauguration.
is this good or bad ?
are there some qualified opinions ?
thank you

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