viernes, 18 de marzo de 2016

viernes, marzo 18, 2016


4 Signs That the Lights May Be About to Go Out in the Housing Market

Tony Sagami
Editor, Tony Sagami's Rational Bear


Discover the 4 distinct warning signs that a new American housing bubble is on the rise—one you can profit from handsomely if you play your cards right...


Dear Fellow Investor,

The American dream means different things to different people.

For my immigrant parents, it was to send their three children to college (and they managed to do it, too).

For most people, one of the things that’s essential to the American dream—or so we’ve been brainwashed to believe for generations—is to own their own home.

However, a growing number of Americans can’t afford to buy a house today. In fact, the current rate of homeownership is near 1993 levels...


But wait a minute—how can that be when unemployment is at only 4.9%, the lowest level since 2008, wage growth is at a six-year high, and the US economy is happily buzzing along?

Well, things aren’t always the way they seem...

The Awful Truth in a Few Numbers

Let me introduce myself. I’m Tony Sagami, editor of the Rational Bear alert service here at Mauldin Economics.

And I’m telling you, in contrast to what you read in the mainstream media, right now there’s a lot to be bearish about when it comes to the US economy.

Oh, I know, that’s not what you keep hearing from the government talking heads, who claim that everything in the American economic landscape is rainbows and unicorns.

But if there’s one thing I’m well known for, it’s to tell it like it is. I don’t usually mince my words when I see BS... and I won’t let you fall for the pig-with-lipstick figures the government trots out every month either.

Before I tell you more about the housing bubble I see coming, here are some numbers that, in a nutshell, tell the story about why you should be wary of all the economic euphoria:

·         $19.1 trillion is the current US debt. Even taxing the “Top 1%” at 100% of their income and using that money toward paying off the national debt would barely make a dent.

·         0% interest rates. The world is slowly coming to the realization that zero percent interest rates—and the newest fad, NEGATIVE interest rates—are part of the problem, not the solution. These stupidly low interest rates do only two things: they encourage healthy companies to invest in more production capacity, and they keep unhealthy “zombie companies” alive... both of which lead to overcapacity and excess supply.

·         49.5—that’s where the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) index of national factory activity came in for the month of February. (Anything below 50 indicates contraction.) Manufacturing numbers looked even worse for the eurozone, the UK, and China. British factory growth fell to a 34-month low, while manufacturing activity in China has been dropping for seven months straight.

·         12.7% is how much the S&P 500’s earnings per share fell in 2015. The index’s EPS now has been down for FIVE quarters in a row.

·         99.7—that’s the Restaurant Performance Index (RPI) for the month of December. The index is released by the National Restaurant Association on a regular basis and tracks restaurant operators’ responses on same-store sales, traffic, labor, and capital expenditures. In December, the RPI dropped to 99.7, from 101.3 in November and 102.1 in October... which is the worst two-month plunge since 2008.

If those numbers sound dire and depressing to you, remember, I’m not just warning people—I also show them how to make money from these turbulent markets, economic downturns, and incompetently run companies.

And the opportunity I want to present you today is one few investors are seeing yet...


Ultra-Low Mortgage Rates... and STILL No Takers

What the current situation in the housing sector looks like to me is, to quote my friend John Mauldin, “a bug in search of a windshield.”

According to the Census Bureau, the US homeownership rate dropped to 63.7% in 2015—that’s a whopping 5.3% fall from the 2004 peak of 69%.

The rate fell for EVERY age group except householders under age 25, whose numbers climbed by a barely noticeable 0.1%.

At the same time, the renter rate has increased in every one of the 50 largest US cities since 2006, according to American Community Survey.

Here’s what should shock you most about this:

The homeownership rate has declined DESPITE the fact that interest rates have been at or near ZERO PERCENT for the past seven years... and that mortgage rates are at historic lows.


Since the start of 2016, the average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage has dropped from 4.01% to 3.62%—and lower mortgage rates are supposed to be a big positive for the real estate market.


What has all that near-free money done for the real estate market? Not much, according to the most recent statistics.

4 Warning Signs That the Lights May Go Out Soon

As the housing bubble nears its popping point, these warning signs will increase in number and become more pronounced. But if you keep your eyes open, you’ll already see...

Lights-Out Sign #1: Pending home sales are down.

Pending home sales are a good barometer of future real estate sales. However, there is a lag of one or two months between a contract and a completed sale.


According to the National Association of Realtors, pending home sales fell 2.5% from December to January. The “good news”: On a year-over-year basis, there’s a gain—of a truly pathetic 1.4%.

Lights-Out Sign #2: New-home sales are slow.

The “lag” I’ve talked about is already here because the January numbers for new-home sales showed a big slowdown.


The Wall Street crowd had anticipated 520,000 new-home sales, but the actual number came in at 494,000—a 9.2% month-over-month drop from 544,000 in December.

Lights-Out Sign #3: The price of new homes is falling.

The median sales price for a new home dropped by 4.5% to $278,800, the biggest one-year decline since January 2012.


And if you think January was an anomaly, think again: the median sales price fell by 3.7% in December and by 0.3% in November.

Lights-Out Sign #4: Creative mortgage-financing tricks are back.

At the height of the real estate bubble, people bought homes with no to low down payments and without financial documentation (aka “liar’s loans”).


According to the Equifax National Consumer Credit Trends Report, the number of mortgage originations for subprime borrowers with credit scores of 620 and below is on the rise again.

From January to October 2015, Americans took out more than 312,000 subprime mortgages worth $50.7 billion—that’s a 28% increase in the number of mortgage originations and a 45% increase in dollar value.
 
Seven Years of Near-Free Money and This Is the Result?

It’s pretty obvious that the problem is lack of demand... which tells me that the real estate rally has run out of steam and the next major move is going to be downward.

And I’ve found a great way to play the coming housing-bubble burst that I’d like to show you today.

The best and easiest way to profit from a downturn in US real estate is through an inverse fund that, I believe, will make my Rational Bear subscribers a nice chunk of money.

I can’t just tell you the name, out of respect for my paying subscribers. What I can tell you, though, is that the knuckleheads on Wall Street have priced the stocks that make up this fund as if they are going to the moon.

Case in point: The average P/E of the fund’s portfolio is a nosebleed 31.5 times earnings, 12.1 times cash flow, and 5.7 times sales.

A perfect scenario for us to jump in and cash out when the time is ready. And you’ll know instantly when that time has come.

All you have to do to get in position to benefit from the deflating housing bubble is read the current monthly issue of my Rational Bear service.

I think this play could get as big as our recent success with a special exchange-traded note...
 
How to Make Volatility Your Friend

In the past two years, we’ve repeatedly invested in the iPath S&P 500 VIX ST Futures ETN (VXX)... and won every time.

You see, the VXX is designed to mirror the performance of the VIX, the Chicago Board Options Exchange’s Volatility Index. It isn’t a direct bet on the stock market going down—it’s more like a bet that the stock market will become more volatile.

The VIX is calculated from the volume of call and put options trading. It’s a widely used measure of market risk and is often referred to as the “investor fear” index.

And let me tell you, there has been a lot of fear and uncertainty in the market.

We made our first VXX bet on December 4, 2014 and cashed out with a 5.06% gain only five days later... followed by a quick 8.70% gain in four days... and 7.03% in seven days.

As you can see below, my Rational Bear subscribers earned between 2.12% and 34.94% from eight VXX trades spread across thirteen and a half months.

Symbol
Date Open
Date Closed
Time Held
Open Price
Close Price
Gain / (Loss) %
VXX
12/4/2014
12/9/2014
5 days
$26.10
$27.42
5.06%
VXX
12/29/2014
1/2/2015
4 days
$28.51
$30.99
8.70%
VXX
1/13/2015
1/14/2015
1 day
$34.39
$35.12
2.12%
VXX
1/22/2015
1/29/2015
7 days
$31.30
$33.50
7.03%
VXX
3/2/2015
3/11/2015
9 days
$27.00
$29.23
8.26%
VXX
3/20/2015
9/29/2015
6 mos.
$25.73
$26.89
4.51%
VXX
10/21/2015
11/13/2015
23 days
$18.50
$21.96
18.70%
VXX
11/24/2015
1/11/2016
48 days
$17.80
$24.02
34.94%

And these VXX trades were not our only recent successes: In the last few months, my subscribers made 70% and 152.14% on two different trades involving the flailing transportation sector… 56.60% on a dramatically overvalued clothing company... and more.

In a market like this, it can pay well to be a bear.

Of course, I can’t guarantee that we’ll see similarly great results with the US housing bubble trade you can get in on now. But having closely watched the housing market before and since 2008, it again looks pretty frothy to me.

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