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The Wall Street Greek blog is the sexy & syndicated financial securities markets publication of former Senior Equity Analyst Markos N. Kaminis. Our stock market blog reaches reputable publishers & private networks and is an unbiased, independent Wall Street research resource on the economy, stocks, gold & currency, energy & oil, real estate and more. Wall Street & Greece should be as honest, dependable and passionate as The Greek.


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Saturday, October 04, 2008

Business Week in Review - Deflating

deflated stock sentiment consumer
By The Greek - Economy and Markets:

Deflating... One word described Friday best and it was "deflating." The big bad bailout finally passed through Congress... late, politically perverted, manically manipulated, derogatorily decimated, but it passed. What of stock market reaction, you ask, how high did it go? Ah, the psychology of the market; she's a confusing lady. Her reaction on Friday was to say the least, deflating.

(Article interests: AMEX: SPY, Nasdaq: QQQQ, NYSE: NYX, AMEX: DOG, AMEX: SDS, AMEX: QLD, AMEX: XLF, AMEX: IWM, AMEX: TWM, AMEX: IWD, AMEX: SDK)

The market ended the week at its lowest point, despite the passage of the big bad bailout. The Dow Jones Industrials Index (NYSE: DIA) dropped 1.5% on Friday, and collapsed 7.3% on the week. "What happened Greek," they ask me, "you said Paulson had a good plan this time!"

The answer can be found mysteriously in psychology and within the mix of adjectives describing plight that I laid out at the start of this diatribe. To put it simply, this is what happens when you build something up and then slowly tear it down piece by piece. When announced in its simplicity, the Paulson plan was the perfect medicine for what ails us, at least in my view. The problem was that he was asking for a lot, and it needed to get through a group of politicians who are coming up for reelection in a month's time.

So, after the House of Representatives got through telling the world how useless this bill was and how injurious it would be; and after they knocked it down first, allowing even more doubt to brew, they then passed a bill that barely resembled its old self. Oh, it was not much changed in terms of its terms. It was, however, now slouched over and depressed. What Congress did was its best job of pleasing both worlds, which we all know is impossible, and so what it accomplished was less than optimal, and so far even destructive.

The psychological impact this law might have had was all but nonexistent by the hour of its passage. So, Hank Paulson must now take up the reigns of his new gift horse, and get the most out of it as fast as he can. The Treasury Secretary is already putting together the infrastructure to manage the monumental task at hand. Paulson reportedly already hired Barclays (NYSE: BCS) and State Street (NYSE: STT) to manage the purchase of mortgage-backed securities (MBS) related to the Fannie Mae (NYSE: FNM) and Freddie Mac (NYSE: FRE) bailout, so it's likely he'll quickly have infrastructure in place to begin management of securities purchased from financial institutions as a result of Friday's legislation.

Working Against Stocks

So, while the Administration sort of got what it asked for, along with necessary oversight provisions, installment constraints and a bunch of other provisions thrown in to help lawmakers look better to their constituents AND to help Americans, stocks still gave ground through the close on Friday. Who could blame investors for a fearful retreat. Friday's Employment Situation Report noted the labor force shed a net of 159K jobs in September, and Weekly Initial Jobless claims marked their second consecutive period of near 500K new benefits claimants. Meanwhile last week's monthly reports of Factory Orders, Motor Vehicle Sales, Personal Spending and ISM's Manufacturing Survey all stunk of recession.

The Week Ahead

In the absence of much ground breaking news on the economic schedule, I expect all eyes will turn back toward the Fed next week. The pressure should begin rebuilding on Ben Bernanke and crew to cut rates another 50 basis points. Third quarter earnings season officially kicks off on Tuesday, with the report of Alcoa (NYSE: AA), however, in this quiet period ahead of the majority of corporate reports, earnings warnings are more likely to dominate news flow. Otherwise, we have Chain Store Sales to hide from on Thursday, as the retail environment is showing signs of trouble. The International Council of Shopping Centers' Weekly Same-Store Sales growth has slowly but consistently trended lower through September.

Hopefully Hank will get back on his horse, and get to work saving our economy. We expect he'll put in yet another full weekend of work arranging our salvation. With any luck, his buddy at the Federal Reserve will give us the lift we need at this point as well. At least we can take solace in the knowledge that Congress can't do any more harm to sentiment.

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