The Round-Up: December 6th 2006

Executives cash in

When reading this quote, remember what happened to the markets in 1987. Executives are voting with their feet.

Top executives sold $63.18 worth of stock in their companies for every $1 they bought in November -- the widest margin since 1987. Analysts said the numbers suggested that corporate chieftains -- including Microsoft's Bill Gates and Google's Eric Schmidt -- didn't share the investor confidence that has pushed markets to new heights. "They're pretty savvy market guys," said Wayne Wilbanks, chief investment officer of Wilbanks, Smith & Thomas Asset Management. "They see things are slowing down and they're like, 'Man, I'm taking some money off the table.'"
Canadians plunging further into debt

Will Canada follow the American trend in this regard?

While Canadians continue to go deeper into debt and the cost of carrying that debt continues to rise, the proportion who are falling behind in making their mortgage payments -- one measure of how well consumers are handling their debt -- has fallen to a record low of just 0.24 per cent, it said.

"Note that this trend is very different than the situation in the U.S. where delinquency and foreclosure rates have risen notably in recent months," it said, crediting the healthier situation here to the strength of Canada's job market.

$1B prediction

Weaker than expected economic growth will erase $1 billion from next year's projected federal budget surplus and eventually push the Bank of Canada into cutting interest rates, an economic think-tank forecast Monday.

Global Insight's downward revision to what was an already "miserable" forecast for next year follows last week's surprisingly weak report card on the Canadian economy and comes in advance of today's expected decision by the central bank to keep interest rates steady for now.

So much for myth of a soft landing

We now have a U.S. manufacturing sector officially contracting, a housing market falling apart brick by brick, and Canadian growth slowing to its weakest pace in three years.

An ugly string of figures rudely intruded on our raucous stock-market party last week, driving home the cold, hard fact the North American economy is officially slowing.

An Update on: Four Investors' Fairy Tales...and Five Ugly Realities About the Coming Severe U.S. Recession

Floors, Ceilings, Camels, Straw

Inquiring minds are probably wondering what happened to that systemic risk at Fannie Mae that the Fed and the Treasury department had both been harping about for several years now. Bear in mind that Fannie Mae also has a derivative mess so big that it still has not filed is annual report for 2004 or any quarterly reports since then....

....As Bill Gross points out, it is easier to estimate the bottom than the top, but if credit standards and credit spreads are at the bottom, it is likely to imply the top is near at hand on all kinds of things. The top is clearly in on housing starts and housing permits, and in spite of a significant plunge in both, they remain much closer to the ceiling than the floor on a historical basis.

EWI Independent: Housing Hollowed Out By Alan Hall

The housing market is beginning to resemble a watermelon I once floated in a pond overnight to cool. The next day a small hole was in one end and the red interior was completely gone, hollowed out to the sour green rind, sculpted by little teeth. Some muskrat had a feast.

That memory returned when I saw a chart in this month's Elliott Wave Financial Forecast titled, "A Historic Hollowing of the Housing Stock." It shows a recent near-vertical rise to a half-century record high in the percentage of unoccupied U.S. homes. No stealthy muskrats at work in this case; it's a bear market in plain sight.

During the housing mania, the risky, sub-prime segment of the mortgage industry grew 520% between 2001 and 2005. Lenders ceased demanding full documentation of income and assets. They offered "piggyback" loans financed at 90% to 100% of the home price, and didn't require private mortgage insurance on profitable, high-risk, "sub-prime" mortgages. Loan officers and mortgage brokers coached borrowers to inflate their incomes, and many couldn't even make their first payment. After short-term rates began rising, lenders kept "teaser" rates low, meaning that the first payment adjustment would be big. Then, in further arcane chicanery, many of these loans were packaged and sold to investors in collateralized debt obligations (CDO's), glazing another pane in the glass house of derivatives.

Newspaper articles today describe an accelerating wave of mortgage defaults. As bankers, asset managers and the credit-poor awake from easy-credit dreamland, they find the sub-prime ship submerging. "We are a bit surprised at how fast this has unraveled," said the head of asset-backed securities research at U.B.S.

Sleepyheads are still soothed by the lullabies of economists. the pseudo-savvy seers don't "expect any significant harm to the nation's economy or financial systems." That said, the news articles continue like a Klaxon alarm in the Nautilus:

H&R Block is considering the sale of its sub-prime lending company that lost $39 million in the second quarter.
KeyCorp "changing strategic priorities," and selling its sub-prime Champion Mortgage for 40% below what they expected.

The National Association of Realtor's index for pending home sales fell 1.7% from September to October and was down 13.2% from a year earlier.

Delinquency rates rose steadily in the last half of 2005 and spiked in 2006. The figures don't include quickly defaulted loans that lenders were forced to repurchase.
In October, borrowers were 60 days or more behind on payments on nearly 4% of the sub-prime loans packaged in mortgage securities.

Toll Brothers, the largest builder of luxury homes in the US has seen its stock price slide 45 % over the last 18 months, and said fourth-quarter net income plunged 44%.
Believing that the real estate decline will be confined to certain regions and sectors -- like the new ghost towns near Phoenix -- and that effects of it won't spread through our financial house of cards may be like trusting a muskrat with a watermelon.

Stelmach will fight for Alberta 'nation'

Stelmach said he's concerned about a handful of intergovernmental issues, including the debate about a new equalization formula and the fiscal imbalance, as well as the notion of Quebec as a nation within Canada.

"I'm going to fight for the same rights and privileges that may be assigned to this nation within a nation," the usually low-key Stelmach told reporters, gesturing with his hands to drive home his point.

Stelmach's stand worries oilpatch

Alberta's petroleum sector is hoping tough talk from Premier-designate Ed Stelmach about adjusting the royalty break offered to oilsands developers is merely rhetoric left over from the campaign trail.

Mr. Stelmach said he will make good on a campaign promise to conduct a review of the 10-year-old incentive program that hands companies a big break and is largely credited with kick-starting the now-booming industry.

Quest for the oilsands Grail

A replacement for natural gas as the power source for oilsands production is the industry's Holy Grail, an instant panacea for volatile operating costs.

Such a discovery would also silence critics who cringe at the thought of huge volumes of a scarce, relatively clean-burning fuel being swallowed up to produce bitumen, a lower-grade fuel.

The great quest has turned into a sprint in recent weeks between three Alberta-based teams, all of which are entering the homestretch neck-and-neck, riding different technologies towards a potentially massive payoff.

Fallout on home front

The Task Force on the Future of North America reported in May 2005. The proposals were breathtaking. They included a North American "brand name;" a North American security perimeter incorporating air, land, and sea; common exclusion lists for people from Third World countries; joint legal responses to terrorist organizations; biometrics identification at the borders; joint planning for terrorist attacks; a North American passport; common powers for customs and immigration agents; trilateral customs and immigration; a North American currency union; elimination of all exemptions for culture and agriculture; a North American electrical grid and free trade in water.

The report said contentious issues might take time to "ripen politically," but stated that nothing -- "not Canadian water, not Mexican oil, not American anti-dumping laws -- is off the table."

The U.S. never cedes sovereignty. So whenever "North America" appears in any treaty, task force or pact, Canadians and Mexicans should simply read United States: U.S. dollar, U.S. brand name, U.S. currency, U.S. passports; etc.

Norsk, Husky: 'Encouraging' find offshore

Newfoundland and Labrador's hard-luck offshore energy industry yesterday got a second injection of positive news in recent weeks when Norsk Hydro and Husky Energy Inc. said they had uncorked a oil and gas discovery near the Terra Nova oilfield.

The partners said a recently drilled discovery well and follow-up delineation well encountered hydrocarbons in the West Bonne Bay formation in the Jeanne d'Arc Basin, 320 kilometres southeast of St. John's.

The basin is home to Canada's three existing offshore oil projects, Hibernia, the largest, Terra Nova and White Rose.

Enbridge delays pipeline project

Enbridge Inc. has advised the National Energy Board it won't submit regulatory paperwork for its proposed oil pipeline from Edmonton to the West Coast. The Calgary-based pipeline giant confirmed yesterday its Gateway project is being delayed by two to three years and could be operational between 2012 and 2014.
Northern Lights oil sands development faces 160% cost increase; responds by delegating component production to China. It's worth noting that Sinopec is a partner in Northern Lights. I wonder how many will see this as the inevitable accompaniment of Chinese investment in Canadian oil and gas.

Calgary-based Synenco Wednesday said the mining and extraction portion of the Northern Lights project could cost $4.4-billion, more than double a previous estimate of $1.7-billion...

To combat inflation, parts of Northern Lights will be built by workers in China.

The modules for the oil sands mine and the bitumen extraction plant would be shipped by sea to Canada, taking a route around Alaska, through the Bering Strait to the Mackenzie Delta in the Northwest Territories. The pieces would then be barged up the Mackenzie River to northern Alberta, where they would be assembled at the site.

The parts to be shipped will weigh as much as 2,000 tonnes, more than 10 times the size of modules currently shipped by highway in Alberta from the Edmonton area by other oil sands developers.

Not a member yet of the north lands, but should be later next year.  

Does anyone know what the current petrol/gasoline prices are in the western sections of B.C.

Thanks in advance.
Charles.

I'm not sure about BC, but here in Ontario we're paying about 85 cents per litre. It seems quite cheap to me since I was paying more than that in pence per litre when I lived in the UK, despite an exhange rate of about 2.5:1.

I hear that BC is beautiful - hope you enjoy living there.

Stoneleigh

I missed seeing your regular, frequent posts over at TOD, and had no idea you had your own TOD Canada! I will be sure to become a regular reader.

5 degrees Farenheit here. Six inches snow.

George in Vermont

Thanks for the vote of confidence George - much appreciated.

It's cold here too, but not much snow yet (ice instead, so some of the woodpile is welded together where the wind blew off the tarp - sigh).

Things are a little slow at TOD:C at the moment, but we're hoping to pick up the pace in the New Year.

Cheers,

Stoneleigh

Yes thanks for making this happen Stoneleigh.
Here on the roof of southern Ontario we have had freezing rain and power outages of up to 3 days and about 30cm of snow in the past week.  It will be melting by Sunday.  Lately we havent had winters we could really play with so I am hoping I can at least get a rink in for the grand kids.
Relaing to some discussion we had here about ice and wind turbines, here is a local newspaper piece on what happened to our local windfarm last Friday.
http://www.citizen.on.ca/news/2006/1207/Front_Page/003.html

Thanks again
Don

You're welcome, Don.

Interesting article by the way. If climate change gives us more in the way of icy winters, rather than snowy ones, it could make life difficult for wind power operators. This year the El Nino is supposed to mean a warmer than average winter (read endless freeze/thaw) with more precipitation than average (freezing rain, no doubt). That'll mean fewer opportunities for dog-sledding unfortunately, as it's dangerous on the ice (dog-sledding is like racing cars with the accelerator nailed to the floor). Perhaps I should move to North Bay or Sudbury :)

Cheers,

Stoneleigh