Hint: the next interest rate move will be down says Lou Barnes in his weekly column for real estate investorsAnother week of quiet waiting for big data end of this week (not tekkies spying, just the monthly jobs report).

I am not a betting man, but I do occasionally guess: there are hints that the next interest rate move will be down.

First, head-shaking news of humanity. While working out I mumbled near a young trainer, ā€œThe quality of a civilization depends on the extent of corruption.ā€

After ā€œhuh?ā€ he asked for more. FIFA this week has been exposed as utterly corrupt, yet member nations today re-elected silly-putty Sepp Blatter to a fifth term as its president.

Thursday, crawling from under his rock for the first time since 2008, Richard S. Fuld, chairman of Lehman upon its collapse, gave a speech now viral on YouTube.

His one-liners opened a window to a mind possibly too incompetent to be corrupt.

ā€œLehman Brothers at the point of 2008 was not a bankrupt company.ā€ All through 2008 Fuld had been a Wall Street laughingstock trying to sell Lehman as it imploded. Hemingway on bankruptcy: ā€œTwo ways… gradually, then suddenly.ā€

Lehman was the parent of infamous Aurora Loan Services, ALS, the all-time subprime bucket-shop, killing clients, brokers, and itself. Fuld: ā€œI feel sorry for all of you that donā€™t drink, ā€˜cause when you wake up in the morning thatā€™s as good as youā€™re going to feel. I told my children that.ā€

And people still think the housing and credit bubbles were caused by mortgage brokers, Fannie, and too-easy Greenspan. Sheesh.

In a more serious vein (possibly hard to tell), here is the recent key to global financial markets: the Fed says its going to lift off from 0%, which has made the dollar ā€œstrongā€ and pulled up the value of everything dollar-denominated except U.S. bonds, which fear the Fed.

Most of the rest of the worldā€™s central banks have been printing money harder than ever, which has contributed to dollar ā€œstrength.ā€ All of that reached equilibrium 45 days ago, and a weird daily dance has followed: any soft U.S. data presumably pushes Fed action further out, dollar down. The others donā€™t want the dollar down, the European Central Bank (ECB) especially accelerating its money-printing to keep the euro weak.

The Fed’s desire to lift off is reasonable

The Fedā€™s desire to lift off is reasonable, if only to prevent financial bubbles. However, much as I admire Chair Yellen, her insistence that the U.S. economy is improving enough for liftoff and then normalization is becoming embarrassing.

U.S. first quarter GDP was revised to negative .7% as expected, mostly because U.S. exports have been crushed by a ā€œstrongā€ dollar: up 4.5% in Q4 2014, in Q1 they fell 7.6%. Personal expenditures were okay in Q1, up 1.8%, but less than half of Q4.

More disturbing than back-look GDP is the Fedā€™s new annual study of ā€œHousehold Well-being.ā€ It is worth your trouble. (click here to see it) It describes two Americas: households earning less than $40,000/year are not making it, and ones making between $40,000 and $100,000 are treading water and fragile.

A re-read of the Fedā€™s minutes from its late-April meeting found this (unremarked elsewhere): The risks to the forecast for real GDP and inflation were seen as tilted to the downside, reflecting the staff’s assessment that neither monetary nor fiscal policy appeared well positioned to help the economy withstand substantial adverse shocks. All at the Fed insist that liftoff will not be a tightening, just a reduction in extreme ease. I donā€™t know anyone at a bond desk who believes that. Tightening is tightening.

One bright spot possibly justifying tightening: housing. One theory for its continuing weakness: just delayed. Maybe so, after all. The National Association of Realtors (NAR) has April pending sales up 3.4%, four times the estimate, and up a solid 14% year-over-year. One inside indicator: a major bank wholesaler this month entered gridlock, buried with business, turn times running out to two weeks. The strongest component in U.S. Consumer Price Index: housing cost, driven up by rising rents, which sooner or later will push people to buy.

Last in the rates-down calculus: Greece. Everyone has been wrong and/or premature for four years. But it looks now as though there never has been a deal or even real negotiation, just can-kicking. Rates were trading down Friday on that thought.

Next Friday, jobs. The Fedā€™s forecast is on the line.

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Better chartists than I will disagree, but the 10-year T-note trading since January (the chart is two years back) could be interpreted as now settled in a range 2.10%-2.30% and poised to break lower; or the 16-month downtrend is decisively broken, now stair-stepping upward; or chaos. I lean to the third. Data-dependent.

The 10-year treasury note the past two years and what it says about interest rates

An abstract from the Fedā€™s Household survey. If this is a sign of an overheating job market, then my cold cereal this morning was over-cooked. The whole report (short and easy to read). Click here.

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  • Danny Johnson

    Danny Johnson has flipped hundreds of houses over the last 11+ years in San Antonio, Texas. He blogs about flipping houses at FlippingJunkie.com and is the author of "Flipping Houses Exposed: 34 Weeks in the Life of a Successful House Flipper," a best-selling book on Amazon. He also provides real estate investor websites atĀ www.LeadPropeller.com.

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