by Calculated Risk on 8/27/2009 11:57:00 AM
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Report: Car Sales Slump 11% Below June Levels
From the Financial Times: ‘Cash-for-clunkers’ sales disappoint Detroit (ht James)
[S]igns are already emerging that overall sales will fall back sharply now that the incentives have expired.It now appears that sales in August were at about a 16 million SAAR (auto sales for August will be released next week).
...
[Edmunds.com] estimates that, based on visits to its websites, “purchase intent” is down 11 per cent from the average in June ...
excerpted with permission
This follows an 11.22 million SAAR in July. The Cash-for-clunkers program started on July 24th.
If sales in September are 11% below June - that would put sales at under 9 million SAAR - the lowest sales for this cycle, and perhaps at the lowest rate since the early '70s. Of course the program just ended, but it will be interesting to see how much Cash-for-Clunkers cannibalized future sales.
FDIC Q2 Banking Profile: 416 Problem Banks, $3.7 Billion Net Loss
by Calculated Risk on 8/27/2009 10:00:00 AM
The FDIC released the Q2 Quarterly Banking Profile today. The FDIC listed 416 banks with $299.8 billion in assets as “problem” banks in Q2, up from 305 banks with $220.0 billion in assets in Q1, and 252 and $159.4 billion in assets in Q4 2008.
Note: Not all problem banks will fail - and not all failures will be from the problem bank list - but this shows the problem is significant and still growing.
The Unofficial Problem Bank List shows 391 problem banks - and will probably increase this week.
Click on graph for larger image in new window.
This graph shows the number of FDIC insured "problem" banks since 1990.
The 416 problem banks reported at the end of Q2 is the highest since 1993.
There has been some concern that the FDIC has been slow to add banks to the problem list - and a number of failed banks were apparently never on the official list.
The second graph shows the assets of "problem" banks since 1990.
The assets of problem banks are the highest since 1993.
And the banking industry posted a net loss for the quarter:
Burdened by costs associated with rising levels of troubled loans and falling asset values, FDIC-insured commercial banks and savings institutions reported an aggregate net loss of $3.7 billion in the second quarter of 2009. Increased expenses for bad loans were chiefly responsible for the industry’s loss. Insured institutions added $66.9 billion in loan-loss provisions to their reserves during the quarter, an increase of $16.5 billion (32.8 percent) compared to the second quarter of 2008. Quarterly earnings were also adversely affected by writedowns of asset-backed commercial paper, and by higher assessments for deposit insurance.On the Deposit Insurance Fund:
On June 30, 2009, a special assessment was imposed on all insured banks and thrifts. For 8,106 institutions, with assets of $9.3 trillion, the special assessment was 5 basis points of each institution’s assets minus Tier 1 capital; 89 other institutions, with assets of $4.0 trillion, had their special assessment capped at 10 basis points of their second quarter assessment base.
The Deposit Insurance Fund (DIF) decreased by $2.6 billion (20.3 percent) during the second quarter to $10.4 billion (unaudited). Accrued assessment income from the regular and the special assessment increased the fund by $9.1 billion. Interest earned, combined with realized gains on securities and debt guarantee surcharges from the Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program added $1.1 billion to the fund. Unrealized losses on available-for-sale securities combined with operating expenses reduced the fund by $1.3 billion.
The reduction in the DIF was primarily due to an $11.6 billion increase in loss provisions for bank failures. Twenty-four insured institutions with combined assets of $26.4 billion failed during the second quarter of 2009, the largest number of quarterly failures since the fourth quarter of 1992, when 42 insured institutions failed. For 2009 through the end of the second quarter, 45 insured institutions with combined assets of $35.9 billion failed at an estimated current cost to the DIF of $10.5 billion.
The DIF’s reserve ratio was 0.22 percent on June 30, 2009, down from 0.27 percent at March 31, 2009, and 1.01 percent one year ago. The June figure is the lowest reserve ratio for the combined bank and thrift insurance fund since March 31, 1993, when the reserve ratio was 0.06 percent.
Weekly Unemployment Claims: Still Very High
by Calculated Risk on 8/27/2009 08:30:00 AM
The DOL reports weekly unemployment insurance claims decreased to 570,000:
In the week ending Aug. 22, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 570,000, a decrease of 10,000 from the previous week's revised figure of 580,000. The 4-week moving average was 566,250, a decrease of 4,750 from the previous week's revised average of 571,000.
...
The advance number for seasonally adjusted insured unemployment during the week ending Aug. 15 was 6,133,000, a decrease of 119,000 from the preceding week's revised level of 6,252,000.
Click on graph for larger image in new window.This graph shows the 4-week moving average of weekly claims since 1971.
The four-week average of weekly unemployment claims decreased this week by 4,750 to 566,250, and is now 92,500 below the peak in April. It appears that initial weekly claims have peaked for this cycle.
The number of initial weekly claims is still very high (at 570,000), indicating significant weakness in the job market. The four-week average of initial weekly claims will probably have to fall below 400,000 before the total employment stops falling.
Report: Mortgage Delinquencies increase in July
by Calculated Risk on 8/27/2009 12:16:00 AM
From Reuters: U.S. mortgage delinquencies up in July: Equifax
Among U.S. homeowners with mortgages, a record 7.32 percent were at least 30 days late on payments in July, up from about 4.5 percent a year earlier and 7.23 percent in June, according to monthly data from the Equifax credit bureau.There numbers aren't directly comparable to the MBA quarterly numbers, but this shows that delinquencies are still rising.
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
New Hampshire: The Clunker State
by Calculated Risk on 8/26/2009 07:56:00 PM
From the DOT: Cash for Clunkers Stats
Number Submitted: 690,114This should push light vehicle sales to about 16 million (SAAR) in August. Of course the real question is what happens in September.
Dollar Value: $2,877.9M
Darn - Floyd Norris beat me to it, but my table is sortable.
Using the Census Bureau population estimates, here is a table of dollars per person.
New Hampshire is the "Clunker State" by 'Dollars per person'. What happened in D.C.? No one wanted a new car? (UPDATE: several people told me almost everyone in D.C. buys cars in Virginia or Maryland)
NOTE: Columns are sortable - click on column headers: State (includes territories), Clunker dollars, Population, Dollars per person.


