by Calculated Risk on 1/04/2008 10:30:00 PM
Friday, January 04, 2008
Vancouver 2010
Off topic: It's hard to believe the Torino Winter Olympic games were almost two years ago!
Back then, I posted a few times about figure skater Sasha Cohen (a family friend). I still occasionally receive news clippings from readers, and questions about Sasha, so here is an update: Sasha has not skated competitively since March 2006, and she is also not competing this winter. She is currently performing in Japan, and then is touring the U.S. with Stars on Ice through April.
The following video is from the Stars on Ice tour. It is completely different and simply amazing. Sasha also skates two solo performances during the show.
I'm frequently asked: Will she try a competitive comeback? The answer - not too cryptically - is in the post title.
Fed Funds: Market Expects 50bps Rate Cut
by Calculated Risk on 1/04/2008 05:27:00 PM
Click on graph for larger image.
Source: Cleveland Fed, Fed Funds Rate Predictions
The market expectations are now for a 50 bps rate cut on January 30th.
Meanwhile, the Fed has expanded the Term Auction Facility (TAF) in January:
The Federal Reserve will conduct two auctions of 28-day credit through its Term Auction Facility (TAF) in January. It will offer $30 billion in the auction to be held on Monday, January 14 and $30 billion in the auction to be held on Monday, January 28.
...
The Federal Reserve intends to conduct biweekly TAF auctions for as long as necessary to address elevated pressures in short-term funding markets. Decisions regarding auctions in February will be announced by Friday, February 1.
Glassman: "Real estate excesses will vanish by spring 2008"
by Calculated Risk on 1/04/2008 02:21:00 PM
A few days ago, the WSJ asked: Will Home Prices Hit Bottom by June?. The WSJ's Greg Ip provided a link to a research report by James Glassman, economist at J.P. Morgan Chase. (no relation to James K. Glassman, co-author of “Dow 36,000″)
"The correction of housing prices is well under way. Given the present trends in income and house prices, real estate excesses of the past five years will have vanished by spring 2008.And Glassman references this figure:
Click on graph for larger image.This graph is incorrect. The author is comparing gross income per household vs. the S&P / Case-Shiller house price index.
The repeat sales index determines the average change in a house price. The gross income could be distorted by a few individuals with extraordinary income gains.
The average change in a house price could be distorted too, if the most expensive homes appreciated at a much faster rate than other homes. But this doesn't appear to be an issue.
Instead of using the gross income per household, the author should use the median household income gain for homeowners (probably the top 2/3 of households).
This is a simple error, but it leads to a very wrong conclusion. The real estate excesses will not vanish by spring 2008.
Besides the graph is very funny - the housing bubble of the late '80s is graphed as the normal price range. And the subsequent housing bust is graphed as housing being undervalued. That was a very painful bust for many builders and homeowners, and that bubble / bust was small compared to the current bubble.
S&P may cut $6.42 Billion in CDOs
by Calculated Risk on 1/04/2008 12:24:00 PM
From Reuters: S&P may cut $6.42 bln CDOs affecting 149 tranches
Standard & Poor's may cut the rating on $6.42 billion of collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) following downgrades to billions of dollars worth of second-lien residential mortgage-backed securities last month.
S&P said the action affects 149 tranches from 43 U.S. cash flow and hybrid CDOs of asset-backed securities.
December Employment Report
by Calculated Risk on 1/04/2008 08:31:00 AM
Update: This graph shows the unemployment rate and the year-over-year change in employment vs. recessions.
Click on graph for larger image.
The rise in unemployment, from a cycle low of 4.4% to 5.0% will set off alarm bells.
Also concerning is the YoY change in employment is less than 1%, also suggesting a recession.
Employment numbers can be heavily revised, but this report will definitely get attention.
Original Post: From the BLS: Employment Situation Summary
The unemployment rate rose to 5.0 percent in December, while nonfarm payroll employment was essentially unchanged (+18,000), the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor reported today. Job growth in several service-providing industries, including professional and technical services, health care, and food services, was largely offset by job losses in construction and manufacturing. Average hourly earnings rose by 7 cents, or 0.4 percent.
Click on graph for larger image.Residential construction employment declined 28,500 in December, and including downward revisions to previous months, is down 293.1 thousand, or about 8.5%, from the peak in March 2006. (compared to housing starts off almost 50%).
Note the scale doesn't start from zero: this is to better show the change in employment.
This second graph shows starts, completions and residential construction employment. (starts are shifted 6 months into the future). Completions and residential construction employment were highly correlated, and Completions typically lag Starts by about 6 months.This suggests residential construction employment could fall significantly from current levels.
Overall this is a very weak report, and the unemployment rate rising to 5% will set off recession arguments.
Thursday, January 03, 2008
Analysts: Corporate Defaults to Rise "Drastically"
by Calculated Risk on 1/03/2008 05:51:00 PM
From the WSJ Deal Journal: Citi and J.P. Morgan Predict a Buffet of Defaults (hat tip James)
With credit flowing to practically any company in need of cash in recent years, the rate of defaults for U.S. high-yield companies fell to just 0.34% in December, according to a J.P. Morgan Chase analysis. The J.P. Morgan analyst, Peter Acciavatti, predicts that is about to rise drastically, to 4% by the end of 2009 ... Citigroup expects the default rate to surge to 5.5% ...And from Bloomberg: Buffets Misses Coupon Payment; Bonds Fall to New Low
Buffets Inc., the largest operator of buffet-style restaurants in the U.S., failed to make a coupon payment on $293 million of debt, sending the bond prices plunging to a record low.
...
The missed payment sparked concerns that corporate defaults are starting to escalate as the worst home sales market since 1981 slows the economy. Tousa Inc., the Florida homebuilder that lost 99 percent of its market value in the past year, also missed interest obligations on $485 million in debt, the company said in a regulatory filing yesterday.
Consumer Delinquency Rate Highest Since Last Recession
by Calculated Risk on 1/03/2008 01:48:00 PM
From Reuters: Consumers late payers on most loans since recession (hat tip Mike_in_Fl)
Americans are falling further behind on consumer loans, with late payments rising to the highest level since the nation's last recession in 2001, data released Thursday show.A nice follow up to my earlier post on auto sales.
In its quarterly study of consumer borrowing, the American Bankers Association said the percentage of loans at least 30 days past due rose to 2.44 percent in the July-to-September period from 2.27 percent in the previous quarter.
The delinquency rate, which covers eight loan categories, was the highest since a 2.51 percent rate in the second quarter of 2001. Late payments on some types of loans rose to levels not seen since the 1990s.
...
Meanwhile, late payments on "indirect" auto loans, which are made through dealerships, totaled 2.86 percent in the third quarter, a 16-year high.
Credit-card delinquencies fell to 4.18 percent from 4.39 percent in the second quarter.
Foreclosure Fraud
by Anonymous on 1/03/2008 01:00:00 PM
To summarize: if you're in the situation you're in with an unaffordable mortgage because some fast-talking guy in a suit asked you to sign a bunch of papers you didn't understand, you are not going to be in a better situation because some other fast-talking guy in a suit asked you to sign a bunch more papers you don't understand.
Ford: Auto Sales Declined 9.2% in December
by Calculated Risk on 1/03/2008 12:30:00 PM
From Bloomberg: Ford Motor's December U.S. Auto Sales Declined 9.2%
Ford Motor Co. said its December U.S. auto sales fell 9.2 percent ... sales dropped to 212,094 vehicles from 233,621 a year earlier ....Most of the automakers will report today. It looks like December was awful across the board, and most forecasts are for another decline in 2008.
Americans bought about 16.1 million cars and light trucks in 2007, the least since 1998 ... The company's full-year sales slid 12 percent.
And as difficult as 2007 was (and 2008 will probably be), the automakers are building a time bomb with debt. From the LA Times: New cars that are fully loaded — with debt
Gone are the days of the three-year car loan. The length of the average automobile loan hit five years, four months in October, up more than six months from 2002, according to the Federal Reserve. And nearly 45% of loans written today are for longer than six years. Even some staid lenders owned by the carmakers, such as Toyota Financial Services and Ford Credit, are offering seven-year financing. And a few credit unions, particularly in the West, are tinkering with the eight-year note.There is a basic guideline when financing a purchase - match the length of the financing to the life of the asset. Thirty years for a house, maybe 5 years for a car. Then, when the asset becomes worthless, you are no longer paying for it and you can afford to replace the asset. That is the general idea.
Of course money is fungible, and this is just a guideline, but the buyers in the LA Times story are violating this guideline - they are still paying for the automobile after they sell it (by rolling the debt into their new car), and eventually this will lead to more consumer loan delinquencies and probably fewer car sales.
Discount Rate Spread Narrows, Asset Backed CP Increases
by Calculated Risk on 1/03/2008 10:58:00 AM
From the Fed weekly report on commercial paper this morning, here is the discount rate spread:
Click on graph for larger image.
According to the Fed, the discount rate spread narrowed to 58 bps. This graph was released this morning.
Also, asset backed commercial paper (CP) increased $26.3 billion to $773.8 billion. This is the first increase since August.
This is preliminary evidence that the liquidity crisis is easing. But the solvency crisis remains. From the WSJ Economics Blog a couple of day ago: Liquidity Threat Eases; Solvency Threat Still Looms:
As 2007 winds down, the much-feared year-end liquidity crisis appears to have been averted thanks to aggressive action by central banks. ... [A]s 2008 begins, it's solvency, not liquidity, that threatens the economy and the financial system. And at the root of the solvency threat is a likely decline in housing prices that will further undermine credit quality. Making banks more confident of their own ability to raise funds is not going to resolve a generalized shrinkage of lending driven by declining collateral values. ...


