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Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Credit Crisis Indicators: More Progress

by Calculated Risk on 11/04/2008 02:15:00 PM

  • As noted earlier, LIBOR declined again today, from Bloomberg:
    The three-month rate dropped 15 basis points to 2.71 percent, the lowest level since June 9, according to BBA figures.
    The rate peaked at 4.81875% on Oct. 10.

  • The yield on 3 month treasuries rose slightly to 0.47% from 0.44%. (unchanged)

    Usually the 3 month trades below the target Fed Funds rate by around 25 bps, so this is too low with the Fed funds rate at 1.0%. However, the effective Fed Funds rate is even lower (0.22% yesterday), so a 3 month yield of 0.47% is in the right range.

  • The TED spread: 2.23, down from 2.39 (Better) This is still too high, but significantly below the peak of 4.63 on Oct 10th.

    I'd like to see the spread move back down to 1.0 or lower - at least below 2.0.

  • The two year swap spread from Bloomberg: 116.52 down slightly (slightly better). This spread peaked at near 165 in early October, so there has been significant progress, but the spread seems stuck a narrow range now. I'd like to see this under 100.

  • Activity in the Treasury's Supplementary Financing Program (SFP). This is the Treasury program to raise cash for the Fed's liquidity initiatives. If this program slows down borrowing, I think that would be a good sign.

    Here is a list of SFP sales. No announcement today from the Treasury ... no progress.

    NOTE: Once a week I will include the Fed balance sheet assets. If this starts to decline that would be a postive sign.

  • The A2P2 spread is down to 4.45 from a record 4.72 a couple days ago. better.

    The Fed is buying higher quality commercial paper (CP) and this is pushing down the yield on this paper (0.97% on Friday!) - and increasing the spread between AA and A2/P2 CP. So this indicator is a little misleading right now. Still, if the credit crisis eases, I'd expect a significant decline in this spread.

    NOTE: This decline in the A2/P2 spread could be related to this WSJ article: U.S. Weighs Purchasing Stakes in More Firms
    The Treasury Department is considering using more of its $700 billion rescue fund to buy stakes in a broad range of financial companies, not just banks and insurers, after tentative signs of the program's success, according to people familiar with the matter.

    In focus are companies that provide financing to the broad economy, including bond insurers and specialty finance firms such as General Electric Co.'s GE Capital unit, CIT Group Inc. and others, these people said.
    The LIBOR is down, the TED spread is off again, the A2/P2 spread declined - so there is more progress.
  • UK Construction Activity Declines Sharply

    by Calculated Risk on 11/04/2008 12:21:00 PM

    From The Times: Job cuts rise amid record construction fall

    Construction activity in the UK fell at a record rate last month as demand for new houses and commercial property continued to wane amid the global financial turmoil, according to a key industry survey.

    The CIPS/Construction Purchasing Managers' Index measured construction activity at 35.1 in October — the eighth consecutive monthly fall this year.

    Demand for new housing again showed the greatest decline, while commercial property also performed poorly, with activity levels declining at a series-record pace.
    Synchronized cliff diving ...

    Hotel Occupancy Rates Decline; Expected to Fall Further

    by Calculated Risk on 11/04/2008 10:55:00 AM

    A couple of stories ...

    From the Birmingham Business Journal:

    In projections for 2010, national hotel research firm Smith Travel Research predicts hotels will see a decline in occupancy rates over the next two years ... The firm expects occupancy to drop 3 percent to 61.2 percent by the end of 2008, compared to last year, and said it will slip even further to 58.7 percent by 2010.
    And from SignonSanDiego.com: Hotel occupancy rates crater in Hawaii
    Almost 40 percent of the state's hotel rooms languished empty in September, the highest rate since the Hawaii tourism downturn in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, a research firm said Monday.

    Average statewide hotel occupancy plunged 11 percentage points to 63.2 percent from 74.2 percent the same month a year ago, research firm Hospitality Advisors said in a report.
    While the weakening economy is pushing down occupancy rates, a large number of new hotel rooms are still being added.

    Construction Spending Lodging Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph shows construction spending on lodging (seasonally adjusted annual rate in millions) through September - based on the details in the Census Bureau Construction Spending report released yesterday.

    Lodging saw an incredible increase in investment over the last few years.

    Falling demand and increasing supply - not a good environment for new hotel investment - and I expect we will see a sharp decline in investment over the next couple of years.

    LIBOR Continues to Decline

    by Calculated Risk on 11/04/2008 09:23:00 AM

    From Bloomberg: Dollar Libor Drops as Central-Bank Cash, Rate Cuts Thaw Lending

    The three-month rate dropped 15 basis points to 2.71 percent, the lowest level since June 9, according to BBA figures.
    This has pushed the TED spread down to 2.22 this morning (from 2.39 yesterday, and 4.63 on Oct 10th). This is still way too high, but shows more progress. More later on credit indicators ...

    More on Auto Sales

    by Calculated Risk on 11/04/2008 08:57:00 AM

    Jim Hamilton at Econbrowser has more: Another bad month for autos.

    To say that the U.S. auto sector continues to bleed may be an understatement. Maybe we should start talking about a severed artery.
    Econbrowser Auto Sales Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph from Econbrowser shows the Not Seasonally Adjusted car sales in the U.S. Look at September and October 2008 (dark blue) - sales have fallen off a cliff compared to previous years. See Hamilton's post for truck sales (and more cliff diving).

    Sales are grim even for luxury car manufacturers, from Bloomberg: BMW Scraps Earnings Outlook as Quarterly Profit Falls
    Bayerische Motoren Werke AG ... lowered its outlook for the second time this year after third-quarter profit plunged 63 percent as the global financial crisis sapped demand.

    Vehicle sales will fall below last year's figure, the Munich-based company said ...

    "The financial crisis is by no means behind us yet, particularly its impact on the real economy in 2009," Chief Executive Officer Norbert Reithofer said in the statement.

    Monday, November 03, 2008

    WSJ: Foreclosure Prevention Program Drags

    by Calculated Risk on 11/03/2008 10:31:00 PM

    From the WSJ: Homeowners Wait as Relief Plan Drags

    The FDIC has been developing a proposal, which some estimate could help between two and three million homeowners, designed to encourage banks to rework troubled loans by providing a partial federal guarantee for losses on modified mortgages that meet specific criteria ... The plan would use between $40 billion and $50 billion from the government's $700 billion financial-market rescue fund ... Several officials said the plan is strongly opposed by the White House, though officials there deny killing the idea.
    It sounded like a plan would be announced last week, but it appears there is strong disagreement on what the plan should look like.

    This is a key point:
    "Even an ambitious program of mortgage modifications will not prevent a further decline in house prices," said Douglas Elmendorf, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former Clinton economic adviser. "It might prevent an overshooting of house prices on the downside. But houses still look overvalued relative to people's rents or incomes, and it's going to be very difficult to sustain house prices at their current level."
    Any attempt to keep house prices artificially high will just postpone the inevitable and delay the eventual recovery.

    Summary of Busy Day

    by Calculated Risk on 11/03/2008 07:57:00 PM

    For the late readers, there were a number of news stories / posts today, so here is a summary:

    Construction Spending in September: The Census Bureau reported that private non-residential construction increased slightly in September from August, but spending is still below the peak in June 2008. Residential investment decreased in September.

    From MarketWatch: U.S. ISM factory index plunges again in October

    Credit Crisis Indicators showed some progress, especially the LIBOR and TED spread.

    Auto sales were a disaster in October. From Bloomberg: Auto Sales in U.S. Plunge; October Was the Worst Month Since 1945, GM Says. From the WSJ: Auto Makers Post Sharp Drop in U.S. Sales

    U.S. auto sales in October plunged an estimated 31% to about 850,000 vehicles ... It was the first time since February 1993 that auto makers sold fewer than 900,000 cars and light trucks in a month. When adjusted for increases in the U.S. population, October was "the worst month in the post-World War II era," Michael DiGiovanni, the top sales analyst at General Motors Corp., said in an conference call. "This is clearly a severe, severe recession." ... Auto executives warned the worst may still lie ahead ...
    The Fed reported that lending standards tightened and loan demand declined. See post for graph for commercial real estate (CRE) lending and demand.

    And finally, here is my Q3 advance MEW estimate (close to zero).

    Funding the National Debt

    by Calculated Risk on 11/03/2008 05:45:00 PM

    It seems like just yesterday that the National Debt exceeded $10 trillion for the first time. Hard to believe that was just one month ago since the National Debt is now $10.574 trillion (yes, an increase of $574 billion in about one month).

    This raises questions about funding the debt. From Bloomberg: U.S. to Borrow Record This Quarter to Finance Deficit

    The U.S. Treasury more than tripled its planned debt sales for this quarter to help finance a 2009 budget deficit that bond dealers advising the department estimate may swell to almost $1 trillion.

    Borrowing needs are expected to rise to $550 billion in the three months to Dec. 31, compared with the $142 billion predicted in July, the Treasury said in a statement in Washington. That follows a $530 billion record in the July-September quarter.
    As I noted over the weekend, these huge financing needs combined with foreign governments need to stimulate their domestic economies (and maybe even selling foreign reserves) could lead to higher intermediate to long term rates in the U.S. next year - right in the middle of a recession.

    Misc: Wikinvest, Full Feed, and Zombie Ads

    by Calculated Risk on 11/03/2008 05:21:00 PM

    A few housekeeping notes: there is a link to related articles from Wikinvest at the bottom of most posts. Let me know what you think.

    I've also enabled the full RSS feed again (I'm sure the scrapers will return). This may be temporary - sorry.

    And for California readers, I've tried to disable some of the political ads, but they keep coming back ... oh well, at least the election is tomorrow and the ads should end.

    Best to all.

    Advance Q3 2008 MEW Estimate

    by Calculated Risk on 11/03/2008 03:48:00 PM

    We've been tracking mortgage equity withdrawal (MEW) to estimate when the "Home ATM" has closed. Fed economist Dr. James Kennedy's estimate of MEW is not available until after the Fed's Flow of Funds report is released each quarter. Note: the Q3 Flow of Funds report is scheduled to be released on December 11, 2008.

    However it is possible to estimate MEW from supplemental data released with the GDP report. Based on the Q3 GDP data from the BEA, my advance estimate for Mortgage Equity Withdrawal (MEW) is 1.0% of Disposable Personal Income (DPI). This would be slightly higher than the Q2 estimates, from the Fed's Dr. Kennedy, of 0.4% of Disposable Personal Income (DPI).

    Advance Mortgage Equity Withdrawal Estimate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph compares my advance MEW estimate (as a percent of DPI) with the MEW estimate from Dr. James Kennedy at the Federal Reserve. The correlation is pretty high, but there are differences quarter to quarter. This analysis does suggest that MEW was at about the same level in Q3 2008, as in Q2 (close to zero). We will have to wait until December to know for sure.

    MEW has declined precipitously since early 2006, with a combination of tighter lending standards and falling house prices. The impact of less equity extraction on consumer spending is still being debated, but I believe a portion of the slowdown in personal consumption expenditures can be attributed to less MEW.