by Calculated Risk on 4/07/2009 10:53:00 AM
Tuesday, April 07, 2009
Report: RBS to cut 9,000 jobs
From MarketWatch: RBS to cut 9,000 back office jobs over two years
Royal Bank of Scotland said Tuesday that it will cut up to 9,000 back office and support jobs over the next two years ... The cuts represent 20% of the 45,000 staff employed in the bank's "group manufacturing" division, which includes back office operations, purchasing, IT and property management.The beat goes on ...
The PPIP and the FDIC
by Calculated Risk on 4/07/2009 09:10:00 AM
Why are the PPIP loans coming from the FDIC? Apparently to avoid asking Congress for additional funds ...
Andrew Sorkin writes in the NY Times: ‘No-Risk’ Insurance at F.D.I.C.
[The F.D.I.C. is] going to be insuring 85 percent of the debt, provided by the Treasury, that private investors will use to subsidize their acquisitions of toxic assets. The program ... is the equivalent of TARP 2.0. Only this time, Congress didn’t get a chance to vote.These potentially higher fees must make a few banks nervous. And if the losses really pile up, the FDIC will be bailed out, and it will be the taxpayers on the hook.
...
The F.D.I.C. is insuring the program, called the Public-Private Investment Program, by using a special provision in its charter that allows it to take extraordinary steps when an “emergency determination by secretary of the Treasury” is made to mitigate “systemic risk.”
...
[H]ow much does the F.D.I.C. think it might lose?
“We project no losses,” Sheila Bair, the chairwoman, told me in an interview. Zero? Really? “Our accountants have signed off on no net losses,” she said.
...
Here’s the F.D.I.C.’s explanation: It says it plans to carefully vet every loan that gets made and it will receive fees and collateral in exchange. And then there’s the safety net: If it loses money from insuring those investments, it will assess the financial industry a fee to pay the agency back.
Late Night Open Thread and Misc
by Calculated Risk on 4/07/2009 12:38:00 AM
There has been a request for a graph of Federal tax receipts, and I'll post something when the March numbers are released this Friday.
Tim Duy has a follow-up: More on Inflation Expectations
"Conventional wisdom of the Fed's policy describes quantitative easing as an effort to boost inflation expectations. This flows from the fact that the Fed Funds rates is at zero, therefore further decrease in the real rate can only be achieved by boosting inflation expectations. To me, however, the Fed has not committed to a program of raising inflation expectations. Instead, they are reiterating their existing commitment to a low, stable rate of inflation."Dr. Duy argues the Fed has had some success in anchoring inflation expectations.
Update: Tim provides these two graphs.
The first graph shows inflation expectations based on the difference in yields between TIPs and conventional Treasury securities.
For more on using TIPs for inflation expectations, see: Inflation Expectations: How the Market Speaks
The data is available from the St. Louis Fed.
The futures are flat:
Bloomberg Futures.
Futures from barchart.com
And the Asian markets are generally off slightly.
Best to all.
Monday, April 06, 2009
Report: IMF to Warn of $4 Trillion in Losses
by Calculated Risk on 4/06/2009 09:13:00 PM
From The Times: Toxic debts could reach $4 trillion, IMF to warn
Toxic debts racked up by banks and insurers could spiral to $4 trillion (£2.7 trillion), new forecasts from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) are set to suggest.It just keeps getting worse ...
The IMF said in January that it expected the deterioration in US-originated assets to reach $2.2 trillion by the end of next year, but it is understood to be looking at raising that to $3.1 trillion in its next assessment of the global economy, due to be published on April 21. In addition, it is likely to boost that total by $900 billion for toxic assets originated in Europe and Asia.
Meredith Whitney: House Prices to Fall Another 30%
by Calculated Risk on 4/06/2009 05:48:00 PM
From CNBC: Banks' 1st-Quarter Results May Show Improvement: Whitney
"I think you’ll see a directional turn," [Meredith] Whitney said in a live interview. "Banks will make a little money, as little as a penny a share, but they won’t lose money."House price comments at 5:25 into this interview ... "peak to trough off 50%":
...
She also said she expected home prices to fall another 30 percent ...
Boston Office Vacancy Rate Rises Sharply
by Calculated Risk on 4/06/2009 04:02:00 PM
Press Release: Richards Barry Joyce & Partners Releases Quarterly Report On Greater Boston’s Commercial Real Estate Office Market
[O]verall vacancy rates in Greater Boston’s office market rose during the first quarter of 2009, moving up a percentage point from 13.4% to 14.4%. During the period, the market experienced negative absorption of 1.1 million square feet.Negative absorption: words that strike terror in the hearts of CRE owners. Negative absorption means more offices are vacated than leased in a given period. Add any new supply, and the vacancy rate spikes and rents fall.
Class A office space was hit particularly hard. In the last two quarters since Q3’08, tenants have vacated 1.7 million square feet of Class A office space, increasing the vacancy rate from 10.5% to 13.1%. Additionally, Class A asking lease rates dropped $0.59 to $38.75 across the market.
On Friday, REIS Inc. reported that the nationwide office vacancy rate increased to 15.2% from 14.5% in Q4 2008.
Click on graph for larger image in new window.This graph shows the national office vacancy rate from REIS starting in 1991.
A little over one month ago, REIS was forecasting office vacancy rates would reach 17.6% in 2010. Now they are forecasting 19.3%!
Krugman at the EU Conference on Bernanke and Innovation
by Calculated Risk on 4/06/2009 03:07:00 PM
Some excerpts are now available from Professor Krugman's talk in Spain (March 17th). Note Krugman's comments on innovation ...
Here are the slides from Krugman's talk: How will it end?
Note: This was before Bernanke talked about "credit easing" as opposed to "quantitative easing" again. Bernanke's approach appears to run counter to Krugman's argument:
"The only way to make monetary policy effective once you’re in such a trap, at least in this framework, is to credibly commit to raising future as well as current money supplies."
Bill Moyers Journal: William Black Interview
by Calculated Risk on 4/06/2009 01:42:00 PM
Since about 100 people sent me this interview, I suspect there might be some discussion in the comments ...
The video is here.
Here is the transcript.
BILL MOYERS: In your book, you make it clear that calculated dishonesty by people in charge is at the heart of most large corporate failures and scandals, including, of course, the S&L, but is that true? Is that what you're saying here, that it was in the boardrooms and the CEO offices where this fraud began?And here is a photo I've posted before ...
WILLIAM K. BLACK: Absolutely.
BILL MOYERS: How did they do it? What do you mean?
WILLIAM K. BLACK: Well, the way that you do it is to make really bad loans, because they pay better. Then you grow extremely rapidly, in other words, you're a Ponzi-like scheme. And the third thing you do is we call it leverage. That just means borrowing a lot of money, and the combination creates a situation where you have guaranteed record profits in the early years. That makes you rich, through the bonuses that modern executive compensation has produced. It also makes it inevitable that there's going to be a disaster down the road.
BILL MOYERS: So you're suggesting, saying that CEOs of some of these banks and mortgage firms in order to increase their own personal income, deliberately set out to make bad loans?
WILLIAM K. BLACK: Yes.
![]() | This photo from 2003 shows two regulators: John Reich (then Vice Chairman of the FDIC and later at the OTS) and James Gilleran of the Office of Thrift Supervision (with the chainsaw) and representatives of three banker trade associations: James McLaughlin of the American Bankers Association, Harry Doherty of America's Community Bankers, and Ken Guenther of the Independent Community Bankers of America. |
WILLIAM K. BLACK: [T]hey didn't even begin to investigate the major lenders until the market had actually collapsed, which is completely contrary to what we did successfully in the Savings and Loan crisis, right? Even while the institutions were reporting they were the most profitable savings and loan in America, we knew they were frauds. And we were moving to close them down. Here, the Justice Department, even though it very appropriately warned, in 2004, that there was an epidemic...
BILL MOYERS: Who did?
WILLIAM K. BLACK: The FBI publicly warned, in September 2004 that there was an epidemic of mortgage fraud, that if it was allowed to continue it would produce a crisis at least as large as the Savings and Loan debacle. And that they were going to make sure that they didn't let that happen. So what goes wrong? After 9/11, the attacks, the Justice Department transfers 500 white-collar specialists in the FBI to national terrorism. Well, we can all understand that. But then, the Bush administration refused to replace the missing 500 agents. So even today, again, as you say, this crisis is 1000 times worse, perhaps, certainly 100 times worse, than the Savings and Loan crisis. There are one-fifth as many FBI agents as worked the Savings and Loan crisis.
BILL MOYERS: You talk about the Bush administration. Of course, there's that famous photograph of some of the regulators in 2003, who come to a press conference with a chainsaw suggesting that they're going to slash, cut business loose from regulation, right?
WILLIAM K. BLACK: Well, they succeeded. And in that picture, by the way, the other — three of the other guys with pruning shears are the...
BILL MOYERS: That's right.
WILLIAM K. BLACK: They're the trade representatives. They're the lobbyists for the bankers. And everybody's grinning. The government's working together with the industry to destroy regulation. Well, we now know what happens when you destroy regulation. You get the biggest financial calamity of anybody under the age of 80.
Altman: Not a normal cyclical recovery
by Calculated Risk on 4/06/2009 11:55:00 AM
Roger Altman, former deputy Treasury secretary, writes in the Financial Times: Why this will not be a normal cyclical recovery (ht Jonathan)
The rare nature of this recession precludes a cyclically normal US recovery. Instead, we are consigned to a slow, painful climb-out ...Also, in a typical cycle, residential investment (mostly new home construction and home improvement) leads the economy out of a recession. This time there is still too much excess inventory - especially distressed inventory - for any meaningful recovery in residential investment.
What is unusual is that this is a balance-sheet driven recession, centred on the damaged financial condition of both households and banks. These weaknesses mandate sub-normal levels of consumer spending and overall lending for about three years.
... To see why recovery will be slow, we can look at the balance sheet damage. For households, net worth peaked in mid-2007 at $64,400bn (€47,750, £43,449bn) but fell to $51,500bn at the end of 2008, a swift 20 per cent fall. ... household debt reached 130 per cent of income in 2008.
This debt derived from Americans spending more than their income, reflecting the positive wealth effect. Households felt wealthier ... Now that wealth effect has reversed with a vengeance. ... household balance sheets will not be rebuilt soon. Home values will keep falling through mid-2010 and there is no precedent for equity markets, still down 45 per cent from their peak, to make those losses up in just two years. It is illogical, therefore, to expect a full snap-back in the consumer sector in 2010 or 2011. This alone mandates a drawn-out, weak recovery.
The second key sector is the financial one. ... losses are eating into banks’ capital and shrinking their capacity to add assets. Funds from the Troubled Asset Relief Program are only replacing lost capital, not increasing it. When might they end? With key categories of toxic assets still losing value, the answer is: not soon. The scale of lending needed to support a normal cyclical recovery will not materialise.
A third constraint on recovery may involve the federal balance sheet. The fiscal and monetary engines are currently on full throttle. But, within two years, concerns over budget deficits and inflation may revive, compelling the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates and Congress to adopt deficit reduction steps. These actions, contractionary by definition, could occur before a full recovery has asserted itself. On that basis, the federal balance sheet would also limit a full recovery.
So even if the economy bottoms later this year, the recovery will probably be very sluggish for some time.
Mayo on Bank Sector
by Calculated Risk on 4/06/2009 10:29:00 AM
From Bloomberg: Mayo Says Loan Losses Will Exceed Depression Levels
Mike Mayo ... assigned an “underweight” rating to banks on expectations that loan losses will exceed levels from the Great Depression.Note: Mayo will hold a conference call at 11 AM ET. There will also be a discussion of mark-to-market accounting. See the comments for details ...
“While certain mortgage problems are farther along, other areas are likely to accelerate, reflecting a rolling recession by asset class,” Mayo wrote in a report today. “New government actions might not help as much as expected, especially given that loans have been marked down to only 98 cents on the dollar, on average.”



