by Calculated Risk on 5/12/2009 02:32:00 PM
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Immaculate Recovery?
GE Chief Executive Jeff Immelt is uncertain when growth will resume ...
From Reuters: GE CEO says economy stabilized, growth a question
Improved credit markets have brought stabilization to the economy but it is still not clear when growth will resume, General Electric Co Chief Executive Jeff Immelt said on Tuesday.And from PIMCO's El-Erian:
"The credit picture, we think, is improving and that's really one of the fundamentals to getting the broader economy doing better," Immelt said in an interview with Reuters. "Things certainly have stabilized and now the goal is to see where growth goes in the second half of the year."
It was clear to us that, despite the very high hurdle that we always apply to such a statement, the world has changed in a manner that is unlikely to be reversed over the next few years. Put another way, markets are recovering from a shock that goes way, way beyond a cyclical flesh wound.And Bloomberg quotes Paul Krugman:
...
For the next 3–5 years, we expect a world of muted growth ...
“It looks to me now as if the markets are now pricing in a rapid recovery, that they’re pricing in a V-shaped recession, which I consider extremely unlikely,” Krugman said at a forum in Shanghai today. “The market seems to be looking as if this is going to be an average recession, but it’s not.”I thought a depression was unlikely, and I think an immaculate recovery is also unlikely. Something in the middle - that will feel like a recession to many - is more likely.
As I noted last week (see A Return to Trend Growth in 2010? and The Impact of Changes in the Saving Rate on PCE ), the usual engines of recovery - personal consumption expenditures (PCE) and residential investment (RI) - will both remain under pressure (even if they show some sluggish growth).
My forecast is for unemployment to stay elevated for some time, and the suggests minimal wage growth. And I also think household will increase their saving rate to repair their household balance sheet (and because of an aging population). This suggests PCE growth will probably be below trend.
And for RI, there is far too much inventory for any significant rebound in new home construction. So where will the growth come from?
Home Sales: One and Done
by Calculated Risk on 5/12/2009 11:32:00 AM
The NAR reported today: Foreclosure and Short Sale Discounts Weigh Down Metro Area Median Prices
" ... first-time buyers account[ed] for half of all purchases during the first quarter ..."Most of the press release discusses the median price (something to ignore because of the change in mix), but there is a key point being missed - many of these sales are "one and done" with no move up buyer.
“Close to 455,000 buyers purchased their first home during the first quarter, and those are likely just the first wave of new buyers coming into the market – they’re critical for a housing recovery,” [Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist] said.
Click on graphis for larger image in new window.Here is a graphic I created a couple years ago to show a normal market chain reaction.
At that time I wrote: "Not all chain reactions start with a first time buyer using a subprime loan, but the loss of a large number of subprime buyers will impact the entire chain."
Where are the move up buyers going to come from?
There is no "chain reaction" in the housing market - over half the sales are to first time buyers, and frequently the sellers are banks.
I hear this from real estate agents all the time: the agents (low end) are plenty busy with REOs and short sales, but the deals are mostly "one and done".
Advanta Halts New Credit-Card Lending
by Calculated Risk on 5/12/2009 09:25:00 AM
From Bloomberg: Advanta Shuts Down Credit-Card Lending Amid Surging Charge-Offs
Advanta Corp., the issuer of credit cards for small businesses, will halt new lending for its 1 million customers next month as the recession causes a surge in loan defaults. ... Advanta said ... charge-offs, or uncollectible debt, reached 20 percent on some cards as of March 31.This is much higher loss rate than for consumer credit cards - the Fed's two year indicative loss rate was 18% to 20% for consumer credit cards - Advanta is seeing that in one year for some cards!
...
“We’ll be shutting down accounts for future transaction activities, but many of the customers will maintain balances and pay us off over time,” [Chief Financial Officer Philip Browne] said yesterday in a telephone interview.
Advanta was the 11th-biggest U.S. credit-card issuer at the end of 2008 with about $5 billion in outstanding balances, and the only major lender focused on small business borrowers ...
U.S. March Trade Deficit: $27.6 billion
by Calculated Risk on 5/12/2009 08:31:00 AM
The Census Bureau reports:
The ... total March exports of $123.6 billion and imports of $151.2 billion resulted in a goods and services deficit of $27.6 billion, up from $26.1 billion in February, revised. March exports were $3.0 billion less than February exports of $126.6 billion. March imports were $1.6 billion less than February imports of $152.8 billion.
Click on graph for larger image.The first graph shows the monthly U.S. exports and imports in dollars through March 2009.
Both imports and exports declined in March, although it appears the cliff diving in trade might be over.
On a year-over-year basis, exports are off 17.4% and imports are off 27%!
The second graph shows the U.S. trade deficit, with and without petroleum, through March.
The blue line is the total deficit, and the black line is the petroleum deficit, and the red line is the trade deficit ex-petroleum products. Import oil prices increased slightly to $41.36 in March following eight consecutive monthly declines. Spot prices have increased since March, so it appears the decline in the trade deficit due to lower oil prices is over for now.
The trade deficit is mostly oil and China now, so any further significant decline in the deficit is unlikely in the short term. Although the NY Times reports: Chinese Exports Fall 22.6% in April
Exports from mainland China slumped 22.6 percent in April from a year earlier, official statistics showed — a fall that was not only larger than economists had expected but also bigger than that in March, when overseas shipments declined 17.1 percent.
Monday, May 11, 2009
Vacant Retail Space: Advertising Bonanza!
by Calculated Risk on 5/11/2009 11:31:00 PM
From the NY Times: As Storefronts Become Vacant, Ads Arrive
Almost every category of advertising is declining precipitously in this economy, but there is one that is thriving. ...Yeah ... "much easier to acquire locations". I bet!
Taking advantage of all the abandoned retail spaces in urban areas, marketers are leasing them at cut-rate prices and filling them with their ads.
...
“In the last year and a half, it’s been much easier to acquire locations,” said [Ray Lee, the managing director of ... a company that creates storefront advertisements].
Foreclosures in the 'Burbs
by Calculated Risk on 5/11/2009 09:12:00 PM
From Crain's Chicago Business: Foreclosure wave slams suburbia (ht Atrios)
Home foreclosures are surging in Chicago's suburbs just as they level off or decline in many city neighborhoods already ravaged by mortgage defaults.The decline in foreclosures in Chicago might be because of the recent moratorium, but clearly foreclosures are moving into the middle-class areas.
Foreclosure cases filed in the first quarter jumped between 25% and 70% from the fourth quarter in DuPage, Will, McHenry, Lake and Kane counties, according to new data provided to Crain's by the Woodstock Institute, a Chicago-based housing advocacy group. Meanwhile, foreclosures fell 8% in Chicago, the first quarterly decline in a year.
...
The shifting locus of new foreclosures shows how the recession and job losses are supplanting subprime lending as the main driver of mortgage defaults ... While the first wave of foreclosures hit hardest in poorer city neighborhoods ... the latest round is striking middle-class areas where most borrowers qualified for standard-rate mortgages.
We're all subprime now!
And that gives me an excuse to post this ...
Click on drawing for larger image in new window.My friend and co-blogger Tanta originated the phrase "We're all subprime now!" One of her many talents was something she called "Excel Art". This drawing is from December 2007 and is titled "The Adventures of Mortgage Pig, Chapter 4: Hanging Over the Cubicles of the Mod Squad".
The drawing is from an excel file that Tanta used to explain how Option ARM loans recast - see Tanta's UberNerd post: On Option ARMs
Bernanke Speech at 7:30 PM ET
by Calculated Risk on 5/11/2009 06:52:00 PM
UPDATE: Speech Text: The Supervisory Capital Assessment Program
My remarks this evening will focus on the Supervisory Capital Assessment Program, popularly known as the banking stress test. ...Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke will speak tonight at the Atlanta Fed's Financial Markets Conference in Jekyll Island, Georgia.
It is important to note that this was not a solvency test. After including capital previously provided by the Treasury, all of these banking organizations currently have capital well in excess of the minimum stated capital requirements of the supervisors. Instead, the purpose of the exercise was to determine the size of the capital cushion that each organization would need to remain well capitalized and still be able to lend--even in an economic scenario more severe than expected.
...
Conclusion
In summary, the Supervisory Capital Assessment Program is an important element of broader and ongoing efforts by the Federal Reserve, other federal bank regulators, and the Treasury to ensure that our banking system has sufficient resources to navigate a challenging economic downturn. A collateral benefit is that many lessons of the exercise can be used to improve our supervisory processes. In particular, the supervisory capital assessment has demonstrated the benefits of using cross-firm, cross-portfolio information and the simultaneous review of a number of major firms to develop a more complete and fine-grained view of the health of the banking system.
Whether the objectives of the assessment program were achieved will only be known over time. We hope that in two or three years we will be able to reflect on the banking system's return to health with a sharply diminished reliance on government capital. More immediately, we hope and expect that the public and investors will take considerable comfort from the fact that our largest financial institutions have been evaluated in a comprehensive and rigorous fashion; and that they will, as a consequence, be required to have a capital buffer adequate to weather future losses and to supply needed credit to our economy--even if the economic downturn is more severe than is currently anticipated.
I believe Bernanke will be talking about the stress tests.
I'll post a link and excerpts from the prepared text when available ...
Here is the CNBC feed (maybe they will cover the speech).
Meredith Whitney on CNBC
by Calculated Risk on 5/11/2009 04:52:00 PM
Here is Meredith Whitney on banks and stress tests today ...
On the stress test leaks:
"I couldn't believe how poorly the impressions leaked, how effectively people say it was leaked, if it was any other company leaking that information there would be SEC investigations all over the place."
The Mega-Bear Quartet
by Calculated Risk on 5/11/2009 04:19:00 PM
By popular demand, the 2nd graph is Doug's "Mega-Bear Quartet" that includes the Nikkei and NASDAQ bear markets. Click on graph for larger image in new window.
The first graph is from Doug Short of dshort.com (financial planner): "Four Bad Bears".
This is the 2nd worst S&P 500 / DOW bear market in the U.S. in 100 years.
Note that the Great Depression crash is based on the DOW; the three others are for the S&P 500. The second graph compares four significant bear markets: the Dow during the Great Depression, the NASDAQ, the Nikkei, and the current S&P 500.
See Doug's: "The Mega-Bear Quartet and L-Shaped Recoveries".
OECD: Global Economy at "inflection point", U.S. Still in "strong slowdown"
by Calculated Risk on 5/11/2009 03:09:00 PM
"We are, as far as growth is concerned, around the inflection point in the cycle"
European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet, May 11, 2009
From The Times: Britain may be on road to recovery, says OECD
The worst of Britain's recession may now be over, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).More from Bloomberg: Trichet Says Global Economy Is Near Turning Point
The OECD, the umbrella group for the top 30 developed nations, said its indicators, which are considered to be a bellwether for the global economic outlook, pointed to a strong slowdown in the OECD area, but said that Britain, France and Italy were showing “tentative signs” of a pause in the slowdown.
Canada, Japan, Germany and the US, are still in the midst of a "strong slowdown".
...
“However, with the exception of China, where signs of a pause have also emerged, major non-OECD economies still face deteriorating conditions,” the OECD said.
...
“We are, as far as growth is concerned, around the inflection point in the (economic) cycle,” said Jean-Claude Trichet, head of the European Central Bank, at a G10 meeting in Switzerland.
Once global growth starts to pick up, central banks will have to scale back their support for the economy, Trichet said.It took just a couple of months to go from Great Depression II to "green shoots". Now Trichet is talking about an "inflection point" and central bankers scaling back their support - this seems a little premature.
“Insistence is put on the exit strategy, on the medium- term path that permits us to go back to a normal situation, a sound and sustainable situation,” he said. At the same time, central banks will “do what is necessary in terms of extraordinary measures, as long as necessary,” he added.


