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Monday, July 20, 2009

DOT: Vehicle Miles Flat YoY

by Calculated Risk on 7/20/2009 03:09:00 PM

This is the second consecutive month were vehicles miles driven were flat, or slightly above, the comparable month in 2008 (May 2009 compared to the May 2008).

The Dept of Transportation reports on U.S. Traffic Volume Trends:

Travel on all roads and streets changed by +0.1% (0.2 billion vehicle miles) for May 2009 as compared with May 2008. Travel for the month is estimated to be 257.3 billion vehicle miles.
Vehicle Miles DrivenClick on graph for larger image in new window.

The first graph shows the rolling 12 month of U.S. vehicles miles driven. (label corrected: trillions)

By this measure (used to remove seasonality) vehicle miles declined sharply and are now moving sideways.

Vehicle Miles YoYThe second graph shows the comparison of month to the same month in the previous year as reported by the DOT.

As the DOT noted, miles driven in May 2009 were 0.1% greater than in May 2008.

Year-over-year miles driven started to decline in December 2007, and really fell off a cliff in March 2008. This makes for an easier comparison for May 2009.

Moody's: Inadequate Loan Loss Provisions for Banks

by Calculated Risk on 7/20/2009 02:28:00 PM

From Bloomberg: Banks Fail to Make Adequate Loan-Loss Provisions, Moody’s Says (ht Brian, Bob_in_MA)

Banks have failed to make adequate provision for the losses on loans and securities they face before the end of next year ... U.S. banks may incur about $470 billion of losses and writedowns by the end of 2010, which may cause the banks to be unprofitable in the period ...

“Large loan losses have yet to be recognized in the banking system,” Moody’s said. “We expect to see rising provisioning needs well into 2010.”
This can't just be regional and community banks - this must include some of the stress test 19. Maybe it is time for another round of stress tests.

Fed's Lockhart sees Weak Recovery, Exit Strategy not needed for "some time"

by Calculated Risk on 7/20/2009 01:32:00 PM

From Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart: On the Economic Outlook and the Commitment to Price Stability . Here is Lockhart's economic outlook:

Often a deep recession is followed by a sharp rebound in business and overall economic activity. Unfortunately, as I look ahead, I do not foresee this trajectory. I expect real growth to resume in the second half and progress at a modest pace. I do not see a strong recovery in the medium term.

There are risks to even this rather subdued forecast. The risk I'm watching most closely is commercial real estate. There is a heavy schedule of commercial real estate financings coming due in 2009, 2010, and 2011. The CMBS (commercial real estate mortgage-backed securities) market is very weak, and banks generally have no appetite to roll over loans on properties that have lost value in the recession. Refinancing problems will not directly affect GDP—it's commercial construction that factors into GDP—but I'm concerned problems in commercial real estate finance could adversely affect the otherwise improving banking and insurance sectors.

... the healing of the banking system will take time. Working off excess housing inventory will take time. The reallocation of labor to productive and growing sectors of the economy will take time. It will take time to complete the deleveraging of American households and the restoration of consumer balance sheets.

In short, I believe the economy must undergo significant structural adjustments. We're coming out of a severe recession, and it's not too much an exaggeration to say the economy is undergoing a makeover. We must build a more solid foundation for our economy than consumer spending fueled by excessive credit—excessive household leverage—built on a house price bubble.

The surviving financial system must find a new posture of risk taking. The balance of consumption and investment must adjust, with investment being financed by greater domestic saving. The distribution of employment must adjust to match worker skills, including newly acquired skills, with jobs in growth markets. Some industrial plant and equipment must be taken offline to remove excess and higher-cost capacity.

As I said, these adjustments will take time and will suppress growth prospects in the process. I believe the economy will underperform its long-term potential for a while because of the obstacles to growth that must be removed, adjustments it must undergo.
...
Let me summarize my argument here today. The economy is stabilizing and recovery will begin in the second half. The recovery will be weak compared with historic recoveries from recession. The recovery will be weak because the economy must make structural adjustments before the healthiest possible rate of growth can be achieved. While this adjustment process is going on in the medium term, I believe inflation and deflation are roughly equal risks and require careful monitoring. Slack in the economy will suppress inflation. And inflation is unlikely to result—by direct causation—from the recent growth of the Fed's balance sheet. In any event, the Fed has a number of tools being readied to unwind the policies used to fight the recession, and it will be some time before their use is appropriate.
emphasis added

Moody's: CRE Prices Off 7.6% In May

by Calculated Risk on 7/20/2009 12:21:00 PM

From Dow Jones: Moody's: Commercial Real-Estate Prices Fall 7.6% In May

Commercial real-estate prices fell 7.6% in May ... The indexes are down 29% from a year ago and 35% from their October 2007 peak.
According to Moody's, CRE prices fell in 8.6% in April (about 16% in two months).

Talk about cliff diving!

Conference Board Indicators Increase in June

by Calculated Risk on 7/20/2009 09:56:00 AM

From the Conference Board:

The Conference Board Leading Economic Index™ (LEI) for the U.S. increased 0.7 percent, The Conference Board Coincident Economic Index™ (CEI) decreased 0.2 percent ... The Conference Board LEI for the U.S. has risen for three consecutive months now ... With these large and widespread gains, its six month growth has picked up to the highest rate since the first quarter of 2006. Meanwhile, The Conference Board CEI for the U.S., measuring current economic activity, remains on a downtrend, but the pace of its decline has moderated somewhat in recent months. All in all, the behavior of the composite indexes suggest that the recession will continue to ease and that the economy may begin to recover in the near term.
This isn't something I follow very closely, but I'm curious to see when (or if) they try to call the end of the recession. The Conference Board was still saying "sluggish economic growth will likely continue in the near term" even after the recession started - so this might not be useful for turning points.

CRE Losses Piling Up

by Calculated Risk on 7/20/2009 08:13:00 AM

From Lingling Wei and Maurice Tamman at the WSJ: Commercial Loans Failing at Rapid Pace

U.S. banks have been charging off soured commercial mortgages at the fastest pace in nearly 20 years ... losses on loans used to finance offices, shopping malls, hotels, apartments and other commercial property could reach about $30 billion by the end of 2009.
...
Many of the most troubled [regional] banks have heavy exposure to commercial real estate. ...

In contrast to home loans, the majority of which were made by about 10 lenders, thousands of U.S. banks, especially regional and community banks, loaded up on commercial-property debt.
...
Some analysts, meanwhile, worry that banks aren't sufficiently recognizing losses on their commercial real-estate loans, thereby exposing themselves to bigger losses later. ..."Net charge-offs to date have been highly inadequate," said Richard Parkus, head of commercial mortgage-backed securities research at Deutsche Bank. "This is clearly a problem that is being pushed out into the future."
Many regional and community banks had excessive loan concentrations in Construction & Development (C&D) and CRE loans. The FDIC identified this as an emerging risk in 2006 - so it is no surprise. These smaller banks have been slow to recognize the related losses - possibly because many of the deals had interest reserves that mask the performance of the commercial building until the reserve runs dry. Then there is just more work for the FDIC ...

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Mortgages to Mods: Getting them coming and going

by Calculated Risk on 7/19/2009 11:58:00 PM

“I had people calling me crying, and we were telling them, ‘You can pay me or you can lose your house. People were giving me every dime they had, opening credit cards. But I never saw one client come out of it with a successful loan modification.”
Paul Pejman, a former sales agent for FedMod in Irvine, Calif
That quote is from Peter Goodman's article in the NY Times about ex-mortgage brokers now offering loan modifications: Cashing In, Again, on Risky Mortgages

Goodman mentions this interesting tidbit that Jillayne (at CEForward and RainCityGuide) had previously told me about:
The California Department of Real Estate warns consumers that many dubious loan modification companies have organized themselves as law firms solely to allow them to collect upfront fees, even though the lawyers have little, if anything, to do with the services provided. The department cautions consumers against hiring such companies.

More on CIT Deal

by Calculated Risk on 7/19/2009 09:11:00 PM

UPDATE, Deal Approved by Board: From the NY Times CIT Is Said to Obtain Urgent Loan to Prevent Bankruptcy (ht Basel Too)

Directors of the CIT Group, one of the nation’s leading lenders to small and midsize businesses, approved a deal Sunday evening with some of the bank’s major bondholders to help it avert a bankruptcy filing through a $3 billion emergency loan ...
From Reuters: CIT bondholder plan backed by unsecuritized assets (ht jb)
"The $3 billion is new money but securitized by all the remaining unsecuritized assets which probably exceed $10 billion," the source said.
A few points:

  • This is new debt at a reported 10% plus LIBOR rate. This is not debt for equity. This is essentially a bridge loan, with a reported 2 1/2 year term.

  • This deal hasn't has received CIT Board approval (UPDATE Above: Deal Approved).

  • This new debt is apparently secured by all the remaining unsecured assets of CIT. This probably means CIT will survive through 2009 (if approved), but long term debt holders will be behind this debt.

  • The parties are trying to negotiate a debt-for-equity swap, and that would probably seriously dilute current shareholders.

  • This doesn't solve the problem, just kicks the can down the road.

    Other story links:
    WSJ broke the story: Bondholders Plan CIT Rescue

    NY Times: CIT Is Near Deal for $3 Billion Loan to Avert Bankruptcy

  • WSJ: CIT Cuts Deal with Bondholders, No Bankrutpcy

    by Calculated Risk on 7/19/2009 05:52:00 PM

    From the WSJ: CIT cuts deal with key bondholders for $3 billion in financing. CIT will avoid bankruptcy, restructure outside court. (ht Noah at UrbanDigs in NY)

    UPDATE: From WSJ: Bondholders Plan CIT Rescue

    The deal, which was being considered by CIT's board Sunday night, charges CIT very high interest rates, and it doesn't permanently fix the company's long-term financing needs ... Under the proposal, CIT would likely pay interest rates 10 percentage points above the London interbank offered rate, said these people. ... CIT has also agreed to pledge some of its highest-quality loans as collateral on the $3 billion package.

    The new loan could act like a "bridge" to a series of debt-exchange offers that CIT would launch in order to get bondholders to swap some of their bonds for equity in the company or for new debt that matures later.
    So it is a bridge loan while CIT tries for a debt-for-equity exchange or new debt. This is a short term fix, but probably gets CIT through the year.

    Office Space: Negative Absorption and New Construction

    by Calculated Risk on 7/19/2009 03:10:00 PM

    From the Sacramento Business Journal: Office vacancies piling up (ht Brad)

    Office vacancies in Sacramento continue to rise as new buildings come online while many businesses are retrenching or closing altogether.

    During the second quarter, local office vacancy surged to [a record] 20.9 percent ...

    Brokers say these lowlights reflect the clash between today’s economic uncertainty and the confidence of the past, as large new buildings planned years ago are being completed just as companies hit by the recession are hunkering down, getting leaner or closing down.

    While conditions would appear dreary even without new construction, the completion of major office projects is compounding the problem.

    “You’ve got very significant new buildings being added to the base,” said Cornish & Carey managing partner John Frisch ...
    Companies are "hunkering down, getting leaner or closing down" and giving up office (negative absorption) just as long planned new space comes online. This is pushing up vacancy rates, and pushing down rents. The article mentions suburban Class B office lease rates are back to levels last seen in the 1980s.

    I posted the following nationwide graph a few months ago based on CoStar's The State of the Commercial Real Estate Industry: 2008 Review/2009 Outlook (no link). This shows that 2009 will be the peak office space delivery year for this cycle.

    Office Space Delivered per Year Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph graph shows the amount of office space delivered per year in the U.S. in millions of square feet since 1958. The over investment during the '80s (S&L crisis) is obvious, as is the office boom during the stock bubble.

    The red columns are based on projections from Costar for projects already in the pipeline. Although deliveries will be strong in 2009 (with all the projects currently under construction), CoStar projects new office deliveries in 2010 will the lowest since 1996, and deliveries in 2011 will be the lowest in over 50 years.