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Sunday, March 14, 2010

Weekly Summary and a Look Ahead

by Calculated Risk on 3/14/2010 12:03:00 PM

This will be a busy week with two key housing reports released on Monday and Tuesday: Builder confidence and Housing starts.

On Monday, the Fed will release the February Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization report at 9:15 AM ET. Expectations are for no increase in industrial production, and a slight decrease in capacity utilization (snow related).

Also on Monday, the NAHB will release the Housing Market Index of builder confidence for March at 1:00 PM ET (little change expected - still depressed), and the Empire Manufacturing Survey will be released at 8:30 AM.

On Tuesday, the Census Bureau will release Housing Starts for February at 8:30 AM ET. There will probably be a small decline in February starts because of the snow, however housing starts have already been moving sideways since last June as the excess inventory of housing units has slowly been absorbed.

Also on Tuesday, the FOMC statement will be released at 2:15 PM ET. Obviously there will be no change to the federal funds rate, but the statement might be a little more positive on the economy. The key wording -"exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for an extended period" - will almost certainly remain the same. The Fed will probably discuss planning for an "exit strategy" and the end of the MBS purchase program at the end of March.

On Wednesday, the MBA Mortgage Applications Index, and the Producer Price index for February will both be released.

On Thursday, the closely watched initial weekly unemployment claims, and the February Consumer Price Index (consensus is for a 0.1% increase - subdued inflation) will be released. Of special interest will be the Owners' Equivalent Rent index that has been declining for several months.

Also on Thursday, the March Philly Fed survey will be released.

On Friday the FDIC will probably close several more banks. I'm still expecting some activity in Puerto Rico soon, and the Chicago Tribune reported this week that bids are being taken on several banks in the Chicago area:

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. is putting at least a half-dozen struggling Chicago-area banks out for bid to healthy institutions that might want to buy their deposits and asset.
...
People familiar with the FDIC process say that, among the undercapitalized banks, those that the regulator is trying to line up buyers for include Amcore Bank, Broadway Bank, Lincoln Park Savings Bank, Wheatland Bank, Citizens Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago and New Century Bank.
On Saturday, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke will be speaking at the Community Bankers convention in Florida.

And a summary of last week ...

  • Retail Sales increase in February

    On a monthly basis, retail sales increased 0.3% from January to February (seasonally adjusted, after revisions), and sales were up 4.5% from February 2009 (easy comparison). However January was revised down sharply from a 0.5% increase to 0.1%.

    Retail Sales Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph shows retail sales since 1992. This is monthly retail sales, seasonally adjusted (total and ex-gasoline).

    The red line shows retail sales ex-gasoline and shows the increase in final demand ex-gasoline has been sluggish.

    Retail sales are up 6.0% from the bottom, but still off 6.4% from the peak. Retail ex-gasoline are up 3.6% from the bottom and still off 5.4% from the peak.

  • Trade Deficit decreases slightly in January

    The second graph shows the U.S. trade deficit, with and without petroleum, through January.

    U.S. Trade Deficit The Census Bureau reports:
    [T]otal January exports of $142.7 billion and imports of $180.0 billion resulted in a goods and services deficit of $37.3 billion, down from $39.9 billion in December, revised.
    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.

  • BLS: Low Labor Turnover, More Job Openings in January

    The following graph shows job openings (yellow line), hires (purple Line), Quits (light blue bars) and Layoff, Discharges and other (red bars) from the BLS JOLTS report. Red and light blue added together equals total separations.

    Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey According to the JOLTS report, there were 4.08 million hires in January (SA), and 4.122 million total separations, or 42 thousand net jobs lost. The comparable CES report showed a loss of 26 thousand jobs in January (after revision).

    Separations have declined sharply from early 2009, but hiring has barely picked up. Quits (light blue on graph) are at near the low too. Usually "quits" are employees who have already found a new job (as opposed to layoffs and other discharges).

    The low turnover rate is another indicator of a weak labor market.

  • Unemployment Rate Increases in 30 States in January

    State Unemployment This graph shows the high and low unemployment rates for each state (and D.C.) since 1976. The red bar is the current unemployment rate (sorted by the current unemployment rate).

    Fifteen states and D.C. now have double digit unemployment rates. New Jersey and Indiana are close.

    Five states and D.C. set new series record highs: California, South Carolina, Florida, Georgia and North Carolina. Two other states tied series highs: Nevada and Rhode Island.

  • Other Economic Stories ...

  • From Brian Sack, Executive Vice President, Federal Reserve Bank of New York: Preparing for a Smooth (Eventual) Exit

  • Employment: March Madness The BLS could report a March headline number of 200,000 net payroll jobs, and that could be viewed as a weak report.

  • From Rex Nutting at MarketWatch: Small business optimism falls in Feb., NFIB says

  • Congressional Oversight Panel criticizes handling of GMAC

  • Manufacturing and Trade Inventory-to-Sales Ratio: Inventory Adjustment Over

  • From Planet Money: Podcast: We Bought A Toxic Asset!

  • HAMP: About One-Third of eligible Trial Mods approved for Permanent

  • Unofficial Problem Bank List at 640

    Best wishes to all.
  • Senator Dodd's Financial Overhaul Bill to be introduced Monday

    by Calculated Risk on 3/14/2010 09:45:00 AM

    From Sewell Chan at the NY Times: Dodd to Unveil a Broad Financial Overhaul Bill

    Here are the key points:

  • The consumer financial protection agency would be part of the Federal Reserve.

  • Creates a systemic risk council that would be headed by the Treasury Secretary and would include "representatives of the Fed, the new consumer agency, the F.D.I.C., the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the Federal Housing Finance Agency — along with an official appointed to monitor the insurance industry, which is largely regulated by the states."

  • Regulate over-the-counter derivatives: "Standardized swaps and derivatives would have to be traded on exchanges or clearinghouses."

  • The Federal Reserve would regulate bank holding companies with $50 billion or more in assets, and "systemically important nonbank financial institutions".

  • Many smaller banks that the Federal Reserve currently regulates would be overseen by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency or the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, depending on the bank charter.

  • Some shareholder provisions that allow shareholders to vote on executive pay and nominate directors.

    The derivative regulation is a positive step forward. I'm not sure about the systemic risk council, but this could be helpful. The consumer financial protection agency as part of the Fed is really no change.

  • Chinese Premier: Currency not undervalued, warns of "Double Dip" Recession

    by Calculated Risk on 3/14/2010 01:15:00 AM

    From Bloomberg: China’s Wen Rebuffs Yuan Calls, Is ‘Still Worried’ About Dollar

    "I don’t think the yuan is undervalued,” Wen said at a press conference in Beijing marking the end of China’s annual parliamentary meetings. Dollar volatility is a “big” concern and “I’m still worried” about China’s U.S. currency holdings, he said.
    And from the WSJ: Chinese Premier Warns of 'Double Dip' Recession

    Saturday, March 13, 2010

    Saturday Night Greece

    by Calculated Risk on 3/13/2010 10:13:00 PM

    It has been a month since Jean-Claude Juncker, Luxembourg's prime minister and chairman of the 16 euro-zone finance ministers, said that Greece had until March 16th to show progress on their budget. The euro-zone finance ministers meet this week, and apparently Greece has meet the short term goals.

    From Reuters: Euro finance ministers to agree on Greek aid: source

    Euro zone finance ministers are likely to agree on Monday on a mechanism for aiding Greece financially, if it is required, but will leave out any sums until Athens asks for them, an EU source said on Saturday. ...

    "I think we should be able to agree on principles of a euro area facility for coordinated assistance. The European Commission and the Eurogroup task force would have the mandate to finalize the work," [a] source said. ... "You would have a framework mechanism and you would have blank spaces for the numbers because there has been no request (from Greece) yet."
    And from the WSJ: No Need for Greek Bailout Now, France's Lagarde Says
    Credible efforts by Greece's government to clean up its finances have so far negated the need for any bailout from the European Union, French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde said Friday.

    Unofficial Problem Bank List at 640

    by Calculated Risk on 3/13/2010 06:00:00 PM

    This is an unofficial list of Problem Banks compiled only from public sources. Changes and comments from surferdude808:

    There were several additions and removals during the week that left the Unofficial Problem Bank List totals almost unchanged. This week there are 640 institutions with assets of $325.6 billion compared to 641 institutions and $325.5 billion of assets last week.

    Removals include the four failures -- The Park Avenue Bank ($520 million), Old Southern Bank ($336 million), Statewide Bank ($243 million), and LibertyPointe Bank ($217 million), and one action termination -- Union Federal Savings Bank ($192 million).

    Additions include Heritage Oaks Bank, Paso Robles, CA ($942 million); Idaho Banking Company, Boise, ID ($228 million); Albina Community Bank, Portland, OR ($199 million); and Ravalli County Bank, Hamilton, MT ($191 million).

    Other changes include for institutions already on the list are Prompt Corrective Action Orders issued against Maritime Savings Bank ($379 million), Horizon Bank ($199 million), and Ideal Federal Savings Bank ($6 million). We anticipate for the OCC to issue their enforcement actions for February 2010 next week.
    The list is compiled from regulator press releases or from public news sources (see Enforcement Action Type link for source). The FDIC data is released monthly with a delay, and the Fed and OTC data is more timely. The OCC data is a little lagged. Credit: surferdude808.

    See description below table for Class and Cert (and a link to FDIC ID system).


    For a full screen version of the table click here.

    The table is wide - use scroll bars to see all information!

    NOTE: Columns are sortable - click on column header (Assets, State, Bank Name, Date, etc.)



    Class: from FDIC
    The FDIC assigns classification codes indicating an institution's charter type (commercial bank, savings bank, or savings association), its chartering agent (state or federal government), its Federal Reserve membership status (member or nonmember), and its primary federal regulator (state-chartered institutions are subject to both federal and state supervision). These codes are:
  • N National chartered commercial bank supervised by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
  • SM State charter Fed member commercial bank supervised by the Federal Reserve
  • NM State charter Fed nonmember commercial bank supervised by the FDIC
  • SA State or federal charter savings association supervised by the Office of Thrift Supervision
  • SB State charter savings bank supervised by the FDIC
  • Cert: This is the certificate number assigned by the FDIC used to identify institutions and for the issuance of insurance certificates. Click on the number and the Institution Directory (ID) system "will provide the last demographic and financial data filed by the selected institution".

    Nearing Retirement and Unemployed or Underemployed

    by Calculated Risk on 3/13/2010 02:05:00 PM

    One of the groups seriously impacted by the great recession is the "pre retirement" generation - currently the "Baby Boomers" - the workers between the ages of 45 and 64.

    Pre-retirement Unemployment Rate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph shows the unemployment rates for two groups: 45 to 54 (seasonally adjusted), and 55 to 64 (only NSA data is available).

    The unemployment rate for these age groups hit an all time high during the great recession (highest since WWII).

    Michael Winerip at the NY Times has a story about the plight of several "Boomers" who he has tracked for the last year: Time, It Turns Out, Isn’t on Their Side (ht Ann)

    A YEAR ago, I wrote about a job fair at the Sheraton in Midtown Manhattan, where over 5,000 mainly white collar, middle-aged jobless men and women waited in the cold for more than two hours, hoping to find work. ...

    For that column, I interviewed two dozen boomers. Given recent reports from the federal government and Manpower, the employment agency, that the hiring outlook is beginning to improve, I thought it would be worthwhile to go back to those highly motivated people. ...

    The short answer is, of the 16 I interviewed again, 9 describe themselves as still struggling. Eight continue to be unemployed or are working part-time jobs that pay near minimum wage. Several were so concerned about bias, they did not want to give their ages. ...

    Of the 16, only one, Mr. Kramer, who was unemployed eight months before being hired in July as a closing manager at a Best Yet supermarket, has found a job that pays more than his old position. More typical of the seven who’ve found full-time work is Ben Brief, 60, a printing supervisor, who’d been jobless two months when I interviewed him on Sixth Avenue in the 20-degree weather. Mr. Brief was out of work nine more months, before finding a printing job that paid 20 percent less than his previous position. “I’m glad to be working, but people know they can pay you a lot less in this economy,” he said.
    Kind of hard to sing "Yeah, time time time is on my side ..." when you are 60 and unemployed or underemployed.

    IMF Official: World's Regulatory Supervision Shockingly Inadequate

    by Calculated Risk on 3/13/2010 11:15:00 AM

    From Tom Abate at the San Francisco Chronicle: Financial leaders dissect meltdown

    "What is quite shocking," [John Lipsky, a senior official of the International Monetary Fund] said, is how inadequate the world's regulatory supervisors were in curbing the lax lending standards at the heart of the housing and credit bubbles.
    Shocked? Hmmm ...

    LA Area Port Traffic in February

    by Calculated Risk on 3/13/2010 08:26:00 AM

    Note: this data is not seasonally adjusted. There is a very distinct seasonal pattern for imports, but not for exports. LA area ports handle about 40% of the nation's container port traffic.

    Sometimes port traffic gives us an early hint of changes in the trade deficit. The following graph shows the loaded inbound and outbound traffic at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach in TEUs (TEUs: 20-foot equivalent units or 20-foot-long cargo container). Although containers tell us nothing about value, container traffic does give us an idea of the volume of goods being exported and imported.

    LA Area Port Traffic Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    Loaded inbound traffic was up 33.8% compared to February 2009. (up 9.5% compared to last year using three month average).

    Of course trade collapsed in February 2009, so this is a very easy comparison. Inbound traffic was still down 18.3% vs. two years ago (Feb 2008).

    Loaded outbound traffic was up 32.7% from February 2009. (+33.5% using three months average) This was also an easy YoY comparison for exports, because U.S. exports fell off a cliff in near the end of 2008.

    Just as with imports, exports are still off from 2 years ago (off 10.0%).

    And more from Ronald White at the LA Times: Trade numbers climb sharply at Southland ports

    Trade numbers at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, the nation's busiest seaport complex, rose sharply in February compared with the same month last year, lending strength to the arguments of some experts who believe that a stronger-than-anticipated recovery may be underway.
    ...
    "Our feeling is that consumers are coming back. They are spending a bit more of their money. They are less concerned about losing their jobs than they have been in the last three months," said Ben Hackett, founder of Hackett Associates, which tracks international trade at the nation's busiest seaports for the National Retail Federation.

    Hackett said his firm had scaled back its expectations for trade growth in 2010, "but we think we'll be seeing a relatively strong year at a 10% to 14% increase. We should see steady improvement, minus the usual seasonal adjustments."
    The LA Times article is using the YoY numbers. However looking at the graph (red line), exports recovered in the first half of 2009, but export traffic has been mostly flat since last summer. The YoY increase for March will be much less than for February!

    It is harder to tell about imports (blue line) because of the large seasonal swings.

    Friday, March 12, 2010

    Report: Over 2000 Bank Enforcement Actions in 2009

    by Calculated Risk on 3/12/2010 10:01:00 PM

    A couple excerpts from American Banker: Regulatory Actions Hit a Record Level in '09

  • "Bank regulators issued 1,143 formal enforcement actions against banks and their holding companies last year, a new record and more than double the 2008 tally."

  • "Informal actions by the agencies, which are not made public and often go untracked, also doubled during that time, reaching 1,099 last year, according to data provided to American Banker."

    According to the FDIC quarterly banking profile, there were 8,012 insured banks at the end of 2009. Some of these actions are double counts since regulators might issue an informal action and then a formal action against the same bank (or multiple formal actions), so we can't say the percentage of banks operating under enforcement actions (either formal or informal), but it could be in the 20% to 25% range.

    A couple of quotes from the article:
    "For the bank failures that have occurred so far, every one of the large loss reports the inspector general has done or any GAO investigation has concluded the reason the bank has failed is the regulator did not take early enough action or severe enough action." said [Bob Clarke, a senior partner at Bracewell & Giuliani LLP and former comptroller of the currency] said.
    I've posted a few of the inspector general reports, and it appears the field examiners identified the problems early - but then insufficient actions was taken. And to put it more bluntly:
    "The regulators were asleep for 10 years during the boom and there's now this remarkable turf war under way with regulatory reform," said Chris Low, chief economist for First Horizon National Corp.'s FTN Financial.

  • Bank Failure #29 & #30: Florida and Louisiana

    by Calculated Risk on 3/12/2010 06:07:00 PM

    Bair's troops march South, East
    Two gulf banks, engulfed by fail
    Will they rise again?

    by Soylent Green is People

    From the FDIC: Centennial Bank, Conway, Arkansas, Assumes All of the Deposits of Old Southern Bank, Orlando, Florida
    Old Southern Bank, Orlando, Florida, was closed today by the Florida Office of Financial Regulation, which appointed the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) as receiver. ...

    As of December 31, 2009, Old Southern Bank had approximately $315.6 million in total assets and $319.7 million in total deposits. ...

    The FDIC estimates that the cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund (DIF) will be $94.6 million. ... Old Southern Bank is the 29th FDIC-insured institution to fail in the nation this year, and the fourth in Florida. The last FDIC-insured institution closed in the state was Marco Community Bank, Marco Island, February 19, 2010.
    From the FDIC: Home Bank, Lafayette, Louisiana, Assumes All of the Deposits of Statewide Bank, Covington, Louisiana
    Statewide Bank, Covington, Louisiana, was closed today by the Louisiana Office of Financial Institutions, which appointed the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) as receiver. ...

    As of December 31, 2009, Statewide Bank had approximately $243.2 million in total assets and $208.8 million in total deposits. ...

    The FDIC estimates that the cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund (DIF) will be $38.1 million. ... Statewide Bank is the 30th FDIC-insured institution to fail in the nation this year, and the first in Louisiana. The last FDIC-insured institution closed in the state was The Farmers Bank & Trust of Cheneyville, Cheneyville, December 17, 2002.
    Louisiana makes an appearance ...