by Calculated Risk on 11/27/2010 05:50:00 PM
Saturday, November 27, 2010
Schedule for Week of Nov 28th
The key report for the week will be the November employment report to be released on Friday, Dec 3rd. Other key reports include the Case-Shiller home price index on Tuesday, the ISM manufacturing index on Wednesday, and the ISM non-manufacturing (service) index on Friday.
10:30 AM: Dallas Fed Manufacturing Survey for November. The Texas survey showed a slight expansion last month (at 6.9), and is expected to show expansion again in November. This is the last of the regional surveys for November, and with the exception of the NY Fed (Empire State) survey, all showed improvement in November.
9:00 AM: S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index for September. Although this is the September report, it is really a 3 month average of July, August and September. The consensus is for prices to decline about 0.4% in September; the third straight month of price declines.
9:45 AM: Chicago Purchasing Managers Index for November. The consensus is for a decline to 60.0 from 60.6 in October.
10:00 AM: Conference Board's consumer confidence index for November. The consensus is for an increase to 52.5 from 50.2 last month.
12:30 PM: Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota speaks on "Monetary Policy Actions and Fiscal Policy Substitutes"
7:00 AM: The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) will release the mortgage purchase applications index. This index declined sharply following the expiration of the tax credit, and the index has only recovered slightly over the last few months - suggesting reported home sales through the end of the year will be very weak.
8:15 AM: The ADP Employment Report for November. This report is for private payrolls only (no government). The consensus is for +68,000 payroll jobs in November, up from the +43,000 jobs reported in October.
8:30 AM: Productivity and Costs for Q3 (Final). The consensus is for a -0.2% decrease in unit labor costs.
10:00 AM: ISM Manufacturing Index for November. The consensus is for a slight decrease to 56.5 from 56.9 in October.
10:00 AM: Construction Spending for October. The consensus is for a 0.4% decline in construction spending.
2:00 PM: The Fed’s Beige Book for November. This is anecdotal information on current economic conditions.
All day: Light vehicle sales for November. Light vehicle sales are expected to decrease slightly to 12.0 million (Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rate), from 12.3 million in October. Edmunds is forecasting:
Edmunds.com analysts predict that November's Seasonally Adjusted Annualized Rate (SAAR) will be 12.2 million, essentially flat from October 2010.
8:30 AM: The initial weekly unemployment claims report will be released. The number of initial claims has been trending down over the last several weeks. The consensus is for an increase to 424,000 from 407,000 last week (still high, but much lower than earlier this year).
10:00 AM: Pending Home Sales Index for October. The consensus is for a 1% decrease in contracts signed. It usually takes 45 to 60 days to close, so this will provide an early indication of closings in December.
12:20 PM: Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser speaks on the economic outlook
Expected: October Personal Bankruptcy Filings
8:30 AM: Employment Report for November. The consensus is for an increase of 145,000 non-farm payroll jobs in November, about the same as the 151,000 jobs added in October. The consensus is for the unemployment rate to stay steady at 9.6%.
9:10 AM: Fed Vice Chair Janet Yellen speaks on "Fiscal Responsibility and Global Rebalancing"
10:00 AM: Manufacturers' Shipments, Inventories and Orders for October. The consensus is for a 0.7% decrease in orders.
10:00 AM: ISM non-Manufacturing Index for November. The consensus is for a slight increase to 54.7 from 54.3 in October.
After 4:00 PM: The FDIC will probably have another busy Friday afternoon ...
Ireland: €85 billion bailout expected Sunday
by Calculated Risk on 11/27/2010 01:31:00 PM
The timing is still not clear, but most people expect an announcment Sunday night.
From the Irish Times: Talks on Irish bailout to resume
Irish officials will today resume talks with a delegation from the EU and IMF on the terms of a €85 billion bailout for Ireland, ahead of the likely announcement of an agreement tomorrow.I'll post the details tomorrow night (if it is announced).
Unofficial Problem Bank list increases to 919 Institutions
by Calculated Risk on 11/27/2010 08:37:00 AM
Note: this is an unofficial list of Problem Banks compiled only from public sources.
Here is the unofficial problem bank list for Nov 26, 2010.
Changes and comments from surferdude808:
The FDIC released its actions for October, which contributed to a notable increase in the Unofficial Problem Bank List. This week there were 17 additions and one removal leaving the list at 919 institutions with assets of $410.2 billion. Assets declined $9.4 billion during the week, but $11.6 billion, or more than 100 percent of the drop in assets, came from the release of 2010q3 financials. Thus, the net 16 additions this week added $2.2 billion of assets. For the month, a net 25 institutions were added and the list has 376 more institutions than it did a year ago.The Q3 FDIC Quarterly banking profile was released last week and showed 860 problem institutions at the end of Q3 with $379 billion in assets.
The sole removal this week is the termination of an action by the FDIC against Torrey Pines Bank, San Diego, CA ($1.2 billion Ticker: WAL).
Among the 17 additions this week are the Bank of the Orient, San Francisco, CA ($675 million); Town & Country Bank and Trust Company, Bardstown, KY ($454 million Ticker: FHDG); Border State Bank, Greenbush, MN ($347 million); McHenry Savings Bank, McHenry, IL ($271 million); and SouthBank, a Federal Savings Bank, Huntsville, AL ($265 million).
Friday, November 26, 2010
Fannie and Freddie on Foreclosed Homes: Resume all normal sales activity
by Calculated Risk on 11/26/2010 07:34:00 PM
From Kimberly Miller at the Palm Beach Post: Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac give the 'go-ahead' to resume sales of foreclosed homes
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac gave the go-ahead this week to restart sales of their foreclosed properties ... Brokers received memos Wednesday from the government-sponsored enterprises saying that the homes could once again be marketed and sales finalized on properties already under contract.Fannie and Freddie halted some sales of already foreclosed properties (REO: Real Estate Owned), and they also halted some foreclosures in process. The above story was on sales of REOs.
On a related point, Freddie Mac reported that the serious delinquency rate increased to 3.82% in October from 3.80% in September. The following graph shows the Freddie Mac serious delinquency rate (loans that are "three monthly payments or more past due or in foreclosure"):
Some of the rapid increase last year was probably because of foreclosure moratoriums, and distortions from modification programs because loans in trial mods were considered delinquent until the modifications were made permanent. As modifications have become permanent, they are no longer counted as delinquent.
The increase in October - the first increase since February - is probably related to the new foreclosure moratoriums.
Note: Fannie and Freddie report REO inventory quarterly, but the FHA reported that REO increased sharply in October to 54,609 from 51,487 at the end of September. So even though Fannie and Freddie halted many foreclosures in process, they also halted REO sales - so my guess is their REO inventory probably increased in October and November too (like for the FHA).
Accelerated Timetable for Ireland Bailout Details
by Calculated Risk on 11/26/2010 05:38:00 PM
From the NY Times: Europeans Striving to Calm Nerves in Markets
[T]he team of European Union and International Monetary Fund specialists in Ireland was racing to complete terms of its financing package before markets reopen on Monday.Looks like Sunday will be busy again.
And from the Irish Times: Reports that bailout will attract 6.7% rate rejected
The interest rate for a nine-year EU/IMF loan would be lower than the 6.7 per cent being quoted in some reports today, a source involved in the talks has indicated.University College Dublin professor Karl Whelan earlier estimated an EFSF borrowing rate close to 6%: Borrowing Rates from The EFSF
And more stress tests are coming in Spain (from NY Times article):
In Spain, the central bank ... said it would carry out further stress tests to show ... financial institutions ... could absorb a “problematic exposure” of 180 billion euros, or $238 billion, to the country’s collapsed construction and real estate sectors.
Housing Supply: What do all the numbers mean?
by Calculated Risk on 11/26/2010 01:42:00 PM
We are constantly bombarded with housing supply numbers: 3.86 million existing homes for sale, 10.5 month-of-supply, 2.1 million "pending sales", 7 million mortgages delinquent.
Recently NY Fed president William Dudley said "We estimate that there are roughly 3 million vacant housing units more than usual", and other sources have mentioned there are close to 19 million vacant housing units in the U.S.!
What does it all mean?
The number to start with is the "visible supply" reported monthly from the National Association of Realtors (NAR). At the end of October, the NAR reported there were 3.86 million homes for sale.
Click on graph for larger image in graph gallery.
This graph shows nationwide inventory for existing homes.
Notice that inventory started to increase in the 2nd half of 2005. That was one of the indicators I used to call the top of the housing bubble.
Also notice the seasonal pattern for inventory - inventory increases in the spring, and usually peaks during the summer months, and then falls off sharply in December as homeowners take their homes off the market for the holidays. I expect NAR reported inventory to fall to around 3.5 million of so in December (down from 3.86 million in October, but up from 3.283 in December 2009).
This brings up an interesting point about how the NAR calculates "months-of-supply". The simple formula is months-of-supply = inventory divided by sales. The NAR uses the Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rate (SAAR) of sales, but the Not Seasonally Adjusted (NSA) inventory - even though there is a clear seasonal pattern for inventory.
The NAR formula is: months-of-supply = (inventory (NSA) /sales (SAAR)) * 12 months. (edit: oops, inverted initially, correct above) For October, the NAR reported 4.43 million sales (SAAR), and 3.86 million units of inventory, so that equals 10.5 months of supply.
If inventory drops to 3.5 million in December (normal seasonal decline), but the sales rate stay at 4.43 million, the months-of-supply metric will decline to 9.5 months. Some analysts might report that decline as "good news" even though it is just because of the normal seasonal change in inventory.
A couple more points:
• Historically year end inventory is around 3% to 3.5% of the total number of owner occupied units. Currently there are about 75 million owner occupied units, so a normal level of year end inventory would be around 2.3 to 2.6 million units. So the visible inventory at around 3.5 million would be significantly above the normal level.
• It is the visible inventory that impacts prices. Also important is the level of distressed sales (short sales and foreclosures).
CoreLogic reports the number of distress sales in their monthly US Housing and Mortgage Trends.
This graph (posted with permission) shows the percentage of short sales and REO (lender Real Estate Ownder) sales since January 2006. From CoreLogic:
Distressed sales fell 10 percent in August to 68,700, the lowest level since May 2008. Although the level of distressed sales declined, it simply reflects the weak demand in the market overall because total sales also declined and the distressed sale share remained stable at 28 percent.So both the level of visible inventory and the percentage of distressed sales is elevated - and that puts downward pressure on house prices.
The next number is the "pending sales" of 2.1 million units. This was reported by CoreLogic this week:
CoreLogic estimates the "pending sale" (by this method) at about 2.1 million units. This number is useful - especially the trend - because it suggests that the visible inventory will stay elevated for some time. And also that the number of distressed sales will stay elevated.
Some analyst have called the number of REOs and total delinquent loans as the "shadow inventory". This is incorrect for two reasons: 1) some homes are listed for sale and are visible (CoreLogic removed these homes from their pending sales metric), and 2) some loans will cure from the borrower catching up, the sale of the home, or with a loan modification.
This graph from Lender Processing Services shows the number of cures by the previous month status. Notice that a very large number of 30 and 60 day loans cure every month (right hand scale). This is common even in good times.A fairly large number of 90+ day and in-foreclosure loans are curing too. This is probably because of modifications - and there will probably be a high percentage of redefaults - but this shows why you can't include all delinquent loans as part of the "shadow inventory".
And that brings us to the 7 million delinquent loans. There are two sources for the number of delinquent loans: the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) quarterly National Delinquency Survey, and a monthly report from Lender Processing Services (LPS).
This graph shows the percent of loans delinquent by days past due through Q3 according to the MBA.The MBA reported that 13.52 percent of mortgage loans were either one payment delinquent or in the foreclosure process in Q3 2010 (seasonally adjusted). This is down from 14.42 percent in Q2 2010.
Note: the MBA's National Delinquency Survey (NDS) covered "about 44 million first-lien mortgages on one- to four-unit residential properties" and the "NDS is estimated to cover approximately 88 percent of the outstanding first lien mortgages in the market." This gives about 50 million total first lien mortgages or about 6.75 million delinquent or in foreclosure.
And from LPS Applied Analytics October Mortgage Performance data:
This graph provided by LPS Applied Analytics shows the percent delinquent, percent in foreclosure, and total non-current mortgages.The percent in the foreclosure process is trending up because of the foreclosure moratoriums.
According to LPS, 9.29 percent of mortgages are delinquent, and another 3.92 are in the foreclosure process for a total of 13.20 percent. It breaks down as:
• 2.72 million loans less than 90 days delinquent.
• 2.24 million loans 90+ days delinquent.
• 2.09 million loans in foreclosure process.
For a total of 7.04 million loans delinquent or in foreclosure.
And finally, what about those "3 million excess vacant housing units"?
This number comes from the Census Bureau's quarterly Housing Vacancies and Homeownership. This report shows almost 19 million total vacant housing units, but that number is pretty meaningless and includes 2nd homes, partially constructed new homes, and much more.
The 3 million number is calculated using the homeowner and rental vacancy rates, and estimating the number of excess units above the normal frictional level. There is always some number of vacant homeowner and rental units as people move and for other reasons. So the excess is the number above this frictional level. The NY Fed also added in a part of the increase in "Vacant, held off market, other" to obtain the 3 million estimate.
I think this last portion of the "excess vacant inventory" is less reliable, and I just use the homeowner and rental vacancy rates. My current estimate is about 1.55 million excess vacant units. This is a key number because once the excess is absorbed in an area as new households are formed, then new construction will begin - and that will mean a pickup in economic activity and employment.
The key numbers to follow for the housing market are 1) existing home inventory, 2) number of delinquent loans, and 3) the excess vacant inventory.
Portugal and Spain: More Denials
by Calculated Risk on 11/26/2010 08:23:00 AM
From the previous post excerpting from Michael Pettis:
Its official – Spain and Portugal will need to be bailed out soon. How do I know? In one of my favorite TV shows, Yes Minister, the all-knowing civil servant Sir Humphrey explains to cabinet minister Jim Hacker that you can never be certain that something will happen until the government denies it.From the Financial Times: Portugal denies facing bail-out pressure
Portugal has denied as “totally false” reports that it is under pressure ... to request an international financial bail-out.And from the Financial Times: Spain issues defiant warning to markets
“There is no truth to these reports,” a government spokesman told the Financial Times.
excerpt with permission
José Luis RodrÃguez Zapatero, Spanish prime minister, on Friday ruled out any rescue package for the country ... “I should warn those investors who are short selling Spain that they are going to be wrong and will go against their own interests,” Mr Zapatero said
Thursday, November 25, 2010
Pettis: Will Europe face defaults?
by Calculated Risk on 11/25/2010 09:01:00 PM
From Michael Pettis on Europe: Chinese inflation and European defaults
Its official – Spain and Portugal will need to be bailed out soon. How do I know? In one of my favorite TV shows, Yes Minister, the all-knowing civil servant Sir Humphrey explains to cabinet minister Jim Hacker that you can never be certain that something will happen until the government denies it.And Portugal and Spain have just rejected the possibility of a bailout (a joke with a lot of truth).
Pettis offers a few pessimistic predictions including:
Greece will be forced to default and restructure its debt, and the restructuring will come with a significant amount of debt forgiveness. The idea that it can grow its way out of the current debt burden is a fantasy.And ...
Greece will not be the only defaulter. Spain, Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Belgium and much of Eastern Europe will also face severe financial distress and possible default.Best wishes to all.
The Pain would come from Spain
by Calculated Risk on 11/25/2010 03:15:00 PM
First, a great overview from Raphael Minder at the NY Times: A Spanish Bailout Would Test Europe’s Strained Finances
[A]ny bailout of Spain — with an economy twice the size of [Greece, Ireland and Portugal] combined — could severely stress the ability of Europe’s stronger countries to help the financially weaker ones, and spell deep trouble for the euro, Europe’s common currency.There is much more in the article.
...
The looming question is whether Spanish banks are really as healthy as the government and the banks say they are. ... Last July, Spanish banks emerged relatively unscathed from stress tests carried out across Europe ... But the credibility of the stress tests has since been undermined by the collapse of Irish banks.
And from the WSJ: EU Hopes to Double Bailout Fund. Concerns about Spain is the reason for doubling the fund.
Galleries, Europe and more ...
by Calculated Risk on 11/25/2010 09:15:00 AM
A few housekeeping notes for a holiday ...
• Every weekend I post a weekly schedule of economic data for the coming week. The current schedule can be accessed in the menu bar above: "Weekly Schedule".
• Receive blog posts via email. Sign up here for free (No subscription information will be sold or otherwise provided to third parties).
• Follow on Twitter.
• Graph Galleries are now active. You can access the galleries by clicking on a graph, or use "Graph Galleries" in the menu bar above.
The galleries are graphs grouped by category:
1) Employment,
2) New Home sales,
3) Existing home sales,
4) Home prices,
5) Housing (like starts and homeownership rate)
6) Mortgage Delinquency
7) Transportation
8) Manufacturing
9) GDP
10) Commercial Real Estate (CRE)
11) Retail
12) Trade
13) Employment Participation Rate (an analysis)
14) Inflation (CPI)
Two examples:
Click on graph for larger image in new window.
This graph is based on data from MBA's National Delinquency Survey (NDS)and shows the percent of loans delinquent by days past due.
If you click on the graph, the link will take you to the same graph in the "delinquency" gallery.
The title for the graph "MBA Q3 Delinquency Data, Nov 18, 2010" is a link to the related blog post - and the date is when the graph was posted.
Note the "print" link at the bottom. That will display the full size image (The graphs are free to use on websites or for presentations. All I ask is that online sites link to my site, http://www.calculatedriskblog.com/, and printed presentations credit www.calculatedriskblog.com.)
And another example from the existing home sales report this week.
Clicking on the graph will take you to the "existing home" gallery. There are seven related graphs in the gallery (Existing home sales, inventory, months-of-supply, etc). You can click on the thumbnails at the bottom to view each graph.
Enjoy!
And on Europe:
• Ireland 10-year yield is over 9%
• Spanish 10-year bond yields have hit a record 5.2%.
• Portugal 10-year yield is at 7%.
Thanks to all for reading. Have a great Thanksgiving!


