by Calculated Risk on 7/12/2011 10:25:00 AM
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
BLS: Job Openings unchanged in May
From the BLS: Job Openings and Labor Turnover Summary
The number of job openings in May was 3.0 million, unchanged from April. The number of job openings in May was 862,000 higher than in July 2009 (the series trough) but remains well below the 4.4 million openings when the recession began in December 2007.The following graph shows job openings (yellow line), hires (purple), Layoff, Discharges and other (red column), and Quits (light blue column) from the JOLTS.
Unfortunately this is a new series and only started in December 2000.
Note: The difference between JOLTS hires and separations is similar to the CES (payroll survey) net jobs headline numbers. This report is for May, the most recent (and even more dismal) employment report was for June.
Click on graph for larger image in graph gallery.Notice that hires (purple) and total separations (red and blue columns stacked) are pretty close each month. When the purple line is above the two stacked columns, the economy is adding net jobs - when it is below the columns, the economy is losing jobs.
In general job openings (yellow) has been trending up - and job openings increased slightly again in May - and are up about 7% year-over-year compared to May 2010.
Overall turnover is increasing too, but remains low. Quits increased again and have been trending up - and quits are now up about 10% year-over-year (usually a sign of more confidence in the labor market).
Trade Deficit increased sharply in May to $50.2 billion
by Calculated Risk on 7/12/2011 08:30:00 AM
The Department of Commerce reports:
[T]otal May exports of $174.9 billion and imports of $225.1 billion resulted in a goods and services deficit of $50.2 billion, up from $43.6 billion in April, revised. May exports were $1.0 billion less than April exports of $175.8 billion. May imports were $5.6 billion more than April imports of $219.4 billion.The first graph shows the monthly U.S. exports and imports in dollars through May 2011.
Click on graph for larger image.Exports decreased in May and imports increased (seasonally adjusted). Exports are well above the pre-recession peak and up 15% compared to May 2010; imports are almost back to the pre-recession peak, and up about 16% compared to May 2010.
The second graph shows the U.S. trade deficit, with and without petroleum, through May.
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.The petroleum deficit increased in May as both prices and the quantity of oil imported increased. Oil averaged $108.70 per barrel in May, up from $103.18 per barrel in April, and up from $76.95 in May 2010. There is a bit of a lag with prices, and import prices will probably be a little lower in June.
The trade deficit with China increased to $24.96 billion, so once again the deficit is mostly oil and China.
NFIB: Small Business Optimism Index "basically unchanged" in June
by Calculated Risk on 7/12/2011 07:30:00 AM
From the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB): Small Business Optimism Stagnates
NFIB’s monthly Small-Business Optimism Index dropped one tenth of a point (0.1) in June, settling at 90.8, an unsurprising reading, basically unchanged from the previous month and solidly in recession territory. While some indicators rose slightly – including expected capital outlays – pessimism about future business conditions and expected real sales gains tugged the Index down, causing a small but disappointing drop in the Index for the fourth consecutive month.Note: Small businesses have a larger percentage of real estate and retail related companies than the overall economy.
...
Although June’s employment growth was weak, 15 percent (seasonally adjusted) of small firms reported unfilled job openings, a 3 point increase from May and an indication that the unemployment rate will ease back below 9 percent in the late summer or early fall.
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Inflation has slowed slightly, due in part to a leveling of gas prices.
...
The sales outlook for small firms continues to look grim as expectations have declined for 4 months in a row and “poor sales” continues to be the #1 problem for owners in operating their business.
Click on graph for larger image in graph gallery.The first graph shows the small business optimism index since 1986. The index decreased to 90.8 in June from 90.9 in May.
This index is still very low - and had been trending up - but optimism has declined for four consecutive months now.
The second graph shows the net hiring plans for the next three months.
Hiring plans increased in June and this is the highest level since February.According to NFIB: “Although June’s employment growth was weak, 15 percent (seasonally adjusted) of small firms reported unfilled job openings, a 3 point increase and an indication that the unemployment rate will ease back below 9 percent in the coming months. "
Weak sales is still the top business problem with 24 percent of the owners reporting that weak sales continued to be their top business problem in June.
In good times, owners usually report taxes and regulation as their biggest problems.There was some good news this month in the survey - employment plans are increasing, expected capital outlays are also increasing, and "poor sales" as the biggest problem is decreasing. However the recovery continues to be sluggish for this index, probably somewhat due to the high concentration of real estate related companies.
Monday, July 11, 2011
Misc: New Policy Ideas for housing being discussed, Realtor group overstates house prices
by Calculated Risk on 7/11/2011 10:58:00 PM
• From Nick Timiraos at the WSJ: U.S. Tackles Housing Slump
The Obama administration is ramping up talks on how to revive the housing market ... Policy ideas include having taxpayer-owned mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac relax their rules for loans to investors, allowing those buyers to vacuum up excess housing inventory. In certain markets, Fannie and Freddie could hold some foreclosed homes off the market and rent them out ... Officials also could sweeten incentives for banks to reduce loan balances for borrowers who are underwater ...I'll have some thoughts on this later this week, but some of these proposals (like converting some owners to renters) make sense.
• From Mary Ellen Podmolik at the Chicago Tribune: Realty trade group overreported Chicago home prices (ht Eric, Austin, Peter)
The Illinois Association of Realtors dramatically overreported the median price of condominiums sold within the city of Chicago in May, with the price tumbling 23 percent year-over-year, not rising 10.3 percent as the trade group said.A key sentence was at the bottom of the story:
The state Realtors' group acknowledged the error after the Tribune, acting on a tip, questioned the accuracy of the data.
In February, questions arose about the accuracy of home sales data as reported monthly by the National Association of Realtors, and whether the trade group had been overestimating the volume of existing home sales since 2007.So we might get the revisions in August (Note: I broke this story about the revisions in January, not February).
Possibly as soon as August, the national group will issue revised- and revised downward - national home sales numbers going back at least three years.
Statement by the Eurogroup
by Calculated Risk on 7/11/2011 07:46:00 PM
I know everyone was waiting for this ... here is the statement by the Eurogroup
Ministers reaffirmed their absolute commitment to safeguard financial stability in the euro area. To this end, Ministers stand ready to adopt further measures that will improve the euro area’s systemic capacity to resist contagion risk, including enhancing the flexibility and the scope of the EFSF, lengthening the maturities of the loans and lowering the interest rates, including through a collateral arrangement where appropriate. Proposals to this effect will be presented to Ministers shortly.It sounds like they will expand the EFSF to buy back bonds of Greece, Ireland and Portugal. That might buy some time, but there is no mention of Italy - and if Italy goes, the EU has lost containment.
Ministers discussed the main parameters of a new multi-annual adjustment programme for Greece, which will build on strong commitments to fiscal consolidation, ambitious growth-enhancing structural reforms and a substantial privatisation of state assets. Ministers welcomed the reinforcement of monitoring mechanisms of the programme of Greece, the nomination of the board of the privatisation agency, which comprises two observers representing euro area Member States and the European Commission, and agreed to provide extended technical assistance to Greece. They called upon the Greek government to sustain its on-going efforts to meet these commitments in full and on time.
Ministers welcomed the decision by the IMF to disburse the latest tranche of financial assistance to Greece, as well as the proposals from the private sector to voluntarily contribute to the financing of a second programme, building on the work already underway. The ECB confirmed its position, reaffirmed by its Governing Council last Thursday, that a credit event or selective default should be avoided.
While the responsibility for resolving the crisis in Greece lies primarily with Greece, Ministers recognised the need for a broader and more forward-looking policy response to assist the government in its efforts to bolster debt sustainability and thereby safeguard financial stability in the euro area.
In this context, Ministers have tasked the Eurogroup Working Group to propose measures to reinforce the current policy response to the crisis in Greece. The Eurogroup Working Group will notably explore the modalities for financing a new multi-annual adjustment programme, steps to reduce the cost of debt-servicing and means to improve the sustainability of Greek public debt. This reinforced strategy should provide the basis for an agreement in the Eurogroup on the main elements and financing of a second adjustment programme for Greece shortly.
Ministers commit to continue negotiating with the European Parliament the
legislative proposals to reinforce economic governance in the European Union in order to agree on an ambitious reform as soon as possible. The reinforced governance should be fully operational without delay.
Distressed House Sales using Sacramento data
by Calculated Risk on 7/11/2011 05:51:00 PM
I've been following the Sacramento market to see the change in mix over time (conventional, REOs, and short sales) in a distressed area. The Sacramento Association of REALTORS® started breaking out REOs in May 2008, and short sales in June 2009.
I'm not exactly sure what I'm looking for, but hopefully I'll know it when I see it! As some point, the number (and percent) of distressed sales will start to decline without foreclosure moratoria, homebuyer tax credits or other distortions. There is no sign of a decline yet (except seasonal).
The percent of distressed sales in Sacramento declined slightly in June compared to May because of a seasonal pickup in conventional sales. In June 2011, 65.2% of all resales (single family homes and condos) were distressed sales. This is down from 65.6% in May, and up from 62.4% in June 2010.
Here are the statistics.
Click on graph for larger image in graph gallery.
This graph shows the percent of REO, short sales and conventional sales. There is a seasonal pattern for conventional sales (strong in the spring and summer), and distressed sales happen all year - so the percentage of distressed sales decreases every summer.
Notes: Prior to June 2009, it is unclear if short sales were included as REO or as "conventional" - or some of both. The tax credits might have also boosted conventional sales in 2009 and early 2010.
More Europe
by Calculated Risk on 7/11/2011 03:55:00 PM
Today was mostly about Europe.
As the Financial Times reported this weekend, European policymakers appear to be finally accepting some sort of default is inevitable for Greece. On Italy: the deficit is 4.6% of GDP (not horrible), but their debt is 120% of GDP - and their growth is slow.
From the NY Times: Italy Evolves Into E.U.’s Next Weak Link
In recent days, Italy has become Europe’s next weak link after Greece, Ireland and Portugal and Spain ... Italy’s banks are sound; they never speculated in a housing bubble. The current annual budget deficit is low, at around 4.6 percent of its gross domestic product. And while Italy issues the largest amount of bonds of any euro zone country, Italians own about half the debt, making it less vulnerable to the follies of financial markets.From the WSJ: Euro Zone Still Seeks Private-Sector Solution
But with interest rates rising, Italy’s economy is not growing fast enough to cover an accumulated debt load of 120 percent of gross domestic product, the second-highest in Europe, after Greece. The International Monetary Fund expects growth to rise only slightly, to 1.3 percent in 2012.
Several European officials said Monday that a significant private-sector contribution to a second bailout package remained critical even if the rating agencies branded it a default.Earlier I posted the bond yields in Europe with record highs for several countries (Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Italy).
"I am more searching for a solution than a rating," Belgian Finance Minister Didier Reynders said before a meeting of euro-zone finance ministers here. "If it's with a negative reaction from the rating agencies, that's not a problem."
AAR: Rail Traffic soft in June
by Calculated Risk on 7/11/2011 11:45:00 AM
The Association of American Railroads (AAR) reports carload traffic in June 2011 increased 0.9 percent compared with the same month last year (up slightly), and intermodal traffic (using intermodal or shipping containers) increased 4.6 percent compared with June 2010. On a seasonally adjusted basis, carloads in June 2011 were down 0.7% from May 2011; intermodal in June 2011 was down 2.4% from May 2011.
June 2011, like the previous couple of months, was not a great month for U.S. rail carload traffic. U.S. freight railroads originated 1,428,580 carloads in June 2011, an average of 285,716 per week — up 0.9% (13,232 carloads) over June 2010 and up 11.6% (148,793 carloads) over June 2009 on a non-seasonally adjusted basis.
This graph shows U.S. average weekly rail carloads (NSA).
As the first graph shows, rail carload traffic collapsed in November 2008, and now, 2 years into the recovery, carload traffic has recovered less than half way.
For the last few months, traffic has been tracking 2010 (little growth from last year).
According to the AAR, carloads for 14 of 20 commodities they track were up in June, but carloads for coal were down, and that really impacts overall traffic.
June 2011 was a better month for U.S. intermodal traffic than for U.S. carload traffic, but intermodal growth slowed. U.S. railroads originated 1,152,432 intermodal trailers and containers in June 2011, up 4.6% over June 2010. That’s a decent year-over-year monthly increase, but it’s the lowest since January 2010.So intermodal traffic has been fairly strong, but carload traffic (commodities and autos) is only about half way back to pre-recession levels.
excerpts with permission
Europe: Bond Yields up Sharply for Italy, Greece, Ireland and Portugal
by Calculated Risk on 7/11/2011 08:35:00 AM
This doesn't look good ... (see table below).
The Greek 2 year yield is up to a record 31.1%.
The Portuguese 2 year yield is up to a record 18.3%.
The Irish 2 year yield is up to a record 18.1%.
And the big jump ... the Italian 2 year yield is up to a record 4.1%. Still much lower than Greece, Portugal and Ireland, but rising.
From the Telegraph: Italy debt contagion fears hit markets as top EU officials meet
Herman Van Rompuy, the president of the European Council, will meet European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet and Jean-Claude Juncker, the chairman of the Eurogroup, for talks in Brussels at around midday, ahead of a meeting of the 17 euro zone finance ministers later on Monday.Here are the links for bond yields for several countries (source: Bloomberg):
Mr Van Rompuy's spokesman described the gathering as a "coordination, not a crisis meeting". He added that Italy would not be on the agenda, as ministers focused on thrashing out terms of a second Greek rescue package.
The meeting comes as the Financial Times reported that leaders are prepared to accept that Athens should default on some of its bonds.
| Greece | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Portugal | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Ireland | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Spain | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Italy | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Belgium | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| France | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Germany | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
Sunday, July 10, 2011
Report: EU to consider Greek Default
by Calculated Risk on 7/10/2011 10:12:00 PM
From the Financial Times: EU stance shifts on Greece default
The Financial Times is reporting that European leaders will now accept that "Athens should default on some of its bonds" to reduce the overall debt burden of Greece.
This would be a major shift. The Financial Times suggests this will be discussed at the meeting of finance ministers on Monday and probably ends the plan suggested by France.
From the Irish Times: European leaders to consider default as part of Greek rescue
EURO ZONE finance ministers are considering a fundamental revision of their strategy in the Greek debt crisis ... At issue as the ministers meet today in Brussels is whether they agree to look again at a German debt-swap plan in which Greek investors would be urged to exchange their bonds for debt with a longer maturity.Another interesting week in Europe.
This plan was scrapped weeks ago on the basis that it would lead to a default rating on Greek debt, something which is resolutely opposed by the European Central Bank.
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Also on the table is the revival of a plan rejected four months ago in which the euro zone bailout fund — the European Financial Stability Facility — would intervene in markets to buy Greek debt at a discount to its original value.
Consideration may also be given to another lowering of the interest rate on Greece’s rescue loans.


