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Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Chrylser Asks for More Money

by Calculated Risk on 2/17/2009 04:37:00 PM

Update: Here is the Chrylser plan update from the WSJ: Chrysler LLC Viability Plan Submitted Today to The U.S. Treasury Department

From MarketWatch: Chrysler asks government for $2 billion more in loans

Chrysler ... submitted an update on its viability plan to the U.S. Treasury, asking for an additional $2 billion in loans and cutting its industry sales target for 2009 to 10.1 million cars and trucks. ... Chrysler said it plans to cut fixed costs by $700 million in 2009, while ... slashing 3,000 jobs ... Chrysler also said it has reached an agreement for concessions from the United Auto Workers and expects to reach a deal with bondholders.

More Cliff Diving ...

by Calculated Risk on 2/17/2009 04:17:00 PM

Stock Market Crashes Click on graph for updated image in new window.

This graph is from Doug Short of dshort.com (financial planner): "Four Bad Bears". (if smaller graph isn't updated, click for larger graph)

Note that the Great Depression crash is based on the DOW; the three others are for the S&P 500.

DOW off 298 points (3.8%)

S&P 500 off 38 points (4.6%)

NASDAQ off 64 points (about 4.1%)

Another day of Cliff Diving.

WaPo on Geithner: Last Minute Course Change for Bank Bailout

by Calculated Risk on 2/17/2009 01:57:00 PM

From Neil Irwin and Binyamin Appelbaum at the WaPo: Late Change in Course Hobbled Rollout of Geithner's Bank Plan

Just days before Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner was scheduled to lay out his much-anticipated plan to deal with the toxic assets imperiling the financial system, he and his team made a sudden about-face.

According to several sources involved in the deliberations, Geithner had come to the conclusion that the strategies he and his team had spent weeks working on were too expensive, too complex and too risky for taxpayers.
...
As the first week of February progressed, however, the problems with both approaches were becoming clearer to Geithner, said people involved in the talks. For one thing, the government would likely have to put trillions of dollars in taxpayer money at risk, a sum so huge it would anger members of Congress. Officials were also concerned that the program would be criticized as a pure giveaway to bank shareholders. And, finally, there continued to be the problem that had bedeviled the Bush administration's efforts to tackle toxic assets: There was little reason to believe government officials would be able to price these assets in a way that gave taxpayers a good deal.
This is surprising since all these questions were raised when Paulson proposed the original TARP. This approach was unworkable.

The real answer is to stress test the banks, and put them in three categories: 1) no additional capital needed, 2) some additional capital needed, and 3) preprivatization.

Hopefully the stress testing is underway - although William Black and Yves Smith say "There Are No Real Stress Tests Going On".

I think this is a misunderstanding of the proposed stress test process (although Geithner wasn't clear). My interpretation was the government will provide the parameters for the test, and the companies will perform the analysis (with a government audit) - so Mr. Black's suggestions about the lack of staff are probably not relevant. But Geithner was vague, and I'd like to hear more from him on the specifics of the tests - including a completion date.

NAHB Housing Market Index Near Record Low

by Calculated Risk on 2/17/2009 01:00:00 PM

Residential NAHB Housing Market Index This graph shows the builder confidence index from the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB).

The housing market index (HMI) increased slightly to 9 in February from the record low of 8 set in January.

Note: any number under 50 indicates that more builders view sales conditions as poor than good.

Press release from the NAHB: Builder Sentiment Remains At Historic Lows In February

The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI), released today, held in the single digits for a fourth consecutive month in February. The HMI rose a single point to 9 – virtually unchanged from an all-time record low in the previous month – indicating that home builders have seen essentially no improvement in the market for new, single-family homes.

“Clearly, the market for new single-family homes remains very weak at this time,” said NAHB Chairman Joe Robson, a home builder from Tulsa, Okla. “However, looking forward, we are certainly hopeful that the newly passed economic stimulus bill, which includes some favorable elements for first-time home buyers and small businesses, will have a positive impact that will help get housing and the economy back on track.”
...
“Home builders are especially concerned about the continually rising number of foreclosures and short sales, which are flooding the market with excess inventory and undermining overall home values,” noted NAHB Chief Economist David Crowe. “This is one reason that home builder expectations for the next six months declined in the February HMI even though traffic of prospective buyers has improved somewhat and present sales conditions were basically unchanged. We are therefore looking forward to working with the Treasury Department as details of its plan to address the urgent foreclosure problem emerge.”
...
Two out of three of the HMI’s component indexes gained a bit of ground in February, with the index gauging current sales conditions rising a single point to 7 and the index gauging traffic of prospective buyers rising three points to 11. Meanwhile, the index gauging sales expectations in the next six months fell two points to a new record low of 15.

Regionally, the HMI rose a single point in both the South and West, to 12, and 5, respectively, in February. The Midwest posted a two-point gain, to 8, and the Northeast registered a one-point decline, to 9.

Ponzi: SEC Charges Stanford with $8 billion securities fraud

by Calculated Risk on 2/17/2009 12:04:00 PM

From the SEC: SEC Charges R. Allen Stanford, Stanford International Bank for Multi-Billion Dollar Investment Scheme

Stanford's companies include Antiguan-based Stanford International Bank (SIB), Houston-based broker-dealer and investment adviser Stanford Group Company (SGC), and investment adviser Stanford Capital Management. The SEC also charged SIB chief financial officer James Davis as well as Laura Pendergest-Holt, chief investment officer of Stanford Financial Group (SFG), in the enforcement action.

Pursuant to the SEC's request for emergency relief for the benefit of defrauded investors, U.S. District Judge Reed O'Connor entered a temporary restraining order, froze the defendants' assets, and appointed a receiver to marshal those assets.

"As we allege in our complaint, Stanford and the close circle of family and friends with whom he runs his businesses perpetrated a massive fraud based on false promises and fabricated historical return data to prey on investors," said Linda Chatman Thomsen, Director of the SEC's Division of Enforcement. "We are moving quickly and decisively in this enforcement action to stop this fraudulent conduct and preserve assets for investors."

Rose Romero, Regional Director of the SEC's Fort Worth Regional Office, added, "We are alleging a fraud of shocking magnitude that has spread its tentacles throughout the world."

The SEC's complaint, filed in federal court in Dallas, alleges that acting through a network of SGC financial advisers, SIB has sold approximately $8 billion of so-called "certificates of deposit" to investors by promising improbable and unsubstantiated high interest rates. These rates were supposedly earned through SIB's unique investment strategy, which purportedly allowed the bank to achieve double-digit returns on its investments for the past 15 years.

According to the SEC's complaint, the defendants have misrepresented to CD purchasers that their deposits are safe, falsely claiming that the bank re-invests client funds primarily in "liquid" financial instruments (the portfolio); monitors the portfolio through a team of 20-plus analysts; and is subject to yearly audits by Antiguan regulators. Recently, as the market absorbed the news of Bernard Madoff's massive Ponzi scheme, SIB attempted to calm its own investors by falsely claiming the bank has no "direct or indirect" exposure to the Madoff scheme.

Ratings Cut for Mortgage Insurers

by Calculated Risk on 2/17/2009 10:51:00 AM

Tanta used to joke "It's not a real estate bust until a mortgage insurer goes down". Of course Triad went down last year ...

From the WSJ: Moody's Slashes Ratings on Mortgage Insurers (ht Shnaps)

Ratings on MGIC Investment Corp. and Radian Group Inc. were cut Friday several notches to junk status because of what Moody's called deterioration in their franchise value, the likelihood of sustained losses for several years and substantially limited access to capital.

Moody's said MGIC's losses in the past year are putting "meaningful capital strain" on the company, which could breach maximum statutory risk to capital guidelines in the next 12 to 18 months without additional capital injections.

It downgraded the insurance-financial-strength ratings of MGIC units seven notches to Ba2, or slightly speculative, and MGIC's senior-debt ratings seven notches to B2, or speculative.
...
The rating agency also cut the insurance-financial-strength ratings of Radian's mortgage-insurance units seven notches to Ba3 and the insurance unit's insurance-financial-strength rating six notches to B1.
The mortgage insurers were cut out of the worst deals (lucky for them!), because Wall Street happily securitized 100% financing with 2nds and no MI. But the losses are still piling up.

Empire State Manufacturing: "conditions deteriorated significantly"

by Calculated Risk on 2/17/2009 08:56:00 AM

From the NY Fed: Empire State Manufacturing Survey

The Empire State Manufacturing Survey indicates that conditions for New York manufacturers deteriorated significantly in February. The general business conditions index fell to a new low of -34.7. The new orders index also fell to a new low, the unfilled orders index stayed close to its recent record low, and the shipments index—despite a slight improvement—remained negative. The indexes for both prices paid and prices received held below zero, with the latter dropping sharply. Employment indexes remained deep in negative territory; the average workweek index slipped to a record low. The future general business conditions index was negative for a second consecutive month as many of the forward-looking indexes remained close to recent lows. The future index for number of employees fell particularly sharply, eclipsing last month’s record low.
How many times did they use the phrase "new" or "record" low?

Here is the general business conditions index. Note that the data only goes back to July 2001 (chart to Jan 2002), so all these record lows aren't that significant.

NY Fed General business Conditions

Monday, February 16, 2009

Late Night Market Discussion Thread

by Calculated Risk on 2/16/2009 11:19:00 PM

Just a late night open thread (ht FFDIC):

I've heard some rumors tonight (nothing worth posting) ... but no cliff diving in the futures or overseas equity markets.

For those interested, here are the Bloomberg Futures.

CBOT mini-sized Dow

And the Asian markets.

Schwarzenegger Prepares to Layoff 20,000

by Calculated Risk on 2/16/2009 10:20:00 PM

From the LA Times: Governor prepares to send out 20,000 pink slips

In an apparent effort to increase pressure on lawmakers negotiating an end to California's fiscal crisis, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is preparing to send pink slips to 20,000 state workers.
...
With his layoff plan, Schwarzenegger hopes to eliminate 10,000 jobs, but is sending out more notices in case the state meets with obstacles, legal or otherwise, in laying off certain workers.

Layoffs can take about six months to implement, because of union contracts and other required steps. ...

Also today, the administration announced that on Tuesday it will shut down the final 276 public works projects that had been allowed to continue operating during the state's cash crisis.
Arnie, you're doing a heck of a job!

FRONTLINE: Inside the Meltdown

by Calculated Risk on 2/16/2009 08:04:00 PM

This could be worth watching, although this will feel kind of like a home movie for all of us!

Tuesday, February 17, 2009, at 9 P.M. ET on PBS. On TV and on the internet. Here is the website.

Sneak Preview,Part I:



Sneak Preview,Part II:

State Budgets: No Progress in California, Kansas Suspends Income Tax Refunds

by Calculated Risk on 2/16/2009 06:42:00 PM

From the WSJ: California Legislators Reconsider Plan to Close $42 Billion Budget Gap (ht Dwight)

California legislators met Monday to reconsider a proposal to close the state's $42 billion deficit after aborting a vote late Sunday ... that would raise taxes and cut spending. ...

The budget put up to vote during the long-weekend session outlined spending for the next 17 months. In addition to the revenue increases, it proposed cutting $15 billion in spending, including $8.6 billion from education and $1.4 billion from payroll costs, to be achieved in part by furloughing 200,000 state workers at least one day a month.
...
The impasse has revolved around a bill, out of the nearly 30 in the budget proposal, that would generate $14 billion in revenue by temporarily raising the sales tax by one percentage point, by increasing the gasoline tax by 12 cents a gallon and by adding a surcharge of up to 5% on income taxes, among other steps.
And from the AP: Kan. suspends income tax refunds, may miss payroll (ht Mark)
Kansas has suspended income tax refunds and may not be able to pay employees on time, the state's budget director said Monday.

The state doesn't have enough money in its main bank account to pay its bills, prompting Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius to suggest transferring $225 million from other accounts throughout state government. But the move required approval from legislative leaders, and the GOP refused Monday.
There are just 2 of 46 states that the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities is facing a shortfall (of course California has the largest shortfall): State Budget Troubles Worsen
States are facing a great fiscal crisis. At least 46 states faced or are facing shortfalls in their budgets for this and/or next year, and severe fiscal problems are highly likely to continue into the following year as well. ...

States are currently at the mid-point of fiscal year 2009 — which started July 1 in most states — and are in the process of preparing their budgets for the next year. Over half the states had already cut spending, used reserves, or raised revenues in order to adopt a balanced budget for the current fiscal year — which started July 1 in most states. Now, their budgets have fallen out of balance again. New gaps of $51 billion (over 10% of state budgets) have opened up in the budgets of at least 42 states plus the District of Columbia.

Report: Hotel Recession Reaches 15 months

by Calculated Risk on 2/16/2009 04:40:00 PM

From Smith Travel Research (STR): Hotel industry recession reaches 15 months

The Hotel Industry’s Pulse index declined 1.9-percent in January to bring the index to a reading of 90.8, according to a report from economic research firm e-forecasting.com in conjunction with Smith Travel Research.

The index measures the likelihood of a recession for the U.S. hotel industry. It was set to equal 100 in 2000. January’s 1.9-percent decline followed a drop of 1.2 percent in December.

HIP’s six-month growth rate, which historically has signaled turning points in U.S. hotel business activity, decreased by an annual rate of 16.1 percent in January, building on December’s 14.5 percent decline.
...
“According to HIP, the hotel industry entered its 15th month in the current recession in January,” said Chad Church from Smith Travel Research.

The previous two industry recessions, in 1991 and 2001, lasted 17 months each. “If HIP continues to decline for a few more months, the current recession in the hotel industry may outpace the longest hotel recession on record that occurred in 1981 and lasted 20 months,” Simos added.
Hotel Industry’s Pulse index Click on graph for larger image in new window.

This graph from e-forecasting.com and Smith Travel Research shows the hotel recessions based on the Hotel Industry’s Pulse index and the NBER's business cycle dating methodology.

In general, hotel recessions correspond to general economic recessions, although they last longer. There was a double dip recession for hotels following the 2001 recession.

Lodging Investment as Percent of GDPThe second graph shows investment in lodging (based on data from the BEA) as a percent of GDP. In general investment in lodging starts to decline during a hotel recession, however the recent boom in lodging investment has been stunning. Lodging investment is now at 0.34% of GDP - an all time high. However, with the hotel industry in recession, it appears likely that investment in lodging will decline sharply in 2009.

Note: prior to 1997, the BEA included Lodging in a category with a few other buildings. This earlier data was normalized using 1997 data, and is an approximation.

Community Banker: Break Up Big Banks

by Calculated Risk on 2/16/2009 02:24:00 PM

"The money is going to sit on the sidelines until [regulators] announce they’re going to do something with these [big banks]. Nobody is going to put fresh capital into the banking business when your major competitor is going to be continuously bailed out by the United States government with more and more money.”
Rusty Cloutier, the president and CEO of MidSouth Bank
From Diana Golobay at Housing Wire: Break Up Big Banks, Says Community Banker
Rusty Cloutier, the president and CEO of MidSouth Bank, recently told major news outlets that “[c]oncentration is a bad thing” and called for the feds to break up the “miserable eight” largest banks that, he said, control 60 to 64 percent of the country’s assets, restoring competition to the banking industry and restoring investor confidence in the system.
This is an excellent point. Most of the big banks can't raise capital because investors are afraid of nationalization preprivatization. And small banks can't raise capital because investors are concerned that their competitors (the large banks) will be continuously bailed out by the government.

The Story of Dictionary Hill

by Calculated Risk on 2/16/2009 12:25:00 PM

Comedian Jim the Realtor tells the story of Dictionary Hill ... (2 min 49 sec). You have to wait until the end ...



For a couple of ugly McMansions in foreclosure, see this Chula Vista video. This is foreclosure alley in a higher price range. And yes, even homes that original sold for over one million dollars are sometimes destroyed by the owners:

Japan's Economy Shrinks Sharply

by Calculated Risk on 2/16/2009 10:12:00 AM

From MarketWatch: Japan's economy shrinks 12.7% annualized

Japan's economy contracted ...12.7% on an annualized basis in the October-to-December period ...

The decline was the biggest since a 13.1% annualized contraction in the January-to-March period in 1974.
From CNBC:
"Given a rise in inventory and a decline in final demand, output adjustments will continue in January-March, paving the way for another big contraction in the first quarter," said Tatsushi Shikano, senior economist at Mitsubishi UFJ Securities.

"As the U.S. stimulus package will have its effect on Japanese exports, Japan's economy may start picking up from April-June onwards, but it will be a very weak recovery amid a lingering recession. The economy can't avoid a second straight year of contraction in the fiscal year starting in April."
The Japanese economy is very dependent on exports, especially to China and the U.S. They are hoping the stimulus packages in China and the U.S. will also provide a boost to their economy.

House "Deal of the Week"

by Calculated Risk on 2/16/2009 12:05:00 AM

The North County Times has a feature called "Deal of the Week". This week the deal is interesting for several reasons: See: Deal of the Week: 73% Off (sorry, wrong link initially)

The featured property is a one-bedroom, one-bath, 700-square-foot condominium in Escondido (inland north county San Diego).

In 2006, during the bubble, the unit sold for $191,000, and in December 2008 - after foreclosure, the unit sold for $52,000. That is almost 73% off the peak price!

A few key points:

  • In 2006, the unit was bought with no money down. Two months ago the buyer paid all cash. From no money down to all cash; near the opposite extremes of financing!

    Note: "near" because during the bubble, some buyers actually received cash out at closing with financing of 105% LTV or greater.

  • These units currently rent for close to $900+ per month (although I suspect rents will decline in this area). Even figuring in HOA fees, taxes, maintenance, insurance, vacancy and other expenses, this unit has to be generating a nice return for the investor.

  • The unit sold for $45,900 in 1979 (Yes, 1979). I checked with Zach from the NC Times, and he said he confirmed the 1979 price with the assessor's office. Zach told me other units in the building sold for $40,500 in 1984, so maybe the '79 price was a little high (that was near the peak of a housing bubble too, so a 10% decline from '79 to '84 might be reasonable).

    Over almost 30 years (1979 to Dec 2008) the price increased 13%. Annualize that return!

  • Sunday, February 15, 2009

    Preprivatization

    by Calculated Risk on 2/15/2009 10:50:00 PM

    "Some clever advocates of nationalization have come up some alternative names, Dan. Some of them include government receivership, and my favorite is preprivatization."
    John Hendren, ABC News, Feb 15, 2009
    (ht to all)

    See video ...

    My favorite too. Best to all.

    Graphs: FDIC Bank Failures

    by Calculated Risk on 2/15/2009 07:01:00 PM

    Four banks were closed by the FDIC Friday, for a total of 13 banks so far in 2009. To put those failures into perspective, here are two graphs: the first shows the number of bank failures by year since the FDIC was founded, and the second graph shows the size of the assets and deposits (in current dollars).

    FDIC Bank Failures Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    Back in the '80s, there was some minor multiple counting ... as an example, when First City of Texas failed on Oct 30, 1992 there were 18 different banks closed by the FDIC. This multiple counting was minor, and there were far more bank failures in the late '80s and early '90s than this year.

    Note: there are currently 8,384 FDIC insured banks.

    FDIC Bank Losses The second graph (ht Kurt) shows the bank failures by total assets and deposits per year starting in 1934 (in current dollars adjusted with CPI).

    WaMu accounted for a vast majority of the assets and deposits of failed banks in 2008, and it is important to remember that WaMu was closed by the FDIC, and sold to JPMorgan Chase Bank, at no cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund (DIF).

    There are many more bank failures to come over the next couple of years, mostly because of losses related to Construction & Development (C&D) and Commercial Real Estate (CRE) loans, but so far, especially excluding WaMu, the total assets and deposits of failed FDIC insured banks is much smaller than in the '80s and early '90s.

    Axelrod: Housing Plan to be Announced Wednesday

    by Calculated Risk on 2/15/2009 03:04:00 PM

    From the WSJ: Axelrod: Obama Has 'Solid' Housing Plan

    Speaking on "Fox News Sunday," senior adviser David Axelrod said the plan that President Barack Obama plans to announce on Wednesday will aim to provide immediate help to homeowners who are "right on the edge" of foreclosure, and ultimately help in "raising home values that have been plummeting."

    Mr. Obama plans to unveil his housing plan during a visit to Phoenix. As part of his swing through western states, he is set to top in Denver Tuesday, when he will sign the $787 billion economic-stimulus plan just passed by Congress.

    Mr. Axelrod provided few details of the housing plan, but said a government investment of $50 billion to $100 billion to fund foreclosure prevention "is obviously a necessary part." He promised that the plan would contain "a lot of aspects."
    I hope "a lot of aspects" includes "a lot of details".

    Report: RBS Expects up to 20,000 Additional Job Cuts

    by Calculated Risk on 2/15/2009 10:55:00 AM

    From the Times: £30 billion loss at RBS prompts savage job cuts (ht Jan)

    ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND boss Stephen Hester is to unveil a brutal cost-cutting exercise, alongside record losses of close to £30 billion, that are expected to lead to a further 10,000 to 20,000 job cuts.
    ...
    The bank has already axed 13,000 jobs internationally since last April, including 3,000 in its investment-banking business.
    And the beat goes on ...