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Sunday, September 12, 2010

Schedule for Week of Sept 12th

by Calculated Risk on 9/12/2010 03:40:00 PM

The key releases this week will be retail sales (on Tues for August), Industrial Production (Weds for August) and the Empire state and Philly Fed surveys (Weds and Thurs for Sept).

----- Likely, but not scheduled -----

Possibly on Monday (update: I've been told Tuesday): Ceridian-UCLA Pulse of Commerce Index™ This is the diesel fuel index for August (a measure of transportation).

CoreLogic House Price Index for July. This release could show the first signs of price declines in July, although the index is a weighted 3 month average for May, June and July.

----- Monday Sept 13th -----

No releases scheduled.

----- Tuesday Sept 14th -----

8:30 AM: Retail Sales for August. The consensus is for a 0.3% increase from July.

Early: NFIB Small Business Survey for August. This survey has been showing declining optimism in the small business sector.

10:00 AM: Manufacturing and Trade: Inventories and Sales for July. Consensus is for a 0.6% increase in inventories in July.

----- Wednesday Sept 15th -----

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 weeks - suggesting reported home sales in August and September will be weak.

8:30 AM: Empire Manufacturing Survey for Sept. The consensus is for a reading of 5.0, down from 7.1 in August. These regional surveys have been showing a slowdown in manufacturing and are being closely watched right now.

9:15 AM: Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization for August. The consensus is for a 0.2% increase in August.

----- Thursday Sept 16th -----

8:30 AM: The initial weekly unemployment claims report will be released. Consensus is for a slight increase to 455K from 451K last week. Claims for nine states were estimated last week because of the holiday.

8:30 AM: Producer Price Index for August. The consensus is for a 0.3% increase in prices.

10:00 AM: Philly Fed Survey for September. This survey declined sharply over the last few months, and showed contraction last month for the first time since July 2009. The consensus is for an increase to 3.8 (slow expansion) from minus 7.7 in August.

----- Friday Sept 17th -----

8:30 AM: Consumer Price Index for August. The consensus is for a 0.3% increase in prices. This is being closely watched for further disinflation, and also because Q3 is the quarter the annual annual cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) is calculated for Social Security (probably no change in 2011).

9:55 AM: Reuters/University of Mich Consumer Sentiment preliminary for September. The consensus is for a slight increase to 70.0 from 68.9 in August.

12:00 PM: Q2 Flow of Funds Report from the Federal Reserve.

After 4:00 PM: The FDIC has only closed one bank over the last 3 weeks. The pace will probably pickup soon ...

Report: Bank regulators reach agreement on Basel III capital requirements

by Calculated Risk on 9/12/2010 12:18:00 PM

The details will be released later today, but here is an overview from the Financial Times: Regulators agree to reforms on bank capital

Basel III ... is expected to include a new minimum core tier one ratio for banks worldwide. ... The current minimum is 2 per cent.

[The] proposal [was] for a new minimum of 4½ per cent [with] an additional buffer of 2½ per cent ... Banks within the buffer zone would face restrictions on their ability to pay dividends and discretionary bonuses.
excerpt with permission
Here is an article from the WSJ: Bank Regulators Reach Deal on New Capital Rules

The details will be released later, and the agreement is expected to be approved in November. This will probably lead to more banks raising capital.

Summary for Week ending Sept 11th

by Calculated Risk on 9/12/2010 09:00:00 AM

It was a light week for economic news ...

  • Trade Deficit declines in July

    The Census Bureau reports:
    [T]otal July exports of $153.3 billion and imports of $196.1 billion resulted in a goods and services deficit of $42.8 billion, down from $49.8 billion in June, revised.
    U.S. Trade Exports Imports Click on graph for larger image.

    The first graph shows the monthly U.S. exports and imports in dollars through June 2010.

    Although imports declined in July, imports have been increasing much faster than exports.

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

    U.S. Trade Deficit 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 decrease in the deficit in July was across the board, although the oil deficit only declined slightly. The trade gap with China declined slightly to $25.92 billion from $26.15 billion in June - essentially unchanged.

    This is the 2nd largest monthly trade deficit since the 2008 collapse in trade.

  • Consumer Credit Declines in July

    The Federal Reserve reports:
    In July, total consumer credit decreased at an annual rate of 1-3/4 percent. Revolving credit decreased at an annual rate of 6-1/4
    percent, and nonrevolving credit increased at an annual rate of 1/2 percent.
    Consumer Credit This graph shows the increase in consumer credit since 1978. The amounts are nominal (not inflation adjusted).

    Revolving credit (credit card debt) is off 15.2% from the peak. Non-revolving debt (auto, furniture, and other loans) is off 1.1% from the peak. Note: Consumer credit does not include real estate debt.

  • Other Economic Stories ...

  • From the Federal Reserve: Beige book Continued growth, but "widespread signs of a deceleration"

  • Housing Completions will set new record low in 2010

  • The MBA reports: Mortgage Purchase Applications Up, Refinance Applications Fall Slightly in Latest MBA Weekly Survey

  • From the BLS: Job Openings increases in July, Low Labor Turnover

  • Unofficial Problem Bank List increases to 849 institutions

    Best wishes to all.
  • Saturday, September 11, 2010

    OECD Paper: "The EU Stress Test and Sovereign Debt Exposures"

    by Calculated Risk on 9/11/2010 07:52:00 PM

    Here is a new paper on EU Sovereign debt exposures. (ht Mark Whitehouse at the WSJ: Number of the Week: Hiding Europe’s Unpleasant Details)

    From Blundell-Wignall, A. and P. Slovik (2010), “The EU Stress Test and Sovereign Debt Exposures

    The EU-wide stress test did not include haircuts for sovereign debt held in the banking books of banks on the grounds that over the 2 years considered default is virtually impossible in the presence of the EFSF [European Financial Stability Facility Special Purpose Vehicle], which is certainly large enough to meet funding needs of the main countries of concern over that period.

    The haircuts applied to the trading book in the stress test are shown in the first block of Table 1. The trading book exposures (not reported in the stress test paper) are also shown. The EU wide loss from the haircut is around €26. bn. The contribution of the 5 countries where most of the market focus has been (Greece, Portugal, Ireland, Italy and Spain) is only €14.4bn.
    Sovereign Debt OECD Table 1 Click on table for larger image in new window.
    A different picture emerges when we consider the banking book. First it is important to note that the EU banking book sovereign exposures are very much larger than those of the trading book—around 83% of the total. If the same haircuts are applied to these exposures the loss amounts to €139bn, or 12% of the Tier 1 capital of the EU banks at the end of 2009 (and €165bn and over 14% of Tier 1 if trading book losses are added in). The haircuts of the 5 countries of market focus amount to €75.8bn in the banking book, and €90.2bn if the trading book amount is added in. This is around 8% of EU Tier 1 capital of stress tested banks.
    ...
    This study has shown that most of the sovereign debt is held on the banking books of banks, whereas the EU stress test only considered their small trading book exposures. Sovereign debt held in the banking book cannot be ignored however. First, individual bank failures would see latent losses on the trading book realized, a fact that creditors and equity investors need to take into account. Second, and more importantly, the market is not prepared to give a zero probability to debt restructurings beyond the period of the stress test and/or the period after which the role of the EFSF SPV comes to an end. The main reasons for this are: the very large job ahead for fiscal consolidation in a period of weak economic growth; and the apparent difficulty of achieving structural/competitiveness reforms in some countries in a short period of time. The paper also showed that excessively exposed banks in principle can reduce their exposure by not re-financing maturing sovereign debt, with the government funding gap being met instead by the SPV. This would have the effect of transferring sovereign risk from the bank concerned to the public sector.
    What happens in less than 2 years when the European Financial Stability Facility Special Purpose Vehicle is no longer providing funding?

    Paper: Housing and the Business Cycle

    by Calculated Risk on 9/11/2010 03:05:00 PM

    From Steven Gjerstad and Vernon Smith in the WSJ: Why We're in for a Long, Hard Economic Slog (ht MrM)

    In the Great Depression and in every recession since, recovery of residential construction has preceded recovery in every other sector, and its recovery has been far larger in percentage terms than the recovery in any other major sector.

    Applied to the Great Recession, it appears that those who see signs of a recovery may be grasping at straws.
    This is something I've been writing about since I started the blog in 2005, but it is worth repeating ... even though Residential Investment usually only accounts for around 5% GDP, it isn't the size of the sector, but the contribution during the recovery that matters - and housing is usually the largest contributor to economic and employment growth early in a recovery.

    But not this time because of the large number of excess housing units.

    Here is the paper from Steven Gjerstad and Vernon Smith: Household expenditure cycles and economic cycles, 1920 – 2010

    This has key implications for policy. As an example, a policy (like the housing tax credit) that encourages adding to the housing stock (new home construction) is a clear mistake, whereas policies that are aimed at household creation (jobs) or at least household preservation (like extended unemployment benefits) make more sense. Also policies aimed at supporting house prices - keeping the price above the market clearing price - are counterproductive and also a mistake.

    Early Review of Byron Wien's "Ten Surprises" List for 2010

    by Calculated Risk on 9/11/2010 11:49:00 AM

    I saw this article at CNBC yesterday: Outlook Gloomy at Secret Billionaire Meeting

    For 25 years, legendary Wall Street strategist Byron Wien, now with The Blackstone Group, has held summer meetings with high net worth individuals to get their outlook on the global economy and investing. This year’s group, totaling fifty individuals and including more than 10 billionaires, was decidedly pessimistic on the U.S. economy ...
    That reminded me to check on Byron Wien's The Surprises of 2010 list.

    Note: For anyone not familiar with the list, Wien tries to make predictions that are generally out of the consensus view - he has been doing this for 24 years, and usually gets more than half right.

    It looks like this will be an off year for the "Surprises" list ...

    A quick review of Wien's possible surprises:
    1. The United States economy grows at a stronger than expected 5% real rate during the year and the unemployment level drops below 9%. ...
    CR: Not Likely.

    2. The Federal Reserve decides the economy is strong enough for them to move away from zero interest rate policy. In a series of successive hikes beginning in the second quarter the Federal funds rate reaches 2% by year-end.
    CR: Not Gonna Happen.

    3. Heavy borrowing by the U.S. Treasury and some reluctance by foreign central banks to keep buying notes and bonds drives the yield on the 10-year Treasury above 5.5%. ...
    CR: Not Gonna Happen

    4. In a roller coaster year the Standard and Poor’s 500 rallies to 1300 in the first half and then runs out of steam and declines to 1000, ending where it started at 1115.10. ...
    CR: Missed on the high, but the general idea of a trading range has been correct so far.

    5. Because it is significantly undervalued on a purchasing power parity basis, the dollar rallies against the yen and the euro. It exceeds 100 on the yen and the euro drops below $1.30 as the long slide of the greenback is interrupted.
    CR: Right on the euro, wrong on the yen.

    6. Japan stands out as the best performing major industrialized market in the world as its currency weakens and its exports improve. Investors focus on the attractive valuations of dozens of medium sized companies in a market selling at one quarter of its 1989 high. The Nikkei 225 rises above 12,000
    CR: The Nikkei did rally to 11,200 before falling sharply, but I think this counts as a miss.

    7. Believing he must be a leader in climate control initiatives, President Obama endorses legislation favorable for nuclear power development. ...
    CR: Didn't happen.

    8. The improvement in the U.S. economy energizes the Obama administration. The White House undergoes some reorganization and regains its momentum. ...
    CR: Not likely this year.

    9. When it finally passes, financial service legislation, like the health care bill, proves to be softer on the industry than originally feared. ...
    CR: I think this was right.

    10. Civil unrest in Iran reaches a crescendo. Ayatollah Khomeini pushes out Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in favor of a more public relations adept leader. Economic improvement becomes the key issue and anti-Israel rhetoric subsides.
    CR: Sounds good, but very unlikely.

    2009 was Wien's best year (he reviews 2009 here), but it looks like 2010 will be his worst.

    Unofficial Problem Bank List increases to 849 institutions

    by Calculated Risk on 9/11/2010 08:43:00 AM

    Note: this is an unofficial list of Problem Banks compiled only from public sources.

    Here is the unofficial problem bank list for September 10, 2010.

    Changes and comments from surferdude808:

    After six additions and one removal, the Unofficial Problem Bank List includes 849 institutions with aggregate assets of $415.3 billion, up from 844 institutions with assets of $412 billion last week.

    The additions include First National Community Bank, Dunmore, PA ($1.3 billion Ticker: FNCB); Pacific Mercantile Bank, Costa Mesa, CA ($1.1 billion Ticker: PMBC); Community Shores Bank, Muskegon, MI ($262 million Ticker: CSHB); First American State Bank, Greenwood, CO ($244 million); Service1st Bank of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV ($232 million Ticker: WLBC); and Bank of the Eastern Shore, Cambridge, MD ($223 million).

    The removal is the failed Horizon Bank ($188 million). Next week, we anticipate for the OCC to release its actions for August.
    The FDIC has only closed one bank over the last three weeks - but the additions keep coming!

    Friday, September 10, 2010

    Austan Goolsbee, Comedian

    by Calculated Risk on 9/10/2010 10:27:00 PM

    Via Politico in October 2009 (link here if embed doesn't load)

    "Number one on the list we wanted to make sure - [whisper] all the Clinton people got their jobs back - to do something to help the country."

    “The unemployment rate is at 9.7% ... Have some sympathy for those people that are unemployed, because when Rahm Emanuel sees my comments from this evening, I am going to be one of them.”

    Bank Failure #119: Horizon Bank, Bradenton, Florida

    by Calculated Risk on 9/10/2010 06:25:00 PM

    Fading Horizon
    It's reach, overextended.
    Federal eclipse.

    by Soylent Green is People

    From the FDIC: Bank of the Ozarks, Little Rock, Arkansas, Assumes All of the Deposits of Horizon Bank, Bradenton, Florida
    As of June 30, 2010, Horizon Bank had approximately $187.8 million in total assets and $164.6 million in total deposits. ... The FDIC estimates that the cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund (DIF) will be $58.9 million. ... Horizon Bank is the 119th FDIC-insured institution to fail in the nation this year, and the twenty-third in Florida. The last FDIC-insured institution closed in the state was Community National Bank at Bartow, Bartow, on August 20, 2010.
    After taking two weeks off, the FDIC is back in action.

    Hotel Occupancy Rate: Just above 2008 levels

    by Calculated Risk on 9/10/2010 03:08:00 PM

    Hotel occupancy is one of several industry specific indicators I follow ...

    From HotelNewsNow.com: STR: US hotel results week ending 4 Sept. 2010

    In year-over-year comparisons, occupancy increased 7.5 percent to 57.4 percent, average daily rate was up 2.1 percent to US$94.37, and revenue per available room rose 9.7 percent to US$54.16.

    This was the 13th consecutive week the U.S. reported overall ADR increases. Before this trend emerged, ADR in decreased 74 of the past 76 weeks.
    The following graph shows the four week moving average for the occupancy rate by week for 2008, 2009 and 2010 (and a median for 2000 through 2007).

    Hotel Occupancy Rate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    Notes: the scale doesn't start at zero to better show the change. The graph shows the 4-week average, not the weekly occupancy rate.

    On a 4-week basis, occupancy is up 8.1% compared to last year (the worst year since the Great Depression) and 3.5% below the median for 2000 through 2007.

    The occupancy rate is just above the levels of 2008 - but 2008 was a tough year for the hotel industry!

    Data Source: Smith Travel Research, Courtesy of HotelNewsNow.com

    Update on Government Employment Graphs

    by Calculated Risk on 9/10/2010 01:25:00 PM

    Yesterday I posted a couple of graphs of government payroll employment since 1976 as a response to some comments to Menzie Chinn's post at Econbrowser: The "Ever-Expanding" Government Sector, Illustrated

    There were a few questions ... (Please remember I was just answering some question to Menzie's post - not trying to start a huge debate - but I do think data helps to define the issues.)

    Q: Does this include active duty military?

    A: No. The payroll data is from the BLS and is for civilian employment only.

    Q: Does this include government contractors?

    A: Government contractors are private employers. The headcount would be included in the BLS report, but not as government employees.

    Q: The graphs show that Federal government payroll employment (ex-military) has been declining over the last 35 years - and state and local has been mostly flat. But what about the pay (including benefits)?

    A: I don't have that data, but the following graph is based on BEA data and shows the Federal (and defense spending) and state and local spending as a percent of GDP. But this doesn't include any unfunded future liabilities.

    Government Spending as Percent of GDP Click on graph for larger image.

    There has been a surge in defense spending, but Federal spending ex-defense and state and local spending has been fairly flat (but as I noted above, underfunded future liabilities - like state and local underfunded pension plans - don't show up).

    I'm guessing the next question will be how the Federal stimulus spending shows up in the BEA reports. So here is the answer from the BEA:

    BEA tracks the portion of federal government sector receipts and expenditures in the national income and product accounts that are affected by the provisions of the ARRA. Many of the ARRA-funded transactions—such as grants, transfers, and tax cuts—are not directly included in gross domestic product (GDP), because GDP only includes government spending on goods and services. However, these transactions affect GDP indirectly by providing resources to households, businesses, and state and local governments to fund personal consumption expenditures, business investment, and state and local government spending.
    Now back to the economy.

    Wholesales Inventories increase 1.3% in July

    by Calculated Risk on 9/10/2010 10:07:00 AM

    From the Census Bureau:

    Total inventories of merchant wholesalers, except manufacturers’ sales branches and offices, after adjustment for seasonal variations but not for price changes, were $405.0 billion at the end of July, up 1.3 percent ...

    The July inventories/sales ratio for merchant wholesalers, except manufacturers’ sales branches and offices, based on seasonally adjusted data, was 1.16.
    Wholesale Inventories Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    Usually we focus on Manufacturers' Inventories and Manufacturers' inventory-to-sales ratio, but the wholesale inventory report shows the same thing - the inventory adjustment is over.

    This increase could be spun two ways. First from CNBC:
    U.S. wholesale inventories surged by the largest amount in two years in July ... in a sign firms were anticipating enough demand to boost stock this summer.
    That sounds like good news.

    The alternative view (my view) is that inventories are now a little too high - and that wholesalers will now cut back a little on orders.

    Goolsbee to chair Council of Economic Advisers

    by Calculated Risk on 9/10/2010 08:44:00 AM

    From the WSJ: Goolsbee to Lead Council of Economic Advisers

    President Barack Obama will name Austan Goolsbee, a longtime adviser and an architect of his campaign's economic message, to be chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers at a White House press conference Friday, an administration official said Thursday night.
    Tanta, my former co-blogger, once wrote about Goolsbee (back in 2007): Dr. Goolsbee: I’ll Stop Impersonating an Economist If You Quit Underwriting Mortgage Loans

    Tanta's post was very funny - but it isn't funny that Goolsbee demonstrated a lack of understanding about the housing market.

    Thursday, September 09, 2010

    From Loan Modification Purgatory to Foreclosure Hell

    by Calculated Risk on 9/09/2010 10:27:00 PM

    David Lazarus has an interesting foreclosure story in the LA Times: Suddenly, their house is taken over

    A few details:

    The couple fell behind on their mortgage payments (he works in construction). Wells Fargo put them in a HAMP three month trial modification program in December, and they made all their payments.

    After the three months were up, Ellen Kahara said, they were told by Wells that their case was still under review and that they should keep making the $1,400 payments. They did.

    The bank continued requesting paperwork as part of its review process. ... The Kaharas received a letter from Wells dated Aug. 11 saying that their application for a permanent loan modification had been rejected. The letter said the Kaharas would have 30 days to discuss other options available to them.

    "No foreclosure sale will be conducted and you will not lose your home during this 30-day period," the letter said.
    On August 18th there was a knock on the door - it was the new owner who had bought the home at foreclosure!

    Obviously Wells Fargo made a huge mistake with the foreclosure, but perhaps just as outrageous is how they strung the couple along for months - collecting seven or eight monthly payments - and then finally denied the permanent modification when they were ready to foreclose.

    Double Digit Unemployment Rate early next year?

    by Calculated Risk on 9/09/2010 06:44:00 PM

    From Ethan Harris, Bank of America North American Economist, and others, Growth recession, Sept 3rd:

    "[F]or most of 2010 and 2011, employment growth is not expected to keep up with the rise in the labor force, which means the unemployment rate heads north. We expect a steady increase to 10.1% by the second quarter with a slow fall slightly below 10.0% by the end of 2011."
    From Ed McKelvey, Goldman Sachs senior economist today:
    "[W]e expect payroll gains to slow to 25,000 per month (ex Census workers) and the jobless rate to drift up to 10% over the next half year."
    With growth slowing in the 2nd half (and into 2011), this means the unemployment rate will probably tick up too (unless the participation rate falls further). I've been expecting the unemployment rate to stay elevated, and probably increase further - and the main reason is the same as for the BofA and Goldman analysts: the general slowing economy.

    Weekly Update on European Bond Spreads

    by Calculated Risk on 9/09/2010 02:29:00 PM

    Here is a look at European bond spreads from the Atlanta Fed weekly Financial Highlights released today (graph as of Sept 7th):

    Euro Bond Spreads Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    From the Atlanta Fed:

    Peripheral European bond spreads (over German bonds) have risen since the August FOMC meeting.

    Irish and Portuguese bond spreads are currently at all-time highs, while the spread for Greek bonds remains extremely elevated.

    Since the August FOMC meeting, the 10-year Greece-to-German bond spread has risen by 146 basis points (bps) ... through September 7. Similarly, with other European peripherals’ spreads, Portugal’s is higher by 99 bps during the period, and Spain’s is up by 20 bps.
    Note: The Atlanta Fed data is a couple days old. Nemo has links to the current data on the sidebar of his site. The bond spreads have eased slightly over the last couple of days.

    Note: A big story today was the report that Deutsche Bank is seeking to raise 9 billion euros.

    Government Employment since 1976

    by Calculated Risk on 9/09/2010 12:23:00 PM

    Menzie Chinn at Econbrowser posted a graph of total government employment over the last decade: The "Ever-Expanding" Government Sector, Illustrated

    In response to the comments to his post, here are a couple of additional graphs:

    Government Employment Click on graph for larger image.

    This graph shows federal, state, and local government employment as a percent of the civilian noninstitutional population since 1976 (all data from the BLS).

    Federal government employment has decreased over the last 35 years (mostly in the 1990s), state government employment has been flat, and local government employment has increased.

    Note the small spikes very 10 years. That is the impact of the decennial census.

    Government Employment The second graph shows government employment excluding education as a percent of the civilian noninstitutional.

    The percent of federal and state government employment (ex-education) have all declined. Local government employment has been steady - so overall government employment (ex-education) as a percent of the civilian population is down over the last 35 years.

    Trade Deficit declines in July

    by Calculated Risk on 9/09/2010 09:11:00 AM

    The Census Bureau reports:

    [T]otal July exports of $153.3 billion and imports of $196.1 billion resulted in a goods and services deficit of $42.8 billion, down from $49.8 billion in June, revised.
    U.S. Trade Exports Imports Click on graph for larger image.

    The first graph shows the monthly U.S. exports and imports in dollars through June 2010.

    Although imports declined in July, imports have been increasing much faster than exports.

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

    U.S. Trade Deficit 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 decrease in the deficit in July was across the board, although the oil deficit only declined slightly. And the trade gap with China declined slightly to $25.92 billion from $26.15 billion in June - essentially unchanged.

    This is the 2nd largest monthly trade deficit since the 2008 collapse in trade.

    Weekly Initial Unemployment Claims decline

    by Calculated Risk on 9/09/2010 08:30:00 AM

    UPDATE: BofA noted this morning that 9 states reported delays in filing jobless claims because of labor day weekend ... so the actual was probably higher (ht Brian)

    The DOL reports on weekly unemployment insurance claims:

    In the week ending Sept. 4, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 451,000, a decrease of 27,000 from the previous week's revised figure of 478,000. The 4-week moving average was 477,750, a decrease of 9,250 from the previous week's revised average of 487,000.
    Weekly Unemployment Claims Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph shows the 4-week moving average of weekly claims since January 2000.

    The dashed line on the graph is the current 4-week average. The four-week average of weekly unemployment claims decreased this week by 9,250 to 477,750.

    Claims for last week were revised up from 472,000 to 478,000.

    This is the lowest level for weekly claims since early July, but it is still very high - and the current level of the 4-week average suggests a weak job market.

    Wednesday, September 08, 2010

    The Frugal are Losers Too

    by Calculated Risk on 9/08/2010 08:34:00 PM

    From Graham Bowley at the NY Times: Debtors Feast at the Expense of the Frugal

    For example, anyone keeping $500,000 in a 12-month certificate of deposit earning a rate of 1.5 percent annually — one of the best savings rates available nationally these days — would earn $7,500 a year, hardly enough to live on. Just three years ago, that same investment would have generated $26,250.

    ... Anyone investing $500,000 in 10-year Treasuries at current yields would earn $13,500 a year.
    Obviously retired people, living on bond yields, are taking a hit as bonds mature. And this is pushing some conservative investors into riskier assets too.

    The BEA has been reporting that Personal interest income has been falling since Sept 2008, and I expect interest income will fall further as bonds and CDs mature.