by Calculated Risk on 2/25/2009 02:18:00 PM
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Treasury Releases Terms of Capital Assistance Program
From the U.S. Treasury: Terms of Capital Assistance Program
To view the White Paper, Term Sheet and FAQ, visit www.FinancialStability.gov.Update: From the Treasury White Paper on Capital Assistance Program (see previous post):
TermsCapital provided under the CAP will be in the form of a preferred security that is convertible into common equity at a 10 percent discount to the price prevailing prior to February 9th. CAP securities will carry a 9 percent dividend yield and would be convertible at the issuer's option (subject to the approval of their regulator). After 7 years, the security would automatically convert into common equity if not redeemed or converted before that date. The instrument is designed to give banks the incentive to replace USG-provided capital with private capital or to redeem the USG capital when conditions permit. With supervisory approval, banks will be able to request capital under the CAP in addition to their existing CPP preferred stock. With supervisory approval, banks will also be allowed to apply to exchange the existing CPP preferred stock for the new CAP instrument.
ConditionsRecipients of capital under the CAP will be subject to the executive compensation requirements in line with the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008, as recently amended. The Treasury will shortly be releasing rules to implement these amendments. As part of the application process, banks must submit a plan for how they intend to use this capital to preserve and strengthen their lending capacity – specifically, to increase lending above levels relative to what would have been possible without government support. The Treasury Department will make these plans public when the bank receives the capital under the CAP. Taxpayers will be able to monitor the performance of banks receiving capital under the CAP. Banks receiving capital will be required to submit to Treasury monthly reports on their lending broken out by category. These will be posted on www.FinancialStability.gov. Recipients will also be subject to restrictions on paying quarterly common stock dividends, repurchasing shares, and pursuing cash acquisitions.
These shares can convert at the firm’s discretion (with the approval of their regulator) into common equity if needed to preserve lending in worse-than-expected economic environment at a conversion price set at a 10% discount from the prevailing level of the institution’s stock price as of February 9, 2009.Guess the date Citi's stock price peaked in February (closed at $3.95 on Feb 9th)
New and Existing Home Sales: The "Distressing" Gap
by Calculated Risk on 2/25/2009 01:10:00 PM
Real Time Economics at the WSJ excerpts some analyst comments about the existing home sales report: Economists React: ‘So Much for Signs of Stability’ in Housing. A few comments from analysts:
"So much for signs of stability."I wouldn't look at existing home sales for signs of stability.
"The drop back in the number of existing U.S. home sales in January dashes hopes that housing activity had found a floor."
"Overall, the longer housing activity remains in the doldrums, the less likely it is that the economy will see a decent recovery in 2010 as Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke hopes."
"The rate of decline in existing home sales over the last three months suggests that the market has not yet entered a bottoming phase and housing remains under considerable pressure."
A large percentage of existing home sales (45% according to the NAR) are distressed sales: REO sales (foreclosure resales) or short sales. This has created a gap between new and existing sales as shown in the following graph that I've jokingly labeled the "Distressing" gap.
Click on graph for larger image in new window.This graph shows existing home sales (left axis through January) and new home sales (right axis through December).
Update (Feb 26, 2009): The graph is updated through January now (and right axis label corrected).
For a number of years the ratio between new and existing home sales was pretty steady. After activity in the housing market peaked in 2005, the ratio changed. This change was caused by distressed sales - in many areas home builders cannot compete with REO sales, and this has pushed down new home sales while keeping existing home sales activity elevated.
If we are looking for the first "signs of stability" in the housing market, I think we should look for declining inventory, a bottom in new home sales, and the gap between new and existing home sales closing.
Note: Existing home inventory might be declining, see the 5th graph here. However this might be misleading (see caveats in post).
Credit Crisis Indicators
by Calculated Risk on 2/25/2009 12:23:00 PM
As Bernanke said today, some progress has been made ...
![]() | Although a normal spread is around 0.5, this is still a significant improvement. |
This is a significant improvement from the high of 5.86 after Thanksgiving. The A2P2 spread is at the lowest level since the latest wave of the crisis started in Sept 2008. However this is still fairly high - look at those previous small peaks - those were considered serious at the time.
Note: This is the spread between high and low quality 30 day nonfinancial commercial paper.
The Federal Reserve released the Factors Affecting Reserve Balances last Thursday. Total assets increased $72.2 billion to $1.92 trillion. The increase was mostly due to the Federal Reserve buying $57.9 billion in mortgage-backed securities (MBS) guaranteed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae.After spiking last year to $2.31 trillion the week of Dec 18th, the Federal Reserve assets have declined somewhat. Now it looks like the Federal Reserve is starting to expand their balance sheet again.
Note: the graph shows Total Factors Supplying Federal Reserve Funds and is an available series that is close to assets.
These indicators do indicate some progress ...
Bernanke: "We're not completely in the dark."
by Calculated Risk on 2/25/2009 11:48:00 AM
Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke is testifying before the House Financial Services Committee today.
UPDATE: Here is the CNBC feed (opens in new window).
From Gregg Robb at MarketWatch: Bernanke tells Congress Fed knows what it is doing
"We're not making it up," Bernanke told the House Financial Services panel.I'm not making this up.
"We're working along a program that has been applied in various contexts," he said. "We're not completely in the dark."
More on Existing Home Sales (and Graphs)
by Calculated Risk on 2/25/2009 10:30:00 AM
The NAR press release is in the previous post. Here are some graphs of existing home sales ...
Click on graph for larger image in new window.
The first graph shows existing home sales, on a Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rate (SAAR) basis since 1993.
Sales in January 2009 (4.49 million SAAR) were 5.4% lower than last month, and were 8.6% lower than January 2008 (4.91 million SAAR).
It's important to note that about 45% of these sales were foreclosure resales or short sales. Although these are real transactions, this means activity (ex-distressed sales) is under 3 million units SAAR. (edit: fixed typo)
The second graph shows nationwide inventory for existing homes. According to the NAR, inventory decreased to 3.6 million in January, from an all time record of 4.57 million homes for sale in July 2008.
Usually inventory peaks in mid-Summer, and then declines slowly through November - and then declines sharply in December as families take their homes of the market for the holidays. Typically inventory starts to increase again slightly in January, however this month there was a slight decrease.
Usually most REOs (bank owned properties) are included in the inventory because they are listed - but not all. Recently I've heard a number of stories about lenders holding REOs off the market, but I can't confirm this.
The third graph shows the 'months of supply' metric for the last six years.
Months of supply decreased to 9.6 months.
Even though the inventory level declined, sales fell even more, leading to a higher "months of supply".
Here is another way to look at existing homes sales - monthly, Not Seasonally Adjusted (NSA):
This graph shows NSA monthly existing home sales for 2005 through 2009. Sales (NSA) were slightly lower in January 2009 than in January 2008. This is the fourth straight year of declining sales.
Again - a significant percentage of recent sales were foreclosure resales, and although these are real sales, I think existing home sales could fall even further when foreclosure resales start to decline sometime in the future.
The last graph shows inventory by month starting in 2004.
Inventory levels were flat during the bubble, but started increasing at the end of 2005.
Inventory levels increased sharply in 2006 and 2007, but have been below the year ago level for the last six months. This might indicate that inventory levels are close to the peak for this cycle. Note: there is probably a substantial shadow inventory – homeowners wanting to sell, but waiting for a better market - so existing home inventory levels will probably stay elevated for some time. There is also the possibility of some ghost inventory (REOs being held off the market).
It is important to watch inventory levels very carefully. If you look at the 2005 inventory data, instead of staying flat for most of the year (like the previous bubble years), inventory continued to increase all year. That was one of the key signs that led me to call the top in the housing market!
If the trend of declining year-over-year inventory levels continues in 2009 that will be a positive for the housing market. Prices will probably continue to fall until the months of supply reaches more normal levels (in the 6 to 8 month range), and that might take some time.



