by Calculated Risk on 3/02/2009 02:22:00 PM
Monday, March 02, 2009
Vehicle Sales in January
The BEA released vehicle sales for January this morning. Total auto and truck sales in the U.S. were below 10 million (SAAR) for the first time since 1982. I've update the sales and turnover graphs below with the January data.
The automakers will release February sales numbers tomorrow, and here is a preview from MarketWatch: No sales bounce in sight for automakers
The total industry decline, according to Edmunds.com, is expected to reach 41.4%. Most forecasts on Wall Street call for a seasonally adjusted annual rate of sales in the low 9-million range, down from 9.6 million last month, which marked a 26-year low.
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"The crisis in the automotive market continues to worsen, but we believe we are nearing the bottom of this cycle," J.D. Power analyst Jeff Schuster said in a report last week. "Our expectation is for February or March to be the low point, but a high degree of uncertainty and risk remains for the second half of 2009."
Click on graph for larger image in new window.The first graph shows monthly vehicle sales (autos and trucks) as reported by the BEA at a Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rate (SAAR).
This shows that sales have plunged to just over a 9.75 million annual rate in January - the lowest rate since 1982. If the car analysts are correct, February will be even worse.
This graph shows the total number of registered vehicles in the U.S. divided by the sales rate - and gives a turnover ratio for the U.S. fleet (this doesn't tell you the age of the fleet).Currently this ratio is at 25.5 years, the highest ever. This is an unsustainable level (I doubt most vehicles will last 25 years!), and the ratio will probably decline over the next few years. This could happen with vehicles being removed from the fleet, but more likely because of a sales increase.
This suggests vehicle sales are much nearer the bottom than the top, and there will probably be some sort of modest rebound later this year or in 2010.
January PCE and Personal Saving Rate
by Calculated Risk on 3/02/2009 11:36:00 AM
Amid all the gloom this morning - the AIG bailout and massive losses, the weak manufacturing ISM index, the cliff diving construction spending numbers - there was this Personal Income and Outlays report for January from the BEA.
This report showed that personal income increased in January, however the increase was mostly because of special factors related to government and military wage increases. But this report also showed that PCE was up slightly from October to January (the period that matters for GDP); about 0.7% in real terms annualized. Not much - and this is just one data point and could be revised, and this might be impacted by gift cards (this data uses the January retail numbers) - but perhaps PCE won't fall completely off a cliff in Q1. I still expect PCE to decline sharply in Q1, but maybe not as rapidly as in Q3 2008 (-3.8% SAAR) and Q4 2008 (-4.3% SAAR)
(SAAR: seasonally adjusted annual rate)
Also interesting:
Personal saving -- DPI less personal outlays -- was $545.5 billion in January, compared with $416.8 billion in December. Personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal income was 5.0 percent in January, compared with 3.9 percent in December.This increase in the percent saved is an important part of the rebalancing process and helps repair household balance sheets.
Click on graph for larger image in new window.This graph shows the saving rate starting in 1959 (using a three month centered average for smoothing).
Although this data may be revised significantly, this does suggest households are saving substantially more than during the last few years (when they saving rate was close to zero). This is a necessary but painful step ... and a rising saving rate will repair balance sheets, but also keep downward pressure on personal consumption.
February 2009 Manufacturing ISM: Employment Index at Record Low
by Calculated Risk on 3/02/2009 10:30:00 AM
From the ISM: February 2009 Manufacturing ISM Report On Business®
"Manufacturing continues to decline at a rapid rate in February. While production has slowed its rate of decline, employment continues to fall precipitously. Prices continue to decline, but price advantages are not sufficient to overcome manufacturers' apparent loss of demand. Survey respondents appear generally pessimistic about recovery in 2009."Manufacturing is still contracting, and employment is especially weak with the employment index at a record low (since the index started in 1948).
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Manufacturing contracted in February as the PMI registered 35.8 percent, which is 0.2 percentage point higher than the 35.6 percent reported in January. This is the 13th consecutive month of contraction in the manufacturing sector. A reading above 50 percent indicates that the manufacturing economy is generally expanding; below 50 percent indicates that it is generally contracting.
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ISM's Employment Index registered 26.1 percent in February, which is 3.8 percentage points lower than the 29.9 percent reported in January. This is the seventh consecutive month of decline in employment. An Employment Index above 49.7 percent, over time, is generally consistent with an increase in the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) data on manufacturing employment.
Construction Spending: Non-Residential Cliff Diving
by Calculated Risk on 3/02/2009 10:01:00 AM
Click on graph for larger image in new window.
The first graph shows private residential and nonresidential construction spending since 1993. Note: nominal dollars, not inflation adjusted.
Residential construction spending is still declining, and now nonresidential spending has peaked and will probably decline sharply over the next 18 months to two years.
The second graph shows the year-over-year change for private residential and nonresidential construction spending.
Nonresidential spending is now at the year ago level and will turn strongly negative going forward. Residential construction spending is still declining, although the YoY change will probably be less negative going forward.
These are two key stories for 2009: the collapse in private non-residential construction, and the probably bottom for residential construction spending.
From the Census Bureau: January 2009 Construction at $986.2 Billion Annual Rate
Spending on private construction was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $682.6 billion, 3.7 percent (±1.1%) below the revised December estimate of $709.0 billion. Residential construction was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $291.5 billion in January, 2.9 percent (±1.3%) below the revised December estimate of $300.3 billion. Nonresidential construction was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $391.0 billion in January, 4.3 percent (±1.1%) below the revised December estimate of $408.7 billion.
AIG: $61.7 Billion Loss
by Calculated Risk on 3/02/2009 06:21:00 AM
For the Fed and Treasury AIG restructuring announcement, please see the previous post.
From MarketWatch: AIG reports fourth-quarter loss of over $61 billion
[AIG] said its fourth-quarter loss widened to $61.66 billion, or $22.95 a share, from the $5.29 billion loss in the year-earlier period. Continued severe credit market deterioration, particularly in commercial mortgage-backed securities, and charges related to ongoing restructuring-related activities weighed down results.The numbers just keep getting bigger ...


