by Calculated Risk on 3/13/2009 11:06:00 AM
Friday, March 13, 2009
Philly Fed State Coincident Indexes: Widespread Recession
Click on map for larger image.
Here is a map of the three month change in the Philly Fed state coincident indicators. Almost all states are showing declining activity over the last three months.
This is what a widespread recession looks like based on the Philly Fed states indexes.
On a one month basis, activity decreased in 49 states in January (Louisiana was the one exception). Here is the Philadelphia Fed state coincident index release for January.
The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia has released the coincident indexes for all 50 states for January 2009. The indexes decreased in 49 states and increased in one, Louisiana, for the month (a one-month diffusion index of -96). For the past three months, the indexes have increased in one state, Wyoming; stayed flat in one state, Louisiana; and decreased in the other 48 states (a three-month diffusion index of -94).
The second graph is of the monthly Philly Fed data of the number of states with one month increasing activity. Most of the U.S. was has been in recession since December 2007 based on this indicator.Last month (December) the number of states with increasing activity was reported as zero, but that has been revised to two. So the current month - with only one state showing increasing activity - is the record for fewest states with increasing activity.
Stewart vs. Cramer
by Calculated Risk on 3/13/2009 10:37:00 AM
Note: The Daily Show website is a little slow today (for some reason!)
Here is the full episode.
Here are three short uncensored excerpts (warning: explicit language).
Part II.
Part III.
FICO President: 'Worst to come' for Mortgage Crisis
by Calculated Risk on 3/13/2009 10:14:00 AM
"Before we do the credit cards, we are actually not done with the mortgage [crisis] - the worst of that is yet to come in fact. The thing about mortgages is you can predict when they are going to reset and you can sort of see what is coming. We easily have another 12 to 18 months of pretty ugly times in terms of mortgage resetting. ... Credit cards are next."
FICO (formerly Fair Isaac) CEO and Michael Porter, CNBC
Porter also defends FICO scores as useful (no surprise), and I think he is mostly correct. Unfortunately during the housing bubble, many lenders used creditworthiness (and FICO scores) as the only measure to allow a loan. Historically lenders used the "Three C's": creditworthiness, capacity, and collateral.
On capacity, during the bubble, lenders qualified borrowers at teaser rates - or the Neg Am rate for Option ARMs. They didn't consider if the borrower could meet the fully amortized rate. On collateral, lenders just assumed housing prices would increase and 100%+ LTV loans were common. All three C's still matter.
U.S. Trade: Exports and Imports Decline Sharply in January
by Calculated Risk on 3/13/2009 08:30:00 AM
The sharp decline in both imports and exports continues to be an important story.
The Census Bureau reports:
[T]otal January exports of $124.9 billion and imports of $160.9 billion resulted in a goods and services deficit of $36.0 billion, down from $39.9 billion in December, revised. January exports were $7.6 billion less than December exports of $132.5 billion. January imports were $11.5 billion less than December imports of $172.4 billion..
Click on graph for larger image.The first graph shows the monthly U.S. exports and imports in dollars through January 2009. The recent rapid decline in foreign trade continued in January. Note that a large portion of the decline in imports is related to the fall in oil prices - but not all.
The graph includes both goods and services. The import and export of services has held up pretty well; most of the collapse in trade has been in goods. Imports of goods has declined by one third from the peak of last July!
The second graph shows the U.S. trade deficit, with and without petroleum, through January.
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. Import oil prices fell to $39.81 in January, and import quantities decreased too - so the petroleum deficit declined by $4 billion.
The trade deficit is now mostly China ($20.6 billion NSA in January) and oil.
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Summary Post: Household Wealth, Retail Sales, and more
by Calculated Risk on 3/12/2009 09:15:00 PM
The market rallied back to 1997 and ...
The Fed reported that household wealth plunged, from MarketWatch:
U.S. households saw their net worth fall by $11.2 trillion, or 18%, to $51.5 trillion at the end of 2008, wiping out five years of gainsHere are several graphs on household wealth and household equity (record low) based on the Fed's Flow of Funds report.
Meanwhile, the employment outlook is still grim. See: Unemployment Claims: Continued Claims at Record 5.3 Million
But retail sales should some signs of stabilization - at a much lower level - off almost 10% from a year ago. There are reasons to be skeptical of the data, but this is a small positive.
Also, the counterparty risk issue with mortgage insurers is heating up again.
Another interesting day ... best to all.


