by Calculated Risk on 5/01/2009 12:22:00 PM
Friday, May 01, 2009
Ford Sales off 31.3% YoY in April
From Reuters: Ford April U.S. vehicle sales off 31.3 pct
This is a year-over-year comparison: April 2009 vs. April 2008.
In March, Ford reported sales off 40.9%
In February Ford sales were off 46.3% YoY
And in January Ford sales were off 42.1%
December: 32.4%
November: 31%
The other manufacturers will report later.
Update: Toyota U.S. April sales fall 41.9% to 126,540
Update2: GM U.S. April sales down 33.2% to 172,150 units
Update3: Chrysler April U.S. sales fall 48%
Reports: Stress Tests Results to be Released May 7th
by Calculated Risk on 5/01/2009 11:03:00 AM
The WSJ, Bloomberg and others are reporting the results of the stress tests will be released Thursday May 7th (apparently in the afternoon).
The release will include capital needs for each individual bank, plus estimated losses by loan categories.
According to the Fed white paper, the data is being collected for 12 loan categories, so hopefully they will release projected losses by each category.
From Bloomberg: Regulators Said to Plan Stress-Test Disclosures on May 7
(no link yet)
The Federal Reserve and U.S. banking regulators will reveal the results of the tests on the country’s 19 largest banks on May 7 after financial markets close, according to a government official.From CNBC: Results of Bank 'Stress Tests' To Be Released on Thursday
The government will unveil both aggregate information and firm-specific details about the capital buffer required to absorb losses if the recession worsens ...
ISM Manufacturing Shows Contraction in April
by Calculated Risk on 5/01/2009 09:59:00 AM
From the Institute for Supply Management: April 2009 Non-Manufacturing ISM Report On Business®
Economic activity in the manufacturing sector failed to grow in April for the 15th consecutive month, and the overall economy contracted for the seventh consecutive month, say the nation's supply executives in the latest Manufacturing ISM Report On Business®.As noted, any reading below 50 shows contraction, although the pace of contraction has slowed.
...
Manufacturing contracted in April as the PMI registered 40.1 percent, which is 3.8 percentage points higher than the 36.3 percent reported in March. This is the 15th 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.
...
"The decline in the manufacturing sector continues to moderate. After six consecutive months below the 40-percent mark, the PMI, driven by the New Orders Index at 47.2 percent, shows a significant improvement. While this is a big step forward, there is still a large gap that must be closed before manufacturing begins to grow once again. The Customers' Inventories Index indicates that channels are paring inventories to acceptable levels after reporting inventories as 'too high' for eight consecutive months. The prices manufacturers pay for their goods and services continue to decline; however, copper prices have bottomed and are now starting to rise. This is definitely a good start for the second quarter."
emphasis added
In other news, new manufacturer orders were down, from the Census Bureau:
New orders for manufactured goods in March, down seven of the last eight months, decreased $3.2 billion or 0.9 percent to $345.3 billion, the U.S. Census Bureau reported today.
NMHC: Apartment Market Conditions Continue to Worsen
by Calculated Risk on 5/01/2009 09:23:00 AM
Note: Any reading below 50 indicates conditions are worsening; above 50 improving. So the increase in the index to 16 means the apartment conditions are worsening, but at a slower pace.
"Worse conditions" implies higher vacancy rates and lower rents - so it is good for renters.
From the National Multi Housing Council (NMHC): Apartment Market Still Suffering Downturn, Though Pace Is Decelerating, According To National Multi Housing Council Survey
Apartment market conditions continue to worsen, though the pace is decelerating, according to the National Multi Housing Council's (NMHC) latest Quarterly Survey of Apartment Market Conditions.
While all four market indexes remained below 50 (index numbers below 50 indicate conditions are worsening; numbers above 50 indicate conditions are improving), they all rose from three months ago. In particular, about half of respondents thought conditions were unchanged in the sales volume, equity finance, and debt finance markets.
“This global downturn has led to the most challenging economic conditions in at least five decades, and the apartment industry is suffering like other industries," noted Mark Obrinsky, NMHC's Chief Economist. "Capital remains difficult to obtain, and the sharp and continuing drop in employment, in particular, is sapping demand for apartments in markets throughout the country."
“Interestingly,” he continued, “despite considerable media focus on the “shadow rental” market, only a slim majority of respondents noted greater competition from condos and single-family rentals than in previous years.”
The Market Tightness Index, which measures changes in occupancy rates and/or rents, rose to 16 from 11 last quarter. Nevertheless, 73 percent of respondents said markets were looser (meaning higher vacancy and/or lower rents). While this was the seventh straight quarter in which the index has been below 50, the low reading may partially represent normal seasonal weakness.

Click on graph for larger image in new window.
This graph shows the quarterly Apartment Tightness Index.
It is common in a recession for apartment vacancies to rise, as households double up by moving in with a friend or family member. However an added factor in this recession is all the single family homes being offered as rentals. This is possible additional competition for apartments:
In a special fifth question to NMHC’s Quarterly Survey, one-third (33 percent) said such competition [from condos and single-family rentals] was unchanged. Another four percent thought there was less competition, and 11 percent don’t consider condos and single-family rentals to be significant competition for apartments in their markets. A slightly majority, 52 percent, did report more competition from condos and single-family rentals than in previous years.Competition from condos and single-family rentals probably depends on location.
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Chrysler Bankruptcy Issues
by Calculated Risk on 4/30/2009 11:46:00 PM
For those interested in the legal issues surrounding the Chrysler bankruptcy, here are a couple of posts from attorney Steven Jakubowski.
First, an overview of situation and Chrysler balance sheet:
Part I: Assessing The Financial Carnage
Second, a discussion of some of the legal issues:
Part II: Testing The Limits Of Section 363 Sales
Jakubowski concludes:
So, who will win? Really, only the true speculator and/or holder of Chrysler credit default swaps will (and perhaps Fiat if they--unlike their predecessors--can make it work), as my first post on the financial carnage at Chrysler demonstrates. My guess is that after much briefing, discovery, and expedited litigation over the next 60 days, Judge Gonzalez will show enough angst to worry both sides that they stand to lose, thus resulting in a compromise that settles the matter and allows the transaction to go forward. But with all Chrysler plants and operations now idled pending a final sale, the pressure to get the deal consummated and return people to work will be so overwhelming that it's hard to imagine Judge Gonzalez not approving the transaction in some form that's acceptable to everyone (except perhaps the dissenting lenders).


