by Calculated Risk on 5/04/2009 12:55:00 PM
Monday, May 04, 2009
Report: Wells Fargo Asked to Raise Capital
From CNBC: Wells Fargo Is Asked to Raise More Capital After Stress Test
Regulators have told Wells Fargo to shore up its finances after government "stress tests" showed the bank would have trouble surviving a deeper recession.The leaks continue ... Citi, BofA, and Wells need to raise capital ... more to come.
Kansas Fed President Hoenig: Let Troubled Banks Fail
by Calculated Risk on 5/04/2009 11:51:00 AM
Dr. Thomas Hoenig, President of Federal Reserve of Kansas City speaks today in New York at Demos: A Better Way To Restore The Banking System
Yesterday Hoenig wrote in the Financial Times: Troubled banks must be allowed a way to fail. Excerpts below the video.
Here is a live webcast of Hoenig's speech (starts at 12:30PM ET):
Excerpts from Hoenig's opinion piece:
... I believe there is an alternative method for addressing this crisis that deals more effectively with the issues we currently face while also considering the long-run consequences of those actions: the implementation of a systematic plan to resolve large, problem financial institutions.
... Boiled down to its simplest elements, the plan would require those firms seeking government assistance to make the taxpayer senior to all shareholders, with the government determining the circumstances for managers and directors. ...
Non-viable institutions would be allowed to fail and be placed into a negotiated conservatorship or a bridge institution, with the bad assets liquidated while the remainder of the firm is operated under new management and re-privatised as soon as is feasible. This plan is similar to what was done in Sweden in the 1990s and in the US with the failure of Continental Illinois in the 1980s.
This plan has many advantages, including that management and shareholders bear the costs for their actions before taxpayer funds are committed. This process also is equitable across all firms; is similar to what is currently done with smaller banks; and provides a definitive process that should reduce market uncertainty. These are important reasons to implement this kind of resolution process.
....
Certainly, the approach I suggest for resolving these large firms also is not without substantial cost, but it looks to both the short and long run.
A systematic approach would reduce the uncertainty that has paralysed financial markets; the cost is more measurable and therefre manageable; and there will be fewer adverse consequences compared to the path we are on now.
Because we still have far to go in this crisis, there remains time to define a clear process for resolving large institutional failure. Without one, the consequences will involve a series of short-term events and far more uncertainty for the global economy in the long run.
While I agree that central banks must sometimes take actions affecting the short run, they must keep the long run in focus or risk failing their mission.
Private Construction Spending Declines Slightly in March
by Calculated Risk on 5/04/2009 10:01:00 AM
Private residential construction spending is 61.8% below the peak of early 2006.
Private non-residential construction spending is 5.7% below the peak of last September.
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 essentially flat on a year-over-year basis, and will turn strongly negative going forward. Residential construction spending is still declining, although the YoY change will probably be less negative going forward.
As I've noted before, these will probably be two key stories for 2009: the collapse in private non-residential construction, and the probable bottom for residential construction spending. Both stories are just developing ...
From the Census Bureau: February 2009 Construction at $967.5 Billion Annual Rate
Spending on private construction was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $661.0 billion, 0.1 percent (±1.4%) below the revised February estimate of $661.6 billion. Residential construction was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $258.4 billion in March, 4.2 percent (±1.3%) below the revised February estimate of $269.6 billion. Nonresidential construction was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $402.6 billion in March, 2.7 percent (±1.4%) above the revised February estimate of $392.0 billion.
Pending Home Sales Up Slightly in March
by Calculated Risk on 5/04/2009 10:00:00 AM
From MarketWatch: U.S. March pending home sales index up 3.2%
The housing market improved in March, a trade group said Monday. The pending home sales index rose 3.2% compared with February and was up 1.1% compared with a year earlier, the National Association of Realtors reported.Note: Existing home sales are reported at the close of escrow, pending home sales are reported when contracts are signed. The Pending Home Sales index leads existing home sales by about 45 days, so the March pending report suggests existing home sales will increase slightly from April to May. (March is the most recent existing home sales report).
Financial Times: BofA plans to raise more than $10 Billion in Capital
by Calculated Risk on 5/04/2009 12:48:00 AM
From the Financial Times: BofA and Citi in last push on stress tests
Citigroup and Bank of America are working on plans to raise more than $10bn each in fresh capital ... Citi, BofA and at least two other lenders will on Monday attempt to convince the Treasury and the Federal Reserve that the findings of “stress tests” into their financial health were too pessimistic.This will be an interesting week.
... the government will present the final test results to 19 banks tomorrow with an announcement scheduled for Thursday ...
emphasis added
David Leonhardt reports the NY Times: Tests of Banks May Bring Hope More Than Fear
The results of the bank stress tests to be released by the Obama administration this week are expected to include more detailed information about individual banks — assessing specific parts of their loan portfolios ...It sounds like regulators will release loss projections by the 12 loan categories included in the Fed White Paper: The Supervisory Capital Assessment Program: Design and Implementation


