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Friday, May 15, 2009

CNBC: Record Credit Card Defaults in April

by Calculated Risk on 5/15/2009 03:03:00 PM

From CNBC: Credit Card Defaults Reach Record Highs in April

U.S. credit card defaults rose in April to record highs, with Citigroup and Wells Fargo posting double digit loss rates ...
AprilMarch
Citigroup10.21%9.66%
Wells Fargo10.03%9.68%
JPMorgan Chase8.07%7.13%
Discover Financial Services8.26%7.39%

And the beat goes on ...

LA Area Port Traffic

by Calculated Risk on 5/15/2009 02:00:00 PM

Note: this is not seasonally adjusted.

Sometimes port traffic gives us an early hint of changes in the trade deficit. The following graph shows the loaded inbound and outbound traffic at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach in TEUs (TEUs: 20-foot equivalent units or 20-foot-long cargo container). Although containers tell us nothing about value, container traffic does give us an idea of the volume of goods being exported and imported.

LA Area Port Traffic Click on graph for larger image in new window.

Inbound traffic was 21.5% below April 2008.

Outbound traffic was 18.3% below April 2008.

There has been some slight recovery in exports the last two months (the year-over-year comparison was off 30% from December through February). But this is the 2nd worst YoY comparison for imports - only February was worse, and that might have been related to the Chinese New Year. So imports from Asia appear especially weak.

This suggests a little more improvement in the trade balance with Asia in the April trade report. Of course the overall trade deficit will probably be worse because of rising oil prices.

House Price Puzzle: Mid-to-High End

by Calculated Risk on 5/15/2009 12:33:00 PM

House Price Puzzle Click on puzzle for larger image in new window.

I've linked to a few pieces of the puzzle below.

But this adds up to more supply (in the mid-to-high end) because of rising foreclosures - and limited demand because sellers at the low end are mostly banks or short sales (so there are no move up buyers), and tight financing.

To me, this suggests prices will fall much further in many mid-to-high end areas.

  • Surging prime delinquencies.

    See: OCC: More Seriously Delinquent Prime Loans than Subprime

    and Fannie, Freddie Report Surge in Prime Delinquencies

    and S&P: Delinquencies Surge for HELOCs and Jumbo Prime Loans

  • Option ARM Loan Recasts are coming.

    See: Loan Reset / Recast Schedule

  • Limited Jumbo Financing

    See: More Jumbo Financing Coming

  • Few Move up buyers

    See: Home Sales: One and Done

    And even more shadow supply, see: High Percentage of Homeowners Waiting for a Market Turnaround

  • FDIC's Bair: Some Bank CEOs will be Replaced

    by Calculated Risk on 5/15/2009 11:51:00 AM

    2nd Update: From FDIC: FDIC Statement Clarifying Bloomberg Article

    Statement from the FDIC Office of Public Affairs, "The Bloomberg story referencing Chairman Bair's discussion of management and board changes is misleading and does not provide the proper context of her comments. Chairman Bair said that management changes could happen based on the capital plans that an institution must submit to the government. She did not refer to CEOs specifically and the comment was in the context of capital plans submitted by the institutions. Chairman Bair also did not suggest the federal government will remove the bank CEOs."

    Transcript of the exchange from Bloomberg follows:

    MR. HUNT: But in the same situation, or similar situation, the government already replaced CEOs at Fannie and Freddie and General Motors -

    MS. BAIR: Yes, that's right.

    MR. HUNT: And some people say, well, why is the head of Bank of America still there? Or why are some of these other banks' CEO's still there?

    MS. BAIR: Right, well, obviously I don't comment on open and operating institutions. I think the review needs to go with both the management and the boards as well, absolutely. And management needs to be evaluated and is this the right skill set, have they been doing a good job, are there people who can do a better job, those kinds of questions.

    MR. HUNT: Do you think some will be replaced in the next couple of months without getting into the particulars?

    MS. BAIR: Yeah, I think there will be an evaluation process. We're requesting it as part of the capital plan and yes.
    Update: From Bloomberg: Bair Says Some Bank Chiefs Will Be Replaced in Next Few Months

    From FDIC's Sheila Bair on Political Capital with Al Hunt this weekend (Bloomberg TV):

  • Some Bank CEOs will be replaced in next few months

  • 'No one accountable' for entire U.S. banking system

  • U.S. needs to fill 'hole' on oversight of holding companies

  • U.S. to have management 'evaluation' process at banks

  • 'Need is still there' to remove toxic assets from banks

  • Liquidity crisis is over

  • Industrial Production Declines, now 16% Below Peak

    by Calculated Risk on 5/15/2009 09:15:00 AM

    The Federal Reserve reported:

    Industrial production decreased 0.5 percent in April after having fallen 1.7 percent in March. Production in manufacturing declined 0.3 percent in April and was 16.0 percent below its recent peak in December 2007. The decreases in manufacturing in April remained broadly based across industries. Outside of manufacturing, the output of mines fell 3.2 percent, as oil and gas field drilling and support activities continued to drop. The output of utilities moved up 0.4 percent. At 97.1 percent of its 2002 average, industrial output in April was 12.5 percent below its year-earlier level. The capacity utilization rate for total industry fell further in April, to 69.1 percent, a low over the history of this series, which begins in 1967.
    emphasis added
    Capacity Utilization Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph shows Capacity Utilization. This series is at another record low (the series starts in 1967).

    In addition to the weakness in industrial production, there is little reason for investment in new production facilities until capacity utilization recovers.