by Calculated Risk on 8/04/2009 06:32:00 PM
Tuesday, August 04, 2009
Setser takes post with National Economic Council
by Calculated Risk on 8/04/2009 05:14:00 PM
Dr. Brad Setser, author of the blog "Follow the Money", has taken a new job with the National Economic Council. Unfortunately this means no more blogging for Brad.
Here is an excerpt from Brad's farewell post: All great things have to end
Fundamentally this blog was about an issue – the United States’ trade deficit, the offsetting trade surpluses in other parts of the world and the capital flows that made this sustained “imbalance” possible. Most of my early blog posts argued, in one way or another, that taking on external debt to finance a housing and consumption boom wasn’t the best of ideas. Even if (or especially if) the deficit was financed by governments rather than private markets.Brad and I have had a number of great discussions over the years, and his blog always provided great information and insight. Brad's work really helped clarify the relationship between the U.S. current account deficit (trade deficit) and the housing bubble.
Brad, congratulations! Thanks for everything, and I wish you all the best at your new job!
Consumer Products: "No trend of increasing orders"
by Calculated Risk on 8/04/2009 04:11:00 PM
Brian sent me these comments from Multi-Color Corp. (this company makes labels mostly for consumer product companies: P&G was 19% of Q1 sales and Miller Beer was 13%.)
Multi-Color: “While there is increasing evidence that the worst of the recession may be over, we remain cautious about sales volume for the remainder of the year. While you would expect inventories to be replenished as the economy stabilizes, we have not seen a trend of increasing orders to date.”The end of cliff diving is not the same as green shoots!
Analyst: Just a few questions. The first would be can you talk about the phasing of order flow by month over the course of the quarter? And can you provide any color on how July trended?
Frank Gerace, Multi-Color CEO: Yes, order flow actually was pretty decent during the month of June, better than May, and then as July came in, July began looking more like May, so there was an improvement during June and then it kind of went back to the way it was looking in May. And what we're seeing now is just steady, stable, steady orders, no increases that we can speak of to date.
emphasis added
Homebuilder D.R. Horton: Good News, Bad News
by Calculated Risk on 8/04/2009 03:15:00 PM
From D.R. Horton:
D.R. Horton ... today reported a net loss for its third fiscal quarter ended June 30, 2009 of $142.3 million ... The quarterly results included $110.8 million in pre-tax charges to cost of sales for inventory impairments and write-offs of deposits and pre-acquisition costs related to land option contracts that the Company does not intend to pursue. The net loss for the same quarter of fiscal 2008 was $399.3 million ... Homebuilding revenue for the third quarter of fiscal 2009 totaled $914.1 million, compared to $1.4 billion in the same quarter of fiscal 2008. Homes closed totaled 4,240 homes, compared to 6,167 homes in the year ago quarter.Horton is the largest homebuilder in the U.S.
...
Donald R. Horton, Chairman of the Board, said, “Our net sales orders in the June quarter reflected a 22% sequential increase from our March quarter which was stronger than our usual seasonal trend. However, market conditions in the homebuilding industry are still challenging, characterized by rising foreclosures, high inventory levels of available homes, increasing unemployment, tight credit for homebuyers and weak consumer confidence."
...
The Company’s cancellation rate (cancelled sales orders divided by gross sales orders) for the third quarter of fiscal 2009 was 26%.
emphasis added
The bad news is they are still losing money and sales are way off from last year.
The good news is sales in calendar Q2 (fiscal Q3) were "stronger than [the] usual seasonal trend", and also cancellations are back to early 2006 levels.
The surge in cancellation rates was an important story after the bubble burst because the Census Bureau doesn't correct inventory levels if contracts are cancelled. Now it appears cancellation rates might be returning to more normal levels.
Note: What matters for inventory is the change in cancellation rate from a couple of quarters earlier, not the absolute level. For those interested in how the Census Bureau handles cancellations, see here.
Click on graph for larger image in new window.This graph shows the cancellation rate for Horton since the top of the housing bubble.
There appears to be a seasonal pattern (fewer cancellations in Q1), so this decline in calendar Q2 is definitely significant.
The cancellation rate could rise again if mortgage rates move higher, but this is a little bit of good news for the builders. These cancellation rates are still above normal (Note: "Normal" for Horton is in the 16% to 20% range, so 26% is still high.), but most of the home builders are reporting the lowest cancellation rates since late 2005 or early 2006.
The really bad news for Horton - and all homebuilders - is that sales will not rebound for the reasons outlined by Mr. Horton above, especially because of the huge overhang of excess inventory. In the low priced areas where inventory is currently low and activity high, most of the homes are selling below replacement cost and the builders can't compete. The big question for the builders is: Can they make money at these sales levels? I think the answer for many of them is no.
ABI: Personal Bankruptcy Filings up 34.3 Percent compared to July 2008
by Calculated Risk on 8/04/2009 12:25:00 PM
From the American Bankruptcy Institute: Consumer Bankruptcy Filings Reach Highest Monthly Total Since 2005 Bankruptcy Law Overhaul
U.S. consumer bankruptcy filings reached 126,434 in July, the highest monthly total since the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act was implemented in October 2005, according to the American Bankruptcy Institute (ABI), relying on data from the National Bankruptcy Research Center (NBKRC). The July 2009 consumer filing total represented a 34.3 percent increase nationwide from the same period a year ago, and an 8.7 percent increase over the June 2009 consumer filing total of 116,365. Chapter 13 filings constituted 28.3 percent of all consumer cases in July, slightly above the June rate.
"Today's bankruptcy filing number reflects the sustained and growing financial stress on U.S. households," said ABI Executive Director Samuel J. Gerdano. "Rising unemployment on top of high pre-existing debt burdens is a formula for higher bankruptcies through the end of this year."
Click on graph for larger image in new window.This graph shows the non-business bankruptcy filings by quarter.
Note: Quarterly data from Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, 2009 based on monthly data from the American Bankruptcy Institute.
The quarterly rate is close to the levels prior to when the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (BAPCPA) took effect. There were over 2 million bankruptcies filed in Calendar 2005 ahead of the law change.
There have been 802 thousand personal bankrutpcy filings through July 2009, and the American Bankruptcy Institute is predicting over 1.4 million new bankruptcies by year end - I'll take the over!


