by Calculated Risk on 9/15/2009 10:26:00 AM
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Ghost Towns in Ireland
From Bloomberg: Ghost Towns May Haunt Ireland in Property Loan Gamble (ht Mike In Long Island)
Finance Minister Brian Lenihan will detail tomorrow how much Ireland will pay for about 90 billion euros ($131 billion) of real estate loans now crippling what as recently as 2006 was one of Europe’s most dynamic economies.The government is taking over most of the non-residential property loans in Ireland. It is amazing that these loans total about half of Ireland's GDP (not including residential).
...
The National Asset Management Agency, known as NAMA, will buy 18,000 loans at a discount from lenders led by Allied Irish Banks Plc and Bank of Ireland Plc. The agency will manage the loans, which amount to about half of Ireland’s gross domestic product. ... Most of the property-related loans of the biggest Irish banks are being taken over by the agency, excluding residential mortgages.
...
The office vacancy rate at the end of the second quarter was 21 percent in Dublin, compared with 8 percent in London and 10 percent in Berlin, according to CB Richard Ellis Group Inc. As many as 35,000 new homes are now vacant, estimates Davy, the country’s largest securities firm, up from 20,000 18 months ago.
emphasis added
Bernanke on Financial Crisis of 2008
by Calculated Risk on 9/15/2009 10:02:00 AM
Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke speaking on the financial crisis of 2008.
A live feed from C-SPAN.
From the Fed: Reflections on a Year of Crisis
NOTE: This is the same speech he gave last month. A history review ...
Retail Sales increase in August
by Calculated Risk on 9/15/2009 08:30:00 AM
On a monthly basis, retail sales increased 2.7% from July to August (seasonally adjusted), and sales are off 5.3% from August 2008 (retail ex food services decreased 6.3%).
Excluding motor vehicles, retail sales were up 1.1%.
The following graph shows the year-over-year change in nominal and real retail sales since 1993.
Click on graph for larger image in new window.
To calculate the real change, the core PCI price index from the BLS was used (August prices were estimated as the average increase over the previous 3 months).
Real retail sales (ex food services) declined by 6.3% on a YoY basis.
The second graph shows real retail sales (adjusted with PCE) since 1992. This is monthly retail sales, seasonally adjusted.
NOTE: The graph doesn't start at zero to better show the change.
This shows that retail sales fell off a cliff in late 2008, and appear to have bottomed, but at a much lower level.
Here is the Census Bureau report:
The U.S. Census Bureau announced today that advance estimates of U.S. retail and food services sales for August, adjusted for seasonal variation and holiday and trading-day differences, but not for price changes, were $351.4 billion, an increase of 2.7 percent (±0.5%) from the previous month, but 5.3 percent (±0.7%) below August 2008. Total sales for the June through August 2009 period were down 7.6 percent (±0.3%) from the same period a year ago. The June to July 2009 percent change was revised from -0.1 percent (±0.5%)* to -0.2 percent (±0.2%)*.It appears the cliff diving is over and the official recession probably ended in July. But retail sales are still far below the pre-recession level, and the recovery will probably be sluggish.
Monday, September 14, 2009
More on U.S. Possibly Selling Citi Stake
by Calculated Risk on 9/14/2009 11:04:00 PM
From the WSJ: Citigroup Explores Bid to Pare U.S. Stake
The tentative aim is for a joint stock sale. Under this scenario, Citigroup would issue as much as $5 billion in new shares, while the government would simultaneously sell an undetermined amount of the stock it is holding ... Citigroup could use proceeds from a stock sale to redeem some of the preferred stock the Treasury is holding ...If I have the numbers correct, the total U.S. bailout of Citi was $45 billion (not including guarantees). Then $25 billion of preferred stock was converted to common at $3.25 per share in February - and that is the 7.69 billion common shares we all own (through the Treasury).
The government converted its preferred shares into common stock at $3.25 a share. Citigroup's shares closed Monday at $4.52. That means the government's 7.7 billion shares have gained about $9.8 billion.
So the U.S. still holds $20 billion in preferred stock. This would be a start, although it might be premature considering all the toxic assets Citi probably still holds.
Report: U.S. Discussing Selling Citi Shares
by Calculated Risk on 9/14/2009 07:35:00 PM
From Bloomberg: U.S. Said to Explore Selling Stock Acquired in Citigroup Rescue (ht jb)
Bloomberg is reporting that the Treasury and Citigroup are discussing how the U.S. can sell the 34 percent stake (7.7 billion shares) that the U.S. acquired as part of the bailout. At $4.50 per share, the U.S. stake is worth almost $35 billion.
In the February bailout, the U.S. increased it's common stake in Citi by converting $25 billion in preferred shares into common. And the U.S. is still also guaranteeing about $306 billion in assets (per the bailout agreement last November).
But selling some common would be a good first step ...


