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Sunday, December 06, 2009

Temporary Help

by Calculated Risk on 12/06/2009 09:12:00 AM

Tom Abate writes in the San Francisco Chronicle: In economic woes, firms count on temp workers

A surge in temporary employment was one of the encouraging aspects of a Labor Department report issued Friday.
Temporary Help Click on graph for larger image.

This graph shows temporary help services (seasonally adjusted) and the unemployment rate. Unfortunately the data on temporary help services only goes back to 1990, but it does appear temporary help and the unemployment rate have been inversely correlated.

The thinking is that before companies hire permanent employees following a recession, employers will first increase the hours worked of current employees and also hire temporary employees. Since the number of temporary workers increased sharply, some people think this might be signaling the beginning of an employment recovery.

Tom Abate adds some caution:
BLS economist Amar Mann said an analysis by the San Francisco office suggests that employers are getting more sophisticated about using temp hiring as a clutch to downshift into recessions and upshift into recoveries.

Mann said temp jobs started down a month after overall employment dropped during the 1990-91 recession. But by the 2001 downturn, employers started cutting temps about five months before they started issuing pink slips to the general workforce.

In the current recession, he said, companies began shedding temps 12 months before they started cutting permanent payrolls.

A similar pattern prevailed in the two prior recoveries, Mann said. Temp jobs came back at the same time as overall employment after the 1991 recovery. Temporary employment rebounded five months before the general job market turned positive following the 2001 dip.

If that pattern holds, it could be next summer before general payrolls start to grow.

Mann refused to speculate about the timing, but said temps are playing an increasing role in the job cycle.

"Employers are getting more savvy about using just-in-time labor on the way down and on the way up," he said.
So use the increase in temporary help with caution.

Is Dubai Holding the next Dubai World?

by Calculated Risk on 12/06/2009 01:22:00 AM

From The Times: Banks face fresh Dubai debt fears

FEARS are growing among western banks that Dubai Holding, the personal investment vehicle of the emirate’s ruler, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, will be the next state-owned Dubai company to default.

The conglomerate went on a debt-fuelled spending spree in the past decade, borrowing $12 billion (£7.3 billion) to fund ambitious projects ...

Together, Dubai World and Dubai Holding are thought to account for 60% to 70% of Dubai’s total debt. Research from Bank of America Merrill Lynch indicates that Dubai Holding has $1.8 billion due for repayment next year.
Just more potential losses for the Royal Bank of Scotland and HSBC.

Saturday, December 05, 2009

Fannie and Freddie Put Back More Loans to Lenders

by Calculated Risk on 12/05/2009 09:09:00 PM

From the WSJ: Soured Loans Put Lenders on the Hook

As home loans sour at a rapid clip, mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are aggressively bouncing back defectively underwritten loans to lenders. The result: higher loan-loss reserves for the lenders and new headwind for banks trying to escape the housing downturn.

For lenders such as Wells Fargo & Co., Bank of America Corp., J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. and Citigroup Inc., which are among the largest sellers of mortgages to Fannie and Freddie, this could mean buying back souring loans at a loss.
...
Through Sept. 30, Freddie Mac put back about $2.7 billion of single-family mortgages to lenders, more than double the $1.2 billion of a year earlier.
...
In 2008, Fannie Mae bounced back roughly a quarter of the loans on 94,652 real-estate owned properties, or REOs, properties that have been reclaimed by Fannie after foreclosure. Through Sept. 30, Fannie Mae REO properties totaled 98,428. Many of these loans are plain-vanilla prime 30-year fixed-rate mortgages ...
It is a small number, but it is a start. These are mostly prime loans too - most of the subprime and Alt-A loans were securitized by Wall Street, not the GSEs.

Autos: Google Domestic Trends

by Calculated Risk on 12/05/2009 06:29:00 PM

We've looked at this resource from Google before: Domestic Trends. Google is tracking search trends for several specific sectors of the economy.

As an example, below is a screen capture of the Auto Buyers Index.

Google Auto Buyers Index Click on graph for larger image in new window.

This shows the seasonality of car buying, plus the Cash-for-clunkers surge in searches. Click on link for interactive graph - you can also plot the data YoY.

The YoY data for autos has recently turned slightly negative.

I also recommend real estate, rental and unemployment.

The YoY rental index has just turned positive, and the unemployment index has turned up again.

Jim the Realtor Shows some New Construction

by Calculated Risk on 12/05/2009 03:06:00 PM

Jim asks: "Wouldn't it be something if the builders end up beating the banks to the buyers? The banks are satisfied to drip them out - so the builders end up flooding the market and soak up all the buyers."