by Calculated Risk on 12/07/2009 08:57:00 AM
Monday, December 07, 2009
Trapped under TARP: Regional Banks and Real Estate Loans
From Bloomberg: No Escape From TARP for U.S. Banks Choking on Real Estate Loans
... mounting defaults on commercial property may keep regional lenders from repaying bailout funds until at least 2011.Basically small and regional banks were over concentrated in C&D (Construction and Development) and CRE (Commercial Real Estate) loans - and those areas are still under severe stress (CRE will get worse). This is why the FDIC is busy every Friday, and also why many of these small and regional banks will be stuck with TARP for some time (or even fail owing money to the Treasury).
... regional banks ... are almost four times more concentrated in commercial property loans than the nation’s biggest lenders, according to data compiled by Bloomberg on bailout recipients.
The concentration makes regulators less likely to let regional lenders ... leave the Troubled Asset Relief Program, analysts said.
...
The stakes for taxpayers include whether they’ll get back $36.6 billion held by 35 of the largest regional lenders that received TARP money.
...
Among 35 of the biggest regional lenders that retain TARP funds, commercial real estate and construction loans average 37 percent of total loans, compared with 9.5 percent at Citigroup Inc. and Wells Fargo & Co., the two biggest U.S. banks that haven’t announced plans to repay the government, according to data compiled by Bloomberg....
Treasury Forecasts Smaller Loss from TARP
by Calculated Risk on 12/07/2009 12:16:00 AM
From the NY Times: U.S. Forecasts Smaller Loss From Bailout of Banks
The Treasury Department expects to recover all but $42 billion of the $370 billion it has lent to ailing companies since the financial crisis began last year, with the portion lent to banks actually showing a slight profit, according to a new Treasury report.And from the WSJ: Estimated TARP Cost Is Cut by $200 Billion
The new assessment of the $700 billion bailout program, provided by two Treasury officials on Sunday ahead of a report to Congress on Monday, is vastly improved from the Obama administration’s estimates last summer of $341 billion in potential losses from the Troubled Asset Relief Program. ...
The officials said the government could ultimately lose $100 billion more from the bailout program in new loans to banks, aid to troubled homeowners and credit to small businesses.
The article notes that this will reduce the deficit significantly this year.
Sunday, December 06, 2009
Financial Times: Bear Stearns and Lehman Executives Cashed in before Collapse
by Calculated Risk on 12/06/2009 09:18:00 PM
From Lucian Bebchuk, Alma Cohen, and Holger Spamann in the Financial Times: Bankers had cashed in before the music stopped
According to the standard narrative, the meltdown of Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers largely wiped out the wealth of their top executives. ... That standard narrative, however, turns out to be incorrect. ... our analysis ... shows the banks’ top five executives had cashed out such large amounts since the beginning of this decade that, even after the losses, their net pay-offs during this period were substantially positive.It appears these executives were incentivized to gamble.
excerpted with permission
Mark Thoma has more excerpts Did Bank Executives Lose Enough to Learn their Lesson?
Employment and Real GDP
by Calculated Risk on 12/06/2009 04:52:00 PM
Based on the recent trend in the employment report, the U.S. economy might start adding net payroll jobs soon. This post looks at payroll employment vs. the change in real GDP, and estimates the unemployment rate in 12 months for several growth scenarios.
Credit: This idea is from a recent research note by Jan Hatzius.
Note: This is similar to Okun's relationship between GDP and unemployment.
Click on graph for larger image.
The first graph shows the four quarter change in real GDP and the four quarter change in employment, as a percent of payroll employment (to normalize for changes in payroll over time).
The second graph shows the same data in a scatter graph.
There is a clear relationship - the higher the change in the real GDP, the larger the increase in payroll employment.
This shows that real GDP has to grow at a sustained rate of about 1% just to keep the net change in payroll jobs at zero.
A 3% increase in real GDP (over a year) would lead to about a 1.5% increase in payroll employment. With approximately 131 million payroll jobs, a 1.5% increase in payroll employment would be just under 2 million jobs over the next year - and the unemployment rate would probably remain close to 10%.
The following table summarizes several growth scenarios. The unemployment rate is from the household survey and depends on the number of people in the work force - so it cannot be calculated directly. The table uses a range of unemployment rates based on 1.6 to 2.1 million people entering the workforce over the next 12 months (a combination of population growth and discouraged workers reentering the work force).
| Real GDP Growth | Percent Payroll Growth | Annual Payroll Growth (000s) | Monthly Payroll Growth (000s) | Approximate Unemployment Rate in One Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6.0% | 3.5% | 4,563 | 380 | 8.0% to 8.3% |
| 5.0% | 2.8% | 3,684 | 307 | 8.6% to 8.9% |
| 4.0% | 2.1% | 2,806 | 234 | 9.1% to 9.4% |
| 3.0% | 1.5% | 1,928 | 161 | 9.7% to 10.0% |
| 2.0% | 0.8% | 1,049 | 87 | 10.3% to 10.6% |
| 1.0% | 0.1% | 171 | 14 | 10.8% to 11.1% |
I expect a sluggish recovery in 2010, and I think the unemployment rate will stay near 10% for the next year. Those expecting a sharp drop in the unemployment rate are clearly expecting real GDP growth of 5% or more.
Obviously higher growth rates would mean an even quicker decline in the unemployment rate, and a decline in real GDP would mean much higher unemployment rates.
Summary and a Look Ahead
by Calculated Risk on 12/06/2009 12:00:00 PM
Scheduled data for the coming week include the trade report (Thursday) and retail sales (Friday). Also the Treasury is expect to release the Making Home Affordable Program data for November this week and include additional metrics such as the number of permanent modifications and the number of failed trial modifications.
The number of permanent modifications is expected to be in the 10s of thousand.
Also, the Federal Reserve will release the Q3 Flow of Funds report on Thursday.
And a summary ...
The employment report showed a decline of 11,000 payroll jobs in November and a decline in the unemployment rate to 10.0% (from 10.2%). The smaller number of payroll jobs lost was surprising because other indicators (like the ADP report, weekly initial unemployment claims, ISM reports) suggested a larger number of job losses.
From Employment Report: 11K Jobs Lost, 10% Unemployment Rate.
Click on graph for larger image.This graph shows the job losses from the start of the employment recession, in percentage terms (as opposed to the number of jobs lost).
For the current recession, employment peaked in December 2007, and this recession is the worst recession since WWII in percentage terms, and 2nd worst in terms of the unemployment rate (only early '80s recession with a peak of 10.8 percent was worse).
Note: The total number of jobs lost does not include the preliminary benchmark payroll revision of minus 824,000 jobs. (This is the preliminary estimate of the annual revision that will be announced early in 2010).
From Seasonal Retail Hiring, Employment-Population Ratio, Part Time Workers
Retailers are hiring seasonal workers at slightly above the pace of last year ...
Typically retail companies start hiring for the holiday season in October, and really increase hiring in November. Here is a graph that shows the historical net retail jobs added for October, November and December by year.Retailers only hired 54.2 thousand workers (NSA) net in October. This was essentially the same as in 2008 (59.1 thousand NSA). However retailers hired 321.3 thousand workers in November (NSA), an increase from the 233.7 thousand last year. This suggests retailers are a little more optimistic than last year.
From Unemployment: Record number Unemployed over 26 Weeks, Diffusion Index
The blue line is the number of workers unemployed for 27 weeks or more. The red line is the same data as a percent of the civilian workforce.According to the BLS, there are a record 5.887 million workers who have been unemployed for more than 26 weeks (and still want a job). This is a record 3.8% of the civilian workforce. (note: records started in 1948)
Other Employment posts:
If the Economy lost Jobs, why did the Unemployment Rate decline?
Temporary Help
Manufacturing showed slower expansion: From the Institute for Supply Management: November 2009 Manufacturing ISM Report On Business®
Economic activity in the manufacturing sector expanded in November for the fourth consecutive month ...Services showed contraction: From the Institute for Supply Management: November 2009 Non-Manufacturing ISM Report On Business®
Economic activity in the non-manufacturing sector contracted in November after two consecutive months of expansion ...
This graph shows private residential and nonresidential construction spending since 1993. Note: nominal dollars, not inflation adjusted.Residential construction spending increased in October, and nonresidential spending continued to decline.
Private residential construction spending is now 63% below the peak of early 2006.
Private non-residential construction spending is 20.6% below the peak of last October.
This graph shows the historical light vehicle sales (seasonally adjusted annual rate) from the BEA (blue) and an estimate for November (red, light vehicle sales of 10.93 million SAAR from AutoData Corp).Obviously sales were boosted significantly by the "Cash-for-clunkers" program in August and some in July.
Excluding July and August, this was the strongest month since October 2008 (12.5 million SAAR) before sales fell off the final cliff.
The current level of sales are still very low, and are below the lowest point for the '90/'91 recession (even with a larger population).
Best wishes to all.From the American Bankruptcy Institute: November Consumer Bankruptcy Filings Drop 18 Percent from Previous Month HUD's Donovan: "Next Steps" for FHA Fed's Beige Book: Economy "improved modestly" Restaurant Index Shows Contraction in October Hotel RevPAR off 8.4 Percent Unofficial Problem Bank List, Dec 4, 2009


