by Calculated Risk on 9/05/2011 10:42:00 PM
Monday, September 05, 2011
Monday Night Futures and Europe
The European markets declined sharply on Monday. The DAX was off 5.3%, the FTSE 100 off 3.6%.
From the WSJ: Europe Signals Global Gloom
[This is] a pivotal week that includes the European Central Bank's monthly decision on interest rates and a decision by a German court on the legality of Germany's participation in Europe's €440 billion ($625 billion) rescue fund.And from the NY Times: Europeans Talk of Sharp Change in Fiscal Affairs
The ECB purchased Italian and Spanish government bonds Monday in a bid to keep 10-year borrowing costs from rising further above 5% ... The ECB has purchased over €50 billion in bonds since reactivating the program four weeks ago.
The idea is to create a central financial authority — with powers in areas like taxation, bond issuance and budget approval — that could eventually turn the euro zone into something resembling a United States of Europe.The Asian markets are red tonight with the Nikkei down over 1%.
...
Nothing happens quickly in Europe, however. For the most part, such efforts are still being made behind the scenes.
...
The idea of a European Treasury that would enforce fiscal discipline on wayward countries ... Those in prosperous nations like Germany do not want to see their taxes used to bail out countries that borrowed their way into trouble. And those in weaker nations are reluctant to allow outsiders to dictate how their governments spend their money and tax their citizens.
From CNBC: Pre-Market Data and Bloomberg futures: the S&P 500 is down about 28 points, and Dow futures are down about 250 points.
Oil: WTI futures are down to $84 and Brent is up to $110.
Labor Day: Few Labor Stories
by Calculated Risk on 9/05/2011 04:02:00 PM
With the unemployment rate at 9.1% and almost 14 million Americans unemployed, with the alternate measure of unemployment (U-6) at 16.2%, with 6 million workers unemployed for more than 6 months, and with 6.9 million fewer payroll jobs than at the beginning of the 2007 recession, one might think every major publication would lead with a labor story on Labor Day. One would be wrong.
A quick glance shows zero labor stories on the front page on the NY Times - or on the Business page. Zero. Zip. Zilch. Nada.
LA Times? Same story - no stories.
The WSJ? One story, sort of. Infrastructure Likely Part Of Obama Jobs Push
President Barack Obama signaled Monday he'll propose a major infrastructure program and an extension of a payroll tax break in the jobs speech he planned to deliver Thursday before a joint session of Congress.The WaPo? A few opinion pieces.
CNBC? You guessed it. Zip.
Here is a new survey: Out of Work and Losing Hope: The Misery and Bleak Expectations of American Workers (ht Ann)
The unemployed are pessimistic about the prospects of an economic recovery, and have gotten more so over time. In August 2009, 56% thought that the economy would begin to recover within two years. Now, two years later, only 29% think the economy will begin to recover in the next two years. Another 30% are thinking in a time frame of three to five years, leaving 42% that believe that economic recovery is more than five years down the road. This is a strong statement about the likelihood of recovery: almost three quarters of the unemployed do not see an economic recovery even in the space of the next two years.Misery. Bleak expectations. And almost no labor stories ... on Labor Day.
Construction Employment Update
by Calculated Risk on 9/05/2011 11:55:00 AM
The graph below shows the number of total construction payroll jobs in the U.S., including both residential and non-residential, since 1969.
Construction employment is down 2.2 million jobs from the peak in April 2006, but up slightly this year (through the August BLS report).
Unfortunately this graph is a combination of both residential and non-residential construction employment. The BLS only started breaking out residential construction employment fairly recently (residential building employees in 1985, and residential specialty trade contractors in 2001).
Click on graph for larger image in graph gallery.
Mostly moving sideways ...
Usually residential investment (and residential construction) lead the economy out of recession, and non-residential construction usually lags the economy. Because this graph is a blend, it masks the usual pickup in residential construction following previous recessions. Of course residential investment didn't lead the economy this time because of the huge overhang of existing housing units.
This table below shows the annual change in construction jobs (total, residential and non-residential) and through August for 2011.
| Annual Change in Payroll jobs (000s) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Year | Total Construction Jobs | Residential Construction Jobs | Non-Residential |
| 2002 | -85 | 88 | -173 |
| 2003 | 127 | 161 | -34 |
| 2004 | 290 | 230 | 60 |
| 2005 | 416 | 268 | 148 |
| 2006 | 152 | -62 | 214 |
| 2007 | -198 | -273 | 75 |
| 2008 | -787 | -510 | -277 |
| 2009 | -1053 | -431 | -622 |
| 2010 | -149 | -113 | -36 |
| Through August 2011 | 26 | 14 | 12 |
After five consecutive years of job losses for residential construction (and four years for total construction), this is a baby step in the right direction. However there will not be a strong increase in residential construction until the excess supply of housing is absorbed.
In addition residential investment has made a positive contribution to GDP so far this year for the first time since 2005. A small contribution - but a positive one.
Europe: Service Sector Slows, Stocks Fall, Bond Yields move higher
by Calculated Risk on 9/05/2011 08:50:00 AM
From the Telegraph: "Eurozone service sector [slowed] and the Purchasing Managers Index figures show services activity slowed to its lowest rate since September 2009. The eurozone PMI figure slipped to 51.5 in August, down from 51.6 in July."
"The [U.K.] guage of services activity, which makes up the biggest part of the British economy and includes shops and restaurants, fell to 51.1 in August from 55.4 in July"
From the WSJ: U.S. Lawsuit Pressures Bank Shares
Shares in U.K. and European banks slumped Monday after several institutions were named in a lawsuit Friday alleging they sold risky home loans to U.S. housing agencies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.The Greek 2 year yield is at 49.99%!
The suit by the Federal Housing Finance Agency in New York and Connecticut courts alleged that units of 17 banks including Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC, Barclays PLC, HSBC Holdings PLC, Deutsche Bank AG, Credit Suisse AG and Société Générale SA, misrepresented the risks of $196 billion in home mortgage-loan securities sold to the agencies in a four-year period, making it the largest legal action by a federal regulator over the mortgage meltdown.
Here is a graph of the 10 year spread (Italy to Germany) from Bloomberg. And for Spain to Germany. The Italian spread is at 365, most of the way back up to the high of 389 on Aug 4th, and the Spanish spread is at 330, still down from 398 on Aug 4th. Most of the increase in the spread is because the German 10 year yield is at 1.9%. (The U.S. Ten Year is slightly under 2% too).
The Portuguese 2 year yield is up to 13.6%. Also the Irish 2 year yield is at 8.5%.
Here are the links for bond yields for several countries (source: Bloomberg):
| Greece | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Portugal | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Ireland | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Spain | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Italy | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Belgium | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| France | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
| Germany | 2 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
Europe Update
by Calculated Risk on 9/05/2011 12:12:00 AM
A couple of points from the WSJ: Euro Falls on Greece Worries
Rival [German] parties gained fresh support in the elections Sunday, piling further pressure on [Chancellor Angela] Merkel ... the loss of regional influence comes as Merkel's party prepares for a much-anticipated vote in the German parliament at the end of the month on changes to the euro-zone's temporary bailout mechanism.And from Reuters: German court to rule on Sept 7 on euro,Greek bailouts
...
The news follows Friday's suspension of talks between the Greek government and representatives of the International Monetary Fund, European Central Bank and European Commission over new bailout funds.
Germany's constitutional court will announce its verdict on September 7 on whether the government broke the law with last year's euro zone and Greek bailout packages, it said in a statement on Tuesday.It is unlikely the court will rule against the bailout, but Merkel is losing political support. It appears the changes to the bailout mechanism will pass the German parliament, but the vote might be close.
The European crisis is heating up again ...


