by Calculated Risk on 2/27/2012 02:03:00 PM
Monday, February 27, 2012
Germany's Bundestag votes for Greek Bailout
Yesterday I listed some key events in Europe this week and over the next couple of months (list repeated below). The German Bundestag voted overwhelmingly today for the Greek Bailout.
From the WSJ: German Lawmakers Endorse Greek Bailout
Of 591 valid votes cast in the Bundestag, or lower house of Parliament, 496 lawmakers were in favor of the bailout, while 90 were against. Five lawmakers abstained.Feb 27th: Germany's Bundestag votes on Greek Bailout deal (done).
Chancellor Angela Merkel now has a mandate from Parliament to give her approval of the €130 billion ($174.8 bililon) aid package at a meeting of European Union leaders in Brussels this week.
Feb 29th: ECB three year Long Term Refinancing Operation (LTRO)
Feb 29th: Finland lawmakers vote on Greek Bailout deal.
March 1st and 2nd: EU leaders meet in Brussels.
March 8th: €200bn private sector bond swap is scheduled. From the Financial Times Alphaville: A special invitation from the Hellenic Republic ... "The invitation will expire at 9:00 P.M. (C.E.T.) on 8 March 2012, unless extended, re-opened, amended or terminated ..."
March 8th: ECB holds rate meeting
March 12th: Euro-area finance ministers meet in Brussels
March 20th: €14.4bn of Greek bonds scheduled to mature.
March 30th: Euro-area finance ministers meet in Copenhagen.
Late April: Proposed date for Greek general election.
April 22nd: France election.
NY Fed: Delinquent Debt Shrinks while Real Estate Debt Continues to Fall
by Calculated Risk on 2/27/2012 11:30:00 AM
From the NY Fed: Delinquent Debt Shrinks while Real Estate Debt Continues to Fall
Aggregate consumer debt fell $126 billion to $11.53 trillion in the fourth quarter of 2011 according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s latest Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit, a 1.1 percent decrease from the $11.66 trillion reported in the prior quarter’s findings.Here is the Q4 report: Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit. Here are two graphs:
...
Mortgage and home equity lines of credit (HELOC) balances fell a combined $146 billion, a sign that consumers continue to reduce housing related debt.
After a mild uptick in the third quarter, total household delinquency rates resumed their downward trend in the fourth quarter. The report finds that $1.12 trillion of consumer debt (or 9.8 percent of outstanding debt) is currently delinquent, with $824 billion seriously delinquent (at least 90 days late). Meanwhile about 2.2 percent of mortgage balances transitioned into delinquency during the fourth quarter, resuming the recent trend of reductions in this measure. However, delinquency rates remain elevated compared to historical figures.
"While we continue to see improvements in the delinquent balances and delinquency transition rates this quarter, there has been a noticeable decrease in the rate of improvement compared to 2009-2010," said Andrew Haughwout, vice president and economist at the New York Fed. "Overall it appears that delinquency rates are stabilizing at levels that remain significantly higher than pre-crisis levels."
The first graph shows aggregate consumer debt decreased slightly in Q4. From the NY Fed:
Aggregate consumer debt fell slightly in the fourth quarter. As of December 31, 2011, total consumer indebtedness was $11.53 trillion, a reduction of $126 billion (1.1%) from its September 30, 2011 level. Mortgage balances shown on consumer credit reports fell again ($134 billion or 1.6%) during the quarter; home equity lines of credit (HELOC) balances fell by $12 billion (1.9%). Household mortgage and HELOC indebtedness are now 11.0% and 11.7%, respectively, below their peaks. Consumer indebtedness excluding mortgage and HELOC balances again rose slightly ($20 billion or about 0.8%) in the quarter. Consumers’ non-real estate indebtedness now stands at $2.635 trillion. Student loan indebtedness rose slightly, to $867 billion.
From the NY Fed:
As of December 31, 9.8% of outstanding debt was in some stage of delinquency, compared to 10.0% on September 30. About $1.12 trillion of consumer debt is currently delinquent, with $824 billion seriously delinquent (at least 90 days late or “severely derogatory”).There are a number of credit graphs at the NY Fed site.
...
About 2.2% of current mortgage balances transitioned into delinquency during 2011Q4, reinstating the recent trend of reductions in this measure which had been temporarily reversed in 2011Q3. The rate of transition from early (30-60 days) into serious (90 days or more) delinquency also fell slightly, to 28.8%. This reduction in delinquency transitions was accompanied by an improved cure rate: 27.2% of mortgage balances in early delinquency became “current” during the fourth quarter.
NAR: Pending home sales increase in January
by Calculated Risk on 2/27/2012 10:07:00 AM
From the NAR: January Pending Home Sales Rise, Market on Uptrend
The Pending Home Sales Index, a forward-looking indicator based on contract signings, rose 2.0 percent to 97.0 in January from a downwardly revised 95.1 in December and is 8.0 percent higher than January 2011 when it was 89.8. The data reflects contracts but not closings.December was revised down from 96.6, so most of the 2% increase was due to the downward revision. Without the downward revision, this was below the consensus of a 1.5% increase.
The January index is the highest since April 2010 when it reached 111.3 as buyers were rushing to take advantage of the home buyer tax credit.
Contract signings usually lead sales by about 45 to 60 days, so this is for sales in February and March.
Consensus Housing Forecast for 2012: 700,000 starts
by Calculated Risk on 2/27/2012 08:55:00 AM
I guess we can call this the "consensus" forecast for housing starts, from the NABE: NABE Outlook February 2012
Housing starts are expected to increase 19 percent in 2012. The economists surveyed expect housing starts to reach 700,000 units in 2012, up from 610,000 in 2011 and an upward revision from the November forecast. The forecast for 2013 shows continued improvement, with housing starts reaching 850,000 units. Correspondingly, real residential investment is forecast to increase 6.6 percent in 2012, slightly higher than the 4.3 percent predicted in November, and then strengthen further, rising 10 percent in 2013. The projection for home prices in 2012 was lowered slightly from a projected increase in the FHFA index of 0.9 percent (Q4/Q4) in the November survey to home prices remaining unchanged in the February survey. In 2013 home prices are expected to increase slightly more than 2 percent.Here was housing economist Tom Lawler's forecast for 2012.
The following table shows several forecasts for 2012:
| Some Housing Forecasts for 2012 (000s) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| New Home Sales | Single Family Starts | Total Starts | |
| Consensus (NABE) | 700 | ||
| Merrill Lynch | 330 | 713 | |
| Fannie Mae | 336 | 473 | 704 |
| Wells Fargo | 350 | 457 | 690 |
| John Burns | 359 | 717 | |
| NAHB | 360 | 501 | 709 |
| Tom Lawler | 365 | 515 | 740 |
| Moody's | 530 | 687 | |
| 2011 Actual | 304 | 431 | 609 |
Sunday, February 26, 2012
Question Contest, iPad Update, RSS and Twitter
by Calculated Risk on 2/26/2012 09:23:00 PM
• For fun I've added a monthly question contest on the right sidebar. It takes a Facebook login right now. The contest has two parts: 1) every day, before 9:30 AM ET, you can enter whether you think the S&P 500 will be up or down that day, and 2) I'll ask some economic predictions (for March 1st, I'm asking: Will light vehicle sales increase in February compared to January?)
Contestants receive 1 point for each correct answer (either stocks or economic predictions). At the end of the month, starting in March, I'll list the leaders in a post on the blog. For February, I'm the leader (just a few friends entered). Hey, play along and beat CR!
• iPad layout. Based on feedback, I've switched the iPad layout back to the standard blog layout. For those who liked the touch layout, use this URL touch.calculatedriskblog.com
• RSS Feed: For those interested, here is the RSS feed for Calculatedrisk.
• on Twitter @calculatedrisk (My family friend Sasha Cohen, Olympic skater, economics student at Columbia and future hedge fund manager is on twitter @SashaCohenNYC)
Join the contest - beat CR!
Yesterday:
• Summary for Week ending February 24th
• Schedule for Week of February 26th


