by Calculated Risk on 6/22/2012 02:18:00 PM
Friday, June 22, 2012
Reports: European Leaders to Push for €130 billion Stimulus
From the WSJ: European Leaders Push for €130 Billion to Help Growth
Italy, France, Spain and Germany agreed to push European leaders at a key summit next week to sign off on a €130 billion ($163 billion) euro plan aimed at increasing growth in Europe's beleaguered economies.This was a small meeting of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President François Hollande, Spanish Premier Mariano Rajoy, and Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti. This was preparation for the two day European summit in Brussels that starts next Thursday, June 28th.
From the NY Times: Euro Leaders Agree to Push for Stimulus Package
After a two-hour meeting here, the leaders of France, Germany, Spain and Italy also pledged to give a clearer, more comprehensive vision of the future, while acknowledging the serious crisis sweeping the Continent.
“The 130 billion euros is a strong signal,” French President Francois Hollande said at the news conference following the private meeting, and is part of “a road map that presupposes fiscal and banking union.”
Europe: Spain to make Official Aid Request Monday, ECB releases new Collateral Rules
by Calculated Risk on 6/22/2012 11:31:00 AM
More on Europe ...
From the WSJ: Spain to Make Official Aid Request Monday
Spain's government said Friday it plans to make its official request for European Union aid for its banking sector Monday, and expects to have the terms for such aid set by July 9, as discussions continue on ways to inject European aid funds directly into ailing Spanish banks.An unresolved question is how the bank bailout will work.
And from the ECB: ECB takes further measures to increase collateral availability for counterparties
On 20 June 2012 the Governing Council of the European Central Bank (ECB) decided on additional measures to improve the access of the banking sector to Eurosystem operations in order to further support the provision of credit to households and non-financial corporations.There are details in the press release on acceptable collateral and the associated haircuts.
The Governing Council has reduced the rating threshold and amended the eligibility requirements for certain asset-backed securities (ABSs). It has thus broadened the scope of the measures to increase collateral availability which were introduced on 8 December 2011 and which remain applicable.
A Different Look at Inflation: MIT's Billion Price Project
by Calculated Risk on 6/22/2012 09:19:00 AM
This is something I like to check occasionally as a differnt measure for inflation - as opposed to CPI from the BLS.
This is the US only index of the MIT Billion Prices Project.
This index uses prices for online goods. From MIT:
These indexes are designed to provide real-time information on major inflation trends, not to forecast official inflation announcements. We are constantly adding new categories of goods, but we do not cover 100% of CPI goods and services. The price of services, in particular, are not easy to find online and therefore are not included in our statistics.
It appears that year-over-year inflation is around 1.5%.
The recent monthly decline is probably related to oil and gasoline prices, but this is another measure that suggests inflation is not currently a problem.
Thursday, June 21, 2012
Residential Remodeling Index increases 2 percent in April
by Calculated Risk on 6/21/2012 09:54:00 PM
Residential remodels authorized by building permits in the United States in April were at a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of 2,729,000. This is 2 percent above the revised March rate of 2,683,000 and is 12 percent above the April 2011 estimate of 2,447,000.Three key components of residential investment are increasing: home improvement, new multi-family structures, and recently new single family structures.
Seasonally-adjusted annual rates of remodeling across the country in April 2012 are estimated as follows: Northeast, 397,656 (up 5% from March and up 11% from April 2011); South, 1,102,000 (up 5% from March and up 14% from April 2011); Midwest, 484,000 (down 11% from March and up 7% from April 2011); West, 768,000 (up 2% from March and up 10% from April 2011).
"Remodeling continues to grow steadily in the U.S. on a seasonally-adjusted basis; more residential remodeling projects were started in April 2012 than in any of the prior six Aprils," said Joe Emison, Vice President of Research and Development at BuildFax
Earlier on Existing Home Sales:
• Existing Home Sales in May: 4.55 million SAAR, 6.6 months of supply
• Existing Home Sales: Inventory and NSA Sales Graph • Existing Home Sales graphs
Different Views on QE3 Timing
by Calculated Risk on 6/21/2012 06:14:00 PM
Yesterday I argued that Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke had paved the way for QE3 as soon as August 1st, depending, as always, on incoming data. Others think the Fed will wait longer. Here are some different views:
From Merrill Lynch analysts (who all year have been predicting QE3 at the September FOMC meeting):
The Federal Reserve announced that it would extend Operation Twist through the end of the year, selling or rolling over $267bn of short-term holdings into longer-term Treasuries. We view this program as a down-payment on further easing: we still expect the Fed to launch QE3 in September and to push out its forward guidance to mid-2015 by August or September. Bernanke confirmed that the Fed stood ready to ease further if economic conditions warranted; under our forecast, deteriorating conditions will convince the Fed to ease again this fall.From Goldman Sachs analysts (who thought there was a high probability QE3 would be announced at the meeting yesterday):
The FOMC's communication was dovish. First, changes to the committee's economic outlook were larger than expected, with significant downgrades to real GDP growth and employment. Second, the FOMC put in place a more explicit easing bias in the statement, saying that it "is prepared to take further action" should the recovery--and the job market in particular--continue to disappoint.And quite a few people wonder - given the Fed's own projections - why the Fed didn't do QE3 yesterday. From Paul Krugman:
We believe further easing will be needed ... given our forecast for the economy--which remains below the Fed's own view--we also expect additional balance sheet expansion by early 2013.
However, the hurdle for additional balance sheet action in the next few months appears to be quite high. The fact that the FOMC took a "substantive" easing step today probably makes another easing move in the near term relatively unlikely.
The Fed has a dual mandate, employment and price stability. Its own projections show high unemployment persisting for years and years, inflation running below its target — and realistically its inflation projections are too high while its unemployment projections are too low. There is no rational argument I can see for not going all out with monetary stimulus.CR Note: Perhaps an argument against a QE3 announcement on August 1st is there will not be much data released between now and the next FOMC meeting. For employment, the only major report will be the June employment report to be released on July 6th. Also the advance estimate for Q2 GDP will be released on July 27th. Still, if the data is weak, I expect the FOMC to provide additional accommodation at the August meeting.
But what we actually got was action that was pretty obviously calculated to be the absolute least the Fed could do without generating headlines saying “Fed ignores weak economy”.


