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Wednesday, August 15, 2012

NY Fed Manufacturing Survey indicates contraction, CPI unchanged in July

by Calculated Risk on 8/15/2012 08:30:00 AM

• From the NY Fed: Empire State Manufacturing Survey

The general business conditions index slipped below zero for the first time since October 2011, falling thirteen points to -5.9. At -5.5, the new orders index was below zero for a second consecutive month, and the shipments index fell six points to 4.1.
...
The index for number of employees inched lower, but remained positive at 16.5, suggesting a moderate increase in employment levels, and the average workweek index rose to 3.5.
...
Indexes for the six-month outlook were generally positive but lower than in July, indicating that respondents expected business conditions to improve little in the months ahead.
This was the first regional manufacturing survey released for August. The general business conditions index was worse than expected and new orders were down.

The Philly Fed index was especially weak in June and July, and the August index will be released tomorrow.

From the BLS:
The Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) was unchanged in July on a seasonally adjusted basis, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Over the last 12 months, the all items index increased 1.4 percent before seasonal adjustment.
...
The index for all items less food and energy rose 0.1 percent in July, ending a streak of four consecutive 0.2 percent increases.
I'll post a graph later today after the Cleveland Fed releases the median and trimmed-mean CPI. This was below the consensus forecast of a 0.2% increase for CPI and a 0.2% increase in core CPI and makes QE3 more likely in September.

Report: Housing Inventory declines 19.3% year-over-year in July

by Calculated Risk on 8/15/2012 06:00:00 AM

From Realtor.com: July 2012 Real Estate Data

The total US for-sale inventory of single family homes, condos, townhomes and co-ops (SFH/CTHCOPS) remains at historic lows across the country, with 1.866 million units for sale in July, down -19.25% compared to a year ago and -39.80% below its peak of 3.10 million units in September, 2007 when Realtor.com began monitoring these markets.

The median age of the inventory of for sale listings was 88 days in July 2012, up slightly from June (84), but -9.27% below the median age one year ago (July 2011). While the median age of the inventory is highly seasonal, the year-over-year decline is consistent with other data showing a significant improvement in market conditions compared to one year ago.

For sale inventories of SFH/CTHCOPS in July declined on an annual basis in all but two of the 146 MSAs monitored by Realtor.com, with for-sale inventory dropping -20% or more in 67 of the 146 markets covered. Eight out of 10 MSAs with the largest year-over-year declines in their for-sale inventories in July 2012 are in California.

Only two areas experienced a year-over-year increase in their for-sale inventories— Shreveport, LA (+23.06%), and Philadelphia, PA (+3.04%).
The NAR is scheduled to report July existing home sales and inventory next week on Wednesday, August 22nd. The key number in the NAR report will be inventory, and inventory will be down sharply again year-over-year in July.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Wednesday: CPI, Industrial Production, NY Fed Manufacturing Survey, Homebuilder Confidence

by Calculated Risk on 8/14/2012 09:15:00 PM

First on Europe, from the WSJ: Euro Zone Economy Shrinks, Darkening Outlook

Economic activity in the 17-country currency bloc fell at an annualized rate of 0.7% in the second quarter after stagnating in the first three months of 2012, according to data from the European Union's statistics arm.
And on Greece from the Financial Times: Greece seeks two-year austerity extension
The extension plan calls for a slower adjustment with cuts spread over four years until 2016 ... Greece would need additional funding of €20bn
Excerpt with permission
Europe will be a hot topic in September and October (a few key dates here).

• On Wednesday, at 8:30 AM ET, the Consumer Price Index for July will be released. The consensus is for CPI to increase 0.2% in July and for core CPI to increase 0.2%.

• Also at 8:30 AM, the NY Fed Empire Manufacturing Survey for August will be released. The consensus is for a reading of 7.0, down from 7.4 in July (above zero is expansion).

• At 9:15 AM, theThe Fed will release Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization for July. The consensus is for Industrial Production to increase 0.5% in July, and for Capacity Utilization to increase to 79.2%.

• At 10:00 AM, The August NAHB homebuilder survey. The consensus is for a reading of 35, unchanged from 35 in July.

For the August economic prediction contest:

DataQuick: SoCal Home Sales increase year-over-year in July

by Calculated Risk on 8/14/2012 06:54:00 PM

From DataQuick: Southland Home Sales Up Again From 2011; Median Price Nears 4-Yr High

Southern California home sales rose above the year-ago level for the seventh consecutive month in July despite continued declines in low-end distress sales. Increased activity in move-up and high-end submarkets also contributed to a significant rise in the region’s median sale price, which neared a four-year high, a real estate information service reported.

“Even adjusting for changes in market mix, there’s growing evidence prices have crept up in areas where more demand has met a shrinking number of homes for sale. But we’re approaching the peak of the traditional spring-summer home-buying season. Whether these trends hold into the fall and winter isn’t clear. If they do, then logically the number of homes on the market would eventually rise to meet the demand. More owners will be interested in selling, knowing their homes are likely to fetch a higher price, and more people will shift from a negative to at least a slightly positive equity position, enabling them to sell. Home builders could rev up operations and lenders could push more distressed properties onto the market sooner. It would tame any price appreciation,” said John Walsh, DataQuick president.

In July, a total of 20,588 new and resale houses and condos sold in Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego, Ventura, San Bernardino and Orange counties. That was down 6.7 percent from 22,075 in June, and up 13.8 percent from 18,090 in July 2011.

Distressed property sales – the combination of foreclosure resales and short sales – made up 39.7 percent of last month’s resale market. That was the lowest level since the figure was 36.0 percent in January 2008.
The percent of distressed sales is still very high, but this is the lowest level since January 2008 - something we are seeing in most areas.

The median price is being impacted by the mix, with fewer low end distressed sales pushing up the median. This is why I focus on the repeat sales indexes.

The NAR is scheduled to report July existing home sales and inventory next week on Wednesday, August 22nd.

A couple earlier posts on housing:
House Prices and a Foreclosure Supply Shock
Lawler: Table of Short Sales and Foreclosures for Selected Markets

Lawler: Table of Short Sales and Foreclosures for Selected Markets

by Calculated Risk on 8/14/2012 03:18:00 PM

CR Note: Yesterday I posted some distressed sales data for Sacramento. I'm following the Sacramento market to see the change in mix over time (short sales, foreclosure, conventional). Economist Tom Lawler has been digging up similar data, and he sent me the table below for several more distressed areas. For all of these areas, the share of distressed sales is down from July 2011 - and for the areas that break out short sales, the share of short sales has increased (except Minneapolis) and the share of foreclosure sales are down. In most areas, short sales are higher than foreclosures, and for some areas like Phoenix, Reno and Las Vegas, short sales are now double the rate of foreclosures.

From Lawler:

Below is a table showing the share of home sales by realtors in various markets identified in local MLS as being “distressed,” as reported by local realtor associations or MLS.

As the table indicates, the distressed sales share of total sales last month was down compared to last July in all of the above markets, in some (but not all) cases by significant amount. And for those areas breaking out “distressed” sales by short sales or foreclosures, in most (but not all) cases the short sales share was higher, and the foreclosure sales share significantly lower, than a year ago.

Short Sales ShareForeclosure Sales ShareTotal "Distressed" Share
12-July11-July12-July11-July12-July11-July
Las Vegas40.0%20.2%20.7%50.2%60.7%70.4%
Reno38.0%28.0%15.0%37.0%53.0%65.0%
Phoenix29.5%23.6%14.6%43.1%44.1%66.7%
Sacramento32.0%22.3%22.4%39.0%54.4%61.3%
Minneapolis9.3%11.0%24.8%34.4%34.1%45.4%
Mid-Atlantic (MRIS)11.3%10.2%8.7%15.1%20.0%25.2%
Hampton Roads VA29.1%30.3%
Northeast Florida39.0%44.1%

[The second table shows] the YOY growth in total home sales and in “non-distressed” home sales for each of the these areas, as reported by local realtor associations/MLS.

While home sales for these markets combined this July were actually down a bit from last July, “non-distressed” home sales were up by almost 23%.

CR Note: In the post Home Sales Reports: What Matters, I noted: "When we look at sales for existing homes, the focus should be on the composition between conventional and distressed." Even if existing home sales declined in July, the composition appears to be shifting towards more conventional sales - a positive.

YOY % Growth, Home Sales (July 2012)
TotalNon-Distressed
Las Vegas-11.5%17.6%
Reno-3.1%30.0%
Phoenix-14.8%43.1%
Sacramento4.7%23.4%
Minneapolis14.6%38.3%
Mid-Atlantic (MRIS)4.7%12.0%
Hampton Roads VA20.1%22.1%
Northeast Florida1.3%10.5%
Total of Above Markets-0.9%22.8%