by Calculated Risk on 9/21/2012 06:43:00 PM
Friday, September 21, 2012
Sheila Bair: Former BofA CEO considered a "country bumpkin"
From former FDIC Chairperson Sheila Bair writing at Fortune: Sheila Bair and the bailout bank titans (ht Soylent Green is People)
I let my gaze drift toward Kenneth Lewis, who stood awkwardly at the end of the big conference table, away from the rest of the group. Lewis, the head of the North Carolina-based Bank of America (BAC) -- had never really fit in with this crowd. He was viewed somewhat as a country bumpkin by the CEOs of the big New York banks, and not completely without justification. He was a decent traditional banker, but as a dealmaker his skills were clearly wanting, as demonstrated by his recent, overpriced bids to buy Countrywide Financial, a leading originator of toxic mortgages, and Merrill Lynch, a leading packager of securities based on toxic mortgages originated by Countrywide and its ilk. His bank had been healthy going into the crisis but would now be burdened by those ill-timed, overly generous acquisitions of two of the sickest financial institutions in the country.I don't know about Lewis being a "country bumpkin", but the Countrywide acquisition had to be one of the worst ever - and it was obvious to many of us at the time.
Ouch!
Zillow forecasts Case-Shiller House Price index to show 1.6% Year-over-year increase for July
by Calculated Risk on 9/21/2012 02:22:00 PM
Note: The Case-Shiller report to be released next Tuesday is for July (really an average of prices in May, June and July).
Zillow Forecast: July Case-Shiller Composite-20 Expected to Show 1.6% Increase from One Year Ago
On Tuesday, Sept. 25, the Case-Shiller Composite Home Price Indices for July will be released. Zillow predicts that the 20-City Composite Home Price Index (non-seasonally adjusted [NSA]) will be up by 1.6 percent on a year-over-year basis, while the 10-City Composite Home Price Index (NSA) will be up 1.1 percent on a year-over-year basis. The seasonally adjusted (SA) month-over-month change from June to July will be 1 percent for both the 20-City Composite and the 10-City Composite Home Price Index (SA). All forecasts are shown in the table below and are based on a model incorporating the previous data points of the Case-Shiller series and the July Zillow Home Value Index data, and national foreclosure re-sales.Zillow's forecasts for Case-Shiller have been pretty close.
Case-Shiller July data confirms what we have been seeing for several months in other data points: The housing market has started its recovery, albeit appreciation is not back to “normal” pre-housing recession levels and most likely won’t be for the next few years. Zillow’s Home Value Index for August was released on Wednesday and shows a small decline in home values across the nation after nine consecutive months of appreciation. We expect Case-Shiller indices to moderate and likely report monthly declines toward the end of the year tracking the Zillow Home Value Index. Monthly depreciation toward the end of the year is largely a function of declining overall monthly sales volume which will increase the percentage of foreclosure re-sales in the transactional mix being tracked by Case-Shiller.
| Case Shiller Composite 10 | Case Shiller Composite 20 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NSA | SA | NSA | SA | ||
| Case Shiller (year ago) | July 2011 | 156.33 | 154.12 | 142.89 | 141.12 |
| Case-Shiller (last month) | June 2012 | 155.02 | 154.38 | 142.21 | 141.31 |
| Zillow June Forecast | YoY | 1.1% | 1.1% | 1.6% | 1.6% |
| MoM | 1.9% | 1.0% | 2.1% | 1.0% | |
| Zillow Forecasts1 | 158.0 | 155.9 | 145.2 | 143.1 | |
| Current Post Bubble Low | 146.52 | 149.19 | 134.10 | 136.45 | |
| Date of Post Bubble Low | Mar-12 | Jan-12 | Mar-12 | Jan-12 | |
| Above Post Bubble Low | 7.8% | 4.5% | 8.3% | 4.8% | |
| 1Estimate based on Year-over-year and Month-over-month Zillow forecasts | |||||
State Unemployment Rates increased in 26 States in August
by Calculated Risk on 9/21/2012 10:49:00 AM
From the BLS: Regional and State Employment and Unemployment Summary
Regional and state unemployment rates were generally little changed in August. Twenty-six states recorded unemployment rate increases, 12 states and the District of Columbia posted rate decreases, and 12 states had no change, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today.
...
Nevada continued to record the highest unemployment rate among the states, 12.1 percent in August. Rhode Island and California posted the next highest rates, 10.7 and 10.6 percent, respectively. North Dakota again registered the lowest jobless rate, 3.0 percent.
Click on graph for larger image in graph gallery.This graph shows the current unemployment rate for each state (red), and the max during the recession (blue). Two states - New Jersey and New York - are at the maximum unemployment rate for the recession, and New Jersey set a new cycle high in August at 9.9%.
The states are ranked by the highest current unemployment rate. Only three states still have double digit unemployment rates: Nevada, Rhode Island, and California. This is the fewest since January 2009, although New Jersey is close. In early 2010, 18 states and D.C. had double digit unemployment rates.
Over There: Greek and Spanish Aid
by Calculated Risk on 9/21/2012 08:46:00 AM
A plan for Spain will probably be announced next Thursday, and Greece will need additional aid by November.
From the Financial Times: EU in talks over Spanish rescue plan
EU authorities are working behind the scenes to pave the way for a new Spanish rescue programme and unlimited bond buying by the European Central Bank, by helping Madrid craft an economic reform programme ...From the WSJ: Fight Looms on Greek Bailout
...
The plan, due to be unveiled next Thursday, will focus on structural reforms to the Spanish economy long requested by Brussels, rather than new taxes and spending cuts.
Excerpt with permission.
A report by international inspectors, due in October, will state how big the funding shortfall is in Greece's bailout program, but European officials say the deficit is far too big for Greece to close on its own.
That means the International Monetary Fund, the European Central Bank, and euro-zone governments such as Germany will have to negotiate over which of them will make painful concessions to ease Greece's debt-service burden.
...
The trio must agree to a plan by November at the latest, when the government in Athens—already in financial arrears—could run out of money altogether.
...
The €173 billion ($226 billion) bailout plan agreed with Athens in March this year—Greece's second bailout since 2010—is already badly off track, euro-zone officials admit.
Thursday, September 20, 2012
Friday: State Employment Report
by Calculated Risk on 9/20/2012 09:01:00 PM
First, from Freddie Mac: Mortgage Rates Back To Record Lows
Freddie Mac today released the results of its Primary Mortgage Market Survey® (PMMS®), showing fixed mortgage rates at or near their all-time record lows helping to keep homebuyer affordability high. The average 30-year fixed rate mortgage matched its all-time record low at 3.49 percent, and the average 15-year fixed fell to a new all-time record low at 2.77 percent.And from David Wessel at the WSJ: Depression Lessons: Should Fed Stand Down to Compel Congressional Action?
As [economist James] Tobin put it in the American Economic Review in June 1965: “The monetary authorities should have tried harder to promote expansion in 1933-36 and 1937-40 — nothing would have been lost and something might have been gained. Throughout the period the authorities were too little concerned with deflationary risks immediately at hand and too much concerned to forestall the hypothetical future dangers of excess liquidity.”Friday:
... Friedman and co-author Anna Schwartz quote at length from a December 1935 technical memo from Fed files that made the case for tightening the credit spigot. ... The subsequent tightening by the Fed was, Friedman and Schwartz concluded, a mistake followed by “a failure to recognize that the action had misfired.”
• At 10:00 AM ET, the BLS will release the Regional and State Employment and Unemployment (Monthly) report for August 2012.
Earlier: The Trillion Dollar Bear


