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Monday, February 16, 2015

Ships, Ships, Everywhere Ships

by Calculated Risk on 2/16/2015 03:54:00 PM

From the LA Times: Line of ships waiting off coast grows as ports shut down for holiday

On Monday, there were 33 vessels anchored off the Los Angeles and Long Beach ports, unable to dock, according to the Marine Exchange of Southern California. That was three more than Sunday.
...
The White House is sending Labor Secretary Tom Perez to jump-start stalled contract talks between the employer group, Pacific Maritime Assn., and the International Longshore and Warehouse Union. Perez is scheduled to meet with both sides Tuesday, according to a Department of Labor spokeswoman.

Report: "Eurozone's Greek talks collapse early"

by Calculated Risk on 2/16/2015 01:16:00 PM

The Financial Times has the draft text: Eurozone's Greek talks collapse early

The draft text, obtained by the Financial Times, states that Greece would agree to a six-month "technical extension" of its current bailout ... "This would bridge the time for Greece authorites and the Eurogroup to work on a follow-up arrangement," ... Athens would "successfully conclude the programme, taking into accounts the new government's plans" and promised the "best use of the existing flexibility in the current programme".
Greece rejected this statement.

Press conference here.

Year 4: It Never Rains in California

by Calculated Risk on 2/16/2015 10:37:00 AM

Parts of the east coast are suffering with record snow fall, but in California, the drought continues ... last week in SoCal was like summer with temperature in the 80s!

This is the fourth year in a row with little rain or snow in the mountains (the statewide snowpack is about 27% of normal for this date). California is the largest agricultural state, and an ongoing drought could have an impact on food prices - and on the economy.

7 Day Precipitation
This graphic shows the National Weather Service 7 day precipitation forecast for the U.S.

California will be dry for at least another week - and the East Coast is getting too much precipitation.

Sunday, February 15, 2015

March 1st Deadline for Greece Deal

by Calculated Risk on 2/15/2015 08:06:00 PM

From the WSJ: Deadline for Greek Bailout Agreement Looms

Any changes to the content or expiration date of Greece’s existing €240 billion ($273 billion) bailout have to be decided by Friday, to give national parliaments in Germany, Finland and the Netherlands enough time to approve them before the end of the month. Without such a deal, Greece will be on its own on March 1, cut loose from the rescue loans from the eurozone and the International Monetary Fund that have sustained it for almost five years.
Although Greece mostly lived up to the terms of the bailout, the promised growth never materialized (see tables below). As Greek Prime Minister recently said: "We are not negotiating the bailout; it was cancelled by its own failure.”

 The only choices are to allow Greece to run a smaller primary surplus or for Greece to leave the Eurozone and default on all their debt. The first choice seems likely, but not without some drama.

Note: Greece would have left the Eurozone in 2010 if the actual numbers below had been the plan.  No politician would have signed up for that economic devastation!

Greece: Annual GDP, Forecast and Actual1
YearPromisedActual
2009-2-4.4
2010-4-5.4
2011-2.6-8.9
20121.1-6.6
20132.1-3.9
20142.1 
20152.7 
1IMF Forecasts and Eurostat Actual

Greece: Annual Unemployment Rate,
Forecast and Actual1
YearPromisedActual
20099.49.6
201011.812.7
201114.617.9
201214.824.5
201314.327.5
201414.126.82
201513.4 
1IMF Forecasts and Eurostat Actual
22014 is Q1, Q2, Q3 average

Update: The Inland Empire Bust and Recovery

by Calculated Risk on 2/15/2015 11:31:00 AM

Way back in 2006 I disagreed with some analysts on the outlook for the Inland Empire in California. I wrote:

As the housing bubble unwinds, housing related employment will fall; and fall dramatically in areas like the Inland Empire. The more an area is dependent on housing, the larger the negative impact on the local economy will be.

So I think some pundits have it backwards: Instead of a strong local economy keeping housing afloat, I think the bursting housing bubble will significantly impact housing dependent local economies.
And sure enough, the economies of housing dependent areas like the Inland Empire were devastated during the housing bust. The good news is the Inland Empire is now recovering.

Inland Empire Employment Click on graph for larger image.

This graph shows the unemployment rate for the Inland Empire (using MSA: Riverside, San Bernardino, Ontario), and also the number of construction jobs as a percent of total employment.

The unemployment rate is falling, but still elevated at 7.2% (down from 15.0% in 2010). And construction employment is up only slightly from the lows (as a percent of total employment).

Overall the outlook for the Inland Empire is much better today.