by Calculated Risk on 4/22/2011 01:55:00 PM
Friday, April 22, 2011
Another Boom in Silicon Valley
From Jason Lloren at the San Francisco Chronicle: Silicon Valley CEOs see hiring surge continuing
In a survey of 175 chief executives, 66 percent said their companies added jobs in 2010 - twice the number of those polled the previous two years. That was also the highest percentage since the annual Business Climate survey began eight years agoThat is good news.
...
Fifty-five percent of the CEOs polled anticipate job growth in the region to be better in 2011. Only 5 percent expect it to be worse.
For fun, here is a video from the Richter Scales a few years ago "Here Comes Another Bubble v1.1".
Wow - it seems out of date now. Making fun of Facebook at a valuation of $15 billion? Goldman invested at a $50 billion valuation earlier this year. And house prices have fallen too ...
Supply Chain Disruption Update
by Calculated Risk on 4/22/2011 09:29:00 AM
From Reuters: Toyota: Output to Return to Normal in November or December
Toyota Motor said it expects its production to make a full recovery by November or December ... Toyota and other Japanese automakers have been hit hard by a supply disruption of mostly electronic and resin-based parts made in Japan's northeastSeveral tech companies have said supply chain issues will impact Q2. As an example, from the Western Digital conference call this week:
[T]here is uncertainty around the ability of our customers and the HDD industry to fully satisfy this demand due to Supply Chain challenges ... we believe that we'll be supply constrained in both June quarter and in the September quarter. We think that in the December quarter, it will be, we'll be able to supply pretty much what the industry, what the customers demand so we think that the comfort level as far as inventory in the pipeline will not be able to be reached again until this quarter next year, the March quarter of next yearThis will be an issue most of the year, although most of the impact for the U.S. in Q2 and a little in Q3. I've seen estimates that supply issues will be a drag on U.S. GDP growth of about 0.25 to 0.5 percentage points in Q2 and probably less in Q3.
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Greece Update
by Calculated Risk on 4/21/2011 11:13:00 PM
This was amusing. Greece is probing an email discussion of a possible default. The Financial Times has the Citi email sent on Wednesday: Greece probes market talk of debt restructuring
“Over the last 20min, there seems to be some increased noise over [Greek] debt restructuring as early as this Easter weekend. Spreads are moving wider now with 2-year spread +100 from +35 mid-day, while [Greek] banks are at -4%, i6% vs +2% in the morning.Geesh - that seems like pretty normal speculation!
“The last few days the talks over [Greek] restructuring/rescheduling have intensified, despite the ongoing denials by [Greek] and foreign officials.
“If a credit event takes place it is crucial to see what the terms would be as a haircut would have a much different outcome vs an extension of maturities.”
The yield on Greece ten year bonds increased to 14.9% today and the two year yield is up to 23%. Sounds like a credit event might happen soon. If so, I wonder if it will be haircut or an extension of maturities?
Here are the ten year yields for Ireland up to a record 10.5%, Portugal up to a record 9.5%, and Spain at 5.5%.
Correct Reporting and the Philly Fed Manufacturing Index
by Calculated Risk on 4/21/2011 06:12:00 PM
When the Philly Fed business outlook report was released this morning, I made several points:
• The index showed slower expansion in April than in March.
• This was below expectations, but ...
• This index showed decent growth in April, and this suggests the ISM index will be in the low 60s for April.
Several readers have sent me other reports arguing the Philly Fed report suggests, well, the end of the world or something. That is wrong.
First, the Philly Fed index is noisy month-to-month.
Second, the reading of 18.5 is above the median during expansions for the last 40 years. The median during expansions is 14.
Third, the reading in March was the highest since January 1984 - and a decline was expected (although this reading was below expectations).
Here is a long term graph of the index:
Click on graph for larger image.
Obviously this index is noisy, and this is just one month. Still a reading of 18.5 shows decent expansion, not the end of the world as we know it.
Because this index is noisy, I average it with the NY Fed (Empire state) each month. Remember the NY Fed index showed faster expansion in April, and was at the highest level in a year.
Then I average both the Philly Fed and NY Fed indexes with several other regional surveys - and that helps predict the ISM manufacturing index.
This graph compares the regional Fed surveys and the ISM manufacturing index. The dashed green line is an average of the NY Fed (Empire State) and Philly Fed surveys through April. The ISM and total Fed surveys are through March.
And what does a 60 reading for the ISM mean? Here is a long term graph of the ISM manufacturing index:
The dashed line is for the March ISM PMI of 61.2% (very strong).
Clearly a reading in the low 60s (or even high 50s) shows pretty decent expansion for manufacturing.
One reader told me he was surprised by the negativity. He wrote: "We're finally seeing signs of real growth here. Kinda sad in a way. I was getting comfortable coming in late and still finding a parking spot close to the door." Too bad - my guess he is going to have to get in a little earlier, or walk a little further!
Hotels: Occupancy Rate improves in Latest Survey
by Calculated Risk on 4/21/2011 02:38:00 PM
Here is the weekly update on hotels from HotelNewsNow.com: Oahu Island reports strong weekly results
Overall, the U.S. hotel industry’s occupancy was up 4.8% to 63.2%, ADR increased 3.6% to US$102.28, and RevPAR finished the week up 8.5%to US$64.67.Note: ADR: Average Daily Rate, RevPAR: Revenue per Available Room.
Click on graph for larger image in graph gallery.This graph shows the seasonal pattern for the hotel occupancy rate.
The occupancy rate is well above the levels in 2009 and 2010, but still below the occupancy rate for the same period in 2008.
RevPAR and ADR are well below the peak levels prior to the recession. So even though the occupancy rate has improved, hotel income is still much lower now than prior to the recession.
Data Source: Smith Travel Research, Courtesy of HotelNewsNow.com
Other House Price Indexes
by Calculated Risk on 4/21/2011 12:28:00 PM
The most followed house price indexes are Case-Shiller and CoreLogic - and also the FHFA index based on repeat sales of homes with loans sold to or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.
The FHFA reported this morning: U.S. Monthly House Price Index Declined 1.6 Percent from January to February
U.S. house prices declined 1.6 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from January to February, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s monthly House Price Index. The previously reported 0.3 percent decrease in January was revised to a 1.0 percent decrease. For the 12 months ending in February, U.S. prices fell 5.7 percent. The U.S. index is 18.6 percent below its April 2007 peak and roughly the same as the February 2004 index level.There are several other house price indexes that I follow: RadarLogic (based on a house price per square foot method, to be released this afternoon for February), FNC Residential Price Index (a hedonic price index), Clear Capital and more.
I'm planning on mentioning these other indexes, in addition to Case-Shiller and CoreLogic, and discussing some of the differences.
From FNC this morning: February Single-Family Home Prices Decline 0.7 Percent
FNC announced Thursday that U.S. home prices weakened only slightly in February—a better-than-expected price seasonality.According to FNC, house prices are at a post-bubble low, and are back to May 2003 prices. You can see the FNC composite index, and prices for 30 cities here.
Based on the latest data on non-distressed home sales (existing and new homes), FNC’s Residential Price Index™ (RPI) indicated that home prices in February declined 0.7% from January, or 5.3% from a year ago.
Contrary to expectations of relatively rapid price deteriorations, February delivered instead the slowest one-month price declines since November. Even so, the trend shows that weak housing demand and spillovers from rising distressed sales continue to affect the mortgage market.
FNC’s RPI – the industry’s first hedonic price index built on a comprehensive database blending public records with real-time appraisals – also showed home prices nationwide are currently 1.9% below the end of 2010 and comparable to May 2003 on a cyclical basis.
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