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Monday, July 11, 2011

More Europe

by Calculated Risk on 7/11/2011 03:55:00 PM

Today was mostly about Europe.

As the Financial Times reported this weekend, European policymakers appear to be finally accepting some sort of default is inevitable for Greece. On Italy: the deficit is 4.6% of GDP (not horrible), but their debt is 120% of GDP - and their growth is slow.

From the NY Times: Italy Evolves Into E.U.’s Next Weak Link

In recent days, Italy has become Europe’s next weak link after Greece, Ireland and Portugal and Spain ... Italy’s banks are sound; they never speculated in a housing bubble. The current annual budget deficit is low, at around 4.6 percent of its gross domestic product. And while Italy issues the largest amount of bonds of any euro zone country, Italians own about half the debt, making it less vulnerable to the follies of financial markets.

But with interest rates rising, Italy’s economy is not growing fast enough to cover an accumulated debt load of 120 percent of gross domestic product, the second-highest in Europe, after Greece. The International Monetary Fund expects growth to rise only slightly, to 1.3 percent in 2012.
From the WSJ: Euro Zone Still Seeks Private-Sector Solution
Several European officials said Monday that a significant private-sector contribution to a second bailout package remained critical even if the rating agencies branded it a default.

"I am more searching for a solution than a rating," Belgian Finance Minister Didier Reynders said before a meeting of euro-zone finance ministers here. "If it's with a negative reaction from the rating agencies, that's not a problem."
Earlier I posted the bond yields in Europe with record highs for several countries (Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Italy).

AAR: Rail Traffic soft in June

by Calculated Risk on 7/11/2011 11:45:00 AM

The Association of American Railroads (AAR) reports carload traffic in June 2011 increased 0.9 percent compared with the same month last year (up slightly), and intermodal traffic (using intermodal or shipping containers) increased 4.6 percent compared with June 2010. On a seasonally adjusted basis, carloads in June 2011 were down 0.7% from May 2011; intermodal in June 2011 was down 2.4% from May 2011.

June 2011, like the previous couple of months, was not a great month for U.S. rail carload traffic. U.S. freight railroads originated 1,428,580 carloads in June 2011, an average of 285,716 per week — up 0.9% (13,232 carloads) over June 2010 and up 11.6% (148,793 carloads) over June 2009 on a non-seasonally adjusted basis.
Rail Traffic Click on graph for larger image in graph gallery.

This graph shows U.S. average weekly rail carloads (NSA).

As the first graph shows, rail carload traffic collapsed in November 2008, and now, 2 years into the recovery, carload traffic has recovered less than half way.

For the last few months, traffic has been tracking 2010 (little growth from last year).

According to the AAR, carloads for 14 of 20 commodities they track were up in June, but carloads for coal were down, and that really impacts overall traffic.

Rail TrafficThe second graph is for intermodal traffic (using intermodal or shipping containers):
June 2011 was a better month for U.S. intermodal traffic than for U.S. carload traffic, but intermodal growth slowed. U.S. railroads originated 1,152,432 intermodal trailers and containers in June 2011, up 4.6% over June 2010. That’s a decent year-over-year monthly increase, but it’s the lowest since January 2010.
excerpts with permission
So intermodal traffic has been fairly strong, but carload traffic (commodities and autos) is only about half way back to pre-recession levels.

Europe: Bond Yields up Sharply for Italy, Greece, Ireland and Portugal

by Calculated Risk on 7/11/2011 08:35:00 AM

This doesn't look good ... (see table below).

The Greek 2 year yield is up to a record 31.1%.

The Portuguese 2 year yield is up to a record 18.3%.

The Irish 2 year yield is up to a record 18.1%.

And the big jump ... the Italian 2 year yield is up to a record 4.1%. Still much lower than Greece, Portugal and Ireland, but rising.

From the Telegraph: Italy debt contagion fears hit markets as top EU officials meet

Herman Van Rompuy, the president of the European Council, will meet European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet and Jean-Claude Juncker, the chairman of the Eurogroup, for talks in Brussels at around midday, ahead of a meeting of the 17 euro zone finance ministers later on Monday.

Mr Van Rompuy's spokesman described the gathering as a "coordination, not a crisis meeting". He added that Italy would not be on the agenda, as ministers focused on thrashing out terms of a second Greek rescue package.

The meeting comes as the Financial Times reported that leaders are prepared to accept that Athens should default on some of its bonds.
Here are the links for bond yields for several countries (source: Bloomberg):
Greece2 Year5 Year10 Year
Portugal2 Year5 Year10 Year
Ireland2 Year5 Year10 Year
Spain2 Year5 Year10 Year
Italy2 Year5 Year10 Year
Belgium2 Year5 Year10 Year
France2 Year5 Year10 Year
Germany2 Year5 Year10 Year

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Report: EU to consider Greek Default

by Calculated Risk on 7/10/2011 10:12:00 PM

From the Financial Times: EU stance shifts on Greece default

The Financial Times is reporting that European leaders will now accept that "Athens should default on some of its bonds" to reduce the overall debt burden of Greece.

This would be a major shift. The Financial Times suggests this will be discussed at the meeting of finance ministers on Monday and probably ends the plan suggested by France.

From the Irish Times: European leaders to consider default as part of Greek rescue

EURO ZONE finance ministers are considering a fundamental revision of their strategy in the Greek debt crisis ... At issue as the ministers meet today in Brussels is whether they agree to look again at a German debt-swap plan in which Greek investors would be urged to exchange their bonds for debt with a longer maturity.

This plan was scrapped weeks ago on the basis that it would lead to a default rating on Greek debt, something which is resolutely opposed by the European Central Bank.
...
Also on the table is the revival of a plan rejected four months ago in which the euro zone bailout fund — the European Financial Stability Facility — would intervene in markets to buy Greek debt at a discount to its original value.

Consideration may also be given to another lowering of the interest rate on Greece’s rescue loans.
Another interesting week in Europe.

How many jobs are needed over the next year to keep the unemployment rate steady?

by Calculated Risk on 7/10/2011 05:42:00 PM

Dean Baker writes: We Need 90,000 Jobs Per Month to Keep Pace With the Growth of the Population

In an article on the June employment report the NYT told readers that the economy needs 150,000 jobs per month to keep pace with the growth in the population. Actually, the Congressional Budget Office projects that the underlying rate of labor force growth is now just 0.7 percent annually. This comes to roughly 1,050,000 a year or just under 90,000 a month.
Here is the CBO report that Baker mentions: CBO’s Labor Force Projections Through 2021

The number of jobs needed per month to keep up with population growth depends on the rate of population growth, and the participation rate. We also have to be clear on the time frame we are discussing. The CBO report is through 2021, and the CBO is projecting the participation rate to fall to 63% by 2021 due to an aging population.

If, instead, we asked how many jobs are needed over the next year to keep the unemployment rate steady using the CBO projection of the participation rate, the answer is very different. The CBO is projecting the participation rate will be at 64.6% in 2012 and the current participation rate is 64.1%.

I've been projecting some bounce back in the participation rate too - but it hasn't happened yet.

The following table uses the CBO projections and provides an estimate of the jobs needed per month (per the household survey1) to hold the unemployment rate steady.

The first column is actual for June 2011 as reported by the BLS. The second column is using the CBO projections, the third column is a modified CBO using the June 2011 population estimate and a lower estimate for the next 12 months (population only increases 1.8 million).

The fourth column is for the participation rate staying steady at 64.1% (no bounce back).

Jobs needed over next 12 months to hold unemployment rate constantCurrentProjections
BLSCBOCBO modified2Participation Rate Unchanged
Jun-11Jun-12Jun-12Jun-12
Civilian noninstitutional population, 16 and over (millions)239.5242.8241.3241.3
Participation Rate (Percent)64.1%64.6%64.6%64.1%
Labor Force (millions)153.4156.8155.9154.7
Employed (millions)139.3142.4141.5140.4
Unemployed (millions)14.114.414.314.2
Unemployment Rate9.2%9.2%9.2%9.2%
Jobs needed to hold unemployment rate constant (millions) 3.12.21.1
Jobs needed per month 260,000187,00095,000
 
Lower Unemployment Rate to 8.2% CBOCBO Modified2Participation Rate Unchanged
Unemployment Rate 8.2%8.2%8.2%
Employed (millions) 144.0143.1142.0
Unemployed (millions) 12.912.812.7
Jobs need to lower unemployment rate to 8.2% (millions) 4.73.82.7
Jobs needed per month 391,000316,000224,000

1 This is all based on the household survey. The headline payroll number is from the establishment survey.
2 The modified CBO uses the actual population for June 2011 and assumes the population only increases 1.8 million over the next 12 months.

It would take 187,000 jobs added per month over the next year to hold the unemployment rate steady if the participation rate rises to 64.6%. If the participation rate stays steady, it will take 95,000 jobs added per month.

I also included the number of jobs needed to lower the unemployment rate by one percentage point to 8.2%. If the participation rate rises, then it would take 316,000 jobs per month. If the participation rate stays steady, it would take 224,000 jobs per month to lower the unemployment rate to 8.2%.

If the economy does start adding more jobs per month, I expect more people will then join the labor force - keeping the unemployment rate elevated. Of course more people could give up, and the labor force participation rate could fall further pushing down the unemployment rate - but that wouldn't be good news.