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Thursday, January 25, 2007

Unemployment Insurance Weekly Claims

by Calculated Risk on 1/25/2007 10:51:00 AM

Here is a bad headline from the AP: Jobless claims rise to 16-month high.

The U.S. Department of Labor reported:

In the week ending Jan. 20, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 325,000, an increase of 36,000 from the previous week's revised figure of 289,000. The 4-week moving average was 309,250, an increase of 1,500 from the previous week's revised average of 307,750.
Just 4 weeks ago claims were also 325,000, and in the last week of November, claims were 358,000. So why is this a "rise to a 16-month high"?

The AP is referring to the increase in claims from last week.
The Labor Department reported Thursday that 325,000 newly laid-off workers filed claims for jobless benefits last week, an increase of 36,000 from the previous week. That was the biggest one-week rise since a surge of 96,000 claims the week of Sept. 10, 2005, when devastated Gulf Coast businesses laid off workers following Hurricane Katrina.
Why does anyone care? Weekly claims are notoriously noisy week to week, so everyone follows the 4-week moving average.

Click on graph for larger image.

This graph shows the weekly unemployment claims and the 4-week moving average vs. recessions since 1989. The dashed line at 350,000 is the level of concern for the 4-week moving average.

Currently the 4-week average is 309,250; not a concern.

December Existing-Home Sales Ease

by Calculated Risk on 1/25/2007 10:13:00 AM

The National Association of Realtors (NAR) reports: Existing-Home Sales Ease

Click on graph for larger image.

Total existing-home sales – including single-family, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops – eased 0.8 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate1 of 6.22 million units in December from a level of 6.27 million in November. Sales were 7.9 percent lower than a 6.75 million-unit pace in December 2005.
The above graph shows NSA monthly sales for 2005 and 2006. On an NSA basis, sales were 11% below December 2005.

Total housing inventory levels fell 7.9 percent at the end of December to 3.51 million existing homes available for sale, which represents a 6.8-month supply at the current sales pace – down from a 7.3-month supply in November.
Inventory is not seasonally adjusted, and it is normal to see a decline in inventory in December during the holidays. Usually 6 to 8 months of inventory starts causing pricing problems, and over 8 months a significant problem. With current inventory levels at 6.8 months of supply, inventories are now well into the danger zone.
There were 6,480,000 existing-home sales in all of 2006, down 8.4 percent from a record 7,075,000 in 2005. The second highest total was 6,779,000 in 2004; NAR began tracking home sales in 1968.

2006 was the third highest sales year ever, and 2006 also had record year end inventories, both in actual numbers and as a percent of owner occupied units.

This graph shows the annual sales, since 1969, and year end inventory numbers since 1982.

Forbes: The Adventurer

by Calculated Risk on 1/25/2007 01:08:00 AM

Jim Clash interviews Sasha.

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Economic Experts are Optimistic

by Calculated Risk on 1/24/2007 08:02:00 PM

"You were talking about the ugly bears. The reality is that we see a lot of ugly bears growing horns and becoming bulls."
Jacob Frenkel, vice chairman of insurer AIG, to Nouriel Roubini, Jan 24, 2007
From AP on the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland: Experts Ponder Impact of U.S. Slowdown
The majority of panel members at the major economic session on the opening day of the World Economic Forum's annual meeting predicted a soft landing ...

Laura Tyson, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley who was Clinton's top economic adviser, agreed, saying "there are some reasons to be very optimistic for the coming year."

Looking at projections for 2007, she said, there is "an amazing similarity of predicted growth rates for the U.S., Europe and Japan, between 2 and 2 1/4 percent _ a result of the European and Japanese economies picking up and the slowdown in the United States."

Financial markets are not as volatile as they were because of a long-run positive trend in output and interest rates, she said.

Tyson added that the global economy has diversified to the point that it no longer is "dependent on a single locomotive, the United States."

Emerging markets have also been growing and expanding to account for more than half of the world economy, she said.

"All of those things to my mind suggest another Goldilocks year," Tyson said, adding that "it'll look different from the last Goldilocks year."
For the lone bear at Davos' views, see Roubini's First Day in Davos: 2007 Global Economic Outlook
I was the only one who expressed some concerns about a US hard landing that could take the form of a growth recession or an outright recession ...

The consensus, clear at the panel, was for another Goldilocks year for the US and global economy with the US achieving a soft landing.
Roubini suggests:
... housing is only 6% of GDP while consumption is 70% ... So any hard landing – whether a growth recession or an outright recession – will require a sharp slowdown of consumption growth. I do believe that the next leg of the US slowdown, that will lead at least to a growth recession, will be the consumer weakened by a variety of factors:
- The job losses in housing and manufacturing will build up over 2007 and reduce job growth from 150k jobs to about 50k jobs per month over the next few months. So, labor slack will reduce income generation.

- The negative wealth effects of falling housing values and falling mortgage equity withdrawal will slow down consumption as households with negative savings have been using their homes as their ATM machine for too long.

- Rising reset interest rates on monster mortgages, ARMs and subprime loans will increase debt servicing ratios.

- The coming credit crunch in the subprime sector will serious hurt subprime and other ARM borrowers.
So, while the US consumer will be the last shoe to drop it will drop this year as the consumer is at its tipping point in spite of the recent temporary factors that have boosted its consumption. So I do not believe that the economy will achieve the soft landing predicted by the economic consensus as the balance of risks and vulnerabilities suggests further economic weakness ahead.
One more comment from Frankel:
"I'm optimistic but not sanguine."
Say what? I think the AP writer missed something.

California Default Notices Increase

by Calculated Risk on 1/24/2007 11:47:00 AM

"We're in the midst of an adjusting market right now, and we won't know until spring or summer if this [foreclosure activity] is ominous or not,"
Marshall Prentice, DataQuick president, Jan 24, 2007.
UPDATE: Here is the DataQuick press release with some additional details: California Foreclosure Activity Jumps Again

According to DataQuick, the number of default notices jumped significantly to 37,273 in Q4 2006.

Click on graph for larger image.

This graph shows Notices of Default (NOD) by year in California since 1992.

2006 had the highest number of NODs since 1998. And it now appears 2007 will see record or near record NODs.

From David Streitfeld at the LA Times: More Californians at risk of losing homes
Default notices are the initial step in the foreclosure process. In the fourth quarter of last year, lenders issued such notices to 37,273 borrowers across the state, warning them that they were at risk of foreclosure, compared with 15,196 during the same period a year earlier, DataQuick said.

Not every notice of default leads to a foreclosure, when a property is seized and sold to pay the mortgage. But foreclosures also are on the rise. There were 6,078 in the last quarter of 2006, up from 874 a year earlier.

MBA: Mortgage Applications Decrease

by Calculated Risk on 1/24/2007 11:21:00 AM

The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) reports: Mortgage Refinance Applications and Purchase Applications Both Decrease (UPDATE: link added)

Click on graph for larger image.

The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, was 611.3, a decrease of 8.4 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from 667.2 one week earlier. On an unadjusted basis, the Index decreased 5.7 percent compared with the previous week and was up 3.8 percent compared with the same week one year earlier.

The Refinance Index decreased by 9.6 percent to 1848.8 from 2045.8 the previous week and the seasonally adjusted Purchase Index decreased by 8.4 percent to 402.7 from 439.7 one week earlier.
Mortgage rates increased:
The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages increased to 6.22 from 6.19 percent ...

The average contract interest rate for one-year ARMs increased to 5.91 percent from 5.85 ...


The second graph shows the Purchase Index and the 4 and 12 week moving averages since January 2002. The four week moving average is up 0.7 percent to 430.5 from 427.4 for the Purchase Index.
The refinance share of mortgage activity decreased to 47.8 percent of total applications from 49.9 percent the previous week. The adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) share of activity decreased to 20.3 from 21.2 percent of total applications from the previous week.

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

WSJ: Mortgage Delinquencies Mount

by Calculated Risk on 1/23/2007 11:25:00 PM

From the WSJ: Banks Move Earlier To Curb Foreclosures

Some 2.51% of mortgages were delinquent in the fourth quarter, according to new data from Equifax Inc. and Moody's Economy.com Inc. That is up from 2.33% in the third quarter and the highest level since a recent peak of 2.53% in the first quarter of 2002.

The increase in bad loans is broad based, with delinquencies rising in the past year in roughly 80% of the 250 local areas analyzed by Moody's Economy.com....

The rise in delinquencies is unusual because it comes at a time when the economy is relatively strong. Even though job growth remains healthy, "the total mortgage delinquency rate is the highest that it's been since the depths of the [2001] recession," says Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com. He attributes the increase in part to the weaker housing market and the widespread use of adjustable-rate mortgages, many of which now are resetting at higher rates.

... Zandi ... expects that nationwide delinquency rates could rise by as much as a full percentage point from current levels in the next year, but he doesn't expect the trend will have a significant impact on the overall economy.
Anyone notice a theme this week?

D.R. Horton: Housing Slowdown in "Early Stages"

by Calculated Risk on 1/23/2007 02:56:00 PM

"Most downturns are longer and deeper (than people expect), and we are not seeing anything on the horizon to change that opinion."
D.R. Horton Chief Executive Don Tomnitz, Jan 23, 2007

North Carolina: Record Foreclosures

by Calculated Risk on 1/23/2007 01:54:00 AM

From the StarNewsOnline: Foreclosure filings hit record high

The number of North Carolina homeowners threatened with foreclosure reached an all-time high last year, new state figures show.

More than 45,500 foreclosure filings were recorded in 2006, according to the Administrative Office of the Courts.
...
Experts blame the growing availability of mortgage loans - especially high-interest and adjustable rate subprime mortgages - in part for the increase.

Monday, January 22, 2007

Record Foreclosure Activity in 2007?

by Calculated Risk on 1/22/2007 02:23:00 PM

From the Cincinnati Enquirer: Thousands face loss of homes

For the seventh straight year, foreclosure filings hit record highs not only here but in all of Ohio and Kentucky.

Record foreclosures were also a national phenomenon, and Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky were at the front. Through Sept. 30, Ohio led the nation with 3.32 percent of its home loans in foreclosure, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

Indiana was second at 2.9 percent; Kentucky, fifth at 1.76 percent. The national average was 1.05 percent.
And from the Dallas Morning News: Foreclosure lists near 1989 record
... the 1,940 homes in Dallas County and 1,274 Tarrant County homes threatened with foreclosure are approaching record highs, said George Roddy, president of Foreclosure Listing Service.

"This is getting serious," Mr. Roddy said. "This level is getting very close to the all-time records set in 1989, when an average of 2,000 postings were filed monthly on Dallas County residences."

Back then, it was a regional recession that caused the number of home foreclosures to spike.

This go-around it's often because of poor consumer choices, credit analysts say.

"Some of them got into more house than they can afford," said Gail Cunningham with Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Greater Dallas.
These are the areas that saw limited price appreciation during the housing boom. In 2007, the states with the highest appreciation will probably start experiencing near record levels of foreclosure activity. In California, foreclosure activity is already in the "normal range", according to DataQuick, and early January data suggests 2007 might exceed the records set in 1996.

This is one of the keys to my 2007 housing forecast.