In Depth Analysis: CalculatedRisk Newsletter on Real Estate (Ad Free) Read it here.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

AT&T on Capital Expenditures in 2009

by Calculated Risk on 3/10/2009 01:56:00 PM

From MarketWatch: AT&T to spend up to $18 bln on capital expenditures in 2009

AT&T Inc. said Tuesday it plans to invest $17 billion to $18 billion in 2009. About two-thirds of expenditures are earmarked for expanding the company's wireless and wired broadband networks, AT&T said.
The story doesn't mention that AT&T spent $20.3 billion on capital expenditures in 2008, so the announcement today is in line with AT&T's previous announcement on Jan 28th:
Total capital expenditures for 2009 are expected to be down 10 to 15 percent versus 2008 levels.
I guess the good news is they didn't reduce their plans further!

Note: There will be a significant investment slump in Q1 2009, especially in equipment & software and non-residential structures.

Used Vehicle Wholesale Prices Rebound

by Calculated Risk on 3/10/2009 11:34:00 AM

From Manheim Consulting: Wholesale Prices Rise in February (ht Brian)

Wholesale used vehicle prices (on a mix, mileage, and seasonally adjusted basis) increased significantly again in February. Seasonally adjusted, February’s rise was 3.7%, which came on the heels of a 3.8% increase in January. The Manheim Used Vehicle Value Index now stands at 105.5, which represents a year-over-year decline of 2.4%.

Some analysts have suggested that the rapid rise in wholesale used vehicle pricing is a precursor to an improvement in new vehicle sales and may even point to a recovery in the overall economy. It’s more likely, however, that the turnaround in wholesale used vehicle values is a necessary, but not a sufficient, condition for a better new vehicle market. That’s especially true given that the recent rise in auction pricing has been driven in large part by supply dynamics that were created by the unprecedented slowdown in new vehicle sales.
...
Buyers switch to used vehicles. Comments from dealers indicate that potential new vehicle buyers are opting instead to buy used. Evidence that these buyers could have actually afforded a new vehicle is provided by the fact that many of today’s used vehicle customers are making significant downpayments and the shorter loan maturity (relative to new vehicles) means that the monthly payment on their used vehicle loan would often be enough to buy new.
Manheim Used Vehicle Value Index Click on table for larger image in new window.

This index from Manheim Consulting is based on all completed sales transactions at Manheim’s U.S. auctions (A sample size of over five million transactions annually).

As noted above, buyers have switched from new to used cars - pushing up the prices of used cars. This is a probably a necessary step to higher new car sales.

Also according to Manheim, February’s sales rate new vehicles was only 9.1 million units (SAAR). That would be the lowest rate since early 1967!

Report: U.S. Considers Further Steps for Citi

by Calculated Risk on 3/10/2009 08:56:00 AM

From the WSJ: U.S. Weighs Further Steps for Citi

Barely a week after the third rescue of Citigroup Inc., U.S. officials are examining what fresh steps they might need to take to stabilize the bank if its problems mount ...

Citi executives said they haven't detected signs of corporate clients or trading partners withdrawing their business ...

Banking regulators and Treasury officials called Citigroup executives over the weekend ... the talks were geared toward future planning and that no new rescue was imminent. ... The discussions include the Treasury Department, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Federal Reserve and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
From MarketWatch: Citigroup's shares rise as CEO plugs performance
... Chief Executive Vikram Pandit said the hard-hit provider of financial services firm was profitable during the first two months of the year and called its capital position "strong."
Here is a memo from Pandit to employees.

FDIC's Bair on "aggregator bank"

by Calculated Risk on 3/10/2009 12:26:00 AM

From the WaPo: Detox for Troubled Assets

The government's plan to strip banks of troubled assets could force some firms to record large losses, but the painful purge would help restore confidence in the banking system, according to Sheila C. Bair, chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

Bair said yesterday that the effort might require more money than the $700 billion Congress has approved to aid the financial industry ...
This is an interesting interview. It it not clear that Sheila Bair understands that the "public-private investment funds" will overpay for toxic assets because they are receiving low interest non-recourse loans with limited downside risk (a direct subsidy from taxpayers to the banks). She thinks that
"The government, by providing low-cost funding, it will help to tease out that liquidity premium from the pricing and hopefully get the pricing a little higher."
And even at these above market prices, selling these assets will still leave a huge hole in the banks' balance sheets. However Bair sees this as a positive:
Bair emphasized that banks forced to take large losses might not need more government money because, newly cleansed, they would be in position to raise money from private investors. She said the size of the write-downs actually could be a positive, by establishing that banks are free of their problems.
Insolvency is success.

Monday, March 09, 2009

S&P Puts $552.8 billion Alt-A MBS on Downgrade Watch

by Calculated Risk on 3/09/2009 10:37:00 PM

From the WSJ: S&P Puts Mortgage-Backed Securities on Downgrade Watch (ht Bob_in_MA)

Standard & Poor's Ratings Service on Monday placed its ratings on $552.8 billion worth of U.S. first-lien Alt-A residential mortgage-backed securities issued between 2005 and 2007 on watch for downgrade, saying it sees an increase in losses from the transactions issued in those years.
...
S&P said it believes continued foreclosures, distressed sales, an increase in carrying costs for properties in inventory and more declines in home sales will further depress prices and lead to higher losses.
The beat goes on.

The Coming Expansion of the TALF to include CMBS

by Calculated Risk on 3/09/2009 09:00:00 PM

Teams from the Treasury Department and Federal Reserve are analyzing the appropriate terms and conditions for accepting commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) and are evaluating a number of other types of AAA-rated newly issued ABS for possible acceptance under the expanded program.
Federal Reserve, TALF, March 3, 2009
From the Christian Science Monitor: Real estate woes seep into malls, office towers
By April, the federal government expects to have a plan to refinance office towers and shopping centers in danger of defaulting. The scale is likely to be massive...

For now, commercial delinquencies are few. But office vacancy rates are heading toward record levels, according to one estimate, and banks are exposed, with $1.72 trillion in commercial real estate loans outstanding as of Feb. 18.

Just as significant, many insurance companies and pension funds have invested in real estate, putting them at risk, as well.
...
This year some $300 billion in loans to developers are due to be refinanced by commercial banks. Given the decline in the economy, many real estate ventures might not be able to survive if they are not able to refinance their loans on better terms more reflective of today’s economic conditions. But banks are largely refusing to refinance as the properties drop in value.
Last year there was some discussion of a bailout for CRE investors, and that didn't make any sense. This article seems to suggest that the Fed will be helping with a solvency problem because of rising vacancy rates and falling property values. I don't think that is the Fed's intention.

The Fed is considering a program to provide liquidity for newly issued AAA-rated CMBS. That won't help investors who bought at the top, but it will help property owners with strong cash flow positions to refinance. The Fed's role is liquidity, not solvency.

No Pop-up comments.

60 Minutes Video: FDIC Seizing Heritage Community Bank

by Calculated Risk on 3/09/2009 06:23:00 PM

The FDIC allowed 60 Minutes to follow along on the seizing of Heritage Community Bank in Glenwood, Illinois on Feb 27th. This segment provides glimpses of the process. (ht Jon)

Note: If the comments don't work, try clicking here.

Stock Market: Another "Lowest Since ..." Day

by Calculated Risk on 3/09/2009 04:04:00 PM

Another down day ... and that means another link to the four Grizzly Bears (not including foreign markets and the Naz)

DOW off 1.2%

S&P 500 off 1.0%, off 56.8% from the high, lowest since Sept 12, 1996.

NASDAQ off 1.9%

Stock Market Crashes Click on graph for larger image in new window.

This graph is from Doug Short of dshort.com (financial planner): "Four Bad Bears".

This is the 2nd worst S&P 500 / DOW bear market in the U.S. in 100 years. At this point - 17 months into the bear market - this is the worst ever (lower than the Great Depression bear after 17 months).

Note that the Great Depression crash is based on the DOW; the three others are for the S&P 500.

The low in 1996 was 598.48.

Another 78 points or so to get back to 1995 prices.

"Strictly Confidential" AIG Document Warns of Dire Consequences of Failure

by Calculated Risk on 3/09/2009 03:28:00 PM

From Bloomberg: AIG Told U.S. Failure May Cripple Banks, Money Funds

American International Group Inc. appealed for its fourth U.S. rescue by telling regulators the company’s collapse could cripple money-market funds, force European banks to raise capital, cause competing life insurers to fail and wipe out the taxpayers’ stake in the firm.

AIG needed immediate help from the Federal Reserve and Treasury to prevent a “catastrophic” collapse that would be worse for markets than the demise last year of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., according to a 21-page draft AIG presentation dated Feb. 26, labeled as “strictly confidential” and circulated among federal and state regulators.
Here is the “strictly confidential” document.

Roubini on CNBC: Could be 36 Month Recession

by Calculated Risk on 3/09/2009 03:08:00 PM

From CNBC: Roubini: US Recession Could Last Up to 36 Months. A few excerpts and video:

"We could end up ... with a 36-month recession, that could be "L-shaped stagnation, or near depression," Roubini said. He puts the chance of a severe U-shaped recession at 66.7 percent, and a less severe L-shaped recession at 33.3 percent.
...
"We are in the 15th month of a recession," said Nouriel Roubini, a professor at New York University's Stern School of Business, told CNBC in a live interview. "Growth is going to be close to zero and unemployment rate well above 10 percent into next year."

Echoing a speech he made earlier in the day, Roubini said he sees "no hope for the recession ending in 2009 and will more than likely last into 2010."
...
"The market friendly view for the banks is nationalization," said Roubini. "Temporarily take over the banks, clean them up and get them working again."
...
Among his solutions: fix the housing market by breaking "every mortgage contract."











Credit Conditions: Corporate Master Spread

by Calculated Risk on 3/09/2009 01:02:00 PM

Branden suggests Buffett is looking at the Merrill Lynch Corporate Master Index OAS (Option adjusted spread).

Spread Corporate Master and Treasury Click on table for larger image in new window.

This graph shows the OAS for the index for the last 2 years.

This is a broad index of investment grade corporate debt:

The Merrill Lynch US Corporate Index tracks the performance of US dollar denominated investment grade corporate debt publicly issued in the US domestic market.
This does show widening spreads.

Credit Conditions

by Calculated Risk on 3/09/2009 11:05:00 AM

On CNBC this morning, Warren Buffett mentioned that credit conditions are tightening again. Here is a look at a few indicators:

Spread Corporate and Treasury Click on table for larger image in new window.

The first graph shows the spread between 30 year Moody's Aaa and Baa rated bonds and the 30 year treasury.

There has been some increase in the spread the last couple of weeks, but the spread is still way below the recent peak. The spreads are still very high, even for higher rated paper, but especially for lower rated paper.

The Moody's data is from the St. Louis Fed:

Moody's tries to include bonds with remaining maturities as close as possible to 30 years. Moody's drops bonds if the remaining life falls below 20 years, if the bond is susceptible to redemption, or if the rating changes.
A2P2 Spread There has been improvement in the A2P2 spread. This has declined to 0.90 - under 1.0 for the first time since September 2008. This is far below the record (for this cycle) of 5.86 after Thanksgiving, but still above the normal spread.

This is the spread between high and low quality 30 day nonfinancial commercial paper.

TED Spread Meanwhile the TED spread has increased a little, and is now at 1.09 - after being slightly below 1.0 for most of February. This is the difference between the interbank rate for three month loans and the three month Treasury. The peak was 4.63 on Oct 10th and a normal spread is around 0.5.

By these indicators the credit markets might be tightening a little, but nothing like the end of 2008.

Buffett: Economy "has fallen off a cliff."

by Calculated Risk on 3/09/2009 08:51:00 AM

Warren Buffett is on CNBC this morning ...

From the CNBC live blog, a few Buffett comments:

6:05a: Economy is "close to the worst case." Can't imagine it being much worse ... The economy "has fallen off a cliff."

6:06a: Buffett says consumers are "scared and confused." He hasn't seen consumers, or Americans in general, as fearful as now. American people "feel they don't know what's going on" so they've pulled back.
...
6:32a: Buffett says credit conditions are tightening again, but aren't as bad as they were last September.
emphasis added
Yes, all the graphs in the February summary showed the economy was cliff diving.

Sunday Night Futures

by Calculated Risk on 3/09/2009 12:45:00 AM

Comments now work in a pop-up although the comment indicator says "0". That should be fixed tomorrow.

Here is an open thread, a few sources for futures and the foreign markets. The futures are about neutral right now ...

Bloomberg Futures.

CBOT mini-sized Dow

CME Globex Flash Quotes

Futures from barchart.com

And the Asian markets. (off a little tonight)

And a graph of the Asian markets.

Best to all.

Sunday, March 08, 2009

Summers: "Universal demand agenda"

by Calculated Risk on 3/08/2009 09:38:00 PM

Larry Summers is interviewed by the Financial Times: Summers calls for boost to demand

“The old global imbalances agenda was more demand in China, less demand in America. Nobody thinks that is the right agenda now,” said Mr Summers.

“There’s no place that should be reducing its contribution to global demand right now. It is really the universal demand agenda.”

While the US and other western nations should return to living within their means in the medium term, everyone should raise spending sharply now.

“The right macro-economic focus for the G20 is on global demand and the world needs more global demand,” said Mr Summers.
...
“This notion that the economy is self-stabilising is usually right but it is wrong a few times a century. And this is one of those times . . . there’s a need for extraordinary public action at those times.”
The G20 finance ministers will meet next Saturday (March 14th) in the U.K. in preparation for the full G20 London summit on April 2nd. So Summers is trying to influence the agenda for next week.

Business Cycle: Temporal Order

by Calculated Risk on 3/08/2009 03:56:00 PM

I've written extensively about using housing as a leading indicator for recessions and recoveries. Professor Leamer of the UCLA Anderson Forecast presented a very readable paper on this topic at the 2007 Jackson Hole conference: Housing and the Business Cycle

In that paper, Leamer outlined the temporal order of a typical business cycle:

The temporal ordering of the spending weakness is: residential investment, consumer durables, consumer nondurables and consumer services before the recession, and then, once the recession officially commences, business spending on the short-lived assets, equipment and software, and, last, business spending on the long-lived assets, offices and factories. The ordering in the recovery is exactly the same.
I think this order can be simplified as follows (with employment added):

When Weakness Typically Starts

Pre-Recession Coincident with Recession Lags Start of Recession
Residential Investment PCE Investment, non-residential Structures
Investment, Equipment & Software
Unemployment


When I first started writing about the housing bubble - and the then coming housing bust - I pointed out that we should be very concerned because housing slumps typically lead the economy into recessions. It happened once again.

Housing usually leads the economy out of recessions too. The second table shows a simplified typical temporal order for emerging from a recession.

When Recovery Typically Starts

During Recession Lags End of Recession Significantly Lags End of Recession
Residential InvestmentInvestment, Equipment & Software Investment, non-residential Structures
PCEUnemployment(1)


This business cycle there are reasons that housing will not be a significant engine of recovery. It is possible - see Looking for the Sun - that new home sales and housing starts will bottom in 2009, but any recovery in housing will probably be sluggish.

That leaves Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) - and as households increase their savings rate to repair their balance sheets, it seems unlikely that PCE will increase significantly any time soon. So even if the economy bottoms in the 2nd half of 2009, any recovery will probably be very sluggish.

At least we know what to watch: Residential Investment (RI) and PCE. The increasingly severe slump in CRE / non-residential investment in structures will be interesting, but that is a lagging indicator for the economy.

(1) In recent recessions, unemployment significantly lagged the end of the recession. That is very likely this time too.

Senator Shelby: 'Bury' Some Big Banks, Citi a 'Problem Child'

by Calculated Risk on 3/08/2009 02:22:00 PM

Transcript: 'This Week' Economic Debate

SHELBY: ... I think that they've got to close some big banks. They don't want to do it. We're -- we're going down the same road Japan was going down.

STEPHANOPOULOS: So you're in the same place -- I had Senator Lindsey Graham on the problem a couple of weeks ago. He said we're going to have to close, nationalize some of the big banks.

SHELBY: I don't want to nationalize them. I think we need to close them...

STEPHANOPOULOS: So when you say "close," what do you mean by them?

SHELBY: Close -- close them down, get them out of business. If they're dead, they ought to be buried. We bury the small banks; we've got to bury some big ones and send a strong message to the market. And I believe that people will start investing in banks. People aren't...

STEPHANOPOULOS: So you're talking Citigroup?

SHELBY: Well, whatever. Citi's always been a problem child.
emphasis added
When the FDIC "buries a small bank" - they temporarily nationalize the bank, and then reprivatize the bank. So this just appears to be semantics problem. This is why I call the first step "pre-privatize" - to avoid the stigma of "nationalize" - then reprivatize the banks.

I'm not sure what else Shelby could mean by "bury some big ones".

Rising EPDs on FHA Loans

by Calculated Risk on 3/08/2009 08:50:00 AM

The Washington Post has an article on Early Payment Defaults (EPD) for Federal Housing Administration (FHA) loans.

From the WaPo: More FHA-Backed Mortgages Go Bad Without a Single Payment

Many borrowers are defaulting as quickly as they take out the loans. In the past year alone, the number of borrowers who failed to make more than a single payment before defaulting on FHA-backed mortgages has nearly tripled, far outpacing the agency's overall growth in new loans, according to a Washington Post analysis of federal data.

Many industry experts attribute the jump in these instant defaults to factors that include the weak economy, lax scrutiny of prospective borrowers and most notably, foul play among unscrupulous lenders looking to make a quick buck.

If a loan "is going into default immediately, it clearly suggests impropriety and fraudulent activity," said Kenneth Donohue, the inspector general of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, which includes the FHA.
...
More than 9,200 of the loans insured by the FHA in the past two years have gone into default after no or only one payment, according to the Post analysis.
...
The agency's share of the mortgage market is up from 2 percent three years ago to nearly a third of the mortgages now made ...

Congress has substantially increased the amount a homeowner can borrow on an FHA loan in pricey areas, thrusting the agency into markets it was previously shut out of, such as California, where plunging home prices have made people more vulnerable to foreclosure. Moreover, lawmakers last year put the FHA in charge of a program created to address the roots of the financial crisis by helping delinquent borrowers refinance into new mortgages.
The authors don't mention the term "Downpayment Assistance Programs" (DAPs), but they do provide an example of a builder writing zero down loans. With DAPs the seller gives the buyer the downpayment through a charity to avoid the FHA rules on downpayments - and DAPs led to significantly higher defaults - and might be a bigger contributor to EPDs than the FHA's "HOPE for Homeowners" refinance plan for borrowers in trouble. I'd like to see a breakdown of EPDs between DAPs, HOPE, and loans made in high priced areas.

Saturday, March 07, 2009

CR's Secret

by Calculated Risk on 3/07/2009 10:44:00 PM

Dilbert

Click on cartoon for full cartoon in new window.

From Dilbert.com

Best to all (ht Ilya).

The U.K. Stress Test Scenario

by Calculated Risk on 3/07/2009 07:47:00 PM

From The Times: Lloyds primed for 1980s slump

[T]he worst-case scenario envisaged by the Financial Services Authority and the Treasury is a 1980s recession, when there was a 6% drop in GDP from peak to trough. This led to a fifth of UK manufacturing shutting down, a legacy of unemployment and an economic hangover well into the latter part of the decade.

The government wants to ensure Lloyds is equipped to cope with such an outcome and that is why it was forced to take part in the government’s asset-protection scheme – an insurance policy to protect the banks from further losses. Lloyds will place £260 billion of loans into this scheme and in return the government will see its stake in the bank rise from 43% to as much as 77%.
The "more severe" U.S. scenario is for a 3.3% decline in real GDP in 2009 following the 1.7% decline in real GDP the 2nd half of 2008 (from the peak in Q2 2008).

These two scenarios are somewhat close for 2009.

The U.K. economy contracted 0.7% in Q3 and 1.5% in Q4, so a decline of 3.3% in 2009 (assuming no recovery later in the year) would put the peak to trough in the U.K. around 5.5%.