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Monday, May 04, 2009

Merle Hazard Meets John Taylor

by Calculated Risk on 5/04/2009 11:19:00 PM

I've featured a few of Merle Hazard's videos like Merle Hazard Meets Arthur Laffer and Mark to Market.

Here Merle chats with Stanford economist John Taylor:



And that inspires Merle: Inflation or Deflation

WSJ: About 10 of 19 Banks will need Capital

by Calculated Risk on 5/04/2009 09:20:00 PM

From the WSJ: More Banks Will Need Capital

The U.S. is expected to direct about 10 of the 19 banks undergoing government stress tests to boost their capital ...

One big risk worrying industry officials is that the market will view banks on the list as insolvent when the official results are announced Thursday, even though Fed officials have repeatedly said that's not the case.
...
An initial stress test identified Wells Fargo as among the banks needing a bigger buffer ... It is unclear whether Wells would be forced to raise fresh capital or if regulators would accept the bank's argument that it can earn its way through the losses in future years. Wells expects more clarity Tuesday.
Wells Fargo will probably suffer enormous losses from Wachovia's Option ARM portfolio (originally from Golden West) and from their own HELOC portfolio. The estimated losses will apparently be broken out into the 12 categories listed in the Fed's White Paper, and that should show substantial losses for Wells Fargo in these categories.

Citi, BofA, Wells ... the constant leaks are pretty amazing ...

Stock Market Update

by Calculated Risk on 5/04/2009 06:11:00 PM

By popular demand ...

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

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

The S&P 500 is up 34% from the bottom, and still off 42% from the peak.

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

S&P 500 The second graph shows the S&P 500 since 1990.

The dashed line is the closing price today.

This puts the recent rally into perspective.

ManhattanWest Photos

by Calculated Risk on 5/04/2009 04:23:00 PM

This isn't breaking news - just a couple of photos from reader Anthony of the ManhattanWest project in Las Vegas (photos taken yesterday).

ManhattanWest Las Vegas Click on graph for larger image in new window.

Photo Credit: Anthony.

Construction was halted on ManhattanWest in December.

From the Las Vegas Review-Journal in March: ManhattanWest latest casualty of crisis

ManhattanWest, a $350 million development that would include 700 condo units, restaurants, offices and shops on a 20-acre site near Las Vegas Beltway ... Gemstone topped off the nine-story Element House at ManhattanWest in August. The mid-rise residential buildings are about 80 percent finished.
ManhattenWest isn't the only halted project in Las Vegas:
Last year, Mira Villa condos and Vantage Lofts stopped construction and went into bankruptcy. Sullivan Square had barely begun excavation before the project was canceled. Spanish View Towers was the first high-rise project to stop construction after partially building an underground parking garage.
ManhattanWest Las Vegas The second photo shows the only activity at the site; a security guard relaxing in the sun.

There are halted condo projects in many cities - and this is inventory that will some day come on the market. Note: as a reminder, high rise condo inventory is not included in the new home sales report - so this is additional inventory that is sometimes overlooked.

Fed: Banks Tighten Lending Standards Further

by Calculated Risk on 5/04/2009 02:07:00 PM

From the Fed: The April 2009 Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey
on Bank Lending Practices

In the April survey, the net percentages of respondents that reported having tightened their business lending policies over the previous three months, although continuing to be very elevated, edged down for the second consecutive survey. In contrast, somewhat larger net percentages of domestic banks than in the January survey reported having tightened credit standards on residential mortgages. The net percentage of domestic respondents that reported having tightened their lending policies on credit card loans remained about unchanged from the January survey, whereas the net percentage that reported having tightened their policies on other consumer loans fell. Respondents indicated that demand for loans from both businesses and households continued to weaken for nearly all types of loans over the survey period, an exception being demand for prime mortgages, a category of loans that registered an increase in demand for the first time since the survey began to track prime mortgages separately in April 2007.

In response to the special questions on the outlook for loan quality, a significant majority of banks reported that credit quality for all types of loans is likely to deteriorate over the year if the economy progresses according to consensus forecasts.
Charts here for CRE, residential mortgage, consumer loans and C&I.

Report: Wells Fargo Asked to Raise Capital

by Calculated Risk on 5/04/2009 12:55:00 PM

From CNBC: Wells Fargo Is Asked to Raise More Capital After Stress Test

Regulators have told Wells Fargo to shore up its finances after government "stress tests" showed the bank would have trouble surviving a deeper recession.
The leaks continue ... Citi, BofA, and Wells need to raise capital ... more to come.

Kansas Fed President Hoenig: Let Troubled Banks Fail

by Calculated Risk on 5/04/2009 11:51:00 AM

Dr. Thomas Hoenig, President of Federal Reserve of Kansas City speaks today in New York at Demos: A Better Way To Restore The Banking System

Yesterday Hoenig wrote in the Financial Times: Troubled banks must be allowed a way to fail. Excerpts below the video.

Here is a live webcast of Hoenig's speech (starts at 12:30PM ET):



Excerpts from Hoenig's opinion piece:
... I believe there is an alternative method for addressing this crisis that deals more effectively with the issues we currently face while also considering the long-run consequences of those actions: the implementation of a systematic plan to resolve large, problem financial institutions.

... Boiled down to its simplest elements, the plan would require those firms seeking government assistance to make the taxpayer senior to all shareholders, with the government determining the circumstances for managers and directors. ...

Non-viable institutions would be allowed to fail and be placed into a negotiated conservatorship or a bridge institution, with the bad assets liquidated while the remainder of the firm is operated under new management and re-privatised as soon as is feasible. This plan is similar to what was done in Sweden in the 1990s and in the US with the failure of Continental Illinois in the 1980s.

This plan has many advantages, including that management and shareholders bear the costs for their actions before taxpayer funds are committed. This process also is equitable across all firms; is similar to what is currently done with smaller banks; and provides a definitive process that should reduce market uncertainty. These are important reasons to implement this kind of resolution process.
....
Certainly, the approach I suggest for resolving these large firms also is not without substantial cost, but it looks to both the short and long run.

A systematic approach would reduce the uncertainty that has paralysed financial markets; the cost is more measurable and therefre manageable; and there will be fewer adverse consequences compared to the path we are on now.

Because we still have far to go in this crisis, there remains time to define a clear process for resolving large institutional failure. Without one, the consequences will involve a series of short-term events and far more uncertainty for the global economy in the long run.

While I agree that central banks must sometimes take actions affecting the short run, they must keep the long run in focus or risk failing their mission.

Private Construction Spending Declines Slightly in March

by Calculated Risk on 5/04/2009 10:01:00 AM

Private residential construction spending is 61.8% below the peak of early 2006.

Private non-residential construction spending is 5.7% below the peak of last September.

Construction Spending Click on graph for larger image in new window.

The first graph shows private residential and nonresidential construction spending since 1993. Note: nominal dollars, not inflation adjusted.

Residential construction spending is still declining, and now nonresidential spending has peaked and will probably decline sharply over the next 18 months to two years.

Construction Spending YoYThe second graph shows the year-over-year change for private residential and nonresidential construction spending.

Nonresidential spending is essentially flat on a year-over-year basis, and will turn strongly negative going forward. Residential construction spending is still declining, although the YoY change will probably be less negative going forward.

As I've noted before, these will probably be two key stories for 2009: the collapse in private non-residential construction, and the probable bottom for residential construction spending. Both stories are just developing ...

From the Census Bureau: February 2009 Construction at $967.5 Billion Annual Rate

Spending on private construction was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $661.0 billion, 0.1 percent (±1.4%) below the revised February estimate of $661.6 billion. Residential construction was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $258.4 billion in March, 4.2 percent (±1.3%) below the revised February estimate of $269.6 billion. Nonresidential construction was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $402.6 billion in March, 2.7 percent (±1.4%) above the revised February estimate of $392.0 billion.

Pending Home Sales Up Slightly in March

by Calculated Risk on 5/04/2009 10:00:00 AM

From MarketWatch: U.S. March pending home sales index up 3.2%

The housing market improved in March, a trade group said Monday. The pending home sales index rose 3.2% compared with February and was up 1.1% compared with a year earlier, the National Association of Realtors reported.
Note: Existing home sales are reported at the close of escrow, pending home sales are reported when contracts are signed. The Pending Home Sales index leads existing home sales by about 45 days, so the March pending report suggests existing home sales will increase slightly from April to May. (March is the most recent existing home sales report).

Financial Times: BofA plans to raise more than $10 Billion in Capital

by Calculated Risk on 5/04/2009 12:48:00 AM

From the Financial Times: BofA and Citi in last push on stress tests

Citigroup and Bank of America are working on plans to raise more than $10bn each in fresh capital ... Citi, BofA and at least two other lenders will on Monday attempt to convince the Treasury and the Federal Reserve that the findings of “stress tests” into their financial health were too pessimistic.

... the government will present the final test results to 19 banks tomorrow with an announcement scheduled for Thursday ...
emphasis added
This will be an interesting week.

David Leonhardt reports the NY Times: Tests of Banks May Bring Hope More Than Fear
The results of the bank stress tests to be released by the Obama administration this week are expected to include more detailed information about individual banks — assessing specific parts of their loan portfolios ...
It sounds like regulators will release loss projections by the 12 loan categories included in the Fed White Paper: The Supervisory Capital Assessment Program: Design and Implementation

Sunday, May 03, 2009

Krugman: Falling Wage Syndrome

by Calculated Risk on 5/03/2009 11:24:00 PM

Paul Krugman writes in the NY Times: Falling Wage Syndrome

Wages are falling all across America.
...
[A]ccording to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average cost of employing workers in the private sector rose only two-tenths of a percent in the first quarter of this year — the lowest increase on record. Since the job market is still getting worse, it wouldn’t be at all surprising if overall wages started falling later this year.
...
Suppose that workers at the XYZ Corporation accept a pay cut. That lets XYZ management cut prices, making its products more competitive. Sales rise, and more workers can keep their jobs. So you might think that wage cuts raise employment — which they do at the level of the individual employer.

But if everyone takes a pay cut, nobody gains a competitive advantage. So there’s no benefit to the economy from lower wages. Meanwhile, the fall in wages can worsen the economy’s problems on other fronts.

In particular, falling wages, and hence falling incomes, worsen the problem of excessive debt ...

There has been a lot of talk lately about green shoots and all that, and there are indeed indications that the economic plunge that began last fall may be leveling off. ... the risk that America will ... face years of deflation and stagnation — seems, if anything, to be rising.
It sure seems many analysts suffer from a bipolar disorder. A few months ago it was depression, now it is "green shoots". As Krugman notes, it appears the pace of deterioration has slowed, and perhaps the economy will bottom sometime this year - but that is different from new growth. Stagnation is a real concern.

WSJ: Banks Tighten Corporate Credit Lines

by Calculated Risk on 5/03/2009 08:26:00 PM

From the WSJ: Banks Get Tougher on Credit Line Conditions

Banks are shortening the terms on lines of credit ... They are charging significantly higher fees for the lines of credit, known as revolvers. And instead of promising an interest rate determined mainly by the company's credit rating, banks will now charge more if the cost of insuring the company's debt against default is higher.
...
About 72% of the revolving credit facilities obtained by investment-grade companies in the first quarter of 2009 had 364-day maturities, or tenors, and no companies received five-year lines ... In the same period a year ago, 30% of the facilities were for 364 days and 41% had five-year maturities.
There are two key changes: the duration has been shortened, and the interest rate is based on the price of default insurance (as opposed to credit rating). Another snub of the ratings agencies!

Also on lending standards, the Fed's April Senior Loan Officer Survey on bank lending practices will probably be released this week.

Credit Crisis Indicators

by Calculated Risk on 5/03/2009 03:53:00 PM

It has been some time, so here is a look at few credit indicators:

First, the British Bankers' Association reported Friday that the three-month dollar Libor rates were fixed at 1.007%. The LIBOR was at 1.30% a few weeks ago, and peaked at 4.81875% on Oct 10, 2008. The dollar LIBOR might break below 1.0% this week.

A2P2 Spread Click on graph for larger image in new window.

There has been improvement in the A2P2 spread. This has declined to 0.56. 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 SpreadMeanwhile the TED spread has decreased further over the last week, and is now at 86.39. This is the difference between the interbank rate for three month loans and the three month Treasury. The peak was 463 on Oct 10th and a normal spread is around 50 bps.


Spread Corporate and Treasury The third graph shows the spread between 30 year Moody's Aaa and Baa rated bonds and the 30 year treasury.

The spread has decreased sharply over the last couple of weeks. The spreads are still very high, 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.
Spread Corporate Master and Treasury This graph shows the at the Merrill Lynch Corporate Master Index OAS (Option adjusted spread) 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.
Back in early March, Warren Buffett mentioned that credit conditions were tightening again - and this was probably one of the indexes he was looking at. Since March, the index has declined.

All of these indicators are still too high, but there has been progress.

Blight Laws and Foreclosed Properties

by Calculated Risk on 5/03/2009 11:49:00 AM

Here are a few stories on cities fighting foreclosure related blight ...

From the San Francisco Chronicle: Vacant foreclosed homes spawn blight, crime

Next door to Jeffrey Cash's tidy East Oakland bungalow sits a boarded-up foreclosed house that has been vacant for months, attracting locals who shoot dice in the driveway, smoke crack on the porch and dump debris in the yard, he said.
...
His situation is emblematic of a larger problem. The droves of vacant foreclosures nationwide and locally, many of them clustered in low-income areas, act as magnets for crime and create neighborhood blight, according to residents and civic leaders.
...
Many [cities] turn to anti-blight ordinances to try to force the banks that own the foreclosures to take care of them - mow the lawns, board up windows and doors - or face stiff fines if they don't. A California bill enacted in September (SB1137) allows municipalities to charge lenders $1,000 a day for failing to maintain foreclosed properties; some cities already have similar anti-blight provisions in place.
From the Boston Herald: City liens on lenders
City inspectors have slapped thousands of dollars in liens on 43 vacant or foreclosed properties blighting Hub neighborhoods to halt the national housing crisis from spreading more urban decay.

Among those being targeted are big banks, including Deutsche Bank and Wells Fargo, who have ignored their responsibility to maintain the seized homes. ...
From the WSJ: Banker: 'What'd I Do Wrong, Officer?' Cop: 'You've Got Algae in the Pool, Sir'
Officials at a Citigroup Inc. office in St. Louis placed a call to this desert town recently. The bank had caught word that Indio was coming after the lending giant with fines and threats of criminal charges. The offense: an algae-infested swimming pool at 79760 Eagle Bend Court.
...
[L]ast year, Indio passed a law that allowed it to charge banks with a criminal misdemeanor if they allowed a home to fall into disrepair.

"If I need to do it, I'll say, 'Mr. Bank President, if you don't come and take care of your property, we're going to come arrest you and take you to court in California,'" says Brad Ramos, Indio's long-serving police chief.
...
After the letters from Indio, Citigroup paid a $3,450 fine to Indio and sent a cleaning crew to fix the pool at Eagle Bend Court where Citigroup had managed the foreclosure process.
These fines will push the lenders to sell the properties quicker - or demolish them - or possibly not even foreclose on some properties.

Jim the Realtor: "Selling like hotcakes"

by Calculated Risk on 5/03/2009 09:02:00 AM

This video might surprise some people ...

Jim takes us on a tour of a new home site in Carmel Valley, San Diego (Video on May 2nd). Jim said these homes are "selling like hotcakes".

Just a reminder, new home sales are counted by the Census Bureau when the contract is signed (even before the homes are built).

Note: Carmel Valley is in a newer area of San Diego (east of Del Mar).

Saturday, May 02, 2009

Saturday Night Thread

by Calculated Risk on 5/02/2009 11:37:00 PM

A little Daily Show comedy ...

Shiller on Depression Scares

by Calculated Risk on 5/02/2009 07:59:00 PM

Professor Shiller writes in the New York Times: Depression Scares Are Hardly New

WHAT is the chance that the current downturn will morph into another Great Depression? That question has been preoccupying people for months.

The popular mood has a huge impact on the economy, so it’s worth noting what many people seem to forget: Depression scares come and go. And by one authoritative measure, the current outbreak of concern has been surprisingly mild.

The University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers have included in their regular measurements this specific question about fear of a prolonged depression:

“Looking ahead, which would you say is more likely — that in the country as a whole we’ll have continuous good times during the next five years or so, or that we will have periods of widespread unemployment or depression, or what?”

... A high score on the question means that the answers tilted toward continuous good times, with a low score tilting toward unemployment or depression. Since 1960, the average score has been 94.

If we define a depression scare as any time the score is below 65, there have been four such scares since 1951. They were in the periods from 1974 to 1975, during which 47 was the lowest score; from 1978 to 1982, with a low of 41; from 1990 to 1992, with a low of 54; and from 2008 to 2009, with a low (to date) of 59. Note that so far, at least, the worst reading in the current scare has not been as bad as those of the previous episodes.

In each case, the scare’s significance is further confirmed by electronically counting in news databases the number of articles containing the word pair “great depression.” There were huge peaks in the count during these periods.
Here is a graph comparing the decline in real GDP for the current recession with other recessions since 1947. Depression is marked on the graph as -10%.

GDP Declines Click on table for larger image in new window.

After the 6.1% SAAR decline in Q1 2009 GDP, the cumulative real decline is now 3.3% from the peak.

NOTE: GDP is reported on a real (inflation adjusted) Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rate (SAAR) basis. Real GDP declined about 1.5% in Q1.

Even though the current recession is already one of the worst since 1947, it is only about 1/3 of the way to a depression (commonly defined as a 10% decline in real GDP).

Stated another way, to reach a depression, the economy would have to decline at about the same annual rate as the last two quarters for the next four quarters.

Just to put this in perspective, during the Great Depression, real GDP declined 26.5% from the peak to the trough.

I believe the odds of the current recession becoming a depression are very low (much less another Great Depression), but I think the current period has far greater risks than those earlier periods because of the severe financial crisis.

Buffett on Housing and Consumer Spending

by Calculated Risk on 5/02/2009 01:59:00 PM

From MarketWatch: Buffett sees some housing market stabilization

"In the last few months you've seen a real pickup in activity although at much lower prices," Buffett said, citing data from Berkshire's real estate brokerage business, which is one of the largest in the U.S.
...
"We see something close to stability at these much-reduced prices in the medium to lower part of the market," Buffett said.
Also from MarketWatch: Buffett: Consumer spending slump not over
The recent drop in consumer spending and the resulting pressure on retailing, manufacturing and services industries could last "quite a long time," Berkshire Hathaway Chairman Warren Buffett said Saturday.

"I think our retail businesses will not do well for some time" as U.S. consumers save more, Buffett told investors at the company's annual shareholders meeting. "I would not look for any quick rebound in retail, manufacturing and services businesses."
Personal Saving RateClick on graph for large image.

This graph shows the saving rate starting in 1959 (using a three month centered average for smoothing) through the March Personal Income report released yesterday. The saving rate was 4.1% in March.

This suggest households are saving substantially more than during the last few years (when the saving rate was close to zero). The saving rate will probably continue to rise (an aging population usually pushes the saving rate higher) and a rising saving rate will repair household balance sheets, but, as Buffett notes, this will also keep pressure on personal consumption.

Foreclosures: Banks Setting Opening Auction Bid Below Amount Owed

by Calculated Risk on 5/02/2009 09:02:00 AM

From Jillayne Schlicke at Rain City Guide: Why are Banks Setting the Opening Auction Bid Below The Principal Balance?

I attended a foreclosure auction in Bellevue, WA last week to discover if the rumor was true that banks are opening their bids below the amount owed. I received confirmation from three professional investors that yes, the banks have been doing that, it’s no secret, and there seems to be no discernable pattern. It’s not one particular bank or lender, it’s not particular types of property or in any specific area. It appears to be random.

... Only a few of the trustee sales attracted bidders, and the rest were deeded back to the bank. Out of the 92 active sales, 25 had opening bids below the amount owed to the bank.
Jillayne offers some possible explanations why the banks are bidding below the amount they are owed. I've been hearing similar stories in California.

Also, here is the monthly post: April Economic Summary in Graphs.

Friday, May 01, 2009

Summary Post

by Calculated Risk on 5/01/2009 10:27:00 PM

  • The Stress Test results will be released Thursday May 7th after the markets close.

  • Three banks failed today: America West Bank, Layton, Utah, Citizens Community Bank, Ridgewood, New Jersey (corrected - listed the purchasing bank), and Silverton Bank, National Association, Atlanta, Georgia. Silverton is an important bank - it had $4.1 billion in assets, and it was a correspondent banks - a bank for banks. From the Atlanta Business Chronicle:
    [Silverton Bank's failure] will ripple through the banking industry, which some industry experts said will have catastrophic consequences for banks across the Sun Belt as it impacts potentially hundreds of bank balance sheets.
    Many small banks invested in Silverton, or Silverton sold them loan participation in mostly Construction & Development loans. The losses could lead to other bank failures.

  • Auto sales were very weak - just above the record low in February.

  • The Institute for Supply Management April 2009 Non-Manufacturing Report showed contraction in manufacturing, but contracting at a slow pace.

  • The National Multi Housing Council apartment survey showed conditions worsened (from landlords perspective) though the pace of deterioration is decelerating (a common theme: things are still getting worse, but at a slower pace).

  • And for those interested, here is a post comparing quarterly and monthly PCE data.

  • Jillayne Schlicke of RainCityGuide.com took this video at a foreclosure auction on April 24, 2009 in Bellevue, WA. The lady in yellow was just reading off addresses so Jillayne asked her what she was doing. It ends up these were postponements - properties that are probably in loan modification.