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Friday, July 17, 2009

Market, State Unemployment, Fed Balance Sheet

by Calculated Risk on 7/17/2009 04:00:00 PM

A few graphs ...

State Unemployment Click on graph for larger image in new window.

The first graph shows the high and low unemployment rates for each state (and D.C.) since 1976. The red bar is the current unemployment rate (sorted by the current unemployment rate).

Sixteen states now have double digit unemployment rates.

Missouri, Washington, New Jersey and West Virginia are getting close.

Eight states are at record unemployment rates: Rhode Island, Oregon, South Carolina, Nevada, California, Florida, Georgia, and Delaware.

Fed Balance Sheet The Atlanta Fed is now posting Economic Highlights and Financial Highlights weekly.

I cover most of the economic data as it is released, but these are good summaries.

This graph shows the composition of the Fed's assets. From the Atlanta Fed:

  • While the overall size of the Fed’s balance sheet has been shrinking slightly over the last two months, the composition of the balance sheet has changed.

  • There have been sizeable declines in short-term lending to financials and lending to nonbank credit markets. For example, combined, TAF credit, currency swaps, and the CPFF have fallen by about one-half from over $1 trillion on April 8 to just under $500 billion on July 8.

  • Offsetting these declines have been increases in holdings of agency debt, agency mortgage backed securities (MBS), and U.S. Treasury securities. Combined, these three categories have increased by about $430 billion since April 8.
  • Stock Market CrashesAnd on the market ...

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

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

    Report: CIT in Talks for DIP Financing

    by Calculated Risk on 7/17/2009 03:02:00 PM

    From CNBC: CIT Talks Now Include Possible Financing in Bankruptcy

    CIT Group's talks with many lenders have transitioned primarily to how the company would receive financing once it files for bankruptcy, CNBC has learned.

    Although talks are continuing on financing outside of bankruptcy, sources said that discussions are also focused on a so-called debtor-in-possession loan, in which CIT would receive money after a bankruptcy filing.

    For that reason, a bankruptcy filing is unlikely on Friday, although the situation remains fluid.
    A bad sign ...

    Hotel RevPAR off 18.4%

    by Calculated Risk on 7/17/2009 12:43:00 PM

    From HotelNewsNow.com: STR reports U.S. performance for week ending 11 July 2009

    In year-over-year measurements, the industry’s occupancy fell 9.7 percent to end the week at 60.3 percent. Average daily rate dropped 9.6 percent to finish the week at US$93.97. Revenue per available room for the week decreased 18.4 percent to finish at US$56.65.
    Although the occupancy rate was off 9.7 percent compared to the same week in 2008, in both 2006 and 2007 the occupancy rate for the week after the 4th of July weekend was over 74 percent (last year it was 66.8 percent). The occupancy rate is off about 19 percent compared to 2007.

    Hotel Occupancy Rate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph shows the YoY change in the occupancy rate (3 week trailing average).

    The three week average is off 8.2% from the same period in 2008.

    The average daily rate is down 9.6%, and RevPAR is off 18.4% from the same week last year.

    Note: Business travel is off much more than leisure travel - so the summer months will probably not be as weak as other times of the year.

    Data Source: Smith Travel Research, Courtesy of HotelNewsNow.com

    States: More Record Unemployment Rates in June

    by Calculated Risk on 7/17/2009 11:10:00 AM

    Note: the BLS started keeping state records in 1976.

    From the BLS: Regional and State Employment and Unemployment Summary

    Michigan again reported the highest jobless rate, 15.2 percent, in June. (The last state to have an unemployment rate of 15.0 percent or higher was West Virginia in March 1984.) The states with the next highest rates were Rhode Island, 12.4 percent; Oregon, 12.2 percent; South Carolina, 12.1 percent; Nevada, 12.0 percent; California, 11.6 percent; Ohio, 11.1 percent; and North Carolina, 11.0 percent. The Nevada, Rhode Island, and South Carolina rates were the highest on record for those states. Florida, at 10.6 percent, Georgia, at 10.1 percent, and Delaware, at 8.4 percent, also posted series highs.

    GE Conference Call Comments

    by Calculated Risk on 7/17/2009 09:39:00 AM

    Some comments from the GE Conference call (comments from Brian):

    GE: If you look at the environment and the global landscape not much has changed from how we saw it at EPG [investor presentation?]. We're seeing growth in selected markets. Parts of the globe are still robust. China and the middle east, India, places like that. Deflation is helping our margins.

    just talking about orders and backlog, we had about $18 billion of second quarter orders, slightly below first quarter and down about 23% FX adjusted versus last year. We're down about 16% year to date. The backlog remains strong. The orders were about the same level as '06 and '07. Backlog remains very strong at $169 billion. If you just look at the orders in some context we had a record first half of '08. That was really the peak of what we saw for major equipment orders. We built $30 billion of backlog over the last four years so we really expected orders to be down even without the recession. A couple positives with major equipment, cancellations are very low. Cancellations are like $100 million…If you look at our backlog conversion rate and current orders and look forward, maybe 12 months, and you think about the fact that about two-thirds of any given year's revenue convert from backlog, and the other third represent current year orders, we look at a rough estimate for 2010 at about, with equipment revenue down about 10 to 15%, some where in that range.

    Quick update on stimulus and global growth. First with stimulus. We talked about at EPG having about $190 billion potential from a stimulus standpoint. Almost nothing has come out from this so far. The major buckets are clean energy, affordable healthcare, and then a scattering of other projects. We're seeing some early wins in smart grid with orders up 70%. As we said, the wind tax credits have been clarified. China spending is very strong. We're starting to get some bidding on health information changes and seeing some decent activity around the nuclear business. If you look at it from a global standpoint, some of the global regions are still extremely strong. China was up 31%, India up 46%, Middle East up 10% despite the fact that we're only beginning the Iraq shipments and order completion.

    GE Capital

    Delinquencies – Equipment and Real Estate [US improved and Asia is worse????]

    Next is an update on our delinquencies in non earnings. On the left side is the commercial equipment finance data. You can see the 30 plus day delinquencies for equipment are down six basis points in Q2 versus Q1. That was driven by a decline in delinquencies in the Americas where 30 plus went from 2.81% to 2.45%. So we're very interested in watching this trend and seeing how this develops as we go through the year. That was partially offset by, we had some increased delinquencies in our Asia and European equipment books. We continue to see pressure on non earnings, up 18 basis points versus the first quarter but again the pace of that growth has also leveled off a bit. It's driven by senior secured loans where we're well collateralized. In terms of real estate, which is not in the delinquency for the equipment bar up above, delinquencies increased up to 4% [up 178BP Q/Q] on the real estate book and non earnings are up to 2.9% [up 166BP Q/Q]. You can see we continue to see pressure in the commercial real estate book,

    GE Portfolio Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    From the GE Investor Presentation material.

    Delinquencies – Consumer

    On the right side, consumer data, and this is really developing into the two different categories by type of exposure. We broke out mortgage, global mortgage, and nonmortgage because loss dynamics are so different. You can see the improvements in the non mortgage delinquency as the delinquency went from 6.02 in the first quarter down to 5.92 in the second quarter and that's driven by North America . North American delinquencies are down 14 basis points to 6.96%. We're seeing better entry rates in delinquency. We're seeing improved late-stage collection effectiveness. The non earnings balance was flat to the prior quarter, and the reason the rate increase a little bit is because the balance is down. So as a percent it's a little higher, but we are getting the benefit of all the underwriting actions that we took last year as well as some seasonality benefits. And then the second category are the global mortgage assets. We continue to see growth in 30 plus delinquencies and non earnings. UK mortgage book drives most of the changes

    Reserves

    Next is an update on how we think about the non earning assets and our reserve coverage. The left side is commercial. Non earnings ended the quarter at 6.4 billion. It's up 1.9 billion from Q1. This represents 2.9% of financing receivables. The bars show the benefit of being senior secured lender. We expect 1.9 billion of non earnings to have 100% recovery. We have another 1.2 billion some type of workout where we expect full recovery. We'll have a renegotiation, some changes to the documents and terms, and then we have another 1.9 billion where we're protected by collateral value. At the end of the day that leaves with you 1.4 billion of estimated loss exposure today. You can see we have 173% coverage with our reserves. [To summarize, they are expecting a 78% recovery on what is largely a junk grade portfolio albeit in a senior secured position]

    GE PresentationOn the right side of the consumer non-earning assets of $6.6 billion and they were up over Q1, represent about 4.7% of the financing receivables. The consumer dynamics are very different between the mortgage and the nonmortgage assets so the green bar represents our non mortgage non earning assets, principally the US retail business, the credit card business and retail sales finance. We have 1.7 billion dollars of non earnings in that book. And we have 3.3 million of reserves against it, 189% coverage. And then the remainder of the non-earning assets on the global mortgage book we expect 1.5 billion of that to cure. With our underwriting positions we expect to recover $2.9 billion of exposure based on loan to value position. We underwrite at about 70 to 75% loan to value. Today they're at about 85% loan to value as house prices have declined. We have some mortgage insurance we expect to recover on leaving with expected loss of $500 million, 173% coverage without that. We believe we're appropriately reserved for non-earning loss exposure. We'll cover more in detail on the 28th meeting. [To summarize, they expect 30% of their non performing mortgage assets to cure, the value of the underlying assets in their mortgage book are down 12-18% from origination, they expect a 15% loss severity rate (including a modest benefit from mortgage insurance) - these guys must the gods of mortgage underwriting – if anyone wants to bet on the trend of future loss estimates, I’ll take the over – their corporate motto “Imagination at Work” seems fully appropriate here )

    Housing Starts increase in June from May

    by Calculated Risk on 7/17/2009 08:30:00 AM

    Total Housing Starts and Single Family Housing Starts Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    Total housing starts were at 582 thousand (SAAR) in June, up sharply over the last two months from the all time record low in April of 479 thousand (the lowest level since the Census Bureau began tracking housing starts in 1959).

    Single-family starts were at 470 thousand (SAAR) in June; 31 percent above the record low in January and February (357 thousand).

    Permits for single-family units were 430 thousand in May, suggesting single-family starts might decline some in July.

    Here is the Census Bureau report on housing Permits, Starts and Completions.

    Building Permits:
    Privately-owned housing units authorized by building permits in June were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 563,000. This is 8.7 percent (±3.0%) above the revised May rate of 518,000, but is 52.0 percent (±3.6%) below the June 2008 estimate of 1,174,000.

    Single-family authorizations in June were at a rate of 430,000; this is 5.9 percent (±1.4%) above the revised May figure of 406,000. Authorizations of units in buildings with five units or more were at a rate of 109,000 in June.

    Housing Starts:
    Privately-owned housing starts in June were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 582,000. This is 3.6 percent (±11.3%)* above the revised May estimate of 562,000, but is 46.0 percent (±4.3%) below the June 2008 rate of 1,078,000.

    Single-family housing starts in June were at a rate of 470,000; this is 14.4 percent (±11.8%) above the revised May figure of 411,000. The June rate for units in buildings with five units or more was 101,000.

    Housing Completions:
    Privately-owned housing completions in June were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 818,000. This is 0.4 percent (±15.7%)* below the revised May estimate of 821,000 and is 27.7 percent (±9.0%) below the June 2008 rate of 1,131,000.

    Single-family housing completions in June were at a rate of 538,000; this is 8.9 percent (±14.7%)* above the revised May figure of 494,000. The June rate for units in buildings with five units or more was 271,000.

    Note that single-family completions of 538 thousand are still significantly higher than single-family starts (401 thousand).

    It now appears that single family starts might have bottomed in January. However I expect starts to remain at fairly low levels for some time as the excess inventory is worked off.

    Bloomberg: Regulators Poised to Seize Corus

    by Calculated Risk on 7/17/2009 01:00:00 AM

    Just a little preview for BFF ...

    From Bloomberg: Corus Bankshares May Be Seized as FDIC Weighs Potential Bidders

    U.S. regulators are poised to seize Corus Bankshares Inc., the Chicago lender crippled by loans for condominium construction, and are preparing to auction the entire company or its assets, people briefed on the matter said.
    ...
    Corus’s fate has shifted into the hands of the FDIC because the lender and its financial adviser, Bank of America Corp., haven’t found a buyer willing to complete a deal in the absence of government assistance.
    Note: Corus had $7.7 billion in assets at the end of Q1.

    Guaranty Financial (another candidate for BFF) had $15.4 billion in assets at the end of Q3 2008. They have been filing NT forms since Q3 (Notification of inability to timely file).

    Thursday, July 16, 2009

    Daily Show: Financial Guru?

    by Calculated Risk on 7/16/2009 10:51:00 PM

    If video doesn't load, here is the link.

    Housing: Sticky Prices

    by Calculated Risk on 7/16/2009 09:41:00 PM

    Earlier today, DataQuick reported that home sales increased in the California Bay Area. The report mentioned "a perception among potential buyers that prices have bottomed out."

    First, a little history: When the housing bubble was inflating, the demand for housing surged with the widespread use of non-traditional mortgage products. Looking at a supply-demand diagram, this surge in demand pushed the curve to the right.

    At the same time speculators were buying up properties, reducing the supply with the intention of selling later at a higher price. This activity shifted the supply curve to the left (this activity was classic storage).

    So with the surge in demand, combined with speculators removing supply from the market, prices skyrocketed.

    This is exactly what I described in April 2005: Housing: Speculation is the Key

    Of course, once the bubble burst, the supply curve shifted back to the right with speculators unloading properties and all the distressed sales. At the same time, demand declined sharply as speculators disappeared and lenders tightened standards.

    If housing was a perfect market, prices would have fallen rapidly to the market clearing price. However housing prices are sticky downward - as I described in 2005 post: "[R]eal estate prices display strong persistence and are sticky downward. Sellers tend to want a price close to recent sales in their neighborhood, and buyers, sensing prices are declining, will wait for even lower prices.

    This means real estate markets do not clear immediately, and what we usually observe is a drop in transaction volumes."

    This doesn't mean prices are stuck - just sticky. Prices have been falling in most areas for three years, and will probably fall further.

    And this brings us back to the DataQuick article. Just because demand is picking up a little, doesn't mean prices have bottomed. Note: Ignore the median price in the article - that is rising because of the change in mix.

    Assume the following diagram shows the current housing market supply and demand. With the current supply and demand curves, and a perfect market, prices would be at P0 and quantity Q0. However prices were actually at P1.

    Note that demand doesn't fall to zero just because the price is above the market clearing price.

    Now prices have fallen from P1 to P2.

    Imperfect Market Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This has increased the demand from Q1 to Q2.

    I've drawn the diagram to show P2 is still above P0 (typo fixed). Naturally the current buyers think "prices have bottomed out", but they haven't for the market shown.

    There are clues in the DataQuick report that prices are still too high. The volume of sales is still below normal, foreclosure resales are 37.3 percent of the resale market (a very high percentage) - and foreclosure activity "remains near record levels". And the foreclosure resale statistic don't include short sales, and the recent data from Sacramento suggest short sale activity is fairly strong.

    There are other reasons to believe prices will fall further, but I just want to point out that the small pickup in demand doesn't suggest a price bottom.

    Senator: FDIC's Bair says 500 Banks Could Fail

    by Calculated Risk on 7/16/2009 08:56:00 PM

    From Forbes: Bank Earnings: Beauty Is Skin-Deep (ht Brett)

    The banking industry is bracing for continued losses from consumer loans, considering the rising unemployment rate, and an expected wave of commercial real-estate losses. At a Senate Banking Committee hearing in Washington on Thursday, Sen. Jim Bunning, R-Ky., related a comment to him by Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair that another 500 banks could fail "unless something dramatic happens."
    Note that this is Bunning's recollection of a discussion with FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair - so this might not be exactly what Bair said.

    UPDATE: FDIC spokesman, Andrew Gray, disputed Bunning’s recollection (ht we will not monetize):
    “In both public and private settings, the chairman and the FDIC is always careful to not make predictions on the number of upcoming bank failures,” Gray said in an e-mail. “No estimate” was given during the meeting, which took place last week, Gray said.

    “We would regret any miscommunication, but she did not say that,” Gray added.

    LA Area Port Traffic in June

    by Calculated Risk on 7/16/2009 06:31:00 PM

    Note: this is not seasonally adjusted. There is a very distinct seasonal pattern for imports, but not for exports.

    Sometimes port traffic gives us an early hint of changes in the trade deficit. The following graph shows the loaded inbound and outbound traffic at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach in TEUs (TEUs: 20-foot equivalent units or 20-foot-long cargo container). Although containers tell us nothing about value, container traffic does give us an idea of the volume of goods being exported and imported.

    LA Area Port Traffic Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    Inbound traffic was 22.2% below June 2008.

    Outbound traffic was 19.2% below May 2008.

    There had been some recovery in U.S. exports over the last few months (the year-over-year comparison was off 30% from December through February). And this showed up in the in the May trade report, but the port data suggests exports were a little weaker in June.

    Market Precis and More News

    by Calculated Risk on 7/16/2009 04:05:00 PM

    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".

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

  • Tomorrow could be wild. CIT might file bankrutpcy, Corus Bank and Guaranty Financial might be seized by the FDIC ...

    From the Journal Sentinel: Judge denies Guaranty Bank's request to halt insurance payments
    A federal judge has denied Guaranty Bank's request that it be allowed to halt payments to an insurance company despite Guaranty's contention that continuing to pay millions of dollars in premiums each month threatened the bank's survival.

    In February, Guaranty asked the court to let it stop paying premiums to Evanston Insurance Co. of Deerfield, Ill, but nonetheless keep the insurer's coverage on its home-equity loan portfolio intact. Guaranty also sought the return of $30 million in premiums paid since 2004, contending the policy was sold to the bank illegally under Wisconsin insurance law.

    In a brief filed with the lawsuit, Guaranty asserted at the time: "This is a 'bet the bank' motion because the continued existence of Guaranty Bank rests on the outcome."
    From the WSJ: CIT Bondholders Hash Out Their Options and Bloomberg: CIT Group’s Bondholders Said to Discuss Debt Swap

  • From Reuters: MGIC to halt new business; posts steep loss
    Mortgage insurer MGIC Investment Corp reported a wider quarterly loss and said it will stop writing new business as losses mount in the battered housing sector ...

    The largest U.S. mortgage insurer said it will wind down its business and try to capitalize a fresh enterprise that would write new loans beginning next year.
  • UPDATE: Roubini: Views on Economy Unchanged Despite Reports

    Earlier Roubini report was titled: Roubini Now Says The Worst Of Economic Crisis Is Over
    Nouriel Roubini, the economist whose dire forecasts earned him the nickname "Doctor Doom," is now saying that the worst of the economic and financial crisis may be over.
    ...
    Roubini still warned that the US may need a second fiscal stimulus package of up to $250 billion by the end of the year to boost the deteriorating labor market, Reuters reported.

  • Report: CIT Bondholders Considering Debt for Equity Swap

    by Calculated Risk on 7/16/2009 02:31:00 PM

    From Bloomberg: CIT Bondholders Said to Consider Debt Swap as Bankruptcy Looms

    CIT Group Inc. bondholders are holding calls today to discuss whether to swap some of their claims for equity to reduce the 101-year-old lender’s indebtedness ...

    [PIMCO], CIT’s largest bondholder based on regulatory filings, plans to host a call ... [however] there may not be time to complete a debt exchange before CIT goes bankrupt.
    Looks like PIMCO expected a bailout.

    DataQuick: California Bay Area home sales Increase

    by Calculated Risk on 7/16/2009 02:10:00 PM

    Note: Ignore the median price, especially during periods when the mix is changing rapidly.

    From DataQuick: Bay Area home sales and median price rise

    Home sales in the Bay Area jumped to their highest level in almost three years, the result of improved mortgage availability and a perception among potential buyers that prices have bottomed out. ...

    A total of 8,644 new and resale houses and condos sold across the nine-county Bay Area in June. That was up 16.1 percent from 7,447 in May and up 20.4 percent from 7,178 in June 2008, according to San Diego-based MDA DataQuick.

    Home sales have increased on a year-over-year basis the last ten months. June sales have varied from a low of 7,118 in 1993 to 15,735 in 2004 in DataQuick’s statistics, which go back to 1988. Last month was 16.1 percent below the 10,306 for an average June.
    ...
    Financing with home loans above the old “jumbo” limit of $417,000 edged up to the highest level in almost a year. Last month 28.8 percent of all Bay Area mortgages were jumbos, the highest since 31.9 percent in August last year and well above the bottom of 17.1 percent last January. Two years ago jumbos accounted for more than 60 percent of all home purchase loans.
    ...
    Last month 37.3 percent of all homes resold in the Bay Area had been foreclosed on in the prior 12 months, down from 40.5 percent in May and the lowest since 36.0 percent in August 2008. The peak was 52.0 percent in February this year. By county, foreclosure resales ranged last month from 6.3 percent of all resales in Marin to 62.7 percent in Solano.
    ...
    Foreclosure activity remains near record levels ...
    This is still far from a normal market with 37.3% of sales foreclosure resales. And prices will probably continue to fall for some time, especially in the higher priced areas since there are few move-up buyers.

    NAHB: Builder Confidence Increases Slightly In July

    by Calculated Risk on 7/16/2009 01:00:00 PM

    Residential NAHB Housing Market Index Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph shows the builder confidence index from the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB).

    The housing market index (HMI) increased to 17 in July from 15 in June. The record low was 8 set in January.

    This is still very low - and this is what I've expected - a long period of builder depression.

    Note: any number under 50 indicates that more builders view sales conditions as poor than good.

    Press release from the NAHB (added):

    Builder confidence in the market for newly built, single-family homes notched up two points in July to its highest level since September 2008, according to the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI), released today. The HMI rose two points to 17 in July as builders saw an improvement in current sales conditions but continued to express concerns about the future.
    ...
    “Although today’s HMI is positive news that helps confirm the market is bouncing around a bottom, the gain was entirely contained in the component gauging current sales conditions, while the component gauging sales expectations for the next six months remained virtually flat for a fourth consecutive month,” noted NAHB Chief Economist David Crowe. “Builders recognize the recovery is going to be a slow one and that we are facing a number of substantial negative forces.”

    More JPM Comments on Modifications and Foreclosures

    by Calculated Risk on 7/16/2009 11:46:00 AM

    A few more conference call comments on mods and foreclosures: (ht Brian)

    “we definitely saw as all did a build up in loans that were delinquent in all of the delinquency statistics given that we suspended foreclosures during the moratoriums in the Fall and Spring of this year which are described on that side of the page. What I would say is that those will sit there longer in a delinquency bucket so our in prime and subprime you see elevated delinquency stats but we don't expect it to have meaningful accounting or Income Statement impact because as we came out of those moratoriums we originally written down those loans and made adjustments to the writedowns to take account of the longer timeliness to move them through into Real Estate owned and foreclosure, if appropriate, or modify them. So then on modifications, again, I said at the beginning we've approved 138,000 modifications for the Second Quarter here, but those don't have any meaningful impact on our Second Quarter stats, and that's because we have to see three-monthly payments under the terms of the new modification before we'll reunderwrite that loan and it comes out of delinquency and in the meantime, it just continues to roll through delinquency buckets as it otherwise would have per the contract of the term. When we do see, if we do see and we hope to see good success with these modifications perhaps next quarter and in future quarters we'll talk about just the success rate but given that these are largely speaking payment reduction modifications that are done reunderwritten with real income stats and so fourth, we are hopeful that we see some good rates of success in the trial period, but when we do modify, you just see the description at the bottom of how we take into account when we adjust our reserves at the time we modify the expected remaining losses including an assumption for redefault”
    Next quarter we should see the results of the modicifications.
    “when you look at home equity prime and subprime, you'll see the charge-offs continue to trend higher versus prior periods and in a couple of the cases prime and subprime we up our future [loss] guidance but the second point is that across each of these portfolios, the flow into the early delinquency buckets and the dollar value of loans sitting in the early delinquency buckets has started to stabilize over the last 60-90 days across-the-board. That's a new trend versus what we've seen previously and obviously, we don't know if it's going to sustain itself but obviously if it did that would have good implications for future loss trends and could mean that we could be getting near the end of needing to add to reserves in these portfolios.”
    All the other data (like from the MBA) is showing rising delinquencies, especially for prime loans - so this will be something to watch too.

    Philly Fed: "Region's manufacturing still experiencing weakness"

    by Calculated Risk on 7/16/2009 10:00:00 AM

    Here is the Philadelphia Fed Index released today: Business Outlook Survey.

    The region's manufacturing sector is still experiencing weakness ....

    The survey's broadest measure of manufacturing conditions, the diffusion index of current activity, decreased from -2.2 in June to -7.5 this month. The index has been negative for 19 of the past 20 months, a span that corresponds to the current recession ...

    Labor market conditions remain weak, and firms continue to report employment losses and declines in work hours. The current employment index declined to -25.3, from an already weak reading of -21.8. ...
    Philly Fed Index Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph shows the Philly index for the last 40 years.

    "The index has been negative for 19 of the past 20 months, a span that corresponds to the current recession."

    JPM's Dimon: CRE "Big deal for regional banks"

    by Calculated Risk on 7/16/2009 09:16:00 AM

    JPM Conference call comments on Commercial Real Estate (CRE): (ht Brian)

    Analyst: Everyone is still concerned about commercial Real Estate and kind of how it's performing. You haven't really mentioned it as being a problem in the quarter highlighted it. Can you give any color as to how you're seeing general trends in the commercial Real Estate market?

    Jamie Dimon: Commercial Real Estate in the United States of America is going to get worse consistently over the next several quarters. That should not be a surprise to anybody. We've got two major Real Estate exposures, we have what we call CTO which is multi-family smaller loans, it's performing fine and-- what we got from WaMu, that's the commercial bank, 30 Billion portfolio from WaMu -- it will get worse but we don't expect it to be significant, materially significant to our numbers, and we also have a more traditional Real Estate portfolio but I would say both the Bank One, JP Morgan and Chase, we've been so conservative of the last eight or nine years it's been doing nothing but in general shrinking other than the acquisition of WaMu [ it’s 12 billion] and losses are, charge-offs were for the Real Estate banking, 186 basis points and the commercial term lending was 36 and both will get worse but they aren't that big a number for us. It [commercial real estate] is a big deal for regional banks.
    emphasis added

    Report: Record Foreclosure Activity in First Half

    by Calculated Risk on 7/16/2009 08:59:00 AM

    From RealtyTrac:

    RealtyTrac ... today released its Midyear 2009 U.S. Foreclosure Market Report, which shows a total of 1,905,723 foreclosure filings — default notices, auction sale notices and bank repossessions — were reported on 1,528,364 U.S. properties in the first six months of 2009, a 9 percent increase in total properties from the previous six months and a nearly 15 percent increase in total properties from the first six months of 2008. The report also shows that 1.19 percent of all U.S. housing units (one in 84) received at least one foreclosure filing in the first half of the year.

    Foreclosure filings were reported on 336,173 U.S. properties in June, the fourth straight monthly total exceeding 300,000 and helping to boost the second quarter total to the highest quarterly total since RealtyTrac began issuing its report in the first quarter of 2005. Foreclosure filings were reported on 889,829 U.S. properties in the second quarter, an increase of nearly 11 percent from the previous quarter and a 20 percent increase from the second quarter of 2008.
    Something to remember: questions have been raised before about the RealtyTrac numbers (see Foreclosure numbers don’t add up), and RealtyTrac has only been tracking these numbers since 2005. For California, I use the DataQuick numbers for NOD activity (released quarterly), and available since the early '90s - but that is just one state.

    Weekly Unemployment Claims Decline Sharply

    by Calculated Risk on 7/16/2009 08:29:00 AM

    NOTE: The seasonally adjusted weekly claims numbers are being impacted by the layoffs in the automobile industry and other manufacturing sectors. Usually companies cut back production in the summer, and the numbers are adjusted for that pattern - but this year the companies cut back much earlier. This distortion is expected to last for another week or two.

    The DOL reports on weekly unemployment insurance claims:

    In the week ending July 11, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 522,000, a decrease of 47,000 from the previous week's revised figure of 569,000. The 4-week moving average was 584,500, a decrease of 22,500 from the previous week's revised average of 607,000.
    ...
    The advance number for seasonally adjusted insured unemployment during the week ending July 4 was 6,273,000, a decrease of 642,000 from the preceding week's revised level of 6,915,000.
    Weekly Unemployment Claims Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph shows the 4-week moving average of weekly claims since 1971.

    The four-week average of weekly unemployment claims decreased this week by 22,500, and is now 74,250 below the peak of 14 weeks ago. It appears that initial weekly claims have peaked for this cycle.

    The level of initial claims has fallen quickly - but is still very high (over 500K), indicating significant weakness in the job market.

    Following the earlier recessions (like '81), weekly claims fell quickly, but in the two most recent recessions, weekly claims fell some and then stayed elevated for some time. I expect the current recession will be more like the '90 and '01 recessions, than the '81 recession.