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Common Ground Common Sense > Issues that Affect Our Lives > Job Market, Fiscal, and Economic Policies
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Snuffysmith
The banks have been rescued, but the problem still sits there looking you right in the eye.

The BIS changed their method of computer valuation to value to maturity, a cartoon thereby reducing the nominal value from one quadrillion one thousand one hundred and forty four trillion to eight hundred trillion.

There is no way to list 95% of these as they have no common standards.

Other than putting twelve trillion dollars into the system to make Wall Street whole, what has been accomplished.



Mobius Says Derivatives, Stimulus to Spark New Crisis (Update2)
By Bloomberg News

July 15 (Bloomberg) — A new financial crisis will develop from a failure to effectively regulate derivatives and the extra global liquidity from stimulus spending, Templeton Asset Management Ltd.’s Mark Mobius said.

“Political pressure from investment banks and all the people that make money in derivatives” will prevent adequate regulation, said Mobius, who oversees $25 billion as executive chairman of Templeton in Singapore. “Definitely we’re going to have another crisis coming down,” he said in a phone interview from Istanbul on July 13.

The Bank for International Settlements estimates outstanding derivatives total $592 trillion, about 10 times global gross domestic product. Opaque financial products contributed to almost $1.5 trillion in writedowns and losses at the world’s biggest banks, brokers and insurers since the start of 2007, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The U.S. Justice Department is investigating the market for credit-default swaps, Markit Group Ltd., the data provider majority-owned by Wall Street’s largest banks, said July 13.

Mobius didn’t explain what he thought was needed for effective regulation of derivatives, which are contracts used to hedge against changes in stocks, bonds, currencies, commodities, interest rates and weather.

“Banks make so much money with these things that they don’t want transparency because the spreads are so generous when there’s no transparency,” he said.

More…

Snuffysmith
Fed not fit for oversight job, investor group says
By Rex Nutting

AMMAN, Jordan (MarketWatch) — Several large investor groups and two top former regulators are urging the creation of an independent body to examine systemic risks in the U.S. financial sector, the Financial Times reported Wednesday. The group — led by former Securities and Exchange Commission chairmen William Donaldson and Arthur Levitt — said the Federal Reserve should not get the responsibility because it’s credibility had been "tarnished" by its easy credit policies and lax regulatory oversight, which contributed to the excessive leverage that threatens the global economy. The investor group includes senior figures from Calpers, the large Californian state pension fund, and from investment firms BlackRock and Legg Mason

More…

Snuffysmith
Obama’s Stimulus Plan: Failing by Its Own Measure
By STEPHEN GANDEL Tuesday, Jul. 14, 2009

The $787 billion stimulus plan is turning out to be far less stimulating than its architects expected.

Back in early January, when Barack Obama was still President-elect, two of his chief economic advisers — leading proponents of a stimulus bill — predicted that the passage of a large economic-aid package would boost the economy and keep the unemployment rate below 8%. It hasn’t quite worked out that way. Last month, the jobless rate in the U.S. hit 9.5%, the highest level it has reached since 1983.

The two advisers who wrote the paper, Christina Romer and Jared Bernstein, went on to land key jobs in the Obama Administration. Romer is the head of Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers, and Bernstein is the chief economist and economic-policy adviser to Vice President Joe Biden. And the stimulus bill that both economists championed became law in mid-February. What has not come to pass, however, is the boom in job creation that Romer and Bernstein predicted. A little over a month ago, the Administration said the stimulus bill had created or saved 150,000 jobs. That’s a far cry from the 3 million to 4 million jobs that Romer and Bernstein foresaw back in January.

Lawrence Summers, director of the White House’s National Economic Council, said last week that the stimulus bill was on track. This past weekend, the President rejected calls for a second stimulus package, saying the current stimulus needs more time to work, since only a small fraction of the money has been spent. From the beginning, the Administration has said that much of the boost to the economy from the stimulus plan would not come until the second half of this year. Administration officials have also insisted that it’s unfair to judge the effectiveness of the stimulus by projections they made back in January since the recession has turned out to be worse than what most economists predicted even just six months ago.

More…

Snuffysmith
Think about what this disaster means to those on retirement. Now think about Wall Street firms releasing huge earning and bonuses. What is wrong with this picture as unemployment grows?

American Express halts pension payments to UK staff
US-owned firm blames downturn as it suspends contributions to employees’ stakeholder scheme for 18 months
Phillip Inman
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 15 July 2009 17.14 BST


More than 6,000 UK staff at American Express were today contemplating a meagre retirement income after their US-owned employer told them it was suspending pension contributions for the next 18 months.

The company said payments to its occupational retirement scheme were unaffordable in the current economic downturn, though the situation would be kept under review.

Until this month American Express paid a core contribution of 3% of salary into the stakeholder scheme, with a pledge to match contributions of up to 6%.

The largely non-unionised workforce has accepted the deal, which applies to July salary payments.

Stakeholder pensions are personal retirement plans created by the government as a cheap alternative to trustee-based schemes.

Employers are under no obligation to make a contribution and have no responsibility for the success of the stockmarket-invested plans. Most have gone down in value by more than 30% over the last year, following a sharp decline in share values.

The company’s staff are based mainly in Sussex at centres in Brighton and Burgess Hill, with a headquarters in London’s Belgravia.

<a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/jul/15/american-express-suspends-pension-payments">More…

Snuffysmith
California Versus Texas Is America's Future
- The Economist
Snuffysmith
The Next Six Months
Nouriel Roubini and Christian Menegatti, Forbes, July 16, 2009 The U.S. economic outlook remains very weak.
Snuffysmith

Our Economy Needs at Least $2 Trillion in Stimulus Spending Right Now -- Tens of Millions of Jobs Are at Stake

Dean Baker, The Guardian

Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace: Politicians and pundits in Washington are either too ignorant, dishonest, or scared to talk about the expenditures that this economy needs.
Snuffysmith
Report: Record Foreclosure Activity in First Half by CalculatedRisk 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.
Snuffysmith
Curb Your Enthusiasm: CIT & California Loom - Randall Forsyth, Barron's
The Economic Outlook Remains Very Weak - Roubini & Menegatti, Forbes
The Time Bomb in Corporate Debt - David Henry, Business Week
Fear Stagflation - Anatole Kaletsky, Times of London
Snuffysmith
Port Disaster Growing

The latest figures will be filtering out over the next couple of days from the rest of the ports, but already the Port of Lang Beach has released its June import and export report. It shows that inbound cargo from overseas is down 28.4% compared with June a year ago and that on a year to date basis, imports are down 23.5% overall.



On the export side, things were even worse in June with exports down 28.8% compared with year ago levels and that means exports for the year to date are down 26.9%



The Port of Long Beach is only the first of the Ports to come out with their report. And, Long Beach has been the most extreme case. However, as American consumers continue to see disposable incomes fall, I expect the problems of falling imports to be working their way across the country over the next couple of months.

---

One reason that disposable income figures have not been falling as fast as the unemployment rate has been rising (and imports export business dropping) I suspect is in statistical methodologies. If you want something to write up a contributed article on (you can be a reporter, too, you know) just go to work on how the disposable income figures are based on things like 'housing equity' and see how much adjusting has been done there to reflect the real nearly 33% decline nationally in housing prices (S&P/Case-Schiller) since the housing bubble peaked.



Wanna make a bet there isn't some fancy footwork underway there to keep up the illusion that anyone has any free cash to go spend? Then try to sell that in a waterfront diner and let me know how you do.



The truth is becoming apparent if you work the docks, though...and while Long Beach may be dropping some due to market share, the other ports can be expected to see proportionate declines when they report over the next week or so.

Snuffysmith
Foreclosures Jumping

After being at record highs last year, foreclosures are up a further 15% in the first half of 2009.



Gee, maybe living in camps and not burdened with a house payment, people do have higher disposable incomes, don't you suppose?

---

You know things are bad when cemeteries are shutting down.

Snuffysmith
Tax Us to Tears

Looks like top earning people in New York may be looking for a cheaper place to live since the NY Post is headlining this morning that "DEM HEALTH RX A POI$ON PILL IN NY: Terrifying 57% tax looms for biggest earners".



This tax and spend outbreak comes at a time when we're reading about how Social Security just spent nearly three-quarters of a million dollars on a conference in Phoenix.



And while the republicorps in congress have unveiled the fruity loops org chart behind the democons healthcare plan, which looks strangely like an org-chart in a blender, we see that a hospital in Massachusetts is suing the (formerly) Commonwealth saying that basically, universal health care there doesn't really pay for the low-end folks. Now, look the other way, cough, and try to look surprised.



But wait! Before you go, want to bend over one more time and pay for poor people in Colorado to get cell phones?

---

If this leaves you dazed and confused, consider one way out might be to bust up the booze lobby. Did you see where "Calif Tax Officials: Legal pot would rake in $1.4 billion?"

Snuffysmith
Market Madness

I forgot to mention that Industrial Production is down 13.6% compared with year ago figures according to the latest from the (not really ) Federal Reserve (which is above auditing). Construction is down 20.7%, business equipment down 17.8% and in the major industry groups the best performance was utilities down only 3.9%.



With industrial plants running at a mere 68% of capacity now, seems sure that even with an occasional twitch of life out of the economy, that won't set off hiring because hours worked has been falling. All of which means the administration's grudging admission that unemployment will top 10% will be wrong by at least a full 1% and maybe even 4-5% on the low side - or worse since this is a Depression, dammit. Been reporting on it since 1997 and still people are in denial. Truly frigging amazing.



Look: All the Baby Boomers can't get their 'profits' it will collapse the economy. There hasn't been enough 'savings' with all the money watering down that CONgress has been doing all these years to pay for squat. That's why states like Texas keep resurrecting the NAFTA Highway plan and selling of taxpayer-paid roads to foreign corporations to run as 'toll roads' - so they can double and triple-dip the taxpayers. And the cons aren't all just in Austin...they are in every capitol where a lobbyist can find a hotel room. It's that simple and yeah, people are that dumb.

jeffmoskin
QUOTE(Snuffysmith @ Jul 16 2009, 07:22 AM) *
...You know things are bad when cemeteries are shutting down...

Worse, they are re-selling plots; a practice I thought was restricted to TV producers.
Snuffysmith
Months
Nouriel Roubini and Christian Menegatti, 07.16.09
The U.S. economic outlook remains very weak.


The United States is in the twentieth month of a recession that has been by far the longest and most severe of the postwar period. While comparisons with the Great Depression are frequent and appropriate (especially if we look at the pace of contraction in industrial production), the aggressiveness of policy measures has significantly reduced the probability of a near-depression. Economic activity fell off a cliff in Q4 2008 and Q1 2009, with two consecutive quarters of sharp contraction--by 6.3% and 5.5% respectively--in line with our previous forecasts. The general consensus is that this recession will end sometime in the second half of 2009. While we expect more quarters of negative real GDP growth in 2009, we also expect the pace of contraction of economic activity to slow significantly. We forecast negative real GDP growth in Q2 2009 and Q3 2009, and for real GDP to remain flat in Q4. After the sharp contraction in economic activity in 2009, growth will reenter positive territory only in 2010, and then at a very sluggish rate, well below potential.

Even if economic activity stops contracting by the end of 2009, that might not mark the official end of this recession. Recessions are not measured exclusively by GDP contractions. Unemployment, industrial production, real manufacturing, wholesale trade sales and real personal income (less transfer) are all considered when it is time for the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) to put dates around recession periods. As reported by the NBER, this recession started in December 2007, and all the above indicators peaked between November 2007 and June 2008. U.S. real GDP will stop contracting at the end of 2009, but it is likely that many of the above indicators will not bottom out (or peak, in the case of unemployment) before mid-2010.

Improvements in real economic activity are present and visible in the reduction of the pace of job losses, in the improvement in indicators of manufacturing activity, in the stabilization of housing starts and in the improvement of financial conditions. However, we do not yet see signs of a strong and sustainable recovery.

Labor market conditions are still quite dire. More than 3.4 million jobs have been lost in 2009, and about 6.5 million have been lost since the beginning of the recession. Compare this with the 2.5 million jobs lost in the recession of 2001, 1.5 million lost in the recession of the early 1990s, 3 million in the one of the early 1980s and 2.2 million in the one of the 1970s. The pace of job losses has fallen from the 600,000-plus per month registered between December 2008 and March 2009 to about 350,000 in May and 467,000 in June; the average of monthly job losses in this recession is now at about 360,000. While the recent slowing of losses is a positive development, we have to put this in perspective: In previous postwar recessions, average monthly job losses ranged between 150,000 and 260,000. Moreover, average weekly hours in private non-farm payrolls are at the lowest since 1964, as employers have cut employees' hours. Job openings and turnover openings continue to fall and are at the lowest levels since 2000, indicating continued weakness in the economy.

The U.S. consumer is still the engine of U.S. growth and contributes over 70% of aggregate demand. While saving rates are headed for the high single digits and high oil prices together with long-term rates keep putting a dent in personal consumption, the over-leveraged consumer is finding some support in the tax breaks of the fiscal stimulus package. Yet the over-indebted U.S. consumer--whose deleveraging process has yet to start--will likely continue to put the brakes on consumption, while the savings rate continues to creep up. While this will encourage a rebalancing in the U.S. and global economy, in the medium-term it isn't likely to support strong U.S. and global growth.

Housing starts appear to have stabilized and will likely move sideways for quite some time. However, housing demand is not yet improving at a pace that can guarantee that the lingering inventory overhang will dissipate. This implies that home prices will continue to fall. We expect home prices to continue to fall through mid-2010.

U.S. industrial production has been contracting for 17 months in a row--with a short break in October 2008. Industrial production usually finds a bottom shortly after the ISM manufacturing index does. While the index probably found its bottom back in December 2008--at depression levels of 32.9--industrial production remains in a mode of contraction that started in January 2008.

Financial conditions are showing some improvement. Banks are borrowing at zero interest rates, and higher net interest margin can definitely help rebuild capital. Regulatory forbearance, changes in FASB (Financial Accounting Standards Board) rules and under-provisioning might enable banks to post better-than-expected results for a few quarters. However, relaxation of mark-to-market rules reduces the banks' incentives to participate in the Public-Private Investment Program (PPIP) and therefore reduces the likelihood that the program will succeed in clearing toxic assets from banks' balance sheets. The "muddle through" approach might be successful in a scenario in which the U.S. and global economy recover soon and go back to potential growth during 2010, but according to our forecasts, this is highly unlikely. While we might have positive surprises coming from the banking system in the next couple of quarters, the situation could turn around again after that, jarring confidence in financial markets in a way that would spill into the real economy. Increases in the unemployment rate, well beyond the rates envisioned by the adverse scenario of the recent bank stress tests, imply that recapitalization needs are larger than what the too-lenient stress test prescribed. The U.S financial system--in spite of the massive policy backstop--thus remains severely damaged, and the credit crunch remains unlikely to ease very fast.

A sharp rise in public debt burden--the U.S. Congressional Budget Office estimates that the public-debt-to-GDP ratio will rise from 40% to 80% (in the next decade), or about $9 trillion--will also put a dent in growth. If long-term rates were to increase to 5%, the resulting increase in the interest rate bill alone would be about $450 billion, or 3% of GDP. The implication is that the fiscal primary surplus will have to be permanently increased by 3% of GDP, which could constitute further pressure on the disposable income of the U.S. consumer.

Not only does the U.S. economy face downward risks to growth in the medium term, but potential growth might fall as well. The U.S. population is aging. With employment still falling--and another jobless recovery on the horizon--the rate of human capital accumulation will fall. Moreover, workers who remain unemployed for a long period of time lose skills, while young workers that enter the workforce, but don't find a job, don't acquire on-the-job skills. Reduced investments in worker training and education, coupled with lower capital expenditure, are a recipe for lower productivity ahead.

Deflationary pressures are still present in the U.S. economy. Demand is falling relative to supply, and excess capacity is still promoting slack in the goods markets. Moreover, the rising slack in labor markets, which is pushing down wages and labor costs, implies that deflationary pressures are going to be dominant this year and next year. This suggests that the Fed will keep monetary policy loose for a while longer. However, discussion of an exit strategy has to start now as investors' concerns about the Fed's ballooning balance sheet and expectations of inflation both mount.

There are also signs that a double-dip recession could materialize toward the second half of next year, or in 2011. If oil prices rise too much, too fast and too soon, that's going to have a negative effect in terms of trade and real disposable income in oil-importing countries. Also, concerns about unsustainable budget deficits are high and are pushing long-term interest rates higher. If these budget deficits are going to continue to be monetized, eventually, toward the end of next year, there is a risk of a sharp increase in expected inflation that could push interest rates even higher. Together with higher oil prices, driven up in part by this wall of liquidity rather than fundamentals alone, this could be a double whammy that would push the economy into a double-dip or W-shaped recession by late 2010 or 2011.

In conclusion, the outlook for the U.S. economy remains very weak. The recent rally in global equities, commodities and credit may soon fizzle out as worse-than-expected earnings and financial news take their toll on this rally, which has gotten ahead of improvements in actual macroeconomic data.

Nouriel Roubini, a professor at the Stern Business School at New York University and chairman of Roubini Global Economics (RGE), is a weekly columnist for Forbes. Read more of his columns here.Christian Menegatti is head of global economic research at RGEMonitor.com.
Snuffysmith
The National (Abu Dhabi)

July 12, 2009
By: Stephen Glain
July is shaping up to be a great month for contrarians and the cruellest month to date for Barack Obama, the US president. Seldom have so many economists, money managers, business owners, investors and even politicians converged on the side of the same dreary prognosis.


Green shoots? That happy talk wilted along with the announcement that the US jobless rate had risen to 9.5 per cent last month, the highest level in a quarter of a century. Unemployment in the world's largest economy has doubled in only 16 months and economists now expect it to reach 11 per cent by next year.


To make matters worse, wage growth is stalling and may be on the verge of decline. High unemployment and diminished household income dims the outlook for consumer spending, which had been recovering from its collapse last year. Less spending means weak retails sales, which leads to more lay-offs and an end to that illusory fourth-quarter recovery.


This would be bad enough for an economy on a sound financial footing. For the US, which now expects trillion-dollar budget deficits every year for the next decade, the prospect of anything less than a robust recovery amounts to a threat. According to a recent report from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), the burden of US borrowing will reach 82 per cent of GDP by 2019, about double what it was just last year. Having spent US$700 billion (Dh2.57 trillion) in rescue packages for Wall Street and troubled industries such as the car sector, in addition to a $787bn economic stimulus package, America's rate of indebtedness is growing faster than economic output. Soon, the US government will owe more money than at any point since the early 1940s, when it was busy helping the British make the world safe from Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan.


The combination of lost jobs, record deficits and the prospect of a long, shallow recovery has fuelled talk in Washington and Wall Street about the need for a second stimulus package. Mr Obama sold his first spending bill, which became law in February, on the assumption it would restrict the unemployment rate to about 8 per cent. Since then, 2.5 million labourers have been laid off. While some economists and politicians credit the stimulus for preventing an economic collapse, others say its effects will have been exhausted by the end of this year, just as the tax cuts from the previous president, George W Bush, are scheduled to expire.


The last thing Mr Obama needs is to invest more political capital in a second package. Though most economists acknowledge deficit spending was the only alternative for a president who inherited an economy on life-support - his spending on initiatives is equal to about only 10 per cent of the total debt - Americans are understandably nervous about the sustainability of Washington's fiscal policy.


Mr Obama's own party is divided over the need for another rescue package. Laura Tyson, a member of the White House Economic Advisory Board, said last week the first programme was too small, while Democrats leaders in Congress, sensing grass-root alarm over the public debt, disagreed. Last week, Mr Obama was obliged to respond defensively to remarks from Joe Biden, his vice president, that the White House "misread" the depths of the crisis. In some parts of the country, Mr Obama's approval ratings have dropped below 50 per cent.


For now, the White House is trying to allay fears of a looming "debt trap" by pledging to cut the deficit in half by next year and to write a healthcare reform bill that will pay for itself.No one believes this, particularly not the Chinese government, which is talking down the dollar again. Last Thursday, Dai Bingguo, a member of China's delegation at last week's Group of Eight industrialised nations summit, called for "a diversified and rational international reserve currency system". It was a clear swipe at America's onerous public debt and its long-term consequences for the US currency. As the world's top buyer of US treasuries, China is Washington's most important banker and custodian to $2tn worth in mostly dollar-denominated foreign exchange reserves.


Mr Dai's comment followed news last week that Beijing would allow companies to invoice and settle transactions in local currency, an important step in the internationalisation of China's financial system.Although Beijing knows the dollar will remain the world's reserve currency for some time, it is, through currency liberalisation and the occasional raspberry at high-level summits, signalling that its patience for America's debt addiction is wearing thin.


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Snuffysmith
Recession and unemployment
The Daily Star - Dhaka,Bangladesh
The world has been experiencing a severe economic depression in the first decade of this century long after its appearance during the third decade of the ...


3 In 4 Americans Use Internet To Combat Recession
InformationWeek - Manhasset,NY,USA
Pew dubbed the Internet users "a subpopulation of online economic users" and noted that most have suffered some economic malaise traceable to the economic ...


Everyone Seems to Agree That Budget Deficits are Harmful. Can They ...
FindLaw - Mountain View,CA,USA
Despite the current, welcome feeling that we seem to have pulled back from the precipice of out-and-out global economic depression, the trends are negative ...


Geithner sees 'durable' signs of stability
The Associated Press
Geithner discussed economic stimulus plans in his talks with the French prime minister. Fillon's office said the two men reviewed the size and efficiency of ...


Another way to look at the nation's economy
Daily American Online - Somerset,PA,USA
By KENT LALLEY Suppose for a moment our current depression/recession/meltdown, whatever, didn't just materialize out of nowhere? What if desperate economic ...


Lamy Says Keeping Trade Open Important for Recovery
Farm Futures - Carol Stream,IL,USA
... has been even fiercer than the shrinkage of trade in the Great Depression." Lamy went on to say that trade contraction followed economic troubles ...


City's economic, housing climate suffering
Asheville Citizen-Times - NC,USA
While the United States is undoubtedly part of a worldwide recession, Smith said the long-term peril falls short of the Great Depression. ...


The Fallacies of Another New Deal
Lew Rockwell - Burlingame,CA,USA
Thus, in making sense of the Great Depression and the New Deal, we have to examine a number of things. First, we must look at the economic conditions that ...


A Panel Is Named to Examine Causes of the Economic Crisis
New York Times - United States
The work of that commission, named for Ferdinand Pecora, the investigative counsel for a Senate committee during the Great Depression, contributed to the ...


Financial Crisis Commission Chair: Will Leave No Stone Unturned
CNNMoney.com - USA
It is modeled on the Pecora Commission, a Senate panel that investigated causes of the Great Depression during the 1930s. The Pecora Commission led to major ...


Snuffysmith
Foreclosure Filings in US Reach Record 1.5 MillionBloomberg - Dan Levy - ‎‎ July 16 (Bloomberg) -- US foreclosure filings hit a record in the first half, a sign that job losses and falling property prices deepened the housing recession, according to realtytrac Inc. More than 1.5 million properties received a ...
Snuffysmith
Harley, Polaris warn on motorcycle demand Reuters - James B. Kelleher, Andre Grenon - By James B. Kelleher CHICAGO (Reuters) - Harley-Davidson Inc (HOG.N) and Polaris Industries Inc (PII.N) said on Thursday that cash- strapped consumers steered clear of their big, high-end motorcycles in the second quarter and warned demand would likely ... Video: Harley cutting another 1,000 jobs Video: Harley cutting another 1,000 jobs WLUK Less Hogs On The Road Forbes
Snuffysmith
States: More Record Unemployment Rates in June by CalculatedRisk 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.
Snuffysmith
U.S. Arms Deliveries Decreased by Almost $1 Billion in FY2008

FAS Acquires Most Recent Annual Military Assistance Report Under Freedom of Information Act


WASHINGTON DC -- According to the latest Annual Military Assistance Report, deliveries of arms, military equipment and defense services through the Defense Department's Foreign Military Sales (FMS) Program totaled $10,996,180,000 in fiscal year 2008 - nearly $1 billion less than the previous fiscal year. The top five importers were, from largest to smallest in U.S. dollars, Israel, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Egypt and Poland.

The countries experiencing the largest increases in deliveries were South Korea, Canada, Iraq, Turkey and Pakistan. The increases in exports to Iraq and Pakistan are particularly noteworthy given that U.S. arms exports to both countries were banned until just a few years ago.

The Defense Department's contribution to this annual report are released to the public each year in response to annual Freedom of Information Act requests filed by the Federation of American Scientists.

The Foreign Military Sales Program is one of several avenues through which US arms are exported. Arms are also exported as Direct Commercial Sales licensed by the State Department, and through several smaller programs.

Read the full article at http://fas.org/programs/ssp/asmp/publicati...port_July17.pdf.


To read the Strategic Security Blog, please visit: http://www.fas.org/blog/ssp/2009/07/fas-ob...rms-exports.php.
Snuffysmith
Market, State Unemployment, Fed Balance Sheet by CalculatedRisk on 7/17/2009 04:00:00 PM

A few graphs ...

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.

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.

<li> 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.

<li> 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.
And 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.
Snuffysmith
The privately owned Federal Reserve runs our CountryUnemployment on the rise- by Bob Chapman - 2009-07-16
Snuffysmith
Does Team Obama Believe in Manufacturing?



The Obama administration doesn't put any particular emphasis on rebuilding America's manufacturing. Manufacturing doesn't even make the cut for the list of jobs they see growing over the next seven years. A recently released report from the Council on Economic Advisers says:

While manufacturing overall is projected to continue to decline as a share of total employment, several manufacturing subsectors - such as aerospace and drugs, along with other similarly-advanced manufacturing industries - are anticipated to grow (but not enough to make the list in Figure 2).


As Ralph Gomory recently wrote, a healthy US economy cannot depend exclusively on high-end services. Because the demand for these services is limited, we continue to buy more from abroad than we sell, resulting in higher trade deficits. By selling goods from the manufacturing industry, on the other hand, we can pay for the goods we consume with the goods we sell to the rest of the world, thus ensuring comfortable levels of consumption without increasing debt.

What is particularly striking about the administration's position is that it's not clear we can continue to let the industry suffer. If we want to keep our "comfortable" levels of consumption we must replace debt by selling more goods to the rest of the world, Gomory argues. If the United States is to "export our way out of the crisis," manufacturing must be the cornerstone of this strategy.

Manufacturing also has many other benefits: It pays higher wages. It has a higher multiplier effect than other sectors. And finally, it is the major driver of productivity growth.

New America Foundation is hosting a discussion tomorrow on the roll of manufacturing featuring Ralph Gomory, former Vice President of Science and Technology at IBM. "Does America Need Manufacturing?" will start at 12:15pm at the New America Foundation. Click here to RSVP.

-- Samuel Sherraden
Snuffysmith
Told you so!" Paulson: Close to Collapse

Not that it comes as any surprise to people who read UrbanSurvival on a regular basis, but there's a report in the UK Independent today that Hank "Paulson reveals US concerns of breakdown in law and order" should the financial system have failed in the wake of last year's financial panic.

The reason that this is so important is that it gives credence to the report that back in (going by memory here) March 2008, CONgress held a secret session (only its fourth in history) and talked about how dire/grim/scary things would be should the system break down.

Ooops. memory isn't completely gone yet....here's a posting off the Honorable Ron Paul's web site from that period under the heading "Congress Secret session March 13, 2008":
"Not only did members discuss new surveillance provisions as was the publicly stated reason for the closed door session, they also discussed:

the imminent collapse of the U.S. economy to occur by September 2008,

the imminent collapse of US federal government finances by February 2009,

the possibility of Civil War inside the USA as a result of the collapse,

advance round-ups of "insurgent U.S. citizens" likely to move against the government,

The detention of those rounded-up at "REX 84" camps constructed throughout the USA,

the possibility of retaliation against members of Congress for the collapses,

the location of "safe facilities" for members of Congress and their families to reside during expected massive civil unrest

the necessary and unavoidable merger of the United States with Canada (for its natural resources) and with Mexico (for its cheap labor pool),

the issuance of a new currency - THE AMERO - for all three nations as the proposed solution to the coming economic Armageddon.

Members of Congress were FORBIDDEN to reveal what was discussed. Several are so furious and concerned about the future of the country, they have begun leaking info."
Initially, these reports were passed over - OK, buried then - by the MainStreamMedia, which we assume had also been brought to heel through various scare-tactics which instead of reporting the news and risks directly, sat on the story while the printing press kicked taxpayer money to the biggest of the banks, auto companies, and so forth. As it turns out, that put what seems still to be coming on hold - but just for a while.

What few places talk about even today is the notion that all we've really done with the bailouts and fancy footwork is put off the day of reckoning so that when it comes, it will be just that much worse for all the additional debt, relevering, & money printing that will be further piled on to our past egregious financial misfeasance.

While there is still time for alert people to hedge their bets by investing in self sufficiency, there's also a good case that by this time next year you'll be looking back at even the relatively high unemployment rates and insane levels of government spending TODAY as 'the good old days'. No doubt, the push for national health care and such is all part of 'make work' programs that government can retain control over.

The government's strategic problem is that a massive Second Depression which we're already into now will result in a serious downsizing of not only government, but of the general population as things like the globalist model of 'free trade/labor wage rate differential spreads - break down accompanied by a much, much lower standard of living in the US - not to mention the wholesale theft of a whole generation's retirement planning by watering down the money supply in order to paper our way through events to come this fall and through next year.
Snuffysmith
Bankruptcy Filings up 33 Percent over a 12-month Period: Total 12-month Total of Bankruptcy Filings 1.2 Million. In last Report, Filings up 27 Percent in one month.

Bankruptcy filings are soaring in the United States. In the last data point, we had 134,282 bankruptcy filings for the month of March 2009. Bankruptcy data usually lags 3 or 4 months but the trend is ominous. For the last 12 months some 1.2 million bankruptcy filings have occurred. Much of this is linked to the26,000,000 unemployed or underemployed Americans being unable to pay their bills or even service their debt. What is more telling is the amount of Chapter 7 bankruptcies occurring since these are straight liquidations and not like a Chapter 13 restructuring.

Let us examine the most recent data for bankruptcies that highlight this troubling trend:



What you’ll notice is a significant spike in the March data point. This monthly jump was enormous. This was the largest number of quarterly bankruptcy filings since December of 2005 when many were rushing to beat the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005. Yet even with the law making it harder for people to file bankruptcy, most are being forced into austerity and it is hard to squeeze anything further out of a turnip. What this tells us is that for average Americans there is still a significantly large amount of pain in the real economy. The unemployment rate is understated by the 9.5 percent headline number.

More…

Snuffysmith
In the old days, you could judge which country was gaining international strength by which country was accumulating gold. You can't do that any longer, but you can still judge by which nation's currency is gaining strength.

Here, the gold star and the cigar goes to China. One sentence tells the story. This sentence is from the weekly Washington Post: "As Detroit crumbles, China emerges as the place where cars are made. "

"The center of gravity is moving eastward," "Dieter Zetsche, Chairman of Daimler, told reporters at the car show. "When we look back 20 years from now, the year 2009 is likely to be viewed as the year in which the baton of leadership in the global auto industry passed from the United States to China."

So-called "Obamanomics" is losing its appeal. For instance, Charlie Allmon, editor of the long-lived Growth Stock Outlook. "I talk constantly with businessmen and investors. Anyone and everyone who might be adding substance to our economy. Sadly, I can report that most of them are scared to death of what comes next. Those who meet payrolls on a regular basis seem doubly disturbed. They seem to be presented with several risk scenarios. Will slow US and global growth transition into more unpleasant stagflation? The present gang calling the shots in Washington D.C. are beginning to make the Carter years look awfully good!

"What's doubly disturbing is that for the first time in our history, the US government, in a self-appointed role in the public sector, now deems itself the major supplier and allocator of credit. If you find this unsettling, just wait a while. It could get worse."
Snuffysmith
Roubini Statement on the U.S. Economic Outlook
Snuffysmith
U.S. Economic Forecasts for 2009 and 2010 Raised: How Far Away is the Bottom? Print
    Overview: The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) doesn’t require two quarters of successive contraction in GDP to date the beginning and end of a recession and instead focuses on month-to-month changes in the economy. The four economic indicators that NBER considers--personal income, retail sales, industrial production and employment--are still very weak. While personal income and retail sales turned positive in April 2009, buoyed by tax cuts, their growth remains extremely sluggish. The contraction in industrial production has been easing since April but is still as severe as it was in the 1970s and in some months is comparable with the 1930s. Job losses have eased since April but are still greater than in the last two recessions. Credit flow for households and firms remains very tight, home prices continue to fall sharply and investment is plunging. Fiscal stimulus has been delayed and inadequate. Monetary measures are causing inflation fears. Structural weaknesses like large government debt, private-sector deleveraging and the retreat of the U.S. consumer imply a below-potential recovery and a hit to potential growth.

  • Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) Minutes June 23-24: "The economy remained very weak though declines in activity seemed to be lessening. The reductions in employment and industrial production had slowed, consumer spending was holding reasonably steady after shrinking in H2 2008 and sales and construction of single-family homes had flattened out. The recent declines in capital spending were smaller than those recorded earlier in the year. Consumer price inflation was fairly quiescent in recent months, although the upturn in energy prices likely boosted headline inflation in June. FOMC participants generally expected that after declining in H1 2009, output would expand sluggishly in H2 2009. The recovery is expected to be gradual in 2010. Labor market conditions will improve gradually in 2010 and 2011. The economy is expected to take five or six years to converge to a sustainable growth rate."
  • In the June meeting, FOMC raised the GDP growth forecast to -1% from -1.5% y/y for 2009 and to 2.1% from 3.3% for 2010. But it raised the unemployment rate forecast from 9.8% to 10.1% for 2009 and from 9.5% to 9.8% for 2010.
  • Dr. Roubini: "The recession [will] last roughly 24 months and will be over by year end. I am not forecasting economic growth before year’s end. We are in a deep U-shaped recession [which is] three times longer than the previous two and five times deeper-–in terms of cumulative GDP contraction–-than the previous two. [A recovery will only begin in 2010] and will be weak given the debt overhang in the household sector, the financial system and the corporate sector... [There is] also a massive re-leveraging of the public sector with unsustainable fiscal deficits and public debt accumulation... [There will be] a shallow, below-par and below-trend recovery where growth will average about 1% in the next couple of years when potential is probably closer to 2.75%...[T]here is a risk of a double-dip W-shaped recession toward the end of 2010 due to the challenge of getting right the timing and size of the exit strategy for monetary and fiscal policy easing."
  • IMF: In its July 2009 World Economic Outlook Update, the IMF raised the growth forecast for the U.S. for 2009-10. GDP is forecast to contract 2.6% in 2009, a reduction from the 2.8% previously estimated. In 2010, the economy is expected to grow 0.8%. "Indicators point to a diminishing rate of deterioration, including in the labor and housing markets. Industrial production may be close to bottoming out, the inventory cycle is turning and business and consumer confidence has improved. These developments are consistent with the stabilization of output during H2 2009. Given financial strains and adjustments in the housing and labor markets, a solid recovery is projected to emerge only in mid-2010. The Fed can ease credit further if conditions worsen. Additional fiscal stimulus could also be considered if the economy doesn’t bounce back. But monetary and fiscal stimulus may stoke concerns about inflation and rising debt, exerting upward pressure on interest rates."
  • RGE: The economy will contract in H2 2009, but the pace of contraction will slow significantly from Q2 to Q3 2009. Growth will remain flat in Q4 2009. After contracting 3.1% in 2009, growth will enter positive territory only in 2010 at the sluggish rate of 1%--well below potential.
  • OECD: The GDP will contract 2.8% in 2009. The recession is projected to bottom out later in 2009 as fiscal and monetary support take hold and the housing cycle bottoms. In 2010, growth will remain weak at 0.9% due to slowdowns in capital accumulation, negative wealth effects and adverse though improving financial conditions. Economic slack will bring inflation to very low rates. Measures to support activity might include expanding the scale of its quantitative easing if necessary and removing impaired securities from banks' balance sheets.
  • WB: The U.S. economy will contract 3% in 2009 and will grow 1.8% in 2010.
  • Q1 2009: Real GDP growth contracted 5.5%. Exports, inventories and private investment had a negative contribution to growth whereas consumption and a decrease in imports had a positive contribution. The decrease in the pace of GDP contraction from 6.3% in Q4 2008 came from improvement in consumption and decline in imports. (U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis)
  • Details of Q1 2009 GDP: Real final sales (GDP--change in private inventories) decreased 3.3%. Private inventories subtracted 2.2% from growth. Personal consumption rose 1.4%; private investment fell 48.9%, led by a 38.8% decline in residential and 37.3% fall in business investment; government expenditure fell 3.1% due to decline in both federal and state and local government spending; exports fell 30.6% but imports fell at a faster pace at 36.4%. This led to a positive GDP contribution of net exports of 2.39%. (U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis)
  • Growth Forecasts: Morgan Stanley: -1.5% in Q2 and -2.6% in 2009 and +2.2% in 2010. Merrill Lynch/BoA: -0.5% in Q2 and -2.1% in 2009 and +2.6% in 2010. Goldman Sachs: -1% in Q2 and -2.9% in 2009 and +1.2% in 2010. JP Morgan: -2% in Q2 and -2.4% in 2009 and +2.8% in 2010. (Bloomberg Survey)
  • Economist: "The economy might begin to grow again in the current quarter for two reasons: the dramatic inventory liquidation might be ending and the impact of the fiscal stimulus is growing. But a self-sustaining recovery needs a virtuous circle of increasing consumer spending and incomes and there is still no evidence of that."
  • Paul Krugman: “V-shaped recoveries, in which employment comes roaring back, take place only when there’s a lot of pent-up demand. But this is absent due to high debt and excess capacity in the economy. One of the great policy dangers is premature optimism which leads the government to scale back policy stimulus. There’s a risk that talks of green shoots and glimmers will breed a dangerous complacency."
  • BridgeWater Associates: "Government actions might be big enough to impact near-term growth, but are not sufficiently directed at the root problem of excessive indebtedness to produce permanent healing. The deterioration in employment will continue because companies' profit margins are deeply damaged that a little bounce in growth won't do much to alter their need to cut costs. This will undermine demand and pressure loan losses and keep the pressure on banks and elevate the cost of capital." (Thoughts from the Frontline)
  • NBER: "U.S. entered a recession in December 2007 ending 73 months expansion from November 2001 (expansion of 1990s lasted 120 months). Decline in economic activity in 2008 met the standard for a recession. The 2.6 million fall in employment in 2008 was the biggest factor in determining the start of the contraction. The peak quarter of economic activity was Q4 2007. Employment peaked in December 2007. Real personal income less transfers peaked in December 2007. Real manufacturing and wholesale-retail trade sales peaked in June 2008. Industrial production peaked in Janua
Snuffysmith
States See Spreading Unemployment Pain: Still No Stimulus In Sight Published by AJStrata under Measuring The Recovery

Update: Here is a tragic chart showing 16 13 states with unemployment over 10%, Michigan leading the pack with 15.2%. Many of these states are at or near all time record highs.



America can and should measure the Democrats by their record on the economy and jobs. In fact, I dare anyone to sanely argue why we should not! Here is the source of the data. There is a great US map there were you can roll back to the 2008 election and see the damage done since then. It clearly shows the pain spreading out and deepening.
Snuffysmith
The next economic crisis
OregonLive.com - Portland,OR,USA
... guest opinion The United States confronts not one but two economic challenges: its worst recession since the Depression and a growing imbalance between ...


Big tech earnings week will reveal economic trends
The Associated Press
The quote: "I refer to what we're going through globally, frankly, as an economic reset, not a recession and not a depression," Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer ...


Larry Summers: Stimulus Success, 'Economic Depression' Google ...
Right Pundits - Lafayette,CA,USA
Happy days are here again because fewer people are searching Google for economic depression news. This reminds me of when Gore was campaigning 1996 and ...


Economic depression
Examiner.com - USA
This might sound a little weird to non-economists but Larry Summers is claiming that the fall in the number of people searching for "economic depression" on ...


Perhaps There Are Unseen Green Shoots
Seeking Alpha - New York,NY,USA
I believe, baring some unforeseen economic event or a second dip, that ECRI's forecast of the recession ending in the 3Q 2009 is correct. ...


ECRI yearly US economic growth gauge at 5-year high
Reuters - USA
The Economic Cycle Research Institute, a New York-based independent forecasting group, said its projection that the recession will end this summer is not ...



Examiner.com Why Denver gardeners feel secure in an economic depression
Examiner.com - USA
An economic depression often means reverting to the old ways of gardening for food. People begin to rely on each other for support. ...

Employment Woes Fuel Uptick in Lawyer Depression
The National Law Journal - USA
... from depression that stems, at least partly, from the decline in their personal and professional prospects brought on by the economic downturn. ...


Summers: Economy Is 'Back From The Abyss'
Forbes - NY,USA
And Google searches for "economic depression," which surged to quadruple their normal levels, have since returned to normal. (A growing number of economists ...


Inside Dr. Bernanke's E.R.
Wall Street Journal - USA
Looking back, he said soberly, “We came very close in October to Depression 2.0.” Ben Bernanke left Princeton University for Washington in 2002 to join the ...


Snuffysmith

Many Predict US Financial Collapse in September
July 18, 2009


by Charles (A Reader)

Let us contemplate the day in the near future when the consequences of financial chicanery finally outpace the ability of the governments, central banks and big media to cover up and obfuscate the truth. Many respected voices have now gone on record that September 30 or thereabouts will be that day.

Bob Chapman [Internationalforecaster.com] revealed that the US State Dept has advised embassies worldwide to stock up on a year's worth of the local currency in anticipation of collapse of the US dollar. Look for a temporary banking shutdown timed for around September 2009. As under Roosevelt, some banks won't reopen. 96% of bank reserves are currently held with the Federal Reserve who tells the banks not to loan the money, but rather to save it for further banking acquisition and consolidation. Chapman foresees a bank holiday lasting 4-5 days. Chapman thinks this first bank holiday presages a much more significant bank holiday months to years later which will involve simultaneous devaluations of multiple currencies as well as other significant changes in the banking system.

Harry Shultz [as quoted in marketwatch.com] says "Some U.S. embassies worldwide are being advised to purchase massive amounts of local currencies; enough to last them a year. Some embassies are being sent enormous amounts of U.S. cash to purchase currencies from those governments, quietly. But not pound sterling. Inside the State Dept., there is a sense of sadness and foreboding that 'something' is about to happen ... within 180 days, but could be 120-150 days."

Benjamin Fulford [http://benjaminfulford.typepad.com/benjaminfulford/] states that for almost a century the US Treasury Dept has been issuing specialized debt instruments to countries with which the US has had a trade surplus. These complex debt instruments are tailored by complex treaties. Unfortunately, the recent US Treasury funding needs exceed the willingness of these creditor nations to extend additional credit. Fulford writes, "The problem is that after nearly a century of issuing these debt instruments, the chickens are coming home to roost. President Obama tried at the recent G8 plus 5 meeting in Italy to borrow more money than George Bush junior did in 8 years. He was told a resounding no. The result should be total economic chaos in the U.S. by September 30th . "

Jim Willie [goldenjackass.com] writes of an Asian led initiative ending dollar hegemony beginning this weekend. Willie suspects that the Fed/Treasury is covertly loaning foreign central banks the money with which the central banks are now using to buy US debt. Increasingly, US debt is being bought by foreign central banks taking up the slack of investors abandoning US Treasury debt. Willie confirms Chapman's comments and says he solicited and received "multiple confirmations." He adds, "CHAOS WILL PREVAIL WITHIN SEVERAL MONTHS, PERHAPS A YEAR AT MOST{his emphasis}."

Jim Sinclair [jsmineset.com] has recently visited China meeting with its leaders. He states that China is increasingly more willing to take on the United States in its apparent maneuvers to inflate its way out of its debt crisis. In early July Sinclair started a 120 day countdown till breakdown of the US dollar ends market manipulation and all those sour economic chickens come home to roost.

OUT OF TRICKS


Seemingly the Federal Reserve/US Treasury have exhausted their bag of tricks. The Fed is fighting rising interest rates, a difficult task given the hyperinflationary debt financing it is now doing. Once rising pressure on interest rates become too much for the Fed to control, there will probably be several sudden economic and financial surprises cascading with currently known dilemmas: crashing dollar; increasing home mortgage defaults; commercial mortgage defaults reaching critical mass; falling bond and stock markets extending insolvency of pension funds; defaults on debt by state and local governments. And don't forget derivatives and further exposure of corruption and criminality on Wall Street. Bernie Madoff may soon have lots of company.

Unable to produce any more financial wizardry, the cynical federal government is arrayed in full battle dress uniform: 1] Mass forced swine flu vaccinations scheduled this fall performed under the specter of martial law; 2] Rumblings of extending the wars in Asia into Iran and Pakistan; 3] Rekindling the Korean conflict may also be in the cards. Of course, don't forget that both Iran and North Korea are client states of the British World Order. All the recent saber rattling involving Iran and North Korea is wholly orchestrated. We need the distractions from the economic crisis, so our clients Ahmadinejad and Kim provide us with the necessary theater. So what will come first, further banner headlines of dollar collapse and market crashes or the distracting theater of more war or 911 type events?

What will this fall really bring? It is not too far away so we shall soon know. Unfortunately, it may make last fall look pretty tame. When the government answers economic distress by preparing for the worst, then the worst may very well be what happens.


----


Related: "Western World Faces Fiscal Ruin"
Snuffysmith
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment...ld-beckons.html


Fiscal ruin of the Western world beckons

For a glimpse of what awaits Britain, Europe, and America as budget deficits spiral to war-time levels, look at what is happening to the Irish welfare state.
Events have already forced Premier Brian Cowen to carry out the harshest assault yet seen on the public services of a modern Western state. He has passed two emergency budgets to stop the deficit soaring to 15pc of GDP. They have not been enough. The expert An Bord Snip report said last week that Dublin must cut deeper, or risk a disastrous debt compound trap.

A further 17,000 state jobs must go (equal to 1.25m in the US), though unemployment is already 12pc and heading for 16pc next year.



Education must be cut 8pc. Scores of rural schools must close, and 6,900 teachers must go. "The attacks outlined in this report would represent an education disaster and light a short fuse on a social timebomb", said the Teachers Union of Ireland.

Nobody is spared. Social welfare payments must be cut 5pc, child benefit by 20pc. The Garda (police), already smarting from a 7pc pay cut, may have to buy their own uniforms. Hospital visits could cost £107 a day, etc, etc.

"Something has to give," said Professor Colm McCarthy, the report's author. "We're borrowing €400m (£345m) a week at a penalty interest."

No doubt Ireland has been the victim of a savagely tight monetary policy e_SEmD given its specific needs. But the deeper truth is that Britain, Spain, France, Germany, Italy, the US, and Japan are in varying states of fiscal ruin, and those tipping into demographic decline (unlike young Ireland) have an underlying cancer that is even more deadly. The West cannot support its gold-plated state structures from an aging workforce and depleted tax base.

As the International Monetary Fund made clear last week, Britain is lucky that markets have not yet imposed a "penalty interest" on British Gilts, given the trajectory of UK national debt – now vaulting towards 100pc of GDP – and the scandalous refusal of this Government to map out any path back to solvency.

"The UK has been getting the benefit of the doubt, both in the Government bond market and also the foreign exchange market. This benefit of the doubt is not going to last forever," said the Fund.

France and Italy have been less abject, but they began with higher borrowing needs. Italy's debt is expected to reach the danger level of 120pc next year, according to leaked Treasury documents. France's debt will near 90pc next year if President Nicolas Sarkozy goes ahead with his "Grand Emprunt", a fiscal blitz masquerading as investment.

There was a case for an emergency boost last winter to cushion the blow as global industry crashed. That moment has passed. While I agree with Nomura's Richard Koo that the US, Britain, and Europe risk a deflationary slump along the lines of Japan's Lost Decade (two decades really), I am ever more wary of his calls for Keynesian spending a l'outrance.

Such policies have crippled Japan. A string of make-work stimulus plans e_SEmD famously building bridges to nowhere in Hokkaido e_SEmD has ensured that the day of reckoning will be worse, when it comes. The IMF says Japan's gross public debt will reach 240pc of GDP by 2014 e_SEmD beyond the point of recovery for a nation with a contracting workforce. Sooner or later, Japan's bond market will blow up.

Error One was to permit a bubble in the 1980s. Error Two was to wait a decade before opting for monetary "shock and awe" through quantitative easing.

The US Federal Reserve has moved faster but already seems to think the job is done. "Quantitative tightening" has begun. Its balance sheet has contracted by almost $200bn (£122bn) from the peak. The M2 money supply has stagnated since January. The Fed is talking of "exit strategies".

Is this a replay of mid-2008 when the Fed lost its nerve, bristling over criticism that it had cut rates too low (then 2pc)? Remember what happened. Fed hawks in Dallas, St Louis, and Atlanta talked of rate rises. That had consequences. Markets tightened in anticipation, and arguably triggered the collapse of Lehman Brothers, AIG, Fannie and Freddie that Autumn.

The Fed's doctrine – New Keynesian Synthesis – has let it down time and again in this long saga, and there is scant evidence that Fed officials recognise the fact. As for the European Central Bank, it has let private loan growth contract this summer.

The imperative for the debt-bloated West is to cut spending systematically for year after year, off-setting the deflationary effect with monetary stimulus. This is the only mix that can save us.

My awful fear is that we will do exactly the opposite, incubating yet another crisis this autumn, to which we will respond with yet further spending. This is the road to ruin.

Snuffysmith
From Roger Vincent at the LA Times: Commercial brokers are swimming in empty space

Nearly 16% of office space in Los Angeles County is sitting vacant as tenants close up shop or move out of expensive properties. Nearly a third of the space around up-market Playa Vista sits empty; office buildings in the Inland Empire and parts of Orange County are completely vacant.

It all adds up to less work for brokers like [Carl] Muhlstein, who make their living facilitating the sale and leasing of these properties.
And some recent national CRE data:

Strip Mall Vacancy Rate Hits 10%, Highest Since 1992

U.S. Office Vacancy Rate Hits 15.9% in Q2

Hotel Occupancy Off 19% Compared to 2007

Apartment Vacancy Rate at 22 Year High
Snuffysmith
Ritholtz: "Why are people calling a bottom for Real Estate?" by CalculatedRisk on 7/18/2009 03:19:00 PM

I'm working on a housing start post, but first ...

Barry Ritholtz presents the following graph and asks:

"I cannot figure out why people continue to call for a bottom in Real Estate — as if there is going to be this snap back any day now."


Well I'm one of the people who wrote yesterday that a bottom for single family housing starts might have happened:
It now appears that single family starts might have bottomed in January.
A few quick points:

If single family housing starts bottomed in January, on a seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) basis, the 12 month moving average of unadjusted data won't bottom until October or so (depending on the shape of the recovery). Using this method adds a lag to the analysis.

<li> Barry also conflates calling a bottom in housing starts with: 1) "a bottom in Real Estate" and 2) "a snap back".

First, there will probably be two bottoms for Residential Real Estate. The first will be for new home sales, housing starts and residential investment. The second bottom will be for prices. For more on this, see: More on Housing Bottoms

Most people think prices when they hear the word "bottom", and the bottom for prices usually trails the bottom for housing starts - sometimes the two bottoms can happen years apart!

Second, looking for a bottom in housing starts doesn't imply "a snap back" in activity. As I noted yesterday, "I expect starts to remain at fairly low levels for some time as the excess inventory is worked off."

I'll have more on why the housing start report is somewhat good news soon.
Snuffysmith
Slip Sliding Sideways by CalculatedRisk on 7/18/2009 10:53:00 AM

Here is a graph from Jan Hatzius at Goldman Sachs (no link):

Click on graph for larger image in new window.

The graph shows the end of cliff diving for retail sales, auto sales, home sales, and capital goods orders - but so far no recovery.

But GDP can still turn slightly positive.

Here is a speech from San Francisco Fed President Janet Yellen in March: The Uncertain Economic Outlook and the Policy Responses.

[I]t takes less than many people think for real GDP growth rates to turn positive. Just the elimination of drags on growth can do it. For example, residential construction has been declining for several years, subtracting about 1 percentage point from real GDP growth. Even if this spending were only to stabilize at today's very low levels—not a robust performance at all—a 1 percentage point subtraction from growth would convert into a zero, boosting overall growth by 1 percentage point. A decline in the pace of inventory liquidation is another factor that could contribute to a pickup in growth. Inventory liquidation over the last few months has been unusually severe, especially in motor vehicles—a typical recession pattern. All it would take is a reduction in the pace of liquidation—not outright inventory building—to raise the GDP growth rate.
emphasis added
This is a very important point for forecasters - to distinguish between growth rates and levels. Even if the economy has bottomed, it is at a very low level compared to the last few years, and the recovery will probably be very sluggish.
Snuffysmith
The Dark Years Are Here
Egon von Greyerz
Matterhorn Asset Management AG - July 17, 2009 Newslettter
In this newsletter we will outline what is likely to be the devastating effect of the credit bubbles, government money printing and of the disastrous actions that governments are taking. Starting in the next 6 months and culminating in 2011-12 the world will experience a series of tumultuous events which will be life changing for most people in the world. But 2011-12 will not be the beginning of an upturn in the world economy but instead the start of a long period of economic, political and social upheaval that could last for a couple of decades. We will discuss the three areas that we for some time have argued will determine the faith of the world for the foreseeable future, namely the coming unemployment explosion, the next and much more serious phase in the credit markets and finally the likely hyperinflationary or just inflationary effect this will have on the world economy and investments.

EMPIRES ARE BUILT ON THEFT PILLAGE, SLAVE LABOUR AND FINALLY MONEY PRINTING

Let us first go back in history and analyze what creates an empire and the prosperity that comes with it.

The British Empire started in the 17th century and reached its peak in the 19th century during Queen Victoria's reign. By the end of the 19th century The British Empire included nearly 20% of the land surface of the world and 25% of the world's population. So Britain which is less than 0.5% of the world's land surface area controlled an empire which was more than 50 times greater. So by using slave labor and by stealing the resources of 20% of the world, it is no wonder that Britain was the wealthiest nation for several centuries. But like all empires, Britain carried the seeds of its own destruction. All empires - e.g. Mongolian, Roman, Ottoman or British etc. - eventually overstretch their resources both militarily and financially. This combined with decadence and illusions of grandeur eventually leads to the collapse of an empire.

The US empire was slightly different from the point of view that it never conquered the world although the US was itself a colony conquered from its original inhabitants. But the US has intervened in many areas (e.g. Korea, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iraq etc.). Also, there are US military bases in 120 countries. Initially the US was an economic superpower based on an entrepreneurial spirit and a very strong production machine backed by fierce military power. But after the Vietnam war the US had overstretched its resources and by 1971 Richard Nixon abolished the gold standard in order to be able to start money printing in earnest. The money printing phase is normally the last stage of an empire before it collapses and this is where the US is now. The US dollar became the reserve currency of the world when the US was strong economically. But as the US economy started to weaken in the 1960-70's the US government found a much better method for maintaining a strong economy. It started to print paper that it sold to other nations or exchanged for goods and services. For almost 50 years this has been the most clever way ever devised of maintaining the living standards of an economically deteriorating nation without even having to spend any resources on building an empire. It is a Ponzi scheme which has worked for several decades but slowly the world is now waking up to the fact that they are holding worthless paper printed by the US Government. (We realize this is a much simplified version of empire building and destruction but it is nevertheless an accurate analysis).

THE US GOVERNMENT IS IN DENIAL

The US is hemorrhaging financially and economically. It has lent or committed almost $13 trillion in the last 18 months to prop up the financial system. The estimated government deficit in the current year is almost $2 trillion or 50% of the budget. All the money committed so far has only achieved two things: Firstly it has created some short term hope which together with totally illusionary sightings of green shoots have generated a small stock market correction (which we forecast in our January Newsletter) and some belief that the crisis is ending. Secondly, all the funds printed so far to save the system have gone to Wall Street but has done nothing whatsoever for the real economy. Every single sector of the real economy is deteriorating whether it is production, unemployment, corporate profits, real estate, credit defaults, construction, federal deficits, local government and state deficits etc.

And what is the government doing about it. They are doing the only thing they know which is to print more money. This is total lunacy! How can any intelligent person believe that printed pieces of paper can solve an economic catastrophe? If that were the case we could all go home and write out pieces of paper or use Monopoly money to spend in the shops or repay our debts.

How can the US government, the UK government and most other governments not understand that the only way to run an economy is to cut your coat according to your cloth. This is why the emperor had no clothes because the country had run out of gold thread to make the cloth. Until now the US as well as other countries have been able to buy the cloth because the world has been foolish enough to accept worthless pieces of paper as payment. But this is coming to an end very soon and many countries will be without both coats and cloth.

What governments are doing with people's money is to totally destroy its value. Purchasing power in the US and many other countries has declined more than 95% in the last 100 years. While it might buy votes short term it will only generate massive misery long term. And this is what many countries are starting to experience now. But sadly it will get a lot worse. We are still only in the first phase of this tragic saga. The second phase is likely to start in the next 6 months.

THE US HAS 100 MILLION AFFECTED BY UNEMPLOYMENT The real unemployment in the US is 20% or 30 million. These are the real unadjusted figures calculated on the same basis as the official figures before the method of the calculation was changed in the 1990's. Reported government figures, especially in the US, are continually manipulated in order to suit the political aims of the government. Therefore, one should not give any credence to the published figures. Most governments mislead the people most of the time.

With 20% unemployment in the US we are already approaching the levels in the 1930's when peak total unemployment reached 25%. The 20% current level is the non-farm unemployed and is still a lot lower than the non-farm peak figure in the 1930's which was 35% unemployed.

Since we are still in the early stages of this crisis, it is our firm opinion that non-farm unemployment levels will reach 35% at least in the US in the next few years.

But even the current figure of 30 million unemployed is a catastrophe. Adding dependants to every unemployed person there are currently 100 million people affected by unemployment in the US. In the next three months 3 million unemployed will fall out of the social security safety-net. These are the people who were laid off in the second half of 2008. Including their families this means that around 10 million people will become destitute between now and September with no social security and no savings. If we then add the 4 million that were made redundant in the first half of 2009 that will result in an additional 13 million people including families will become destitute around Christmas. This is a disaster of unimaginable consequences that will affect the whole fabric of American society.

The consequences will be social, political, financial and the effects on the US economy will be of a magnitude which is substantially greater than during the Depression of the 1930's. We must remember that none of the problems in the financial system have been resolved but only put on a very temporary hold. The rise in unemployment combined with the reduction in consumption will lead to the next and much more severe banking crisis.

Unemployment in Europe is also rising fast and shows no signs of abatement. Many countries are reaching 10% with for example Spain at 19% and Latvia at 16%. But as we have said for quite some time, of the larger European nations, the country with the biggest problems is the UK. Unemployment in the UK is currently "only" 2.5 million or 7% but it is estimated to reach over 3 million by the end of 2009. The combination of government deficits, a banking system which is extremely fragile and too big for the country, very high personal credit that will not be repaid and a housing bubble which still has a long way to fall makes the UK very vulnerable to a major financial shock.

During the next 6-9 months unemployment will severely affect most parts of the world including China, Asia and Africa. Never before has there been a global unemployment crisis affecting the world simultaneously. This will not only mean a massive decline in consumption and world trade leading to a recession or depression worldwide but also poverty, famine and social unrest.

THE BANKERS ARE STILL RUNNING THE SHOW

The masters of the financial circus are the bankers. Not only did they reap the benefits from manufacturing toxic financial products to the extent of receiving bonuses and stocks in the $trillions during the last 15-20 years. But they are also the only beneficiaries of the trillions of dollars that have been printed by governments to rescue the financial system. Why are the bankers benefiting from the rescue of their own banks? Because they are the ones controlling the government, advising the government and making major contributions to the politicians.

Bonuses are back

Yes, many banks are paying higher bonuses in 2009 than 2008. Goldman Sachs is on course to pay bonuses of $20 billion or $700,00 per employee and Morgan Stanley a 30% increase from average per employee of $262,000 last year to $340,000 this year. JP Morgan's bonus pool for the first quarter of 2009 is up 175% to $3.3 billion and the new chief executive of RBS, the nationalized UK bank is getting an incentive package worth £10 million! Similar bonuses are being paid by many other banks. Barclays Capital for example is on a massive spending spree recruiting executives with golden hellos and guaranteed bonuses of millions per employee.

Central banks and governments worldwide have spent trillions of dollars temporarily propping up a totally bankrupt financial system and now a few months later the bankers are back earning absurd money within a banking system which hasn't been mended and is still bankrupt. This is scandalous.

Toxic Structures are back

But not only that, they are also back to creating new securitization programs in order to reduce capital requirements and increase leverage. Goldman Sachs, and Barclays Capital are doing this already and many other banks will follow. It is exactly these types of programs that created the financial crisis in the first place and now the bankers are back at it again. This is totally disgraceful and irresponsible behavior by bankers who have learnt nothing from their disastrous freewheeling actions except how to milk the system to the maximum again.

As we have pointed out before, none of the problems in the banking system have been resolved. The system still has a leverage of 25-50 times, it is still full of toxic debt and derivatives, loan books are deteriorating daily, it still has worthless paper assets valued at fantasy prices and most banks are run by the same bankers who created the problems in the first place. For a typical bank, a 4% drop in asset value wipes out the equity. This is what we call a recipe for disaster.

In the meantime governments are making feeble attempts at preventing a future crisis by planning new regulations. But these regulations will only deal with known and historic problems. The bankers will again run rings around the authorities in creating new structures to circumvent the new rules.

ACCELERATION OF THE DOWNTURN IS ABOUT TO START

The next phase of this tragic saga will soon start.

Compared to the of the 1930's we are already in a worse position today than at the same stage of the Great Depression. Industrial production is worse in many countries. World trade is worse and the stock market fall is greater than at the same stage in the corresponding period of the Depression and both government and private debt is a lot worse.

So what is likely to happen next?

  • Unemployment will increase government deficits
First unemployment will rise substantially as outlined above and the effects of the unemployed masses will have major repercussions on the economy. This will lead to government deficits growing substantially. Tax revenue is already falling at alarming rates in the US and UK and most other countries but it will get a lot worse. Government expenditure will rise rapidly due to the mass unemployment. Taxes will rise but this will be like getting water out of a stone - there won't be much revenue to tax. And if Vat or sales taxes are increased this will kill consumption even more. In addition governments will have to implement more programmes to help the poor, hungry and homeless. This will lead to more money printing.

  • Next phase of bank problems
Secondly the next phase of problems in the financial system will start by the autumn of 2009 at the latest. Since this will come as a total shock to everyone the effect will be much worse than in 2008. So far US banks have taken losses of $1.1 trillion. Conservative estimates put total losses at $2.2 trillion but realistic estimates are around $4 trillion and this excludes any problems in the $600 trillion to $1 quadrillion derivatives market a big part of which is worthless. In the next round of capital raising for banks there will only be one investor - the government. Thus there will be more money printing.

  • Government paper will collapse - first in the US and UK
With the escalation of money printing markets will be flooded with government paper which nobody wants, leaving governments to buy its own junk. The two countries with the worst problems are the UK and the US and their precarious situation will emerge first. Within the next few months rating agencies are likely to downgrade both countries' debt. This will lead to the value of the treasury bonds and gilts collapsing and interest rates quickly moving up into the teens. The higher rates will make the financing costs of the debt to up exponentially leading to more money printing and higher interest rates. This is the "perfect" vicious circle that will end in a hyperinflationary depression.

  • Hyperinflation is a currency driven event
For many years we have been saying that this crisis will by hyperinflationary. The issuing of unlimited government paper will lead to the rest of the world selling their holdings of US/UK treasuries as well as selling the dollar and the pound. Most so called financial experts have been predicting a deflationary recession/depression since they don't see the demand pull that they think is the cause of hyperinflation. We have been one of the very few (together with the very wise Jim Sinclair) to understand that hyperinflation is a currency driven event. The issuing of unlimited government paper outlined above will lead to the US dollar as well as the pound collapsing. It is the collapse of the currency which leads to hyperinflation. Without fail in history every hyperinflationary event has been caused by a collapsing currency not by demand pull.

Many other nations will also experience hyperinflation such as the Baltic States, certain Eastern European and Asian Countries. Many more countries will have high inflation.

THE DARK YEARS

In the next few months we will see the start of the Dark Years. For the first time in the history of the world there will be a synchronized downturn affecting all nations (although some a lot worse than others).This is the culmination of the world and especially the Western world, living above its means for decades in a mania of credit bubbles, asset bubbles, real estate bubbles as well as excesses leading to decadence and a society with very weak moral and ethical values. (Of course no society recognizes this as it is happening but only afterwards). Governments have fuelled this process by printing unlimited amounts of paper thus destroying the money and purchasing power of most nations.

The Dark Years will be extremely severe for most countries both financially and socially. In many countries in the Western world there will be a severe depression and it will be the end of the welfare state. Most private and state pension schemes are also likely to collapse. It will be a worldwide depression but some countries may only have a deep recession. There will be famine, homelessness and misery resulting in social as well as political unrest. Different type of government leaders and regimes are likely to result from this.

How long will the Dark Years last? There is a book called "The Fourth Turning" written by Neil Howe. He has identified a pattern that repeats itself every 80 years. The pattern has been extremely accurate in the Anglophile world. We have recently entered the Fourth Turning which is the final 20 years of the cycle. According to Howe we are in the early stages of a 20 year period of economic and institutional upheaval. This is a period of Crisis when the fabric of society will change dramatically. Previous Fourth Turnings have been the American Revolution, Great Depression and World War II. According to Howe the Crisis will be substantially worse before it is over and it will last for another circa 20 years.

All of this is not good news and we hope that we and Howe are wrong regarding the severity and length of this crisis. But we fear that we are both right. We must stress again that never previously has the the whole world entered a downturn simultaneously in such a fragile state both financially and economically which is why the Dark Years are likely to be so devastating and long lasting.

FINANCIAL MARKETS

Stockmarkets
The correction up in stockmarkets has probably finished but there is a possibility that it will continue for another couple of months. What is important is that it is a correction (we predicted it already back in January) and it will soon lead to a strong resumption of the downtrend. In the Dow Jones, a break of the trend line at 6400 would lead to a projected decline of at least 90% from the top. Almost all major world markets point to similar declines. This sounds incredible but bearing in mind that the Dow Jones fell 90% in the 1930's and bearing in mind our discussion in the Dark Years paragraph above, this kind of target is not impossible.

Some commodity stocks as well as gold and silver mining shares will be major beneficiaries from the Crisis.

Bonds
We forecast at the beginning of the year that US long rates would go up and they have almost doubled since. But this is only the beginning since we expect US and UK long rates to reach at least the mid teens in the next 2-3 years. Interest rates in all countries will go up substantially in the next few years.

Currencies
The dollar and the pound will have very substantial falls in the autumn of 2009. At some later stage the Euro will also weaken as a result of certain countries breaking away from the Euro area.

Gold
The currency which will be the major beneficiary from the Crisis is Gold. We have invested in gold since 2002 when we saw the Crisis coming. Gold has trebled since then. But this is just the beginning. The next major move will take place in the coming 4-5 months and it will be major. Gold for wealth preservation purposes should be held directly by the investor and stored outside the banking system in his name. Holding gold in ETF form, futures or owning part of gold bars that you don't have personal access to is not wealth preservation.

There is no means of avoiding a final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis should come sooner as a result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved.

Ludwig von Mises

EGON von GREYERZ

MATTERHORN ASSET MANAGEMENT AG




Snuffysmith
First Take › 3 consecutive increases in LEI not always bullish
MarketWatch - USA
Of course, the worst stock bear market since the Great Depression -- until the last two years -- began in December 1972. To be sure, three consecutive LEI ...


Australian mothers lead national economic recovery
NEWS.com.au - Australia
By Stefanie Balogh AUSTRALIAN mums have steered the nation through the worst phase of the global economic crisis by hitting the shopping malls, ...


Christina Romer: Working to Improve the Economy
U.S. News & World Report - Washington,DC,USA
As a college professor, she developed an expertise in the causes of and recovery from the Great Depression in the 1930s, especially the role played by the ...


The death knell sounds for universal health coverage
Atlanta Journal Constitution - GA, USA
By AJC/DNC Management I love Oblahmasan because he is an economic dimwit and in a long, deep economic depression, which is where this country is headed, ...



CNET News What to expect from Apple's quarterly progress report
CNET News - San Francisco,CA,USA
Apple has had a string of successful quarters, even in the midst of the worst economic environment since the Great Depression. One thing the company did do, ...


Googling the Economic Depression
BullionVault - London,England,UK
"The number of people searching for the term 'economic depression' on Google is down to normal levels." As you can see, searches for the term "economic ...


In other economic news, lemonade stand sales are up sharply
National Post - Toronto,Ontario,Canada
... the economy has started to recover, the fact that: "Google searches for the term 'economic depression' were up fourfold from their pre-crisis levels. ...


Forget the 1930s – We are Reliving 1975 (part 1) 0 comments
Seeking Alpha - New York,NY,USA
By almost any measure the Great Depression starting in 1929 was twice as bad as any subsequent economic collapse, including today. ...


Microsoft's new mantra: Save people money
Seattle Times - United States
"I refer to what we're going through globally as an economic reset — not a recession, not a depression," Ballmer said in a speech last week at Microsoft's ...


Pennsylvania: Another State Descends into Financial Crisis
Seeking Alpha - New York,NY,USA
However, as I've written previously, going down that road must lead to hyperinflation (see "Rising US interest rates signal Hyperinflationary Depression"). ...


Snuffysmith
Fed's Lockhart sees Weak Recovery, Exit Strategy not needed for "some time" by CalculatedRisk on 7/20/2009 01:32:00 PM

From Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart: On the Economic Outlook and the Commitment to Price Stability . Here is Lockhart's economic outlook:

Often a deep recession is followed by a sharp rebound in business and overall economic activity. Unfortunately, as I look ahead, I do not foresee this trajectory. I expect real growth to resume in the second half and progress at a modest pace. I do not see a strong recovery in the medium term.

There are risks to even this rather subdued forecast. The risk I'm watching most closely is commercial real estate. There is a heavy schedule of commercial real estate financings coming due in 2009, 2010, and 2011. The CMBS (commercial real estate mortgage-backed securities) market is very weak, and banks generally have no appetite to roll over loans on properties that have lost value in the recession. Refinancing problems will not directly affect GDP—it's commercial construction that factors into GDP—but I'm concerned problems in commercial real estate finance could adversely affect the otherwise improving banking and insurance sectors.

... the healing of the banking system will take time. Working off excess housing inventory will take time. The reallocation of labor to productive and growing sectors of the economy will take time. It will take time to complete the deleveraging of American households and the restoration of consumer balance sheets.

In short, I believe the economy must undergo significant structural adjustments. We're coming out of a severe recession, and it's not too much an exaggeration to say the economy is undergoing a makeover. We must build a more solid foundation for our economy than consumer spending fueled by excessive credit—excessive household leverage—built on a house price bubble.

The surviving financial system must find a new posture of risk taking. The balance of consumption and investment must adjust, with investment being financed by greater domestic saving. The distribution of employment must adjust to match worker skills, including newly acquired skills, with jobs in growth markets. Some industrial plant and equipment must be taken offline to remove excess and higher-cost capacity.

As I said, these adjustments will take time and will suppress growth prospects in the process. I believe the economy will underperform its long-term potential for a while because of the obstacles to growth that must be removed, adjustments it must undergo.
...
Let me summarize my argument here today. The economy is stabilizing and recovery will begin in the second half. The recovery will be weak compared with historic recoveries from recession. The recovery will be weak because the economy must make structural adjustments before the healthiest possible rate of growth can be achieved. While this adjustment process is going on in the medium term, I believe inflation and deflation are roughly equal risks and require careful monitoring. Slack in the economy will suppress inflation. And inflation is unlikely to result—by direct causation—from the recent growth of the Fed's balance sheet. In any event, the Fed has a number of tools being readied to unwind the policies used to fight the recession, and it will be some time before their use is appropriate.
emphasis added


Posted by CalculatedRisk on 7/20/2009 01:32:00 PM
Snuffysmith
CRE Losses Piling Up by CalculatedRisk on 7/20/2009 08:13:00 AM

From Lingling Wei and Maurice Tamman at the WSJ: Commercial Loans Failing at Rapid Pace

U.S. banks have been charging off soured commercial mortgages at the fastest pace in nearly 20 years ... losses on loans used to finance offices, shopping malls, hotels, apartments and other commercial property could reach about $30 billion by the end of 2009.
...
Many of the most troubled [regional] banks have heavy exposure to commercial real estate. ...

In contrast to home loans, the majority of which were made by about 10 lenders, thousands of U.S. banks, especially regional and community banks, loaded up on commercial-property debt.
...
Some analysts, meanwhile, worry that banks aren't sufficiently recognizing losses on their commercial real-estate loans, thereby exposing themselves to bigger losses later. ..."Net charge-offs to date have been highly inadequate," said Richard Parkus, head of commercial mortgage-backed securities research at Deutsche Bank. "This is clearly a problem that is being pushed out into the future."
Many regional and community banks had excessive loan concentrations in Construction & Development (C&D) and CRE loans. The FDIC identified this as an emerging risk in 2006 - so it is no surprise. These smaller banks have been slow to recognize the related losses - possibly because many of the deals had interest reserves that mask the performance of the commercial building until the reserve runs dry. Then there is just more work for the FDIC ...
Snuffysmith

What If?
By Paul McCulley, Managing Director, PIMCO

The whole world, it seems, is wrapped around the axle about exit strategies from putatively unsustainable policies: (1) the Fed's bloated balance sheet, with some $800 billion of excess reserves sloshing 'round the banking system, in the context of an effective zero Fed funds rate; and (2) the Treasury's huge budget deficit, unprecedented in peace time and set to stay huge, implying a Treasury debt/GDP ratio approaching 100% within a decade's time.

For some, usually with Monetarist roots, this combination of policies is a classic brew for a major bout of inflation (eventually, it is always stressed). For others, usually with Austrian tendencies, this policy brew is a deflationary force, as it will provoke foreign investors to flee both the dollar and Treasuries, driving up real interest rates, pole axing any revival in risk asset prices, themselves backed by the fruits of bubble-driven mal-investment. And, I'm quite sure, there are some with a foot in both camps.

So it's not easy to actually define conventional, or consensus, wisdom. In fact, many of my Keynesian brethren seem to be struggling with what to do, arguing against any further near-term fiscal stimulus, or at least unless enacted simultaneously with long-term fiscal restraint. Indeed, I recently publicly uttered something along these lines, though I hedged myself by saying long-term fiscal responsibility rather than restraint (responsibility is in the eye of the beholder, while restraint is more categorical).

In any event, there does not seem to be any serious consensus as to how the policy mix should be adjusted, if at all, despite clear and present evidence of massive unemployment and underemployment, which is putting downward pressure on nominal personal income (the product of fewer jobs, fewer hours and decelerating wages, almost to the zero line). This is not the stuff of a self-sustaining revival in aggregate demand. Thus, my tentative conclusion is that maybe the consensus professional economist view is that America should simply accept that it's going to have its version of Japan's lost decade, the Calvinist aftermath of the preceding sin of booming growth on the back of ever-increasing leverage and mal-investment.

But if that sobering view is indeed the new consensus, shame on my profession! There is another way. And, irony of ironies, it is not a new way, but rather an old way, one defined by no less than Paul Krugman in 1998 and Ben Bernanke in 2003, when lecturing Japan about what to do. I have enormous respect for the intellectual horsepower of both men, and what they preached back then deserves a re-preaching, even if I'm the humble preacher that must take the pulpit.

Krugman in May 1998

In a delightfully wonkish paper,1 using the enormous horsepower of the IS-LM (investment savings-liquidity preference money supply equilibrium) framework, he made a powerful case for what Japan should do to bootstrap itself out of the deflationary swamp. I'll spare you the wonkish part and cut to his commonsensical conclusion.

In the midst of deflation in the context of a liquidity trap, with the central bank's policy rate pinned at zero, it is not enough for the central bank to print money, accommodating massive fiscal policy stimulus, he argued. Not that this is not a necessary policy action. It is. But it is not sufficient, Krugman pounded the table, because if the public believes that the central bank will, in the future, un-print the money – in today's jargon, implement an exit strategy from money printing – then the printed money will simply be hoarded, rather than spent, because deflationary expectations will remain entrenched.

To get the public to spend the money, Krugman argued, the central bank should make clear that the printed money will remain printed, shifting deflationary expectations to inflationary expectations. In his famous conclusion, actually advice to the Bank of Japan, Krugman declared (his italics, not mine):

"The way to make monetary policy effective is for the central bank to credibly promise to be irresponsible – to make a persuasive case that it will permit inflation to occur, thereby producing the negative real interest rates the economy needs."

In a follow-up (similarly wonkish) paper2 in 1999, Professor Krugman refined his argument, stressing that the core of his thesis could be implemented through a credible inflation target that was appreciably higher than the prevailing negative inflation rate in Japan. Thus, he was not so much arguing that the Bank of Japan should act irresponsibly, but rather act irresponsibly relative to orthodox, conventional thinking, which itself was irresponsible, in that it emphasized the need for an eventual exit strategy from liquidity trap-motivated money printing.

To get out of the trap, he emphasized, the central bank needed to radically change expectations to the notion that there was no exit strategy, at least until inflation was appreciably higher – not just inflation expectations, but inflation itself. Only then would the commitment to higher inflation be credible, with the central bank not just talking the reflationary talk, but walking the reflationary walk, turning deflationary swamp water into reflationary wine.

Naturally, the Bank of Japan didn't listen to Krugman at the time; orthodoxy is as orthodoxy does. In March 2001, however, the Bank of Japan did serve up a small beer from the Krugman still, adopting Quantitative Easing (QE), re-enforcing its zero interest rate policy (ZIRP) with an explicit target for massive creation of excess reserves, committing to retaining that policy until the year-over-year core CPI moved above zero on a "stable" basis. A very small beer indeed.

But to its credit, the Bank of Japan tiptoed the reflationary walk, sticking with QE for five years, exiting in March 2006, after the year-over-year core CPI had turned positive in November 2005. A small beer is better than no beer.

Bernanke in May 2003

Professor Bernanke became Fed Governor Bernanke the prior year, making his most famous speech in November 2002, "Making Sure 'It' Doesn't Happen Here,"3 detailing the Fed's anti-deflationary toolbox. That's the speech that the markets are using as a roadmap for Chairman Bernanke's present anti-deflation policy path (it's actually been quite a good roadmap!). But a speech in May 2003, "Some Thoughts on Monetary Policy in Japan,"4 is equally important, I think, because it provides a roadmap for what the Fed might do if present anti-deflation policies prove to be inadequate to the task.

The speech is not quite as wonkish as Krugman's May 1998 missive, but is still robustly analytical. Perhaps that's why my profession and the media do not give it the attention it deserves. But Mr. Bernanke's speech does have strong Occam's Razor conclusions, and they are eerily the same as Krugman's, perhaps even stronger.

No, Mr. Bernanke did not advocate to the Bank of Japan that it credibly commit to acting irresponsibly, Krugman's clever turn of phrase. In fact, as noted above, Krugman didn't really, either; he simply wanted the Bank of Japan to act responsibly, which would be deemed irresponsible in the context of orthodox thinking. Both men know how to think outside the proverbial box!

At the time, Mr. Bernanke was a table-thumping advocate for the Fed to adopt an explicit inflation target. But in Japan, he upped that analytical ante by advocating that the Bank of Japan adopt a price level target, not an inflation target.

And there is a huge difference. An inflation target "forgives" past deflation (or below inflation target) sins. In contrast, a price level target does not forgive those sins, but rather demands that the central bank atone for them by explicitly pursuing sufficient inflation to restore the price level to a plateau that would have been achieved if those sins had not been committed. More specifically, he advocated that the Bank of Japan should (his italics, not mine):

"... announce its intention to restore the price level (as measured by some standard index of prices, such as the consumer price index excluding fresh food) to the value it would have reached if, instead of the deflation of the past five years, a moderate inflation of, say, 1 percent per year had occurred. (I choose 1 percent to allow for the measurement bias issue noted above, and because a slightly positive average rate of inflation reduces the risk of future episodes of sustained deflation.) Note that the proposed price-level target is a moving target, equal in the year 2003 to a value approximately 5 percent above the actual price level in 1998 and rising 1 percent per year thereafter. Because deflation implies falling prices while the target price-level rises, the failure to end deflation in a given year has the effect of increasing what I have called the price-level gap. The price-level gap is the difference between the actual price level and the price level that would have obtained if deflation had been avoided and the price stability objective achieved in the first place.

A successful effort to eliminate the price-level gap would proceed, roughly, in two stages. During the first stage, the inflation rate would exceed the long-term desired inflation rate, as the price-level gap was eliminated and the effects of previous deflation undone. Call this the reflationary phase of policy. Second, once the price-level target was reached, or nearly so, the objective for policy would become a conventional inflation target or a price-level target that increases over time at the average desired rate of inflation."

This is very powerful stuff! Mr. Bernanke knew he was breaking some new ground, at least from the mouth of a sitting policymaker. In actuality, he was drawing on some powerful academic work of Eggertsson and Woodford,5 which laid out the case that a price level target would likely have a more powerful effect on inflation expectations than simply an inflation target above the prevailing level of inflation (or in Japan's case, deflation). How so? A price level target pegged at the starting point of a period of deflation – or below target inflation – implies that the central bank is explicitly committed to reflation, meaning that in the short-to-intermediate term, the central bank will explicitly aim for an inflation rate that is higher than its long-term "desired" rate.

Mr. Bernanke recognized that such a policy could unmoor long-term inflation expectations, creating a deleterious rise in long-term interest rates. But in his view, this was a risk worth taking, in part because he felt that a central banker with strong communications skills could draw a distinction between (1) a one-time reflation to correct a deflated price level back up to a level that would have been achieved in the absence of deflationary sins and (2) the central bank's long-term inflation objective. But he acknowledged it would be tricky.

But his case didn't rest simply on skilled central bank communications. While he felt that generating a positive shock to short-to-intermediate inflation expectations would have the effect of reducing real interest rates (remember, the real rate is the nominal rate minus inflation expectations), he did not think that effect was assured and even if it was, he did not believe it would be sufficient to stimulate private sector aggregate demand robust enough to reduce Japan's output gap. Thus, he advocated explicit cooperation between the fiscal authority and the monetary authority, with the latter subordinating itself to the former. And you thought Krugman was radical!

While the passage on this topic6 in Bernanke's speech is a bit long, it is so powerful that I think it deserves a full hearing. Here it is:

"My thesis here is that cooperation between the monetary and fiscal authorities in Japan could help solve the problems that each policymaker faces on its own. Consider for example a tax cut for households and businesses that is explicitly coupled with incremental BOJ purchases of government debt – so that the tax cut is in effect financed by money creation. Moreover, assume that the Bank of Japan has made a commitment, by announcing a price-level target, to reflate the economy, so that much or all of the increase in the money stock is viewed as permanent.

Under this plan, the BOJ's balance sheet is protected by the bond conversion program,7 and the government's concerns about its outstanding stock of debt are mitigated because increases in its debt are purchased by the BOJ rather than sold to the private sector. Moreover, consumers and businesses should be willing to spend rather than save the bulk of their tax cut: They have extra cash on hand, but – because the BOJ purchased government debt in the amount of the tax cut – no current or future debt service burden has been created to imply increased future taxes.

Essentially, monetary and fiscal policies together have increased the nominal wealth of the household sector, which will increase nominal spending and hence prices. The health of the banking sector is irrelevant to this means of transmitting the expansionary effect of monetary policy, addressing the concern of BOJ officials about 'broken' channels of monetary transmission. This approach also responds to the reservation of BOJ officials that the Bank "lacks the tools" to reach a price-level or inflation target.

Isn't it irresponsible to recommend a tax cut, given the poor state of Japanese public finances? To the contrary, from a fiscal perspective, the policy would almost certainly be stabilizing, in the sense of reducing the debt-to-GDP ratio. The BOJ's purchases would leave the nominal quantity of debt in the hands of the public unchanged, while nominal GDP would rise owing to increased nominal spending. Indeed, nothing would help reduce Japan's fiscal woes more than healthy growth in nominal GDP and hence in tax revenues.

Potential roles for monetary-fiscal cooperation are not limited to BOJ support of tax cuts. BOJ purchases of government debt could also support spending programs, to facilitate industrial restructuring, for example. The BOJ's purchases would mitigate the effect of the new spending on the burden of debt and future interest payments perceived by households, which should reduce the offset from decreased consumption. More generally, by replacing interest-bearing debt with money, BOJ purchases of government debt lower current deficits and interest burdens and thus the public's expectations of future tax obligations.

Of course, one can never get something for nothing; from a public finance perspective, increased monetization of government debt simply amounts to replacing other forms of taxes with an inflation tax. But, in the context of deflation-ridden Japan, generating a little bit of positive inflation (and the associated increase in nominal spending) would help achieve the goals of promoting economic recovery and putting idle resources back to work, which in turn would boost tax revenue and improve the government's fiscal position."

Powerful, powerful stuff!

And Now to the USA at Present

The United States is not presently suffering deflation in goods and services prices, although the core CPI has dipped slightly below the Fed's putative 2% "target." So the extreme measures that Krugman and Bernanke advocated for Japan do not translate fully to the United States. But they do translate a lot more than the consensus is even willing to discuss in politically correct circles.

America is in a liquidity trap, driven by private sector deleveraging borne of asset price deflation, meaning that private sector demand for credit is axiomatically flat to negative, despite a Fed funds rate pinned against zero. The only source of credit demand growth in the United States is the Treasury itself.

And until the deleveraging process runs its course, consensus agrees that there is nothing wrong with such bloated Treasury demand for credit: In a recessionary foxhole, Keynesian religion dominates all other economic religions. But not all believers are equally devout, as noted at the outset, with many against any further ramping up of Keynesian stimulus, at least without a contemporaneous move to ensure long-term fiscal responsibility, so as to prevent a deleterious increase in long-term Treasury interest rates.

So what should Washington do, if and when – and I stress "if and when"; I'm not making a forecast here! – private sector aggregate (nominal) demand growth looks like it's going to languish in Japan style for the indefinite future? The answer: Take one cup of Krugman's advice for Japan and two cups of Bernanke's advice for Japan – responsibly act irresponsibly relative to orthodoxy.

Yes, as Bernanke intoned, there are no free lunches. But no lunch doesn't work for me. Or the American people. While it is true, as Keynes intoned, that we are all dead in the long run, I see no reason to die young from orthodoxy-imposed anorexia.

  1. "Japan's Trap," http://web.mit.edu/krugman/www/japtrap.html
  2. "Thinking About the Liquidity Trap," http://web.mit.edu/krugman/www/trioshrt.html
  3. http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/sp...121/default.htm
  4. http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/sp...531/default.htm
  5. Gauti Eggertsson, and Michael Woodford (2003). "The Zero Bound on Interest Rates and Optimal Monetary Policy," http://www.columbia.edu/~mw2230/BPEA.pdf
  6. In this case, Bernanke was drawing on his own work, a no-punches-pulled academic essay from December 1999, "Japanese Monetary Policy: A Case of Self-Induced Paralysis." For the wonks amongst you that haven't read it, I strongly urge that you do so!
  7. Elsewhere in the speech, Bernanke lays out a framework, via an interest rate swap arrangement, for the fiscal authority to assume any losses for the central bank from interest rate risks on its bond purchases, so as to bury that political red herring. As an economic matter, such losses are of no importance when looking at the consolidated balance sheet of the monetary authority and the fiscal authority: If government bond prices go down, the central bank loses money from a mark-to-market accounting perspective, but the fiscal authority makes exactly the same amount from a mark-to-market accounting perspective.
Snuffysmith
Fiscal ruin of the Western world beckons
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

For a glimpse of what awaits Britain, Europe, and America as budget deficits spiral to war-time levels, look at what is happening to the Irish welfare state.

Events have already forced Premier Brian Cowen to carry out the harshest assault yet seen on the public services of a modern Western state. He has passed two emergency budgets to stop the deficit soaring to 15pc of GDP. They have not been enough. The expert An Bord Snip report said last week that Dublin must cut deeper, or risk a disastrous debt compound trap.

A further 17,000 state jobs must go (equal to 1.25m in the US), though unemployment is already 12pc and heading for 16pc next year.

Education must be cut 8pc. Scores of rural schools must close, and 6,900 teachers must go....Nobody is spared. Social welfare payments must be cut 5pc, child benefit by 20pc. The Garda (police), already smarting from a 7pc pay cut, may have to buy their own uniforms. Hospital visits could cost £107 a day, etc, etc....

No doubt Ireland has been the victim of a savagely tight monetary policy – given its specific needs. But the deeper truth is that Britain, Spain, France, Germany, Italy, the US, and Japan are in varying states of fiscal ruin, and those tipping into demographic decline (unlike young Ireland) have an underlying cancer that is even more deadly. The West cannot support its gold-plated state structures from an aging workforce and depleted tax base.

As the International Monetary Fund made clear last week, Britain is lucky that markets have not yet imposed a "penalty interest" on British Gilts, given the trajectory of UK national debt – now vaulting towards 100pc of GDP – and the scandalous refusal of this Government to map out any path back to solvency.

"The UK has been getting the benefit of the doubt, both in the Government bond market and also the foreign exchange market. This benefit of the doubt is not going to last forever," said the Fund.

France and Italy have been less abject, but they began with higher borrowing needs. Italy's debt is expected to reach the danger level of 120pc next year, according to leaked Treasury documents. France's debt will near 90pc next year if President Nicolas Sarkozy goes ahead with his "Grand Emprunt", a fiscal blitz masquerading as investment.

There was a case for an emergency boost last winter to cushion the blow as global industry crashed. That moment has passed. While I agree with Nomura's Richard Koo that the US, Britain, and Europe risk a deflationary slump along the lines of Japan's Lost Decade (two decades really), I am ever more wary of his calls for Keynesian spending a l'outrance.

Such policies have crippled Japan. A string of make-work stimulus plans – famously building bridges to nowhere in Hokkaido e_SEmD has ensured that the day of reckoning will be worse, when it comes. The IMF says Japan's gross public debt will reach 240pc of GDP by 2014 e_SEmD beyond the point of recovery for a nation with a contracting workforce. Sooner or later, Japan's bond market will blow up.

Error One was to permit a bubble in the 1980s. Error Two was to wait a decade before opting for monetary "shock and awe" through quantitative easing.

The US Federal Reserve has moved faster but already seems to think the job is done. "Quantitative tightening" has begun. Its balance sheet has contracted by almost $200bn (£122bn) from the peak. The M2 money supply has stagnated since January. The Fed is talking of "exit strategies".

Is this a replay of mid-2008 when the Fed lost its nerve, bristling over criticism that it had cut rates too low (then 2pc)? Remember what happened. Fed hawks in Dallas, St Louis, and Atlanta talked of rate rises. That had consequences. Markets tightened in anticipation, and arguably triggered the collapse of Lehman Brothers, AIG, Fannie and Freddie that autumn.

The Fed's doctrine – New Keynesian Synthesis – has let it down time and again in this long saga, and there is scant evidence that Fed officials recognise the fact. As for the European Central Bank, it has let private loan growth contract this summer.
The imperative for the debt-bloated West is to cut spending systematically for year after year, off-setting the deflationary effect with monetary stimulus. This is the only mix that can save us.

My awful fear is that we will do exactly the opposite, incubating yet another crisis this autumn, to which we will respond with yet further spending. This is the road to ruin.

Snuffysmith
Feldstein: Risk of Double Dip by CalculatedRisk on 7/21/2009 01:27:00 PM

From Bloomberg: Harvard's Feldstein Sees Risk of 'Double-Dip' Recession in U.S.

... "There is a real danger this is going to be a double dip and that after six months or so we'll have some more bad news," [Martin] Feldstein, the former head of the National Bureau of Economic Research and Reagan administration adviser, said today in an interview on Bloomberg Television. "We could slide down again in the fourth quarter."

The economy could "flatten out" or "even be positive" in the third quarter, and then it's likely to contract again in the last three months of the year as the effects of the federal stimulus program wear off and companies finish rebuilding inventories, he said.

"There isn't going to be enough to sustain a really solid recovery," he said, even though recent data has provided some "good news" on the economy.
This was the key point of the Texas Instruments post yesterday (with conference call comments on inventory). There is a possibility of short term growth as companies rebuild inventories, but then an extended period of sluggishness since end demand is flat.
Snuffysmith
Philly Fed State Coincident Indicators: Widespread Recession in June by CalculatedRisk on 7/21/2009 11:28:00 AM

Click on map for larger image.

Here is a map of the three month change in the Philly Fed state coincident indicators. Forty seven states are showing declining three month activity.

This is what a widespread recession looks like based on the Philly Fed states indexes.

On a one month basis, activity decreased in 46 states in June, and was unchanged in 1 state. Here is the Philadelphia Fed state coincident index release for June.

The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia has released the coincident indexes for the 50 states for June 2009. In the past month, the indexes increased in three states (Mississippi, North Dakota, and Vermont), decreased in 46, and remained unchanged in one (North Carolina) for a one-month diffusion index of -86. Over the past three months the indexes increased in two states (Mississippi and North Dakota), decreased in 47, and remained unchanged in one (Montana) for a three-month diffusion index of -90.
The second graph is of the monthly Philly Fed data of the number of states with one month increasing activity. Most of the U.S. was has been in recession since December 2007 based on this indicator.

Note: this graph includes states with minor increases (the Philly Fed lists as unchanged).

Almost all states showed declining activity in June. Still a very widespread recession ...
Snuffysmith
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S&P Increases Forecast for Subprime Mortgage Losses - Again! by CalculatedRisk on 7/22/2009 06:07:00 PM

From Bloomberg: Subprime-Mortgage Loss Forecast Is Raised by Standard & Poor's

Standard & Poor's again boosted its projections for losses from U.S. subprime mortgages backing securities ... Losses on loans backing 2006 securities will reach an average of about 32 percent of the original balances, while losses for similar 2007 bonds will total about 40 percent, the New York-based ratings firm said in a statement today. In February, S&P said the losses would total an average of 25 percent for 2006 bonds and 31 percent for 2007 securities.
Ouch!
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