Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Morning Economic News - February 10, 2009

Commentary and Overnight Trading



Overnight trading results early Tuesday [2:57 AM Eastern] are almost as lackluster as Monday's US stock market returns. The Nikkei closed down 0.29%, while the Hang Seng is up 0.01%, while US stock market futures are down just under 1%. Oil is up 26 cents a barrel and gold is up 0.39% while silver is down by the same percentage. The dollar is down slightly against the yen, up solidly againsg the euro, pound and Canadian dollar.

Economic Reports



Employment Trends Index - January 2009




  • Employment Trends Index: 96.6

  • Monthly Change: Down 1%

  • Year-to-year Change: Down 18.6%




What I'm Reading



Slowdown Hits Emerging Markets



The global downdraft is hitting emerging economies with a speed and ferocity few imagined possible just months ago.



China's Inflation Slows to 1%, Weakest Pace in Two Years, as Economy Cools China’s producer prices tumbled by
the most in almost seven years and inflation cooled to the
weakest pace since 2006 as the government struggled to revive
growth in the world’s third-biggest economy.


BOE's King Must Print Money Now to Escape Credit `Mess,' Former Aides Say Bank of England Governor Mervyn King
should print money now and abandon economic assumptions that
have failed to save the U.K. from its worst recession since
World War II, a group of former central bank economists said.


U.K. Home Sales Drop to Lowest Since at Least 1978 as Recession Deepens U.K. housing sales dropped to the
lowest level since at least 1978 in the quarter through January
as property prices dropped further and Britain’s recession
deepened, the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors said.


Australia's Business Confidence Plunges to Record Low as Exports Decline IOOF Holdings Ltd. and Australian
Wealth Management Ltd., the asset managers that agreed to merge
last year, said funds under management plunged as financial
markets tumbled amid the global credit crisis.


Japan's Consumer Sentiment Stayed Near Record Low in January on Job Cuts Japan’s consumer sentiment stayed
near its lowest level in at least 26 years in January,
indicating households are likely to keep cutting spending.


South Korean Economy to Shrink 2%, Government to Boost Spending, Yoon Says South Korea’s new Finance Minister
Yoon Jeung Hyun pledged to increase stimulus spending after
forecasting the economy will contract about 2 percent this year
and lose around 200,000 jobs.


Bond Vigilantes Drive Treasuries to Worst Start Since 1980 in Test of Fed The bond vigilantes may be making a
comeback.


ECB Says Mixing Bad-Bank Plan, Asset Guarantee Would Curb Toxic-Paper Cost The European Central Bank said
governments should consider combining a so-called bad bank with
guarantees of securities to achieve the most cost-effective way
of ridding lenders of toxic assets.




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Monday, February 9, 2009

Morning Economic News - February 9, 2009

Commentary and Overnight Trading



US stock market futures show a market set to give back about a third of Friday's gains in the opening hours as delays in the Fed's Term Asset-Backed Securities Lending
Facility and the Obama administration's financial rescue package are reported. The Nikkei dropped 1.33% Monday, while the Hang Seng is up 0.84% [3:50 AM Eastern]. Oil is down half a percent and gold is down more than 1%, while industrial metals are up. The dollar is trading up against the euro, pound and Canadian dollar, down against the yen.

Economic Reports



Consumer Credit - December 2008




  • Total outstanding consumer credit: $2562.3 billion

  • Total rate of change: Down 3.1%




Employment Situation - January 2009




  • Nonfarm Payroll Employment: 134,580,000

  • Monthly Change: Down 598,000

  • Unemployment Rate: 7.6%




What I'm Writing



Financial Roadmap: The Week Ahead February 9 to 13, 2009



This week will be fairly light in the number of economic indicator releases, but some of the numbers could be very revealing...the markets are in one of those weird moods where bad news is seen as
bringing relief closer. This is normally Fed focused, but with the Fed
sidelined by a lack of ammunition, it's now fiscal policy focused. And
that's where the biggest news of the week may come from, as Congress is
likely to put the finishing touches on a fiscal stimulus package early
in the week.


What I'm Reading



Real-Estate Sector Cheers Tax Credit



A proposed tax credit for home purchases is raising the
hopes of the real-estate industry, which believes it could stabilize
the housing market.




U.S. Delays Financial-Rescue Plan as Officials Grapple With Toxic Assets Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner
delayed the announcement of the Obama administration’s
financial-recovery plan as officials debated proposals aimed at
addressing the toxic debt clogging banks’ balance sheets.



Japan Machinery Orders Fall for Third Month, Corporate Bankruptcies Climb Orders for Japanese machinery fell
for a third month in December and bankruptcies increased as
businesses scrapped investment plans amid a collapse in exports
and deteriorating earnings.



India's Economy Forecast to Expand 7.1% This Year, Weakest Pace Since 2003 India’s economy may grow at the
slowest pace since 2003 this year, undermining Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh’s re-election bid in two months.



Taxpayers Risk $9.7 Trillion on Bailouts as Senate Debates Obama Stimulus The stimulus package the U.S. Congress
is completing would raise the government’s commitment to solving
the financial crisis to $9.7 trillion, enough to pay off more
than 90 percent of the nation’s home mortgages.



Taiwan's Exports Decline by a Record 44.1% as Sales to China, U.S. Tumble Taiwan’s exports fell by an
unprecedented 44.1 percent last month on reduced global demand
for the island’s computer chips, laptops and mobile phones.



Japan's Recession May Be Worst in Half Century, BOJ's Chief Economist Says Japan’s economy is deteriorating at a
pace unseen in the past half century, the central bank’s chief
economist said.



China Exports May Fall by Most in Decade as Demand Plunges in U.S., Europe China’s exports probably fell by the
most in a decade in January as demand dried up in the U.S. and
Europe, making it harder to revive growth in the world’s third-
biggest economy.



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Friday, February 6, 2009

Morning Economic News - February 6, 2009

Commentary and Overnight Trading



Asian indexes are up strongly Friday morning, with the Nikkei closing up 1.6% and the Hang Seng up more than 3% at this writing [3:30 AM Eastern]. US stock market futures are marginally higher, but much less than the Asian markets. Oil futures are down 1%, just above the $40 mark. The dollar is up against the Canadian dollar, down against the yen, euro and pound.

Economic Reports



Monster Employment Index - January 2009




  • Index: 118

  • Monthly Change: Down 13

  • Year-to-year Change: Down 42 Points




Money Supply - February 5, 2009




  • M1 Seasonally Adjusted Prior Month: $1595.8 billion

  • M1 4-Week Average: $1584.5 billion

  • M1 Annual Change (Unadjusted): $238.3 billion




Jobless Claims - February 5, 2009




  • Initial Claims: 626,000

  • Change from Last Week: Up 35,000




Japanese Leading Index takes biggest tumble in over 30 years



The Japanese Leading Index experienced its biggest monthly decline in
more than thirty years in December, dropping 4.3%, while the Coincident
Index dropped 1.4%. Still, four leading indicators improved: real money
supply, stock prices, interest rate spread, and the (inverted) business
failures*.


What I'm Reading



States' Jobless Funds Run Low



A growing number of states are running out of cash to pay
unemployment benefits, a development that comes as initial jobless
claims passed 600,000 last week.




Fed Calls Emergency Consultants to Triage and Treat AIG, Stricken Markets Every Sunday night, New York
bankruptcy lawyer Marshall Huebner spends a 13-hour shift on
call as an emergency medical technician. His day job involves
work on another sort of rescue: The government’s $152.5 billion
bailout of American International Group Inc.



Sarkozy Defies Protests, Promises $10.2 Billion Cut in French Business Tax French President Nicolas Sarkozy
defied calls for more aid to consumers, saying his 26 billion-
euro ($33 billion) plan to spur investment will cushion a
deepening economic slump and increase productivity.



U.S. Jobless Rate Probably Climbed to 16-Year High as Recession Deepened Unemployment in the U.S. probably
climbed in January to the highest level since 1992 and payrolls
dropped for a 13th consecutive month as the recession showed no
sign of abating, economists said before a report today.



Australian Central Bank Cuts GDP, Inflation Forecasts, Says Rates to Help Australia’s central bank slashed its
forecasts for economic growth and inflation, increasing Governor
Glenn Stevens’s scope to extend interest-rate cuts that have
taken the benchmark rate to the lowest in more than four decades.



Shirakawa Says Bank of Japan Will Limit Asset Buying to Save Balance Sheet Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki
Shirakawa said the central bank will limit its purchases of
stocks and corporate debt to protect its balance sheet and the
credibility of the yen.



Hong Kong January Luxury Home Sales Surge 31% as Lower Prices Lure Buyers Sales of Hong Kong luxury homes rose
to their highest in six months in January, indicating that prices
may have stabilized as buyers seek bargains, according to data
by Centaline Property Agency Ltd.



Geithner's Window to Halt Flight of Capital From U.S. Banks May Soon Close Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner
must use his Feb. 9 speech to lure private investment to U.S.
banks or risk an accelerating flight of capital that would
result in creeping nationalization, analysts and investors said.



India Bucks Global Auto Trend After Rate Cuts Spur Record Sales at Suzuki After six months of deliberating
whether to buy a car, Mumbai real-estate agent Abraham Mathew
took out a 300,000 rupee ($6,200) loan to buy a Suzuki Motor
Corp. sedan. The clincher: a 20 percent fall in interest rates.





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Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Morning Economic News - February 4, 2009

Commentary and Overnight Trading



Oil prices have rebounded slightly in overnight trading after falling a bit more than 1% Wednesday. Asian stocks are mixed with the Nikkei down 1.11% with an hour before the close and the Hang Seng up 2.69%. US stock market futures are down with the DJIA futures trading below 7900. The dollar is down against the Canadian dollar and the yen, even against the euro and up against the increasingly beleaguered pound. [1:24 AM Eastern]

Economic Reports



ADP Employment Report - January 2009




  • Total Nonfarm Private Employment: 112,702,000

  • Monthly Change: Down 522,000




Pending Home Sales Index - December 2008




  • Pending Home Sales Index: 87.7

  • Monthly Change: Up 6.3%

  • Yearly Change: Up 2.1%




Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey - February 4, 2009




  • Market Composite Index: 795.4

  • Change: Up 8.6%

  • Purchase Index: 261.4

  • Change: Down 11.2%




What I'm Writing



Stabilizing gasoline demand putting floor under oil



On the demand side, gasoline demand is 0.5% below the same period last
year – stabilizing if not exactly rebounding in the face of retail
prices well below last year's levels...gasoline supply and demand factors may be feeding through to the
increases in crude oil prices that do not seem driven by supply side
fundamentals.


What I'm Reading



CBO: Obama Stimulus Plan Lowers Long-Run Growth



Russia to Expand Bank Support



Russia plans to curb spending and assist banks to shore up its economy.



Bank of Japan Must Take Prompt, Extraordinary Actions, Member Mizuno Says Bank of Japan board member Atsushi
Mizuno said the central bank should take “extraordinary”
actions to counter the recession, indicating it may consider
more steps after buying shares and corporate debt.


Bank of England May Cut Interest Rate Closer to Zero as Recession Deepens The Bank of England will probably
lower the benchmark interest rate closer to zero today as
officials resort to buying securities to revive the economy.


Trichet's Curse Becomes Blessing as Sticky Prices Justify Rate-Cut Delay European Central Bank President Jean-
Claude Trichet’s curse of a year ago may now be a blessing.


Productivity in U.S. Probably Rose Last Quarter Even as Recession Deepened U.S. companies, struggling to contain
escalating losses in the deepening recession, squeezed more
output from their remaining workers last quarter, economists
said before a government report today.


Japan Intervention Depends on Pace of Yen's Moves, Not Level, Gyohten Says Japan will refrain from selling the
yen, trading near a 13-year high against the dollar, unless the
currency’s appreciation gathers pace, a former Finance Ministry
official said.


New Zealand's Fourth-Quarter Jobless Rate Rises to Highest in Five Years New Zealand’s jobless rate rose to a
five-year high in the fourth quarter as a prolonged recession
prompted companies to cut production and fire workers.


Senate Adds Tax Credit for Homebuyers to Stimulus Bill as Final Vote Nears The U.S. Senate voted to cut taxes on
homebuyers and weaken “Buy American” provisions in an economic
stimulus package that tops $900 billion and could come to a vote
as soon as today.


U.K. Corporate Bankruptcies to Surge `Dramatically' This Year, KPMG Says As many as 5,000 U.K. companies may file
for bankruptcy this year as the economy worsens, according to a
report by accounting and insolvency firm KPMG.


Russia Fueling Ruble Tumble With Overnight Bank Loans, Alfa, UniCredit Say Russia’s central bank is exacerbating
the ruble’s 34 percent plunge since August, even as it struggles
to defend the exchange rate, by providing loans to banks that
speculate on the currency, say Alfa Bank and UniCredit SpA.




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Monday, February 2, 2009

Morning Economic News - Tuesday February 3, 2009

Commentary and Overnight Trading



Bad news Monday brought a down stock market (except the NASDAQ) and overnight trading looks to be adding to the losses with Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 and NASDAQ futures all trading down. There was actually some good news buried in the numbers themselves yesterday. The Purchasing Managers Index still shows manufacturing activity contracting, but at a slower pace than December and the same report showed inventories falling faster. Falling inventories mean a shorter time until at least some of those inventories will have to be replenished, so quicker depletion is a good sign for the economy. The Conference Board reported very bad news on online job ads with roughly a million less vacancies advertised in January compared to October. What they didn't put in the headline was that the January 2009 number was virtually identical to the January 2008, calling into question whether the big drop may be a flaw in their seasonal adjustment. Personal spending fell again, but real disposable personal income rose another 0.3% in December, bringing further relief to the 93% of consumers with jobs.

Asian markets are following a down Monday with a slightly down Tuesday. Oil has regained a little less than 1/3 of Monday's losses. The dollar is up against the yen and the pound, down against the euro and the Canadian dollar.



Monday's Economic Numbers



Construction Spending - December 2008




  • Monthly Change: Down 1.4%

  • Year-to-year Change: Down 3.6%




Help Wanted Online Data Series - January 2009




  • Monthly Change: Down 15% (Not seasonally adjusted)

  • Year-to-year Change: Down 0.3% (10,200 fewer job ads)




Manufacturing Report on Business - January 2009




  • Purchasing Managers Index (PMI): 35.6

  • 50+ represents growing economic conditions

  • Monthly Change: Up 2.7




Personal Income and Outlays - December 2008




  • Personal Income: Down $25.3 billion

  • Monthly Change: Down 0.2%

  • Real Disposable Personal Income: Up 0.3%




What I'm Reading



Consumers Keep Recovery at Bay



U.S. manufacturing activity contracted at a slower rate
than expected, but steep declines in consumer spending suggest a
recovery in that sector is premature.



Australia Cuts Key Rate to 45-Year-Low 3.25% as Government Boosts Spending Australia’s central bank cut its
benchmark interest rate to the lowest level in 45 years and the
government announced it will spend a further A$42 billion ($27
billion) to ward off a recession.


Bank of Japan to Buy Shares in Companies Held by Banks to Shore Up Capital The Bank of Japan will buy 1 trillion
yen ($11.1 billion) of shares owned by financial institutions to
shore up their capital, which has been decimated by the global
stock-market rout.


Homeowners in U.S. Lost $3.3 Trillion in Property Value in 2008 Amid Slump The U.S. housing market lost $3.3
trillion in value last year and almost one in six owners with
mortgages owed more than their homes were worth as the economy
went into recession, Zillow.com said.


Pending U.S. Home Resales Probably Unchanged, Signaling Slump to Persist The number of Americans signing
contracts to buy previously owned homes was probably unchanged
in December, snapping a three-month drop, economists said
before a report today.


South Korea's Economy Will Shrink 4% in 2009 and Rebound in 2010, IMF Says The International Monetary Fund
expects South Korea’s economy will contract this year for the
first time since the Asian financial crisis a decade ago,
according to a statement from the nation’s finance ministry.


Rupee to Strengthen This Quarter on India Growth Outlook, DBS's Wee Says India’s rupee will strengthen this
quarter as growth outperforms most emerging markets and
foreigners resume purchases amid waning risk aversion, according
to DBS Group Holdings Ltd.


Asia Needs Global Economic Recovery for Region to Exit Slowdown, IMF Says Asian nations will need a recovery in
the global economy before the region can exit a slowdown as its
trade and financial linkages have increased with the rest of the
world, International Monetary Fund Managing Director Dominique
Strauss-Kahn said.


Japan's Wages Slide for Second Month as Companies Cut Costs Amid Losses Japan’s wages fell for a second month
in December as manufacturers slashed production and overtime pay
amid mounting losses.




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Sunday, February 1, 2009

Morning Economic News - February 2, 2009

Commentary and Overnight Trading



The wait for Friday's employment report is likely to set the tone for the week in stock markets as bad expectations for this important report mute any positive news and give extra oomph to bad news. The pattern is showing up early with drops in Asian stock markets, US stock market futures and oil. The "flight to quality" pattern is holding again in currency markets with the dollar up against the euro, pound and Canadian dollar and down against what seems the stablest of the major currencies, the yen. [2:38 AM]

Friday's Economic News



Leading, Coincident Indicators down for Euro Zone, Mexico and Australia



The oil dependent Mexican economy took the biggest hit in November with
the Coincident Economic Index down 0.6% and the Leading Economic Index
dropping 4.5%. Of all the indicators in both indexes only one – stock
prices – improved.


What I'm Writing



Financial Roadmap: The Week Ahead February 2 to 6, 2009



This week will be a busy one with several labor market indicators, news
from the manufacturing sector including January auto sales, pending
home sales data and consumption spending. The week opens and closes
with indicators from the important areas of employment and the consumer
sector.


Low rates could cut payment time in half



At the current rates an 8.5% 30-year mortgage could be refinanced into
a 15-year mortgage at roughly the same payment – reason enough to
refinance for anyone with 3 to 5 years on a subprime loan who can
qualify now for prime rates.


What I'm Reading



Summers Carves Out Powerful Role



Obama's chief economic adviser is raising the clout of the
National Economic Council -- and the chance of internal conflict in the
administration.


How Bad? Jobs Data Offer a Clue



The first employment report for 2009, which comes out Friday, is going to be bad. The question is: How bad?




Obama Will Require Banks to Expand Lending as Condition of Government Aid President Barack Obama will require
banks to boost lending to consumers and companies in return for
taxpayer aid from the $700 billion bailout fund, in a departure
from Bush administration policy, a key lawmaker said.


Australian Investment Plans Shelved as Global Slump Hurts Mining Companies Planned investment in Australia
dropped for the first time in four years as mining companies
scaled back production because of the global economic slowdown,
Access Economics said.


Aso Risks Worsening Japan's Recession by Delaying Election He Might Lose Prime Minister Taro Aso risks
deepening Japan’s recession in order to delay an election he’s
likely to lose.


Indonesia Inflation Slows to 9-Month Low; May Allow Cut in Interest Rates Indonesia’s inflation slowed to a
nine-month low in January, giving the central bank room to cut
interest rates this week.


South Africa's Central Bank May Cut Benchmark Rate by Most in Five Years South Africa’s central bank may cut
its benchmark interest rate by 1 percentage point on Feb. 5, the
biggest reduction in more than five years, to stimulate an
economy heading toward a possible recession.


U.S. Manufacturing Probably Shrank at Fastest Since 1980 as Sales Slumped Manufacturing in the U.S. probably
shrank in January at the fastest pace in 28 years following a
collapse in sales that caused inventories to swell at the end of
2008, economists said before reports today.


Davos Dreams of Global Financial Cooperation Face Protectionist Resistance As world leaders in Davos called last
week for international cooperation to tackle the financial and
economic crisis, businessmen were complaining that the stress is
only aggravating national divides.


Thai Consumer Prices Fall for First Time in 9 Years; May Prompt Rate Cut Thailand’s consumer prices fell for
the first time in nine years in January, giving the central bank
room to cut interest rates this month.


South Korean Exports Plunge a Record 32.8%, Pointing to Deeper Asian Slump South Korea’s exports tumbled by a
record 32.8 percent in January, foreshadowing a deepening slump
in Asia’s export-driven economies.




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Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Morning Economic News - January 28, 2009

Commentary and Overnight Trading



The drop in the Consumer Confidence Index Tuesday is particularly bad on a couple of levels. Most obviously the level was already at historic lows, so the drop makes a bad situation worse. Secondly, the fact that the Expectations Index fell even more than the Present Situation Index calls into question the Obama administration's prime weapon in reviving the economy and one where the administration seemed to have strong ammunition - Hope.

The Federal Reserve's monetary policy arm, the Federal Open Market Committee, will release a statement tomorrow, but as I noted here the Fed's commitment to a zero rate policy leaves little room for the statement to really say much. Or, as a Bloomberg article today puts it:

Fed's Shift to Zero Rates Leaves Experts Blind, Complicates Bernanke Job Investors will have a tougher time
assessing Federal Reserve policy when officials today replace
interest rates with emergency credit programs as their main
tool for steering the economy.


Still stocks are looking up heading into Wednesday with the Nikkei closing up more than half a percent and US stock market futures up almost 2% [3:22 AM Eastern]. Oil markets have recovered half a percent of Tuesday's 9% drop. With nothing to indicate a demand rebound, a Goldman Sachs report indicating that oil is not ready to rise and another inventory report due out Wednesday, the 9% drop seems more sensible than the rebound. The dollar is up against the yen, down against the euro, pound and Canadian dollar, likely on contrarian profit taking.

Tuesday's Economic Numbers



Consumer Confidence Index - January 2009




  • Expectations Index: 43.0

  • Monthly Change: Down 1.2




Case-Shiller Housing Price Index - November 2008




  • Composite 20 Index: 154.59

  • Monthly Change: Down 2.2%




What I'm Reading



Home Prices Slide, Angst Rises

U.S. home prices in the 20 areas tracked by
S&P/Case-Shiller fell 18.2% in November from a year earlier.
Consumer confidence hit a new low.


Unemployment Rises in Every State

State unemployment rates increased across the country in
December, new data show, underscoring how the recession has spared few
industries or regions.



Australian Consumer Prices Decline Most in 11 Years Amid Looming Recession Australian consumer prices declined
by the most in 11 years last quarter, increasing scope for the
central bank to cut interest rates as evidence mounts the
economy is heading for its first recession since 1991.


Dudley Brings Crisis Experience to Job as New York Federal Reserve Chief William Dudley, named president of
the Federal Reserve Bank of New York today, kept up his stamina
during last year’s all-night talks on the financial crisis by
napping on the carpet of his office at the bank.


Japan Finance Ministry Cuts View of Regional Economy as Recession Deepens Japan’s Finance Ministry lowered its
assessment of the regional economy for a fourth straight quarter
as companies cut production in the wake of a collapse in exports.


South Korean Consumer Confidence Rises From 10-Year Low on Stimulus, Rates South Korea’s consumer confidence
rose in January from a 10-year low on optimism interest-rate
cuts and the government’s 51 trillion won ($37 billion) stimulus
may help to revive the economy.


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Monday, January 26, 2009

Morning Economic News - January 27, 2009

Commentary and Overnight Trading



While investors were understandably excited over the double upside surprise Monday - actual increases in both the Existing Home Sales Index and the Leading Index - there are a few notes of caution appropriate going into Tuesday. First, the big housing indicator due out Tuesday is the Case-Shiller Price Index, which is very unlikely to post an upward surprise. The Existing Home Sales report showed a fairly sizeably month-to-month drop in home prices and the Case-Shiller index, which focuses on the most overheated big metro markets has performed worse on prices than the existing home sales report for several months. It's doubtful that the trend is going to reverse right now. Second, that increase in the Leading Index was driven heavily by Federal Reserve actions which boosted two components of the index directly, the money supply and the interest rate spread. There was very little evidence that those actions had bled through to affect other leading indicators and no indication that there were any current effects, as the Coincident Index fell 0.5%.

On the other hand, the Existing Home Sales report is usually considered a lagging indicator. In normal times, this would mean that existing home sales would not start to rise until after the general economy was beginning to recover. Because this recession is driven so heavily by the housing market, that probably doesn't apply completely, but it is still reason to consider the good news especially good.

Oil markets seem to be liking the news, with the futures price north of $46 in spite of the dollar rising against the yen and the Canadian dollar. The dollar had risen against the pound and euro earlier, but is currently down a quarter to half percent against those currencies. [1:02 AM Eastern] Japan's Nikkei index is up more than 5.5% with an hour and a half left to the close. US stock market futures are up more than 1% for the three major indexes.

Monday's Economic Numbers



Existing Home Sales - December 2008




  • Total Existing Home Sales Annual Rate: 4.74 million units

  • Monthly Change: Up 6.5%




Leading Index - December 2008




  • Leading Index: Up 0.3%

  • Coincident Index: Down 0.5%

  • Lagging Index: Down 0.4%




What I'm Reading



Goldman Sachs: Economy Looks Bad for 2010. Sorry, Democrats.

Big Mideast Funds Scale Back

Sovereign wealth funds, among the stars of last year's World Economic Forum, are a lot more skittish this time around.


U.S. Retail Sales Are Expected to Drop

U.S. retail sales are forecast to decline 0.5% this year as
consumers continue to pull back, according to the National Retail
Federation.



Fed Move Into `Uncharted Waters' Spurs Pressure to Overhaul Its Forecasts Federal Reserve officials are
considering an overhaul of their economic forecasting, aiming to
make clear their objectives for growth and inflation in the aftermath of the longest recession since the 1930s.


Bank of Japan Focusing on Easing Corporate Borrowing Costs, Minutes Show Bank of Japan policy board members
said they should focus on lowering longer-term borrowing costs
for companies after cutting the overnight rate to 0.l percent in
December, meeting minutes show.


Subbarao May Keep Indian Interest Rates on Hold After Cutting to Record India's central bank Governor Duvvuri
Subbarao may keep interest rates unchanged today after lowering
them to a record this month.


Australian Business Confidence Rises From Record Low on Stimulus Measures Australian business confidence rose
in December from a record low as a government stimulus package
and the most aggressive interest-rate cuts since the last
recession in 1991 buoyed consumer spending.


Germany's Business Confidence May Drop to 26-Year Low as Recession Deepens German business confidence probably
fell to the lowest level in more than 26 years in January as the
global recession damped exports, prompting companies to curb
production and cut jobs.


Philippine Imports Fell Most in 10 Years in November Amid Slowing Demand Philippine imports fell the most in
10 years in November as manufacturers reduced purchases amid
slowing demand at home and abroad.




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Sunday, January 25, 2009

Morning Economic News - January 26, 2009

Commentary and Overnight Trading



The Nikkei dropped less than 1% Monday, while US stock market futures are also down less than 1%, pushing Dow Jones Industrial futures below the 8,000 mark. Oil futures are down nearly 2%, but still above $45. The dollar is up against the Canadian dollar, euro and pound, down slightly against the yen.

With bad news expected Monday on the existing home sales front and from the Leading Index, an upside surprise, even in the form of a smaller than expected drop, has the potential to fuel a rebound from a weak couple of weeks. A reboudn would be especially good news because the S&P is down about 70 points for the month and since 1979 the S&P has followed the January trend for the entire year 32 of 39 times.

What I'm Writing



Financial Roadmap: The Week Ahead January 26 to 30, 2009



The Durable Goods Orders report Thursday from the Commerce Department
may be the most important figure we see this week. A drop is expected
but reports and rumors are that many consumers after more than a year
of cutbacks in personal spending and businesses which have been
pinching pennies for over a year are reaching the point where
replacement of aging durables is no longer optional. With the other
bits of good news for consumers – lower interest rates finally
trickling through in some cases, lower costs of energy and food – pent
up demand for durable goods could lead the way out of this economic
downturn. The main question is «When?»


What I'm Reading



GM to Invest TARP Dough in Brazil



World's Elite Visit Davos in Doubt



Business and political leaders in Davos will meet as the
IMF Wednesday is to cut its global-growth forecast to below 1% for the
year.


Reports to Reveal Shoppers' Cutbacks



A slew of earnings reports from consumer-staples makers will show just how much consumers have cut back.




Gap, H&M's Cambodian Garment Suppliers Keep Tax Breaks to Combat Recession Cambodia, reliant on overseas aid to
finance a quarter of the national budget, said it will extend
tax breaks for clothing manufacturers and invest in power plants
as a cash shortage restricts its ability to provide economic
stimulus.


Economy in U.S. Probably Contracted Most Since 1982 as Spending Collapsed The worst credit crisis since the
Great Depression sent the U.S. economy into a tailspin at the end
of 2008 as consumers and businesses retrenched, reports this week
may show.


Japan Government-Owned Lender May Take Stakes in Non-Financial Companies A Japanese state-owned bank may take
stakes in non-financial companies to help them weather the global
recession, people familiar with the plan said.


South African Inflation Probably Slowed, Making Room for Interest-Rate Cut South African inflation probably
slowed for the fourth consecutive month in December, adding to
pressure on the central bank to accelerate interest rates cuts.


Bank of Israel Will Probably Cut Key Rate Half a Point to a Record 1.25% The Bank of Israel will probably
lower its benchmark lending rate tomorrow to a record as
Governor Stanley Fischer seeks to shore up flagging economic
growth, a survey showed.


U.K. Economy Shrinks 1.5 Percent in the Fourth Quarter: Table of the Day Following are the preliminary GDP growth estimates
for the fourth quarter from the Office for National Statistics in London:


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Thursday, January 22, 2009

Morning Economic News - January 23, 2009

Commentary and Overnight Trading



The Nikkei dropped more than 3% Friday and the S&P/ASX200 has dropped more than 4% on bad news from the Australian mining sector. The Hang Seng was down 3% earlier, but is near even now [2:44 AM Eastern]. US stock market futures are down a little less than 1%. Oil prices have dropped but remain well above $42/barrel. The dollar is up strongly against the euro and pound, up a bit against the loonie and down slighlty against the yen.



Thursday's Economic News



Housing Starts - December 2008




  • Housing Starts: 550,000

  • Monthly Change: Down 15.5%

  • Year-to-year Change: Down 45%

  • 1-Family Monthly Change: Down 13.5%




Jobless Claims - January 22, 2009




  • Initial Claims: 589,000

  • Change from Last Week: Up 62,000




Money Supply - January 22, 2009




  • M1 Seasonally Adjusted Prior Month: $1595.8 billion

  • M1 Annual Change (Unadjusted): $238.3 billion




Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey - January 22, 2009




  • Purchase Index: 303.1

  • Change: Up 2.5%




German economy took big hit in November



The Leading Index for Germany fell 2.2% in November and the Coincident
Index fell 0.5%, according to a Conference Board report released
Thursday. Only three of the eleven indicators included in the indexes
improved.


What I'm Writing



Markets shrug off another big oil inventory gain



The weekly oil report from the US Energy Department showed a big
increase in total commercial petroleum stocks, including increases in
crude oil and all the major refined products except propane, which is
used heavily for heating in the rural Midwest which just experienced a
cold snap. Other tidbits from the report included a substantial drop in
refinery activity and continued drops year-to-year in gasoline
consumption despite a price drop of 39% from this time last year.


New purchase applications up despite rate increase, trouble in refinances



Despite the increase in rates, the Mortgage Bankers Association reported a 2.5% increase in purchase mortgage applications.


The Banker's Depression



Meanwhile, bankers are just sitting on a pile of new money - the
Federal Reserve has printed and put in bank reserves $238 billion new
dollars in the last 12 months. That's a massive 15% increase in the
monetary base (M1 for the technically minded). But bankers aren't
lending it.


What I'm Reading



Microsoft Job Cuts: Layoffs Good News for Economy



I would bet that these job cuts are going to force a lot of people to
find their inner-entrepreneur. These ex-Microsofties are going to end
up starting a lot of small businsees that may eventually grow in size
to become some pretty profitable companies. Who knows, Microsoft may
inadvertently be creating another Gooogle or Apple or, yes, Microsoft.
Creative destruction, gang


Tough GOPers Stand Up to Geithner; All GOPers Should Counter Keynesian Stimulus



Right now capital is on strike. So are investors. Supply-side incentives will bring them back. This is where the GOP must go.



Fed Likely to Focus on Rates, Loans



Fed officials are likely next week to keep their approach for handling the financial crisis, despite internal divisions.




Housing Starts in U.S. Tumble 16% to Lowest on Record as Credit Dries Up Home prices in the U.S. dropped the
most in at least 18 years and builders broke ground on the
fewest houses since record-keeping began as the recession
deepened, government reports said today.


Australia May Cut Interest Rate Below 2% Amid Deep Recession, Fraser Says Australia’s central bank may more
than halve its benchmark interest rate as the nation enters a
long and deep recession, former Governor Bernie Fraser said.


China's Slowdown to Deepen as Recession Pummels Exports, Asian Suppliers China’s economic slowdown, already
the deepest in seven years, is set to worsen as the global
recession pummels its exports, darkening the outlook for
suppliers from Australia to Taiwan.


Geithner Warning on Yuan May Trigger Renewed U.S.-China Economic Tensions Timothy Geithner’s warning that
President Barack Obama believes China is “manipulating” its
currency may trigger renewed tensions between two of the world’s
three biggest economies.


JPMorgan Forecasts Larger Australian Rate Cut Next Month Amid Global Slump JPMorgan Chase & Co. forecasts the
Australian central bank will cut its benchmark interest rate by
1 percentage point next month, double its previous prediction,
amid a deepening slump in the nation’s major export markets.


Singapore Lowers Corporate Tax, Spends Record Amount Amid Worst Recession Singapore cut corporate taxes for
the second time in three years and said it will tap its reserves
to fund record spending amid efforts to drag the island’s
economy out of its deepest recession since independence.


Roubini Says China Is in Recession Despite `Massaged' Economic Growth Data China is in a recession despite
government statistics today showing the world’s third-largest
economy expanded in the fourth quarter from a year earlier,
according to Nouriel Roubini, the New York University professor
who predicted last year’s economic crisis.


Mining Boom Turns to Bust in Western Australia, Raising Risk of Recession Michael Smith moved 2,500 miles
across Australia in July to earn A$120,000 ($80,000) as a
blaster. Now the 30-year-old explosives expert is a motorcycle
courier making half his former wage.


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Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Morning Economic News - January 22, 2009

Commentary and Overnight Trading



Wednesday's big economic news release was a study in how the TARP went wrong. Home builder sentiment is down again, hitting another record low. And who can blame them? They're being hit by a triple whammy, all engineered by the people who run the banks. Perhaps the bankers' massive string of errors was not purposeful and knowing, but it certainly wasn't mere happenstance either. The housing market was run to overheating by profligate lending. Builders, whose business is building houses not reading financial tea leaves, invested in building more homes since they were selling like hotcakes and profit margins were high. Then the bankers got skittish and stopped making these bad loans to consumers. Well enough. Solid builders could have weathered that storm with more creative financing, incentives, slimming down those high profit margins and just taking occasional losses where needed. But then the banks added insult to injury with the third whammy - they stopped rolling over the builders loans and began to foreclose on newly built homes, competing against the builders who often still owed them money on other loans. It's easy to feel sorry for the builders, but damn hard to feel sorry for the bankers. Thursday may bring better news on housing, in the weekly mortgage report.

US stock futures are up a fraction of a percent in overnight trading and Asian stock markets are up 1 to 2%. Oil futures have managed to add another 9/100 of a percent, a small number but a big achievement on top of Wednesday's 9% rise in the spot price and pretty speculative with the US oil inventories due out Thursday morning. The dollar is in a familiar pattern, outperforming the battered euro and pound, losing against the yen and up, despite the oil price rise, against the loonie. [2:30 AM Eastern]

Economic News



Housing Market Index - January 2009




  • Current Month Index: 8

  • Monthly Change: Down 1

  • Current 1-Family Sales Index: 6

  • Monthly Change: down 2




State Street Investor Confidence Index - January 2009




  • Global Index: 60.3

  • Monthly Change: Up 12.1

  • Year-to-year Change: Down 9.2




French Leading Index down over 1%



The Conference Board reported another round of bad news for the French
economy Wednesday, with a 1.4% drop in the Leading Economic Index for
France and a 0.2% decline in the Coincident Index. The weakness was
widespread with only 3 of the 11 indicators in the two indexes
improving.


What I'm Reading



Should Obama Help Banks or Homeowners?



From Andy Busch of BMO Capital Markets:


The disease remains housing and home prices.This is why I expect new
TARP money to flow towards the housing market and to reduce the supply
of foreclosures.  Here's an idea:  why not declare that as of January
1st 2009, all homes in foreclosure will be purchased by TARP?  This
attacks the supply or inventory problem forcing prices down.  It would
take away a major negative driver of bank assets.  Yes, but it still
means the government has to do something with those homes. 

The best solution would be to follow the RTC model by
putting the properties together and then holding a fire sale to clear
the market.  The government would take the loss between what they pay
for the homes and what they sell them for to the market.It's this loss
that no one wants to take or absorb.  While the US taxpayer is on the
hook for it, this solution attacks the central problem.  More
importantly unlike an acronym or a "bad bank", it will stabilize home
prices.  Taxpayers can live with nationalizing or socializing home
owner losses from the real estate market much easier than they can live
with taxpayer losses from the banking industry.  Let's see which
political party picks up on this first ...



Politics Seen in Bank Bailout Decisions



As Obama's team revises TARP, it faces dissatisfaction with
the program's implementation. Some politicians, including Barney Frank,
have used leverage to seek funds for their home-state banks.


U.K. Pound Serves as Omen for Dollar



As the British pound continues to sink, its travails are a cautionary tale for the U.S. dollar.


China GDP Confirms Slowdown



China said its economy expanded 6.8% in the fourth quarter
of 2008 from a year earlier, confirming a slowdown that has cut growth
nearly in half in just a year.



China's Economy Grew 6.8% in Fourth Quarter, Slowest Pace in Seven Years China’s economy expanded at the
slowest pace in seven years as the global recession dragged down
exports, increasing pressure for more government spending and
lower interest rates to buoy growth.


South Korea's Economy Contracts More-Than-Expected 5.6% as Exports Plunge South Korea’s economy shrank a
larger-than-expected 5.6 percent last quarter, the biggest
decline since the Asian financial crisis a decade ago as exports,
business investment and consumer spending plunged.


Japan's Exports Plunge Record 35%, Signaling More Cuts in Jobs, Production Japan’s exports plunged by a record
in December, signaling companies will be forced to shut factory
lines and fire more workers, driving the economy deeper into
recession.


Bank of Japan to Consider Buying Corporate Bonds; Keeps Key Rate at 0.1% The Bank of Japan said it will
consider buying corporate bonds to prevent a shortage of credit
from worsening a recession it predicted will deepen next year.


Japanese Corporate Loan Demand Rises to Record as Recession Dries Up Funds Demand for loans among Japanese
companies surged to a record this month as falling profits and
stagnating credit markets left businesses with less cash to
operate, a central bank survey showed.


Singapore's Government May Unveil Record Budget, Tap `Rainy Day' Reserves Singapore, suffering its deepest
recession since independence, will probably announce record
spending in its budget today to help companies hurt by the
global slowdown and preserve jobs.


Vietnamese Trade Deficit Narrowed In January, Easing Currency Concerns Vietnam’s trade deficit narrowed for
the first time in more than two years, as a global recession
slashed demand for its goods as well as restricting the nation’s
appetite for products from overseas.


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Monday, January 19, 2009

Morning Economic News - January 20, 2009

Commentary and Overnight Trading



The opening bell of the New York Stock Exchange will be rung at Federal Hall, the site of the first Presidential inauguration, in celebration of the inauguration of President-elect Barack Obama and likely kicking off a losing morning session. US stock market futures are down 1.6% from Friday's close and Asian markets are down 2 to 3% Tuesday [1:10 AM Eastern]. Oil is down more than $2 since Friday and nearing the $34 mark. The dollar is up against the euro, pound and Canadian dollar, down against the Japanese yen.

What I'm Writing



Financial Roadmap: The Week Ahead January 19 to 23, 2009



The three major indicators this week are split between confidence readings and housing markets with one focused on both.



What I'm Reading



Korean Fund Ponders Selling U.S. Treasurys

South Korea's national pension fund said it may sell U.S. Treasurys because
of the prospect that they'll become less profitable and stoke inflation.



Treasury Demands Banks Provide Lending Data as U.S. Tries to Revive Credit The U.S. Treasury, under pressure to
revive lending, is demanding monthly reports from the banks that
received the most capital from the government's $700 billion
rescue program.


Brown Tightens Grip on Financial System, Hands BOE Power to Buy Securities Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s
government tightened its grip on Britain’s financial system,
guaranteeing toxic assets and giving the Bank of England
unprecedented power to buy securities.


Japan's Consumer Sentiment Tumbles to Record Low as Job Prospects Dwindle Japan’s consumers became the most
pessimistic in at least 26 years, indicating households are
likely to keep cutting back as the recession deepens.


China Faces Worst Unemployment in Decades as Economy Cools, Exports Slump China’s official urban unemployment
rate jumped for the first time since 2003 and may climb to an
almost 30-year high as exports slump and a slowdown deepens in
the world’s third-biggest economy.


Trichet Says Economy Will Be `Substantially' Worse Than Forecast This Year European Central Bank President Jean-
Claude Trichet said the outlook for the euro-region economy is
“substantially” worse than the bank predicted a month ago.


Europe's Economy to Shrink for First Time Since Euro Introduction, EU Says The euro-area economy will contract
this year for the first time since the currency was introduced a
decade ago, the European Commission forecast, cutting its outlook
for the region amid the worst financial crisis since World War II.


Premier Key Says New Zealand Is Ready to Bail Out Its Important Companies New Zealand’s government is ready to
lend to any strategically important company that was unable to
borrow directly amid a global credit freeze, Prime Minister John
Key said today.


European Finance Officials Defend Budget Discipline Even as Deficits Soar European finance officials defended
the credibility of their budget rules even as they ramp up
deficit spending to fight the worst recession since World War II.




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Thursday, January 15, 2009

Morning Economic News - January 16, 2009

Unfortunately due to technical problems I can't do my usual complete roundup of yesterday's economic news for a second day, but with the big news that came out about 2 hours ago, I am going to write a brief post today. Regular reports will resume Monday the 19th.

About 11 PM the Treasury Department, FDIC and Federal Reserve announced an aid package for the Bank of America. Specifically, the agencies are providing "protection against the possibility of unusually large losses on an asset pool of approximately $118 billion of loans". These loans have already been written down to their current, discounted market value. The bank has to meet some fairly stringent conditions including "enhanced executive compensation restrictions" and a "mortgage loan modification program". Treasury also announced that it's extending its Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program up to 10 years for banks that do new consumer lending.

Major points:

1 - This is a big commitment, but should ultimately free up a lot of capital for new lending, a multiple of the amount involved.

2 - It addresses two of the biggest complaints about the string of financial bailouts - spendthrift executives getting big bonuses at taxpayer expense for driving their companies into the ground and banks accepting bailout funds and continuing not to lend.

3 - The B of A package addresses mortgage modification to attack the problem loans from the bottom as well as the top.

4 - This has been coming for a while and markets had it priced in over the last week.

Markets seem to be responding well to the news, with US stock market futures up just under 1% [2:50 AM Eastern]. The dollar is down against the euro, Canadian dollar and pound, but up against the yen - a reversal of the pattern that's been "normal" the last couple of weeks and may simply represent profit taking. The Nikkei closed up 2.58% and the Hang Seng is down a fraction of a percent. Oil is up less than half a percent.

Treasury press release follows:

anuary 16, 2009
HP-1356

Treasury, Federal Reserve and the FDIC Provide Assistance to Bank of America

Washington, DC – The U.S. government entered into an agreement today with Bank of America to provide a package of guarantees, liquidity access and capital as part of its commitment to support financial market stability.

Treasury and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation will provide protection against the possibility of unusually large losses on an asset pool of approximately $118 billion of loans, securities backed by residential and commercial real estate loans, and other such assets, all of which have been marked to current market value. The large majority of these assets were assumed by Bank of America as a result of its acquisition of Merrill Lynch. The assets will remain on Bank of America's balance sheet. As a fee for this arrangement, Bank of America will issue preferred shares to the Treasury and FDIC. In addition and if necessary, the Federal Reserve stands ready to backstop residual risk in the asset pool through a non-recourse loan.

In addition, Treasury will invest $20 billion in Bank of America from the Troubled Assets Relief Program in exchange for preferred stock with an 8 percent dividend to the Treasury. Bank of America will comply with enhanced executive compensation restrictions and implement a mortgage loan modification program.

Treasury exercised this funding authority under the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act's Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). The investment was made under the Targeted Investment Program. The objective of this program is to foster financial market stability and thereby to strengthen the economy and protect American jobs, savings, and retirement security.

Separately, the FDIC board announced that it will soon propose rule changes to its Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program to extend the maturity of the guarantee from three to up to 10 years where the debt is supported by collateral and the issuance supports new consumer lending.

With these transactions, the U.S. government is taking the actions necessary to strengthen the financial system and protect U.S. taxpayers and the U.S. economy. As was stated in November when the first transaction under the Targeted Investment Program was announced, the U.S. government will continue to use all of our resources to preserve the strength of our banking institutions and promote the process of repair and recovery and to manage risks.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Morning Economic News - January 14, 2009

Commentary and Overnight Trading



Asian stock markets rose slightly Wednesday, with the Nikkei up 0.29% and the Hang Seng up 0.26% at time of writing [3:28 AM Eastern] and US stock market futures are up a few points. Oil is up 3%, but still holding below $40/barrel. In a reversal of the recent pattern, the dollar is down against the Canadian dollar, euro and pound, but up against the yen.

Economic Indicators



Federal Budget - December 2008




  • Year-to-date: $485,198 million deficit

  • Prior Year-to-date: $106,815 million deficit




International Trade - November 2008




  • Trade Deficit: $40.4 billion

  • Monthly Change: Down $16.7 billion




UK Leading Index down 1%



The UK capped off a full 12 months of declines in its leading economic
indicators with a 1% drop in November, according to the Conference
Board. The Coincident Index was unchanged, with 3 of the 4 coincident
indicators actually improving.


Korean economy tanking



The Conference Board reported widespread weakness in the Korean economy
with a headline drop of 3.5% in the Leading Index. Of 11 economic
indicators tracked in the Leading and Coincident Indexes for Korea, 10
declined in November.


What I'm Reading



Global Trade Posts Sharp Decline

Foreign trade fell 18% for the U.S. from July to November,
part of a global trend that makes the world-wide slump harder to fight.


Feds: Ailing Banks Need More U.S. Funds

As Obama lobbied Senate Democrats for the remaining
financial-rescue funds, Bernanke argued for a new effort to help banks
get bad loans off their balance sheets.



Fed Seeks New Effort to Cleanse U.S. Banks as Toxic Assets Retard Lending The Federal Reserve’s top two
officials urged a new effort to address the toxic assets held by
financial companies, warning that they threaten to prevent banks
from resuming lending to households and companies.


Thai Central Bank Cuts Benchmark Rate More Than Forecast to 2% From 2.75% Thailand’s central bank cut its
benchmark interest rate more than economists expected for a
second month after inflation cooled to the slowest pace in six
years and political protests sent confidence to a record low.


U.K. to Guarantee $29 Billion of Loans to Companies to Keep Credit Flowing Business Secretary Peter Mandelson
said the U.K. government will guarantee as much as 20 billion
pounds ($29 billion) of bank loans to medium-sized companies in
order to keep credit flowing during the recession.


Asia's Interest-Rate Cuts, Spending May Propel Recovery, Economists Say Asia’s interest-rate reductions and
fiscal stimulus packages unveiled in recent months may help
propel a recovery in demand and economic activity later this
year, economists said.


China Overtook Germany as World's Third-Biggest Economy in 2007, Data Show China’s economy overtook Germany’s
in 2007 to become the world’s third largest, underscoring the
nation’s increasing economic and political clout.


Fed May Look for International Credentials in Seeking Geithner Replacement The candidates for president of the
New York Federal Reserve Bank include several with international
experience, indicating officials may be seeking a new leader in
the mold of departing chief Timothy Geithner.


U.S. Retail Sales May Have Dropped for Record Sixth Month as Jobs Vanished Sales at U.S. retailers probably fell
in December for a sixth consecutive month as rising unemployment
caused consumers to retrench, economists said before a report
today.


South Korean Employment Falls for First Time Since 2003 as Economy Slumps The number of South Koreans with
jobs fell in December for the first time since October 2003, the
latest sign the economy may be sinking into a recession as
exports plunge and domestic demand falters.


Oil Collapse Forces Gulf Nations to Run Deficits, Cut Foreign Investment Tumbling oil prices are forcing
many of the richest Persian Gulf states to record budget
deficits and limit a critical source of foreign investment for
poorer Arab countries.


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Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Morning Economic News - January 13, 2009

Commentary and Overnight Trading



The Conference Board's Monday report on employment was, as expected, decidedly negative. The reports news release headline predicted 2 million additional lost jobs and the reports headline index number showed employment trends below 1996 levels. Less reported, the employment trend is still not the worst situation in the last 40 years, let alone the "worst since World War II" or "since the Great Depression" as is being widely touted. Markets clearly had the bad job picture priced in and in perspective, with a 1.5% retreat in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, hardly a rout.

In early overnight trading, US stocks are little changed with the S&P and NASDAQ, which fell more on Monday, up slightly and the DJIA down a handful of points. The Nikkei isn't faring as well, down nearly 5%. Oil is down 3%, with another $6 to fall if Goldman Sachs prediction of $30 oil is going to happen. The dollar is up against the Canadian dollar, euro and pound, but continues to deteroriate against the yen.

Economic Indicators



Employment Trends Index - December 2008




  • Monthly Change: Down 1.6%

  • Year-to-year Change: Down 16%




What I'm Reading



U.S. Seeks the Rest Of Bailout Cash

Bush requested the second half of the financial-rescue
funds on behalf of Obama. Senate Republicans, including Tom Coburn, are
expected to be a tough sell.


Obama Reconsiders Proposed Tax Credit for Hiring

Obama's proposed new-hiring tax credit is likely to be scaled back or scrapped in favor of renewable-energy tax breaks.



China's Exports Fall by Most Since 1999 as Global Recession Reduces Demand China’s exports fell the most in
almost a decade in December as the deepening global recession
cut demand for the nation’s toys, clothes and electronics.


Merkel's Coalition Forges Second, $66 Billion Stimulus Package for Germany German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s
coalition agreed to spend an additional 50 billion euros ($66
billion) this year and next, its second attempt to stem the
worst recession since World War II in Europe’s largest economy.


Economy May Shrink 1.5% in 2009 as `Very Deep' U.S. Recession Stymies Fed Economists slashed forecasts for
U.S. growth in 2009 and projected Federal Reserve policy makers
won’t be able to start raising interest rates until 2010,
according to a monthly Bloomberg News survey.


Japan's Current-Account Surplus Narrowed 66% in November as Exports Slump Japan’s current-account surplus
narrowed for a ninth month in November as exports slumped by a
record in the wake of the global recession.


Finnish Economy Shrank 1.6% in October on Crisis for First Drop Since 2005 Finland’s economy contracted for the
first time in three and a half years in October on waning global
demand for Finnish goods.


New Zealand Foreign Currency Credit Rating May Be Cut on Deficit, S&P Says New Zealand’s AA+ foreign-currency
credit rating may be cut if the nation’s current account deficit
and overseas debt begin to curb growth and investment, Standard
& Poor’s said.


U.K. Economy Slumps Most Since 1989 as Home Sales Drop, Lobby Groups Say The British economy slumped the most
in at least two decades during the fourth quarter and home sales
dropped to the lowest since the measure began in 1978 as the
recession deepened, reports by lobby groups showed.


Trade Deficit in U.S. Probably Shrank to Four-Year Low as Oil Prices Fell The U.S. trade deficit probably
shrank in November to the lowest level in more than four years
as oil prices plunged, economists said before a report today.


Goldman Forecasts South Korea's First Recession in a Decade on Export Drop Goldman Sachs Group Inc. forecasts
South Korea’s economy will shrink this year, reversing a
previous prediction for growth because of a slump in exports.


Philippine Exports Fall a Second Straight Month as Electronics Sales Drop Philippine exports fell for a second
consecutive month in November as the global recession damped
demand for disk drives and mobile-phone chips made by Intel Corp.
and other manufacturers in the country.


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