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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