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Saturday, February 07, 2009 7:39 PM


Website Allows Job Seekers To Bid On Low Pay


Finding a job now is difficult. Competition is fierce. How low a pay will you accept? In Boston, college grads have create a new website where Job Seekers Bid On Low Pay.

In a sign of just how tough it is to find work in the struggling economy, a group of Boston college grads has created a Web site that allows job seekers to try for positions based on who will work for the lowest salary.

The three local college graduates have launched a site called www.jobaphiles.com where people can bid on jobs posted by employers.

The site was created with the vision to create a "student labor yellow pages,” said Thai Nguyen, CEO of Jobaphiles.com.

Similar to eBay’s bidding system, Jobaphiles.com visitors can bid on job positions by stating how much they are willing to be paid. They can also post why they are qualified and create a profile that includes a photo.

Employers can then select the most qualified and affordable bidder to hire for the job.

Signing up for Jobaphiles.com is free for both employers and students looking for jobs. Nguyen said the site has more than 1,300 job postings that range from HTML programming to baby-sitting.

Currently, the majority of job postings are for part-time positions in the Boston area. “We saw a shift in jobs, towards a higher demand for part-time work from small-scale businesses because of the economy,” said Nguyen.
Jobaphiles Beantown Beta

Inquiring minds are investigating Jobaphiles.Com.
How Jobaphiles Works

Jobaphiles is a free job-auction website. You can post a job and local college students and recent grads will then bid for it by indicating how much they're willing to work for and why they should be hired.

1. Browse Job
2. Read the Details
3. Check the Ratings
4. Place a Bid
5. You will be contacted
6. Get Paid
7. Rate the Employer (Optional)
8. Get Re-Hired (Optional)
This is starting out as a part time thing for college students and college grads in Boston. I believe it has far bigger application. If so, someone like Craig's List will soon be on this business model nationally. Either way, the downward pressure on wages salaries continues.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

1:39 AM


Sign of the Times - Gold for Sale in New Orleans


Here is a sign of the times, hard times.



My friend Marty writes ...

Mish,
Got the photo from a friend. The white sign that has been blacked out used to be the Toy Center. The biggest & best toy store in New Orleans in the late 50's early 60's. The Coca Cola bottling plant & Tulane Shirt Company were just to the left on S. Jefferson Davis Parkway.
Times have changed.
Yours,
Marty


Thanks Marty!

All kinds of assets are going to be for sale in the upcoming months. This is just a start of what's to come.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Friday, February 06, 2009 12:30 PM


Fed Overwhelmed, Calls Emergency Consultants To Untangle AIG


AIG is just one piece of the derivatives mess. Nonetheless AIG alone is so complex no one can figure it out. In response, the Fed Calls Emergency Consultants To Untangle AIG.

“I don’t think the Fed has seen anything like this,” former New York Fed general counsel and AIG executive Ernest Patrikis said in an interview. “AIG just got so complex in terms of private corporate matters that you just need that outside expertise.” Patrikis is now with the law firm of White & Case in New York.

In addition to hiring consultants, the Fed and the Treasury have retained Wall Street firms to help manage more than $2 trillion in bailout and emergency-loan programs.

Pacific Investment Management Co. runs a $259 billion program to backstop the commercial-paper market. BlackRock Inc., Goldman Sachs Asset Management, Pimco and Wellington Management Co. are managing the Fed’s purchases of up to $500 billion of mortgage-backed securities. JPMorgan Chase & Co. oversees a separate program under which the Fed may lend up to $540 billion to support money market mutual funds.

Last month, the House passed conditions for releasing the remaining $350 billion of financial-rescue funds, including a requirement that the Fed give details of the contracts and selection process for the mortgage-backed securities purchase program’s managers. The Senate isn’t planning to take up the legislation.

BlackRock is also managing and selling assets acquired in the Fed’s $29 billion rescue of Bear Stearns Cos., as well as securities called collateralized debt obligations the central bank purchased in the bailout of AIG, the largest U.S. insurer by assets.

Staff Overwhelmed

Such contracts show how the Fed’s in-house staff has been overwhelmed by new responsibilities that the central bank has taken on in handling the crisis.

“Once the government starts getting into the business of restructuring companies, there are competency deficits,” said Phillip Phan, professor of management at the Johns Hopkins Carey Business School in Baltimore. “It’s inevitable they’ll go back to Wall Street for advice.”

Still, he said, “the man in the street would say, ‘We’re paying to fix somebody else’s mistake by paying the very people who are part of the system that produced the mistake.’”
Babcock Shareholders Wiped Out

In the land down under, Babcock Shareholders Wiped Out as Banks Force Sales.
Babcock & Brown Ltd. will be forced by creditors to sell all its assets to repay debt, wiping out shareholders after its strategy of buying ports and property on credit imploded as the global financial crisis deepened.

Chief Executive Officer Michael Larkin will lead the sale process and hand the proceeds to banks over the next two to three years, Sydney-based Babcock said in a statement today. The listed company, which had a peak market value of $7.8 billion, may be placed in administration and removed from the exchange, it said.

“There was too much greed and arrogance and not enough transparency,” said Tim Morris, an analyst at Sydney-based investment advisory Wise-Owl.com, the only researcher to rate Babcock’s shares a “sell” at the start of 2008. “The core of the problem was when they started repackaging assets and the only people making money was themselves. When you start burning people, it’s only a matter of time before the fire catches up with you.”

Babcock, an owner of property, ports and power stations around the world, becomes the biggest Australian casualty of the global credit crisis, topping a list that includes Allco Finance Group Ltd. and Centro Properties Group. Like Centro, Babcock averted liquidation because falling asset prices and scarce buyers makes this an unattractive option for creditors.

Babcock’s holdings “across all asset classes” will be sold, with all proceeds over the amount needed to continue operating the business used to reduce debt, the company said. Creditors have agreed to a restructure of existing debt facilities, with all interest payments and approximately A$2.12 billion of principal repayments to be on a “Pay If You Can” basis.

Babcock shares, down 99 percent in 2008, have been suspended since Jan. 7 at the company’s request and last traded at 32.5 cents. The shares peaked at A$34.78 in June 2007, when the company had a market value of about A$12 billion. There will be “no value” for equity holders and “negligible or no value” for note holders after its survival plan, Babcock said in a statement on Jan. 23.
Geithner’s Bank Rescue May Emphasize Guarantees Over ‘Bad Bank’

Geithner still does not know what he is going to do, primarily because his mission makes no sense, and the options under consideration make negative sense. Please consider, Geithner’s Bank Rescue May Emphasize Guarantees Over ‘Bad Bank’.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner’s strategy to aid the nation’s banks will likely emphasize guarantees of toxic assets over proposals to create a so-called aggregator bank that would remove them from balance sheets, according to people familiar with the plan.

The government guarantees, which might be modeled on those already given to Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Corp., may be coupled with the purchase of preferred shares in the banks that would be later convertible into common stock, some of the people said. The aggregator bank or ‘bad bank,’ has lost favor, in part because the potential costs involved, they added.

“Our agenda is to begin to shape the architecture of a financial recovery plan that’ll help get credit flowing again,” Geithner said before a meeting yesterday with Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and other members of the President’s Working Group on Financial Markets. Geithner will announce the plan on Feb. 9

The Obama administration has its work cut out for it. U.S. banks have already racked up $745 billion in credit losses and have warned of more to come. Shares of Bank of America, the country’s largest bank, touched a 24-year low yesterday amid concern it would be taken over by the government. The stock recovered to end the day 3 percent higher at $4.84.

Another advocate of dramatic action is Harvard University economist Jeremy Stein, tapped to join the White House’s National Economic Council under director Lawrence Summers.

Stein, in a September op-ed piece in the New York Times, advocated that the government act as a “deep-pocketed private investor that sees a bargain buying opportunity -- Warren Buffett on steroids” to snap up the toxic assets. He’s also called for the government to conduct tough audits of the banks and to force those who are found insolvent to close or merge.
Stein, like Bernanke, and Geithner are all in the late stages of FIV. Stein wants to snap up toxic assets while forcing banks that are insolvent to close. Of course, all the big banks are insolvent, unless the toxic assets are snapped up. And since when can the government ever act like a private investor?

Stein's ridiculous thinking makes him a perfect addition to the team of bizarros running the asylum.

In the meantime Geithner and the Fed have so many strategies going in so many places they are overwhelmed. While attempting to untangle AIG, they are simultaneously creating a tangled mess in everything else they touch.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

9:49 AM


Jobs Contract 13th Straight Month; Unemployment Rate Soars to 7.6%


This morning, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) released the January Employment Report.

Nonfarm payroll employment fell sharply in January (-598,000) and the unemployment rate rose from 7.2 to 7.6 percent, the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor reported today. Payroll employment has declined by 3.6 million since the start of the recession in December 2007; about one-half of this decline occurred in the past 3 months. In January, job losses were large and widespread across nearly all major industry sectors.





Nonfarm Payroll employment has shrunk to mid-2006 levels.

Establishment Data Changes

There were massive backward revisions in the number of jobs this month. The BLS explains it as as follows.

The establishment survey data in this release have been revised as a result of the annual benchmarking process and the updating of seasonal adjustment factors.

In addition, household survey data for January 2009 reflect updated population estimates. Also, January 2009 industry data shown in table A-11 of this release have been converted to the 2007 Census Industry Classification System. Historical data have not been revised.



Establishment Data



click on chart for sharper image

Highlights

  • 598,00 jobs were lost in total
  • 111,000 construction jobs were lost
  • 207,000 manufacturing jobs were lost
  • 279,000 service providing jobs were lost
  • 45,000 retail trade jobs were lost
  • 121,000 professional and business services jobs were lost
  • 54,000 education and health services jobs were added
  • 28,000 leisure and hospitality jobs were lost
  • 6,000 government jobs were added

A total of 319,000 goods producing jobs were lost (higher paying jobs), and the service sector was clobbered once again as well. Government, the last place one wants to see jobs, added 6,000 jobs. The number government jobs has declining sharply, a welcome event, but I expect this to change in the months ahead along with various stimulus programs.

Note: some of the above categories overlap as shown in the preceding chart, so do not attempt to total them up.

Birth Death Model Revisions 2008-2009



click on chart for sharper image

Birth/Death Model Revisions

As is typical in January, the Birth/Death Model revisions seem to bear some semblance of reality lost in most other months of the year.

A quick check on the Mortgage Lender Implode-O-Meter shows that 329 Major US lending operations have imploded. This number appears to be topping.

However, even if fewer lenders are going under, there is still decreasing activity in the sector and many small 1-5 person shops are throwing in the towel. Those small 1-5 person businesses are not properly accounted for in the Birth-Death Model. At this point in the cycle birth death numbers should be massively contracting. Month after month, with the exception of January the BLS is assuming more jobs were created by new businesses than lost by businesses closing shop.

BLS Black Box

For those unfamiliar with the birth/death model, monthly jobs adjustments are made by the BLS based on economic assumptions about the birth and death of businesses (not individuals). Those assumptions are made according to estimates of where the BLS thinks we are in the economic cycle.

The BLS has admitted however, that their model will be wrong at economic turning points. And there is no doubt we are long past an economic turning point.

Here is the pertinent snip from the BLS on Birth/Death Methodology.

  • The net birth/death model component figures are unique to each month and exhibit a seasonal pattern that can result in negative adjustments in some months. These models do not attempt to correct for any other potential error sources in the CES estimates such as sampling error or design limitations.
  • Note that the net birth/death figures are not seasonally adjusted, and are applied to not seasonally adjusted monthly employment links to determine the final estimate.
  • The most significant potential drawback to this or any model-based approach is that time series modeling assumes a predictable continuation of historical patterns and relationships and therefore is likely to have some difficulty producing reliable estimates at economic turning points or during periods when there are sudden changes in trend.

Household Data
The number of persons who worked part time for economic reasons (sometimes referred to as involuntary part-time workers) was essentially unchanged in January at 7.8 million; however, this measure was up by 3.1 million over the past 12 months. Included in this category are persons who would like to work full time but were working part time because their hours had been cut back or because they were unable to find full-time jobs.

Persons Not in the Labor Force

About 2.1 million persons (not seasonally adjusted) were marginally attached to the labor force in January, about 400,000 more than 12 months earlier. These individuals wanted and were available for work and had looked for a job sometime in the prior 12 months. They were not counted as unemployed because they had not searched for work in the 4 weeks preceding the survey. Among the marginally attached, there were 734,000 discouraged workers in January, up by about 270,000 from a year earlier.

Discouraged workers are persons not currently looking for work because they believe no jobs are available for them. The other 1.4 million persons marginally attached to the labor force in January had not searched for work in the 4 weeks preceding the survey for reasons such as school attendance or family responsibilities.
Table A-5 Part Time Status



click on chart for sharper image

The chart shows 7.8 million people are working part time but want a full time job. A year ago the number was 4.7 million.

Table A-12

Table A-12 is where one can find a better approximation of what the unemployment rate really is. Let's take a look



click on chart for sharper image

Grim Statistics

The official unemployment rate is 7.6%. However, if you start counting all the people that want a job but gave up, all the people with part-time jobs that want a full-time job, all the people who dropped off the unemployment rolls because their unemployment benefits ran out, etc., you get a closer picture of what the unemployment rate is. That number is in the last row labeled U-6.

It reflects how unemployment feels to the average Joe on the street. U-6 is 13.9%. Both U-6 and U-3 (the so called "official" unemployment number) are poised to rise further.

Looking ahead, I expect the service sector to continue to weaken. Mall vacancy rates are rising and a huge contraction in commercial real estate is finally started. There is no driver for jobs and states in forced cutback mode are making matters far worse.

Unemployment is a lagging indicator, it is likely to continue rising until sometime in 2010.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Thursday, February 05, 2009 2:23 PM


Jobless Claims Soar To 626K, Factory Orders Plunge


It's a double shot of bad news today as jobless claims soar while factory orders sink.

Weekly Claims For The Week Ending Jan. 31



Chart from US Department of Labor.

The best way to look at weekly claims is the 4 week moving average which smooths out minor week to week variations. The moving average has been trending up for well over a year. Compare the number from today to a year ago: 582K vs. 339K. Remember that the economy was losing jobs rapidly a year ago. This is evidence that upcoming monthly jobs reports are going to be dismal.

New Jobless Claims Jump To 626K

Inquiring minds are digging deeper into New jobless Claims.

New jobless claims jumped far more than expected last week in an already dismal labor market, and there's no relief in sight for workers as mass layoffs persist.

The Labor Department reported Thursday that the number of newly jobless workers seeking benefits rose last week to a seasonally adjusted 626,000, from the previous week's upwardly revised figure of 591,000. The latest total is far more than analysts' expectations of 583,000.

That's also the highest since October 1982, when the economy was in a steep recession, though the work force has grown by about half since then.

The numbers reflect the large spate of layoffs announced last month by companies from all sectors of the economy, including Caterpillar Inc., Pfizer Inc. and Microsoft Corp. The layoffs continued Thursday with cosmetics maker Estee Lauder Cos. saying its fiscal second-quarter profit fell 30 percent and it plans to begin a four-year restructuring plan that will include cutting 2,000 staffers, or 6 percent of the work force. The company will also continue its hiring freeze.

The number of people that remained on the unemployment compensation rolls increased slightly to nearly 4.8 million, the Labor Department said, most since records began in 1967. The continuing claims data lags the number of new claims by one week.

As a proportion of the work force, the number of people receiving unemployment benefits is at the highest level since August 1982. But that doesn't include an additional 1.7 million people receiving unemployment insurance through an extension of benefits Congress approved last year, which brings the total to about 6.5 million.

The extension provides up to 33 additional weeks of benefits, on top of the 26 weeks typically provided by states.
Read that paragraph above in red one more time. Think the reported unemployment number is as advertised?

U.S. December Factory Orders Fall Fifth Month
Bloomberg is reporting U.S. December Factory Orders Fell More Than Forecast.
Orders placed with U.S. factories fell in December for a fifth month, reflecting a pullback in business spending that will extend the recession.

Bookings declined 3.9 percent, more than forecast, after a revised 6.5 percent drop in November, the Commerce Department said today in Washington. Other reports showed firings jumped at the end of January.

Today’s report showed orders for non-durable goods including food, petroleum and chemicals fell 4.8 percent in December. Bookings for petroleum and coal products fell 18 percent.

Orders for durable goods, which make up just over half of total factory demand, fell 3 percent, after a 4 percent drop the previous month.

Civilian aircraft orders plunged 44 percent after declining 46 percent the prior month.

Boeing Co., the world’s second-biggest commercial-airplane maker, last week said customers may continue to cancel or defer orders in 2009 as demand for travel slides and credit remains restricted. The Chicago-based company reported a fourth-quarter loss and announced plans to cut 10,000 jobs.

Bookings for auto assemblies and parts decreased 5.7 percent in December. The deterioration has spilled over into this year: U.S. sales plummeted 49 percent in January at General Motors Corp., the biggest U.S. automaker, and 40 percent at No. 2 Ford Motor Co., the companies said.

Orders for construction machinery plummeted 28 percent.

Bookings for capital goods excluding aircraft and military equipment, a measure of future business investment, fell 3.2 percent after a 1.1 percent gain.
What Happened To Hope and Change?

YahooFinance is asking Obama Warns of 'Catastrophe:' What Happened to 'Hope' and 'Change?'
"A failure to act, and act now [on the bill], will turn crisis into a catastrophe," Obama said, sounding a lot more like his predecessor than the candidate of hope and change.

Even as he sees the potential for a near-term rally, Todd Harrison, CEO of Minyanville.com, says Obama is understandably worried about the risk of Congressional inaction. "He's right there's potential for this [economy] to get much worse and manifest itself not only financially, but through societal unrest," he says.

More than Obama's rhetoric or what's in the stimulus bill, Harrison is worried that protectionist policies worldwide could lead to heightened geopolitical tension and, ultimately, global war. Now that's something to really be worried about.
Fear Tactics?

Todd Harrison discusses fear tactics vs. the window of hope and whether the market can rally in the face of this news in a video in the link above. While Obama is worried about the risk of Congressional inaction, I am worried about Congressional action. Todd is certainly correct about the sabre rattling, protectionist policies, and heightened geopolitical tensions. We can all hope this does not move beyond sabre rattling to something more dramatic.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

3:55 AM


The Game Is Up


Inquiring minds are noting similarities between the implosion in Ireland and the implosion in California. Let's take a look starting with In Ireland, "the game is up"

DUBLIN — At 2 a.m., with time for compromise running out, the Irish prime minister finally presented his emergency plan for the floundering economy to the country’s trade union leaders.

He proposed an average 7 percent reduction in gross pay for bureaucrats, teachers, police, firefighters, road cleaners and everyone else on the public payroll, in the form of a levy to finance their pensions.

He made clear that without an agreement the government would do it anyway.

Inevitably the union leaders said “No.” They couldn't sell it to their members.

The country’s trade union leaders will meet in the coming weeks to decide whether they will follow French trade unionists and organize strikes.

David Begg, the Irish Congress of Trade Unions general, warned of a “revolution” from lower-paid public workers.

With calls for everyone — including those financially well off — to share the pain, highly-paid broadcasters on RTE, the government-subsidised TV and radio station, volunteered to take a 10 percent pay cut.

The ramifications of the economic crisis are being felt across Irish society: In the private sector there are now 300,000 unemployed. Some 10,000 people are losing their jobs every month and unemployment is predicted to rise from 6 percent to 10 percent this year.
Schwarzenegger Plan for Furloughs Upheld by Judge

Meanwhile, back in the states, Schwarzenegger Plan for Furloughs Upheld by Judge.
California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger can order thousands of state workers to take two unpaid days off a month to cut $1.4 billion from the budget, a judge ruled.

Superior Court Judge Patrick Marlette in Sacramento, California, today ruled in favor of Schwarzenegger in a lawsuit brought by employee unions seeking to block the furloughs. Schwarzenegger said yesterday that he would lay off workers to achieve the savings if he lost in court.

“I cannot help but recognize the huge impact this will have on state workers,” Marlette said at a hearing today in Sacramento. “My job is not to rule if this is the right solution but whether his action is authorized by law.”

The unpaid days off, scheduled to begin Feb. 6 for 238,0000 workers, amount to a 10 percent pay cut, according to labor unions that oppose them. Schwarzenegger, a Republican, ordered the furloughs to help conserve cash.

California, the most-populous U.S. state, is anticipated to have $42 billion less than it will need to pay for schools, police and other services through June 2010 because the recession and stock market have lowered tax revenue.
Counties Threaten Tax Revolt

Mercury News is reporting Counties threaten tax revolt against California budget
California counties are throwing another wrinkle into the state's cash crisis as Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and legislative leaders try to agree on a way to erase a $42 billion budget deficit.

Several counties are considering some form of tax revolt—either filing lawsuits or delaying tax payments to the state—because the governor has proposed withholding payments to them for as long as seven months in a move to preserve cash.

Local governments already are missing out because the state has imposed a 30-day payment delay to counties. That was part of a move by the state controller to delay refunds to taxpayers, money for college tuition-assistance programs and payments to state vendors.

The Riverside County Board of Supervisors authorized staff to file a lawsuit, while elected officials in Colusa County decided to impose a 30-day delay on sending any taxes and fees it collects to the state.

"We will have to shut the doors," said Kim Dolbow-Vann, a supervisor in Colusa County, north of the state capital. "We don't have the borrowing capacity" to backfill delayed payments.

Los Angeles County also is considering payment delays. County Supervisor Don Knabe said it's important to know whether the state's threat to withhold money is legal.

Schwarzenegger's finance spokesman, H.D. Palmer, said it's not clear whether the withholdings would have a significant effect on state government. Counties collect property taxes, which go to public schools.

Palmer suggested the state could in turn withhold sales tax revenue from the counties because the state needs to ensure it has enough cash throughout the year to pay its debt.

"We don't put these proposals forward lightly," Palmer said. "We will move heaven and earth to ensure that bond holders will be paid on schedule."
Lovely. No one want to pay anyone while expecting to get paid. What a mess.

Winter of Discontent

In the UK, Brown Faces Winter of Discontent as Workers’ Anger Mounts.
Spreading strikes, reduced workweeks and tens of thousands of job cuts are throwing British Prime Minister Gordon Brown back to the 1970s.

With 16 months before he has to call an election, Brown is facing the toughest test of a Labour premier since James Callaghan’s so-called Winter of Discontent in 1979, after which the party was cast out of office for almost two decades.

“They’ve sold us down the river,” said Charles Hilton, 61, an electrician from Hull in northern England who was out on strike yesterday with local oil-refinery workers. “We’re going to see civil unrest in this country. It’s already started. It will grow unless things are sorted.”

Matthew Worley, a history lecturer at Reading University and author of a book on the Labour Party in the 1920s and 30s, sees a parallel to Depression-era politics.

“There was a big fear of unemployment; a lot of people saw themselves as skilled people yet they were being undermined not by better labor, but by cheaper labor,” Worley said. “And you see again the idea that what happens somewhere else today will happen to us next.”

Also reminiscent of the 1930s is the growing presence of a nationalist party. The anti-immigrant British National Party has had representatives at all of the demonstrations at refineries and plants, said Simon Darby, its deputy leader.
Unions and government workers are resisting pay cuts in California, Ireland, and the UK. However, concession have to be made, and so they will. Obama might foolishly grant California a temporary reprieve with emergency funding, but that will only delay the inevitable. Realistically speaking, the game is up.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Wednesday, February 04, 2009 10:46 PM


Currency Intervention Madness


Currency intervention never works, yet that does not stop countries from trying. And in a strange twist of fate, the Central Bank of Russia has been providing loans to banks to shore up the Ruble, instead they are shorting it.

Bloomberg picks up the story in Russia Fuels Ruble Tumble With Bank Loans.

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.

Banks used “almost all” the money to bet against the ruble, said Natalia Orlova, chief economist at Alfa, Russia’s largest non-government bank. The ruble fell 18 percent against the dollar in January.

“A significant amount, if not all, of the speculative attacks on the ruble are funded by the central bank itself,” said Vladimir Osakovsky, Moscow-based economist for UniCredit, Italy’s largest bank.

Central bank Chairman Sergey Ignatiev pledged Jan. 22 to continue using reserves to hold the ruble at 41 against a target basket of dollars and euros, and said he would limit the amount of refinancing offered and adjust interest rates. The ruble slid as much as 0.2 percent to 40.9860 against the basket yesterday, just 0.03 percent from the limit of the trading band.
Using reserves to prop up the Ruble is a disastrous policy. All it does is waste reserves needed for other purposes, thereby exacerbating the problem. If Russia wants to defend the Ruble it will have to hike interest rates.

Mexico Intervenes to Halt Peso Slide

Mexico is in on the currency intervention madness as well as the Mexican Central Bank Intervenes to Halt Peso Slide.
Mexico’s central bank bought pesos in the foreign-exchange market after the currency plunged to a record low today.

A statement from a joint central bank and Finance Ministry committee said Banco de Mexico purchased pesos to “provide liquidity and to ease volatility.” The intervention is an “extraordinary” measure beyond the bank’s normal offer to buy $400 million worth of pesos a day, the press office said earlier.

The central bank stepped into the market after the peso tumbled to a record for a fourth day. Today’s intervention adds to the $16.6 billion of foreign reserves that central bank Governor Guillermo Ortiz has spent to prop up the peso since the global financial crisis sent it tumbling in October.

“They have to be aggressive, they have to do it on a number of occasions and use larger amounts” to support the peso, said Francisco Diez, director of foreign-exchange trading at RBC Capital Markets in Toronto.

“The market learned how to play” the daily auction system, said Maya Hernandez, a currency analyst with HSBC Holdings Plc in New York. “It wasn’t having any impact at all.”
Francisco Diez simply has it wrong. No matter how much Mexico supports the Peso by intervention, as soon as Mexico stops, the Peso would resume its slide. Maya Hernandez has it correct with “The market learned how to play” the daily auction system.

Indonesia Seeks To Defend The Rupia

In an attempt to defend of the rupiah, Indonesia Seeks Larger Japan Currency Swap, New Pacts.
Indonesia’s central bank is seeking to expand its currency swap agreement with Japan from $6 billion and is seeking new pacts to bolster the rupiah, which slumped the most in eight years in 2008.

Indonesia, which has similar agreements with China and South Korea for $3 billion each, may also initiate talks with a fourth nation, central bank Governor Boediono said, without identifying the country. The rupiah, which fell 16 percent last year, closed at 11,673 per dollar yesterday in Jakarta.

“We think the critical period is six months in which the main problem is tight liquidity and investors pulling out money to return home,” Boediono said at a dinner with local newspapers late yesterday. “In the U.S. itself there’s dollar scarcity, which is ironic.”
Kazakhstan Devalues The Tenge

In Kazakhstan a Tenge Devaluation Triggers Sell-Off
Evidence of deteriorating economic conditions in central and eastern Europe fuelled a broad-based return to risk aversion in currency markets on Wednesday after Kazakhstan devalued its currency and Russia’s credit rating was downgraded.

Kazakhstan’s central bank said it had widened the trading band for the tenge, allowing the currency to fall by 18 per cent against the dollar to 150 tenge, in response to weaker oil prices and the impact of the global economic crisis.

Kazakhstan’s devaluation triggered a wave of selling of emerging market currencies, with Poland’s zloty plumbing a fresh five-year low against the euro, at 4.7005 zloty, before paring its losses to trade 0.4 per cent lower at 4.6540 zloty by mid-afternoon in New York. The Czech koruna slid 0.5 per cent against the euro to an intraday low of Kcs28.673.

Christian Lawrence, at RBC Capital Markets, said: “Kazakhstan killed risk appetite within currency markets.”

Hungary’s forint hit a record low of Ft304.24 against the euro, before reversing its losses to jump 0.7 per cent to Ft298.05, amid rumours that the central bank had intervened to prop up the currency. The central bank declined to comment.
Kazakhstan Sets New Range For The Tenge

The finger pointing begins: Kazakhstan blames devaluation on rouble.
Kazakhstan devalued the tenge by more than 18 per cent on Wednesday, blaming the sharp depreciation of the Russian rouble and falling oil prices.

The devaluation highlighted the plight of central Asia’s inter-dependent republics and their vulnerability to Russia’s economic woes.

The Kazakh central bank set a new range for the tenge, saying the currency would be allowed to fluctuate by about 3 per cent around a level of 150 against the US dollar. On Wednesday the tenge tumbled to 149 against the dollar from Tuesday’s levels of 122-124 – the far end of the central bank’s previous corridor of 117-123.

Grigory Marchenko, the chairman of the Kazakh central bank, pledged to support the tenge at the new level. “We have reached a new market equilibrium level and we will defend it,” he said. Kazakhstan has used up $6bn of foreign exchange reserves since October defending the tenge, including $2.7bn (€2.1bn, £1.9bn) in January alone.
Silliest Currency Statement Of The Week

This could be premature but I doubt it. I am awarding the silly currency statement of the week to Grigory Marchenko, the chairman of the Kazakh central bank, for “We have reached a new market equilibrium level and we will defend it.”

Excuse me, but if you have reached a new market equilibrium level, there is no need to defend anything.

Spotlight on Japan

Toyoo Gyohten, the former Japanese ministry’s top currency official says Japan Intervention Hinges on Yen Moves, Not Level.
Japan will consider intervening in the currency market based on the pace of the yen’s appreciation as opposed to the level at which it trades, a former Finance Ministry official said.

“Japan’s authorities may focus on the direction and the speed of the movement, rather than the level,” Toyoo Gyohten, the ministry’s top currency official from 1986 to 1989, said in an interview on Feb. 4. He said there was no need for the government to sell the currency, which is trading near a 13-year high against the dollar.

The yen’s 19 percent rise since September has sapped earnings at exporters including Toyota Motor Corp., which is forecasting its first loss in 71 years. Keidanren business lobby Chairman Fujio Mitarai and Honda Motor Co. President Takeo Fukui have called on the government to sell the currency to stem its gains.

Japan hasn’t stepped into the currency market since the central bank, at the request of the Finance Ministry, sold a record 14.8 trillion yen ($166 billion) in the first three months of 2004, when the yen was trading an average 107 per dollar.

The currency strengthened to 87.13 per dollar on Jan. 21, the strongest level since July 1995, as global financial turmoil spurred investors to buy it as a haven.

Gyohten said the G-7 nations will discuss how to combat the global recession, with an emphasis on the progress of President Barack Obama’s efforts to stimulate a U.S. recovery.

The next six months “will be crucial for the U.S. economy and the world economy as a whole” as the effectiveness of Obama’s policies will become evident, he said.
Currency Recap

  • Yen at strongest level vs. dollar since 1995
  • Russia central banks attacks the ruble
  • Ruble in freefall
  • Mexican peso at record low
  • Indonesia tries to defend the rupia
  • Kazakhstan devalues the tenge
  • Kazakhstan’s devaluation triggered a wave of selling of emerging market currencies
  • Poland’s zloty plummets to a fresh five-year low against the euro
  • Hungary’s forint hit a record low against the euro

So much for the idea that it would be the US dollar leading the decline in 2009.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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11:38 AM


CS-CPI Sinks To Negative 5.0%


The following chart shows the effect if one substitutes the Case-Shiller housing index for Owners' Equivalent Rent in the CPI.

Case-Shiller-CPI (CS-CPI) vs. CPI-U



click on chart for sharper image.

The above chart is courtesy of my friend "TC" who writes:

For Dec 2008 the CS-CPI fell to a stunning negative 5.0% year-over-year as compared to a positive 0.1% for the CPI-U. Moreover, the Government OER data continues to move higher while home prices continue to move lower amplifying the divergence between the two CPIs to its largest level ever. The CS-CPI now reflects a price level last seen in Dec 2006.

What is equally amazing is that it was less than 2 1/2 years ago (Sep 2005) when the CS-CPI was positive 7.8% year-over-year and we're now 1280 basis points lower. Deflation is here and it's now even beginning to show in the government's CPI-U data.
"Owners' Equivalent Rent" (OER) is the largest component in the government measure of the Consumer Price Index (CPI).

OER is a process in which the BEA estimates what it would cost if owners were to rent the homes they own from themselves. OER is not a valid pricing barometer.

By ignoring housing prices, CPI massively understated inflation for years. The CPI is massively overstating inflation now.

Data for the above chart is from two sources.


For more on the methodology behind this post please see the discussion following CS-CPI Negative 3.1% Year over Year in November.

Real interest are very high even at zero percent!

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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2:42 AM


Triage For Troubled Assets


The Obama administration, led by Geithner, is proposing a triage of bad ideas for troubled assets. The Washington Post has the story in Bank Rescue Would Entail Triage for Troubled Assets.

The Obama administration's emerging rescue plan for the banking system would amount to financial triage, with the Treasury Department playing the delicate role of deciding which of the trillions of dollars in troubled assets plaguing the economy to buy, guarantee or leave in the hands of banks, sources said.

The high-stakes approach would dramatically increase the investment of taxpayer money in the financial industry, and the potential losses.

The basic problem confronting the government is that banks hold large quantities of assets that they value on their books for much more than investors are willing to pay. Banks cannot sell these assets without recording massive losses. But holding the assets is tying up vast amounts of money, choking the financial system.
My Comment: That is admittedly what Obama, and Geithner thinks is the basic problem, but the reality is different. The basic problem is the Fed together with Congress micromanaged the economy into a black hole from which there is no escape. If that sounds grim it is because it is grim.

The enabling force is fractional reserve lending and Congressional spending gone rampant. The only real solution involves time (more of it), price (falling), bankruptcies (more), and an increase in savings. Of course that is a short term solution. The long term solution to prevent this from happening again is to abolish the Fed and eliminate fractional reserve lending.
Since the early days of the financial crisis, officials have struggled to unwind that knot. If the government buys the assets at prices that banks consider fair, the Treasury would take a huge loss when it ultimately sells the assets for much less. If, instead, the government insists on paying market prices, the banks may not survive their losses.
My Comment: There is no knot except in Geithner's head. It is all imaginary. The only fair price is the market price. The sooner the insolvent banks go under, the quicker the recovery.
Instead of taking a single approach, the Obama administration plans to divide assets and other loans into three categories, each with its own solution, according to sources familiar with the discussions, speaking on condition of anonymity because the details are not finalized.

The government would buy and hold on to those assets whose falling prices are putting banks under the most pressure. Officials want to limit these purchases because of the vast expense.

The centerpiece of the plan would be a guarantee to limit losses on a second group of troubled assets that can be kept by the banks because they have more stable prices.

And it would allow banks to retain and profit from their healthiest assets.
My Comment: The centerpiece is insanity. The Government has already guaranteed $400 billion in bad debts of Citigroup and Bank of America. Now Geithner wants more. Note that the market cap of Citigroup (C) is roughly $19 billion and Bank of America (BAC) is roughly $27 billion. The treasury is guaranteeing $400 billion of debt on companies that would be worthless without those guarantees. Does this make sense?
Beyond these initiatives, the government also is likely to inject more capital into troubled institutions.
My Comment: Hells bells, Geithner is likely to do anything. He is in the very late stages of FIV, the dreaded Fiscal Insanity Virus.
The triage approach is a response to accounting rules.

When banks buy assets such as loans, they must specify for accounting purposes whether they plan to hold the asset until it is repaid in full or whether they might sell the asset earlier. If the price of similar assets begins to fall, banks may be required to record a loss in value. Those rules apply much more strictly to assets that a bank has said it may sell.

The government plans to focus on buying assets "available for sale" -- those assets whose values banks have already written down substantially, sources said. Such assets are causing immediate problems for banks because they must set aside substantial amounts of capital to compensate for the losses recorded on their books.
My Comment: Here's the deal. The government will buy the worst assets, dramatically overpay for them, stick taxpayers will the losses, and only reduce bonus pools of the banks by 40%. It's a great deal for those in the bonus pools. It's a horrid deal for everyone else.
Assets "held to maturity" would remain with the companies, but the government would guarantee to limit any losses.
My Comment: Preventing losses will keep that bonus pool humming.
Allowing institutions to hold those assets rather than selling them to the government would avoid a moment of reckoning because the banks will also be able to avoid acknowledging on their books the sharp declines in market prices. Government officials argue the approach is better for banks and taxpayers because the price of many assets will eventually recover after the financial crisis passes, so there is no value in forcing the banks to record losses.
My Comment: The whole scheme is nothing but a shell game. In fact, it is the Super SIV Bailout Plan revived once again.

Don't Ask - Don't Sell
  • The plan boils down to this: Don't Ask - Don't Sell.
  • Don't Ask what the asset is worth.
  • Don't Sell or you will find out and not like the result.
The idea that asset prices are going to come back is sheer nonsense. And this carp about "better for taxpayers" is preposterous. What's better for taxpayers, the country, and in fact everyone in the world who is not in the bonus pool, is for the banks to go under.
Joshua Rosner, a financial analyst at Graham Fisher, said in a recent research note that it makes no sense to accept the prices banks have assigned to assets as more accurate than the prices assigned by investors in the marketplace.

"I would argue that it is a thinly veiled attempt to prevent losses from being recognized and which will result in larger levels of ultimate losses," he wrote.
My Comment: This is a rarity. Someone is making sense. Ring the bell and give Joshua Rosner a well deserved cigar.
In November, the government agreed to limit Citigroup's losses on a portfolio of $301 billion of troubled assets. Last month, the government issued a similar guarantee to Bank of America covering $118 billion in troubled assets. In both cases, the companies agreed to absorb an initial increment of losses -- about $30 billion for Citigroup and $10 billion for Bank of America -- with the government absorbing 90 percent of any subsequent losses.

To address public anger over the bailout, White House officials are set to detail today the restrictions that would be imposed on financial firms receiving what the government deems to be "exceptional" assistance. A minority of recipients would fall into this category.

Such companies would be required to cap their executives' pay at $500,000, a source said.
Instead of being fired for incompetence, executive salaries will be capped at $500,000.

For the record, I am not in favor of salary caps, especially caps imposed by the government. I am in favor of letting the free market work. What would happen under a free market approach is these executives would be out on their ass and their companies bankrupt and sold off in pieces.

Geithner's plan is a triad of stupidity. The reason Geithner is struggling with these ideas is none of them are worth a plug nickel. His solution is straight out of the "Official Bureaucrat's Handbook": take the worst of three bad ideas, merge them into one plan, and expect it to work.

I know I am going to get questions on this. Here is my reply in advance. No, this does not mean massive inflation is coming. What it means is the recovery is going to be slow in coming, weak in strength, and create few jobs, a veritable triad of bad news.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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Tuesday, February 03, 2009 2:23 PM


Downward Spiral In Autos: GM 49%, Ford 40%, Toyota 32%


The downward spiral in autos continues: GM, Ford Say January Sales Fell at Least 40%; Toyota Drops 32%.

General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. said U.S. sales plummeted at least 40 percent in January and Toyota Motor Corp. dived by almost a third as the recession ravaged demand in the world’s biggest auto market.

The declines were 49 percent at GM, the largest U.S. automaker, and 40 percent at No. 2 Ford, according to statements released today. Toyota dropped 32 percent, Honda Motor Co. fell 28 percent and Nissan Motor Co. was down 30 percent.

The reports showed the toll of sinking confidence among car and truck buyers. GM, Ford and Chrysler LLC executives have all said that January deliveries may have tumbled to an annual rate of fewer than 10 million vehicles, after full-year sales averaged almost 17 million this decade before 2008.

“In this downward spiral, as a company it’s hard to plan your business and as a consumer it’s hard to change your sentiment,” said Joe Barker, an analyst at consulting firm CSM Worldwide Inc. in Northville, Michigan. “We’re all looking for some sense of stability in the sale rate.”

Plummeting sales hamper efforts by GM and Chrysler to pare labor costs, cut debt, trim dealers and idle plants to reduce cash use and make a case to keep $17.4 billion in loans from the U.S. Treasury that kept them from slipping into bankruptcy. The companies face a Feb. 17 federal deadline for a progress report.

January had 26 selling days, 1 more than a year earlier. Some automakers release results adjusted for sales days, meaning the totals will be about 4 percent lower than unadjusted numbers. Bloomberg uses unadjusted figures.
Toyota, Honda, Nissan Sales Slump

The Japanese auto manufacturers are all in a deep slump as Toyota Leads Drop in Japan Car Sales.
Toyota Motor Corp. and Honda Motor Co., Japan’s two largest carmakers, led the biggest drop in the country’s auto sales in 35 years last month as a recession cut wages and jobs and crippled consumer demand.

Sales of cars, trucks and buses fell 28 percent to 174,281 vehicles in January, excluding minicars, the Tokyo-based Japan Automobile Dealers Association said in a statement today. It was the biggest monthly drop since May 1974, the group said.

Honda slashed its full-year profit forecast 57 percent on Friday as sales plunge in Japan, the U.S. and Europe. Japan is headed for its worst postwar recession as factory output slumped an unprecedented 9.6 percent in December and unemployment surged.

Toyota, the world’s largest carmaker, sold 81,985 vehicles excluding its Lexus brand, down 22 percent, and sales at Honda dropped 31 percent to 22,087 units. Sales at Nissan Motor Co., Japan’s third-largest automaker, fell 31 percent to 30,786 vehicles last month.

The drop in domestic demand echoes a sales slump in the U.S., the most profitable market for Japan’s carmakers. In December, Toyota’s sales in the world’s largest car market dropped 37 percent. Nissan’s plunged 31 percent and Honda had a 35 percent drop.
GM Looking To Sell Truck Unit

In an effort to convince the "car czar" that GM can become profitable Union Says GM in Talks With Isuzu to Sell Truck Unit.
General Motors Corp., trying to prove its viability to the U.S. Treasury Department, is in talks to sell a division that produces work trucks to Isuzu Motors Ltd., a local union leader said.

The United Auto Workers has agreed to allow the transfer of the unit if talks are successful, said Local 598 Chairman Mark Hawkins, citing a UAW letter about the talks. The plant in Flint, Michigan, employs about 525 hourly workers and produced about 22,000 trucks last year, GM spokesman Tony Sapienza said. GM doesn’t provide revenue or profit figures for the unit.

The Detroit automaker is trying to cut labor and debt costs and sell assets to persuade Treasury that it will be viable and should keep $13.4 billion in pledged government loans GM says it needs to stay in business. Isuzu would keep making so-called medium-duty trucks at the factory for at least five more years under a plan being discussed, Hawkins said. GM spokeswoman Julie Gibson said no decision has been reached.

“We would rather have Isuzu than Navistar because Isuzu will keep the jobs in Flint,” Hawkins said, referring to an earlier plan to have Navistar International Corp. buy the unit.
Killing the entire Saturn line might have some meaning, but selling a division of a truck unit is more like attacking a glacier with an icepick.

GM, Chrysler Gain Momentum on Labor Cuts to Keep Aid

Bloomberg is reporting GM, Chrysler Gain Momentum on Labor Cuts to Keep Aid
General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC, propped up by $17.4 billion in U.S. loans, are speeding up efforts to pare union payrolls and meet a Feb. 17 deadline to justify keeping the money.

Buyouts are being offered to almost all their 91,600 United Auto Workers members to make room for new employees earning half of the $28 hourly wage of their predecessors. The UAW’s “jobs bank,” in which workers were paid when they didn’t have duties, ended at GM yesterday, a week after being halted at Chrysler.

With everything that has happened over the past 24 hours, it’s almost desperation pace,” Dennis Virag, president of Automotive Consulting Group in Ann Arbor, Michigan, said yesterday. “When you offer all of your hourly workers a buyout, that’s certainly a sign of a troubled organization.

Bringing in lower-cost employees and unwinding programs such as the jobs bank moved Detroit-based GM and Chrysler closer to two hurdles they must clear to retain the federal aid.

While working on labor costs, GM also is in talks to pare $27.5 billion in unsecured debt to about $9.2 billion in a swap for equity, and it plans to shut dealers and reduce obligations to a union retiree health fund by 50 percent to $10.2 billion in a separate equity swap.

GM fell 16 cents, or 5.5 percent, to $2.73 at 10:40 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. GM’s 8.375 percent note due in July 2033 gained 0.25 cent to 15 cents on the dollar yesterday, yielding 55.7 percent, according to Trace, the bond- pricing service of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.

The GM program covers about 62,000 workers willing to retire or quit and consists of a $25,000 voucher to buy a new auto and $20,000 in cash, said a UAW official, who didn’t want to be identified because the details are private.

Chrysler is offering a $50,000 cash payment and a voucher for $25,000 to purchase a new vehicle for workers who are eligible to retire, said another UAW leader, who also didn’t want to be named because the specifics haven’t been announced. Workers not eligible for retirement are being offered $75,000 in cash plus a $25,000 voucher, the union leader said.

Abolishing the job bank doesn’t do much,” Virag said. “It’s more of a sign, the significance of it rather than the actual losing of it.
GM is indeed a deeply troubled organization, and that jobs bank program which paid laid off workers as much as 90% of their salary for doing nothing was certainly a significant piece of the problem, along with health care benefits, pay scales, and union work rules.

Bondholders do not want to give concessions, but the alternative might mean finding out what they would get in bankruptcy proceedings, arguably nothing. With long term bonds trading at 15 cents, perhaps some bond holders would just assume take their chances in a liquidation sale. However, I doubt it would come to that, at least initially. Restructuring is far more likely than liquidation.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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5:00 AM


Runaway Trains Gather Momentum


The runaway train of bad economic news continues. On another track, a runaway train of bad ideas as to how to deal with the economic crisis is also picking up steam. Here are a sampling of headlines to consider from the US and around the world.

U.S. Property Owners Lost $3.3 Trillion in Home Value Last Year

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.

The median estimated home price declined 11.6 percent in 2008 to $192,119 and homeowners lost $1.4 trillion in value in the fourth quarter alone, the Seattle-based real estate data service said in a report today.

“It’s like a runaway train gaining momentum,” Stan Humphries, Zillow’s vice president of data and analytics, said in an interview. “It’s difficult to say when we’ll see a bottom to the housing market.”

The U.S. economy shrank the most in the fourth quarter since 1982, contracting at a 3.8 percent annual pace, the Commerce Department said on Jan. 30. Record foreclosures have pushed down prices as unemployment rose. More than 2.3 million properties got a default or auction notice or were seized by lenders last year, according to RealtyTrac Inc., a seller of data on defaults.

About $6.1 trillion of value has been lost since the housing market peaked in the second quarter of 2006 and last year’s decline was almost triple the $1.3 trillion lost in 2007, Zillow said.
Car sales: From bad to worse
Even as credit starts to flow to potential car buyers, sales could fall to a 26-year low due to a sharp drop in purchases by car rental companies.

Consumers may have had an easier time getting car loans last month, but don't look for that to fuel a rebound in battered auto sales when automakers report their January sales Tuesday.

Forecasts of a modest pickup in sales to consumers are being more than offset by a sharp plunge in purchases by rental car companies, which in a typical year can buy close to 3 million vehicles a year.
China Puts Joblessness for Migrants at 20 Million
The government offered a telling indicator Monday of the slowdown in China’s once-galloping economy, announcing that more than one in seven rural migrant workers had been laid off or was unable to find work, twice as many as estimated just five weeks ago.

The new statistics followed a hint on Sunday by Prime Minister Wen Jiabao that the government might have to expand a recently announced $585 billion stimulus plan to deal “pre-emptively” with growing economic problems.

About 20 million of the total estimated 130 million migrant workers, whose cheap labor underpins China’s manufacturing sector, have been forced to return to rural areas because of a lack of work, according to a survey conducted by the Agriculture Ministry that was cited at a briefing.

In late December, employment officials estimated that at least 10 million migrant workers had lost their jobs in the third quarter of 2008 as waves of factories and businesses shut their doors.

The specter of millions more unemployed clearly has the Chinese government worried. The government has not released annual figures on social unrest — what it terms “mass incidents” — for several years, but foreign news reports suggest growing protests as unemployment spreads.
Any ideas that China is about to start another commodities boom, that China will decouple, or even that the RMB is hugely undervalued vs. the US dollar now seem far-fetched.

Billions in Stimulus Are Proposed for Australia
Australia announced another major stimulus plan and its central bank delivered a deep cut in interest rates on Tuesday as the country sought to prop up growth.

The government said it would spend $42 billion Australian dollars, or $26.5 billion, on infrastructure, schools, housing and payments for low-income earners. Last year, Australia announced several measures as the economic slowdown in the United States and Europe began to spread around the world and engulf the economies of the Asia-Pacific region.

“The weight of the global recession is now bearing down on the Australian economy,” Wayne Swan, Australia’s treasurer, said in a statement. “In the midst of this global recession it would be irresponsible not to act swiftly and decisively to support jobs.
The only responsible action government can take is to cut taxes, stop wasting money, and otherwise getting out of the way so that the private sector can function properly.

Australia Cuts Key Interest Rate to 45-Year-Low 3.25%
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.

Governor Glenn Stevens lowered the overnight cash rate target to 3.25 percent in Sydney today, saving borrowers with an average A$250,000 home loan more than A$120 a month. Treasurer Wayne Swan said the government will spend A$12.7 billion in handouts to families and A$28.8 billion on infrastructure, sending the budget into its first deficit since 2001-2002.
Rent-Hungry Los Angeles Landlords Hide Tenants With Pepsi Signs
Andy Safir says he paid a premium for a view of the Santa Monica Mountains and Los Angeles skyline when he leased space for his economic consulting firm.

He was surprised one morning to find the office in shadows even though the sun was shining. While he traveled abroad, the side of the building had been draped with a giant Statue of Liberty in protest against a city sign moratorium on just that kind of display.

So-called supergraphics, huge posters made of vinyl and mesh, can bring in $20,000 a month or more, said Paul Fisher, a lawyer in Newport Beach, California, who represents advertising firms and landlords in disputes with the city of Los Angeles.

That’s drawing landlords hungry for revenue, as vacancy rates rise for Los Angeles office buildings. Ads for Tropicana orange juice, Pepsi-Cola, Club Med and other products cover as much as 10 stories of building faces, including windows.

Tenants complain that the signs block their natural light, while other opponents say the banners clutter an urban landscape already filled with commercial messages. The city opposes some signs for safety reasons, and the fire department ordered removal of about 20, City Councilman Jack Weiss said at a news conference last week.
If I was a renter in one of those buildings I would vote with my feet.

California delays $3.5B in payments
Running short of cash, California has started delaying $3.5 billion in payments to taxpayers, contractors, counties and social service agencies.

With the governor and state lawmakers locking horns on resolving California's budget crunch, the controller Monday halted checks covering these obligations so the state could continue funding its school system and making its debt payments.

The delay will inflict more pain on the already sorry condition of the Golden State, which is facing a $40 billion budget gap. People won't have tax refund money to spend, businesses won't get paid for their services and agencies won't have funds to help the needy until the budget situation is addressed.

Nearly $2 billion in personal state income tax refunds are being held up, according to state estimates. Last year, some two million Californians received refunds in February.

"People are going to be hurt starting today," said Garin Casaleggio, a spokesman for Controller John Chiang.
People have been hurting badly for years thanks to the policies of the Bush administration, the Fed, Congress, and coming soon Geithner, who is slated to become the worst treasury secretary ever. That is quite an achievement.

BOJ may buy $111.5 billion in shares held by banks
Japanese stocks ended lower Tuesday, in volatile trading highlighted by a midday announcement that the Bank of Japan will resume buying shares held by financial institutions, with plans to spend up to 1 trillion yen ($111.5 billion) through April 2010.

The Nikkei rose as much as 2.7% after the announcement, but retreated later in the afternoon to close 0.6% lower at 7,825.51. The BoJ did not say when it would begin buying shares. It plans to halt the buying by the end of April 2010 and dispose of all shares it acquires by autumn 2017.

The last time the central bank had run a similar share purchase, it spent 202 billion yen purchasing shares from financial institutions during the 22 months ended in September 2004. At the time, the central bank had pledged to buy as much as 3 trillion yen of shares.

The BoJ began disposing of its holdings in October 2007 but suspended the program during the market slump last autumn. The central bank held 1.273 trillion yen of shares as of September 2008, it said in the statement.
The BOJ never managed to unload the shares it bought the last time it tried this ridiculous maneuver. Buying shares to prop up prices can never work.

Macy's cuts 7,000 jobs, slashes dividend
Macy's Inc said on Monday it would slash about 7,000 jobs and cut its quarterly dividend as it forecast earnings for fiscal 2009 that fell far below Wall Street expectations, sending its shares down 4 percent.

The department store operator said it took the steps to counter what it expects will be a very tough retail market this year, and that it would plan conservatively despite efforts by the U.S. government to build an economic stimulus package.

Macy's expects these initiatives, which also include integrating its divisions into one unit, to reduce its previously planned expenses by about $400 million per year starting in 2010, and $250 million in part of 2009.

"We just believe that this is a time when nothing should be considered a sacred cow," Chief Executive Terry Lundgren said in a conference call following the announcement.

The job cuts announced on Monday are about 4 percent of the company's workforce and should mostly be completed by May 1, Lundgren said. Macy's also cut its quarterly dividend to 5 cents a share from 13.25 cents.
Macy's is way late in cutting that dividend. Furthermore, it ought to slash the dividend to no more than 1 cent. It is going to need that cash and raising money in this environment will not be easy.

20,000 NEC employees to be let go
As losses continue to mount at NEC, news has reached us that the company will embark on plans to start massive layoffs in an effort to slash the red ink. Like many other Japanese companies, NEC is expecting to struggle unless the industry rebounds sooner than expected.

The company plans to start laying off employees company-wide. Currently the exact numbers are not set in stone, but the number of workers to be slashed are projected to be as high as 20,000 when it is all said and done. The company says that the layoffs will be split evenly between full time and part time workers.

With over 150,000 employees worldwide, the cuts at NEC come at a time for the company when the Japanese tech sector has been hard hit in the wake of the current financial crisis. It is currently unknown if the company plans to discontinue any of its product lines in light of the current announcement.
20,000 jobs is a lot of jobs. There is no decoupling for Japan.

L.A. Times at the Abyss

"It was a really, really depressing thing," says the L.A. Times reporter. "If you weren't depressed before you came in, you were walking out."

The staffer, who spoke to the L.A. Weekly on condition of anonymity, was describing the scene in the Times' newsroom last Friday, when Times editor Russ Stanton personally announced a few changes - 20 minutes after outlining them in an email soon posted by L.A. Observed. Things like the folding of the paper's California section into Section A in March, and the loss of 300 jobs - 70 of which would come from the very room in which the assembled reporters were gathered.

The only silver lining Stanton offered his audience was that he was trying to ensure that the California-section reporters would be the least hard hit when the layoffs come in the next few weeks. Besides editorial, the biggest hits are expected on the business side, where advertising-sales staff members fear their jobs are about to be contracted out. And, because the folding of California means one less print run, the move will also hit the pressmen and designers.
I am saddened to see this. The LA Times provided many good stories for the blogging world. I wish the best of luck to everyone affected.

Citigroup to Use $36.5 Billion of Funds for Expanding Lending

Citigroup Inc. plans to use $36.5 billion to lend to consumers and companies and to fund U.S. mortgage loans after receiving $45 billion as part of the government’s bailout of the banking industry last year.

The New York-based bank will use $25.7 billion for mortgage lending, $2.5 billion for consumer loans, $1 billion for student loans, $5.8 billion for credit card lending, and $1.5 billion for corporate loans, according to a report to be issued today by Citigroup and which was obtained by Bloomberg News.

Citigroup and other banks that received funds from the U.S. Troubled Asset Relief Program have been criticized by politicians including Representative Barney Frank for not using the money for making loans. 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 yesterday.

“The government, on behalf of the American taxpayer, has invested in Citigroup,” Chief Executive Officer Vikram Pandit said in the report. “We have an obligation to repay in ways that go well beyond the $3.41 billion Citigroup will pay the government each year in dividends associated with its TARP investment, and a separate loss sharing agreement.”

The Treasury has distributed more than $194 billion through its program of purchasing stakes in U.S. banks. It has also mounted rescues of Citigroup and Bank of America Corp., insuring a total of more than $400 billion of illiquid assets on their balance sheets.
The US taxpayer has guaranteed hundreds of billions of dollars of Citigroup debt and Pandit comes across as bragging about paying a lousy $3.41 billion in dividends back to the government, all of which really came from the taxpayers in the first place.

In essence Citigroup is taking a bag of peanuts from the taxpayers and bragging about returning the shells.

FDIC seeks to triple Treasury Dept borrowing power

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp is seeking to more than triple its credit line with the U.S. Treasury Department to $100 billion, a move to give it more financial power to handle U.S. bank failures, the agency said on Monday.

Frank said the FDIC's desire to increase its borrowing power is a safeguard to ensure the agency can quickly pay out insured deposits when a bank fails and the FDIC is named as a receiver.

"They have no immediate need for it, but they just want to make sure they're not constrained in the decision by a lack of the insurance fund," Frank told reporters after meeting Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner on Monday. "They don't want to say, 'We have to keep this bank open longer than it should because we don't have enough money.'"
Translation: The FDIC is in deep *@&&, and has an immediate need for taxpayer money.

The deflation train continues to gather steam. Unfortunately Geithner, Frank, Bernanke, and Obama (along with numerous counterparts worldwide) are on a runaway train of their own, taking countermeasures guaranteed to make a very bad situation, much worse.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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Monday, February 02, 2009 12:11 PM


Wells Fargo's Balance Sheet: Scaring the Horses


This look at Wells Fargo (WFC) strangely begins with an investigation into 3.875% mortgage loans - fixed for 30 years - offered by Arbor Custom Homes near Portland Oregon.

3.875% is rather interesting given that current mortgage rates are much higher as the following Table of Mortgage Rates from Bloomberg shows.



The Lending Partner for Arbor Homes is Wells Fargo. How can Wells offer a fixed rate of 3.875% for 30 years given the current rate term structure and conditions in the MBS/CDO markets?

The only answer I can come up with is Wells Fargo is going to promptly bundle and dump those securities straight into the insolvent arms of Freddie Mae (FNM) and Fannie Mac (FRE). Who else would take them?

Furthermore, the Portland area is saturated with homes already (see the section Happy Valley Foreclosed in Housing gridlock: Trapped in Suburbia for more details).

Leading the Way Home

Wells Fargo claims to be Leading the Way Home to Stabilize Hard-Hit Communities.

Wells Fargo Merger Gives 478,000 Wachovia Customers Access to New Wells Fargo Solutions if Their Mortgage Payments Become At-Risk.

Through active calling and letter-writing campaigns, workshops, regional outreach events and door-to-door contact, Wells Fargo Home Mortgage has reached 94 percent of its customers who are two or more payments past due. For every 10 of these customers, it has worked with seven on a solution, two declined the help, and the remainder cannot be reached or a solution simply cannot be found. Of the customers who received a loan modification, one year after the loan was modified approximately seven of every 10 of these customers were either current on their loans or less than 90-days past due.
That is a rather self serving way of looking at things. Notice the grouping of current with less than 90-days past due.

Here is a more accurate way of phrasing things: 30% of Wells Fargo's reworked mortgage loans are 90 days past due or longer, one year after loan modification. That does not sound so good does it?

Moreover, hidden in the 70% grouping is an undisclosed percentage of customers who are not even current. What percentage is that?

Odds are high that those not current shortly after a rework are going to fail. What's the percentage? Wells Fargo does not say. With that backdrop, it's time to dive into Wells Fargo's 4th quarter earnings and balance sheet details to see what we can find.

Wells Fargo 4th Quarter Earnings

Please consider Well's Fargo's 4th Quarter 2008 News Release announcing a net loss of $2.55 billion, $0.79 per share, after significant de-risking and merger-related actions.
“Despite the unprecedented contraction in the credit markets, we remained ‘open for business’ and continued to lend to credit-worthy customers. We made $106 billion in new loan commitments during 2008 to consumer, small business and commercial customers and originated $230 billion of residential mortgages.

The allowance for credit losses, including unfunded commitments, totaled $21.7 billion (Wells Fargo and Wachovia combined) at December 31, 2008, compared with $8.0 billion (Wells Fargo only) at September 30, 2008.

The Wachovia acquisition was completed on December 31, 2008, and therefore Wachovia’s results are not consolidated in Wells Fargo’s income statement. Wells Fargo’s balance sheet includes Wachovia’s period-end balance sheet data net of closing purchase accounting adjustments.
Wells Fargo's Balance Sheet



click on chart for sharper image

Wells may be open for business, but the amount of securities it is seeking to dump increased from $86+ billion to $151+ billion. Goodwill, which may easily be worthless, increased to $22+ billion.



Note that Wells has $110+ billion in junior mortgage liens. That is a lot of risk. Total consumer loans, most of which is mortgage related is a whopping $474+ billion. That's a lot of risk. And given that commercial real estate is just now starting to crumble badly, commercial and commercial real estate exposure of $356 billion is a lot of risk. Will $21 billion in loan loss provisions cover that? I doubt it.

Off-Balance Sheet Exposure

The balance sheet shows the risk we can easily talk about. What about the off-balance sheet risk? There was no mention of off-balance sheet exposure in the 4th quarter news release so inquiring minds are looking at balance sheet statements from the Wells Fargo's 3rd quarter 2008 release.
OFF-BALANCE SHEET ARRANGEMENTS AND AGGREGATE CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATIONS

Almost all of our off-balance sheet arrangements result from securitizations. Based on market conditions, from time to time we may securitize home mortgage loans and other financial assets, including commercial mortgages. We normally structure loan securitizations as sales, in accordance with FAS 140, Accounting for Transfers and Servicing of Financial Assets and Extinguishment of Liabilities – a replacement of FASB Statement No. 125. This involves the transfer of financial assets to certain qualifying special-purpose entities (QSPEs) that we are not required to consolidate.
What Exactly Are QSPEs?

Those wondering about QSPEs are reading The CPA Journal July 2004 Issue.
Basically, an off–balance-sheet entity is created by a party (the transferor or the sponsor) by transferring assets to another party (the SPE) to carry out a specific purpose, activity, or series of transactions.

Regardless of their legal form, off–balance-sheet entities share the following characteristics:

  • They are often thinly capitalized.
  • They typically have no independent management or employees.
  • Their administrative functions are often performed by a trustee who receives and distributes cash in accordance with the terms of contracts and who serves as an intermediary between the SPE and the parties that created it.
  • If the SPE holds assets, one of these parties usually services them under a servicing agreement.

The challenge for investors is the difficulty in spotting these transactions. Unfortunately, the magnitude of the dollar amounts involved in these transactions notwithstanding, any available disclosures about them are buried in footnotes. There is no easy way of estimating the amount of assets or liabilities that are subject to these arrangements.

As the Enron crisis brought attention to the use of SPEs, FASB responded by issuing a proposed interpretation of existing accounting principles aimed at putting many off–balance-sheet entities back onto the balance sheet of the companies that created them.

The current accounting standards require an enterprise to include in its consolidated financial statements subsidiaries in which it has a controlling financial interest. The existing common definition of “control” is met when a parent company has more than 50% of the voting stock in a subsidiary. Over the years, however, companies have found ways to obtain economic control of other entities without owning 50% of the voting stock, thereby avoiding consolidation of these entities.
If you were ever wondering why all these 49% ownership arrangements appear all over the place, now you know.

Not Practical To Tell The Truth

It's ridiculous for corporations to be hiding 49% of stuff off the balance sheet. Much of that stuff is now highly toxic. Citigroup (C) alone is sitting on $800+ billion of it, down from about $1.1 trillion.

New rules were supposed to go into effect late last year requiring corporations to put such assets back on the balance sheet where they belong. I talked about this in Not Practical To Tell The Truth on August 1, 2008.
FASB Postpones Off-Balance-Sheet Rule for a Year

On July 30th, FASB Postpones Off-Balance-Sheet Rule for a Year.

The Financial Accounting Standards Board postponed a measure, opposed by Citigroup Inc. and the securities industry, forcing banks to bring off-balance-sheet assets such as mortgages and credit-card receivables back onto their books.

FASB, the Norwalk, Connecticut-based panel that sets U.S. accounting standards, voted 5-0 today to delay the rule change until fiscal years starting after Nov. 15, 2009. The board needs to give financial institutions more time to prepare for the switch, FASB member Thomas Linsmeier said at a board meeting.

"We need to get a new standard into effect," Linsmeier said, though "it's not practical" to begin requiring companies to put assets underlying securitizations onto their books this year.

Citigroup's Mysterious Shadow Assets

Of that $11 trillion in total bank off balance sheet entities, Citigroup has $1.1 trillion of it. Enquiring minds may wish to consider Citigroup's $1.1 Trillion in Mysterious Shadow Assets.

If Citigroup is looking for an award, it can take the blue ribbon for greed, arrogance, and stupidity in the off balance sheet category. There are plenty of other categories and more blue ribbons will be awarded. Nominations are being taken now.
Wells Fargo claims it is "well capitalized". Is it? By what measure? What is hidden off its balance sheet that we do not know enough about? Can anyone believe what any financial institution says when it is perfectly clear all these games are being played?

Clearly, the Fed is engaged in delaying tactics. However, those tactics are increasing mistrust. It was hard enough before to measure a corporation, but given toxic assets everywhere one looks, it is even harder now.

Balance Sheet Is The Future

In periods of deflation, where asset prices are rapidly depreciating, a key point to remember is balance sheet concerns are paramount. Minyan Peter discussed this issue along with goodwill writeoffs in Deflation Accounting Signals Bleak Future.

For those who have not yet done so, I also highly recommend reading read Bank Earnings 102: The Best of Times, The Worst of Times when Minyan Peter, former treasurer for a large Midwest bank, first penned the phrase "The income statement is the past. The balance sheet is the future."

Diving into the balance sheet of Wells Fargo, I do not like what I see. Of equal concern is what I don't see, things hidden in QSPEs.

Bernanke wants us to believe everything is under control. When everything is hidden, how could one possibly know?

Every quarter is another disaster and every quarter more taxpayer money is handed straight over to the banks and brokerages that caused the problem. All this talk about helping the consumer get loans is a lie. No one is really concerned about the little guy; the concern is to bail out insolvent banks, by hook or by crook, using Fannie Mae as the slush fund.

Once that is accomplished, taxpayers will be left holding the losses in an insolvent Fannie Mae. Is it any wonder mistrust is high and growing?

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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