ISM/Consumer Credit


Karim writes:

  • Similar to Manufacturing ISM, Non-Mfg activity largely stabilized in June.
  • Most components also stable
  • One notable feature of most PMIs is the collapse of input prices over the last 3mths. Although not a feature of this report, output prices have held largely steady in most surveys-suggesting margins are expanding.
  • Interesting mix of data and anecdotals in article below on progress of U.S. household deleveraging.



June May
Composite 53.3 54.6
Business activity 53.4 53.6
Prices Paid 60.9 69.6
New Orders 53.6 56.8
Backlog of Orders 48.5 55.0
Supplier Deliveries 52.0 54.0
Inventory Change* 53.5 55.0
Employment 54.1 54.0
Export orders* 57.0 57.0
Imports* 46.5 50.5

*=Non-seasonally adjusted

Best Consumer Credit Since ‘06 Reveals Loan Rebound Across U.S.

June 25 (Bloomberg) — Michael Busick says his credit union “was shocked” to discover his credit score was 812 of a possible 850 when he applied for a $19,500 new-car loan.

The loan officer told Busick he rarely sees scores so close to perfect, said the Charlotte, North Carolina, math teacher, who added that he always pays his bills on time and doesn’t “overextend.” He got the funds in May.

The average U.S. credit score — a predictor of the likelihood lenders will be paid back — rose to 696 in May, the highest in at least four years, according to Equifax Inc., a provider of consumer-credit data. The ratio of consumer-debt payments to incomes is the lowest since 1994, and delinquencies have dropped 30 percent in two years, Federal Reserve data show.

Improving credit quality gives households the ability to lift borrowing as concerns ease about rising gasoline prices, hard-to-find jobs and falling home prices. A reacceleration in spending would belie Morgan Stanley economist Stephen Roach’s assertion that consumers will be “zombies” for years because of too much debt.

“The financial situation of the household sector has improved far faster and far more than everyone thought it would two years ago,” said James Paulsen, chief investment strategist for Wells Capital Management in Minneapolis. “People are still locked into the view that consumers are facing record burdens, and they are not. There has been a change that is sustainable and durable.”

Willing to Lend

Bank senior loan officers reported a pickup in demand for auto loans in the second quarter, following first-quarter growth for all consumer lending — the first increase since 2005, according to a quarterly Fed survey released in May. About 29 percent were more willing to make consumer installment loans, the highest percentage since 1994, the survey found.

“The household deleveraging process is much further along than is appreciated,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics Inc. in West Chester, Pennsylvania. “This is evident in the rapid improvement in credit quality. ‘Zombie consumers’ is a mischaracterization of the state of the American consumer.”

More borrowing could help spur growth slowed by higher gasoline prices, Paulsen said. That will make stocks more attractive than bonds, pushing the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index up about 8 percent to 1,450 by year end, while raising the yield on 10-year Treasury notes more than half a point to 3.75 percent, he said.

Fewer Defaults

Discover Financial Services’ shares have risen about 43 percent this year to $26.55 on July 1. The Riverwoods, Illinois- based credit-card issuer reported a record second-quarter profit of $600 million on June 23, more than double a year earlier, as consumers spent more and defaulted less.

Fewer losses will benefit stocks of other credit-card and banking companies, said senior analyst Brian Foran of Nomura Securities International Inc. in New York, who has a “buy” rating on Discover, Capital One Financial Corp. and U.S. Bancorp, Minnesota’s biggest lender.

Consumers have reduced debt by more than $1 trillion in the 10 quarters ended in March, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and Roach, nonexecutive chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia, says they will retrench “a minimum of another three to five years.” While household obligations are at a 17-year low because of increased savings and lower interest rates since 2007, debt remains high, he said. He calculates that it amounts to 115 percent of income, compared with a 75 percent average from 1970 to 2000.

‘Overly Indebted’

“What I worry about now is we are creating a whole new generation of zombie consumers in the United States,” Roach said in a Bloomberg Television interview with Carol Massar. “We need to encourage balance-sheet repair and adjustment by overly indebted, savings-short consumers.”

Roach’s view is supported by economists who say the credit that fueled the housing boom from 2002 to 2006 will take years to unwind.

“It’s pernicious, it’s ongoing and it’s holding back the growth because people are going to save more and spend less, and this is a process that will last for several years,” said Kevin Logan, chief U.S. economist at HSBC Securities USA Inc. in New York.

Confidence among U.S. consumers rose to a 10-week high for the period ended June 26 as gasoline prices declined, according to Bloomberg’s Consumer Comfort Index. Expectations had soured in the past few months following a 29 percent surge in regular unleaded prices during the past year, according to AAA, the nation’s largest auto club.

Falling Home Values

Unemployment climbed to 9.1 percent in May, the highest this year, figures from the Labor Department showed June 3, while the S&P/Case-Shiller index of property values in 20 cities fell 4 percent from April 2010, the biggest drop since November 2009.

Even so, Dean Maki, chief U.S. economist at Barclays Capital Inc. in New York, says the growth in credit reflects an underlying optimism, part of a virtuous cycle. As a Fed economist in 2000, he published research that concluded “high debt burdens are not a negative force” and the debt-income ratio isn’t reliable in predicting spending.

“Stronger credit growth is associated with stronger consumer spending,” Maki said. “When consumer credit is growing, it is a sign that households have become more confident about income prospects.”

Rising Profits

Craig Kennison, a senior analyst at Robert W. Baird & Co. in Milwaukee, predicts lending profits will rise at CarMax Inc., the largest U.S. seller of used cars, and at Milwaukee-based Harley-Davidson Inc., the largest U.S. motorcycle manufacturer.

Their finance arms “have fully recovered,” said Kennison, who rates both “outperform.” CarMax, based in Richmond, Virginia, “is looking to take a larger share of the loan originations at CarMax dealerships, a sign of confidence,” and “Harley-Davidson is poised to see retail growth for the first time in the U.S. since 2006.”

Households spent just 16.4 percent of their earnings on debt payments in the first quarter, including lease and rental payments, homeowners’ insurance and property taxes. That’s the least since 1994, Fed figures show. Since the 18-month recession began in December 2007, household obligations have dropped by 2.37 percent of incomes.

Even consumers still in trouble are in better shape, said Mark Cole, chief operating officer for Atlanta-based CredAbility, which provides nonprofit credit counseling nationally. Clients have an average of $19,500 in unsecured debt this year, down 30 percent from 2009 and the lowest in at least six years. “We really see people’s credit quality is increasing,” he said.

‘Fine’ Cash Flows

Credit-card charge-offs “are collapsing” as companies have written off debt of people unemployed for 27 weeks or longer, who account for about 45 percent of all the jobless, Foran said. “Consumers spend money based on their cash flows, and their cash flows are fine.”

Discover’s rate of 30-day delinquencies was 2.79 percent in the second quarter, the lowest in its 25-year history, company officials said on a June 23 conference call with investors. The nationwide rate fell in May to 3.09 percent, the lowest since May 2007, according to Bloomberg data.

Jennifer Lahotski, 28, who has a marketing job in Los Angeles, said she’s worked to repair her credit from 2007, when it scored “absolutely below 660,” the minimum considered prime for consumer loans, according to Equifax. The Pennsylvania State University alumnus had been late on some bills and had an old charge of $5 from a gym.

‘Sent Them a Check’

“I went through each expense, each delinquency, and sent them a check,” she said. “I turned myself into a hermit for six months but I did it,” she added, eliminating most restaurant meals and “random Target runs where you come out with $50” of merchandise.

Lahotski, who has a Visa and an American Express card and $15,000 in student loans, said she is saving “a few hundred a month,” with plans to buy a house when she can afford a down payment.

Math teacher Busick, 33, who has a home loan and four credit cards, estimates his near-perfect credit score has risen from the upper 700s in the past few years. While he uses an American Express card to accumulate frequent-flier miles on Delta Air Lines Inc., he pays it off in full most months. Busick says he strives to maintain strong credit.

“I don’t have late payments,” he said. “I pay all my bills on time.”

Busick is eying a Sony television or Dell or Hewlett- Packard computer that could cost $2,000.

“If I want something, I will get it,” he says.

Or (and),

With higher gas prices and lower personal income, consumers had to borrow more to buy the same amount. So somewhat lower gas prices might not mean more spending, just less borrowing and some paying down of credit cards

Yes, the federal deficits have largely repaired consumer balance sheets. But a new ‘borrowing to spend’ cycle has not yet emerged, which has been the driver of prior expansions.

The problem is, the prior borrowing to spend cycles were driven by circumstances that no one wants to repeat- the sub prime expansion of a few years ago, the dot com bubble of the late 1990’s, the S and L expansion phase of the 1980’s that drove the Reagan years, the emerging market lending boom of the prior decade, etc. etc. etc.

After Japan’s credit bubble burst in 1991 they’ve been very careful not to repeat that performance, and have stagnated ever since, even with what are considered relatively high levels of govt deficit spending.

My point is, the demand leakages seem to be high enough such that without an extraordinary surge in private sector credit expansion we need a lot higher deficit to close the output gap.

Which to me is a good thing. I’d prefer lower taxes for a given level of public expenditure to another credit bubble. But when govt. doesn’t understand this, and instead looks to reduce the federal deficit, the result is high unemployment and a relatively weak economy, again, much like Japan.

China 2011 new lending seen around 6.7 trln yuan

This kind of direct limiting of lending does slow things down, and can cause a credit implosion induced hard landing. It’s like a cut in govt spending.

It doesn’t have to be a hard landing, but it’s a serious risk, especially going into the second half of the year.

China 2011 new lending seen around 6.7 trln yuan -paper

July 6 (Reuters) — Chinese banks are seen issuing 6.7 trillion yuan ($1.04 trillion) worth of new loans this year, an official paper said on Wednesday, suggesting lending could slow markedly in 2011 as part of Beijing’s drive to tame inflation.

Drawing on its own calculations and without citing sources, the China Securities Journal said the pace of new bank lending could ease considerably from last year’s 7.95 trillion yuan.

The pace of bank lending is a focal point in China’s monetary policy as it is used by Beijing to manage economic growth and inflation. The government tells banks how much they should lend by setting loan quotas.

Although Beijing did not publicly announce a loan quota this year, it is widely believed to have an informal target of 7 trillion-7.5 trillion yuan.

Chinese banks likely lent 4 trillion yuan worth of new loans in the first six months of this year, after lending 3.5 trillion between January and May, the paper said.

Accordingly, total new lending for the year would hit around 6.7 trillion yuan if Chinese banks control their pace of lending according to a formula stipulated by the central bank, the paper said.

It said the formula calls for banks to lend 60 percent of annual loans in the first half of the year, and the remaining 40 percent in the second.

With inflation at 34-month highs and a lending spree by Chinese banks in 2009 feeding worries about a build-up of bad debt, Beijing wants to temper bank lending this year.

Since October, it has increased interest rates four times and raised the reserve requirement ratio for banks six times, effectively ordering banks to lock a record 21.5 percent of deposits with the central bank.

WTO- China Curbs on Raw Material Exports Illegal

So the WTO controls how a nation prices its exports?

WTO Rules China Curbs on Raw Material Exports Illegal

July 5 (Reuters) — China broke international law when it curbed exports of coveted raw materials, the World Trade Organization ruled Tuesday, in a landmark case threatening Beijing’s defense for similar export brakes on rare earths.

A WTO legal panel dismissed China’s claim that its system of export duties and quotas on raw materials — used in the production of steel, electronics and medicines served to protect its environment and scarce resources.

China struck a defiant note in response to the ruling, which it is expected to appeal.

The WTO said in a statement, “The panel found that China’s export duties were inconsistent with the commitments that China had agreed to in its protocol of accession.”

“The panel also found that export quotas imposed by China on some of the raw materials were inconsistent with WTO rules,” it added.

The ruling hands a victory to the United States, the EU and Mexico, which took China to the WTO in 2009 saying export restrictions on raw materials including coke, bauxite and magnesium discriminated against foreign manufacturers and give an unfair advantage to domestic producers.

It coincides with growing anxiety among markets and policymakers about a trend among resource-rich countries to rein in exports of commodities — from wheat to iron ore — as supplies fall behind global demand.

The WTO issued an unusually stark warning about such export policies last month, saying they risked creating serious shortages.

The case is of particular importance to the EU, whose raw materials purchases from abroad make up 10 percent of its total imports, and which are used in production and manufacturing processes it says employ 30 million Europeans.

‘Significant Victory’

More important than the potential for providing easier access to the eight raw materials in question, the ruling sets a potential precedent in favor of the free circulation of raw materials, particularly of rare earth minerals used to make high-tech goods. China produces 97 percent of the world’s supplies of the crucial industrial inputs, and has begun cutting exports to the dismay of importers.

The United States and EU’s top trade negotiators as well as industry groups said the ruling should serve to pressure China and other states into dropping such restrictions.

U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk hailed the “significant victory” on Tuesday, but warned that “China’s extensive use of export restraints for protectionist economic gain is deeply troubling.”

EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht called for a negotiated peace with Beijing to avoid a full-fledged trade war, and vowed to address the issue during a visit to Beijing next week.

But he insisted the EU, United States and Mexico could still opt for legal action if China failed to cooperate.

“What is important about this judgement is that it sets the rules for the future and that it will become an important element in discussions with every country” that restricts raw material exports, De Gucht told Reuters before addressing EU lawmakers in Strasbourg, France.

“What I hope is that we can come to a solution through discussions so we don’t have to litigate anymore,” he said.

Saudi crude pricing

Setting price and letting quantity adjust:

Daily Oil Note: OSPs a Critical Piece in the Supply Puzzle


A key source of market uncertainty is how much oil Saudi Arabia will produce and export over the next few months. We see reports that Saudi Aramco recently offered additional cargoes to term buyers, but reportedly many declined because pricing was unattractive versus alternatives. Tanker bookings also do not point to a substantial ramp up in Middle East liftings in coming weeks. In fact, they are running well behind the pace in June.

Japan’s Noda: Need To Curb Spending From Sept If Bond Bill Not Enacted

Monkey see, monkey do…

Noda: Need To Curb Spending From Sept If Bond Bill Not Enacted

July 4 (Dow Jones) — Japan’s finance minister Tuesday urged opposition parties to quickly approve a key bond issuance bill, saying the government would have to curb spending as early as September with the economy still struggling to recover from the March 11 disaster.

Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda’s plea comes as the opposition continues to block the passage of a bill that would enable the government to issue new debt to fund roughly 40% of the spending in the annual budget for the current fiscal year, started April.

“If the deficit-financing bond issuance bill isn’t passed, we would start having trouble smoothly implementing the budget in September or later, and would have to make an agonizing decision to curb spending,” Noda said at a news conference after a regular Cabinet meeting.

China Extends Crackdown on Off-Balance-Sheet Loans

Cutbacks now will further slow things:

China Extends Crackdown on Off-Balance-Sheet Loans

July 4 (Reuters) — China’s bank regulator has cracked down on off-balance-sheet lending by the country’s banks, sources told Reuters on Monday, its latest step to prevent over-zealous and risky lending from hurting its financial system.

China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) has ordered banks to check all their deals in discounted commercial bills after discovering misconduct among some banks, two sources said.

Chinese banks have in the past year taken to off-balance-sheet lending, or keeping loans outside balance sheets after authorities clamped down on bank loans as part of their fight against inflation.

Last week the regulator tightened control on sales of wealth management products to ward off potential risks, and the regulator had earlier told banks to include all their loans extended via trust investment programs into their account books.

Discounted bills, an important source of financing for firms with no access to formal bank loans, accounted for about 2.5 percent of the 49.5 trillion yuan ($7.7 trillion) of total outstanding loans at the end of March, according to data from the Chinese central bank.

The regulator’s latest move comes after discovering that some rural credit cooperatives and banks in the central Henan province were issuing loans through discounted commercial bills and keeping them outside their loan books.

Under China’s banking laws, banks’ deals in discounted commercial bills should be reflected on their balance sheets.

Banks have been asked to investigate all deals linked to discounted commercial bills and submit their findings by Monday, sources said.

Under the review, banks were ordered to verify that bills issued were based on real transactions, and were ordered to track how extended credit was spent, they added.

Banks were also instructed to stop discounting bills that they issued to get funds for property and stock investments.

Analysts welcomed the move towards stringent regulation, which would also boost transparency.

“There is some concern that some borrowers were using these discounted bills as collateral for further borrowing,” said Mike Werner, a China banking analyst with Sanford Bernstein.

“So the idea that the CBRC is going to increase diligence covering this area of the market is not surprising.”

The regulator said bank branches found with serious misconduct would be barred from the discounted commercial bill market entirely, the sources added.

CBRC was not immediately available for comment when contacted by Reuters.

As China tightens policy and rein in lending to tame 34-month high inflation of 5.5 percent, many companies are struggling to get loans.

For these firms, discounted commercial bills are an important source of financing. They let companies bring bills or drafts to banks and request for money to be disbursed before they mature.

China’s second half now in progress

With govt lending and spending ‘front loaded’ into the first quarter the second half slows down relative to the first, and the first half was just ok this year.

Headlines:

China’s June Home Prices Slow in Major Cities, SouFun Says
China June PMI hits 28-mth low as global slowdown bites
China’s GDP to grow 9.5% in H1
China Eliminates Income Tax for 60 Million Workers Amid Tension Over Inflation, Wealth Gap

Broad-based slowdown in Eurozone manufacturing as domestic markets weaken

Broad-based slowdown in Eurozone manufacturing as growth hits 18-month low

(Markit) The final Markit Eurozone Manufacturing PMI fell to a one-and-a-half year low of 52.0 in June, down from 54.6 in May and unchanged from the earlier flash estimate. Incoming new orders fell for the first time since July 2009. Weakening domestic markets – especially at the periphery – was a major factor underlying lower order book inflows. June saw new export orders increase at the slowest pace since September 2009, led down by a decrease at intermediate goods producers. Production continued to rise at a robust pace in the investment goods sector in June, but lower output was seen at consumer and intermediate goods producers. Meanwhile, new order inflows stagnated at consumer and investment goods companies, and dropped at the steepest rate in over two years at intermediate goods producers.

This is not good. The hope is it reverses with lower crude and recovery in Japan.

Risks include China weakening, US austerity, and further austerity induced weakening in Europe.