Connolly

Agreed that government can buy stocks to keep them from falling, as HK did.

But the 1930s was a gold standard deflationary collapse.

The Fed was constrained from net buying anything due to the risk of losing gold reserves.

The risks are very different now with non-convertible currency/floating fx:

Depression risk might force U.S. to buy assets

by John Parry

“The Fed probably can’t fix it all on its own now,” Connolly said. “There is a chance the Fed gets forced into unconventional cooperation with government,” which could involve buying a range of assets to reflate their value.

Operationally this can be readily done. But what assets would the Fed want to reflate? Equities represent a return on investment, which is what it is. Yes, it might make sense to have a bid, like HK did, for ‘market-making stabilization’ purposes, but not to hold longer term, as that would be public ownership of the means of production, etc.

That would be reminiscent of some steps the U.S. government took in the 1930s when the economy was mired in deflation and high unemployment.

One turning point came when agricultural prices were restored to their pre-slump levels, Connolly said. Such measures were among the New Deal programs that President Franklin D. Roosevelt launched to bolster the economy.

Note that we don’t have a problem with low agricultural prices today!

Nor with low energy prices or plunging nominal wages.

Only housing prices have been falling due to excess inventory that I calculate will be cleared in a few months. The risk is that housing prices rise after that.

Either way, investors face bleak prospects now without some kind of further government intervention, he said.

Investors, yes. Consumers, not so bleak. Jobs and income are holding up, and most forecasts are only minor rises in unemployment. And with booming exports and the fiscal package in place, GDP has been revised up.

Those steps might offer clues to investors in stocks and commodities, which Connolly expects the government might be ultimately force to step in and buy to stabilize markets.

Yes, as above. Maybe some market stabilization in the financial sector. I don’t see anything in the real sector that needs more government buying right now. Seems CPI is high enough as is for more mainstream economists.

He expects that a depression may be averted, but only by the state and the Fed reinflating the price of such assets.

If we do get a recession, it will be due to falling demand from something like a tax hike to balance the budget.

Beleaguered housing, non-government fixed-income securities and even the now overvalued Treasury market have little hope of generating substantial returns for investors over the next few years, he said.

Earned income is sufficient to drive effective demand, even without investor income.

“If we don’t avoid depression, the only thing worth holding is cash,” he added.

As we watch it buy less and less CPI? Looks more like we are turning the currency into wallpaper, at least so far.

As long as resources producers spend their incomes on imports of real goods an services (and don’t ‘save’ it), world demand is likely to be sustained at whatever prices they wish to charge.

Twin themes seem to be continuing: weaker demand with higher prices. But no recession, yet.


Year over year export growth

Year over year export growth is looking strong and today’s Dec number revises Q4 GDP estimates to up 1% (vs initial government report of up 0.6%).

Also note that Q4 lost 1.25% as inventories built in Q3 were drawn down. Smooth the inventory numbers for Q3/Q4 and that implies Q3 would have been up 3.65% and Q4 up 2.25%.

This also supports the upwardly revised December payroll number.

The likelihood of strong January exports is one factor that leads me to suspect the January employment number will be revised up as well.

And if exports continue to grow at current rates though Q1 it will also be higher than expected, with exports continuing to pick up the slack from housing.

2008-02-14 YoY Export Growth

YoY Export Growth


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2008-02-14 US Economic Releases

2008-02-14 Trade Balance

Trade Balance (Dec)

Survey -$61.5B
Actual -$58.8B
Prior -$63.1B
Revised n/a

Moving lower as it reflects the declining desire of non residents to accumulate $US financial assets. Three main drivers are Paulson calling CB’s who buy $ currency manipulators, the Fed pursuing what looks to the world an ‘inflate your way out of debt’ policy scaring foreigners out of holding $US financial assets, and Bush’s ideological stance discouraging many oil producers from accumulating $US financial assets. And the new fiscal package doesn’t help, either.

Strong exports continue to support GDP and pick up the slack due to weak housing.


2008-02-14 Initial Jobless Claims

Initial Jobless Claims (Feb 9)

Survey 347K
Actual 348K
Prior 356K
Revised 357K

Working their way back down – no recession here.


2008-02-14 Continuing Claims

Continuing Claims (Feb 2)

Survey 2759K
Actual 2761K
Prior 2785K
Revised 2770K

Still at modest levels, and only a very small blip on the long term chart.


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Bernanke written testimony

As you know, financial markets in the United States and in a number of other industrialized countries have been under considerable strain since late last summer. Heightened investor concerns about the credit quality of mortgages, especially subprime mortgages with adjustable interest rates, triggered the financial turmoil. However, other factors, including a broader retrenchment in the willingness of investors to bear risk, difficulties in valuing complex or illiquid financial products, uncertainties about the exposures of major financial institutions to credit losses, and concerns about the weaker outlook for the economy, have also roiled the financial markets in recent months.

As the concerns of investors increased, money center banks and other large financial institutions have come under significant pressure to take onto their own balance sheets the assets of some of the off-balance-sheet investment vehicles that they had sponsored. Bank balance sheets have swollen further as a consequence of the sharp reduction in investor willingness to buy securitized credits, which has forced banks to retain a substantially higher share of previously committed and new loans in their own portfolios. Banks have also reported large losses, reflecting marked declines in the market prices of mortgages and other assets that they hold. Recently, deterioration in the financial condition of some bond insurers has led some commercial and investment banks to take further markdowns and has added to strains in the financial markets.

This had been expected to cause banks to not be able to lend as before. So far that hasn’t happened. Funds are there for credit-worthy borrowers.

The banking system has been highly profitable in recent years and entered this episode with strong capital positions. Some institutions have responded to their recent losses by raising additional capital. Notwithstanding these positive factors, the unexpected losses and the increased pressure on their balance sheets have prompted banks to become protective of their liquidity and balance sheet capacity and, thus, to become less willing to provide funding to other market participants, including other banks. Banks have also become more restrictive in their lending to firms and households. For example, in the latest Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey conducted by the Federal Reserve, banks reported having further tightened their lending standards and terms for a broad range of loan types over the past three months. More-expensive and less-available credit seems likely to continue to be a source of restraint on economic growth.

Bernanke sees the above as stemming from the supply side – bank’s becoming ‘protective’ of their balance sheets and rationing credit.

I see it, at the macro level, as banks being prudent in trying to lend only to people who can pay it back at spreads that compensate them for perceived risks.

In part as the result of the developments in financial markets, the outlook for the economy has worsened in recent months, and the downside risks to growth have increased.

Not sure if this means things have gotten worse since the last meeting – probably not.

To date, the largest economic effects of the financial turmoil appear to have been on the housing market, which, as you know, has deteriorated significantly over the past two years or so. The virtual shutdown of the subprime mortgage market and a widening of spreads on jumbo mortgage loans have further reduced the demand for housing, while foreclosures are adding to the already-elevated inventory of unsold homes. Further cuts in homebuilding and in related activities are likely.

Not much spillover yet.

Conditions in the labor market have also softened. Payroll employment, after increasing about 95,000 per month on average in the fourth quarter, declined by an estimated 17,000 jobs in January.

He must know January is subject to revision in a couple of weeks.

Employment in the construction and manufacturing sectors has continued to fall, while the pace of job gains in the services industries has slowed. The softer labor market, together with factors including higher energy prices, lower equity prices, and declining home values, seem likely to weigh on consumer spending in the near term.

Forward looking only? Seems he doesn’t think the consumer has already cut back all that much.

On the other hand, growth in U.S. exports should continue to provide some offset to the softening in domestic demand, and the recently approved fiscal package should help to support household and business spending during the second half of this year and into the first part of next year.

This could mean the Fed forecasts are for stronger growth now that the fiscal bill has been signed.

On the inflation front, a key development over the past year has been the steep run-up in the price of oil. Last year, food prices also increased exceptionally rapidly by recent standards, and the foreign exchange value of the dollar weakened.

The three negative supply shocks.

All told, over the four quarters of 2007, the price index for personal consumption expenditures (PCE) increased 3.4 percent, up from 1.9 percent during 2006. Excluding the prices of food and energy, PCE price inflation ran at a 2.1 percent rate in 2007, down a bit from 2006.

Doesn’t mention the recent acceleration of core PCE over the last several months.

To date, inflation expectations appear to have remained reasonably well anchored,

Only ‘reasonably’.

but any tendency of inflation expectations to become unmoored or for the Fed’s inflation-fighting credibility to be eroded could greatly complicate the task of sustaining price stability and reduce the central bank’s policy flexibility to counter shortfalls in growth in the future.

Indicating that if they do elevate, it’s too late. Most of the FOMC agrees with this.

Accordingly, in the months ahead we will be closely monitoring inflation expectations and the inflation situation more generally.

To address these developments, the Federal Reserve has moved in two main areas. To help relieve the pressures in the interbank markets, the Federal Reserve–among other actions–recently introduced a term auction facility (TAF), through which prespecified amounts of discount window credit can be auctioned to eligible borrowers, and we have been working closely and cooperatively with other central banks to address market strains that could hamper the achievement of our broader economic objectives.
In the area of monetary policy, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) has moved aggressively, cutting its target for the federal funds rate by a total of 225 basis points since September, including 125 basis points during January alone. As the FOMC noted in its most recent post-meeting statement, the intent of these actions is to help promote moderate growth over time and to mitigate the risks to economic activity.

Promote moderate growth over time. With inflation where it is, they can’t promote robust growth or full-employment. They need a positive output gap to bring inflation down to their long-term objectives.

A critical task for the Federal Reserve over the course of this year will be to assess whether the stance of monetary policy is properly calibrated to foster our mandated objectives of maximum employment and price stability and, in particular, whether the policy actions taken thus far are having their intended effects.

Doesn’t sound like there’s another cut coming? The ‘stance’ is the real rate, and without inflation coming down, keeping the stance constant doesn’t mean cutting rates.

Monetary policy works with a lag. Therefore, our policy stance must be determined in light of the medium-term forecast for real activity and inflation, as well as the risks to that forecast.

As follows:

At present, my baseline outlook involves a period of sluggish growth,

It would have to get worse for a change in stance.

followed by a somewhat stronger pace of growth starting later this year as the effects of monetary and fiscal stimulus begin to be felt.

Somewhat stronger – can’t get too strong and close the output gap.

At the same time, overall consumer price inflation should moderate from its recent rates, and the public’s longer-term inflation expectations should remain reasonably well anchored.

Headline CPI expected to flatten, but doesn’t mention core, which is probably projected to rise as it catches up to headline.

Although the baseline outlook envisions an improving picture, it is important to recognize that downside risks to growth remain, including the possibilities that the housing market or the labor market may deteriorate to an extent beyond that currently anticipated, or that credit conditions may tighten substantially further. The FOMC will be carefully evaluating incoming information bearing on the economic outlook and will act in a timely manner as needed to support growth and to provide adequate insurance against downside risks.

Barring a major deterioration in the growth outlook from ‘sluggish’ by the next meeting seems rates may be on hold.


Bernanke preview

If inflation is now above Bernanke’s comfort zone, as per Yellen who has been more dovish than Bermanke, and above their long-term target of maybe 2%, it can only be brought down by maintaining an output gap greater than zero under the mainstream theory they all subscribe to.

Particularly with the negative supply shocks of food, crude, and import/export prices persisting. And with energy prices (headline CPI) now showing up in core prices, also as per Yellen, inflation expectations are showing signs of coming unglued.

And the fiscal package has likely increased the Fed’s growth forecasts (smaller output gap) for Q2, Q3, and Q4.

The Fed believes a zero output gap means about a 4.75% unemployment rate.

That means the Fed wants to keep the economy from deteriorating and unemployment from rising, but it also doesn’t want unemployment falling to 4.75% which would mean it would have to act (rate hikes) to get it back up to something over 5% to meet long-term inflation targets.

So while Bernanke can say he stands by to do everything necessary to avoid a financial collapse, he also can’t allow the output gap to go to zero.


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2008-02-14 JN Highlights

News Headlines:

Japan Economy Grows 3.7%, Twice as Fast as Expected
Oct-Dec GDP Grows Annual 3.7% On Brisk Domestic, External Demand
Consumer Sentiment Fell For 4th Straight Month In Jan
Dec Revised Industrial Output Rises 1.4%
MOF Tsuda: GDP Confirms Recovery Despite Some Weakness
GDP COMMENT: Consumer Confidence Key To Future Growth

Seems to have done just fine last quarter without consumer confidence.


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The full employment recession is spreading

Looks like the US full-employment recession is spreading:

UK jobless rate falls to 5.2 percent in latest quarter

The unemployment rate in the United Kingdom in the last quarter of 2007 fell to 5.2 percent, down from 5.4 percent in the previous quarter, the government said Wednesday.

Average earnings, including bonuses, rose 3.7 percent in the fourth quarter compared with a year earlier, the Office for National Statistics said.

Yes, unemployment is a lagging indicator, but the subprime housing collapse is well over a year old. And the 4.9% rate in the US is, even by Yellen’s standards, ‘very close’ to full-employment.


2008-02-13 US Economic Releases

2008-02-13 MBAVPRCH Index

MBAVPRCH Index

Doesn’t look too bad.

Mortgage bankers have reduced staff and are probably working overtime on refi’s which remain very high.


2008-02-13 Retail Sales

Retail Sales

Details of today’s report aside, the year over year chart looks like retail sales have been working their way modestly higher during the last year.


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Sweden hikes rates due to cost push inflation

This is the mainstream approach to negative supply shocks:

“Don’t let relative value stories turn into inflation stories.” (as the Fed used to say)

And, they say, if you wait for the economy to get strong bringing the higher rates of inflation down gets more than that much harder.

STOCKHOLM, Sweden – Sweden’s central bank on Wednesday made a surprise increase in its key interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 4.25 percent in a move to keep inflation in check.

The hike surprised many market watchers who had expected the Riksbank to either cut its benchmark repo rate or keep it unchanged at 4 percent.

“There were expectations on a reduction. It was a surprising increase,” Handelsbanken analyst Marcus Hallberg was quoted as saying by Swedish news agency TT.

The bank said it expects the interest rate to stay “roughly” at the same level for the rest of the year. But in Wednesday’s announcement, the bank warned that “there is still considerable uncertainty regarding the economic outlook and inflation prospects,” and cautioned that while it currently expects the repo rate to stay near the new level, “there is considerable uncertainty in this assessment.”

The bank’s further course would depend on how economic developments abroad affect Sweden’s economic activity and inflation, it said.

Although economic activity remains strong, the bank said it deemed inflation to be high, and the rate rise will help to bring inflation back toward the target of 2 percent “a couple of years ahead.”

Inflation, or consumer price index, has been rising steadily in recent years and is now at 3.5 percent.

The bank said that “gross domestic product growth will slow down over the year and the increase in employment will slacken. Resource utilization in the economy will nevertheless be higher than normal.”

Inflation has been pushed up mainly by higher food and energy prices as well as cost pressures.

The bank said the continued global market financial turmoil and the unrest in the U.S., has led to “great uncertainty” and that recent developments in the financial markets mean that “the risk of weaker growth in the world economy has increased.”

Davide Stroppa, an economist at Bayerische Hypo- und Vereinsbank AG, described the raise as a “shock” in a research note.

“As we see it, with today’s move, the Riksbank exploited the window opportunity to deliver a hike before it will be too late and the dilemma of risks of a slower (although still quite respectable) growth and higher inflation would be solved in favor of the former.”

Sweden’s repo rate was last raised in October, by a quarter of a percentage point to 4 percent.