27 February 2009
Economics Update
Well, the revised GDP numbers are in for Q4 of 2008, and they are a horror-show, with GDP declining 6.2%, when the initial numbers had been -3.8%.
With numbers like this it's no wonder that the FDIC is reporting that the banking industry posted an aggregate net loss for a quarter for the first time since 1990.
If we are expecting real estate to rebound any time soon and save us, I wouldn't hold my breath with condo developers trying auctions to move properties, and And apartment buyers walking away from deposits....Six and seven figure deposits....in Manhattan.
I would also note that the consumer does not appear to be their either, with the finally tally for the Consumer Confidence Index falling to a 29 year low.
With numbers like this, it's no surprise that S&P is considering downgrading the ratings on $140 billion of prime jumbo mortgage CDOs, and non-prime mortgage origination hit a 17-year low last year.
Real estate, and hence banking, is in a sad enough condition that the FDIC has instituted a temporary emergency rate hike in order to bolster its reserves.
More generally, we have The Institute for Supply Management's Chicago Purchasers’ Index showing continued contraction. It rose to 34.2 from 33.3, but anything under 50 means contraction, and the 30s are significant contraction.
The fact that GE cut its dividend to 10 cents from 31 cents indicates that no one is doing well here.
The same is going on overseas, with most of eastern Europe in dire straits, getting emergency loans totaling about $31 billion, and Japanese factory output falling, and new jobs drying up.
The revised GDP figures drove both oil and the dollar down.
With numbers like this it's no wonder that the FDIC is reporting that the banking industry posted an aggregate net loss for a quarter for the first time since 1990.
If we are expecting real estate to rebound any time soon and save us, I wouldn't hold my breath with condo developers trying auctions to move properties, and And apartment buyers walking away from deposits....Six and seven figure deposits....in Manhattan.
I would also note that the consumer does not appear to be their either, with the finally tally for the Consumer Confidence Index falling to a 29 year low.
With numbers like this, it's no surprise that S&P is considering downgrading the ratings on $140 billion of prime jumbo mortgage CDOs, and non-prime mortgage origination hit a 17-year low last year.
Real estate, and hence banking, is in a sad enough condition that the FDIC has instituted a temporary emergency rate hike in order to bolster its reserves.
More generally, we have The Institute for Supply Management's Chicago Purchasers’ Index showing continued contraction. It rose to 34.2 from 33.3, but anything under 50 means contraction, and the 30s are significant contraction.
The fact that GE cut its dividend to 10 cents from 31 cents indicates that no one is doing well here.
The same is going on overseas, with most of eastern Europe in dire straits, getting emergency loans totaling about $31 billion, and Japanese factory output falling, and new jobs drying up.
The revised GDP figures drove both oil and the dollar down.
Labels:
Economy
,
employment
,
Europe
,
Finance
,
Japan
,
Real Estate
,
Recession
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