25 November 2009
Economics Update (Catching Up)
The lede here is that the corrected numbers for US GDP are out, and it's way down, to +2.8%, down from the initial estimate of 3.5%.
Even more worrying is that the primary reason for the drop is that that consumer demand is way down, which does not bode well for the holiday season.
Some things to note on this:
GDP is still down year over year, and at this won't be back to the pre-recession level until sometime in 2011.
Also, the credit card data has more evidence of consumer deleveraging, with late payments on credit cards falling in the 3rd quarter, though delinquencies were up in October.
The Conference Boards Consumer Confidence index roses in November, but still at levels indicating contraction, 49.5, where 90 is more or less neutral.
The Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago also released its National Activity Index, and it fell slightly (PDF), to -1.08, which indicates that things are still moving in a recessionary direction.
In real estate, the 3rd quarter numbers are in, and the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index showed home prices increasing 3.1%, though it's still down 9% year over year, and existing home sales rose an astounding 10% in October.
The timing here shows why this housing "recovery" is a mirage. Existing home sales rose in October because these were people scrambling to get in under the wire for the new home tax credit.
Some quick math shows that the median existing home prices in the US is $173,100, and $8000 is 4.62% of that, so the the degree to which the tax credit is driving price deltas is probably pretty significant.
Meanwhile, we are having some significant movement in the bond/central bank world, both nationally and internationally, with Fitch cutting its rating Mexico's sovereign debt, the Bank of Israel yesterday raising its overnight lending rate by a 25 basis points (¼%), and Colombia's central bank cutting its rate by 50 basis points (½%), because inflation is below expectations, and they want to give their economy a boost.
My guess is also that Columbia wants to push its currency down to help with its trade balance.
US Treasuries rose in their most recent auction, probably because investors are looking for safe havens following the downward GDP revision.
Certainly the GDP revision pushed oil down, though interestingly enough the dollar fell against both the Yen and Euro.
Even more worrying is that the primary reason for the drop is that that consumer demand is way down, which does not bode well for the holiday season.
Some things to note on this:
GDP is still down year over year, and at this won't be back to the pre-recession level until sometime in 2011.
Also, the credit card data has more evidence of consumer deleveraging, with late payments on credit cards falling in the 3rd quarter, though delinquencies were up in October.
The Conference Boards Consumer Confidence index roses in November, but still at levels indicating contraction, 49.5, where 90 is more or less neutral.
The Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago also released its National Activity Index, and it fell slightly (PDF), to -1.08, which indicates that things are still moving in a recessionary direction.
In real estate, the 3rd quarter numbers are in, and the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index showed home prices increasing 3.1%, though it's still down 9% year over year, and existing home sales rose an astounding 10% in October.
The timing here shows why this housing "recovery" is a mirage. Existing home sales rose in October because these were people scrambling to get in under the wire for the new home tax credit.
Some quick math shows that the median existing home prices in the US is $173,100, and $8000 is 4.62% of that, so the the degree to which the tax credit is driving price deltas is probably pretty significant.
Meanwhile, we are having some significant movement in the bond/central bank world, both nationally and internationally, with Fitch cutting its rating Mexico's sovereign debt, the Bank of Israel yesterday raising its overnight lending rate by a 25 basis points (¼%), and Colombia's central bank cutting its rate by 50 basis points (½%), because inflation is below expectations, and they want to give their economy a boost.
My guess is also that Columbia wants to push its currency down to help with its trade balance.
US Treasuries rose in their most recent auction, probably because investors are looking for safe havens following the downward GDP revision.
Certainly the GDP revision pushed oil down, though interestingly enough the dollar fell against both the Yen and Euro.
Labels:
Currency
,
Economy
,
Energy
,
Finance
,
Real Estate
,
Recession
,
regulation
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