Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Bitter Feud at ECB over Monetary Policy; BOE to Expand Stimulus; Japan's Great Deflation; Will the US Follow?
- Reluctant Breadwinners, Downsized Housing; Demographic Pendulum in Motion
- Smoking Gun: New Evidence of How Wall Street Shafted Pension Funds by Misrepresenting Mortgages; Rep Miller Calls for Full Audit of Fannie Mae
Posted: 17 Oct 2010 10:05 PM PDT Although there is a huge debate amongst Fed members regarding US monetary policy, especially the merits of Quantitative Easing, that debate can easily be described as relatively friendly discussion. Things are quite different in the EU where there is a bitter feud between ECB president Jean-Claude Trichet and Trichet's rumored replacement, Bundesbank President Axel Weber. Trichet Chastises Weber Regarding Who is the President In a public display of animosity, Trichet has let Weber know who is in charge. Please consider ECB's Trichet Rejects Weber's Call to End Bond Purchase Program European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet rejected Bundesbank President Axel Weber's call to end the bond purchase program that has provided a lifeline for European governments and banks trying to shore up their finances.Trichet a Monetarist Pussycat It is interesting to see Trichet continuing as the dove just as Bernanke is at the Fed. Trichet had an undeserved reputation as a central bank hawk. The reality is quite different as discussed earlier this year in Trichet, a Monetarist Pussycat at Heart, Throws ECB Rulebook Out the Window Currency Implications Unlike Bernanke, Trichet is due to step down October 2011. Weber had widely been viewed as the leading candidate to replace Trichet. I wonder if that is still the case after this open feud. Implications regarding the valuation of the US dollar vs. the Euro are at stake. CEBR says Bank of England Will Expand Stimulus According to the Centre for Economics and Business Research, the Bank of England will join the Fed's currency debasement strategy. Please consider BOE Will Expand Stimulus by 100 Billion Pounds, CEBR Predicts The Bank of England will expand its stimulus program by 100 billion pounds ($160 billion) to aid the economic recovery, the Centre for Economics and Business Research said.Japan's Great Deflation The New York Times reports Japan Goes From Dynamic to Disheartened. Here is a somewhat lengthy snip, but the article is a full 3 pages long. Few nations in recent history have seen such a striking reversal of economic fortune as Japan.Demographic Pendulum in Motion "We're not Japan," said Robert E. Hall, a professor of economics at Stanford. "In America, the bet is still that we will somehow find ways to get people spending and investing again." Robert Hall, like most others, does not understand the deflationary impacts of the entire gamut of changing socioeconomic trends and attitudes. After 20+ years of deflation fighting tactics, Japan has nothing to show for its deflation fighting efforts but massive public debt. To be sure, one can point out that US demographics are more favorable than Japan's. However, US consumers have a much bigger and much more deflationary pile of leveraged debt on their balance sheets than do most Japanese families. Inflation Targeting Madness Not only has Japan's two decades of failure shown the futility of fighting consumer attitudes, common sense alone would suggest that it is futile to fight changing social trends with monetary policy. Unfortunately that has not stopped the Fed with reckless proposals on top of reckless proposals. Please see Inflation Targeting Proposal an Exercise in Blazing Stupidity; Fed Fools Itself for further discussion. Will the US Follow? As I stated in June of 2008, we are now on the back side of peak consumption and Peak Credit. Regardless of what Bernanke of the Fed does, the demographic pendulum is in motion. There is no going back. Once attitudes hit extreme then reverse, there is nothing the Fed or anyone else can do about it. Thus, the question is not whether the US will follow the footsteps of Japan, the question is whether the US or Japan blows up first from misguided central banks fighting a battle that cannot be won. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Reluctant Breadwinners, Downsized Housing; Demographic Pendulum in Motion Posted: 17 Oct 2010 10:32 AM PDT Because of losses in construction and manufacturing, unemployment has taken its toll on more men than women. Please consider More Wives Head for Work Angela Patterson is working as an insurance agent in New York while her husband looks for construction jobs in North Carolina. Diana Gomez had been staying home to care for an ill daughter. When her husband lost his job, she became an administrative assistant in a dentist's office. Michelle, a social worker and mother of three young children in Baltimore, who asked that her last name not be used, switched from part-time to full-time work when her husband was laid off last year. She kept to that schedule after he found work earlier this year—at two-thirds his former salary.Daily Femme Chimes In Ashleigh, writing for The Daily Femme takes issue with the story in her commentary Are we "reluctant breadwinners"? Am I the only one who feels like this is a decidedly outdated sentiment? Sure, there are plenty of women who would prefer to stay home and care for their families, and far be it from me to judge them. But the assertion that women going back to work will create "new challenges" seems a little stale. Women have been working outside the home for some time now, and any challenge (real or imagined) that this creates is certainly not new.Changing Social Trends The Real Story While admittedly the BusinessWeek story does have that "50's feel", Ashleigh misses the point. The point is families are being disrupted by changing social trends, whether the story has a "50's feel" or not. Here are some more examples of pertinent changing social trends. Student Debt Tens of thousands of students graduate from college each year without a job, deep in debt, and many of them are doubling up households or moving back home. This disrupts family formation with impacts on housing and demand for goods and services. Boomers did not graduate from college deep in debt. Tuition was $250 a semester when I started at the University of Illinois, and about $400 a semester the final semester. Walmart Greeters Take a look at the average age and sex of the greeters at Walmart. Are those people, mostly women, in those jobs because they want to, or because they have to? Jobs are so few that grandparents compete against their kids and grandkids for those jobs! If you were an employer, who would you hire to fill those positions: someone in their 30's or 40's raising a family in need of expensive health care coverage, or someone past retirement age on Medicare? That women dominate such jobs offers one of the reasons women make less. Another reason is some women have disrupted their careers to raise families. How many women engineers are there compared to men? Geologists? Physicians? Social Workers? Construction workers? Comparing degrees is not a valid way of determining whether or not women are underpaid relative to men. Deflationary Impact of Trends As boomers head towards retirement, and students deep in debt cannot find jobs that will allow them to quickly pay down that debt, all kinds of unfavorable demographic trends are playing out. Importantly, the downsizing of boomer lifestyles will put pressure on high end housing for a long time. Trends in Housing I was in North Carolina these past two week, staying in a beach house owned by a person on my blog who posts under the name "Black Swan". Thanks Swan! Swan developed and sold many properties on Topsail Island. I met another developer on the Island, and both of them are downsizing the sizes of the units they are building and intending to build. While not "breaking news", it certainly is another piece of the puzzle. Smaller homes means less lumber, less granite, less drywall, less bathrooms, less furniture, less everything. Needs of Downsizing Boomers Aging boomers will be dependent on their children to look after them, yet the children do not really want their parents moving back in. Taking those factors into consideration, "Black Swan" has plans to put two smaller homes on one parcel, say a 1200-1500 square foot home as well as separate 500 square foot home on the same lot. Demographic Pendulum in Motion Few understand the deflationary impacts of the entire gamut of trends that is playing out, or the stress these trends place on families. It is futile to fight changing social trends, but that has not stopped the Fed with reckless proposals on top of reckless proposals. Please see Inflation Targeting Proposal an Exercise in Blazing Stupidity; Fed Fools Itself for more details. As I stated in June of 2008, we are now on the back side of peak consumption and Peak Credit. Regardless of what Bernanke of the Fed does, the demographic pendulum is in motion. There is no going back. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 16 Oct 2010 11:55 PM PDT Josh Rosner, who heads the research firm Graham Fisher, presents new proof that banks knew they were selling bad loans. The following video is as discussion between Rosner and Elliot Spitzer about the smoking gun and what to do about it. It's well worth a listen. Partial Transcript of "Inside Job" SPITZER: What I would be doing right now would be to drop a subpoena on every investment bank saying, I want to track this information, these documents came from Clayton, the due diligence firm, see where in the company they went, who saw them, who knew about them, who had a conversation about them, and what did they do? And somebody who saw these documents, and as Josh said, saw that there was 29 percent noncompliance and still pushed these mortgages into the security, boom, charge them right there -- failure to apply the rigorous standards. Charge them, recover all the money. And this time, I would hope the ax comes done, no bailout, we claim every... Dylan Ratigan Show Democratic congressman Brad Miller calls for an audit of all the loans at Fannie and Freddie to see if they were conforming to the standards necessary to get government backing. Partial Transcript MILLER: There are $trillion of mortgage backed securities out there that are very much in doubt. The pension funds have been pushing for some time now to get information about whether the securitizer, the big banks that bought the mortgages and put them in pools, and sold the mortgage backed securities, whether the securitizer should have to buy back the mortgages for not meeting the contractual requirements.Miller also said another TARP will not happen, "not in this lifetime", and if banks have to take back enough mortgages the resolution authority will have to deal with it. I would sure like to see it come to that, but it won't. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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