Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Housing Rebound Didn't Lift Economy as Much as Economists Expected: Why?; Six Questions for Zandi
- Italy Seeks "Silver Bullet" to Clean Up €330 Billion Nonperforming Loans; Explaining the "Bad Bank" Concept
- Existing Home Sales Decline, NAR Calls Report "Disturbing"; First Time Buyers Decline Third Year; Housing Clearly Weakening
- Cash is King for Holiday Shopping; 63% of Millennials Have No Credit Cards; Millennial Attitudes and Deflationary Trends
Housing Rebound Didn't Lift Economy as Much as Economists Expected: Why?; Six Questions for Zandi Posted: 23 Nov 2015 04:04 PM PST Home prices are nearly back to where they were before the crash. In some places, home prices are above where they were at the peak of the national boom. Yet, the impact of rising home prices has not had the economic effect that economists expected. The Wall Street Journal addresses the issue in Why the Housing Rebound Hasn't Lifted the U.S. Economy Much. I think the journal misses the reasons by a mile, as does Moody's Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi. Let's take a look. Home equity has roughly doubled to $12.1 trillion since house prices hit bottom in 2011, according to the Federal Reserve. As a result, a key gauge of housing wealth—homeowners' equity as a share of real-estate values—is nearing the point seen a decade ago, before the downturn.Zandi Misses Demographic Boat Boomers are not about to go on a spending spree based on the once widely held but now discredited notion that home prices always go up. Headed into retirement, boomers in general have more worries than whether or not their kitchen cabinets are up to date. Boomer home improvements will primarily pertain to replacing worn out heaters, air conditioning, or appliances, not remodeling. And millennials, especially women, still live at home in record numbers. For details, please see Women Not Leaving the Nest in Record Numbers; Marriage and Kids, Who Can Afford Them? Six Questions for Zandi
Zandi expects the prior trend will resume. I propose we are not at inflection point. It's all in his head, and easy answers to the above questions on attitudes and demographics explain why. Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
Posted: 23 Nov 2015 11:59 AM PST In defiance of eurozone rules against state aid to banks, Italy Plans Bad Bank "Silver Bullet" Bailout. Italy plans to launch a series of bad bank-style measures as early as the end of the year in an effort to cut its €330bn pile of non-performing loans as it seeks a "silver bullet" to boost its weak economic recovery, say senior officials.Explaining the "Bad Bank" Concept Take away artificial stimulus and I rather doubt Italy grew at all. And with €330 billion nonperforming loans does anyone believe the ECB's stress tests that show eurozone banks are well capitalized. Let's get down to the nitty-gritty of how the "bad bank" construct works and doesn't work. The idea that you can take bad debt, isolate it, and it then magically becomes good debt, is of course ridiculous. Creating a bad bank does nothing in and of itself. It is the "government guarantee" that cures the bad bank. And it is taxpayers who pay for the government. And so here we go again, with another bailout of bondholders, at the expense of the public, and in violation of EC rules, should Italy proceed with the plan. "At Risk" of Failing Euro Budget Rules Every country in the Eurozone is "at risk" of violating budget rules for the simple reason nearly all of them currently and consistently violate budget rules. Nonetheless, on November 17, the European Commission targeted Austria, Italy and Lithuania 'At Risk' of Failing Euro Budget Rules. The European Union warned Tuesday another three of the 19 countries that use the euro, including Italy, risk breaking the currency bloc's budget rules and hinted it could give France some leeway in the wake of the attacks in Paris."Broadly" Compliant Defined Broadly compliant means those countries may barely meet budget-deficit rule extensions, granted multiple times already, assuming there is not another economic slowdown nor another wave of terror. France uses Paris as an excuse, but in reality France would have been "broadly non-compliant" anyway. Of course, there is nothing magic about 3% deficits year-after-year. Exponentially speaking, even 1% eventually matters. Italy's debt burden that it cannot shrink even though it is compliant with the deficit rule is proof enough. Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
Posted: 23 Nov 2015 10:14 AM PST Existing home sales came in a bit under Bloomberg Econoday Consensus, down 3.4% in October. Year-over-year trends are weakening. Sales of existing homes are not a source of strength for the economy, down 3.4 percent in October to a slightly lower-than-expected annualized rate of 5.36 million. Year-on-year, sales are up only 3.9 percent which is the lowest for this reading since January. Weakness is split roughly even between single-family homes, down 3.7 percent in the month to a 4.75 million rate, and condos, down 1.6 percent to a 610,000 rate.Existing Home Sales Percent Change From Year Ago October vs. September In September, Existing Home Sales Rose 4.7% Following August's 5% Decline. This is what Bloomberg said a month ago: "Existing home sales bounced back very strongly in September, up 4.7 percent to nearly reverse the prior month's revised decline of 5.0 percent, a decline that now looks like an outlier. The month's annual sales rate, at 5.55 million, is just beyond Econoday's top-end forecast and the second best reading of the recovery. The year-on-year percentage gain, at plus 8.8 percent, is back where it was during the sales gains of the spring." If there was an "outlier", perhaps it was the September gain, not the August and October declines. And even though September sales data bounced, prices didn't. The median price declined 2.9% in September. Bloomberg concluded "This report, which wraps up a busy and mostly positive week for housing data, is a big plus for the housing outlook, suggesting that demand for existing homes may be catching up with demand for new homes." I responded: "That last statement by Econoday is amusing. For starters, new home sales are not all that strong, and it is new home sales that contribute most to GDP and family formations." As a followup, please note my November 18 article Housing Starts Plunge 11% to 7-Month Low: Single-Family Down 2.4%, Multi-Family Down 25% October wiped away all of September's good news and then some. 1.060 million starts was far below Econoday Consensus Estimate of 1.162 million SAAR and also well below the lowest estimate of 1.125 million. Bloomberg pointed out hidden strength including "important good news" on October permits. Spotlight on Permits
In aggregate, that hardly looks like "important good news". First Time Buyers Decline Third Year The National Association of Realtors (NAR) notes First-time Buyers Fall Again in NAR Annual Buyer and Seller Survey. "The share of first–time buyers declined for the third consecutive year and remained at its lowest point in nearly three decades as the overall strengthening pace of home sales over the past year was driven more by repeat buyers with dual incomes." Housing Clearly Weakening On average, starts are weakening, permits are weakening, new home sales are weakening, price data is weakening, and existing home sales are weakening. First time buyers, a strong indication of family formation, is at a three-decades low, and the NAR is "disturbed" about trends. Simply put, housing is weakening, albeit in a volatile way, making it a bit harder to spot the change in underlying trends. Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
Posted: 23 Nov 2015 12:32 AM PST As we head into the black Friday holiday shopping season, cash is king. Cash will be the most popular payment method for shoppers buying holiday gifts, with 39% of Americans saying they plan to use it for most of their holiday purchases, in a recent survey of 1,000 shoppers personal finance website Bankrate conducted with Princeton Survey Research Associates International. This number was about the same as in 2014, when 38% of holiday shoppers said they planned to use cash.Millennial Attitudes That stat on credit card usage by millennials is precisely in tune with statements I made in 2008 if not before.
Deflationary Trends
The Fed, the ECB, Bank of Japan, Bank of China, etc., are fighting major deflationary forces. Attitudes are the key force actually. It took two generations for memories of the great depression to go away. And it will take at least a generation for millennials who saw their parents lose their homes or get into huge fights over money for those memories to vanish. To top it off, the Fed (central banks in general) has spawned another enormous asset bubble that will hugely add to deflationary woes when it pops. Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
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