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A new bout of fear gripped financial markets during the past week, causing
the slide in global stocks, commodities and emerging-market assets to deepen.
As investors' angst escalated, positions in risky assets were liquidated in
exchange for perceived safe havens such as the US dollar, government bonds
and gold bullion.
"We have seen fundamental selling, technical selling, forced selling (deleveraging),
short selling, capitulation selling and selling due to ennui," commented David
Fuller (Fullermoney).
Fueling the sell-off were mounting concerns that the economic recession could
not only be more intense than previously feared, but also fall into a corrosive
deflationary phase. Additionally, sentiment was undermined by renewed questions
about the effectiveness of the US government's bailout plans.
A clear sign of distress and fear was the US three-month Treasury Bill rate
falling to zero on Thursday, before nudging up to (a still minuscule) 0.10%
by the close of the week. "The financial situation at the moment is so bad
that women are now marrying for love," quipped an e-mail doing the rounds.
After the S&P 500 Index breached the grim milestone of the October 2002
lows and fell to levels last seen in 1997 - thereby threatening to wipe out
the entire 2002 to 2007 bull market - Wall Street regained some confidence
late on Friday. The trigger for a strong turnaround arrived just in time for
the 15:00 witching hour and came in the form of Timothy Geithner's (pronounced
GYTE-ner) nomination as new Treasury Secretary, resulting in the S&P 500
recovering from an intraday loss of more than 1% to a gain for the day of 6.3%.

On the bailout front, the Detroit automakers sought $25 billion from the Treasury
to avert bankruptcy. However, Congress withheld financial aid for the time
being, giving the companies until December 2 to submit a "viable" recovery
plan.
"Don't be misled, though - the something that is rotten in the auto industry
has nothing to do with the credit crunch, and everything to do with years of
mismanagement, shoddy products and bad choices," said Bloomberg columnist
Mark Gilbert. "Consider the credit-rating histories of GM and Ford. For both
companies, the rot started all the way back in August 2001, when Standard & Poor's
put the A grades they enjoyed for a decade on review for downgrade. In October
of that year they each suffered a two-level cut to BBB+ that left them just
three moves away from junk status."
I received the following note from an American friend a few days ago: "...even
the children in my son's second grade class are depressed about the auto industry.
I had to answer my son's questions about bankruptcy since the kids are talking
about it ..." This comment says it all!
Elsewhere, Citigroup's (C) share price plunged by 60.4% over the week to a
16-year low as the company wrestled the financial crisis and planned to slash
50,000 jobs. According to The
Wall Street Journal, "Citigroup officials have been talking in recent days
to Treasury Department and Federal Reserve officials, and those discussions
are expected to continue throughout the weekend ..."
A pointed comment regarding the principle of bailouts came from Jim
Rogers, as quoted by the Financial
Times: "What they're doing is taking the assets away from the competent
people, giving them to the incompetent people and saying to the incompetent:
'Okay, now you can compete with the competent people, with their money.'
I mean this is terrible economics. This is outrageous economics."
Next, a tag cloud of the text of the plethora of articles I have read since
a week ago. This is a way of visualizing word frequencies at a glance. Keywords
such as "banks", "economy", "market" and "prices" occur often, but words such
as "gold" and "deflation" have also started creeping into the tag picture.

The following update on the stock market outlook arrived on Friday from Bennet
Sedacca (Atlantic Advisors): "We
have been barely invested, mostly void, in equities, since May. We went ½ long
today near the lows for a rally that could last longer than some think. Mostly
large cap, high-quality, excellent balance sheet companies with a little
tech and financials thrown in. We must remember, buy when you can, not when
you have to."
Oversold conditions are bound to result in rallies from time to time (and
possibly around Thanksgiving), but these should not be trusted at face value.
For a more lasting market turnaround to happen, I would like to see evidence
of base formations on the charts, a 90%
up-day, and relative outperformance by the financial sector.
I am also closely monitoring the surges in the US dollar and Japanese yen
- low-yielding currencies previously used for funding risky investments - as
a break of the uptrends in these two currencies will be a good indicator of
the forced deleveraging selling starting to subside. Once this situation has
played itself out, we should see a return to lower volatility levels and a
return of confidence. (Also read my recent posts "Economic
woes torpedo stock markets" and "Panic-crash
sentiment causes extreme volatility".)
Before highlighting some thought-provoking news items and quotes from market
commentators, let's briefly review the financial markets' movements on the
basis of economic statistics and a performance round-up.
Economic reports
The Ifo World Economic Climate has worsened further in the fourth quarter of
2008 with the indicator falling to its lowest level in more than 20 years,
according to the Ifo World Economic Survey.
Not only the major economic regions of North America, Western Europe and
Asia are affected, but also Central and Eastern Europe, Russia, Latin America
and Australia. On the whole, the survey data point to a global recession.

Economic reports released in the US during the past week confirmed an increasingly
dire situation.
• The US moved closer to deflation territory as the CPI decreased by
1.0% from September to October (the largest monthly decline since the 1930s),
leaving the CPI 3.7% higher compared with a year ago and significantly down
from September's 4.9% rate. The continuing decline in US economic activity
is pushing down inflationary pressure.
• Because of weak demand, producer prices for finished goods gave up
ground for the third month in a row, falling by 2.8% in October largely as
a result of much less expensive energy products.
• On par with expectations, residential construction slowed again in
October, with a 4.5% month-on-month decline in total housing starts. At 791,000
annualized units, starts have hit another record low as exceptionally weak
demand was constraining homebuilding.
• The NAHB housing market index fell further in November, setting a record
low.
• Slumping demand is hitting US industry hard, although production bounced
back in October from hurricane-related declines in September. Total industrial
production increased by 1.3% after having fallen a downwardly revised 3.7%
in September, but the indicator fell around two-thirds of a percent in September
and October when excluding once-off effects.
• Initial claims for unemployment insurance benefits increased by 27,000
to 542,000 for the week ended November 15, putting claims at their highest
point since the early 1990s. This is a serious warning signal about the health
of the labor market.
• The Conference Board Index of Leading Economic Indicators declined
by 0.9% in October, led by a sharp plunge in stock prices and decreases in
residential building permits and consumer expectations. The LEI in the last
three months has shown an acceleration in the rate of decline, adding to evidence
that the US has entered a recession that will likely be much deeper than either
of the previous two.
It comes as no surprise that the minutes of
the Federal Open Market Committee's meeting of October 28 to 29 indicate that
members were extremely concerned about the near-term prospects for the economy,
given the stresses in financial markets. With the problems in credit markets
persisting, the FOMC's forecast called for falling growth through the first
half of 2009, with next year's real GDP growth projection lowered to -0.2%
to 1.1% (previously 2.0% to 2.8%).
Banks continue to hoard all the liquidity the Fed is injecting directly instead
of lending it out. This raises the question: Is the Fed "pushing on a string"?
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust)
commented as follows: "The lowering of the Fed funds rate, the Fed's innovative
programs to provide liquidity to financial institutions and more lenient rules
for borrowing through the discount window appear to have exhausted the gamut
of possibilities routed through monetary policy changes to influence aggregate
demand.
"The provisions of the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 allow
for recapitalization of banks. The FDIC is working on obtaining an approval
for the anti-foreclosure plan to address the housing market issues that are
central to the current crisis. ... the probability of a hefty fiscal stimulus
package ... is growing every day."
Economic reports in other parts of the world were equally dismal.
Japan entered into its first recession in seven years as the financial crisis
curbed demand for its exports. GDP growth contracted by 0.1% during the third
quarter, or at an annualized rate of -0.4%, following a second quarter contraction
of a massive 0.9%.

Source: Financial
Times, November 17, 2008.
China also warned that the unemployment outlook was "grim" as a result of
the financial crisis forcing the closure of more export-oriented factories.
In Europe, a further slowdown in economic activity caused the Swiss National
Bank to announce a surprise 100 basis-point cut in its three-month target range
to 0.5%-1.5% - the third emergency reduction in two months.
Week's economic reports
Click here for
the week's economy in pictures, courtesy of Jake of EconomPic
Data.
| Date |
Time (ET) |
Statistic |
For |
Actual |
Briefing Forecast |
Market Expects |
Prior |
| Nov 17 |
8:30 AM |
NY Empire State Index |
Nov |
-25.4 |
-26.0 |
-26.0 |
-24.6 |
| Nov 17 |
9:15 AM |
Capacity Utilization |
Oct |
76.4% |
76.5% |
76.5% |
76.4% |
| Nov 17 |
9:15 AM |
Industrial Production |
Oct |
1.3% |
0.1% |
0.2% |
-2.8% |
| Nov 18 |
8:30 AM |
Core PPI |
Oct |
0.4% |
0.0% |
0.1% |
0.4% |
| Nov 18 |
8:30 AM |
PPI |
Oct |
-2.8% |
-2.0% |
-1.8% |
-0.4% |
| Nov 18 |
9:00 AM |
Net Foreign Purchases |
Sep |
$66.2B |
NA |
$17.5B |
$21.0B |
| Nov 19 |
8:30 AM |
Building Permits |
Oct |
708K |
760K |
772K |
805K |
| Nov 19 |
8:30 AM |
Core CPI |
Oct |
-0.1% |
0.1% |
0.1% |
0.1% |
| Nov 19 |
8:30 AM |
CPI |
Oct |
-1.0% |
-0.7% |
-0.8% |
0.0% |
| Nov 19 |
8:30 AM |
Housing Starts |
Oct |
791K |
780K |
780K |
828K |
| Nov 19 |
2:00 PM |
FOMC Minutes |
Oct 29 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| Nov 20 |
8:30 AM |
Initial Claims |
11/15 |
542K |
505K |
503K |
515K |
| Nov 20 |
10:00 AM |
Leading Indicators |
Oct |
-0.8% |
-0.7% |
-0.6% |
0.1% |
| Nov 20 |
10:00 AM |
Philadelphia Fed |
Nov |
-39.3 |
-30.0 |
-35.0 |
-37.5 |
Next week's US economic highlights, courtesy of Northern
Trust, include the following:
1. Existing Home Sales (November 24):Sales of existing homes are predicted
to have declined in October after a small gain in September. Sales of existing
homes advanced by 7.8% from a year ago in September, after posting declines
since late 2005. Consensus:5.00 million versus 5.18 million in September.
2. Real GDP (November 25): Incoming economic reports suggest a small
downward revision of real GDP in the third quarter to a 0.5% drop from the
advance estimate of a 0.3% decline. Consensus: -0.5%
3. New Home Sales (November 26):Sales of new homes are expected to
have fallen in October after a 2.3% increase in September. Sales of new homes
have dropped by 32.1% from a year ago in September. Consensus:450,000
versus 464,000 in September.
4. Durable Goods Orders (November 26):Durable goods orders (-2.0%)
are predicted to have dropped in October reflecting declines in bookings of
defense and aircraft, which posted large gains in September. Consensus:
-2.6% versus +0.9% in September.
5. Personal Income and Spending (November 26):The earnings and payroll
numbers for October indicate a steady reading for personal income in October.
Auto sales fell sharply in October and non-auto retail sales were noticeably
weak, pointing to a likely drop in consumer spending (-0.6%). Consensus:Personal
income +0.1%, consumer spending -0.9%
6. Other reports: Case-Shiller Price Index, OFHEO Price Index, Consumer
Confidence (November 25).
Click here for
a summary of Wachovia's weekly economic and financial commentary.
Markets
The performance chart obtained from the Wall
Street Journal Online shows how different global markets performed during
the past week.

Source: Wall
Street Journal Online, November 14, 2008.
Equities
Global stock markets suffered badly during the past week on mounting worries
about the severity of the economic slowdown. The week's movements - MSCI
World Index -9.6% and MSCI Emerging Markets Index -11.8% - tell the story
of a rough ride for bourses all over the world and marked a third straight
week of losses. And the scoreboard would have been even worse if not for
a dramatic late-session recovery in the US on the news that Timothy Geithner
would be named Treasury Secretary.
Not a single developed market closed the week unscathed. Similarly, large
losses also abounded among emerging markets, with the sole exception being
the Shanghai Stock Exchange Composite Index that recorded only a relatively
small 0.9% decline. The Index plunged by 72.0% since its high of October 16,
2007 until hitting a low on November 4, but has subsequently bounced by 15.4%
to flirt with its 50-day moving average and roundophobia 2000 level. Will the
upside leadership for global stock markets come from China on this occasion?
The chart below shows the performances of the four BRIC countries during the
past week.

A (very red) market map, obtained from Finviz,
providing a quick overview of last week's performances of global stock markets
(as reflected by the movements of ADR stocks).

The US stock markets all declined sharply over the week as shown by the major
index movements: Dow Jones Industrial Index -5.3 (YTD -39.3%), S&P 500
Index -8.4% (YTD -45.5%). Nasdaq Composite Index -8.7% (YTD -47.8%) and Russell
2000 Index -10.9% (YTD -46.9%).
The S&P 500 closed below its October 2002 low of 777 on Thursday, but
Friday's rally (+6.3%) to 800 put it back above this key support level. The
Dow remained above its 2002 low of 7,286 on Thursday and closed 760 points
above this level after Friday's surge.
A market map, also from Finviz.com, showing
the performances of the various segments of the S&P 500 over the week.

As far as industry groups are concerned, gold (+19%) was the top performer
for the week, led by Newmont Mining (NEM) on the back of a sharp rise in the
price of gold bullion.
On the other side of the performance spectrum, the industrial real estate
investment trust (REIT) group (-40%) was the worst performer. The diversified
financial services group (-38%) was the second worst performer, with each of
the group's large banks - Citigroup (C), JPMorgan Chase (JPM) and Bank of America
(BAC) - dropping sharply. Investor concerns about future credit losses, valuations
of "toxic" securities on the banks' books, job layoffs and capital adequacy
issues were the drivers for the declines.
David Fuller (Fullermoney) commented
as follows on the outlook for stock markets: "... we have yet to see evidence
of bottoming out on many major stock market charts. While this is worrying,
to put it mildly, and sentiment is diabolical, investors should recall an extremely
important behavioural conditioning process. The crowd has always turned progressively
more bearish with each additional decline towards the eventual low for every
bear market. This is inevitable as more people sell, and unfortunately, few
are more bearish than a battered holdout who finally capitulates.
"If global stock markets are not close to a major buying opportunity, then
I suggest we should all head to sea and become Somali pirates."
Fixed-interest instruments
Government bond yields across the world plunged last week as spooked investors
rushed out of equities into sovereign debt.
The ten-year US Treasury Note yield declined by a massive 57 basis points
to 3.18%, the UK ten-year Gilt yield dropped by 20 basis points to 3.87% and
the German ten-year Bund yield fell by 30 basis points to 3.38%. However, emerging-market
bonds, in general, lost ground as further deleveraging took its toll on risky
assets.
The yield on ten-year Treasuries touched a 5½-year low (3.01%) on Thursday
before rebounding by the close of the week, whereas the yield on 30-year bonds
dropped to its lowest level (3.53%) since the start of regular issuance in
1977 before snapping back by 14 basis points.

US mortgage rates also declined, with the 30-year fixed rate dropping by 9
basis points to 6.09% and the 5-year ARM also by 9 basis points to 5.89%.
A number of indicators show that the credit crisis is still severe. For example,
credit default swaps that measure default risk for investment grade debt are
trading at their highest levels of the bear market. This is seen from Bespoke's
index that measures default risk for 125 companies with investment grade debt
ratings.

Currencies
The week's feature among currencies was safe-haven flows into the US dollar
and Japanese yen as investors liquidated risky assets previously funded with
these low-yielding currencies.
The Swiss franc came under pressure as the Swiss National Bank slashed interest
rates a full percentage point to 1% as an emergency step to soften the economic
slowdown.
The chart below illustrates the accent of the US dollar and Japanese yen since
September 15. (The US dollar is measured against a trade-weighted basket of
currencies, whereas all the other currencies are measured against the US dollar.)

Emerging-market currencies had another bad week as a result of increasing
risk aversion. Examples of losses against the greenback include the Brazilian
real (-10.4%), the Turkish lira (-4.5%), the South Korean won (-6.7%) and the
South African rand (-4.4%).
RGE Monitor raised the question whether
Bulgaria and the Baltic states will be forced to reset their fixed exchange
rate pegs to the euro as a result of their large external imbalances and the
global financial crisis. "Because of their fixed exchange rates, these economies
cannot conduct independent monetary policy so the burden of macro-economic
adjustment falls on fiscal policy."
Commodities
The Reuters/Jeffries CRB Index (-6.5%) witnessed a further decline amid fears
of a protracted global economic recession and expectations that demand will
drop.
Gold bullion (+6.6%) bucked the trend and surged as the yellow metal found
support among nervous investors as a safe store of value. A report that China
might embark on a gold-buying program provided an additional boost.
On the other hand, West Texas Intermediate crude declined by a further 13.3%
to $49.9 - a level not seen since May 2005. OPEC meets on November 29 to consider
additional production cuts.
The graph below shows the movements of various commodities over the past week
- a continuation of the intense bear market that has been in force since the
beginning of July.

Lau-Tzu said: "Those who have knowledge, don't predict. Those who predict,
don't have knowledge." Wise words indeed, but hopefully the news items and
words from the investment wise below will cast some light on the lie of the
investment land. And may the markets bring you additional reason to celebrate
a joyous Thanksgiving.
That's the way it looks from Cape Town.

Source: Pat Oliphant, Slate
Barry Ritholtz (The Big Picture): Record-breaking data everywhere!
"One of the interesting aspects of this unprecedented housing collapse, credit
crisis, economic recession and market crash has been all the new records we
keep seeing:
• Over the past year, the S&P 500 Index lost ~$1 trillion more than
the entire 2000-2002 bear market, according to Standard & Poor's. From
the October 2007 highs of 1,565, to yesterday's close of 806.58, the S&P
500 market capitalization lost $6.69 trillion. That's almost $1 trillion more
than entire 2000-03 bear market losses of $5.76 trillion. (Marketwatch)
• The S&P 500 hasn't been this far below its 200-day moving average
on a percentage basis since the Great Depression. (Doug
Kass)
• CPI: US consumer prices in October registered their largest single-month
decline since before World War II. It is the largest monthly drop in the 61-year
history of the data;
• PPI, down 2.8% for the month, was also a record-breaking drop.
• The dividend yield on the S&P 500 is now greater than the yield
on the 10-year Treasury. That hasn't happened since 1958. (Barron's)
• First-time claims for US unemployment insurance rose to the highest
level since September 2001. The total number of people on unemployment benefit
rolls jumped to the highest level since 1983.
• Housing starts fell to 791,000, off 38% from a year ago. That's the
slowest pace of starts since data began being compiled in 1959. Starts are
now down 65% from the early 2006 peak - this has become the very worst housing
downturn on record.
• Permits for new houses, at a 708,000 pace, were off 40% from a year
ago, also the lowest total since it has been tracked starting in 1960. Put
this into context of population - in 1960, the total US population stood at
180 million - 60% of today's 300 million.
• The 30-year return for BBB-rated corporate bonds is now greater than
the 30-year return for stocks. So it has not paid to take equity risk for 30
years! (The
Street.com)
• The TIPS Spread ( Treasury Inflation Protected Securities versus the
10-year Treasury) is at a record low 54 basis points (1997).
• The Russell 3,000 now has 1,228 stocks a share price under $10. That's
42% of the index. At the market's 2002 lows, there were significantly less
stocks trading below $10/share - just 884. (Bespoke)"
Source: Barry Ritholtz, The
Big Picture, November 20, 2008.
The Wall Street Journal: Obama likely to pick Fed's Geithner for Treasury
"President-elect Barack Obama is expected to nominate as Treasury Secretary
Timothy Geithner, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and
a figure who has been deeply involved in tackling the financial crisis.
"Mr. Geithner, 47 years old, would be one of the youngest-ever US Treasury
secretaries. His nomination would come as Wall Street is being challenged by
the financial crisis and a Washington power vacuum, and as the world's debt
markets show fresh signs of falling into deeper problems.
"Mr. Obama is expected to introduce his entire economic team on Monday, according
to people familiar with the matter. The president-elect has been under pressure
to speed up his transition as stock markets this past week fell to lows not
seen since the late 1990s.
"Mr. Geithner served as a Treasury attaché in Japan in the 1990s and
later at the International Monetary Fund. He was a protégé of
former Treasury Secretaries Lawrence Summers and Robert Rubin. Mr. Summers,
who was also a potential candidate, instead is expected to take a position
within the White House as an economic adviser.
"Mr. Geithner has spent most of his career managing government responses to
financial crises, from the 1990s bailouts of Mexico, Indonesia and Korea, to
the debt-market meltdown that has brought Wall Street to its knees this year.
"Mr. Geithner (pronounced GYTE-ner) pushed for earlier intervention in the
financial markets to stem the financial crisis, and looks likely to continue
that activist approach in his new job. Among his first priorities could be
a large fiscal-stimulus package.
"Unlike previous picks for Treasury secretary, who hailed from Wall Street,
industry or the Senate, Mr. Geithner has been a technocrat most of his career."
Source: Jonathan Weisman, Deborah Solomon and Jon Hilsenrath, The
Wall Street Journal, November 22, 2008.
The Wall Street Journal: Paulson - we're not experimenting with bailout
"Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson defended the Bush Administration's $700 billion
bailout plan, telling WSJ's Alan Murray he doesn't think he's doing FDR-like
experimentation with liquid assets."

Source: The
Wall Street Journal, November 17, 2008.
CNBC: Bernanke testimony
Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke testifies before the House Financial
Services Committee.

Source: CNBC,
November 18, 2008.
Financial Times: US economy chiefs say policies bear fruit
"The cost of insuring top quality US companies against default hit a record
high on Tuesday even as Hank Paulson and Ben Bernanke told Congress that their
radical policy actions to ease the credit crisis were starting to bear fruit.
"'We have turned the corner in terms of stabilising the system and preventing
collapse,' said Mr Paulson, Treasury secretary. He called for patience, saying:
'There is a lot of work that still needs to be done in terms of recovery of
the financial system.'
"Mr Bernanke said there were 'some signs that credit markets, while still
quite strained, are improving'.
"However, the Federal Reserve chairman noted that 'overall credit conditions
are still far from normal, with risk spreads remaining very elevated'.
"On Tuesday, the CDX index that measures the cost of insuring investment grade
companies against default closed at a record high on mounting concern about
the global economy, and there were fresh signs of dislocation in the swaps
market.
"Meanwhile, indices that measure the value of securities backed by residential
and commercial property loans - which have plunged since Mr Paulson abandoned
his plan to buy toxic assets last week - continued to plumb new depths."
Source: Michael Mackenzie and Krishna Guha, Financial
Times, November 18, 2008.
The Wall Street: Paulson, Summers, Rubin debate crisis
"Current Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and predecessors Lawrence Summers
and Robert Rubin locked horns over the best way to get the US economy back
on track."

Source: The
Wall Street Journal, November 17, 2008.
Bespoke: Paulson trying to rewrite his own history
"Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson spoke at the Reagan Library this afternoon,
and judging by the speech, it appears as though Mr. Paulson is embarking on
a PR campaign to rewrite the history of his handling of the credit crisis.
One line that stood out was when he said: 'By pro-actively addressing the problems
we saw coming ...'
"Judging by excerpts of prior comments the Treasury Secretary made during
2007, if Mr. Paulson saw the problems coming, he wasn't telling anybody.
"Marketwatch 3/13/07:
Paulson also said the fallout in subprime mortgages is 'going to be painful
to some lenders, but it is largely contained.'
"Reuters 4/20/07:
'I don't see (subprime mortgage market troubles) imposing a serious problem.
I think it's going to be largely contained.'
"Bloomberg 5/22/07:
Paulson, also speaking to CNBC, said the housing slump was 'largely contained'
and that market's correction was mostly 'behind us.'
"Bloomberg 6/20/07:
Subprime fallout 'will not affect the economy overall.'
"Forbes 7/27/07:
Appearing on CNBC with other members of the Bush administration's economic
team, he again said mortgage industry problems would be 'largely contained.'
"Boston.com 8/1/07:
Paulson added that he did not see anything that caused him to reconsider his
view that the economic damage from the housing correction was 'largely contained.'
"Another classic
line from today was, 'As I assess our current situation, I believe we
have taken the necessary steps to prevent a financial collapse.' Mr. Paulson,
what is it going to take for you to consider this a financial collapse?
"Given that the extent of the credit crisis was underestimated by almost everyone,
you can give Paulson somewhat of a pass for missing it. But to try and rewrite
history through speeches even while the credit crisis is still playing out
is inexcusable."
Source: Bespoke,
November 20, 2008.
Financial Times: Congress reaches an impasse on car bailout
"The US Congress is unable to approve a new emergency loan to the country's
troubled car sector, Democratic leaders said on Thursday.
"Industry chiefs' pleas for aid appeared to backfire after two days of hearings
on Capitol Hill. News of the impasse over one of the hardest-hit sectors of
the US economy came as President George W. Bush agreed to extend unemployment
benefits after US weekly jobless claims hit a 16-year high.
"Harry Reid, Senate majority leader, and Nancy Pelosi, speaker of the House
of Representatives, said there were not enough votes to pass a $25 billion
loan for Detroit that Democrats had advocated. They said car companies had
to be more specific about restructuring.
"The pair gave the big three carmakers - General Motors, Ford and Chrysler
- until December 2 to submit a 'viable' recovery plan, with the prospect of
convening hearings immediately afterwards and possible congressional votes
a week after that.
"The announcement came in spite of last-minute efforts by six Democratic and
Republican senators from car-producing states to reach a deal on a bridging
loan."
Source: Daniel Dombey, Andrew Ward and Bernard Simon, Financial
Times, November 20, 2008.
ABC News: Auto bailout - would be better to burn the money
"Congress is debating cutting the Big Three Autos a check ... something to
tide them over through these tough times. General Motors is bleeding money
... some 2 billion dollars a day. Bail them out or let them go bankrupt? That's
the billion dollar question. And its billions of your money.
"One side says give them money - they're too big to fail, too many jobs will
be lost, the American economy will be hit hard, they need time to get fuel
efficient cars to the market.
"The flip side - let them fail, they brought this on themselves, pouring 25
billion into these failed models is a waste, bankruptcy protections will let
them out of their incredibly expensive labor contracts.
"... David Yermack from NYU Stern Business School chimed in: 'The implications
of this story for Washington policy makers are obvious. Investing in the major
auto companies today would be throwing good money after bad. Many are suggesting
that $25 billion of public money be immediately injected into the auto business
in order to buy time for an even larger bailout to be organized. We would do
better to set this money on fire rather than using it to keep these dying firms
on life support, setting them up for even more money-losing investments in
the future.'"
Source: ABC News, November
17, 2008.
Paul Kedrosky (Infectious Greed): The auto bankruptcy teeter-totter
"GM, for its part, isn't taking this lying down. It has posted a video on YouTube
explaining - okay, propagandizing - the implications of letting it die. Watch
it to see how the straight-to-consumer "Save us!" game is played."

Source: Paul Kedrosky, Infectious
Greed, November 15, 2008.
CNBC: Financial crisis tab already in the trillions
"Given the speed at which the federal government is throwing money at the financial
crisis, the average taxpayer, never mind member of Congress, might not be faulted
for losing track.
"CNBC, however, has been paying very close attention and keeping a running
tally of actual spending as well as the commitments involved.
"Try $4.28 trillion dollars. Not only is it a astronomical amount of money,
it's a complicated cocktail of budgeted dollars, actual spending, guarantees,
loans, swaps and other market mechanisms by the Federal Reserve, the Treasury
and other offices of government taken over roughly the last year, based on
government data and new releases. Strictly speaking, not every cent is directed
as a result of what's called the financial crisis, but it arguably related
to it."

Source: CNBC, November 17, 2008.
Reuters: Financials need at least $1 trillion - analyst
"The US financial system still needs at least $1 trillion to $1.2 trillion
of tangible common equity to restore confidence and improve liquidity in the
credit markets, Friedman Billings Ramsey analyst Paul Miller said.
"Eight financial companies - Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs Group,
Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, AIG, Bank of America Corp and GE Financial - are
in greatest need of capital, he said.
"'Debt or TARP capital is not true capital. Long-term debt financing is not
the solution. Only injections of true tangible common equity will solve the
current crisis,' he said.
"Currently, the US financial system has $37 trillion of debt outstanding,
he noted.
"Combined, these eight companies have roughly $12.2 trillion of assets and
only $406 billion of tangible common capital, or just 3.4%, the analyst said.
"Miller said these institutions need somewhere between $1 trillion and $1.2
trillion of capital to put their balance sheets back on solid ground and begin
to extend credit again, given their dependence on short-term funding and the
illiquid nature of their asset bases."
Source: Reuters,
November 20, 2008.
Mr Mortgage: The great mortgage modification pump
"Reworking loans to make 'payments affordable' without permanently reducing
principal balances is the worst possible thing that can be done because it
ensures the housing and foreclosure crisis will be with us for a long time.
If these programs are widely accepted, housing is a dead asset class indefinitely
...
"This style of modification does not sit well with owners of mortgage securities
either, which make up the bulk of distressed mortgages. This is because deferred
interest, 40-year terms and interest only teaser periods, greatly reduces the
cash flows and lengthens the duration of the security."
Click here for
the full article.
Source: Mr
Mortgage, November 19, 2008.
Credit Suisse: More fiscal action needed to ease crisis
"The US, Europe and Japan are in significant recession, says Giles Keating,
Head of Global Research at Credit Suisse. He explains how the financial crisis
is evolving and why capital injections are needed."

Source: Credit
Suisse, November 12, 2008.
The Wall Street Journal: Discussing the Great Depression
"Dorothy Womble and William Hague survived the Great Depression. They share
their stories of living during that time as children."

Source: The
Wall Street Journal, November 14, 2008.
Reuters: Fed's Hoening - Fed has done "as much as it can"
"Kansas City Federal Reserve President Thomas Hoenig said on Monday the US
central bank has done what it can to buffer the economy through a downturn,
and a painful process of readjustment is likely ahead.
"'The Fed has done about as much as it can do,' he said in an interview on
PBS's Nightly Business Report. Interest rates are already extremely low, he
noted, according to a transcript of the program.
"'We might put it out there, but banks are not able to, given their own capital
constraints, able to lend as aggressively,' he added.
"Hoenig said he was surprised at how quickly economic activity has slowed,
but that a sharp reversal of consumption was clearly a key development.
"'The consumer factor was a major part of the strong slowdown and the actual
entering into the recession,' he said.
"'Part of it is working through the deleveraging,' he said. 'I don't know
of any painless way to rebalance your economy, you have to go through this
adjustment, and we will get through it, but it's not going to be without consequence,'
he added."
Source: Mark Felsenthal, Reuters,
November 17, 2008.
Bloomberg: NABE's Varvares says US recession to extend into 2009
"Chris Varvares, president of Macroeconomic Advisers LLC and president of the
National Association for Business Economics, talks with Bloomberg about the
results of NABE's survey of business economists."

Click here for
the article.
Source: Timothy R. Homan, Bloomberg,
November 17, 2008.
Bloomberg: Nouriel Roubini - "I fear the worst is yet to come"

Source: Bloomberg,
November 20, 2008.
Clusterstock: Roubini - How are we screwed? Let us count the ways
"Nouriel Roubini weighs in with another treatise of doom, this time focused
on consumer spending. He lists 20 reasons consumer spending is headed to hell
in a handbasket, taking the economy down with it. We're short on Prozac, so
we'll summarize only a handful here, and we'll let Nouriel take it away:
"Today's news about October retail sales (-2.8% relative to the previous month
and now down in real terms for five months in a row) confirm what this forum
has been arguing for a while, i.e. that the US has entered its most severe
consumer-led recession in decades. At this rate of free fall in consumption
real GDP growth could be a whopping 5% negative or even worse in Q4 of 2008.
And this is not a temporary phenomenon as almost all of the fundamentals driving
consumption are heading south on a persistent and structural basis ..."
Click here for
the article.
Source: Henry Blodget, Clusterstock,
November 15, 2008.
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): What is the Fed's next move?
"The minutes of the October 28 to 29 FOMC meeting were published this afternoon
[Wednesday]. The main thrust of these minutes is that economic growth is the
topmost concern. The minutes noted that 'members also saw the substantial downside
risks to growth as supporting a relatively large policy move at this meeting,
though even after today's 50 basis point action, the Committee judged that
downside risks to growth would remain. Members anticipated that economic data
over the upcoming intermeeting period would show significant weakness in economic
activity, and some suggested that additional policy easing could well be appropriate
at future meetings.'
"The target rate was lowered to 1.0% on October 29, with the effective rate
trading between 22 bps and 37 bps since then. Is there a benefit to lowering
the Federal funds rate? A lower Federal funds rate, as suggested in the minutes
of the October 28-29 meeting, would only accomplish validating the already
low effective Federal funds rate. It is possible the Fed could cut the Federal
funds rate and abandon attempting to manage the effective rate such that it
trades close to the target rate. It appears that the Fed may be considering
the possibility of a zero federal funds eventually, if economic conditions
warrant it."

Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust
- Daily Global Commentary, November 19, 2008.
Bloomberg: Fed to cut rates to zero on deflation risk, JPMorgan predicts
"The US Federal Reserve will probably cut interest rates to zero percent over
the next two months to staunch deflation, according to JPMorgan Chase.
"The Fed will lower borrowing costs by 50 basis points at each of the next
two policy meetings on December 16 and January 28, JPMorgan economist Michael
Feroli wrote in a note to investors yesterday. The central bank will hold rates
at zero for the rest of 2009 to prevent prices from spiraling down as companies
cut jobs and banks reduce lending, stifling spending, Feroli said.
"The Fed may not be the only central bank to begin offering free money to
jolt life into their recessionary economies and keep prices rising as the 15-month
credit crisis deepens. The Bank of Japan cut its benchmark rate to 0.3% last
month, and the European Central Bank has signaled it's ready to lower rates
further after two reductions in the past six weeks.
"'Taking the target rate to zero percent would not be costless for the Fed,'
Feroli said. Public confidence may drop 'if there is a perception that the
Fed has run out of ammo'."
Source: Jason Clenfield, Bloomberg,
November 20, 2008.
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Leading index points to further weakening
of economy
"The Conference Board's Index of Leading Economic Indicators (LEI) dropped
0.8% in October after a revised 0.1% increase in September. The LEI has dropped
in four of the last six months. On a year-to-year basis, the LEI has dropped
3.5%, the largest monthly decline for the current cycle.

"The LEI has sent a reliable warning of weakening economic conditions for
all recessions since 1960, with the exception of the 1967 dip (the economy
was weak in this period but it was not a recession)."
Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust
- Daily Global Commentary, November 20, 2008.
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Industrial production is significantly
weak
"The headline industrial production index rose 1.3% in October, after a 3.7%
drop in September. The September estimate now shows a larger drop than the
original estimate of a 2.8% decline due to revised estimates of the impact
of Hurricanes Gustav and Ike on the chemical industry. According to the Fed,
excluding the special factors of hurricanes and Boeing strike, industrial production
dropped 2/3 percent in both September and October."

Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust
- Daily Global Commentary, November 17, 2008.
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Decline in housing starts stress persistence
of housing turmoil
"Total housing starts dropped 4.5% to an annual rate of 791,000 in October,
reflecting a decline in starts of both multi-family and single-family units.
These numbers along with the record low of the Housing Market Index of the
National Association of Home Builders in November imply that the bottom of
housing starts is not here yet."

Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust
- Daily Global Commentary, November 19, 2008.
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Housing market update - grim news bolsters
Sheila Bair's plan to stem the crisis
"The grim housing market news continues to support opinions that the mortgage
problem is the key to a resolution of the current financial market crisis.
The crux of the issue is that falling home prices, foreclosures, and rising
inventories need to be replaced by more stable conditions for the economy to
turnaround. The National Association of Home Builders reported in the November
survey that the Housing Market Index fell to 9.0 from 14.0 in October to establish
a new record."

Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust
- Daily Global Commentary, November 18, 2008.
Continue to
Part II
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