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One of the definitions of "stress" offered by the Merriam-Webster dictionary
is "bodily or mental tension resulting from factors that tend to alter an existent
equilibrium". Well, any bodily or mental tension investors might have been
suffering from as a result of financial factors were shrugged off on Thursday
with the announcement by US regulators that ten of the nation's largest banks
had to add a total of "only" $74.6 billion in equity following the completion
of stress tests. However, whether this will indeed restore the equilibrium
remains to be seen.

Source: Walt
Handelsman
The diagram below, courtesy of the Financial
Times, summarizes the stress test results in a nutshell. Click here or
on the image below for a larger graphic.

Source: Financial
Times
As investors welcomed the less-than-feared stress-test results and their hopes
for an early economic recovery mounted, they drove up the prices of risky assets
such as equities, oil and commodities, precious metals, emerging-market bonds
and currencies, and high-yielding corporate bonds. On the other hand, traditional
safe havens like developed-market government bonds and the US dollar experienced
selling pressure.
With investors' confidence being buoyed up, the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX)
declined by 9.2% during the week to 32.1 - a far cry from more than 80 in October
and a sign that markets are returning to more normal behavior.
The performance of the major asset classes is summarized by the chart below.

Source: StockCharts.com
Marking nine straight weeks of gains, the MSCI World Index surged by 6.4%
(YTD +3.6%) on the week, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index by 9.4% (YTD +27.9%)
and the S&P 500 Index by 5.9% (YTD +2.9%). Serving as a reminder of the
severity of the bear market, these indices are still down by 43.3%, 45.8% and
40.6% respectively since the October 2007 bull market highs.
With the exception of the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the UK FTSE 100
Index, most major global stock markets have now moved into positive territory
for the year to date.
Click here or
on the table below for a larger image.

Returns around the world ranged from top performers Ukraine (+20.5%), Serbia
(+20.0%), Kazakhstan (+19.4%), Peru (+17.9%) and Singapore (+16.6%) to Barbados
(-4.1%), Slovakia (-2.3%), Bangladesh (-2.0%), Pakistan (-1.0%) and Tunisia
(-0.9%) which experienced headwinds. (Click here to
access a complete list of global stock market movements, as supplied by Emerginvest.)
With only a handful of US companies still to report first-quarter earnings,
62% of the companies that have reported have beaten analysts' earnings expectations.
According to Bespoke,
this earnings season will be the first quarter-over-quarter increase in the "beat
rate" since the third quarter of 2006. "When the 'beat rate' started to decline
in 2007, it was definitely a warning signal for the market, and this quarter's
increase is hopefully the start of a new positive trend. As long as analysts
remain behind the curve, and companies exceed expectations, stocks will have
a solid foundation to build on," said Bespoke.

Source: Bespoke
As far as leadership since the start of the nine-week-old rally is concerned,
the surging Financial SPDR (XLF) is by far the top performer among the economic
sector exchange-traded funds (ETFs). Interestingly, cyclical sectors such as
the Industrial SPDR (XLI), Consumer Discretionary SPDR (XLY) and Materials
SPDR (XLB) all outperformed the S&P 500, whereas the traditional defensive
sectors like Consumer Staples SPDR (XLP), Health Care SPDR (XLV) and Utilities
SPDR (XLU) all lagged the broader market. This is the type of pattern one would
expect typically to emerge during a market base formation development.

Source: StockCharts.com
John Nyaradi (Wall Street
Sector Selector) reports that the strongest ETFs on the week were KBW
Bank (KBE) (+34.8%), PowerShares FTSE RAFI Financial (PRFF) (+30.6%) and
Rydex S&P Equal Weight Financial (RYF) (+26.5%). On the other end of
the performance scale ProShares Short Financial (SEF) (-15.9%), iShares Goldman
Sachs Semiconductor (IGW) (?4.0%) and Vanguard Extended Duration Treasury
(EDV) (-3.3%) were underwater.
On the credit front, the TED spread (i.e. three-month dollar LIBOR less three-month
Treasury Bills - a measure of perceived credit risk in the economy) narrowed
by 10 basis points during the past week. Since the TED spread's peak of 4.65%
on October 10 the measure has eased to an 11-month low of 0.76% - still well
above the 38-point spread it averaged in the 12 months prior to the start of
the crisis, but nevertheless a strong move in the right direction.

Source: Fullermoney
Also, the cost of buying credit insurance for US and European companies eased
sharply during last week's trading, as shown by the narrower spreads for both
the CDX (North American, investment-grade) Index (down from 163 to 143) and
the Markit iTraxx Europe Index (down from 139 to 124).
CDX (North America, investment-grade) Index

Source: Markit
Two important trend reversals deserve mention, namely US 10-year Treasury
Notes having breached their key 200-day moving average, and likewise the US
dollar. Treasuries fell out of favor as a result of a poorly received $14 billion
auction of 30-year bonds on Thursday, with 10-year Notes and 30-year Bonds
rising to 3.29% (+17 bps) and 4.27% (+23 bps) respectively on the week. As
massive issuance overhangs the sovereign bond market, investors speculated
about the Fed's pain threshold for long-term rates. According to Reuters,
PIMCO's Bill Gross said: "In order to maintain a 4% agency mortgage rate, the
Fed will likely have to step up its daily purchases of Treasuries and focus
on the longer end of the curve."

Source: StockCharts.com
As far as the greenback is concerned, Richard Russell (Dow
Theory Letters) said: "I don't think most people understand the importance
of the whole dollar, bond, interest rate syndrome. First, the US is creating
and spending fiat dollars in the trillions. This wild creation of dollars
is putting pressure on the dollar - after all, too much of anything will
dilute its value. Dollar down = bonds down."

Source: StockCharts.com
The quote du jour relates to whether the stress tests were "stressful" enough
and belongs to Barry Ritholtz (The Big Picture),
who remarked: "... the 25-to-1 leverage [Tier 1 capital equal to 4% of risk-weighted
assets] is absurd, as is the worst case scenario of 9.5% unemployment. Odd,
in my opinion, to show such largesse to those very same reckless banks
that caused the entire financial mess."
"Far be it for me to call the stress tests a charade, a dupe, a con game or
an exercise in manipulation - I'll leave that to others, like the Wall
Street Journal, which noted this morning that the banks managed to browbeat
the Fed into accepting much lower capital needs than the tests should have
required. [For example, a decrease in required capital of 48.3% was negotiated
by Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Fifth Third Bancorp and Citigroup when added
together.] The entire exercise is turning out to be one giant joke - and the
laugh is on the taxpayers."
Next, a quick textual analysis of my week's reading. No surprises here, with
the word "banks" dominating the media. Strikingly, "bonds" is increasingly
prominent as investors are becoming more concerned about the rise in government
bond yields. (And after only one week, notice how "swine flu" shines in its
absence.)

Back to the stock market. As shown in the table below, the major US indices
have moved to within spitting distance of the important 200-day moving averages
and the early January highs. On the downside, the levels from where the nascent
rally commenced on March 9 should hold in order for the upward trend to remain
intact.

The Bullish
Percent Index, showing the percentage of S&P 500 constituents that
are currently in bullish mode as a result of point-and-figure buy signals,
has increased from 1.6% in October to 12.8% in March to the current figure
of 74.8% - a positive, albeit short-term overbought, figure.
The number of S&P 500 stocks trading above their respective 200-day moving
averages has increased to 47.8% from almost zero in October. This is a lagging
indicator, but for a primary uptrend to be confirmed the bulk of the index
constituents need to trade above their 200-day averages. (The 50-day reading
is now 91.0% - the highest since October 2006 and calling for at least some
consolidation of the recent gains.)
Adam Hewison of INO.com prepared
a short technical analysis of the S&P 500's most likely direction and important
chart levels. Click here to
access the video presentation.
On the question of whether this is a suckers' rally or the real deal, Société Générale's
co-chief strategist James Montier weighed in on the subject in his latest investment
newsletter (as discussed by FT
Alphaville). He said he didn't have a clue and was therefore buying insurance
to protect on the downside. "Two methods of insurance stand out. Either I could
buy index puts (relatively cheap at the moment) or I could construct individual
short positions," added Montier.
"Be careful about jumping into the stock market with both feet after this
monumental rally. Consider whether or not it would be more appropriate to take
advantage of the run-up to reduce equity exposure," Merrill Lynch's chief North
American economist, David Rosenberg, wrote in his final missive (as reported
by Barron's)
ahead of his previously announced departure from the firm.
Jeremy Grantham's (GMO) take on the
stock market outlook is summarized in his recent quarterly newsletter,
in which he says: "The current stimulus is so extensive globally that surely
it will kick up the economies of at least some of the larger countries, including
the US and China, by late this year or early next year. (This seems about 80%
probable to me, anyway.) Anticipating this, we should expect a stock market
recovery - which normally leads economic recovery by six months, plus or minus
two - sometime between two months ago and, say, August, which the astute reader
will realize implies that this rally may already be it."
In my assessment, and as written in a post last
week, the thawing of credit markets and the return of confidence augur well
for the outlook for equities and provide further evidence that US stock markets
are mapping out a base development formation. The early-January highs and 200-day
moving averages are the next important targets and a break above these levels
would signal the completion of the base formation and a secular bottom (as
has already been seen in leading markets such as China and Brazil). Only then
will the corpse of the bear be put to rest.
Meanwhile, the speed and sheer magnitude of the rally argue for markets to
either consolidate or retrace some of the past nine weeks' gains prior to moving
higher.
For more discussion about the direction of stock markets, also see my recent
posts "Video-o-rama:
Stress tests ad nauseum", "Gold
bullion: Regaining its shine?", "Jeremy
Grantham: The last hurrah and seven lean years", "Parting
thoughts from David Rosenberg", "Technical
talk: Stellar market internals" and "Picture
du Jour: Stock markets - it's all about confidence". (And also make a point
of listening to Donald Coxe's webcast of May 8, which can be accessed from
the sidebar of the Investment
Postcards site.)
Economy
"Global business confidence has taken on a brighter hue in recent weeks. Sentiment
notably improved in the US last week to its best level since early November.
Expectations regarding the outlook six months from now - a good leading indicator
- have risen meaningfully since hitting a record low at the very end of last
year," said the latest Survey of Business Confidence of the World conducted
by Moody's Economy.com.

Source: Moody's Economy.com
Further to the official Chinese Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) reported on
last week, the CLSA China Manufacturing PMI also increased strongly to 50.1
in April from 44.8 in March - any reading over 50 indicates that the manufacturing
sector is growing. "China's government has been extremely successful in stimulating
investment and, combined with a sharp improvement in export orders, this has
pushed the PMI back into positive territory," wrote CLSA's head of economic
research, Eric Fishwick.

Source: EconomPic
Data
Rebecca Wilder (News N Economics)
summarized the global economic picture as follows: "The signs of hope remain
mostly in the soft data - US and China Purchasing Managers surveys posting
consecutive monthly growth - while the hard data - export growth, inflation,
and unemployment - continue to deteriorate. Going forward, the story that 'economies
are declining less quickly' is gaining some momentum. And for some, a turning
point may be on the horizon."
In an article entitled "Green shots or dandelion weeds", John Mauldin (Thoughts
from the Frontline) said: "So many bullish analysts talk about the second
derivative of growth, by which they mean that we are slowing our descent
into recession. But it is not the second derivative that is important. What
is important is that the first derivative, actual growth, return. Until that
time, unemployment will continue to rise, which is going to put pressure
on incomes and consumer spending, and thus corporate profits."
Testimony that the coast is not yet clear came from the European Central Bank
(ECB), cutting its main interest rate by 25 basis points to a record low of
1%, and announcing plans to buy €60 billion of covered bonds (backed by
mortgage or public sector loans.) Across the Channel, the Bank of England (BoE)
kept rates at 0.5% and said it would pump a further £50 billion into
the UK economy by means of "quantitative easing".
Turning to the US, a snapshot of the week's economic data is provided below.
(Click on the dates to see Northern
Trust's assessment of the various data releases.)
May
08, 2009
• April employment report - details point to positive developments
May
07, 2009
• Initial Jobless Claims - leading indicator!
• Productivity - gains in Q1
May
06, 2009
• Challenger Report and ISM Employment Index - more encouraging news about
employment conditions
May
05, 2009
• Bernanke mentions positive factors with caveats
• ISM Non-Manufacturing Survey sends an upbeat signal
May
04, 2009
• Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey - credit conditions have improved
• Pending Home Sales Index posts second consecutive monthly advance
• Public Sector and Non-residential Construction Outlays lift overall
construction spending
Also, almost 21.8% of US homeowners owed more than their properties were worth
as of March 31, Zillow.com said in a report (via Bloomberg).
At the end of the fourth quarter 17.6% of homeowners were underwater, while
14.3% had negative equity three months earlier.
In his testimony before
the Joint Economic Committee in Washington on Tuesday, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke
noted that "the pace of contraction may be slowing ... some tentative signs
that final demand, especially demand by households, may be stabilizing". Although
he expected the economic cycle to bottom out later in 2009, he also added that "a
number of factors are likely to continue to weigh on consumer spending, among
them weak a labor market and the declines in equity and housing wealth that
households have experienced over the past two years".
Jeremy Grantham is not assured of
an enduring recovery and reasoned as follows: "Although the economy is likely
to kick up in the next 12 months (although far from a near certainty), I believe
it is likely that the longer-term health of the economy will be exaggerated.
In time - perhaps a year into the recovery - the economy will slow once again
and stay disappointingly below the standards to which we have become accustomed
over the last several decades.
"... what I'm proposing could be known as a VL recovery (or very long), in
which the stimulus causes a fairly quick but superficial recovery, followed
by a second decline, followed in turn by a long, drawn-out period of sub-normal
growth as the basic underlying economic and financial problems are corrected."
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 |
| May 4 |
10:00 AM |
Construction Spending |
Mar |
0.3% |
-1.7% |
-1.6% |
-1.0% |
| May 4 |
10:00 AM |
Pending Home Sales |
Mar |
3.2% |
0.0% |
0.0% |
2.0% |
| May 5 |
10:00 AM |
ISM Services |
Apr |
43.7 |
43.0 |
42.2 |
40.8 |
| May 6 |
8:15 AM |
ADP Employment Change |
Apr |
-491K |
-620K |
-645K |
-708K |
| May 6 |
10:30 AM |
Crude Inventories |
05/01 |
+605K |
NA |
NA |
+4053K |
| May 7 |
8:30 AM |
Initial Claims |
05/02 |
601K |
620K |
635K |
635K |
| May 7 |
8:30 AM |
Productivity -Preliminary |
Q1 |
0.8% |
0.9% |
0.6% |
-0.6% |
| May 7 |
8:30 AM |
Unit Labor Costs |
Q1 |
3.3% |
2.5% |
2.7% |
5.7% |
| May 7 |
3:00 PM |
Consumer Credit |
Mar |
-$11.1B |
-$1.0B |
-$4.0B |
-$8.1B |
| May 8 |
8:30 AM |
Average Workweek |
Apr |
33.2 |
33.2 |
33.2 |
33.2 |
| May 8 |
8:30 AM |
Hourly Earnings |
Apr |
0.1% |
0.2% |
0.2% |
0.2% |
| May 8 |
8:30 AM |
Non-farm Payrolls |
Apr |
-539K |
-590K |
-600K |
-699K |
| May 8 |
8:30 AM |
Unemployment Rate |
Apr |
8.9% |
8.9% |
8.9% |
8.5% |
| May 8 |
10:00 AM |
Wholesale Inventories |
Mar |
-1.6% |
-0.9% |
-1.0% |
-1.7% |
In addition to a speech on the financial crisis by Fed Chairman Bernanke (Tuesday,
12 May), the US economic highlights for the week include the following: Retail
Sales (Wednesday, 13 May), PPI (Thursday, 14 May) and CPI, Industrial Production
and Michigan Consumer Confidence (Friday, 15 May).
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 financial markets performed
during the past week.

Source: Wall
Street Journal Online, May 8, 2009.
"The best investors are like socialites. They always know where the next party
is going to be held. They arrive early and make sure that they depart well
before the end, leaving the mob to swill the last tasteless dregs. Good money
managers understand that. Investment is all about change and anticipating it," said
The Economist in 1986 (hat tip: Charles
Kirk). Hopefully the "Words from the Wise" reviews will assist Investment
Postcards readers in staying abreast of change in the investment markets.
On Mother's Day,
wishing all the mothers a day that's just as special as you are.
That's the way it looks from Cape Town (where we are enjoying balmy autumn
days).

Source: Tom
Toles
Financial Times: Stress tests show $75 billion buffer needed
"US regulators on Thursday ordered 10 of the nation's largest banks to add
a total of $74.6 billion in equity following the completion of stress tests,
triggering a frenzy of activity as banks lined up to announce capital-raising
plans.
"'These tests will help ensure that banks have a sufficient capital cushion
to continue lending in a more adverse economic scenario,' Tim Geithner, US
Treasury secretary, said.
"The US authorities said that the tests projected that losses at the top 19
banks over 2009 and 2010 would reach $599 billion if the adverse scenario set
out in the stress test materialised.
"They said that bank operating earnings would absorb $363 billion of these
losses under the stress scenario. They estimated that 10 of the 19 top banks
would need a further $74.6 billion in equity to be sufficiently well capitalised
at the end of 2010 to cope with potential losses beyond that period.
"The regulators put the additional equity need at a much higher $185 billion
at the end of 2008, but said that actions taken by the banks subsequently had
reduced that amount by $110 billion.
"The long-awaited publication of the test results, which came after days of
tense discussions between regulators and the banks, prompted a flurry of activity
among lenders with Bank of America, which was found to have the biggest capital
shortfall at $33.9 billion, announcing plans to raise $17 billion in equity.
BofA said that it would add equity through a share sale and the conversion
of preferred shares held by non-government investors. It also plans to raise
the money through earnings and the possible sale of assets, including asset
manager Columbia Management and First Republic Bank.
"Wells Fargo, which needs to plug a gap of $13.7 billion, launched a $6 billion
equity issuance, while Morgan Stanley said that it would sell $2 billion in
shares and $3 billion in non-government-backed debt to fill its $1.8 billion
capital requirement. Citigroup, which needs $5.5 billion in additional equity,
said that it would expand an existing offer to convert preferred shares.
"The stress tests could force the government to gain a large stake in a number
of regional banks such as SunTrust, KeyCorp and Regions which might have to
ask the government to convert its preferred shares into common stock unless
they manage to sell enough shares to investors to meet the tests' requirements."
Click here or
on the image below for a larger graphic.

Source: Krishna Guha, Francesco Guerrera and Alan Rappeport, Financial
Times, May 8, 2009.
CNBC: Ken Lewis speaks about stress tests
"The government's assessment is aggressive but Bank of America will raise the
equity needed, says Kenneth Lewis, Bank of America CEO."
Source: CNBC,
May 8, 2009.
CNBC: Is the US doing the right thing with banks?
"A decade ago, Asia was told to tighten their belts and not to bailout their
banks. Nouriel Roubini, co-founder and chairman at RGE Monitor, also known
as Dr. Doom, tells CNBC's Martin Soong, that now, the US is doing the complete
opposite."
Source: CNBC,
May 7, 2009.
MarketWatch: "Goldman Conspiracy" - Bogle's "pathological mutation?"
"No, it'll be a blockbuster because we get a chance to cheer for a new dark
antihero, the infamous Depression era gangster, machine-gun-toting John Dillinger:
Cheer because this new Dillinger is doing what we all secretly want to do -
rip off our corrupt banking system, turn the tables on the guys who have been
ripping us off for too long.
"Dillinger must be the guy former SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt had in mind when
he told Fortune: 'America's investors have been ripped off as massively as
a bank being held up by a guy with a gun and a mask.' That was the last recession.
Today, it's a heck of a lot worse in the 'Great Recession': Bad banks, financial
weapons of mass destruction, AK-47 derivatives.
"Yes, this time the banks are the gangsters. They're robbing Main Street's
Treasury. And it's an inside job. Hank Paulson, the 'Goldman Conspiracy's'
Trojan Horse, plays a 'Dillinger', leading a much bigger conspiracy, the 'Happy
Conspiracy', that robbed America's 300 million citizens and taxpayers. They
made off with trillions, while our 'guards', a clueless Congress, laid down
their guns and surrendered the keys to the vault.
"The 'Happy Conspiracy?' Yes, that's what Vanguard founder Jack Bogle calls
Wall Street in his bestseller, 'The Battle for the Soul of Capitalism'. He
sees Wall Street as a 'pathological mutation' of capitalism. Adam Smith's 'invisible
hand' no longer drives 'capitalism in a healthy, positive direction'. Instead,
Bogle sees the invisible hands of this elite 'Happy Conspiracy' running capitalism
to serve its own selfish, greedy agenda.
"'Over the past century, a gradual move from owners' capitalism - providing
the lion's share of the rewards of investment to those who put up the money
and risk their own capital - has culminated in an extreme version of managers'
capitalism - providing vastly disproportionate rewards to those whom we have
trusted to manage our enterprises in the interest of their owners.'
"Today, the 'Goldman Conspiracy' is the visible hand of Bogle's invisible
'Happy Conspiracy' that's 'ripping us off as massively as a bank being held
up by a guy with a gun and a mask'. Except today: No masks, no guns. Congress
just writes blank checks.
"The plot's so hot we read all 1,243 comments, emails and links to related
Web sites, such as goldman666.com, that were posted on our earlier discussion
of this topic.
"What emerged has the makings of what may be the next mega-successful long-running
television series."
Click here for
the full article.
Source: Paul Farrell, MarketWatch,
May 4, 2009.
Charlie Rose: A conversation with Robert Zoellick, President of the World
Bank
Source: Charlie Rose,
May 5, 2009.
Dominic Konstam (Credit Suisse): Is inflation inevitable?
"There is a growing belief in financial markets that uncontrollable inflation
is inevitable, but that view is wrong, argues Dominic Konstam, interest rate
strategist at Credit Suisse.
"Nor are we heading towards a prolonged depression and deflation, he believes.
"'A more plausible scenario is a mildly deflationary middle way with positive
nominal growth. We can think of this as Grandma Goldilocks,' he says.
"This is a reference to the late 1990s, when market conditions were deemed
just right - not too hot and not too cold - because real growth was high, but
inflation low. 'A decade later, Goldilocks may not be quite dead but just a
lot older,' he says.
"Mr Konstam believes growth is likely to be relatively subdued in the next
few years, driven by fiscal stimulus, while real interest rates will remain
high. He believes consumers will be spending less and saving more, exerting
significant downside pressure on inflation. There will be plenty of excess
capacity in the economy. 'The output gap is very large and forewarns of downward
pressure on prices to come,' he says.
"What does this mean for financial markets? 'If we're right, [10-year Treasury]
bond yields aren't going to zero, but they're going to stay low for a while.
We're not going to 4% anytime soon. Stocks may not make new lows and they will
surely be capped to the upside.'"
Source: Dominic Konstam, Credit Suisse (via Financial
Times), April 2009.
Business Week: A conversation with Nouriel Roubini
"One of the most prominent voices of the financial crisis has been Nouriel
Roubini, the New York University economist and chairman of economic consulting
firm RGE Monitor. Credited with predicting the housing and financial crisis
that crescendoed last fall, his outlook has remained consistently bleaker than
those of many other economists, but so far he has often been borne out. As
he is fond of pointing out lately, the International Monetary Fund recently
revised its estimate of global and US bank losses upward to figures similar
to his own.
"I sat down with him (and the Washington Post's national economy correspondent,
Neil Irwin) on Sunday afternoon, to talk about securitization, the Federal
Reserve and the big banks.
"The economy:
"Roubini says he doesn't see much in the way of 'glimmers of hope' other economists
have noted. Unemployment, capital investment, and exports are all worsening,
and while there are a few signs of stability in housing, it's not much. Overall,
he figures, the odds of a prolonged 'L-shaped' depression have fallen to less
than 20%, from about 30%, thanks largely to the efforts of this administration
... He expects global contraction of 2% this year, and expansion of about 0.5%
next year, 'so small it's going to feel like a recession still'.
"Still, he adds: 'I don't worry as much as six months ago about a near depression.'
From the man who has been called Dr. Doom - or, as he prefers, Dr. Realistic
- that's practically cheery.
"On securitization and the TALF:
"While lending has improved somewhat, Roubini doesn't credit the Federal Reserve's
Term Asset-Backed Loan Facility. A 'reasonable idea' in principle, he says,
the funds it has lent to subsidize the purchase of securitized consumer credit
'is too small to make a difference'. Moreover, demand from securitizers has
proven lower than some expected, either because of the fear of complications
from after-the-fact congressional meddling, or because there's simply too little
demand for new lending.
"He does see securitization returning in time, likening the metastasized securitization
state of the pre-crisis market to the junk-bond market's go-go days. 'I don't
think we'll go back to what it was,' he says. But 'now we've gone from too
much to zero'.
"On Ben Bernanke's Federal Reserve:
"After underestimating the depth and impact of the housing slump, mistaking
the subprime crisis as a niche problem, and failing to seek legislation to
dismantle failing banks after Bear Stearns' collapse last spring, the Fed 'has
done a lot right,' Roubini says. 'Now that the stuff has hit the fan, they
have become much more aggressive about doing the right thing.'
"Still, he's not pleased with the Fed's role as a back-door financier for
the rescue effort. It's understandable that the government has turned to the
Fed, since early missteps led the public to see the effort as a bail-out of
Wall Street bankers, which in turn has left Congress unwilling to open the
purse strings. Still, using the Fed is 'a way of bypassing Congress', Roubini
says. 'I don't think it's a proper process. In a democracy, if you have a fiscal
cost, you should do it the right way.'"
Click here for
the full article.
Source: Business
Week, April 27, 2009.
Financial Times: Bernanke expects gradual recovery
"Fed chairman says economy is on track for a recovery later this year, but
the pickup is likely to be sluggish and the jobless rate is likely to rise
further."

Source: Financial Times, May
6, 2009.
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Bernanke mentions positive factors with
caveats
"Chairman Bernanke's testimony at the Joint Economic Committee noted that 'the
pace of contraction may be slowing, and they include some tentative signs that
final demand, especially demand by households, may be stabilizing'. This is
good news, but he also added that 'a number of factors are likely to continue
to weigh on consumer spending, among them weak labor market and the declines
in equity and housing wealth that households have experienced over the past
two years'.
"In his opinion, the housing market indicators are suggesting that a trough
has been established. The news from the business sector is less encouraging
compared with the housing market and household sector. The latest data point
to severely weak capital spending and a massive liquidation of inventories.
However, the latest factory surveys indicate that although activity is still
declining, the pace had moderated noticeably in April compared with the past
seven months.
"Bernanke also noted that the Fed expects economic activity to bottom out
later in the year, assuming that financial conditions continue to mend. In
this context, the Chairman remarked that 'a relapse in financial conditions
would be a drag on economic activity and could cause the incipient recovery
to stall'. Supportive of Bernanke's optimism, the 3-month Libor has edged below
1.00% as of this writing."

Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust
- Daily Global Commentary, May 5, 2009.
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Initial jobless claims - leading indicator
"Initial jobless claims fell 34,000 to 601,000 for the week ended May 2, the
fourth weekly decline in the past five weeks. The peak for initial claims appears
to have occurred during the week ended March 28 (674,000). The four-week moving
average is down 35,250 to 623,500 from the peak on April 4, 2009. These are
noteworthy numbers because initial jobless claims are part of the Index of
Leading Economic Indicators which forewarn about economic conditions.
"Continuing claims, which lag initial claims by one week, moved up 56,000
to 6.351 million, a new record high; and the insured unemployment rate rose
to 4.8% from 4.7% in the prior week. The mixed news from initial jobless claims
and continuing claims is typical at turning points of a business cycle because
initial jobless claims have peaked well ahead of continuing claims.
"We will be tracking jobless claims data closely in the weeks ahead as there
is strong signal that the turning point of the business cycle is around the
corner."

Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust
- Daily Global Commentary, May 7, 2009.
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Employment details point to positive developments
"The Civilian Unemployment Rate:8.9% in April versus 8.5% in March,
cycle low is 4.4% in March 2007.
"Payroll Employment:-539,000 in April versus -699,000 in March, net
loss of 66,000 jobs after revisions of payroll estimates for February and March.
"Hourly earnings:+1 cents to $18.51, 3.18% yoy change versus 3.4% yoy
change in March, cycle high is 4.28% yoy change in Dec. 2006.
"The civilian unemployment rate rose to 8.9% in April, the highest since September
of 1983. The participation rate increased to 65.8% from 65.5%. The sharp increase
in unemployment rate is troubling and it is projected to shoot up to 10% by
year-end.
"Nonfarm payrolls fell 539,000 in April, following a 699,000 drop in March.
Since December 2007, the date of the official onset of the current recession,
5.7 million payroll jobs have been lost. The headline number in April was more
muted compared with March partly due to increase in federal government employment
(+related to Census 2010). Private sector employment fell 611,000 in April
versus a loss of 693,000 private sector jobs in March. As shown in the chart,
the pace of decline in non-farm employment was significantly smaller in April
compared with the prior five-month period.

"... the underlying details strongly support the view that hiring is stabilizing
gradually. The Fed is on hold for the rest of the year given the nature of
underlying weakness in economic conditions."
Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust
- Daily Global Commentary, May 8, 2009.
CNBC: Bond king on banks and jobs
"Weighing in on what the bank stress tests and the jobs numbers indicate for
the economy and markets, with Bill Gross, Pimco founder/co-chief investment
officer."
Source: CNBC,
May 8, 2009.
Casey's Charts: Are the green shoots for real? Watch part-time workers
"Since the fall of 2007, the number of employees forced to work part-time due
to the economic slowdown has doubled to over nine million people - that's two
million more than at any time in 54 years of collecting the data. You can see
the spike in the chart above.
"You can also see a close correlation between the start of a recession and
a sharp shift to using part-time workers. And, conversely, that when an economy
recovers, the use of part-time workers falls off quickly.
"Lesson of the day? This is one of the few reliable indicators of an economic
turnaround ... watch it closely. Until you see a distinct reversal in the indicator,
ignore the government's happy talk of green shoots and continue to rig for
stormy economic weather."

Source: Casey's
Charts, May 6, 2009.
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): ISM Non-Manufacturing Survey sends an
upbeat signal
"The ISM non-manufacturing survey report for April contained several noteworthy
aspects. First, the composite index (average of new orders, business activity,
employment, and supplier deliveries indexes) moved up to 43.7 in April from
40.8 in March, which is the highest level since October 2008. Second, the index
tracking new orders rose 8.2 points to 47.0, the highest since September 2008.
Third, with exception of supplier deliveries, all the sub-indexes advanced
in April.
"Effectively, the ISM surveys of the factory and service sectors send a message
of improving activity. Readings above 50.0, denoting an expansion of activity,
are probably not too far away."

Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust
- Daily Global Commentary, May 5, 2009.
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Pending Home Sales Index post second consecutive
monthly advance
"The Pending Home Sales Index (PHSI) of the National Association of Realtors
increased to 84.6 in March from 82.0 in February, marking the third monthly
increase in the last four months. According to National Association of Realtors,
the PHSI leads sales of existing homes by 1-2 months. Sales of existing homes
declined slightly in March. However, based on the latest readings of the PHSI,
it should not be surprising to see a rebound in sales of homes in April and
May, particularly given the downward trend of mortgage rates in recent weeks."

Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust
- Daily Global Commentary, May 4, 2009.
Eoin Treacy (Fullermoney): Mortgage resets already discounted in house
prices?
"The schedule of resets for Option ARM mortgages is looming and is being viewed
by pundits as a massive overhang which will continue to put downward pressure
on the market until well into 2011. However, what if this is already in the
market?
"No one paid much attention to the subprime reset schedule until it became
apparent that subprime was indeed infecting the prime market and foreclosures
were rising across the board. The Option ARM schedule has been well publicized
and those under pressure from mortgages they cannot afford are already being
included in foreclosure figures.
"In a no-recourse mortgage market, unique to the USA as far as I know, one
would expect the pace of house price declines to be swift because large numbers
of homeowners can opt to give back the keys and walk away. Sentiment is understandably
abysmal and as in other markets this is bound to be affecting decisions about
when to sell.
"If a significant portion of the Option-ARM and Alt-A overhang is already
in the price, then the housing market has the potential to bottom earlier than
many expect. This does not mean that prices are set to rebound to levels seen
in 2006 and 2007, but it does suggest that base formation could get underway
sooner. Since affordability is now at such a high level and such vast sums
are being pumped into almost every economy in the world, the potential for
house prices to stop falling has risen considerably.
"House data comes out with a substantial lag so whenever a bottom does begin
to develop it will not be apparent for a number of months in housing indices.
Anecdotal evidence is more likely to give a lead indicator than published data."
Source: Eoin Treacy, Fullermoney,
May 8, 2009.
Bloomberg: Almost one quarter of US homeowners underwater as values sink
"A growing number of US homeowners owe more than their properties are worth
after prices extended their two-year decline in the first quarter, Zillow.com
said.
"Almost 21.8% of all owners were underwater as of March 31, the Seattle-based
real estate data service said in a report today. At the end of the fourth quarter,
17.6% of homeowners owed more than their original mortgage, while 14.3% had
negative equity three months earlier.
"Property values dropped 14% from a year earlier in the first quarter, reducing
the median value of all US single-family homes, condominiums and cooperatives
to $182,378, Zillow said. The gain in underwater homeowners will lead to more
bank repossessions, the company said.
"Many owners 'would be more willing to bear the financial consequences of
bankruptcy or foreclosure,' Stan Humphries, Zillow's vice president of data
and analytics, said in an interview. 'You are going to continue to see home
prices fall for the rest of this year and some portion of next year.'"
Source: Daniel Taub, Bloomberg,
May 6, 2009.
Zillow: Mortgage rates continue to fall across the board
"The weekly average rate borrowers were quoted on Zillow Mortgage Marketplace
for thirty-year mortgages remained relatively steady last week. Last week's
rate was 5.05%, down slightly from 5.07% the week prior, according to the Zillow
Mortgage Rate Monitor, compiled by real estate Web site Zillow.com®. Meanwhile,
rates for 15-year fixed mortgages fell to 4.70%, down from 4.72% and 5-1 adjustable
rate mortgages decreased significantly, down to 4.30% from 4.38% the week prior."
Source: Zillow, May 5, 2009.
The Wall Street Journal: Banks get tougher on credit line provisions
"Banks are shortening the terms on lines of credit that have long been used
by companies to avoid cash crunches - a sign that while lending is reviving,
businesses are facing new hurdles to obtaining credit.
"These revolving lines of credit typically ran for three or five years and
let companies borrow at low interest rates, in part because they were rarely
drawn upon before the credit crunch. Companies could use the money if they
were cut off from other sources of cash such as the commercial-paper market.
"Now, lenders are cutting the length of many commitments to less than a year.
They are charging higher fees for the lines of credit, known as revolvers.
And instead of promising an interest rate determined mainly by the company's
credit rating, banks will now charge more if the cost of insuring the company's
debt against default is higher.
"The trend, unfolding for months, mirrors what's going on in the rest of the
credit markets: Lending is occurring again following last year's freeze. But
many borrowers are facing tougher terms. As the economy slows, companies are
more likely to need extra cash to keep their businesses running. At the same
time, rising loan defaults are making banks more cautious. Even the strongest
companies must pay more for revolving credit lines, regardless of their plans
to use them.
"The changes mean that corporations will have to renegotiate their credit
lines more frequently. And if their financial condition deteriorates, such
funding could become a lot more expensive and more difficult to secure. Already,
the higher revolver rates are leading some firms to forgo the credit lines
or to issue more long-term bonds if they are able to. Weaker companies are
pledging more assets to banks to get or renew revolvers."
Source: Serena Ng, The
Wall Street Journal, May 4, 2009.
Continue to
Part II
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