Friday, September 07, 2007

"Goldilocks" Reality Check

Maybe yesterdays "surprisingly" (LOL) jobs report is shutting down the folks that are still believing "Goldilocks" is here.......

Evtl. hat ja endlich der gestrige "überraschend" (LOL) schwache Arbeitsmarktbericht den letzten die Augen geöffnet das Ihr optimales Szenario "Goldilocks" ( inflationsfreies Wachstum ) wohl nur ein Wunschtraum bleibt.

I wish everyone a nice weekend

Euch allen ein schönes Wochenende

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Saturday, May 26, 2007

Working Under the Radar / illegal immigrants as a percentage of total jobs

this is a another reason why the official employment data is not showing the real impact of the slowdown in the economy.....

hier ein weiteres beispiel dafür das die offiziellen daten aus den usa nicht annähernd den wirtschaftlichen verlangsamung anzeigen......

Jeffrey S. Passel, a former Census Bureau demographer who works at the Pew Hispanic Center, estimates that more than 7 million of the 12 million illegal immigrants are employed.
They account for nearly 5 percent of the nation’s civilian labor force, with higher shares in some occupations: 29 percent of roofers, 24 percent of agricultural workers and 25 percent of construction laborers.

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Thursday, May 24, 2007

Employment Numbers "Can´t Truss It" / Minyanville

click on the labels to read more about the bogus numbers.......and click on the headline to read the 4 other things you need to know.

mehr zu den unfassbaren ermittlungsmethoden des us arbeitministeriums unter den labeln...klickt bitte auf die überschrift um mehr von minyanville zu lesen.

Can't Truss It
So here's a song to the strong 'bout a shake of a snake, and the smile went along wit dat, can't truss it, according to Public Enemy and (finally!) the Wall Street Journal this morning.
  • All the way back in 1991 Chuck D warned us that we can't truss it.

  • Now, 16 years later, the Wall Street Journal is wondering if Chuck D was right.
    How is it, the Journal asks, that job growth remains robust even as the economy has slowed, especially relative to the housing industry?

  • Housing starts in April fell 33% from their recent peak in January 2006, the Journal notes, yet the number of residential-construction jobs has dropped by only about 3% over the same period.

  • After surveying a handful of economists, the Journal concludes that this must be because 1) layoffs have lagged the housing slump and the worst is yet to come, 2) the Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics is overestimating employment, or 3) the BLS isn't registering job losses by illegal immigrants.

  • Well bass in our face! Can't truss it.

  • Like Chuck D we got a story that's harder than hardcore and one that, as incredible as it is to believe, wasn't even mentioned in the Journal story.

  • The BLS's use of the Birth/Death model. Can't truss it.
    How a story about the economy slowing in the face of "robust job growth" can not mention even once the Birth/Death model is beyond us, but what are you gonna do? Ya can't truss it.

  • U.S. job growth in April slowed to 88,000, but you can't truss it, because the Birth/Death model contributed 317,000 adds to those 88,000 jobs.

  • Since the beginning of the year, the birth/death model has accounted for a net 388,000 jobs. Can't truss it.

  • Last year it added 964,000 jobs. Can't truss it.

  • We want to believe, of course.

  • But because the Bureau of Labor Statistics refuses to allow academics and commercial economists access to the models they use for the birth/death additions, we'll stick to our song to the strong 'bout a shake of a snake, and the smile went along wit dat, can't truss it.

maybe the bls should hire this crew....

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Friday, May 04, 2007

employment report april 2007

88.000.....plus downward revisions.......plus , plus, plus......

just one or two comments on the jobs report. the bls has assumed that in the year 2006 271.000 jobs were created via the "birth death model".

mhhh, now with gdp significantly lower and the economy clearly weakening they come to the conclusion that 317.000 were added. (especially the plus 12k in construction....)

this shows the problem with the model that isn´t able to adjust timely to swings in the economy. i think we will see a big downward revision in the future.

read more about this from barry ritholtz http://tinyurl.com/3bzw5n

so langsam machen die daten zumindest in etwa sinn. eine ausnahme ist allerdings das via dem birth/death model ein höherer ansteig als im jahr 2006 unterstellt wird. da inzwischen die us wirtschaft klar im trend gen süden geht werden hier noch gewaltige revisionen nach unten erfolgen. lest bitte unbedingt die erläuterungen zu dieser "eigenwilligen" ermittlung der daten von kevin depew....

2007 Net Birth/Death Adjustment (in thousands)
SupersectorJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec

Natural Resources & Mining

-2112

Construction

-52112749

Manufacturing

-23363

Trade, Transportation, & Utilities

-29101930

Information

-9507

Financial Activities

-1711826

Professional & Business Services

-48282144

Education & Health Services

1012147

Leisure & Hospitality

1343995

Other Services

-63614

Total

-175118128317

birth/death model http://www.bls.gov/web/cesbd.htm


thanks to http://www.glasbergen.com/

this comment from kevin depew (s.link mish) sums it up......

  • According to Minyanville Professor Scott Reamer, since 1999 there has been only one other month in which the add was bigger, January 2004.

  • For some perspective, in the 36 month period ending March 2002 - 36 months - the total adds from the birth/death model were 353,000. Over 36 months.

  • Since the beginning of the year, the birth/death model has accounted for a net 388,000 jobs.

  • Last year it added 964,000 jobs.

  • The kicker is that the Bureau of Labor Statistics refuses to allow academics and commercial economists access to the models they use for the birth/death additions.

from the bls:

"The most significant potential drawback to this or any model-based approach is that time series modeling assumes a predictable continuation of historical patterns and relationships and therefore is likely to have some difficulty producing reliable estimates at economic turning points or during periods when there are sudden changes in trend"

and times are changing.........

and the government contributed almost 30% with 25k new jobs..........

es sei am rande noch erwähnt das "vadder staat" satte 30% aller jobs selber geschaffen hat (25.000).....

Nonfarm employment....... p88

Government .......... p25

Goods-producing (1).... p-28

Construction ........ p-11

Manufacturing ....... p-19

Service-providing (1).. p116

Retail trade (2)..... p-26.....

here are more details http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.nr0.htm

no way to spin this............very very weak .....especially with the 26.000 revision for the previous two months....

keine chance das als gute zahlen hinzustellen...extrem schwach...besonders mit den 26.000 revision der vormonate

via barry ritholtz http://tinyurl.com/2kot89

• BLS continues to understate the unemployment rate, as it has been doing for most of the past 6 years, by reducing the ‘pool of available workers’. BLS reduced the labor force by 392,000 in April. This kept the Unemployment Rate from jumping higher than 4.5%. The ‘participation rate’ declined to 66% from 66.3%, which is an unusually large monthly decline. That's 0.3% times 143 million or so workers -- instead of rasisng the unemployment rate, we lower the labor participation rate by 429,000 workers.

here are the takes from

tim http://tinyurl.com/3b59r5

barry http://tinyurl.com/37p4ot

the street light http://tinyurl.com/2v3ubf

calculated risk http://tinyurl.com/39ywwf

mish/minyanville http://tinyurl.com/2xqszz

housing doom http://tinyurl.com/2w52ns

mish http://tinyurl.com/2d57u3 (must read)!

disclosure: chapman and dylan fan :-)

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Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Still Renting / PIMCO / Hall of Fame

once more excellent stuff from pimco. mark kiesel was right in the past and it his current outlook seems aslo be spot on.
einmal mehr eine tolly analyse von pimco. mark kiesel war einer der wenigen die in der vergangenheit richtig lagen und ich denke auch seine aktuelle beschreibung trifft ziemlich genau zu.


One question my friends and colleagues have asked me repeatedly over the past six months is: Are you still renting? Yes! I sold my house over a year ago and continue to rent.

Back in late 2005, I became anxious about my investment in the “American Dream,” after spending a considerable amount of time and effort researching several factors that I felt would influence housing prices. At the time, I was nervous about housing and ended up selling my house in early 2006 after owning for eight years, and then, upon closing, published For Sale, our U.S. Credit Perspectives, June 2006 publication. A year ago, I suspected housing prices were set to take a sharp turn for the worse and more “For Sale” signs were coming.


Based on the current outlook for housing, I will likely be renting for one to two more years. While many factors that influence housing prices have turned negative, I suspect we have not yet hit bottom. In fact, housing prices should head lower throughout the rest of this year and next year as well. Why? Housing inventories remain high, delinquencies and foreclosures are set to rise as homes purchased over the past few years by speculators and individuals with teaser-rate and adjustable-rate mortgages come back on to the market, affordability is low, and sentiment and risk appetite has shifted negatively. Most importantly, the availability of credit is set to take a turn for the worse as lenders tighten credit standards.


This is all great news for renters and buyers who are patient. Over time, housing prices and interest rates should decline, resulting in improved affordability. This adjustment, however, will take time and occur over a period of years, not months. Housing is illiquid and prices are sticky. As a result, potential buyers should exercise patience and not jump back into the housing market too early. A year ago, I described the state of the U.S. housing market as “the next NASDAQ bubble.” The NASDAQ took over 2 ½ years to go from peak to trough. I suspect that housing prices could display a similar pattern, and we are still over a year away from the bottom. Given these risks, I prefer renting versus owning, and an investment strategy which favors defense versus offense.

Unwinding the Housing Bubble
Housing was an asset bubble influenced by bullish sentiment, robust risk appetite and speculation, lack of fundamental analysis, cheap money, inflated appraisals and easy lending standards. These factors helped to drive housing prices up to new levels and the unwinding of these conditions is expected to drive housing prices down. Never before have we witnessed so many people lever-up real estate with so little money down or “skin in the game.” This growth in mortgage debt and risk appetite helped fuel consumer spending and corporate profits. As such, the unwinding of this bubble will have broad consequences for the overall economy.
As the housing bubble unwinds, what are the implications for the overall economy and credit spreads? The U.S. economy will likely experience sub-par economic growth for the next year as declining housing prices lead to weaker consumer spending, slower corporate profit growth, a decline in business investment and less job creation. This environment favors reducing credit risk, especially to cyclical industries and lower-quality sectors of the market. As lending standards tighten and risk appetite turns more conservative, housing prices are likely to face a further leg down.

What’s the big picture? Declining housing prices will lead to a pullback in job creation and a sharp slowdown in corporate profit growth, causing the Fed to lower short-term interest rates by the end of this year. Despite lower short-term rates, mortgage rates may not follow downward, because more cautious lenders will charge higher spreads relative to Treasuries. In addition, credit spreads should widen as consumers rein in their risk appetite for housing and investors turn more cautious on the outlook for the U.S. economy. We will now turn to an analysis of the supply and demand factors influencing housing. These factors should help to illuminate the future path of housing prices over the next year.

Inventory
On the supply side, the inventory of new and existing homes available for sale remains near all-time highs (Chart 1). The homebuilder industry helped contribute to today’s record inventories through its bullish sentiment and aggressive land purchases over the past several years. Unfortunately, homebuilders have little incentive to stop building once they have purchased land for development. In hindsight, homebuilders bought too many lots over the past few years, expecting that the run-up in land prices would continue for several more years. Given that undeveloped land is less valuable than developed land, homebuilders went through the process of getting zoning approvals on their land and started the build-out process in order to monetize their investments.

Even when prices appeared to have peaked over a year ago, homebuilders continued to commit to new developments and communities. Meanwhile, even in the face of large discounts and concessions, housing order rates have fallen more precipitously than most expected, resulting in inventories remaining stubbornly high. Undeveloped land cannot be monetized without a completed home. The cost of carry, including completion guarantees, provides strong incentives for builders to keep building. Unfortunately, housing is like a supertanker, which takes time to slow down. In addition, homebuilders have little incentive to stop building when a home is incomplete, even if economic conditions soften. All of these factors help to ensure that once projects are started, they are completed, and also help to explain why homebuilders’ inventories have remained elevated despite aggressive incentives such as –10% to –15% price discounts.

The housing market faces potential new supply from other sources as well. First, a large portion of incremental housing demand over the past several years has come from speculators and investors. With housing prices now falling in most of the markets where speculative activity was strongest, yesterday’s marginal buyer is becoming today’s marginal seller. Not surprisingly, the inventories in highly speculative regions such as Florida, California, Phoenix and Las Vegas, have risen sharply. In some of these over-heated markets, supply represents several years of demand. Not surprisingly, homeowner vacancies are soaring (Chart 2). This trend may even accelerate as recent speculators with low initial equity, and negative future equity, choose to walk away from paying monthly mortgage payments on a losing investment, especially factoring in the cost of 4-5% real estate commissions.

Another source of new supply will likely come from rising delinquencies which will eventually turn into more foreclosures. A growing segment of recent homebuyers have bought homes using teaser-rate, adjustable-rate, and no-money-down or low-money-down mortgages. As adjustable-rate mortgages reset upward, the housing market will likely see increased foreclosures involving individuals who can’t afford the new reset rate on their mortgage. The total inventory of homes in foreclosure has risen to 437,041 homes, a +39% increase over the past year.1 The problem is not only in the subprime category, as delinquencies for both prime and subprime loans are rising (Chart 3).

In fact, the market’s primary focus on subprime ignores a major issue, which is that Alt-A and prime borrowers will also face “sticker shock” when adjustable-rate mortgages reset upward. Lehman Brothers estimates $421 billion of ARMs will reset in 2007 ($308 billion subprime and $113 billion prime) and $542 billion of ARMs will reset in 2008 ($349 billion subprime and $193 billion prime).2 Clearly, this is not just a subprime issue, but rather an ARM reset issue as both subprime and prime borrowers potentially are forced to put homes back on the market with almost $1 trillion of ARMs resetting over the next two years. What impact will this have on housing? According to a study published last month by First American CoreLogic, a total of 1.1 million foreclosures with losses of about $112 billion will occur over a period of six years or more with roughly 500,000 homes going into foreclosure over the next two years.3


Rising foreclosures will result in homes coming back on the market not only at a time when current inventories are near record levels, but also when pent-up demand for housing is low. Easy lending standards and innovations in the mortgage market over the past several years brought forward future housing demand. People who would have qualified for a mortgage in the future were given a mortgage today. Why? Lenders, hungry for yield, relaxed their underwriting standards and provided cheap money. Naturally, consumers took the bait, and levered-up with record low down payments. In fact, 46% of homes purchased in the U.S. last year had less than a 5% down payment.4 Over time, homeowners with little capital at risk and negative home equity will likely walk away from homes under water. For all these reasons, housing inventories are likely to remain high over the next few years.

Affordability and Risk Appetite
On the demand side, housing affordability remains near 20-year lows due to a sharp run-up in housing prices (Chart 4). While mortgage rates have come down slightly over the past few quarters, housing remains unaffordable for a large group of new potential buyers. This buyers’ strike will continue until prices fall and/or mortgage rates decline. Given that homebuilders can’t control the absolute level of mortgage rates, we should expect buying incentives to remain elevated over the next several quarters. Given the strong incentives for buying a new home, owners of existing homes who are forced to sell will likely be forced to lower their asking prices.
We know from the NASDAQ bubble that once risk appetite changes, prices can shift violently in the other direction. Housing is different from equities because it is much less liquid; therefore price adjustments take more time. In a down housing market, the gap between buyers and sellers widens, and volumes fall. Buyers pull back and sellers take time to realize their listing prices are too high. Eventually, housing prices in entire neighborhoods will get reset downward by the weakest hand. Just as prices went up and everyone in the neighborhood applauded the newest neighbor who bought at the top, prices will likely start to fall as financially-stretched home owners and speculators sell, and are forced out of the market. As this process unfolds, risk appetite for housing should take a sharp turn for the worse. This year’s weak start to the traditionally strong spring selling season suggests we have indeed entered the “buyer’s strike” phase of the cycle.

Credit Availability, Lending Standards and Appraisals
A major headwind for housing in the near future will be more restrictive credit availability. Lenders are already increasingly asking for income verification and higher down payments. Countrywide changed their no down-payment lending policy last month, and is now requiring homeowners to have at least a 5% stake in their homes.5 Other lenders are following Countrywide’s lead, which will result in a smaller pool of potential homebuyers. The threat of increased government regulation and restrictive legislation is likely to cause lenders to reduce offerings of no-documentation loans, and to ensure that adjustable-rate borrowers can qualify at the higher reset rate. This trend will tighten credit availability for potential homebuyers.

As delinquencies and foreclosures rise, lenders will also suffer losses. This should reduce their willingness to take risk and cause credit spreads to widen, particularly for riskier borrowers. As lending standards tighten, less credit will be granted. And, credit that is granted will likely be offered at higher interest rates. In the long run, this will be a positive for the housing market, as only buyers who can afford to buy a house will buy one. However, in the short run, tighter lending standards will cause a reduction in demand for housing, and could cause the home ownership rate to fall. Given the significant increase in projected foreclosures mentioned above, an extended period of credit tightening could materialize.

As we discussed in Credit Innovation and Opportunity, our December 2006 U.S. Credit Perspectives, the mortgage industry’s ability to develop new products that kept initial monthly payments low enabled consumers to buy homes they could not otherwise afford, and was a major factor in driving the home ownership rate up 5% in the last 10 years to today’s level of 69%. With rising delinquencies and foreclosures, the downside of credit innovation will surface and may be met face-to-face with increased regulation. Innovation in the mortgage market, which has provided a huge lift to consumers and housing prices through growth in non-traditional products (Chart 5), is clearly at risk. Consumers will likely shift away from exotic mortgages, resulting in less overall stimulus for the housing market, particularly given the lack of pent-up demand for housing.

Lenders are not the only players in the real estate market who are turning more cautious. Real estate appraisers will also become more conservative in their evaluations of property. Some appraisers, who in hindsight probably inflated appraisals over the past several years, helped contribute to the housing bubble on the way up by helping to get marginal buyers and mortgages approved in order to “make the deal work.” Given heightened regulatory oversight, appraisers will turn more realistic. As lending standards tighten (Chart 6) and appraisals become more conservative, the pool of potential homebuyers will shrink. Why? A major problem in today’s housing market is not only sales to new home owners. The “move up” market, or existing owners who want to sell their current house to buy another house, is basically frozen. Outside of speculators exiting the market, this is a major reason why cancellation rates have risen. It isn’t only the speculators and investors backing away. Potential new homebuyers can’t sell their existing home to another buyer. As a result, they cannot move up. Changing buyer sentiment, more restrictive credit and less aggressive appraisals are all helping to restrict marginal buyers.

Where’s The ATM ?
Over the past several years, consumers leveraged rising housing prices and easy credit availability using their home as an ATM. Mortgage equity withdrawal (MEW) soared, allowing consumer spending to grow faster than income growth over the past several years. This process was facilitated by rising home prices and loose lending standards. As long as housing prices were rising, lenders were willing to lend, and consumers were willing to spend, as rising housing prices gave them the confidence to draw down on savings. Today, mortgage equity withdrawal appears tapped. Consumers have been accessing their homes as bank accounts, but housing prices are now falling in many areas, and credit is becoming more difficult to obtain. The slowdown in MEW has been remarkably swift. Over the past year, consumers tapped over $400 billion less equity out of their homes than the previous year. And, in looking at the four-quarter moving average of MEW divided by nominal GDP, the change in MEW as a percent of nominal GDP is now –1.8% (Chart 7). Slower housing price appreciation is causing mortgage equity withdrawal to fall sharply, and is set to detract from U.S. economic growth.

To understand why corporate profits may be at risk as a result of the slowdown in MEW, let’s turn our attention to consumer spending. Companies make money when consumers spend. And, consumers have been spending in part due to rising housing prices, which have allowed consumers to grow debt faster than nominal GDP. Why are corporate profits as a percent of nominal GDP at new highs? Some would argue the reasons are: (a) healthy productivity gains, (b) cost cutting, (c) strong global growth, and (d) low long-term interest rates due to robust global savings. Instead, I suggest turning the focus back to the consumer and housing. Thanks to rising housing prices, consumers have been able to grow spending significantly faster than income growth, through unprecedented increases in mortgage equity withdrawal. In fact, the growth in mortgage debt parallels the growth in corporate profits (Chart 8). As a result, corporate profits, and thus economic growth, are highly dependent on housing prices. As housing prices turn negative, corporate profit growth will eventually follow.

Housing Is Today’s Leading Indictor
Housing is today’s leading economic indicator. To quote our forecast from one year ago in For Sale, “with a softening housing market, we should expect tighter lending standards, a moderation in the willingness to take risk, a slowdown in the pace of asset price appreciation, less liquid markets, and rising volatility in financial markets.” On the economic front, I believe declining housing prices and tighter credit are set to unleash a sharp downturn in housing turnover and job creation. As housing prices fall, corporate profits are expected to be at risk as consumers pull back their spending.

Housing is a momentum market. Turnover rises when real housing prices, as defined as housing price appreciation (HPA) minus mortgage rates, are rising. Turnover slows when real housing prices are falling (Chart 9). Today, the growth in real housing prices is falling. We believe real housing prices will turn further negative in 2007, causing new and existing home sales to decline towards 5 million units per year, down from a peak of over 7.5 million units per year in 2005.

Housing starts and permits tend to be a good leading indicator of job growth. Through February 2007, housing starts are down –28% year-over-year. This type of decline in housing starts typically leads to a sharp slowdown in job growth, within roughly one year (Chart 10). As a result, I believe that job creation is set to slow, possibly materially. The U.S. economy created approximately 200,000 new construction jobs last year. It would not surprise me if we lost 400,000 construction jobs this year, as homebuilders complete their existing projects and then lay off workers. As corporate profit growth deteriorates with a slowdown in housing, business investment and consumer spending, layoff announcements across all sectors of the labor market will likely pick-up
here the link to the economic impact on the illegal immigrants

"Housing Slump Takes a Toll on Illegal Immigrants" http://tinyurl.com/22bv9l
The Fed should lower the Fed Funds rate as soon as we have confirmation that the employment situation is deteriorating. By that time, credit spreads will have already anticipated the fact that risk appetite is set to turn for the worse.......
For renters and potential homebuyers, my advice is to still rent. The housing market has turned for the worse but the unwinding of this bubble will take more time. Unfortunately, this is not good news for the U.S. economy, job creation or corporate profits. Nevertheless, investors who are patient and adopt a conservative investment strategy should prosper over the next few years.

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Tuesday, April 17, 2007

For Illegal Immigrants, Housing Slump Takes Toll / NYT

good story that explains how big the impact of the illegal immigrants on the economy and the job market was during the boom time and how is now masking the real impact of the slump. click on the headline to read the full story.

guter bericht über den einfluß der illegalen einwandere in den usa während der boomzeit und wie der wahre effekt der immokrise auf die wirtschaft jetzt zum teil berschleiert wird. bitte auf die überschrift für die ganze geschichte klicken.

From Fresno to Sacramento, big tangles of wire and PVC pipes clutter vacant lots in silent subdivisions, waiting for houses to be built — some day. Dozens of “For Sale” signs already dot the lawns across new residential communities. And right next to the ubiquitous billboards from builders are fresh signs offering homeowners help to avoid foreclosure.

But another set of losers is less visible: the immigrant workers, mostly illegal, who rode the construction boom while it lasted and now find jobs on building sites few and far between.

Offering more than $10 an hour as well as new skills and a shot at upward mobility, construction provided many illegal immigrants the best job they ever had, a step up from the backbreaking work reserved for those toiling without legal authorization, which in the Central Valley mostly meant pruning and picking in fruit and vegetable fields.

The growing presence of illegal immigrants in home building, mostly working for small labor contractors, might help explain why government statistics have recorded only a small decline in construction employment, despite the collapse in residential investment....


größer/bigger http://tinyurl.com/2qs569

Illegal immigrants played a big if quiet part on the supply side of America’s housing boom. According to the Pew Hispanic Center, a research organization in Washington, immigrants from Mexico and other Latin American countries account for about one in five construction workers. Those who arrived since 2000 — who are likely to be unlawfully in the United States because they had virtually no way of immigrating legally — account for an estimated 7 percent of the construction work force.

They were mostly pulled in by the building frenzy of the first half of the decade. According to the analysis by the Pew Hispanic Center, based on census data, Hispanic immigrants took 60 percent of the million new construction jobs created from 2004 to 2006. Those recently arrived took nearly half......

The nation’s great housing bust has not shown up so far in official employment data. According to the Labor Department, employment in residential construction has declined by only 28,000 jobs — or some 3 percent — since its peak last fall.

The statistics seem to belie the debacle that has overwhelmed home building. In February, there were 15 percent fewer homes under construction and 27 percent fewer homes started than in the corresponding month of 2006. In California, 42 percent fewer building permits for new residential units were issued in February than a year earlier.

>and on the other hand "California Notices of Default Soar"


thanks to http://calculatedrisk.blogspot.com/.

more on the foreclosure topic

from calculated risk http://tinyurl.com/35naq9

and tim http://tinyurl.com/2peljr

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Monday, April 09, 2007

an autopsy on the march jobs report / northern trust - kasriel (pdf)

here is a summary of comments on the surprising strong job numbers. i highly recommend to click on the headline to see what paul kasriel from northern trust has to say.

hier folgt ne zusammenfassung des letzten überraschend starken arbeitsmarktberichtes. ich empfehle unbedingt auf die überschrift zu klicken um zu sehen was paul kasriel von northern trust zu sagen hat.

he is digging into the numbers and after reading his report there are some more doubts that the numbers are as good as they looked at first glance.

er geht ins detail der daten und nachdem man sich seine sicht der dinge angesehen hat bestehen einige zweifel ob die lage wirklich entspannt ist

just one highlight from kasriel: / nur ein beispiel von kasriel

With so many people being employed in retailing at relatively low hourly earnings, I guess it is not surprising that there has been a sharp increase in folks working multiple part-time jobs now that their adjustable rate mortgages are resetting. Chart 7 shows that in March 2007 vs. year-ago, there was an 11.15% increase in people working multiple part-time jobs. more from

mish http://tinyurl.com/326rom

calculated risk http://tinyurl.com/2m5f8w

barry ritholtz http://tinyurl.com/2ubbux

tim " the mess that greenspan made" iacono http://tinyurl.com/yw3sd7

morgan stanley http://tinyurl.com/2gllxo

economic policy institute (epi) http://tinyurl.com/ytbtug

thanks to epi and mish for the chart


größer/bigger http://tinyurl.com/23hwak

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Friday, March 09, 2007

employment report feb. 2007

this cartoon is becoming more reality every month......

dieser cartoon wird immer mehr zur realität.....


lets do the math. 118.000 jobs via the black box "birth death model" (vs 116.000 in 2005 when the economy wasn´t in a downturn) and of the 97.000 created were 39.000 40% government jobs. ouch! the quality of the numbers is deteriorating. and i view this report as weak http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.nr0.htm

ihr könnt ja sleber mal nachrechnen. 118.000 nur geschätzt (keiner weis nach welcher formel) das ist umso erstaunlicher als in 2006 116.000 geschätzt wurden. und in 07 befindet sich die wirtschaft unbestreitbar in ner schwächephase. von den übriggebliebenen 97.000 sind dann noch satte 40% jobs die vom staat geschaffen worden sind. schwache qualität der zahlen.


the formula for the birth death model? :-)


U.S. Feb. services payrolls up 168,000
U.S. Dec., Jan. payrolls revised up 55,000
U.S. Feb. factory payrolls fall 14,000
U.S. Feb. construction payrolls fall 62,000
U.S. Feb. average workweek falls to 33.7 hours.
U.S. Feb. average hourly earnings up 0.4% vs. 0.3%
U.S. Feb. unemployment rate falls to 4.5% vs. 4.6%
U.S. Feb. nonfarm payrolls up 97,000 vs. 100,000 expected

Builders cut 62,000 jobs, the biggest decline since January 1991, after adding 28,000 the prior month.


i wanted to highlight that despite the numerous layoffs from the lendingindustry it looks like the whole finance sector has added jobs. maybe there is a time lag until they become effective and/or other financial are on a hiring binge. another reason could be that lots of brokers etc were self employed. but i remain sceptical....http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.t14.htm

2007 Net Birth/Death Adjustment (in thousands)
SupersectorJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec

Natural Resources & Mining

-21

Construction

-5211

Manufacturing

-233

Trade, Transportation, & Utilities

-2910

Information

-95

Financial Activities

-1711

Professional & Business Services

-4828

Education & Health Services

1012

Leisure & Hospitality

134

Other Services

-63

Total

-175118



from bloomberg http://tinyurl.com/27lufd

but maybe the weather was the reason for the poor number: (but it feels like this argument comes always when the numbers are weaker.....)

Poor weather kept 505,000 people from working in February, more than twice as many as a year earlier, the Labor Department said.

Hiring in other industries (government !) helped make up for the biggest drop in construction jobs in 15 years, a sign that the slowdown in housing isn't filtering through to the rest of the economy

more/different views on the jobs number

from calculated risk http://tinyurl.com/27956r

a nice rant from rodger rafer ! http://tinyurl.com/25gdos

from tim "Fewer Drywall Nailers, More Baristas " http://tinyurl.com/2kvx9q

from mike larson http://tinyurl.com/ynwl56

from mish http://tinyurl.com/254ll3

northern trust http://tinyurl.com/ypp5am (pdf)

and another must see from mish! http://tinyurl.com/2g23an


remember that the data is revised 5-7 times during the next 12 month... (sarcasm of)

eigentlich lohnt die ganze aufregung eh nicht da die daten mehrere male binnen der nächsten monate revidiert werden......

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Friday, February 16, 2007

U.S. January Housing Starts Plunge to Lowest Level Since 1997

here is what fed´s moskow has to say/spin ....here we go..........

hier was einer fed leute zu sagen hat.....

Moskow: Jan housing start drop may be due to volatility 1 :30 PM ET, Feb 16, 2007 - 12 hours ago (taken from marketwatch) - rest of his quotes in the comments


of course........../ selbstverständlich.........

U.S. Jan. housing starts fall to lowest rate since 1997
U.S. Jan. housing starts punge 14.3% to 1.408 mln
U.S. Jan. building permits fall 2.8% to 1.568 mln
U.S. housing starts down 37.8% year-on-year
U.S. Jan. single-family permits down 4.0% to 1.121 mn

U.S. Jan. single-family starts fall 11.2% to 1.108 mln
U.S. building permits down 28.6% year-on-year


http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aQQD478kkqhU&refer=home

Construction in the West fell 28.5 percent to an annual rate of 301,000 last month, the slowest since December 1996. The decline in the West from December was the biggest since January 1979.

Starts also dropped 15.2 percent in the Midwest to a 195,000 pace, the weakest since January 1991, and decreased 11.8 percent in the South to 716,000. Beginning construction in the Northeast rose 8.9 percent. (this graph doesn´t include the latest weak numbers...)

Home construction fell at an annual rate of 19.2 percent last quarter, the most since 1991, after contracting at an 18.7 percent pace in the previous three months, according to a government report Jan. 31. The decline subtracted 1.2 percentage points from fourth-quarter growth




it will be interesting to see how wall street spins this.

one thing for sure will be that this is good news for the builders (will be lower inventory down the road...), blame the weather....., cooling......, leveling off....,the bottom .....,the fed will lower rates....., blah blah ......... (or the trash from moskow...)

wird gleich wieder lustig zu sehen sein wie die gelehrten der wall street das in gute news ummünzen werden.....

every "normal" thinking person can see the job fallout and the coming economic slowdown and probably a recession....(see labels)

jeder normalsterbliche kann sich zurechreimen das dieses jobverluste und wahrscheinlich ne rezession bedeuten wird......(mehr unter den lablen)

more on this topic from

mike larson http://interestrateroundup.blogspot.com/2007/02/housing-starts-disaster.html,

calculated risk http://calculatedrisk.blogspot.com/2007/02/housing-starts-and-completions.html

plus a very funny lereah bashing from minyanville http://www.minyanville.com/articles/?a=12177 (highly recommended!)


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Wednesday, February 14, 2007

where housing is headed / wsj

click on the headline to read the related article (good one).

i disagree with the often "strong" job outlook and it is almost guaranteed or as gary watts would say "in the bag" that the delinquencies and foreclosures will spike in 2007.

and 2007 will be the year when the impact from the slump will be felt on the job market.

[Blueprint]

bitte auf die überschrift für den dazugehörigen (guten) artikel klicken.

mit dem oft als "starken" job markt kann ich nicht übereinstimmen. zudem sollte man im hinterkopf haben das bereits jetzt die zahlen der zwangsvollstreckungen etc explodieren.

ausserdem wird im 2007 der effekt des "luft ablassens" voll auf den jobmarkt durchschlagen.

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Monday, February 05, 2007

How housing masked a weak economy / fleckenstein

i´m not sure but i think this sign shows a bumpy road ahead and not a b...sty. ..
important to hear that the credit tightening is now under way

wichtig zu erkennen das nun so langsam aber sicher die kreditbestimmungen angezogen haben.

Since 2001, the nation's economic growth has been powered by the real estate industry, particularly mortgage-equity withdrawals. Without housing to prop it up, the economy is in trouble.
"Housing mania will end in tears." That belief served as the headline of my column back on March 7, 2005. Now this scenario is slowly playing out as, directly or indirectly, the noose around the housing ATM continues to tighten.

Withdrawing equity from one's home was the economy, from essentially 2001 through sometime last year. A statistic from a recent report by John Mauldin says it all: Real GDP growth, excluding mortgage-equity withdrawals, averaged less than 1% over the past six years (it averaged a little more than 2.5% a year overall). During the thick of it, the real estate industry was responsible, directly or indirectly, for 40% of all jobs created. more from calculated risk http://calculatedrisk.blogspot.com/2007/01/mews-impact-on-2007.html



That 40% contribution to job creation has, in the past 18 months or so, declined to about 13% of new jobs. It will soon be responsible for the bulk of job losses, in my opinion. In fact, my friend in the subprime business said that WMC Mortgage, a wholly owned subsidiary of General Electric (GE, news, msgs), is laying off 35% of its work force, taking a $100 million charge and cutting back on its writing of loans. (here is a a calculation done from roubini )http://immobilienblasen.blogspot.com/2006/09/anteil-immobiliensektor-am.html


But what's even more important, he notes: "They (WMC folks) are going to get rid of all 100% financing on all borrowers below 700 FICO. Also, (there will be a) 95% cap on first-time homebuyers. All we talked about is coming to a head. Now watch the home builders suffer." .....

This is a story with far greater ramifications than just for the subprime sector, and we need to keep that in mind, even as the lunatic fringe -- i.e., the banking industry -- once again lusts after last cycle's winners: the mortgage originators.

In 2000, banks were busy buying brokerage firms, particularly those of a tech bent, such as Montgomery Securities and Robertson Stephens. In past cycles, they wanted to lend to leveraged-buyout artists, and before that there were "oil patch" loans, etc. Banks have an uncanny ability to pour capital into the wrong place at the wrong time. Bottom line: Wherever they are busy making acquisitions will be the source of problems .......

At some point, the amount of damage being done will rapidly accelerate. I am certain that one day, when we look back on this period -- which witnessed the incredible housing-stock rally that ran from summer 2006 through early 2007, before it collapsed -- and we describe it to folks who may not have seen it firsthand, they will shake their heads in disbelief, the same way that folks now look back at the Nifty 50, the stocks that propelled a doomed early-1970s bull market, and ask: How could anyone have been so naive to have believed that concept?

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Friday, January 19, 2007

pimco on housing

the full piece (headline) is mainly about canada. but even there the biggest risk seems to be the us housing market. i think they are way to optimistic in their assumptions.

obwohl der bericht sich in erster linie um kanada dreht (überschrift klicken) scheint auch das der us immomarkt die größte gefahr auszumachen. ich denke das pimco in dem ausblick was den immoimpuls angeht zu optimistsch ist.

PIMCO believes the most likely scenario for the U.S. in 2007 is that growth will remain below trend at about 2%, owing to the influence of the ongoing housing market correction and its expected impact on the labor market and consumer spending........

....That should all add up to a soft landing for U.S. growth and the global economy after the strong growth of the past few years. But we see the risks as skewed to the downside in the U.S., owing to the potential for a sharper-than-expected slowdown in housing that spills over into other sectors of the U.S. economy and slows consumer spending ( While we believe the rest of the world can take in stride a U.S. soft landing, a harder landing in the U.S. creates the potential for greater spillover effects and a harder landing for the global economy


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