Shaken Consumers, Banks May Stifle U.S. Growth, Extend Slowdown

In Blooomberg can we read today:

Sept. 22 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. economy might be moving from the acute stage of the credit contagion to a chronic one.

Even with hundreds of billions of dollars from Washington to keep them solvent, banks facing the prospect of more loan losses may still curb new lending. Debt-laden consumers look set to rein in spending further as job cuts take their toll. And profit-pinched companies are turning cautious on investing and hiring as the rest of the world slows.

The plan the Bush administration and Congress are racing to enact is designed to alleviate the crisis in the markets rather than stimulate a sluggish economy. ``The fact that we have stepped back from the edge of the cliff doesn't mean everything is wonderful,'' says <a href="http://search.bloomberg.com/search? q=Michael+Atkin&site=wnews&client=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date:D:S:d1">Michael Atkin, head of sovereign research at Putnam Investments in Boston. ``We shouldn't forget that the economy is not in great shape.''

 

 

That puts pressure on Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and his colleagues to follow up their extraordinary interventions in the markets with more traditional medicine in the form of lower interest rates.

``The Fed still has more rate cuts to do,'' says John Makin, a principal at Caxton Associates LLC hedge fund in New York and a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington.

The credit squeeze is prompting some economists to lower their forecasts for the economy. Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania, now expects the economy to contract next quarter and in the first quarter of 2009. That would be the first recession since 2001.

 

Slowing Growth

The consensus forecast calls for growth of 0.7 percent in the fourth quarter and 1.1 percent in the first quarter, according to a Bloomberg News survey of economists completed Sept. 9. The economists saw a 51 percent chance of a recession in the next 12 months. For all of 2008, growth is forecast to be 1.8 percent, the slowest since 2002.

Rate cuts would help the economy in several ways. They would boost banks' profits by lowering their cost of funds, something that the $700 billion rescue package before Congress doesn't do. That might encourage them to lend more freely.

Lower borrowing costs would also aid consumers directly by easing their debt burdens. And companies would benefit because the cuts would help offset some of the higher premiums that investors are demanding on corporate bonds.

Stock-market investors responded positively to the news that Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson want to cleanse banks of bad assets and insure deposits in money-market funds. The Standard & Poor's 500 index jumped 4 percent on Sept. 19 to close the week little changed.

 

Reaction at the Epicenter

The reaction in the credit markets, the epicenter of the 13-month crisis, was more restrained. The cost of default protection on bonds issued by individual banks and brokers was still higher than a week earlier, even after dropping on Sept. 19.

Bankers were cautious as well. Bank of America Chief Executive Officer Kenneth Lewis, while praising the steps Washington took, shied away from declaring the crisis over.

``There's a lot of bad debt out there that still needs to get cleaned out of the system,'' he said in a speech to the National Black MBA Association in Washington Sept. 19.

Global banks have racked up more than $500 billion in losses on bad loans and investments, and more red ink is likely. Moody's Investors Service boosted its forecast for losses on subprime and prime-jumbo mortgages on Sept. 18 as delinquencies came in higher than expected.

Bank of Italy Governor Mario Draghi, who chairs the Financial Stability Forum of regulators, estimates banks must raise another $350 billion in capital to prepare for further losses and writedowns.

 

`Survival Mode'

``Banks are in survival mode,'' says Zandi at Moody's Economy.com. ``They're not interested in extending credit. They're interested in conserving capital.''

Consumers are particularly vulnerable to a tightening of credit. They're being squeezed by a weakening job market, with unemployment at a five-year-high of 6.1 percent last month, and a continued decline in house prices. Household debt as a percentage of net worth rose to 68 percent in the second quarter, the highest since 2002.

``American consumers need time to restore some balance to their household finances,'' Lewis said.

They're already trying. Retail-sales growth has slowed for six straight weeks, according to the International Council of Shopping Centers in New York. The council's chief economist, Michael Niemira, pared his forecast for September growth to 1.5 to 2 percent, from 2 percent previously.

Blue Christmas?

Analysts at Merrill Lynch & Co. said Sept. 18 that U.S. retailers may suffer their slowest holiday sales since 1991 as households grappling with higher food and fuel costs cut back.

``Consumers are starting to get the idea that they've got to de-leverage,'' says David Wyss, chief economist at Standard & Poor's in New York.

Companies may also be turning more cautious. Industrial production fell in August by the most in almost three years as slower consumer spending prompted automakers to cut back. Almost half of large companies across the globe have curbed technology spending for the next year, according to Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Forrester Research Inc.

Firms are feeling the pinch as earnings slow along with the economy. Third-quarter profits of the Standard & Poor's 500 companies may sink the most in seven years, according to analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg News.

 

 

Exports Hurt

Foreign sales -- until now a major source of strength for U.S. companies -- are also hurt by the fallout from the credit crisis as the U.S. slowdown seeps abroad. Japan's government said last week that its economy, the world's second-largest, is weakening.

Dell Inc., the world's second-biggest personal-computer maker, said Aug. 28 that ``continued conservatism'' from some U.S. customers was spreading to Western Europe and Asia.

Companies are also getting hit by dearer credit. The average yield on the most actively traded investment-grade bonds fell Sept. 19 on Washington's moves to fight the crisis, yet still stood nearly 0.9 percentage point higher than a week earlier.

``The kind of spreads we're seeing'' on corporate debt were ``just inconceivable a couple of weeks ago,'' Martin Fridson, chief executive officer of Fridson Investment Advisors in New York, said in a Bloomberg Radio interview Sept. 19.

Financial conditions in the economy, as measured by a Bloomberg index that includes money-market spreads and equity prices, tightened during the last week despite the series of actions taken by the Fed and Treasury to ease the crisis.

Even after the Fed left its benchmark rate unchanged on Sept. 16, traders in futures markets still see about a 45 percent chance of a reduction before the end of the year.

``There's been a tightening of financial conditions,'' says David Hensley, director of global economic coordination at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in New York. ``If they stay tight, a Fed easing may be in play

 

 

 

olja  oljekrig  oilwars  USA  FED  nyliberalism  nyliberal  neoliberal  skojare  liberaler  kollapsen av nyliberalismen  militär keynesianism  Bush  Clinton  McCain  Förenta Staterna  George W Bush  liberal kris  den osynliga handen  globalisering  internationella förhållande  amerikansk ekonomi  dollar collaps  the invisible hand  neocons  militar speditures  structural crisis trade balance  Globalisation  Globalization  globalism  Globalisering   IMF  world bank  corporate bond equities markets  disarray; the banking system  collapsing  consumer spending  tax revenues  national debt black holes  krigsförbrytare  war criminals  Democracy  liberal democracy  dictatorship  fascism  McBush  11/9  9/11  Palin terrorism  War on terrorism Russia  Georgia  Bush  Putin  south Ossetia  War nuclear  Nato  Election 2008  Obama  McCain  Iran  11 september   Accounting    Asset    Asymmetric information    Autarky    Average cost    Average propensity to consume B   Barter system    Bonds    Budget    Business economics C   Call money market    Capital    Capital Asset Pricing Model    Capital market line    Commerce    Commodity    Company    Corporate finance    Credit    Currency D   Depreciation    Diversification    Duty E   Economics E cont.   Efficient frontier F   Finance    Main Page    Gini coefficient    Microfinance    Price floor    Equity    Financial economics    National stock exchange    Budget deficit    Sample    Financial instrument    Fixed capital    Foreign exchange rate    Future value H   Hedge funds I   Industry    Inter-connected Stock Exchange L   Lending    Loan M   Macroeconomics    Money Supply    Money changer    Money market N   Normal distribution O   Option    Over-The-Counter Exchange of India P   Present value    Price    Product    Profit R   Repo rate    Return on investment    Risk    Risk management S   Secondary market    Security Market Line    Sell    Share    Share certificate    Standard deviation    Stock    Stock market T   Tariff    Taxation    Time value of money  Treasury bonds Y   Yield Z   Zero-coupon bond  Foreign policy law of the United States  imperialism  noninterference  nonintervention  regionalism  axis-of-evil  Bill of Rights  blow-back  budget  capitalism  caucus  civil rights  collateral damage  depression  disinformation  doublespeak  fascism  free speech  free enterprise  Federal Reserve System  FDIC  globalization  mpeachment  inflation  laissez-faire  MSM   Mainstream media  Neo-liberalism  Neo-conservative (Neocon)  New World Order  outlays  POTUS  propaganda  privatize  recession  revenue enhancement  republic  SCOTUS  Supreme Court of the United State  SEC  social security  subsidy  think tank  tyranny  terrorism  unilateralism  Weapons of mass destruction  antiterrorism  expansionism  geopolitics  neocolonialism  neoliberalism  ultraconservatism  Dollar Collapse  Credit Default Swap  CDS  Credit derivatives finance  Credit-default swaps on Fannie and Freddie  Credit Default Swaps and Financial WMDs trade  quote market  dealer  the bid  strategy  investors  lower the overall cost  shares   principal  mortgage  outstanding. Average life    weighted-average time   receipt   future cash flows  using as the weights the dollar amounts  principal paydowns. Average maturity The average time to maturity  securities  mutual fund  Changes in interest rates  bondholders and stockholders  Dow Jones Industrial Average  contract  financialoptions contractstraded  Corporation  financial institutions   bids  offers  tradedbonds  bond government agency   corporations created  manage a revenue-producing public enterprise. authority bond  municipal bond  margin protections  incorporated  authority bond contract  institutional investors  transact block business  purchase  sale   security  Markets   price   free interaction of prospective buyers  sellers floor  stock exchange  stocks preferred  dividend discount model   share  equity  low price-earnings ratios  high dividend yield  futures and options  contract  executed  exchanges   closing period  taxpayer  cash flow   risk  profit   asset value exceeds market value  A security  collateralized  Stock Price Riskless Indexed Notes. Zero-coupon four-year bonds repayable  security   commodity  financial_institution   syndication. This implies the entity that agreed and negotiated the project financing structure  bank  underwriter entitled to syndicate the loan or bondissue  convertible arbitrage index arbitrage  and international arbitrage  profits differences  price  extremely similar  security  currency  commodity  traded  two or more markets  Lower-rate refunding issue proceeds  invested Treasuries  first call date  interest rate Preferred Stock  equities  call provision in a municipal bondindenture   right of redemption  issuer  interest payment  general equities  order to buy or sell  quantity of stock  convertible securities. Interest  accumulated  market value  discount bond  liability  pension plan  strategy  available information forecasting techniques  better performance  buy  holdportfolio  asset  protected  potential loss  insurance  hedging Adjustable rate   convertible securities  interest rate   dividend adjusted standard market rate  outside control of the bank or savings institution  Treasury bonds  notes. Bush  McCain  Obama  Imperialists  hegemony  american century  pax americana  Palin  Finanskris  kreditkris  dollarraset  olja  oljekrig  oilwars  USA  FED  nyliberalism  nyliberal  neoliberal  skojare  liberaler  kollapsen av nyliberalismen  militär keynesianism  Bush  Clinton  McCain  Förenta Staterna  George W Bush  liberal kris  den osynliga handen  Bernake  Greenspan  kreditkrisen  finanskrisen  bankkrisen  konsument krediter  skuld  nationell skuld  räntenivå  recession  konjunktur strukturell kris  national debt handelsbalans utlandsskuld  nykeynesianism; internationell ekonomi  ekonomiskt läge  globalisering  internationella förhållande  amerikansk ekonomi  bankväsendet  finansmarknad  avreglering  pension  globala rånet  nyliberal skojeriet  neoliberalism  neocons  financial crisis  bank crisis  recesion  depresion  economics  voodoo economics  freakonomics  Federal reserve  Dollar Collapse  neokeynesianism interest rate  obligations  CDOs  state obligations  economic colapse  the dollar empire  monetary policy  national debt  state debt  credit crisis  credit card  mortgages structured investment vehicles   financial asset   credit crunch  Bank of England   financial panic   Individual Voluntary Agreement   toxic packages   sub-prime mortgages  privatization  deregulation  foreign debt  dollar asssets  dollar collaps  the invisible hand  neocons  debt mortage loans  mortage debt  consumer debt  bonds  trasure bonds inflation  consument price index  producent price index  energy price  oil price  bonds price  stocks  stock  Wall Street  financial markets  militar speditures  structural crisis trade balance  Globalisation  Globalization  globalism  Globalisering   IMF  world bank  corporate bond equities markets  disarray; the banking system  collapsing  consumer spending  tax revenues  national debt black holes  Closed Economy The Black Economy  Recession  Leverage  Treasury Bill  Asymmetric Information  The Long Tail  Demand Forecasting  Monetization  Monopoly  Monopsony  Duopoly  Oligopoly