from Ambrose Evans-Pritchard:
The labour force contracted by 661,000. This did not show up in the headline    jobless rate because so many Americans dropped out of the system. The broad    U6 category of unemployment rose to 17.3pc. That is the one that matters.  
Wall Street rallied. Bulls hope that weak jobs data will postpone monetary    tightening: a silver lining in every catastrophe, or perhaps a further    exhibit of market infantilism.
The home foreclosure guillotine usually drops a year or so after people lose    their job, and exhaust their savings. The local sheriff will escort them out    of the door, often with some sympathy –– just like the police in 1932,    mostly Irish Catholics who tithed 1pc of their pay for soup kitchens.  
Realtytrac says defaults and repossessions have been running at over 300,000 a    month since February. One million American families lost their homes in the    fourth quarter. Moody's Economy.com expects another 2.4m homes to go this    year. Taken together, this looks awfully like Steinbeck's Grapes of Wrath. 
Judges are finding ways to block evictions. One magistrate in Minnesota halted    a case calling the creditor "harsh, repugnant, shocking and repulsive".    We are not far from a de facto moratorium in some areas.  
This is how it ended between 1932 and 1934, when half the US states declared    moratoria or "Farm Holidays". Such flexibility innoculated    America's democracy against the appeal of Red Unions and Coughlin Fascists.    The home siezures are occurring despite frantic efforts by the Obama    administration to delay the process.  
This policy is entirely justified given the scale of the social crisis. But it    also masks the continued rot in the housing market, allows lenders to hide    losses, and stores up an ever larger overhang of unsold properties. It takes    heroic naivety to think the US housing market has turned the corner    (apologies to Goldman Sachs, as always). The fuse has yet to detonate on the    next mortgage bomb, $134bn (£83bn) of "option ARM" contracts    due to reset violently upwards this year and next. 
US house prices have eked out five months of gains on the Case-Shiller index,    but momentum stalled in October in half the cities even before the latest    surge of 40 basis points in mortgage rates. Karl Case (of the index) says    prices may sink another 15pc. "If the 2008 and 2009 loans go bad, then    we're back where we were before – in a nightmare." 
David Rosenberg from Gluskin Sheff said it is remarkable how little traction    has been achieved by zero rates and the greatest fiscal blitz of all time.    The US economy grew at a 2.2pc rate in the third quarter (entirely due to    Obama stimulus). This compares to an average of 7.3pc in the first quarter    of every recovery since the Second World War.  
Fed hawks are playing with fire by talking up about exit strategies, not for    the first time. This is what they did in June 2008. We know what happened    three months later. For the record, manufacturing capacity use at 67.2pc,    and "auto-buying intentions" are the lowest ever.  
The Fed's own Monetary Multiplier crashed to an all-time low of 0.809 in    mid-December. Commercial paper has shrunk by $280bn ($175bn) in since    October. Bank credit has been racing down a hair-raising black run since    June. It has dropped from $10.844 trillion to $9.013 trillion since November    25. The MZM money supply is contracting at a 3pc annual rate. Broad M3 money    is contracting at over 5pc.  
Professor Tim Congdon from International Monetary Research said the Fed is    baking deflation into the pie later this year, and perhaps a double-dip    recession. Europe is even worse.  
This has not stopped an army of commentators is trying to bounce the Fed into    early rate rises. They accuse Ben Bernanke of repeating the error of 2004    when the Fed waited too long. Sometimes you just want to scream. In 2004    there was no housing collapse, unemployment was 5.5pc, banks were in rude    good health, and the Fed Multiplier was 1.73.  
How anybody can see imminent inflation in the dying embers of core PCE, just    0.1pc in November, is beyond me. 
Mr Rosenberg is asked by clients why Wall Street does not seem to agree with    his grim analysis.  
His answer is that this is the same Mr Market that bought stocks in October    1987 when they were 25pc overvalued on Shiller "10-year normalized    earnings basis" – exactly as they are today – and bought them at even    more overvalued prices in 2007, long after the property crash had begun,    Bear Stearns funds had imploded, and credit had its August heart attack. The    stock market has become a lagging indicator. Tear up the textbooks.
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Unemployment Worsens Despite Headline
Labels:
economy,
jobs,
unemployment