The broadest measure of money supply still reported by the Federal Reserve continues falling albeit at a decelerating pace.
While the pace of decline is moderating, broad money (M2 + Institutional Money Market Funds) continues dropping. I wonder if QE 2.0 will put a floor in the decline?
As you can see money supply growth is negative, something not seen during this entire data series. As a growing money supply implies a growing (real) economy this does not bode well.
Monday, October 18, 2010
Friday, October 15, 2010
Consumers and Credit -- Behaviors may not be changing
One item I follow are aggregate debt levels as well as additional focus on the consumer as they are a large portion of GDP.
A WSJ blog entry from Sept 18 caught my eye and the results of their analysis are very interesting.
Their conclusion is the consumer is not voluntarily deleveraging, rather it is from charge-off and defaults. This information does synch with how retail sales continue slowly rising even in the face of declining credit.
From the WSJ:
Interesting data providing for very different conclusions. People will shop until their credit cards are pried from their cold dead fingers.
A WSJ blog entry from Sept 18 caught my eye and the results of their analysis are very interesting.
Their conclusion is the consumer is not voluntarily deleveraging, rather it is from charge-off and defaults. This information does synch with how retail sales continue slowly rising even in the face of declining credit.
From the WSJ:
There are two ways, though, that the debts can decline: People can pay off existing loans, or they can renege on the loans, forcing the lender to charge them off. As it happens, the latter accounted for almost all the decline. Our own analysis of data from the Fed and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. suggests that over the two years ending June 2010, banks and other lenders charged off a total of about $588 billion in mortgage and consumer loans.
That means consumers managed to shave off only $22 billion in debt through the kind of belt-tightening we typically envision. In other words, in the absence of defaults, they would have achieved an annualized decline of only 0.08%.
Interesting data providing for very different conclusions. People will shop until their credit cards are pried from their cold dead fingers.
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Latest Chinese Lending Stats: Ignore these numbers!
An odd way to start a post but as mentioned in my previous entry it is hard to know how much lending is truly going on in China these days. The official data shows a decline in the rate of growth in lending and the government appears to be reigning in credit growth by raising reserve ratios.
This does not tell the entire story. There is a boatload of off balance sheet lending but there are no 'official' numbers for that.
The WSJ (Sept 28,2010 ) recently commented:
This does not tell the entire story. There is a boatload of off balance sheet lending but there are no 'official' numbers for that.
The WSJ (Sept 28,2010 ) recently commented:
A report from Standard Chartered economist Stephen Green estimates that by the end of August between 2 trillion yuan and 3 trillion yuan worth of loans (the banks don’t formally disclose the amounts) were moved off balance sheets–and outside the PBOC’s formal loan data–in this way. Over the same period, PBOC data showed the banks lending out 5.6 trillion yuan, suggesting the banking system has already passed the central bank’s 2010 target for new credit creation. It also means that the tightening signaled by the loan quota never happened.Standard Chartered is guessing an additional 50+% of unofficial lending this year. Not a small number. If the bank regulators crack down on this unofficial lending the rate of true loan growth would fall dramatically.
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Foreclosure mess update: Why this is important
Barry Ritholtz clearly explains why this foreclosure mess is so important and how all the cutting of corners by the loan servicing organization has gotten completely out of control.
http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2010/10/why-foreclosure-fraud-is-so-dangerous-to-property-rights/
I could try to paraphrase it but you really must read it ALL to understand why this scandal is more than just some 'goofed up paperwork'
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/bank-of-america-halts-all-foreclosure-wsj-2010-10-08?siteid=bnbh
Bank of America halts all foreclosures. This is a few days old but just the latest in a long march of banks who are calling a full halt to foreclosures.
BofA's sterling efficiency is demonstrated by them foreclosing on a house with no mortgage. Whoops!
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-10-07/man-who-had-no-mortgage-faced-foreclosure-anyway-ann-woolner.html
This is going to get worse before it gets better . . .
http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2010/10/why-foreclosure-fraud-is-so-dangerous-to-property-rights/
I could try to paraphrase it but you really must read it ALL to understand why this scandal is more than just some 'goofed up paperwork'
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/bank-of-america-halts-all-foreclosure-wsj-2010-10-08?siteid=bnbh
Bank of America halts all foreclosures. This is a few days old but just the latest in a long march of banks who are calling a full halt to foreclosures.
BofA's sterling efficiency is demonstrated by them foreclosing on a house with no mortgage. Whoops!
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-10-07/man-who-had-no-mortgage-faced-foreclosure-anyway-ann-woolner.html
This is going to get worse before it gets better . . .
Inflation expectations
The recent rumors of an imminent second round of quantitative easing (QE 2.0) by the US Federal Reserve has sent ripples throughout the entire financial market. One series I occasionally check in on is the implied breakeven inflation rate by looking at nominal versus inflation protected rates in the treasury market. The threat of QE 2.0 can be seen here as well.
Source: Federal Reserve
Interesting.
Of course the Fed threatening to buy up outstanding T bonds (instead of just buying more at auction) also creates a supply demand issue but this trending divergence bears watching.
Monday, October 11, 2010
Volatility measure goes bonkers
One of the indicators I follow just hit multi year lows and that's not a positive sign for the equity markets. (Stockcharts link)
Scroll back through history and notice when this ratio of short term volatiliy to longer term volatility was so low . . .
Another sign of money market stress
Short term lending rates in Europe are creeping upwards, showing a measure of bank stress. Here's the Bloomberg link
I'd be concerned if this keeps going upwards . . .
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