Vital Statistics:
| Last | Change | Percent | |
| S&P Futures | 1413.5 | 8.2 | 0.58% |
| Eurostoxx Index | 2500.1 | 9.5 | 0.38% |
| Oil (WTI) | 86.63 | 0.9 | 1.05% |
| LIBOR | 0.313 | -0.001 | -0.32% |
| US Dollar Index (DXY) | 79.82 | -0.091 | -0.11% |
| 10 Year Govt Bond Yield | 1.84% | 0.05% | |
| RPX Composite Real Estate Index | 194.1 | -0.1 |
Markets are stronger this morning after a strong durable goods report and a good UK GDP number. Initial Jobless Claims came in at 369k and last week was revised upward to 392k. Capital Goods orders were flat. We had a slew of decent earnings reports this morning, and Apple will report after the close. Bonds are getting clocked on the durable goods number, with the 10 year down a point and mortgages down 10 ticks.
The Chicago Fed National Activity Index came in flat, but the 3 month moving average is still negative, indicating the economy is growing below trend.
The FOMC statement yesterday was more or less a rehash of the prior statement. Bond Traders who were looking for the Fed to add Treasuries to the QE mix were disappointed. The Fed noted that household spending has been advancing, while growth in fixed business investment has slowed. Today’s durable goods and capital goods reports bear that out.
The global slowdown is causing another round of job cuts. This time, it is more than just Wall Street as Ford, Dow Chemical, Colgate Palmolive, AMD, and HP are all cutting staff. The number of announced job cuts in the last 2 months is the highest since 2010.
The government is going after Bank of America for the sins of Countrywide. Needless to say, the consumer groups are delighted. Lenders warn that credit will become even tighter. Certainly the litigation risk will get passed onto borrowers through higher rates and fees. Barney Frank believes the government should lay off JP Morgan for the sins of Bear, and claims that the government asked BOA to buy Merrill, but not Countrywide.
Whatever happened to the San Bernardino eminent domain idea? This was the plan that involved the county taking performing underwater mortgages from the banks and forgiving principal. It appears the firestorm of criticism has caused the county to quietly table the idea.
Speaking of foreclosures, ABC News has a depressing photo essay of the foreclosure crisis.
Filed under: Morning Report |
EJ Dionne’s most recent piece merits a mention here due to his tedious repetition of a false talking point about Romney & the auto bailout that has taken hold of the left due to it’s convenience as a sound bite :
His description of Romney’s position is the “straight-out deception” here. Romney was referring to the original request by the automakers for a blank check bailout in 2008 with no strings attached.
http://money.cnn.com/2008/11/19/news/companies/auto_hearing/
http://money.cnn.com/2008/11/17/news/companies/gm_showdown/index.htm
The Bush administration did end up providing a bridging loan through TARP in December 2008 of $17 billion, but with no requirements for restructuring via bankruptcy or otherwise, it failed to fix the problems, just as Romney predicted it would.
Romney’s actual position was for a bankruptcy restructuring backstopped by financial assistance by the federal government, which is ultimately what the Obama administration ended up doing after exhausting all other alternatives. The primary difference between what Obama actually did and a theoretical Romney administration is the treatment of the secured creditors vis-a-vis the unions.
The details are provided by none other than Steve Rattner, Obama’s “Car Czar”.
http://money.cnn.com/2009/10/21/autos/auto_bailout_rattner.fortune/
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jnc- I’m glad you posted this comment because the Detroit News endorsed Romney today. However, in their endorsement, the Detroit News acknowledges that Obama got the auto bailout right and Romney got it wrong, at least partly wrong. They disagree with your claim that Obama did what Romney said. They seem to think Romney’s suggestions would not have worked:
I had mostly accepted your position that Obama had done what Romney proposed. I’m interested in your response to the position of the Detroit News’ editorial board.
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AAPL reporting after the close today — will they miss? Looks like the market thinks so.
But they got some good news today:
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jnc:
Thanks for the Rattner link. That was long but interesting.
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A few points:
1. The bridge loans that allowed the automakers to survive until bankruptcy were provided by the George W. Bush administration through TARP for a total of $17.4 billion to get them through March, 2009. There was a huge fight at the time about whether or not this was a legitimate use of the TARP funds, given that they weren’t being used to purchase “Troubled Assets” or even assist the financial system, but the broad discretion in the law ultimately allowed it’s use as a giant roving bailout slush fund. As Steve Rattner noted, GM by itself managed to burn through $21 billion of cash in a year and another $13 billion in the first quarter of 2009 with their existing cost structure and management team. Just giving them more bridge loans wasn’t going to be the answer.
2. Romney’s proposal for government backing of private loans is similar to what enabled JP Morgan Chase to purchase Bear Sterns. The argument that “the private credit markets were unwilling to provide them” presumes no government backstop. If the Federal government was willing to assume all losses over a certain point as was done with Wall Street merger deals, I’m confident that private money would have become available, probably with Warren Buffett or someone similar doing the deal.
Now, there’s a very good reason to argue that President Obama’s direct investment was a superior solution in that a federal backstop for a private lender is a classic example of “Private Profits, Socialized Losses”, but that’s not the same thing as saying that Romney would let the automakers be liquidated. In fact, this was a key distinction between Romney and McCain in 2008 with McCain taking the harder line.
Steve Rattner’s piece should be reread along with the contemporary accounts that I linked to from 2008. The key point from the time period was this:
That’s what Romney was arguing for and what Obama ultimately did, after exhausting all non-bankruptcy alternatives (remember “People won’t by a car from a company in bankruptcy”). The key differences in their approaches would have been the “Private Profits, Socialized Losses” vs direct government ownership that I mentioned before and the distribution of losses between creditors and the unions. The Obama administration favored the unions, and a Romney administration most likely would have favored the creditors, and also been more in line with existing bankruptcy precedents.
However, this point by Rattner is key with regards to the judgement calls that the administration made in the bankruptcy restructuring:
As I said, it boiled down to a judgement call and at the end of the day the creditors got their day in court (despite the administration’s initial attempt at a “voluntary” restructuring) before a federal bankruptcy judge.
See this also:
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jnc- Thanks. That was easy to follow and made sense. Very much appreciated.
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This is worth noting in the Detroit News editorial:
The line about “the automobile industry is never truly “saved”” is key. How many times should they be bailed out and at what frequency and cost?
The best argument in favor of the bailouts from a free market perspective was made by Bob Lutz on Real Time with Bill Maher.
http://www.hbo.com/real-time-with-bill-maher/episodes/0/239-episode/synopsis/quotes.html#/real-time-with-bill-maher/episodes/0/239-episode/index.html
Specifically he made the point that a big reason why the American automobile manufacturers were noncompetitive to begin with was that the various government mandates forced them to build cars that they weren’t very good at building (namely small, fuel efficient cars) and that people didn’t want to buy at the expense of cars that they were good at building, namely trucks and SUV’s. If they didn’t have any mandates, then they would have been profitable.
Now obviously this argument is self serving and may not be entirely accurate, but it does bring to light certain fundamental issues that are constantly in tension:
1. The desire to have a thriving auto sector with manufacturing in America. If this desire was paramount, there would be virtually no regulations on the types of cars that the American car manufacturers could build and they could optimize for maximum profitability and market share.
2. The desire to have fuel efficient cars to “reduce dependency on foreign oil” and to combat climate change. If this desire was paramount, then the focus would be on getting the most fuel efficient cars possible, even if they were made by foreign manufacturers and if the American car makers weren’t able to fulfill this need then they would go out of business.
3. The desire not to have the government subsidize and bail out private, for profit industries with tax payer money. At the moment, this is what gives when the tension between #1 & #2 results in the periodic financial collapse of the American auto industry.
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Rattner just makes the blanket statement that private capital was not available. Did anyone even try and arrange DIP financing?
My sense is that capital was available, maybe not at the price the government was willing to offer capital at, but DIP loans are very low-risk lines of credit. If LBOs were still being funded then (and they were) you could get a DIP.
But obama was more interested in pushing GM to stop producing big gas guzzling trucks that “nobody wants” and to get them to focus on smaller, greener vehicles. Since SUV’s were where GM made its money, it wasn’t going to do that on its own. I also think he had ideological differences with bankruptcy precedent and didn’t like the way unions had been treated, so he chose to intervene with the priority of creditors.
Regardless of whether GM could or couldn’t arrange for DIP financing, he had no justification for meddling in the process.
Lest we think the story is over, don’t forget one thing: The credit markets will remember. These companies will not be able to issue senior secured debt at competitive levels since there is always the risk of your security being revoked for political convenience. This guarantees a higher cost of capital for GM than its competitors and that will be a drag on its performance going forward.
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Mike:
So . . . property rights being upheld, or just a stealth government-sanctioned quasi-monopoly? Such bans will do some serious damage to competitive technologies.
Apple should be glad they are finding favor with Big Brother. 😉
That being said, I’m stoked for the iPad Mini, especially when they drop the price (which they will, probably at their next product announcement—by spring, I bet) to $249 for the starting machine. They are creaming the market for Christmas; can’t say I blame them. They know early adopters will pay full price for the privilege.
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“Brent Nyitray, on October 25, 2012 at 12:02 pm said:
…
I also think he had ideological differences with bankruptcy precedent and didn’t like the way unions had been treated, so he chose to intervene with the priority of creditors.”
The other argument is that cooperation from the unions was more important to the viability of the companies going forward than some of the other creditors, therefore it made sense to try and work something out with them.
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“Brent Nyitray, on October 25, 2012 at 12:02 pm said:
Rattner just makes the blanket statement that private capital was not available. Did anyone even try and arrange DIP financing? “
I think that specifying the time frames and individual companies in question is critical to answering this. You need to distinguish between fall and winter of 2008 when Bush did the bridge loan and June of 2009 when the actual bankruptcy filing occurred, and also between Chrysler and GM.
My own impression is that a federal backstop of some sort would have been required in 2008, especially for Chrysler.
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The latest Rolling Stone interview with President Obama is up:
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/obama-and-the-road-ahead-the-rolling-stone-interview-20121025
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Apple misses. Q1 guidance is terrible.
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