Morning Report: Fannie Mae’s 2013 forecast for economics and housing 12/19/12

Vital Statistics:

  Last Change Percent
S&P Futures  1445.2 4.1 0.28%
Eurostoxx Index 2659.8 16.3 0.62%
Oil (WTI) 88.4 0.5 0.53%
LIBOR 0.31 0.001 0.32%
US Dollar Index (DXY) 79.04 -0.319 -0.40%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 1.82% 0.00%  
RPX Composite Real Estate Index 191.9 0.2  

Markets are higher this morning on optimism over the fiscal cliff.  John Boehner introduced a Plan B yesterday in case bipartisan talks fail, but markets / observers still seem optimistic that a deal can get done. Bonds and MBS are flat

Housing starts came in at an annualized 861k pace in November, somewhat below expectations.  This is undoubtedly a Sandy-influenced number.  Building Permits came in at 899k, above expectations. This is the strongest 3 months in four years. The NAHB Builder Confidence Index rose in Dec. Overall, the housing sector has turned the corner and is now an engine for growth, not a drag. 

Fannie Mae is out with their Economic and Housing Outlook for 2013.  Here is their forecast for 2013:

  • GDP +2.2%
  • Unemployment 7.5%
  • 10 year bond yield: 1.7%
  • Housing starts:  949k
  • House Price appreciation:  + 1.7%
  • 30 year fixed rate mortgage 3.4%
  • Purchase originations + 15%
  • Refinances: – 29%

I am surprised at their forecast for a drop in refis given that they think rates will stay low.  

Peter Eavis of the NY Times discusses the state of play with the qualified mortgage.  Consumer advocates are pushing for a broad definition of a qualified mortgage in order to increase credit availability, but they are are reluctant to give banks any legal protection. The big banks are saying that they won’t relax credit standards unless they are given some protection. Consumer advocates point out that that a shield will still presume the banks have met the standards, and merely allows the consumer to rebut that presumption, which means the lender has the upper hand to begin with.

Given the focus on the election and the fiscal cliff, fears of a European implosion seem to have fallen by the wayside.  The markets seem relatively sanguine about the prospect of a Euro debt crisis as sovereign yields have fallen since early Summer. Here is a chart of the Greek 10-year bond yield, post-re-org:

Actually, it isn’t just Greece – all of the PIIGS are rallying. All things considered this is a huge accomplishment.  Time should have named Mario Draghi Person of the Year instead of Barack Obama.

Morning Report – Reaching across the fiscal abyss 12/18/12

Vital Statistics:

  Last Change Percent
S&P Futures  1431.2 4.2 0.29%
Eurostoxx Index 2637.4 9.4 0.36%
Oil (WTI) 87.76 0.6 0.64%
LIBOR 0.309 0.000 0.00%
US Dollar Index (DXY) 79.49 -0.077 -0.10%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 1.78% 0.01%  
RPX Composite Real Estate Index 191.7 0.1  

Markets are higher this morning on optimism for a deal on the fiscal cliff. The President made some tax concessions to move closer to Speaker Boehner’s position. The current account deficit increased more than expected to 107.5B.  Bonds continue to sell off, although it looks like the 10-year yield is bumping up against resistance. Certainly the announcement of QE4EVA was a case of “buy the rumor, sell the fact.”  FWIW, that is my gut feeling about stocks and the fiscal cliff as well. 

Both sides are coming closer on a deal to avoid the fiscal cliff.  Obama has lowered his revenue target to $1.2 trillion from $1.4 trillion and moved up the threshold for higher taxes to $400k from $250k.  $1.22 trillion will be cut in spending, from a variety of areas. The second biggest component of “savings” would be interest saved on debt that isn’t going to be issued. Only in DC, would that count. It would also raise the debt ceiling enough to cover two years and the 2014 midterms.  On capital gains, the top tax rate would be 20%. Raising the medicare eligibility age from 65 to 67 seems to be off the table.  The sequester will be replaced by another sequester.  Extended unemployment benefits would continue.  One other surprising tidbit – the President wants to replace the expiring payroll tax cut with other stimulus measures such as infrastructure spending.  Which means everyone’s taxes are going up, not just the rich.

The FHA plans to sell 40,000 non-performing loans over the next year to help improve its finances, which would make them the biggest seller of distressed paper, according to Louis Amaya of National Asset Direct.  One interesting wrinkle is that it is a back-door way to achieve principal mods.  Acting FHFA Chairman Ed DeMarco has steadfastly refused to allow FHA to reduce principal when modifying delinquent loans.  However, if they sell the loans, the investor is free to make whatever modification makes sense.  Under a U.S. Treasury program, investors can be reimbursed as much as 63 cents on the dollar for principal forgiveness.  Steve Schwartzman of Blackstone said they are “loading the boat.” with delinquent loans, both for rentals and a macro bet on a housing recovery. 

At 10:00 am, we will get the National Association of Homebulder’s Housing Market Index.  This is a sentiment indicator of the homebuilders, which has been skyrocketing since housing bottomed earlier this year. According to Trulia, the Millenials are planning to ditch the rentals to buy a house in the next two years. As I have stated in other posts, household formation numbers have been highly depressed during the last 5 years, not because of demographics, but because of the economy. That represents a lot of pent-up demand that will be unleashed as the economy recovers. 

Chris Whalen of Carrington discusses how the lending environment has changed and how the “regulatory arbitrage” favors the smaller independent lenders.  The downside is that mortgages will remain tough to get courtesy of the CFPB, especially in judicial states with high value properties. 

Fun useless link of the day – put your own house in a snow globe.  h/t Rob Chrisman.

Morning Report 12/17/12

Vital Statistics:

  Last Change Percent
S&P Futures  1414.9 5.7 0.40%
Eurostoxx Index 2622.9 -7.6 -0.29%
Oil (WTI) 86.67 -0.1 -0.07%
LIBOR 0.309 0.001 0.32%
US Dollar Index (DXY) 79.58 -0.001 0.00%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 1.72% 0.02%  
RPX Composite Real Estate Index 191.6 0.4  

Markets are higher this morning after Japan elected Shinzo Abe, who has advocated further fiscal and monetary stimulus.  The Empire Manufacturing Survey showed manufacturing in NY state contracted more than expected. Bonds are down and MBS are down small. 

The negotiations on the fiscal cliff continue. The President has tied any discussions on entitlement cuts to increasing taxes on the rich and an increase in the debt ceiling.  Boehner has proposed a millionaire’s surtax and an increase in the debt ceiling. Of course, Boehner can strike a deal with the President, but that doesn’t mean he can deliver the votes in the House.  

Barry Ritholz has MBIA’s presentation on Countrywide’s fraud.

Samuelson discusses the Fed’s targeting of both unemployment and inflation and lays out some of the unintended consequences.  

 

The Mecca of Guns

In the course of my job, I often travel past an icon of gun culture. Visible from I-66 at the back of an 80s era office park is the headquarters of the National Rifle Association. It would be indistinguishable from all the other Beltway buildings but for the large NRA logo on the outside.

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After passing it dozens of times I finally had time to kill between appointments and decided to tour their museum. Admission is free and it takes up one wing of the ground floor of the building.

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As you might expect, the primary artifacts are firearms of all varieties. But the sheer quantity is a bit overwhelming.

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There are several thousand weapons, mostly rifles with plenty of pistols and a smattering of machine guns.

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Each case is stuffed to overflowing with plaque noting the semi-famous collector who donated them. There are so many in each display that even the numbered keys aren’t very helpful in distinguishing the distinctive feature of one gun from the nearly identical version just above or below it.

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The galleries are arranged in roughly chronological order running from colonial times to our various Gulf Wars. The largest segments are devoted to the Wild West days with another display devoted to the sport hunting trophies and weapons of Teddy Roosevelt.

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The modern era weapons case had plenty of weapons nearly identical from the ones in the “modern sporting rifle” case except for the affixed much recently maligned bayonets.

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The current exhibit in their rotating gallery is a tribute to Hollywood movie weapons. They have the actual prop gun used in the movie along with a poster or still from the movie. The oeuvre of noted Republican stand-up comic Clint Eastwood is well represented.

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The items which caught my attention were the blaster and lightsaber from Star Wars. As I stood there taking a photo of them with my cell phone one of the other guests that sparsely attended weekday afternoon chuckled that I must have a kid at home if in this enormous display of weaponry those were the items I wanted to photograph. No, I thought to myself, I’m a nerd. Just a little different for the type that usually tours the NRA museum.

Like any decent museum, and plenty of crappy ones, they have a gift shop full of coffee mugs and tee-shirts and trinkets for kids. And on the way out they have a newsrack with the most recent issue of their magazine and a catalog of their wares.

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The museum isn’t much different from all sorts of narrowly defined special interest organizations. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is stuffed full of gold records and rock star costumes. The Smithsonian Museum of the American Indian has more beaded blankets than you knew existed. And the NRA museum has guns. And as I mentioned, it sure has plenty of guns. Really way more than is needed for any sense of historical context. The museum fetishizes its collection with highly technical descriptions of each item.

But what it lacks is perspective. It is all about the role of guns in American history. Each gallery tells how guns were used to gain our independence, resolve the issue of slavery, and settle the West. Perhaps we need at least one display about how they are being used today in our schools and malls and post offices.

Morning Report – Hotel California Monetary Policy 12/14/12

Vital Statistics:

  Last Change Percent
S&P Futures  1412.1 0.1 0.01%
Eurostoxx Index 2628.7 1.1 0.04%
Oil (WTI) 86.4 0.5 0.59%
LIBOR 0.308 0.000 0.00%
US Dollar Index (DXY) 79.91 -0.023 -0.03%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 1.71% -0.02%  
RPX Composite Real Estate Index 191.6 0.4  

Stock index futures are flat after a benign CPI report.  Of course the Fed explicitly told us that until unemployment drops below 6.5%, they do not care what inflation does. Industrial Production rebounded in November, and Capacity Utilization rose. Bonds and MBS are up small.

Markit’s flash Purchasing Manager’s Index is generally upbeat and shows US manufacturing rebounding in December after reaching post-crisis lows in Aug and Sep. There has been some concern that Q4’s GDP numbers have been goosed by an inventory build, which means we are borrowing growth from next quarter.  FWIW, the report does not bear that out as it shows inventories are falling. The report notes employment is picking up in the manufacturing sector as well.  

CoreLogic’s December Market Pulse is reasonably optimistic on housing.  Punch Line:  Residential Real Estate is finally contributing to economic growth instead of being a drag. While residential real estate is not a massive driver of the economy, it usually is the first to recover after a recession and makes its largest contributions early in the economic cycle. It is the piece of the puzzle that allows us to shift from first to second gear.  

The Man With The Tan – Angelo Mozilo has no regrets about how he ran Countrywide and only agreed to a $67.5 million settlement to protect his children.  (BTW, it looks like Bank of America paid the lion’s share of that) You can read his entire deposition here

Great perspective on the history of banking from my favorite financial author, Jim Grant. “You can have the fear of God or the socialization of risk, but you cannot have both.”

Interview with Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher on the Fed’s “Hotel California” monetary policy.  He lays out the argument that the problem with the economy is not monetary policy, it is regulatory uncertainty out of Washington. He also notes that we are reaching the point of diminishing returns. 

I Saw NoVA Lobby Santa Claus

Being a good lobbyist means working your connections. And as it is happens, I’ve got a meet and great with Santa Claus at the White House tonight.

One of the fun parts of living in the DC area is the National Christmas tree and other decorations. There’s a Santa’s workshop on the Ellipse. We’re taking the little guy to visit this evening after work. My understanding is there’s a mailbox with a to Santa. There’s other fun things, such as the fact that each state has an ornament.

So, if any ATiMers have any Christmas wishes (or any other type — Festivus and the airing of grievances, perhaps), post them here, I’ll pull them together and make sure that Santa gets the ATiM list.

White House tree

Updated with pic —
Santa

Morning Report – QE4EVA 12/13/12

Vital Statistics:

  Last Change Percent
S&P Futures  1427.7 0.5 0.04%
Eurostoxx Index 2625.6 -4.8 -0.18%
Oil (WTI) 86.29 -0.5 -0.55%
LIBOR 0.308 -0.002 -0.48%
US Dollar Index (DXY) 79.87 0.058 0.07%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 1.71% 0.01%  
RPX Composite Real Estate Index 191.3 0.5  

Markets are flat after a mixed bag of economic data.  Retail sales increased .3% in November vs an expectation of .5%.  Initial Jobless claims fell to 343k and were well below the 369k expectation. The Producer Price Index showed inflation running lower than anticipated. The Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index fell.  Bonds are down a few ticks and MBS are flat. 

As expected, the Fed announced a Treasury buying program in its FOMC statement. $45 billion per month, until unemployment drops below 6.5% and inflation stays below 2.5%.  Bernake was careful not to characterize the 6.5% unemployment rate as NAIRU – or the non- accelerating inflation rate of unemployment. They took down their GDP projections from September, with their 2013 GDP forecast falling to a range of 2.3 – 3.0 from a range of 2.5 – 3.0.  They also took down unemployment as well, to a range of 7.3% to 7.7% from a range of 7.6% – 7.9%.  Inflation forecasts were lowered as well. Here is a video of the press conference.  Bonds reacted negatively to the announcement.  Biggest takeaway – the Fed has the pedal to the metal and they are writing the book as they go along. 

Looks like no progress so far on the fiscal cliff. A recent poll shows overwhelming support for increasing taxes on the rich.  Business execs have been lobbying for a deal. Liberals are fighting spending cuts. Bernake mentioned in his press conference that the Fed does not have the ability to offset the negative effects to the economy if we go over. 

delay in BofA’s jumbo deal shows just how hard it is to bring private capital back into the mortgage market. Private Label Securitizations were $3.5 billion this year, versus $1 trillion in 2006. Blame Dodd-Frank’s proposed “skin in the game” rules, which combined with accounting and other requirements would require banks to hold capital against all of the underlying loans. 

Transunion is forecasting mortgage delinquency rates to fall to 5.06% at the end of 2013 from 5.32% today. RealtyTrac reported foreclosure starts are at a 71 month low.

From the Department of Irony:  it turns out that the government’s exit from GM hinges on the success of its newly-unveiled full size Silverado pickup.  I could have sworn I heard many in Washington claim that the reason GM hit the wall was because they were making these huge vehicles that “nobody wants.” 

Morning Report: 12^3 edition 12/12/12

Vital Statistics:

Last Change Percent
S&P Futures 1433.3 1.8 0.13%
Eurostoxx Index 2629.5 5.4 0.21%
Oil (WTI) 86.35 0.6 0.65%
LIBOR 0.31 0.000 0.00%
US Dollar Index (DXY) 79.95 -0.116 -0.14%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 1.66% 0.00%
RPX Composite Real Estate Index 191.1 0.4

Markets are up slightly this morning ahead of the FOMC statement this afternoon. Mortgage Applications were up 6.2% last week. Right to Work was passed in Michigan. Bonds and MBS are flat.

The FOMC statement is due out at 12:30, and at 2:15, the Bernank begins his press conference. Things to look for:  New Treasury purchase plan to replace Operation Twist, 2013 GDP forecast, any comments on its outlook for housing. The WaPo speculates that the Fed will shift more buying to Treasuries than mortgages, and it looks like Bill Gross concurs, as he is lightening up his MBS position.

Looks like FHFA Acting Director will be out of a job soon. This will undoubtedly pave the way for a mass principal forgiveness / underwater refis on Fannie and Freddie loans. Mortgage-Backed securities will be vulnerable to news of more interventionist policies out of FHFA, so beware as you could have Treasury pricing and MBS pricing diverge.

While individual tax rates are going up as part of the fiscal cliff, corporate tax rates may be going down. Obama earlier this year proposed lowering the corporate tax rate to 28% from its current 35%.  The lower rates would be offset by eliminating some deductions and the net revenue would be the same. I would argue that we are at the point on the Laffer Curve where lowering rates would actually raise revenues as it would eliminate some of the transfer-pricing games companies play to declare as much income as possible overseas. The poster child of these transfer pricing games is GE, which paid no US income taxes in 2010. Or Google, which shifted $9.8 billion in revenues to a Bermuda shell company, which allowed it to avoid paying roughly $2 billion in taxes.

Dodd-Frank implementation could stall for a while after Mary Schapiro steps down as Chairman of the SEC, leaving the commission deadlocked with 2 democrats and 2 republicans.  Politically divisive issues like prop trading and restrictions on executive pay will have to wait until a fifth commissioner is nominated and confirmed.  Fun fact:  The SEC has finalized just 32 of the 95 rules that the 2010 law required.

The Fed has been quietly telling the big banks:  No more mergers. Banks that hold 10% of US deposits are already capped in size, but now it looks like the biggest banks just below that threshold are now prohibited from growing by acquisition. Fed Governor Dan Tarullo gave a speech which discusses the TBTF problem and examines various alternatives (re-instate Glass Steagall, capping non-deposit liabilities, etc.)

Morning Report – NFIB Small Business Pessimism Survey 12/11/12

Vital Statistics:

  Last Change Percent
S&P Futures  1423.2 3.0 0.21%
Eurostoxx Index 2615.1 19.1 0.73%
Oil (WTI) 85.78 0.2 0.26%
LIBOR 0.31 -0.001 -0.32%
US Dollar Index (DXY) 80.09 -0.236 -0.29%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 1.65% 0.03%  
RPX Composite Real Estate Index 190.8 0.3  

 

Markets are higher this morning on optimism for a deal on the fiscal cliff and a better-than-expected report on German investor confidence. The US government exited its AIG position. UBS will begin charging clients for deposits in swiss francs. Bonds and MBS are down.

The NFIB Small Business Survey fell off a cliff in November to 87.5. The survey blames the election, not Sandy. If people though uncertainty over the election was the cause of the nascent slowdown, this survey shows that it wasn’t.  Of course there is a correlation and causation effect happening here:  Does uncertainty cause a lousy economy, or does a lousy economy increase the risk that politicians will do something stupid? 

Chart:  NFIB Small Business Optimism:

Part of the reason for falling optimism is falling profits.  One claim constantly thrown out is “Profits are at record levels, why aren’t people hiring?”  Maybe it is because they are not, at least not in the small business arena.  This is even more profound when you consider that taxes are going up.  Small business should be pushing as many expenses as possible to next year in order to minimize their 2013 tax bite, which means that profits should be increasing now as their expenses are deferred.  Which means that underlying business profitability may in fact be lower.  

Chart:  NFIB Small Business Earnings:

Note that Bill Dunkelberg is a free-market sort of guy, so the language of his survey will reflect his political leanings.  That said, the numbers are what the numbers are. 

Ezra Klein of WaPo sums up where things really stand in the fiscal cliff negotiations.  The White House needs (a) an increase in tax rates for the rich, (b) a long-term solution to the debt ceiling, and (c) an extension of unemployment insurance. Republicans need something on the entitlement front – either an increase in the medicare eligibility age or a change in inflation calculations for Social Security. 

The change in inflation calculation involves a going to a “chained CPI.” One of the historical criticisms of the Consumer Price Index is that it fails to take into account the substitution effect, which means that as relative prices increase, consumers substitute cheaper goods for higher priced goods.  In other words, if the price of beef rises, consumers substitute chicken for beef. Since the CPI is based on a static basket of goods, it fails to take into account the fact that the basket of goods changes as relative prices change, which means that it overstates inflation.  The chained CPI is an attempt to correct for this. 

Today begins the two-day meeting of the FOMC. The Street is expecting that the Fed will announce an open-ended Treasury Purchase program, which could push its balance sheet to almost $4 trillion. The estimate is that the latest round of QE will add $500B in Treasuries to $620B in mortgage backed securities.  It will be interesting to see if the Fed notes its frustration that consumer borrowing rates are not falling in lockstep with mortgage backed securities.  It would be even more interesting if there was some acknowledgement of G-fee increases, which explain the reason why. 

Michigan Hullabaloo

Things have been a bit crazy up here in Michigan as Republicans are attempting to pass some right to work legislation. Obviously, Michigan has a long history with unions so this topic is even more contentious here than in many other states. The manner in which the bill is being passed (no committee meeting, public banned at one point, in the lame duck session) only fans the flames. Here are the basics and here is an article from Michigan State Senator Gretchen Whitmer. Keep an eye on her. I would not be surprised to see her run for Governor. Governor Snyder signing this bill has given her significant publicity and will motivate the Democratic base for the next election.

Getting less attention than the right to work legislation is piece of education legislation also being considered in the lame duck session. We have had several discussion at this blog regarding public schools, private schools, and the role of the government in education. Fortunately we have a diverse view on the subject and people, I’m thinking Kevin in particular, with some great knowledge in the subject area. With that said, I am interested in people’s thoughts on quite the hullaboloo that has arisen here in Michigan over a couple of laws being considered by the lame duck state legislature.

In short, the legislation would expand the Education Achievement Authority (EAA) to become a super-disctrict of underachieving schools (the bottom 5%). The two primary criticisms relate to the lack of oversight, the head of the EAA is not elected and reports only to the governor, and the absence of much evidence that the EAA improves things.

One of the interesing aspects of the debate is that the superintendents from some rather wealthy and successful districts are strongly opposed to the proposals. A couple have drated letters and various PTA organizations had a letter published in The Washington Post

Work is pretty busy, but I’ll try to keep an eye on comments to answer any Michigan specific questions.