Posts tagged Alpha Copyright

Average jobless claims continue down but data mask problems

From the U.S. Department of Labor:

In the week ending Jan. 9, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 444,000, an increase of 11,000 from the previous week’s revised figure of 433,000. The 4-week moving average was 440,750, a decrease of 9,000 from the previous week’s revised average of 449,750.

The advance seasonally adjusted insured unemployment rate was 3.5 percent for the week ending Jan. 2, a decrease of 0.1 percentage point from the prior week’s unrevised rate of 3.6 percent.

The advance number for seasonally adjusted insured unemployment during the week ending Jan. 2 was 4,596,000, a decrease of 211,000 from the preceding week’s revised level of 4,807,000. The 4-week moving average was 4,855,000, a decrease of 151,500 from the preceding week’s revised average of 5,006,500.

The fiscal year-to-date average for seasonally adjusted insured unemployment for all programs is 5.448 million.

The data are heavily affected by seasonal adjustments as over 801,000 people filed employment insurance claims last week, bringing actual continuing claims to almost 6 million.  For the same week in 2009, there were 956,791 initial claims for unemployment insurance, which brought the insurance roles down to 5.65 million. Nevertheless, the trend for initial claims is down. The labor market is improving, albeit slowly.

However, what should be clear is that, despite the fall in initial claims, the jobs picture remains incredibly weak. Unadjusted continuing claims didn’t hit 6 million until February of last year and while they increased another 400,000 still, the week ended 14 March 2009 marked the high point for the series.  What does that tell you? It tells me that the employment picture is still pretty dire in the U.S. And given the additional 5.0 million people claiming Emergency Unemployment Compensation, we now have a record 11 million people collecting unemployment insurance.

As David Rosenberg said when the jobs numbers were released last week:

The so-called ‘employment rate’ — the ratio of employment to population — fell 58.2% from 58.5% in November and the cycle peak of 63.4% in 2007. This is extremely significant because what it means is that it would take an expansion in employment of 20 million over the next five years just to get back to those old cycle highs. But here’s the problem — the country has never before managed to come close to creating that number of jobs over a half-decade period, so what the future holds is one of ongoing deflationary labour market pressure as far as the eye can see.

That’s why this is a only a technical rebound – and won’t be a full blown recovery for years to come (see my post on what I am calling a technical recovery). The structural issues will remain for some time to come.

Source

Snack With Dave – David Rosenberg, Gluskin Sheff, 8 Jan 2010

See also Job Openings in U.S. Fell by 156,000 in November from Bloomberg

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Jon Stewart: Clusterf#@k to the Poor House – Wall Street Bonuses

Does Stewart capture the Zeitgeist or what?

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David Letterman’s Top Ten Signs There’s Trouble at NBC

David Letterman is having a field day with the uproar over at NBC. Below are four videos of him poking fun. Enjoy.

Top Ten

Opening Monologue

More Fun for Letterman

Leno Victims Unit

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FDIC looks to reign in compensation via insurance levy

FDIC Chairperson Sheila Bair has released her own proposal to compete with a recently floated proposal for a tax on bank compensation.  Her proposal calls for linking compensation with FDIC insurance levies as a means of aligning incentives in the banking industry going forward. In contrast, the competing initiative calls for a one-off ‘windfall’ tax as a means of recouping bonus money due to be paid out by large financial institutions.

In announcing her competing plan, Bair said:

A broad consensus of academic studies agrees that poorly designed compensation structures can misalign incentives and induce risk taking. I share those concerns. The recent crisis has shown that compensation practices that encourage excessive risk can create significant losses in the financial system and the deposit insurance fund.

What I like about Bair’s proposal is that it is designed both as a longer-term solution and meant to align compensation with the larger systemic risks, which Bair explicitly mentions in the quote above.  On the other hand, I see the windfall tax proposal as a gimmick designed to harness the public’s outrage on a serious issue and misdirect it toward a one-off political ploy. Windfall taxes are not going to change systemic issues on risk, compensation and moral hazard, whereas the insurance levy does move in that direction.

The public is right to be angry about excessive compensation in financial services. The real issue in compensation has to do with individuals being compensated in the present for riskier bets which appear to accrue higher payoffs in the near-term but have disastrous consequences longer-term. Imposing a one-off tax does nothing to eliminate this problem. Tying compensation and risk together does.

What angers me personally is that this banker windfall tax appears to be a naked ploy to quell voter anger. The tax offers superficially satisfying populist solutions which fail to address any of the more systemic issues that led to the financial crisis. After the one-off tax, it’s back to business as usual on Wall Street. This seems to be a solution designed to win votes and nothing more. Let’s hope Bair wins the day in the Obama Administration’s internal politics.

Source

FDIC Board Seeks Comment on Incorporating Employee Compensation Structures Into the Risk Assessment System – FDIC: Press Releases – PR-5-2010 1/12/2010

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Graphic: Unemployment – State by State

This comes from Kiplinger (click to enlarge). Not only does this graphic break down where the trouble spots are for jobs today, it gives you a historical perspective as well. It looks like the Southeastern seaboard and the west coast are feeling the most pain relative to past recessions.

Also see What You Need to Know About Unemployment Benefits from Kiplinger.

unemploymentmaplarge

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Links: 2010-01-12

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Feature Link: A New Tax on Banks and Bankers? – NYTimes.com

Simon Johnson, Bert Ely and I each gave our view on a proposed banker tax for the Editors at the New York Times’ Room for Debate. Bert and I are against and Simon is for. 

Today’s Bread & Circus feature: Rod Blagojevich: ‘I’m blacker than Obama’

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Black and the AIG cover-up of the cover-up of the cover-up

I had originally looked to add this video to the last post on Black about the federal reserve. But the video here showing Black speaking to Bloomberg News about the recent AIG scandal and financial regulation deserves a post of its own.

The question Black asks is why haven’t we seen a more thorough investigation of AIG, a company 80% owned by taxpayers?  He also makes a good analogy to the forensic examination of airplane crashes, telling us that any experienced investigator knows to go to the black box first. In the case of a financial catastrophe, it is the models, the e-mails and other correspondence which will tell you what you need to know. He sees the most recent scandal involving the New York Fed as a cover-up of prior cover-ups.

The video is embedded below. Bill, what’s up with the beard?

I would be remiss if I didn’t point out the apparent bias the presenter shows. The host appears in visible disbelief near the end of the spot as to why this is important. She even goes as far as to ask why are we dredging up the past.  I find this a remarkably poor piece of editorial on an extremely important issue. Maybe the beard threw her.

 

Last week, Black also wrote a post on these ideas with Frank Partnoy and Eliot Spitzer at New Deal 2.0 that I recommend. Here is how it begins:

In a December New York Times op-ed, we called for the full public release of AIG email messages, internal accounting documents and financial models generated in the last decade. Today, a Bloomberg story revealed that under Timothy Geithner’s leadership, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York told AIG to withhold details from the public about its payments to banks during the crisis. This information was discovered when emails between the company and the Fed were requested by representative Darrell Issa, ranking member of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.

The emails requested by Issa span five months beginning in November 2008. The Fed’s request to suppress this information would not have come to light without the release of these emails. If five months of emails reveal information key to our understanding of the aftermath of the crisis, imagine what 10 years of emails could contribute to our understanding of its causes. We believe the AIG emails and other internal company documents are the ‘black box’ of the financial crisis. If we understand the failure of AIG, we will more fully understand the crisis – what caused it and more importantly how to prevent it from happening again.

Source

Tip of the Iceberg – New Deal 2.0

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China takes steps to prevent overheating

China has been very successful in maintaining GDP growth in the midst of one of the worst global downturns on record.  In 2009, the concern was how an export collapse would trigger slow growth and unemployment. But as 2010 begins, for the Chinese economy, it is overheating and inflation that most are worried about. Chinese Academy of Social Sciences economists Yao Zhizhong and He Fan are reported to have said:

If the government continues with the same strength of macro-economic stimulus as in 2009, there will be notable economic overheating in 2010.

Indeed, they see growth as high as 16% if government stimulus continues on the same path. There are stories everywhere pointing to galloping inflation and overheating. Below are a few sample headlines from just the past day:

While this may be a perfect example of herding, I think the financial press are on to something. And the Chinese central bank (PBOC) does as well because it is now taking steps to rein in excessive credit growth.

First, the central bank has increased reserve requirements by 0.5% effective 18 Jan 2010. Bloomberg reports:

Reserve requirements will increase by 50 basis points from Jan. 18, the central bank said on its Web site this evening. The existing levels are 15.5 percent for big banks and 13.5 percent for smaller ones.

Chinese lenders added a record 9.21 trillion yuan ($1.3 trillion) of loans in the first 11 months of 2009, driving an economic rebound after the global financial crisis slashed exports.

These measures were taken because credit growth is through the roof now.  There were 600 billion yuan (nearly $90 billion) of new loans granted in the first week of this year alone. That is double the average over the preceding six months.

But the central bank is also increasing interest rates. Last week, the PBOC increased 3-month bill rates by 4 basis points. Today, the PBOC increased 1-year bill rates by 8 basis points above the rate set in August 2009, selling benchmark bills at 1.8434%.

And, to top it off, the PBOC is now aggressively draining liquidity from the credit system.  For example, today it sold 200 billion yuan (nearly $30 billion) in 28-day bills, the largest repo operation since 2004.

So, the chorus of media pundits talking about excessive credit growth and bubbles in China are on the mark and now the Central Bank is taking steps to address these problems. The question is whether the expansionary fiscal policy is at odds with this newfound tighter monetary policy. Finance Minister Xie says the government will continue adding stimulus. Let’s see, then, where this heads.

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The Fall Street Bear Index

From cuddly teddy bear, to growling starving bear, here is your bear market index, courtesy of FallStreet.com. Hat tip Scott.

 

bearindex

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Bloomberg continues to push the Geithner-AIG cover-up issue

Below is the latest Bloomberg News video on the Geithner-AIG cover-up. Congressman Darrell Issa (R-CA), who learned by investigation that the NY Fed asked AIG to withhold information about payment to its counterparties, is now asking questions. The New York Fed has responded saying that Tim Geithner “played no role in” the deliberations and communication referenced in specific e-mails now in question.  This issue needs further investigation.

(see video embedded below)

The NY Fed has not said categorically that Tim Geithner played no role in or had no knowledge of the withholding of information. I would like to see a categorical statement of this sort.

An example would be:

Timothy Geithner neither knew of nor participated in any deliberations concerning the withholding of information about payments by AIG to its counterparties. Any decisions to withhold information about AIG’s payments to its counterparties were made without the knowledge or participation of Mr. Geithner.

That is a categorical statement.

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China

Video: California Seeks Billions from Washington

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Obama: The Transactional President

Reading the news today, I came across an NPR article that I believe captured the political mood in the U.S. rather well.  While the stress of the article is on disillusionment from Obama’s base of supporters, I believe much the same dynamic is at play for crossover independent voters. But, apparently, the base has a lot to gripe about.

"There has been a great sense of disappointment among some of President Obama’s strongest supporters," Green says.

If that doesn’t change, he says, a lot of Democrats either won’t vote or won’t volunteer as foot soldiers for Democratic candidates in the upcoming year.

Intraparty Conflict

The president hasn’t actually lost many supporters among his base. Instead, polls show that it’s the intensity of his support that has diminished and the Republican grass-roots base is the one fired up and ready to go for the next election cycle.

Green’s issue is health care…

There are other intramural disagreements within the Democratic Party. Much of the Democratic base is opposed to the president’s troop increase in Afghanistan, although the alleged Christmas bomber may have taken some of the heat out of that sentiment.

Civil libertarians are angry Obama hasn’t yet closed down the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Hispanic lawmakers want more White House action on immigration reform, and even members of the Congressional Black Caucus are complaining he hasn’t done enough for African-Americans.

And then there’s labor. It’s a slightly smaller part of the Democratic vote than it used to be, but still crucial to the party in a midterm election. Steve Rosenthal, former political director of the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations — the AFL-CIO — thinks Democrats will lose support with labor if it delays action on a bill that would make it easier to organize unions.

Clearly, these people are expecting too much from one year’s results. But, the quote from Anthony Weiner (D-NY), calling Obama a transactional figure more than an aspirational one, struck me was particularly on the mark. It is this transactional nature which I believe is at the heart of growing voter apathy on Obama – and not just from liberals. Here are the key paragraphs:

"Despite the fact that the president wages an aspirational and ideological campaign, he’s turned out to be a very transactional president, and that’s not necessarily a bad thing. You have to make deals to get legislation passed," Weiner says. "But the problem is that many people in Congress don’t know what he believes about some of the big issues we are considering."

And that’s ironic, Weiner says, considering President Obama has made more progress toward the Democrats’ cherished goal of universal health coverage than any other Democratic president in a century. In what Weiner says should have been an unvarnished win for Democrats, Obama has actually lost support from his base.

"[It] may be it’s because their expectations are too high, but it could also be the president hasn’t shown them the type of fight that they would like to see," Weiner says.

What happened to the “Audacity of Hope?”

More at the link below.

Source

Obama’s Base Cools As It Watches Him Compromise – NPR

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Tim Geithner impersonates Jack Nicholson… again

The White House Stands Behind Geithner, Says Tim Was Not Involved In AIG Email Fiasco is the headline of a recent post at Zero Hedge. Barack Obama is standing behind Tim Geithner. I remain unconvinced.

This is the second time Secretary Geithner has done his “A Few Good Men” routine; and, judging from the uniformly negative response, it is another “deeply unpopular, deeply hard to understand” thing.

All of this is a bit cryptic. We deserve to know more as to why the Fed specifically wanted AIG’s synthetic CDO structures not to be revealed to the public and what role Tim Geithner specifically played in this incident. Was he involved in keeping the 100 cents on the dollar payments from the public?

Secretary, I have just one more question. If you gave an order that synthetic CDO structures weren’t to be discussed because they were irrelevant and your orders are always followed, then why were relevant bits of information crossed off on this memo?

Note that there should be no discussion or suggestion that AIG and the NY Fed are asking to structure anything else at this point.

Given that the disclosure describes the key amendment (i.e, updating the schedule to reflect the additional $[] exposure, is filing the amendment necessary or helpful?

-Handwritten note on document from late December 2008 discussing why not to reveal more details of the “Shortfall Agreement” at AIG.

 

I want the truth!

You can’t handle the truth!

I have a greater responsibility than you can possibly fathom. You weep for the taxpayer, you curse the U.S. Government. You have that luxury. You have the luxury of not knowing what I know – that the taxpayer’s demise, while tragic, probably saved lives. And, my existence, while grotesque and incomprehensible to you, saves lives.

I have neither the time nor the inclination to explain myself to a man who rises and sleeps under the blanket of the very freedom that I provide and then questions the manner in which I provide it.

Did you order the Code Red on AIG?

You’re goddamn right I did.

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Links: 2010-01-08

Dear readers,

I just barely missed putting 2009 in the title again. I’ll learn.  I have some other things on my plate, so I have not posted quite as often as I would like. I have three or four topics I want to look into. They are:

  • Greece and the recent comments by Juergen Stark.
  • The morality of strategic default (a reader asked me to write a piece on this)
  • More numbers on the unemployment situation

And a few other pieces I can’t remember at the moment.

In the meantime, below are the links for stories through this morning. Many more links are available at the news feed (which is also available as an RSS feed).

Cheers.

Edward

ps. Marshall Auerback has promised to write a bit more here to give you a variety of opinion.

pps. And my apologies to those whose e-mail I have yet to answer.

 

Today’s must read post:

Scott Fullwiler: Helicopter Drops Are FISCAL Operations

These Chartalist guys need a LOT more attention than they are getting.  See this post to get a better conceptual understanding of what fiscal stimulus really is and monetary stimulus really is. Very wonky but great framework. I recommend it highly.

 

Other posts

 

Sorry, no Bread & Circus feature.  I know you need some distractions. They will be back.

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Household survey charts reveal this is no garden variety downturn

Markets were disappointed by today’s unemployment data because they reveal how difficult it has been for the employment situation to improve in a meaningful way. The employment market is improving, just not as much as one would hope. Below are four charts derived from the household survey data that tell the story, but also point to the secular nature of this problem.

Secular trends in unemployment?

This first chart demonstrates that the secular trend in the unemployment rate has mirrored the secular trend in the stock market over the last 40 years. The data reveal a secular increase in unemployment during the 1970s which I believe is related to economic ‘recalculation’ as the economy made a secular adjustment out of manufacturing and dealt with rising inflation (see my post Looking at structurally high unemployment as recalculation). In the 1980s and 1990s these trends were reversed. It seems we are entering another secular period of increasing unemployment which began at the beginning of the last decade. However, notice the slope of the line is enormous. As I have indicated in the past, I believe we are only in the middle of a depression and secular bear market. This would suggest that unemployment would rise even higher in the next downturn and points to the recent rally as a cyclical bull market aka bear market rally.

unemployment-rate-200912

 

This time is different?

Is this recession different?  In some ways, yes. The change in the unemployment rate has been unusually high, peaking at 4.0% in April and June 2009.  I would expect that June date to be right around the official dating for a technical recovery when the determination is eventually made. However, recovery or not, you have to back to 1949 to find a steeper one-year rise in the unemployment rate. This is a truly depressionary indicator that, combined with the private sector debt load, suggests a future of secularly weak consumer demand. While I am far from convinced the balance sheet recession means deleveraging will be large during a recovery, it does suggest demand retrenchment will be unusually severe when the next downturn hits, one reason, I expect the unemployment rate to shoot up even higher.

unemployment-change-200912

 

Not a garden variety recession but the beginning of a secular trend

This chart only goes back twenty years as there have been increases in the labor force which make longer comparisons deceptive.  But, you can clearly see the trend in the number of unemployed workers of the last twenty years has been broken.

 

unemployed-workers-200912

If  stretched this period out to the 40 years of the previous charts you would see a repeat of the secular trends from the unemployment rate.

unemployed-workers-200912-2

 

Is the fall in labor participation unusual?

Finally, there is the labor participation rate.  This usually falls when the jobs market is poor as people become discouraged and drop out of the labor force.  You can see this in the data.  The worrying thing is that this number is still dropping.  However, I would point out that this is not at all unusual in our services-based economy. For example, in the last recovery, which began in November 2001, the participation rate didn’t bottom until January 2005. The 1990-91 recession ended in March 1991, but labor participation fell until December 1991.

I don’t have a feel as to which specific structural issues are behind this jobless recovery syndrome and comparisons to the past are poor because the data only go back to 1975 when women were entering the workforce en masse. But the chart does show a dramatic and unprecedented change in participation rates from this last downturn.

I would say that this fall in labor participation rate, combined with stagnant or falling house prices, is likely to limit household formation, creating another pro-cyclical effect that will be a drag on the economy and on the housing sector going forward.

labor-participation-rate-200912

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Unemployment comes in at 10.0%; 85,000 jobs lost but November revised to gain

The forecast was for 10.1% unemployment and a gain of +15,000 jobs according to Market Watch, but 10.0% unemployment and a flat non-farm payroll number according to Bloomberg. As a reminder, ADP reported the private sector shed 84,000 jobs, the smallest job loss since March 2008. So, the labor market is definitely improving.

But, in November, 59% of the unemployed were out of work for more than 15 weeks, 38% for more than 27 weeks, the point where extended benefits kick in. The employment-to-population ratio, which takes everyone into account including those who have stopped looking, is at a two-decade low. This speaks to the depressionary conditions in the job market.

From the Employment Situation Summary:

Nonfarm payroll employment edged down (-85,000) in December, and the unemployment rate was unchanged at 10.0 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Employment fell in construction, manufacturing, and wholesale trade, while temporary help services and health care added jobs.

Household Survey Data

In December, both the number of unemployed persons, at 15.3 million, and the unemployment rate, at 10.0 percent, were unchanged. At the start of the recession in December 2007, the number of unemployed persons was 7.7 million, and the unemployment rate was 5.0 percent.

Also note that there are huge data revisions in this release, going back to January 2005, so I’ll have to parse the data before I draw any definitive conclusions. On the surface, this supports my view that we would see positive job growth by year end 2009 or Q1 2010 but that unemployment should continue to rise as the labor participation rate improves.

More later.

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The smoking gun in the AIG – Geithner cover up

 geithner-email-10-01-07

In then New York Fed president Tim Geithner’s own handwriting:

Note that there should be no discussion or suggestion that AIG and the NY Fed are asking to structure anything else at this point.

It will be enlightening to hear him explain what this statement means. See also Tim Geithner "Protects America From Itself" By Forcing Elimination Of Material AIG Disclosure at Zero Hedge. There are many more documents to come. This story is just unfolding.

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