Blog Spotlight: Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis

Another edition of our new series:  Blog Spotlight.

We put together a short list of excellent but somewhat overlooked
blog that deserves a greater audience. Expect to see a post from a
different featured blogger here every Tuesday and Thursday evening,
around 7pm.

Second up in our Blogger Spotlight:  Michael Shedlock and Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis. Mike is one of the editors of The Survival Report, covering stocks and the economy. He also writes for the Daily Reckoning, and co-edits Whiskey & Gunpowder. He also runs stock boards on the Motley Fool, Silicon Investor, and TheMarketTraders. He is an avid photographer, when not writing about stocks or the economy, with over 80 magazine and book covers to his credit.

Mish_geta

Today’s focus commentary is called Falling Dominoes and addresses the impact of Housing’s decline on the economy:

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The Sentinel is reporting State targeting abusive lenders.

The [Massachusetts] state Division of Banks is cracking down this month on what it sees as abusive business practices by mortgage lenders and brokers.

The agency issued a series of new emergency regulations earlier this month, requiring better documentation from lenders and prohibiting them from pressuring consumers into taking out mortgages they can’t afford or working without their own independent lawyers. It also forced four companies — two of them located Worcester — to close immediately and place all pending mortgages with another, more established lender.

Commissioner of Banks Steven L. Antonakes said in a recent interview that division examiners found a pattern of deceptive business practices by some lenders during their most recent round of company inspections.

"We want to spell out in very plain English to send a message to lenders and brokers that these specific acts, whether they’re very obviously unfair or deceptive, or more subtle, they weren’t going to be tolerated," he said. "And you would put your license at risk by engaging in this kind of activity."

Abusive lending practices can destabilize the entire real-estate market. As an example, he described a hypothetical street containing 10 homes, each worth a certain amount of money.

"If loans were originated for two of those homes, in which the loan was made that the broker knows the consumer has no hope of repaying those loans, very likely the borrower will become delinquent," he said. "In the worst case, the home will be foreclosed upon, and that kind of activity could result in the home being sold for less than its value and before you know it, you have a domino effect."

But the slowdown has also put lenders in a tough position, said Christopher J. Iosua, president of the Mortgage Connection Inc. "When business slows down the way it has in the past six to nine months, new loan originators and those without a strong base of customers do things they probably wouldn’t normally do," he said.

The idea that lenders are doing things they may not have done in "normal conditions" may have some merit for some lenders but when 40% of the loans sold in California before the bust were either stated income loans or pay option arms, I think the idea if more fiction than fact. Anything and everything was done to keep the bubble booming, and that was as I said happening well before the bust.

With every bubble comes fraud. The two go hand in hand and housing is not unique in this respect. We are only beginning to scratch the surface of the fraud that supported this bubble. Lending standards are going to tighten as a result, and will continue to tighten as more and more of the fraudulent activity is exposed. I consider fraud and tightening of lending standards to be two big dominoes that are now falling. Tightening of lending standards was previously discussed in Lending Guidelines / Credit Squeeze and The Blame Game.

Consumer Spending

Consumer spending has been propping up our economy for so long so
let’s take a look at the current state of affairs with that oversized
domino. The Associated Press is reporting Consumers Cut Back Spending in August.

Feds Say Consumers Cut Back Spending by 0.1 Percent in August, Largest Amount in Nearly a Year.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Battered consumers, faced with weak income growth
and rising inflation, trimmed their spending in August by the largest
amount in nearly a year. The Commerce Department reported Friday that
consumer spending, after adjusting for inflation, dropped by 0.1
percent last month, the first decline since a 0.3 percent fall in
September 2005, a month when business activity was disrupted by
Hurricane Katrina.

Incomes, reflecting lackluster gains in employment, rose by just 0.3
percent in August, the weakest performance in nine months. Core
inflation, which excludes energy and food, was up a worrisome 2.5
percent compared to a year ago, the biggest year-over-year increase in
more than a decade.

The new report underscored how much the economy is slowing this year
as consumers have been battered by record-high gasoline prices and a
cooling housing market. Falling home prices are making Americans more
cautious about spending money because they feel less wealthy.

The overall economy grew at an annual rate of just 2.6 percent in
the April-June quarter, the government reported Thursday, and the new
report on consumer spending indicates that growth will likely slow even
more in the current quarter.

However, most economists believe the country will be able to escape
an outright recession, in part because trends in recent weeks have been
more favorable with gasoline prices falling rapidly, helping to boost
consumer confidence.

That development is expected to bolster consumer spending in the
final months of this year, giving retailers a decent Christmas sales
season. Consumer spending is closely watched because it accounts for
two-thirds of total economic activity.

Consumer spending before adjusting for inflation showed a tiny 0.1
percent rise, far below the 0.8 percent jump in the previous month.

Premature reports of the "death of the consumer" have been heard for
quite some time now from various people, and I must admit that group
includes me. Consumers have been spending more than they have been
making for 16 consecutive months. We have seen our first yearly
negative savings rate since the great depression. For a nice graph of
the negative savings rate, as well as a neat picture of the mythical
Eeyore please consider July Personal Spending.

Mortgage Equity Withdrawal

One of the dominoes propping up consumer spending is called Mortgage
Equity Withdrawal. In simple terms people have been treating their
house as a ATM, taking cash out at refinancing and spending it. That
source of funding is drying up. CalculatedRisk talked about MEW in GDP Growth: With and Without Mortgage Extraction.

The recent Flow of Funds report showed that household mortgages
increased $220.3 Billion in Q2 2006, and $436.4 Billion for the first
half of 2006. Using a simple formulation(1) for Mortgage Equity
Withdrawal (MEW), MEW was $81.6 Billion in Q2 2006. This is
substantially below the record $180.1 Billion of MEW in Q3 2005.

CalcualtedRisk went on to say the "declining MEW over the next few years will be a significant drag on GDP growth." I agree. That falling domino makes it more likely that this downturn in consumer spending is finally the real deal.

Jobs

Another key domino that is tipping but has not completely fallen over yet is jobs. I recently wrote about Jobs in No Hard Landing. Following is a snip from No Hard Landing, quoting Mike Morgan of MorganFlorida (a Florida Real Estate Broker).

Will there be a hard landing? No!
Will there be a crash landing? Absolutely!

For the last two weeks I’ve been receiving daily calls
from desperate mortgage brokers, real estate attorneys, insurance
brokers, title companies and subcontractors looking for deals and work.
This week I spoke with a real estate attorney closing his office and
returning to the corporate world. And several of the smaller builders
have called me offering triple commissions to entice sales of their
inventory. It doesn’t end there.

Who will the housing crash effect? Everyone. Real estate agents will
be first. As a group, they’ve made a ton of money during the housing
boom, and they’ve spent millions on new cars, vacations, restaurants,
clothes, and everything else that comes with excessive discretionary
income. That’s over now. Agents are not buying the luxury items that
helped feed the economic boom, and they are cutting back on business
spending like advertising and marketing. That hits the vendors and
newspapers revenues.

But this is all old news for us. The other shoe is dropping now.
Loss of hundreds of thousands of jobs created from housing will act
like a virus and spread throughout our economy. As real estate agents,
attorneys and mortgage brokers reign in their spending, it will effect
restaurants, car dealers, advertising companies, jewelers, remodeling
contractors, furniture manufacturers, bank profits, electronic
retailers, clothing and the list goes on and on and on.

As the primary players are affected, and they cut back on spending,
so will the secondary players in this market. These companies will be
forced to lay off employees, and the cycle will grow like a virus. Is
that it? Not a chance.

The reason this domino has not completely fallen over yet is that
homebuilders are still building homes at a high rate. Yes, year over
year rates show huge declines, but homebuilding remains brisk on a
historic basis. Thus homebuilding is still providing jobs even as it
increases inventories and downward price pressure. So while housing
related trade jobs are slowing, they have not yet collapsed. They will.
It is just a matter of time.

Countrywide

The Ventura County Star is reporting Countrywide may cut jobs by 10%.

The
end of the real estate market boom is forcing one of Ventura County’s
largest employers to cut 5 percent to 10 percent of its work force over
the next few months, a top executive told workers Tuesday.

Countrywide Financial Corp., the country’s largest mortgage lender
with about 5,700 workers in Simi Valley, Thousand Oaks and Westlake
Village, instituted a 60-day hiring freeze and plans to reduce staffing
in several areas, Dave Sambol, president and chief operating officer,
said in a memo obtained by The Star.

The memo does not mention layoffs, but several workers leaving the
company’s Westlake Village office as security guards roamed the parking
lot declined to discuss layoffs or said they were told not to talk with
the media.

layoff rumors that had been swirling on the Countrywide campus for
weeks were confirmed Tuesday morning. "You found out because your
vacation time on your paycheck was gone," said [a Thousand Oaks woman].

‘Bloodbath levels of decline’

"Sales of single-family homes for the year through July were down 27
percent, condos are down 60," said economist Mark Schniepp of the
California Economic Forecast Project in Goleta. "These are bloodbath
levels of declines. I don’t see how you can call that kind of a market
healthy. There are direct casualties from this downturn."

I had the pleasure of talking to George Noory with CoastToCoast
radio last Thursday evening. I briefly mentioned Countrywide while
talking about housing. I was surprised to receive this Email the next
day:

"Mr. Shedlock thank you for your presentation last night on Coast To Coast.

My husband has been a loyal employee of that company for five years.
He has been in the mortgage and lending industry here for almost 20
years. He’s had outstanding performance reviews and was recognized
repeatedly for running a very profitable branch FOR COUNTRYWIDE.

Mid Summer without ANY WARNING whatsoever, and after years of
outstanding performance reviews his branch was summarily closed. He and
his production staff were RIFED, then BROUGHT BACK into a failing
branch that had been recently started up just a few miles from his
branch.

You see over the course of several years (and through an ever
revolving door of Area Managers who were amply rewarded for OPENING NEW
BRANCHES) his management had established offices within one or two
miles of each other in the same footprint. This was fine during the
boom times of low interest rates, but you can imagine the cannibalism
for trained qualified staff and accounts that raised it head during
times of ever increasing interest rates. Instead of working in concert
with existing branch managers to establish a consolidation plan,
SUDDENLY AND WITHOUT WARNING BRANCHES WERE SHUT DOWN employees were
rehired with DEMOTIONS into cramped, tiny start up offices."

Countrywide Insider Sales

Cfcinsidersales

The above is just a snip of insider sales and it was taken
mid-september. Here is a link to all recent insider transactions thanks
to Yahoo. One look will show that CFC insiders are massively voting
with their feet (making tens of millions of dollars in the process).

A National Bubble?

Is it just Florida, Boston, Phoenix, Las Vegas, and California
affected by this? Even if it was, that would still be a lot wouldn’t
it? Let’s look at California alone. CalculatedRisk reported back in May
of 2006 California: Real Estate Licensees Surpasses 500,000. In other
words, one out of every 55 adults in California is a RealEstate agent.
That’s a lot of jobs isn’t it? The question to ask next is "How many of
them have had any sales lately?" Technically they are still employed
even though many agents in many states have no money coming in. The
unemployment numbers produced by the BLS are a joke for many reasons
and this is just one of them.

But returning to the initial question, the answer is no. This is not
just affecting the coasts and the deserts but places like Minneapolis
and Madison Wisconsin as well.

If you have not yet seen this video about Billings Montana, please
take the time to play it. It is a stunning example of the overbuilding
that still continues today in spite of sinking demand. It continues in
all of the bubble markets as well. Condos and houses are still going up
everywhere. Once that building stops, official unemployment rates will
soar.

Retail Expansion

The falling domino from slowing homes sales will soon tip the domino of retail store expansion.

Retail expansion, primarily around new subdivisions going up in
outer suburbia, supported a multitude of jobs at places like Pizza Hut,
Bennigans, Outback Steakhouse, Walmart, and Home Depot. With the
slowdown in housing activity, the slowdown in strip malls will follow
with a lag. Retail store expansion is in its final phase.

Global Wage Arbitrage

But pressure on jobs is not just on manufacturing and housing. We
are being hit from multiple angles. I wrote about teaching jobs in
Outsourcing Homework and medical outsourcing in Medical Tourism, the
Healthcare Fiasco, and the Healthcare Fiasco Continued.

As you can see, there are many dominoes in various stages of
tipping. Right now it seems like we may be headed for a mass collapse
all at once as opposed to a more linear progression of falling
dominoes. In the meantime hardly anyone in the mainstream media seems
to be able to see the recession that is headed our way.

Mike Shedlock / Mish
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/

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What's been said:

Discussions found on the web:
  1. Jed commented on Oct 5

    You picked a great blog for your spotlight today. The Big Picture and Mish’s blog, along with Calculated Risk, are my favorite sources of analysis of economic indicators and how they are likely to impact the stock market. Mish’s blog in particular is a great source for insights into what is likely to happen as a result of the housing crash. For example, the horrific warning yesterday by WCI (“WCI sees combined tower and traditional new orders falling 80% from last year.”) was foreshadowed much earlier in the year in Mish’s reports from Florida realtor Mike Morgan, who reported that WCI was building scads of condo towers in an already-glutted market.

  2. wcw commented on Oct 5

    Mish is a permabear, but a smart one. I remember reading his SI stuff in 1999 (back when buying puts was a self-flagellation like no other, I can assure) and thinking that despite his obvious prejudices, his was good thinking even when wrong. While I no longer spend time on his sites, I am tickled that he has continued to do good work.

    Reading someone like Mish is like reading JJ Cramer: neither is always wrong, both habe their certain insights, and in the end, you can either use their work as shortcut or do it yourself.

  3. me commented on Oct 5

    What Jed said plus Mark Thoma’s blog.

  4. jmf commented on Oct 6

    very good choice barry.

    mish is wunderbar!

  5. James Bednar commented on Oct 6

    Great picks so far Barry! Mish’s blog is a daily stop on my list. Heck, who am I kidding, sometimes it is 5 or 10 stops a day.

    That begs the question Barry, based on the comments on these threads, are these blogs really so overlooked?

    Perhaps not, but they definitely deserve the spotlight.

    jb

  6. ss23 commented on Oct 6

    Mish sometimes sensationalize…sometimes ok..
    overall B-.

  7. BDG123 commented on Oct 6

    I like Mish’s blog alot. No conspiracy theory, no paranoia. Just plain old fashioned perma-bear Mr. Negative. It’s nice to read something that makes you feel like slitting your wrists every once in a while. Combine that with Don Hays and you’ve got a pretty neutral view of life.

  8. jj commented on Oct 6

    Barry

    please don’t highlight BDG’s blog !!!

  9. alex norman commented on Oct 6

    My Favorite Econ/Market Blogs & Other Commentary”

    Big Picture
    Calculated Risk
    Mish
    Ben Jones
    Nouriel Roubini (Used it a lot more when it was free)
    John Mauldin
    Bill Gross Monthly IO
    John Hussman Monthly Commentary
    Jeremy Grantham Monthly/Quarterly Commentary
    Dan Gross (Moneyblog)

    And for the academics:

    Brad De Long
    Angrybear
    Economist’s View
    Becker-Posner

    Barry, the blog I nominate for Blog Spotlight is the best “News-From-the-Frontlines” Housing Market blog from Jim Klinge in Carlsbad, CA.

    Jim is a veteran residential broker who tells it straight and isn’t afraid of some quant analysis.

    the blog is called bubbleinfo.com

  10. angryinch commented on Oct 6

    Anon wrote: “a housing market slowdown is great for the stock market, as speculative housing money will pour in.”

    Correct me if i’m wrong, but most/all of the RE speculation was based on no-money-down (or very little money down.)

    I don’t think most brokerages will allow you to buy fine equities for 0% or 5% down.

    There was no speculative money “pouring in” to real estate. It was borrowed. So there’s no tsunami of speculative cash poised to flood the stock markets.

    Da bullz will need another argument to support the “coming equity bubble”. This one ain’t gonna fly.

  11. Abobtrader commented on Oct 6

    Good reporting from Mish, but I think this type of analysis (one fall-out leading to another and so on) is perhaps too linear, as it ignores the automatic stabilising forces in the economy (low bond yields for example are partly driven by a view of severe slow down in the housing mkt, but they also act as a counter force to this very slowdown).

    The analysis is plenty enough to get one worried, but I’m happier on the side of the optimists (in the good company of Mr Greenspan, apparantly!)

  12. Dubya commented on Oct 19

    I read Mish’s blog all the time. I liked it more before he relied so much on Mike Morgan and his bear-convert-Atlanta-area-realtor (I forget his name) for content.

    I wouldn’t say that blog is as overlooked as it used to be. A year ago, he’d be lucky to have a dozen comments per post. Now Mish regularly gets hundreds, even after deducting threadjackers and trolls.

    Good shout-out, tho. Mish has some classic stuff, but nothing quite as classic as “Your Coffee Sucks”.

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