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#793 | |
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Nov 2003
22·5·373 Posts |
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up the "recession is over" bullsh*t artists: Unemployment problems are worse than meet the eye Douglas McIntyre Sep 27th 2009 at 8:30AM filed under: Economy More There are a lot of people out of work, which is the norm during a recession. There are almost no jobs available, which is a bit unusual during a recovery. According to the The New York Times, a look at Labor Department statistics for the month of July revealed that "only 2.4 million full-time permanent jobs were open, with 14.5 million people officially unemployed." That's a six to one ratio -- the largest since they've tracked this stat. The immediate effect of the situation is obvious, but the longer term effects may not be. People will clearly be looking for work for a longer period than in previous recessions and the unemployment rate is almost certain to go over 10 percent, and may stay there for several quarters. The stress that this problem will put on the federal, state, and local governments around the country will be immense. The first consequence of this major imbalance between jobs and the jobless is that federal and state governments will be providing an unemployment social safety net that they really cannot afford. Congress has already voted to extend unemployment benefits, further straining federal financial resources. But, many people who are out of work will run out of benefits early next year, further undermining consumer spending. The other issue for government at all levels is that tax receipts will continue to stagnate at lower-then-expected levels, at least when compared to the federal Budget. IRS receipts may actually continue to drop, driving the deficit higher. The recession may be over, but it may not be over for long. Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 24/7 Wal St. |
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#794 | ||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
2D7F16 Posts |
Really busy at work today, but I see Bob has my back - here's the NYT article about the dire jobs-to-seekers ratio,
U.S. Job Seekers Exceed Openings by Record Ratio Quote:
G20 Summary: No reform, just a cosmetic patch for a discredited, flawed regime Quote:
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#795 | |||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
FDIC Says Banks Must Prepay Fees Through 2012 to Boost Depleted Reserves: The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., seeking to replenish deposit reserves as banks fail at the fastest pace in 17 years, today voted unanimously to have lenders prepay fees through 2012, raising about $45 billion.
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Note that "broke" is a euphemistic term for a government agency like the FDIC ... as you can see, they have the power to hit up the banks (i.e. the banks` customers, and that includes those of the banks which did not engage in reckless lend-and-spend behavior) for more money ... they could in an emergency also draw on their recently-created $500 Bln line of credit with Treasury. But the point is, the speed at which the FDIC insurance fund got wiped out belies all the claims in the past year by the government and by FDIC head Sheila Bair about the alleged "soundness" of the U.S. banking system, or about the current crisis "leading to far fewer bank failures" than occurred in the early-90s S&L crisis ... there may be fewer banks failing, but the average size is much larger, and the state of the average failed-bank balance sheet is at least as bad (and will probably prove worse once all is said and done and the mortgage-backed and CRE securities in question are finally marked to market) as during the S&L debacle. And of course we`re not counting the explicitly-backstopped-by-the-taxpayer TBTFs here. Federal Reserve Buys More Than 100% of Mortgages Issued in 2009 Quote:
Morgan Stanley's Mack Proposes Single Regulator to Oversee Banks Worldwide: Morgan Stanley Chief Executive Officer John Mack, who struggled to return the bank to profitability amid the financial crisis, said a single regulator should oversee financial institutions worldwide. Quote:
And once again I call BS on the repeated touting of bailed-out financial firms who "have paid back the TARP" funds ... that was only the one-most-visible of the many types of bailouts the Too-Big-to-Fails got courtesy of the U.S. taxpayer, and I seem to have missed the bit about "TARP interest rates being reflective of the risk" represented by these firms. The truth is that most of them would have been unable to raise desperately-needed capital in the open debt markets at any rate of interest. So not only did they get huge capital injections at basically no cost from Uncle stupid, they also got: - Access to Fed discount window and the alphabet soup of Fed-created emergency lending programs; - Ability to offload large amounts of toxic assets onto the Fed at face value; - Explicit government backstop of new debt issuance (e.g. via the FDIC program set up for this purpose); - Government permits biggest legalized account fraud in history by pushing for FASB regulation changes allowing banks to engage in mark-to-fantasy valuation of toxic assets; - Any number of "backdoor" bailouts, e.g. Goldman getting paid in full as a counterparty of AIG instead of taking a $10 billion-plus haircut as they should have; - Government looks the other way as the TBTFs "recapitalize" by raising customer account and credit-card fees to outrageous levels; - A roughly five-fold increase in their share prices due to an unprecedented market-pumping propaganda campaign by the government. Being able to (a) avoid bankruptcy and (b) issue gobs of new shares at a much-higher price than your non-government-backstopped financial status would justify is nice, very nice. |
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#796 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
GM Will Shut Saturn After Penske Automotive Ends Talks on Supply Concerns: General Motors Co. will close Saturn, the brand created 24 years ago to mirror Japan-based companies’ carmaking, after Penske Automotive Group Inc. said it has broken off discussions to buy the unit.
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Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis to retire: Beleaguered chief executive Ken Lewis to leave after tumultuous tenure. Bank under fire for its merger with Merrill Lynch last year. "Retiring now will allow me to focus my efforts on attempting to stay out of prison..." -- Ken Lewis` inner defense counsel |
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#797 | |||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19·613 Posts |
Update on the Saturn story - I googled the name of one of my former CWRU students who went to work at the Saturn plant in Tennessee upon graduating, it seems she was working there until last year, and is now enrolled at Belmont University, a liberal-arts school in Nashville, TN - personal retooling, as it were.
--------------- America’s New Post-Recession Employment Arithmetic Quote:
This Fortune writer isn`t going to be missing GM`s Saturn brand very much, and sees a similar dynamic in GM`s breathless hyping of its Chevy Volt concept car: Saturn's dead: Good riddance: It looked like a great idea when it was born, but it was just another symptom of the hubris that helped bring GM to its knees. Quote:
Shadow Housing Inventory Will Halt A Housing Recovery Quote:
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#798 | ||||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
2D7F16 Posts |
Denninger breaks down the September U.S. jobs data:
Nearly 1 Million Jobs Disappeared in September Quote:
[Addendum: Since I wrote the above this morning, news has broken that apparently the BLS is admitting that their black-box statistical fudgery has been wildly optimistic all year long. This will probably come as a surprise mainly to "most economists".] And speaking of folks going bankrupt... 2009 Consumer bankruptcies top 1 million: Mounting unemployment and housing crisis push the number of consumer bankruptcies to highest level since 2005. Quote:
TARP: Taxpayers on the hook for $200 billion: Experts say the cost of the $700 billion bailout to taxpayers is a small price to pay for saving the economy. Others argue we are just staving off an inevitable collapse. My Comment: Would that it were only $200 billion we were on the hook for, for our generosity in saving the crooks on Wall Street and at the Megabanks and Mortgage Lenders from the consequences of their own crimes and misdeeds. We're broke ... time for a new tax: Given the country's fiscal hole, former Fed chair Paul Volcker and many tax experts say there may be a need for a value-added tax. Quote:
A ZeroHedge contributor has an article with extensive reader discussion about the possible effects of a VAT here. Federal Reserve Actions in Lehman Bankruptcy Confirm Fed is a Criminal Conspiracy These guys really do believe that Laws are for the Little People: Will Disclosure In Lehman Bankruptcy Case Lead To Lawsuit Against Federal Reserve? Quote:
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#799 | |
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Nov 2003
164448 Posts |
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golden bailout in the process. |
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#800 | ||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
[Re. Bob's note about Ken Lewis's Platinum Parachute]
That will hopefully serve him as a nice nest egg with which to keep his future prison cell tastefully decorated... ---------------- September Employment Data: The More You Dig Into the Numbers, the Worse They Get: Barron’s Alan Abelson calls the September employment report “An absolute horror.” Quote:
Related: Charles Biderman of TrimTabs Investment research (yes, I know it sounds like a weight-loss supplement - and I see from the article comments that I'm not alone in wishing they'd change their name) takes the BLS to task for their employment-numbers fudging. ZeroHedge writer Bruce Krasting has an article detailing the effects of the recession on the huge "shadow" sector of the economy occupied by illegal aliens: An American Story Quote:
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#801 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19·613 Posts |
Schumer and Cornyn - "We Agree on Tax Credit": There was a love fest on ABC’s This Week. The odd couple was Senators Schumer (D.NY) and Cornyn (R.TX)
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#802 | |||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
Denninger was very quiet this past weekend ... I figured either he'd had an unfortunate run-in with a vampire squid or was working on something in-depth ... appears to have been the latter. He has a highly detailed post laying out the basic principles of banking, and argues - in opposition to Mish Shedlock - that fractional reserve lending is not the root of all Ponzi-lending evil, but rather that *unsound* lending (e.g. accepting crap as collateral, or nothing at all) is the real problem:
Sound Banking: A Capitalist Imperative Quote:
Quote:
Note that in 1873 the meltdown resulting from all the excess leverage had as its proximate cause President Grant's hard-reversion to an all-gold standard. Some incorrectly describe the effects in terms like "the gold standard caused the crisis", but that is not so ... any time you take an economic system which - for all its flaws - relies on certain assumptions about money supply and credit to function and subject it to a radical, ill-conceived "shock therapy", the law of unintended consequences comes to bear in a major way. Grant`s gold standard decree had much the same effect as last year`s shutdown in the credit markets post-Lehman had ... the credit-market analog of taking away a hard-core heroin addict`s supply. So, where do I stand with respect to Mish and Karl`s main points-and-counterpoints? - I agree with Mish that preventing creation of fiat currency with reckless abandon is terribly important, but disagree that there is a single "one true hard currency" ... as I`ve said before the main claim gold (Mish`s choice for HC) has to be a store of value is historic (and also by way of its relative indestructibility and scarcity). But the supply of gold is not in any way reflective of total economic production, some countries are blessed with lots of it despite having low overall economic productivity, and procuring more of it is terribly and needlessly environmentally destructive. Any modern form of a hard currency standard would thus need to be much broader, and encompass a wide range of goods and materials which are (a) transportable and (b) economically useful: oil, timber, cement, any of a number of "base" metals ... even things like electrical power and computer chips could be in the mix. - I agree with Karl that sound lending can and does occur within the context of a fractional-reserve system, but believe that such systems are an invitation to abuse and asset-price bubbles. KD notes that "Lending someone $9,000 to buy an $18,000 car (they put the other half down in case) is in fact not a fractional loan. The lending is in fact fully-secured and thus bears no fractional reserve of any sort", but if you look at the last decade`s spate of reckless lending you see the problem: Clever financial engineers will eventually find a way to offload the risk of such lending to other parties, and then it becomes a race to maximize loan-issuance volume, and the resulting rise in monetary velocity (roughly, leverage) will inevitably lead to asset-price bubbles as we saw in real estate. Then you end up lending someone not $9,000 to buy an $18,000 car, but rather $27,000 to buy an $18,000 car whose price has doubled to $36,000 due to a speculative bubble in automobile prices. The buyer may find another lender to finance the remaining $9,000 and thus has zero skin in the game, and all those "fully secured" loans made at the height of the bubble prove to be effectively unsecured once the bubble bursts and the buyers start walking away from those loans. Report on Bailouts Says Treasury Misled Public Quote:
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#803 |
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Aug 2003
Snicker, AL
7·137 Posts |
You are a confirmed cynic and pessimist at times Ewmayer.
I personally see quite a bit of good coming out of a big housing stimulus. Just think. We already have 1.5 trillion in 'incentives' that benefited just about all the big bankers and car companies and Japan and etc.... (add your favorite ...). Why not finally have something that benefits a big section of the working populace? After all, I didn't buy a car under CFC, but I just might buy a house for a $15,000 up front writeoff. DarJones (somewhat tongue in cheek with the above so don't get ideas I'm chaniging my tune) |
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