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Jobless claims, an end to the housing bubble: storm signals
for US economy
By John Levine
30 September 2005
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On Monday, September 26, in a speech to the American Bankers
Association Annual Convention, Federal Reserve Board Chairman
Alan Greenspan made unusually grave warnings about the risks to
the economy resulting from a fall in housing prices.
Echoing a warning he has made repeatedly over the past year,
Greenspan told the meeting of bankers that the dramatic
increase in the prevalence of interest-only loans, as well as
the introduction of other, more-exotic forms of adjustable-rate
mortgages, are developments that bear close scrutiny.
These loans have allowed highly leveraged borrowers to
purchase homes at inflated prices, and in the event
of widespread cooling in house prices, these borrowers, and the
institutions that service them, could be exposed to significant
losses (emphasis added).
Although Greenspan attempted to put an optimistic spin on the
situation, a barrage of economic data released this week makes
it impossible to sugar-coat the dangers to the stability of American
capitalism.
Hurricane Katrina created immense job losses, estimated at
between 400,000 and 500,000. Katrina-related jobless claims filed
at backed-up government offices rose to 214,000 last week. Total
jobless claims rose consistently over the past three weeks, reaching
a two-year high of 432,000 for the week ending September 17. The
previous week saw a jump of 97,000, a bigger increase than after
the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.
The day after Greenspans speech, the Conference Board
reported that the Consumer Confidence Index fell 19 points, from
105.5 in August to 86.6 in September. Analysts had expected the
index to fall to between 95 and 100. This is the lowest the index
has reached since October 2003, but more significantly, it represents
the largest single drop in 15 years. The last such fall came amidst
fear of oil shocks during the first invasion of Iraq.
Earlier this month, the University of Michigans Index
of Consumer Sentiment also dropped to 76.9 in September from 89.1
in August. At 76.9, sentiment was more pessimistic than in the
period after the September 11 attacks. Even before the hurricane,
the university report noted, Rising prices were expected
to completely offset income gains by four-in-ten households in
August, the highest level in more than ten years.
Other figures confirmed the decline in consumer confidence,
with twice as many expecting business conditions to worsen as
believe conditions will improve. A recent Conference Board report
found, Consumers saying jobs are hard to get
increased to 25.4 percent from 23.1 percent, while those claiming
jobs are plentiful fell to 20.1 percent from 23.6
percent.
These sentiments are leading to lower levels of consumption
spending. The Commerce Department recently revealed that retail
sales declined by a larger-than-expected 2.1 percent in August.
There is a direct relationship between the slowdown in consumer
spending and the topping out of the housing market. A large part
of consumer spending is financed by home equity loans and cash-outs.
But housing prices are no longer rising at double-digit rates,
creating paper increases in equity that can be used to sustain
consumption.
A Commerce Department report Tuesday pointed to a downward
turn in the housing market. New home sales sharply declined by
9.9 percent to a seasonally adjusted rate of 1.24 million units,
far worse than the expected 5.5 percent decline. The decline was
especially concentrated in the Northeast, where sales fell by
22 percent. Sales in the West fell by 17.9 percent and by 10.6
percent in the Midwest. In the South, sales fell by only 2.2 percent.
Despite the slowdown, prices rose by 2.5 percent over July,
but this is the first price rise in new homes in three months.
New home prices in August 2005 were only 1 percent greater than
last August, and the inventory of new homes for sale reached a
five-year high, further indicating an end to the housing bubble.
The Mortgage Bankers Association said Wednesday that applications
to purchase homes fell 3.4 percent last week atop a 2.6 percent
loss the week before, and filings to refinance mortgages dropped
by 10.5 percent.
In addition, mortgage rates rose for the second week in a row.
Thirty-year fixed rates rose to 5.85 percent, compared to 5.81
the previous week and 5.64 the same time last year. One-year ARMs
rose to 5.02 percent, from 4.94 last week. The rates on these
loans respond much quicker to short-term rates, rising from 4
percent in September of last year.
With less home equity available to pay off debts, missed payments
on credit card loans have already reached record levels, according
to a report released Tuesday by the American Bankers Association.
Credit card loan delinquencies reached 4.81 percent of account
holders in the second quarter of 2005, the highest since the ABA
began keeping records in 1973.
As of July, the total outstanding consumer debt, excluding
mortgages, was about $2.2 trillion. It will continue to increase
with the current savings rate of negative 0.6 percent of income.
The number of all consumer loan accounts missing a payment in
the second quarter was 2.2 percent, also a relatively high rate.
The increasing inability to make credit card payments suggests
that housing defaults may come next. In the past five years, household
debt has skyrocketed by 60 percent, and the average household
now spends as much as one fifth of its after-tax personal income
to service debt.
See Also:
US Federal Reserve hikes interest rates
No post-Katrina letup in assault on wages
[22 September 2005]
Bush reassures American ruling class
Tax cuts to continue, social programs to be slashed in wake of
Hurricane Katrina
[19 September 2005]
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