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Decline in US service industries heightens recession fears,
sparks stock sell-off
By Barry Grey
6 February 2008
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US stock markets plunged Tuesday following the release of a
report showing a sharp contraction in service sector business
activity in January. All three major stock indexes were in negative
territory throughout the trading session and closed at or near
their lows for the day.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 370.03 points, a decline
of 2.93 percent; the Nasdaq Composite Index lost 73.28 points,
or 3.08 percent, to reach a 52-week low; and the Standard &
Poors 500 Index plunged 44.18 points, or 3.20 percent.
Tuesdays fall followed major declines on Monday, precipitated
by analyst downgrades of banks and credit card issuers and a survey
by the Federal Reserve Board showing that banks are tightening
their lending standards for both consumers and businesses, even
beyond real estate loans, and corporate demand for credit is weakening.
The Dow fell 108.03 points, the Nasdaq declined by 30.51, and
Standard & Poors 500 lost 14.60 points.
The two-day loss was the worst for the S&P 500 Index in
five years.
The sell-off reversed gains registered last week following
the Federal Reserve Boards extraordinary moves to lower
short-term interest rates. The Fed cut its federal funds rate
by 0.75 percent in an emergency move following panic selling on
international share markets, and a week later, at its regular
policy meeting, slashed the rate by an additional 0.50 percent.
This brought the major US short-term interest rate to 3 percent,
down from 5.25 percent last September.
These measures, aimed at pumping liquidity into near-frozen
credit markets and aiding banks hit by tens of billions in losses
from failed subprime mortgage-linked investments, have not sufficed
to ease fears on Wall Street and in corporate board rooms of a
steep recession and potential collapse of the US and international
financial system.
The markets reacted with near-panic to the report issued Tuesday
prior to the opening of the trading session by the Institute for
Supply Management (ISM) showing a major contraction in the US
services sector. This sector, which includes restaurants, travel,
banking, construction and retail, accounts for about two-thirds
of the US economy.
The ISM reported the first decline in the sector in nearly
five years. Its measure of non-manufacturing business activity
fell to 41.9 in January from a revised reading of 54.4 in December.
A reading above 50 indicates expansion, while one below 50 indicates
contraction.
Economists had expected a slight slowdown but were still forecasting
growth, with a median estimate for the index of 53. The ISM said
that only three service industries reported growth, while 14 showed
a decline. Among the indices that fell were those for new orders
and employment, which came in at 43.5 and 43.9 respectively.
These negative readings were particularly ominous, since they
point to future business activity. With manufacturing continuing
to shrink, the service sector has up to now been the chief source
of growth for the economy as a whole.
The ISM report compounded recession fears, as it came on the
heels of last weeks employment report for January, showing
a net loss of 17,000 jobs, and the governments report on
overall economic growth for the fourth quarter of 2007, which
registered an anemic increase of 0.6 percent.
This is an absolute collapse of this index, said
Nigel Gault, chief US economist at Global Insight. Gault pointed
out that in March of 2001, at the beginning of the last recession,
the index stood at 50, and during the recession it remained at
48 or 49, several points higher than Januarys reading.
Speaking of economists estimates of a current or imminent
recession, Gault said the report would be tipping plenty
of people over the edge.
Anthony Nieves, chairman of the ISMs non-manufacturing
business survey committee, said the consensus among survey respondents
was that the services sector had come to the end of a long-term
period of growth.
This is the most unequivocal sign weve had that
the economy is weakening, said Stephen Stanley, chief economist
at RBS Greenwich Capital.
The Wall Street Journal Online cited BNP Paribas
Richard Iley as saying the ISM report suggested... that
having flirted with recession the economy has reached a stage
where it suddenly accelerates sharply into the downswing,
surprising all forecasters and policy makers with the speed and
severity of the downswing and leaving the debate over recession
a complete irrelevance.
Other developments this week have added to fears of a deepening
financial crisis and economic slump. On Monday, Thompson Financial
reported that fourth-quarter 2007 earnings of the S&P 500
corporations were on track to dive 20.7 percent from a year earlier.
The net decline is overwhelmingly the result of massive losses
in the banking sector, which is expected to show a net loss.
Also on Monday, Standard & Poors warned that downgrades
of bond insurers would worsen the capital position of major banks
that have already recorded huge losses from investments linked
to the housing market. Another report said that major private
equity firms might refuse to help bail out two of the largest
bond insurance companies, Ambac Financial Group and MBIA.
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, testifying Tuesday before
the Senate Finance Committee to push for passage of the Bush administrations
$150 billion economic stimulus package, repeated the administrations
mantra that the US economy is fundamentally sound.
However, he sounded an ominous note, warning: Capital markets
turmoil impacting our financial institutions is and can increasingly
spill over to our real economy unless we do something about it.
He urged struggling banks to recognize losses and raise
capital rather than shrinking their balance sheet
and then restraining their lending.
Jeffery Lacker, the president of the Richmond Federal Reserve
Bank, told the West Virginia Bankers Association that he was undecided
on whether further interest rate cuts were warranted, even though
he believed job growth will be lethargic, at best, for much
of this year, and he expected business investment to slow
since some firms are experiencing a higher cost of capital
and most firms face an uncertain demand for their products.
He pointed to the signs of rising inflation and suggested that
the Feds easy money policy was undermining its credibility
in holding down prices.
His testimony was evidence of divisions within the Federal
Reserve Board, which are themselves rooted in the deep and systemic
nature of the crisis wracking American capitalism. Years of financial
speculation, based on low interest rates and cheap credit, accompanied
by various forms of accounting fraud and financial manipulation,
have enriched the corporate and banking elite at the expense of
the countrys industrial infrastructure and the living standards
of the broad masses of the population.
At the same time, they have built up a huge edifice of corporate,
consumer and government indebtedness. Attempts to bail out Wall
Street by pumping cash into the markets threaten to unleash an
upward spiral of inflation and undermine the already declining
international position of the US dollar.
See Also:
US: 17,000 jobs lost in January
[2 February 2008]
US: Fed rate cut fails to
stem recessionary fears
[31 January 2008]
US home foreclosures rise
by 75 percent in 2007
[30 January 2008]
Bushs last State of
the Union speech overshadowed by deepening crisis
[29 January 2008]
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