Visit us at our new home!

For new daily content, visit us at our new blog: http://www.acrinv.com/blog/

Friday, December 26, 2008

Afternoon Review

AT&T (T) +0.40%, Wal-Mart (WMT) -0.16%
Wal-Mart Stores (WMT) will start selling Apple’s iPhone on December 28 in almost 2,500 U.S. stores to bolster its offering of consumer electronics. A partnership with Wal-Mart brings the iPhone to the world’s biggest retailer, building on a deal Apple made in September with Best Buy, the largest U.S. electronics chain.

Wal-Mart’s customers can be seen as the average American, and it appears that Apple hopes Wal-Mart will help the iPhone go mainstream. While it is highly unlikely that the iPhone will control the market the way iPods control the MP3 player market, Apple will likely see its smartphone marketshare grow.

AT&T should reap the benefits of new customers buying iPhones, and thus switching to their network. Increasing the number of current customers using smartphones would provide AT&T with a boost since smartphone customers tend to have higher monthly bills.

By carrying the iPhone Wal-Mart continues to build its reputation as a consumer-electronics destination. The company’s 3,000 U.S. supercenters and discount stores have improved displays and given more space to Sony Corp. flat-panel televisions, Dell Inc. laptops and other electronics in the past year to spur sales.

Eli Lilly & Co. (LLY) +0.48%
Lilly signed a $497 million licensing and development agreement for BioMS’s dirucotide, potentially the first treatment for advanced forms of multiple sclerosis to come to market.

Lilly faces the possible loss of more than half of last year’s revenue when patents on its top-selling drugs – Zyprexa, Cymbalta, Gemzar and Humalog – expire by 2013.

In mid-2009, BioMS will hand off dirucotide to Lilly so it can complete clinical testing and eventually sell the product. At any time during testing, Lilly can break its agreement with BioMS, which has no other drug in its pipeline.


Quick Hits


Peter Lazaroff, Junior Analyst


Daily Insight

U.S. stocks gained some ground in a holiday-shortened session on Wednesday, halting a two-day decline. Better-than expected economic reports helped the major indices advance.

We’re headed for the worst annual performance on the S&P 500 since 1931 (although I’ll add that the 47% decline that year followed a 28.5% decline in ’30 and a 12% loss in ’29, so the current move is more in line with the 1973-1974 period – down 47% combined – than the years of the last depression. This year’s performance will end a five-year winning streak).

In any event, we may find a rally here in the final four days of the year as tax-harvesting may have run its course. Still, mutual fund managers will want to show high cash balances for quarterly statements, so any gains should be subdued.

Reports on personal spending and durable goods orders, while weak, came in above expectations. The durable goods report showed business spending actually rose 4.7% last month and that helped sentiment.

Market Activity for December 24, 2008

The equity markets have meandered for three weeks now, but at least the moves have been relatively subdued. We have given back a quarter of the 20% rally off of the November 20 multi-year low but that leaves us 15% above that mark. The market appears to be in a feeling out process; no one knows which way things will go but based on similar bear markets – for instance the 1974 bear – there’s a good chance we’ll rally from here.

We may test those lows again, but the de-leveraging event has pushed us below where we should be from a fundamental perspective. For sure there’s a lot of bad news out there, but with the NYSE trading at 13 times trailing earnings with a 4.54% yield (remember the 10-year Treasury carries a 2.16% right now) and the S&P 500 trading at 14 times the consensus estimate for trough earnings (generally the trough earnings multiple is significantly higher than this) stocks have the bad news, and then some, priced in.

Stocks will have to face additional tough forces over the next year – higher regulations, the prospect of higher tax rates, what I believe will be an energy policy that is not conducive to growth, a likely inflation event that will force the Fed to substantially raise rates and will drive long-dated Treasury yields much higher and a new president that may be tested by Islamic radicals, just as the prior two were just months into office – hopefully changes over the past seven years have helped us thwart attacks.

However, we’re trading at very low levels right now and a nice rally is warranted. Further, if any of the stated concerns do not come to pass, stocks will respond positively as a result. Still, without a tax-rate response to the current issues, it is unlikely the next couple of years will be an easy ride. An economy has never spent its way out of a problem and we’re guessing without a reward for success and measured risk-taking (by driving tax rates lower on capital and income) we’re not going to prove history wrong this time.

The government crammed in a bunch of economic releases on Wednesday, some of which would have normally been due out yesterday, so we’ll touch just briefly on each one to keep from getting too long.

Mortgage Applications

The Mortgage Bankers Association’s index of applications to buy a home or refinance a loan rose to the highest level since 2003, jumping 48% in the week ended December 20. The groups’ refinancing gauge rose 63% and purchases gained 11%.

The average rate on the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage dropped to the second-lowest level on record. Let’s hope these rates are low enough to at least partially offset what has become an additional drag on the housing market – a weak labor market.


Durable Goods (November)

The Commerce Department reported that durable goods orders fell 1.0% last month; however, the reading was much better than expected as a decline of 3.0% was anticipated. We’ll note the revision to the October data was revised downward big time, coming in at -8.4%. Significantly lower than an already large 6.2% decline previously estimated.

The ex-transportation reading on durables actually increased in November, rising 1.2%. This is a big surprise and, even if it’s off of a horrible 6.8% drop in October, should be viewed as a good sign.

Non-defense capital goods ex-aircraft, a proxy for business spending within the report, rebounded in November, up 4.7%. However, for the quarter this segment is down 21.6% at an annual rate. A huge reversal from what we saw in the second quarter and first-half of the third as the figure was up 15.25% at an annual pace. This shows how quickly things changed in mid-September.

Overall, for the first two months of the fourth quarter total durable goods are down 41.6% at an annual rate, which puts orders on track for one of the largest quarterly declines ever. The intensification of the credit crunch, the Boeing strike and Hurricane Ike (which made landfall last quarter but affected the first month of this quarter) have combined for the perfect storm to hammer durable goods orders and manufacturing and industrial production in general.

Personal Income and Spending

The Commerce Department also reported that personal incomes fell 0.2% in November, marking only the second monthly decline in the past three years.

So, we’re beginning to see some meaningful deterioration in incomes as the year-over-year reading has dropped below 3.0% -- it came in at 2.5% from the year-ago period for November. Compensation was up just 1.7% in November. The wage and salary segment was up 1.5%. Proprietor’s income fell 1.7%. These are year-over-year readings.

On the positive side, dividend income, while down from high single-digit growth six months back, has held up pretty well, up 3.6%. (The decline in financial-sector payout rates has put pressure on the figure). Rental incomes continue to soar, more than doubling on a year-over-year basis as the housing market correction has fueled rental occupancy rates.

Personal spending fell 0.6% in November, marking the fifth-month of decline -- although, the drop last month was less than estimated. That’s on a nominal basis. Adjusting for inflation, real spending rose 0.6% in November, marking the first increase since May.

We’re looking for the December reading to break this nominal spending trend. Bad weather across the nation over the past two weeks may have held things back a bit, but the 65% decline in gasoline prices has left significant cash in consumers’ pockets and this should show up in the December figure. The plunge in energy prices has brought overall levels of inflation down to almost nothing, so real incomes remain positive, which is meaningful.

Consumer will continue to boost cash savings, as their main savings vehicles – the home and stock market – have endured major damage. Still, the decline in gasoline prices is very powerful and even if the December spending figure fails to show a bounce, it will occur over the next couple of months.

Inflation Trend

Inflation has been led lower by a plunge in energy prices and this should not be confused with what’s known as monetary deflation. While consumer activity must be affected by a deteriorating labor market, the current decline in energy prices is great news for the U.S. consumer and should help to drive spending in other areas over the next couple of months.

The inflation gauge tied to the personal spending data (the PCE Deflator) showed overall price activity came in flat during November (no change from the October reading) and has dropped to 1.4% on a year-over-year basis from as high as 4.5% in July. So this massive deceleration in the rate of inflation should help to augment consumer activity. That said, we do not believe inflation will remain tame; this is a transitory event.


The massive liquidity injections by the Fed will combine with an infrastructure-based stimulus program -- that will likely reach $1 trillion when it’s all said and done -- to kick up commodity prices again and thus overall inflation. But that’s another story and likely several months out.

Jobless Claims

The Labor Department reported that initial jobless claims jumped 30,000 in the week ended December 20 to hit 586,000, remaining at a 26-year high.

While this is a very elevated level, as we continue to point out, claims of nearly 600,000 are not what they were back in 1982 when civilian employment stood at just 99 million, today it stands at 144 million. Adjusting for the increase in employment, we’d need to see claims hit nearly one million to match the 1982 level. We think this perspective is important.
(That 144 million figure comes from the Household Employment Survey, which includes the self-employed. The Establishment Survey, which measure just payrolls and excludes the self-employed, stood at 88 million in 1982 and stands at 136 million today. This does not change the prior point, I just want to clarify that there are two different surveys to view.)

The four-week average of initial jobless claims continues to rise, increasing 13,750 to 558,000 – the eighth week of increase.


We’re without an economic release for the next two business days, so things will be quiet as they normally are in the final week of the year.

On Tuesday, we’ll get some home-price data and manufacturing activity out of the Chicago region. On Wednesday, mortgage apps and jobless claims – again a day ahead of the normal schedule as Thursday is another holiday.

Have a great weekend!


Brent Vondera, Senior Analyst

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Fixed Income Recap

Thin Markets Hurt Auction
Today’s $28 billion five-year auction suffered from a thin market and the rest of the Treasury market suffered as a result. However, it is difficult to draw anything meaningful from market movements during the holiday season when most trading desks are half staffed. The 5-year was off about a half point in price after the auction before rallying back in afternoon trading to yield about 1.44% late in the day.

Mortgages have widened to comparable Treasuries over the past week, but again, volatility must be taken with a grain of salt given the thin markets at year end. The spread between thirty-year MBS and the 10-year Treasury has widened about 30 basis points from this time last week.


Cliff J. Reynolds Jr.
Junior Analyst

Daily Insight

U.S. stocks dropped for the second-straight session (down four of the past five following that 5.1% move on the day of the FOMC meeting) as we’re all but out of time for that Santa Claus rally a number of financial-press articles predicted over the weekend. There are just too many people hiding in cash, and surely mutual fund managers want to show heavy cash positions for year-end reports, while tax-loss trading puts pressure on what is already a light-volume week.

Yesterday’s economic reports didn’t help matters either, as data showed the housing market continues to weaken and the final revision to third-quarter GDP corroborated what the previous estimate told us, the economy contracted during the July-September period.

What’s more, profit reports are illustrating that corporate earnings will have declined substantially this quarter.

While we’ve seen overall S&P 500 profits decline for five quarters now, this has mostly been a financial-sector story. Ex-financial profits have remained positive during this stretch, expanding upon the 20-quarter post-WWII record of double-digit profit growth for total S&P 500 profits. This will not be possible when Q4 earnings season kicks off in a couple of weeks, we’ll see widespread deterioration.

That said, the market has discounted this deterioration in earnings as the conspicuous 46.9% decline on the NYSE Composite illustrates. This is not to say things will be a cakewalk from here, we’re just pointing out that there isn’t much – from an economic perspective -- that should surprise the market at this point.

Market Activity for December 23, 2008

GDP

The Commerce Department reported their final revision to third-quarter GDP came in unchanged from the preliminary revision, showing the economy contracted at a 0.5% real annual rate. The NBER (National Bureau of Economic Research) officially announced the recession began in December 2007, but the contraction truly took hold last quarter.

Real PCE (consumer activity) was downwardly revised to show a very large 3.8% decline at an annual rate. Business equipment spending collapsed, falling 7.5% at an annual pace, much lower than even the meaningful 5.7% drop estimated in the previous revision.

The deterioration in business equipment purchases is the most salient aspect of how quickly things changed when the credit markets froze up. Business spending jumped 10% at an annual rate November 2007-July 2008, but shut down on a dime beginning in September.

Residential fixed investment (housing) declined 16% at an annual rate last quarter. It appeared we had found a bottom in housing during the second quarter as this segment of GDP fell 13.3%, which was a major improvement after falling 25.1% in the prior quarter, and this level of decline had been the trend for the previous several quarters. However, we couldn’t expand on that progress in the third-quarter as credit tightened up and labor-market weakness did additional damage to home sales.

We’ll note a couple of things though. Last quarter’s GDP figure would have still posted a mildly positive reading if not for the Boeing strike, which put additional pressure on durable goods orders, and Hurricanes Gustav and Ike, which did major damage to the Gulf region, shutting down energy and utility production in the Texas and Louisiana. (Gustav made U.S. landfall September 1 and Ike two weeks later – Ike was the third most destructive Hurricane in U.S. history.)

In any event, the report is old news as everyone is focused on the current GDP situation which will be the doozy; we’ll get the advance release (the first estimate) on January 30. Most look for roughly a 6% drop in real GDP, which would mark the worst reading since 1982. The data over the past three months surely bears this out.

Housing

The Commerce Department also reported sales of new homes dropped another 2.7% in November and remained at a 17-year low. Sales came in at an annual rate of 407,000 units. The median price of a new home did rise 2.7% last month, but is off by 11.5% over the past 12 months and down 16.07% from the peak hit in March 2007.


The housing market has hit another snag of late due to the credit event. It appeared as though things had begun to stabilize late-spring/early-summer as the decline in sales eased and we actually saw a couple of months in which sales actually rose; however, the improvement proved short-lived as the combination of tighter credit conditions and a weak labor market have wreaked additional havoc. The unadjusted data showed that just 28,000 new homes sold in November.

The supply of new home, adjusted to the current sales pace dipped slightly, yet as you can see remains very elevated.


On the bright, as we’ve touched on for a couple of months now, the number of new homes available for sale has plunged and when the sale figures do bounce back this shows the inventory-to-sales ratio will fall fast.


In a separate report, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) reported that existing home sales fell a large 8.6% last month (8.0% when taking out multi-family units) to 4.49 million at an annual rate. The median price fell 2.9% last month, down 13.2% from the year-ago period.

Existing home sales are based on contract closing (as opposed to new home data, which is counted when a contract is signed). Thus this November data may be a reflection of the credit crunch that intensified in late September – since there is a 6-8 week lag between the signing and closing of a contract. Let’s hope this data proves the worst has arrived; yet it’s likely the weak job market will be an issue for the housing market for a while still.


The inventory figure, which had shown nice improvement from the peak, has moved higher again.


We really need to see this figure fall to the seven months’ worth of supply level to begin getting excited. The traditional drags on housing – a weak labor market – will cause additional problems for sometime. Mortgage rates have come down nicely over the past three weeks, but we’re not sure this is enough to offset the decline in payroll positions.

The next administration will target mortgage rates (this is our guess, it has not been announced) possibly by issuing long-dated Treasury notes at sub-3.00% -- the 30-year T-bond currently trades at a yield of 2.65% -- and have Fannie and Freddie write mortgages somewhere around 4.25%-4.50%. Depending on how they target this, such artificial meddling within the mortgage market may not have longer-term ramifications. However, if they include those who have been seriously delinquent on their payments (even after prior loans have already been modified) this will certainly cause problems down the road. If they do include these people they better darned make the loans fully recourse.

Such a plan would be a way to take advantage of very low borrowing costs for the government. Problem is there is no free lunch, everything has its cost.

Have a Merry Christmas and a Happy Hanukah!


Brent Vondera, Senior Analyst

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Afternoon Review

General Dynamics (GD) -1.35%, Northrop Grumman (NOC) -1.16%
The U.S. Navy awarded a $14 billion submarine contract to a unit of General Dynamics. The contract calls for construction of eight Virginia-class submarines to be built by Electric Boat, a wholly owned subsidiary of General Dynamics, and Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding, a unit of Northrop Grumman (NOC). The companies will construct one ship per year in 2009 and 2010, and two ships per year from 2011 through 2013.


Covidien Ltd (COV) -4.68%
Covidien said it will change its country of incorporation to Ireland from Bermuda. Investors who track stock benchmarks such as the S&P 500 may sell 65 million shares as a result, JPMorgan & Chase estimates.

We are starting to see more companies leaving Bermuda in anticipation of decreased tax benefits once Obama takes office.


Washington Federal Inc. (WFSL) -26.38%
Washington Federal plummeted after it reduced its quarterly dividend by 76 percent to 5 cents a share, citing higher credit costs.


Quick Hits

Peter Lazaroff, Junior Analyst

Daily Insight

U.S. stocks began the holiday-shortened week lower as a deteriorating outlook regarding corporate profits and commercial real estate wore on investor sentiment. Year-end tax-loss trades may have also put pressure on stocks, overwhelming what is a low volume week.

Stocks did pare earlier losses though, rallying nearly 2% in the final 30 minutes of trading. What appeared to be heading for a 5% downer mid-way through the afternoon session, turned into a 1.80% drop for the broad market – mild by today’s standards.

Commercial real estate concerns are beginning to rise to the surface and this may be an added issue stocks will have to deal with. It’s pretty clear that lenders used unrealistic estimates, assuming strong rental growth rates to justify high loan payments. As the credit freeze-up that hit in September exacerbates declines in commercial rental rates, borrowers will have a more difficult time meeting payments, driving defaults.

On the bright side, with massive levels of cash on the sidelines, we may be able to rally early next year as the taking of tax-losses will have run its course and that will be one less pressure point on stocks. It’s likely the broad market has priced in a lot of ugly assumptions, like this commercial real estate story.

Market Activity for December 22, 2008


Interbank Lending

Interbank lending rates have eased dramatically over the past couple of months and the TED Spread (an indication of risk aversion – a higher level means investors and institutions are less willing to take risk; lower the opposite) has nearly returned to its level prior to the collapse of Lehman on September 15. Although, the level during more normal times is closer to 0.50, so keep that in mind.


The decline in interbank lending rates has not only declined in the U.S. and London, but across the globe. The Hong Kong interbank rate, HIBOR, has declined to the lowest levels since 2005 and TIBOR (Tokyo interbank rates) sits at the lowest level in a decade, according to Bloomberg.

Global central banks have pumped massive amounts of liquidity into the system and as a result these rates should remain palliative to lending.

The degree to which TED has declined is a bit deceiving, however. The narrowing in the spread between three-month LIBOR (the rate at which banks charge one another for loans of this duration) and three-month T-bills is solely a result of the liquidity injections by central banks that has brought LIBOR down. We really need to see 90-day T-bill yields rise; at current levels it is abundantly clear cash is hiding out for now. When the yields on bills begin to rise again it should signal investors’ willingness to take a dip into the risk pool once again.


Been Waiting for This One

Last week I watched an interview in which a business news journalist asked why everything but tax cuts have been tried in getting us beyond the current mess. The guest responded by stating (paraphrasing): “we tried that in 2003 and look where we are now.”

I’ve been waiting for that comment for three months now, it was only a matter of time and frankly I’m surprised it took this long to hear it.

It’s funny to me how Keynesians, always wanting to keep to the same old flawed game plane, have the temerity to make statements like those that vilify lower tax rates. The journalist should have responded by stating that is has been monetary policy mistakes that have brought us to this economic obstacle. If not for negative real short-term interest rates (for two years) that subsidized debt, we wouldn’t have been caught up in this morass in the first place.

Further, the rejoinder should have involved an explanation that if not for the lower tax rates on capital and income over the past five years it’s highly unlikely we would have withstood a serious housing correction (two years in the making) and a massive energy price shock for as long as we did.
(Remember, the oil shock did not begin in 2008 as oil prices doubled from $70 to $145 in a matter of 10 months, but went from $25 to $45 2003-2004; then from $45-$65 2004-2005; later hitting $70 before dipping to $60 in early 2007 and then the stunning spike to $145 that everyone now remembers. All the way, we heard that $40 per barrel would shut down the economy, but it didn’t. Then $60 would shut it down, but it kept rolling along. Then $70, $90, $100 would cause GDP to collapse, no, no and no. It was not until $145 per barrel combined with a freeze-up in credit that the economy finally succumbed.)

And lest we forget, lower tax rates on capital and income (and it’s important to understand that small business makes up 65%-70% of those in the top federal income tax bracket) enabled the labor market to set a record for job creation (52-straigth months) and corporate profit growth (up at double-digit rates for 20-straight quarters – Q3 2002 through Q2 2007) set a post-WWII era record.

The chart below shows profits with capital consumption and inventory adjustment, so no chicanery in these numbers.


Yes, some of this growth was due to the low interest-rate environment that helped the labor market with regard to construction jobs and the financial-sector post robust earnings. However, the higher after-tax returns on capital, the higher disposable (after-tax) income growth and the massive decline in dividend tax rates had a large hand in allowing the economy to withstand a stunning energy-price shock and a housing market that has been weighing on economic growth since the first quarter of 2006.

And another thing, Keynesians are always the first to complain that U.S. consumers engage in too much credit, yet they want consumers to spend like there’s no tomorrow when it makes zero sense to do so – when savings and overall wealth has declined. This is the dichotomy that confuses the Keynesian mind.

Instead of bowing to the mindset that we must always stimulate the demand side, what we need to do is stimulate the production side of things, that’s where the resources are most prevalent right now anyway -- on the business side.

Thus we must continue to reduce trade barriers, lower tax rates across the board, eliminate overlapping regulations and return society to an ideal of self-reliance – a safety net that has turned into a hammock does just the opposite by increasing a state of dependency. An attempt to spend our way out of this situation may look good in the short term, but it is not a long-run strategy.

As Margaret Thatcher stated: (since the world of economics is dominated by the philosophy of taxing and spending) “economics is too important just to be left to economists.” So true.

Have a great day!




Brent Vondera, Senior Analyst

Monday, December 22, 2008

Afternoon Review

Walgreen (WAG) -4.22%
WAG reported first-quarter profit that trailed analysts’ estimates and said it would spend less on new locations. WAG continues to post solid sales in a difficult retail environment, but costs grew faster than sales and the company plans to further cut back on store openings in 2010 and 2011. The new target growth rate is expected to reduce capital spending through 2011 by approximately $500 million, in addition to the $500 million announced in July.

WAG said it will cut spending on new stores by $1 billion through 2011, double its forecast in July. That will bring the rate of new openings to as much as 3 percent in 2011 from almost 9 percent in the most recent fiscal year.


Caterpillar (CAT) -2.13%
CAT announced new cost saving measures and noted that it is seeing continued deterioration of conditions in many of the markets it serves. The company plans to cut executive compensation by up to 50 percent, and senior managers could see cuts of 5-35 percent. CAT has instituted a hiring freeze and said it is offering an incentive-based voluntary separation program to some of its employees.


St. Jude Medical (STJ) -1.56%
STJ is acquiring MediGuide for $283 million, giving STJ technology to track needles, catheters and guidewires inside the body. STJ will use MediGuide’s technology to help develop products for cardiac ablation, a way to destroy malfunctioning heart cells and correct irregular rhythm without open-heart surgery. The market for ablation equipment could reach $2 billion a year by 2011.

STJ also completed its acquisition of Radi Medical Systems for $250 million. The moves do not alter St. Jude’s outlook.


Quick Hits

  • WisdomTree ETFs dropped significantly due to it being their ex-dividend date.


Peter Lazaroff, Junior Analyst


Daily Insight

U.S. stocks ended largely higher on Friday as the S&P 500 and NASDAQ Composite gained ground; however, the Dow Industrial Average was held back by shares of Chevron and Exxon – another 6.5% decline in the price of oil put pressure on the group. (The January contract, which expired on Friday, closed at $33.87 per barrel; that backyard storage idea remains in play!)

Basic material stocks also performed poorly, down 1.30%; energy shares lost 0.42%. Industrial, technology, and health-care shares led the board market higher.

We didn’t have much to trade on beyond the Detroit 3 bailout that was officially announced Friday morning. The news may have assuaged some short-term concerns over the issue, which likely provided stocks with a little boost – futures were pointing to a lower open, but reversed course when the news broke.

Market Activity for December 19, 2008

The Bush Administration’s decision to lend GM and Chrysler $17.4 billion so they can avoid bankruptcy was the big news of the day. (The two carmakers are virtually bankrupt as it is, as management has stated they can’t make it through year-end without the funds.) The deal will extend $13.4 billion now and another $4 billion in February. The car makers will provide the government with non-voting warrants, yet the exact amount was unclear.

Ford will not be included, I guess because they haven’t screwed up as royally as the other two. The company has stated its in good enough shape that they do not need this sort of financing. Maybe they’ll learn from this mistake. As former presidential candidate Fred Thompson has put it, “there are strict criteria to receiving taxpayer funds: you must screw up on a monumental scale.” Got that Ford? I’m sure they’ve learned their lesson; they won’t make that mistake again.

Ford is currently seeking a credit line from the government. Management says they may not need to tap it if the government meets this request. I’m guessing that assumes car sales rebound in quick order, which seems pretty unlikely.

Anyway, the deal with GM and Chrysler does have “stipulations.” The companies must show their viability by March 31 by reducing debt and current cash payments for future health care obligations. That’s pretty vague, for a reason I’m sure. In any event, it won’t matter because the stipulations are non-binding, which doesn’t really make them stipulations now does it. Apparently, Washington has re-defined another term for us. We thank them.

It is difficult to blame Bush too much for this decision. What’s the guy supposed to do with the labor market in the shape it is in? He’s kicking the issue down the road for the next administration, that’s when the real checks will begin to rip off.

What the Detroit 3 really need to become viable is to enter Chapter 11 bankruptcy (this is not Chapter 7 liquidation; it’s reorganization). This way they can streamline their primary workforce and dealerships. Currently the three have way too many assembly line workers, far too many dealerships and a layoff structure that makes competiveness impossible.

In term of the workforce and dealer outlets, the firms pretend as if they still enjoy 50% market share when in reality it is 18%.

In terms of the layoff compensation structure, GM pays the difference between their former wages and what jobless benefits pay. Then when the jobless benefits run out GM pays 95% of their wages for two years. Then, if you have the seniority, a former worker has a chance to enter what’s known as the jobs bank, which pay 95% of wages to do crossword puzzles etc., for years This is a joke and not a competitive business model. The government can write them checks until the cows come home, but until the aforementioned issues are dealt with they simply can’t be viable. If the government demands that the Detroit 3 make smaller and smaller cars, in place of producing what the market demands, they’ll simply become even more dependent on government financing. Unless, of course, the government mandates what cars consumers may buy, but that’s getting into another issue.

We’ve got a quiet Christmas-shortened week ahead of us and no economic data releases today.

Tomorrow we’ll get the final revision to Q3 GDP, which should show the economy declined 0.8% at an annual rate – the estimate is for the figure to remained unchanged from the previous estimate, -0.5%. No one will care about this release though as the Q4 reading will be the big one, likely to show the economy contracted at a 6.0-6.5% real annual rate, the worst reading since the spring of 1982.


Tomorrow we’ll also get new and existing home sales (November). Rarely are these released on the same day, but the holiday-shortened week has them crammed into one.

Pending homes sales remained dire in October, so existing sales were surely extremely weak last month, same will be true for new homes.



On Wednesday we get initial jobless claims (a day earlier than usual) and personal income and spending for November.


Have a great day!


Brent Vondera, Senior Analyst