Sunday, November 16, 2008
Fireside Youtubes
It's something he plans to continue to do as President, and frankly it's a fantastic idea. In the address he talks about the need for a stimulus package and unemployment insurance benefit extensions, but the main focus is the fact he's using the term "recession" already.
The Bushies will be quick to point out we're not in a recession because we've only had one quarter of contraction (and of course they will revise that upwards to make sure the "recession" all falls on Obama's head) as if that makes a difference magically.
Obama at least acknowledges there's a problem.
Saturday, November 15, 2008
Looking Ahead To Monday
Monday may be the day the 8k floor breaks. If it does, all bets are off where we end up. We're in a bad recession, bordering on depression. One of those borders is the markets. A break below 8k would mean a new floor for the Dow, maybe 7k, maybe lower.
Last time the Dow futures hit limit down, the markets rallied by sheer will.
That will again will be tested Monday.
The Dark Side Of The Election
Cross burnings. Schoolchildren chanting "Assassinate Obama." Black figures hung from nooses. Racial epithets scrawled on homes and cars.That's pretty disturbing, both the "more than usual" and the "stolen from them" part.Incidents around the country referring to President-elect Barack Obama are dampening the postelection glow of racial progress and harmony, highlighting the stubborn racism that remains in America.
From California to Maine, police have documented a range of alleged crimes, from vandalism and vague threats to at least one physical attack. Insults and taunts have been delivered by adults, college students and second-graders.
There have been "hundreds" of incidents since the election, many more than usual, said Mark Potok, director of the Intelligence Project at the Southern Poverty Law Center, which monitors hate crimes.
One was in Snellville, Ga., where Denene Millner said a boy on the school bus told her 9-year-old daughter the day after the election: "I hope Obama gets assassinated." That night, someone trashed her sister-in-law's front lawn, mangled the Obama lawn signs and left two pizza boxes filled with human feces outside the front door, Millner said.
She described her emotions as a combination of anger and fear.
"I can't say that every white person in Snellville is evil and anti-Obama and willing to desecrate my property because one or two idiots did it," said Millner, who is black. "But it definitely makes you look a little different at the people who you live with, and makes you wonder what they're capable of and what they're really thinking."
Potok, who is white, said he believes there is "a large subset of white people in this country who feel that they are losing everything they know, that the country their forefathers built has somehow been stolen from them."
These will not be the last incidents. Like lancing a boil, all of the hatred below the surface is erupting over this. It's going to require a lot of patience on both sides to get us through this, especially with tensions so high on the average American due to the economy.
When you feel like life is spiraling out of control, there are those who will lash out. What form will these outbursts will take? Vandalism? Threats? Or will there be something far more sinister?
StupidiNews, Weekend Bailout Edition
- G20 leaders continue to meet in Washington to come up with a plan for the continuing economic crisis.
- Michael Moore's latest film will take on the economy.
- State governments are looking for their own federal bailouts.
- Failure to approve the $25 billion bailout to GM may cost taxpayers $200 billion in the long run.
- Even Pakistan needs a bailout these days.
Friday, November 14, 2008
Consumers, Recession, and You
To bring back the household savings rate to the level of a decade ago (about 6% of GDP) consumption will have to fall – relative to current GDP levels – by almost a trillion dollars. If all of this adjustment were to occur in 12 months GDP would contract directly by 7% and indirectly (including the further collapse of residential and corporate capex spending in a severe recession) by 10%, an exemplification of the Keynesian “paradox of thrift”. If such an adjustment were to occur over 24 months rather than 12 months you would still have negative GDP growth of 5% for two years in a row with a cumulative fall in GDP from its peak of 10% (note that in the worst US recession since WWII such cumulative fall in GDP was only 3.7% in 1957-58). One can thus only hope that this adjustment of consumption and savings rates occurs only slowly over time – four years rather than two. Even in that scenario the cumulative fall of GDP could be of the order of 4-5%, i.e. the worst US recession since WWII. Note that the cumulative fall in GDP in the 2001 recession was only 0.4% and in the 1990-9 recession was only 1.3%. So, the current recession may end up being three times as long and at least three times as deep (in terms of output contraction) than the last two and worse than any other post WWII recession.Any way you slice it, the economy is going to be very, very bad. Unemployment is going to skyrocket, possibly even double.
Obama will certainly take the brunt of the blame.
StupidiNews!
- Astronomers are zeroing in on planets outside our solar system.
- Iraq War vet Tammy Duckworth could be Obama's replacement in the Senate.
- A German politician wants to raise that country's top tax rate to 80%.
- The federal government plans to drill off the coast of Virginia.
- Nintendo once again leads the fight against used games sales and the consumers who want them.
Thursday, November 13, 2008
From The "You Have To Be Effing Kidding Me" Department
There's increasing chatter in political circles that the Obama camp is not overly happy with the usual suspects for secretary of state these days and that the field might be expanding somewhat beyond Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.), Gov. Bill Richardson (D-N.M.), Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.) and maybe former Democratic senator Sam Nunn of Georgia.So I'm sitting here watching Rachel Maddow and Andrea Mitchell discuss how bad it would be for Obama if this isn't true, that it would be a "slap in the face" to Hillary for her not to get this position now after a leak like this, and for the first time I want to throw something at Rachel Maddow for giving into this Village garbage and I'd like her to tell Andrea Mitchell to go intercourse herself with a power tool of her choice.There's talk, indeed, that Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) may now be under consideration for the post. Her office referred any questions to the Obama transition; Obama spokesman Tommy Vietor declined to comment.
The pick of the former presidential contender and Senate Armed Services Committee member would go a long way toward healing any remaining divisions within the Democratic Party after the divisive primaries. Also, Clinton has long been known for her work on international women's issues and human rights. The former first lady could also enhance Obama's efforts to restore U.S. standing amongst allies worldwide.
And Obama could put her in his speed-dial for a 3 a.m. phone call every morning.
Ladies and gentlemen, I can honestly say that I cannot think of a worse person for Sec State for Obama to pick than Hillary Rodham Clinton...which makes me think the quid pro quo on this was sealed months ago. This means Obama's idea of foreign policy is Bush, Only Competent! Joy!
We now know Hillary's price for her and Big Dog campaigning for Obama, and the other shoe has dropped on all these Clinton folks in the transition team. The usual Hillbloggers are already saying that she'd be perfect for the position, when in fact she would absolutely assure that America's foreign policy would continue to be the same abysmal mess we're in right now, and that Israel would be the chief architect of our "diplomacy".
Quite frankly, the trap's been closed on Obama on this one. My major beef with Obama has always been his depressingly Bush-like foreign policy, and the fact it was marginally better than Clinton's even more Bush-like foreign policy was the decider for me in the primaries...at least Obama wanted out of Iraq.
Then again, Obama's too smart for this to really be a trap: Hillary was promised this all along, and this is the pound of flesh she got for not being VP. You'd better believe Big Dog will be all over this too.
So hooray, our foreign policy is officially a shitburger! This right here? This is Obama's first major screw-up, and he's still 68 friggin days from being inaugurated. Should have know it was coming, things were going too well for him.
Meet the new boss, same as the old boss. Jesus.
LIBOR's Liable To Li-Boom
The cost of borrowing dollars for three months in London rose, snapping a 23-day decline, signaling policy makers have yet to succeed in thawing the global credit freeze.The LIBOR and TED spread numbers are still much higher than they need to be historically, and if they are heading back UP now due to the US bailout being focused on buying bank stock stakes rather than buying bad mortgage securities and getting them off the books of banks, it means...surprise!The London interbank offered rate, or Libor, that banks say they charge each other for such loans increased almost 2 basis points to 2.15 percent today, according to British Bankers' Association data. The last time the rate climbed was Oct. 10. The overnight rate also climbed 2 basis points, to 0.40 percent, or 60 basis points below the Federal Reserve's target rate.
Declines in money-market rates may be slowing amid signs the financial crisis will persist and is spreading to the global economy. U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said yesterday he plans to use the second half of the $700 billion financial-rescue program to help relieve pressures on consumer credit, scrapping an effort to buy devalued mortgage assets.
``There's still a lot of uncertainty, especially after the change in the U.S. rescue plan,'' said Alessandro Tentori, a fixed-income strategist in London at BNP Paribas SA. ``The perception in the market will change.''
The global hedge-fund industry lost $100 billion of assets in October, according to an estimate from Eurekahedge Pte, as firms including Sparx Group Co. and Man Group Plc were hammered by investor redemptions.
The $700 billion bailout isn't working at all.
We're changing plans in midstream here. Treasury has been reduced to throwing things at the wall to see what sticks, meanwhile the auto industry is about to go under and banks are doing exactly what I said they would do a month ago: sit on all their nice safe government cash and use it for everything BUT lending to consumers and businesses.
Another bailout program will inevitably be signed into law by Obama in early 2009. He'll have no choice.
StupidiNews!
- The second expansion to the wildly popular World of Warcraft hits stores across the world.
- As vote counting continues in Alaska, Democrat Mark Begich has now taken a lead over convicted felon Senator Ted Stevens.
- US foreclosure numbers continue to get worse as October's figures show nearly 85,000 homes were lost.
- Seven-year-old Stanislas "Stas" Gunkel: Political blogger and Stoopid fighter in training?
- Even Wal-Mart is expecting a bad fourth quarter this year.
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
Zandar's Thought Of The Day
As in "Where the bottom is in the markets, how bad unemployment numbers are going to be for this month, how bad will holiday retail sales really be, who Obama will get to fill his empty cabinet positions, when universal health care will finally get passed, when will we start to actually get out of Iraq and Afghanistan, when will we get Bin Laden, and who is going to run in 2012" stuff, just like now...only the lack of answers would be pretty depressing then.
The fact that I can come up with an entirely plausible scenario where we still don't have answers to any of those eight questions by November 12, 2009 is enough to make me go to bed now.
The Economic Ruin Ahead
US markets lost another 5% across the board today, the Dow alone having lost 1,400 points in six sessions.
Roubini's outlook is nothing short of catastrophic:
That's just leading off. It gets worse: predictions of stag-deflation (a nasty combination of stagnating GDP and deflation), Fed rates hitting zero basis points, the S&P 500 going at low as 500, Credit market losses approaching $2 trillion, more deleveraging and downgrading of long-term corporate bonds, the collapse of the commercial real-estate market, a $1 trillion deficit in 2009 and 2010, the dollar dropping off the cliff, and the markets crumbling as the year-end rally that the economic press is betting on failing to materialize.
- The U.S. will experience its most severe recession since WWII, much worse and longer and deeper than even the 1974-75 and 1980-82 recessions. The recession will continue until at least the end of 2009 for a cumulative GDP drop of over 4%; the unemployment rate will likely reach 9%. The US consumer is shopped out saving less and debt burdened and now faltering: this will be the worst consumer recession in decades.
- The prospect of a short and shallow 6-8 months V-shaped recession is out of the window; a U-shaped 18-24 months recession is now a certainty and the probability of a worse multi-year L-shaped recession (as in Japan in the 1990s) is still small but rising. Even if the economy were to exit a recession by the end of 2009 the recovery could be so weak because of the impairment of the financial system and of the credit mechanism (i.e. a growth rate of 1-1.5% for a while well below the potential of 2.5-2.75%) that it may feel like a recession even if the economy is technically out of the recession.
- Obama will inherit and economic and financial mess worse than anything the U.S. has faced in decades: the most severe recession in 50 years; the worst financial and banking crisis since the Great Depression; a ballooning fiscal deficit that may be as high as a trillion dollar in 2009 and 2010; a huge current account deficit; a financial system that is in a severe crisis and where deleveraging is still occurring at a very rapid pace, thus causing a worsening of the credit crunch; a household sector where millions of households are insolvent, into negative equity territory and on the verge of losing their homes; a serious risk of deflation as the slack in goods, labor and commodity markets becomes deeper; the risk that we will end in a deflationary liquidity trap as the Fed is fast approaching the zero-bound constraint for the Fed Funds rate; the risk of a severe debt deflation as the real value of nominal liabilities will rise given price deflation while the value of financial assets is still plunging.
- The world economy will experience a severe recession: output will sharply contract in the Eurozone, UK and the rest of Europe, in Canada, Japan, and Australia/New Zealand; there is also a risk of a hard landing in emerging market economies. Expect global growth – at market prices – to be close to zero in Q3 and negative by Q4. Leaving aside the effects of the fiscal stimulus China could face a hard landing growth rate of 6% in 2009. The global recession will continue through most of 2009.
General Growth Properties, the second largest US mall operator, saw their stock hit 33 cents today. Bankruptcy is all but certain for this company as it's already looking for a deal.
Ford, GM, and Chrysler will not survive as independent companies. The Big Three Automakers are almost dead and if they all go under, unemployment in this country will double overnight. We're talking the cascading losses of eight to ten million jobs, that would devastate the country for a decade.
Throw in the airlines falling apart and retail stores crumbling across the country, and you have an idea of just how bad the worst case scenario is.
A recession...a bad one lasting into 2010...is assured. A depression is still very possible. A lot will depend on what Obama does. If he and his administration recognize that we're facing a second Great Depression, we have a chance.
If not...we'll all find out just how likely the depression scenario is.
Democrats Won, Folks
In a CNN/Opinion Research Corporation survey released Tuesday, 59 percent of those questioned think that Democratic control of both the executive and legislative branches will be good for the country, with 38 percent saying that such one-party control will be bad.Get that? Fifty-nine percent.
The Village is full of crap. America is ready for Obama and the Democrats to try it their way.
One Term Obama
Now, Jim is right when he assumes the economy is going to be bad for the next four years. He's dead right about that. He is wrong however in assuming that Obama will be kicked out of office because of it.Just "one and done" for Barack Obama's presidency? Recall an ominous passage in his otherwise joyous election-night speech: "The road ahead will be long. Our climb will be steep. We may not get there in one year or even in one term." Maybe the tone was suggested by one of Obama's economic advisers like Jason Furman or Austan Goolsbee. It's the battered economy, after all, that will be President Obama's greatest domestic policy challenge. As such, it will also be his greatest political challenge, too -- but one where failure may already be baked into the cake.
That's right, the "O" in "Obama" may stand for "One Term." For starters, there's a strong chance that when voters head to the polls on Nov. 2, 2010, they likely will still think the economy is awful. Not much debate about that. (Good chance the Democrats' two-election winning streak comes to an end.) And while voters may be somewhat patient for two years, patient for four years? Really unlikely. If history is any guide at all, voters may still be terribly cranky about the economy when they cast their ballots on Nov. 6, 2012 and thus likely choose the 45th president of the United States -- be it Mitt Romney, Sarah Palin, Bobby Jindal or some other Republican without "Bush" for a last name. Once again a "change" election for an impatient America. The same bad economy that doomed John McCain in 2008 will have sunk Obama, as well.
If Obama is able to convince voters that he's actively doing something about the economic disaster, and that he can say "Look, I'm doing everything I possibly can to fix this" and he has a specific plan ready to go on January 20, the public will work with him.
It was GOP's insistence that the economy was fine that killed John McCain's chances, not the economy itself. Bush made the same mistake, as did his father.
The Left Has Teh Stupid Too
John Cole of Balloon Juice (himself a reformed wingnut turned Stupid Fighter) takes BTD to task and names his many crimes against reason, logic, and his fellow bloggers.
With Democrats like this, who needs Red State? If there was anyone who was more tedious during this last election cycle than Armando, aka Big Tent Democrat, let me know. Besides turning one of my favorite sites, TalkLeft, into a pseudo-Puma cess-pool during the primaries (But he supports Obama, dont’cha know- speaking for him only!), BTD’s bigger sin was dispensing bad advice to the Obama campaign on an almost daily basis. If concern trolling was an art form, BTD would be Michelangelo and the 2008 Democratic primary his Sistine Chapel.Not proud of some of the folks on the Left, but Teh Stupid plays all sides of the political spectrum, and it's about time somebody called BTD out on the most egregious of his wrongnosity.Because I am short on patience, and, at heart, a compassionate person, I am not going to go through the TalkLeft archives and dig up where BTD gravely intones that Obama can not win the white vote, can not win the Jewish vote, can not win the Hispanic vote, and on and on. I will not dig up all the stupid god damned advice he gave to the Obama campaign (which they, thank GOD, ignored). I will not look up the umpteen posts where the left’s own pompous village idiot warned that Obama could not win without Hillary on the ticket. I will not dig up the polling data that he consistently misread and always curiously interpreted as showing a need for Hillary on the ticket. I will let you do that for yourself, and you can enjoy your own historical retrospective into BTD’s idiocy. Yes, I voted for Bush twice, but I proudly state I am not as stupid as BTD. Period.
It won't be the last time, either.
StupidiNews!
- President Bush says he has a few regrets about what he said over the course of his two terms.
- HBO releases the entire Sopranos series on DVD in one huge box set.
- Treasury's vaunted plan to rescue homeowners facing foreclosure will only help less than ten percent of them.
- The world's first ovary transplant is a success as a healthy baby is born to the recipient.
- With the real estate crash now hitting retail properties, America's second-largest mall operator is facing bankruptcy.