If all printers were determined not to print anything till they were sure it would offend nobody, there would be very little printed. -- Benjamin Franklin
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Dear America:
--Holman Jenkins, Wall Street Journal
Not So Fast
The U.S. housing market took a sharp turn for the worse while Spain joined a growing list of countries in a recession that shows no sign of abating.We're getting closer and closer to that death spiral depression scenario every month, it seems. The housing market crash lowers consumer consumption, lower consumption causes layoffs, layoffs take more and more people out of their homes, and prices continue to fall as a result as more homes are put on the market and more buyers are taken out as credit requirements tighten.Existing U.S. home sales and prices both fell at a record pace last month, according to a report released Tuesday, further evidence that the financial turmoil which intensified in September was driving consumers deeper into retreat.
"The quickly deteriorating conditions in the job market, stock market and consumer confidence in October and November have knocked down home sales to another level," said Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors.
Sales of newly built U.S. homes slowed to the weakest level since 1991, according to separate figures from the Commerce Department.
At this point a gargantuan stimulus package, well above the trillion dollar mark, may be the last hope we have. All signs point to an even steeper pace of deterioration in early 2009.
As bad at this year has been, next year will be much, much worse.
[UPDATE] Just in time for Christmas, the weekly job numbers are out with new unemployment claims hitting a 26-year peak at 586,000. It'll get worse. Much worse.
Happy Holidays.
StupidiNews!
- President Bush has issued a few more Christmas pardons, but nothing controversial so far.
- Was the airplane death of Karl Rove's "IT Guru" an accident or something else?
- CIT and AmEx join the TARP bailout list to the tune of $6 billion.
- Despite death threats from insurgents, registration for Afghan elections continues.
- The notebook computer has finally overtaken the desktop PC globally in shipments.