SOME MORE FACTS ABOUT THE FANTASTIC JOBS RECOVERY

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Posted on 9th March 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Mike Shedlock puts a huge pin in the MSM/Government Jobs Recovery storyline bubble. The economy lost 276,000 full-time jobs and gained 446,000 part-time jobs in February. Does that sound like a recovery? It sounds like deperation to me. It sounds like Obamacare to me. I work for the largest employer in Philadelphia and I’ve seen first hand that they are panicked by Obamacare. It is so complicated they are paralyzed with fear of doing something wrong and incurring huge penalties. Obamacare is stopping companies from hiring employees and it is making others convert fulltime workers into part-time workers. But pay no attention to the facts. Buys stocks and “invest” in a few houses. 

Spoiling the “Great Employment News”

This article originally appeared on MarketWatch under the title Jobs numbers are far worse than they look.

I selected my title from a humorous comment on MarketWatch by reader “Homer Price” who writes “Mike, What are you doing ? Trying to spoil the GREAT EMPLOYMENT news. Just wait until next year when the Unaffordable Care Act kicks in. THE BEST IS YET TO COME ………………………..

There are other interesting comments as well. Inquiring minds may wish to take a look. Now for my article …

Economists were surprised by the massive “beat” in today’s reported job numbers. The unemployment rate dropped .2 to 7.7% and the economy allegedly added 236,000 jobs.

Is that what really happened? No not really.

According to the household survey (on which the unemployment rate is based) the economy added a healthy 170,000 jobs. However, a whopping 446,000 of those jobs were part-time jobs. Simply put, the economy shed 276,000 full-time jobs.

The BLS labeled those 446,000 part-time jobs as “voluntary”. I am not so sure.

A Gallup Survey yesterday on Jobs show the percentage of workers working part time but wanting full-time work was 10.1% in February, an increase from 9.6% in January, and the highest rate measured since January 2012.

                       

Gallup notes “Although fewer people are unemployed now than a year ago, they are not migrating to full-time jobs for an employer. In fact, fewer Americans are working full-time for an employer than were doing so a year ago, and more Americans are working part time. Although part-time work is clearly better than no work at all, these are not the types of good jobs that millions of Americans are still searching for.”

Obamacare Effect

Obamacare is in play. Recall that under Obamacare, the definition of full-time employment is 30 hours. The BLS cutoff is 34 hours. At 30 hours, companies have to pay medical benefits so they have been slashing the number of hours people work. This reduced the number of hours people worked and provided an incentive for many to take on an extra job.

We can see the effect in actual BLS data.

Multiple Jobholders as a Percent of Employed

After declining for years, the percent of those working two or more jobs is again on the rise.

Multiple Jobholders

In the past month there was a surge of 679,000 in the number of people working multiple jobs. The seasonally-adjusted increase, as shown above, was 340,000.

One can look at the data two ways.

  1. The economy is getting better and more jobs are available
  2. People are working more jobs because their hours were cut and they need a second job

Evidence suggests more of the latter than the former.

Expect Downward Revision in Establishment Survey

The reported 236,000 surge in the establishment survey is not real. It will be revised away.

This is why: In the household survey one is either working or not, thus multiple jobs do not distort the reported unemployment rate (although there are many other distortions such as the participation rate and declining labor force).

The establishment survey, however, is distorted by people working multiple jobs. A surge in multiple-job workers would artificially hike the baseline number. I expect revisions later, probably huge downward revisions.

Mike “Mish” Shedlock

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com

Read more at http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2013/03/spoiling-great-employment-news.html#frwKOgZDyg8gsAZc.99

 

HOW’S BERNANKE’S QE TO INFINITY WORKING OUT FOR YOU?

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Posted on 30th January 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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I know with Bennie and the Ink Jets meeting again this week in their ongoing efforts to enrich their masters at your expense, you might want an update on how that QE to Infinity is working out for you. Bennie announced his “new plan” of buying $85 billion of toxic debt per month from the Wall Street banks and U.S. Treasury for infinity on September 13, 2012. His statement was as follows:

“To support a stronger economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at the rate most consistent with its dual mandate, the Committee agreed today to increase policy accommodation by purchasing additional agency mortgage-backed securities at a pace of $40 billion per month. These actions should put downward pressure on longer-term interest rates, support mortgage markets, and help to make broader financial conditions more accommodative.”

His stated purpose was to decrease long-term interest rates and help the economy recover. As you may have heard this morning, GDP for the 4th quarter, after Bennie intiated his brilliant new plan, went negative for the first time since 2009. In addition, I point you to the little chart below. In July of 2012, the 10 Year Treasury rate hit 1.40%. On the day of Bennie’s QE to Infinity announcement it clocked in at 1.6%. This morning the 10 Year Treasury hit 2.02%. Bennie has truly worked his magic again. Interest rates have been driven higher and the economy has plunged back into recession. I think this should put him in the running for Time’s Man of the Year again.

 FRED Graph

John Hussman gave his assessment of Bernanke’s QE to Infinity shortly after the announcement:

“Quantitative easing promises to have little effect except to provoke commodity hoarding and an expansion in stock valuations to levels that have rarely been sustained for long.  The Fed is not helping the economy – it is encouraging a bubble in risky assets, and an increasingly unstable one at that.”

On September 5 before the Wall Street insiders were told about Bernanke’s plans, the S&P 500 was at 1403. It has skyrocketed to 1507 since Bernanke’s promise to enrich his masters at any cost. That is a 7.4% ramp up, when the economy was going into the dumper and interest rates were soaring by 50 basis points. I guess it must be tied to the improving jobs situation.

Well spin me around and call me Sally. It seems there were 25,000 less people employed in December than there were employed in October. But, at least 432,000 more Americans left the workforce between October and December. That is surely a good sign. They must have all gotten rich on the 7.4% stock market gains. That Bennie sure knows what he’s doing. Remember his advice about housing in 2005? After he retires from the Fed, he has a huge opportunity as a Tarot card reader.

You may have heard of Egan Jones. They weren’t one of the rating agencies that wilfully helped the criminal Wall Street banks commit that biggest financial fraud in history – that was S&P and Moodys. After Bennie’s QE to Infinity announcement, they had the gall to cut their credit rating on the United States of America. You don’t do that to the biggest empire on earth. Last week the Federal government turned the screws on this truth telling credit rating firm by threatening them into accepting a penalty of not being able to rate the United States because they filled out one of their 5,000 Federally required forms improperly. You don’t mess with the oligarchs. Here was Egan Jones evaluation of Bernanke’s QE to Infinity in mid September: 

“The FED’s QE3 will stoke the stock market and commodity prices, but in our opinion will hurt the US economy and, by extension, credit quality. Issuing additional currency and depressing interest rates via the purchasing of mortgage-backed securities does little to raise the real GDP of the US, but does reduce the value of the dollar (because of the increase in money supply), and in turn increase the cost of commodities (see the recent rise in the prices of energy, gold, and other commodities). The increased cost of commodities will pressure profitability of businesses, and increase the costs of consumers thereby reducing consumer purchasing power. Hence, in our opinion QE3 will be detrimental to credit quality for the US.”

The price of oil has risen from $90 to $98 since Bernanke implemented his grand scheme on September 13. In the last month, corn and soybeans are up 5% and cotton is up 9%. Since September, meat prices are up 10%. But don’t concern yourself. Bernanke says inflation is well contained because your wages aren’t going up.

If you are even partially awake, you must realize that Bernanke has no interest in helping the average person with his ZIRP policy and his QE to Infinity policy. He is destroying the savers and the prudent in order to enrich the bankers and the debtors. He knows the averge person will believe what they are told by the corporate mouthpieces in the MSM and are too ignorant to figure out how they are getting screwed by inflation and the non-stop transfer of their wealth to the bankers.

How’s QE to Infinity working out for you?

THE HOUSING RECOVERY FRAUD EXPLAINED

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Posted on 23rd January 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Lance Roberts explains how the MSM bullshit about the blossoming housing recovery has painted a false picture. There is no recovery and 2013 will reveal it to be a Big Lie.

The Media Is Misreporting The Housing Turnaround Story

Imagine that your financial advisor called you up one day and said:

“Great news…your investment portfolio gained 1%  in January which is an annualized return of 12%.  However, we have to  subtract .05% from that return because historically January’s return has only  been 0.95% since 1950.  This brings our seasonally adjusted return to  11.4%.”

Of course, after the SEC  pays a visit to the advisor to correct his performance reporting measures, the  simple reality is that “what you see is what you get.” 

While this example may seem a little farfetched – this is exactly what  happens with a variety of economic reports that are released by various  government agencies and member organization/lobby groups.  The reasoning  for such data manipulations is not a nefarious scheme; but rather an attempt to  smooth what is normally very volatile data.  This is particularly the case  with housing related data.   As an example the chart below shows the data  released by the Census Bureau for housing starts on both a non-seasonally and  seasonally adjusted basis.

 

As you can see there is an extreme amount of volatility in the  non-seasonally adjusted data.  The Census Bureau takes the reported monthly  housing starts data and annualizes it.  Therefore, if 10,000 homes were  started in January it is reported as 120,000 on an annualized basis.  Then  a seasonal adjustment factor is added to account for seasonal weather  and demand patterns.   For example let’s take a look at the housing start  data that was just released for December of 2012.

The headlines read that “Housing starts surged by 12.1% in  December proving that the housing recovery is back.”  In reality  the numbers were as follows:

  • December starts:  61,500 (down 2.8% from  November)
  • Annualized December starts:  738,000
  • Reported seasonally adjusted December starts:  954,000  (Up  12.1% from November)
  • Seasonal adjustment to December starts:  +216,000

Historically, the data smoothing methodology was “close  enough”  and the variations were, more or less, worked out over  time.  However, in the current economic environment, the seasonal  adjustment process may be overstating that actual activity that is occurring  within the underlying economy.  With housing currently making a very small  contribution to overall economic activity, just slightly more than 2.5% as shown  in the chart below, the difference between  the “real” economic impact of 61,500 homes being started  nationwide versus 954,000, of which 216,000 were a mathematical seasonal  adjustment, can be quite dramatic.

 

However, as in our financial advisor analogy, when it comes to the impact  of the “housing recovery” on the economy “what we  see is what we get” and nothing else.  Therefore, in the quest to  determine what the actual contribution to the overall economy that housing will  provide, we need to look at the full process of housing on an actual  basis.

The Housing Process Activity Index (HAPI)

The housing process begins with the permit to build a home which leads to the  start of the construction process, the completion and the sell to an end buyer.    The reason for looking at all four components is that many permits that  are filed do not result in a start, many starts do not lead to completions and  there are many completions that remain unsold for quite some time.

The Housing Process Activity Index (HAPI) takes into account all four  variables.  However, instead of utilizing seasonal adjustment factors and  annualizing the monthly activity, as with the Census Bureau, I use a 12-month  average of the actual monthly activity to smooth the data.   The chart below shows the HAPI as compared to its individual HAPI  subcomponents.

 

This tells us quite a different story than what the media is currently  reporting.   On average over the last twelve months there were:

  • 67,000 permits for new privately owned housing
  • 65,000 housing starts each month
  • 54,300 completions
  • 30,900 sales

What this tells is that out of the 67,000 permits, on average, that were  pulled each month to build a home only 30,900 actually wound up being completed  and sold.  This is a very different picture than the recent months  seasonally adjusted data that showed:

  • 903,000 permits
  • 954,000 starts
  • 686,000 completions
  • 377,000 sales (as of November)

It is important to note that I am NOT contesting the manner in  which the Census Bureau reports its housing data.  I am,  however, suggesting that the method used in the current economic environment may  be overstating the actual activity that is occurring.  By smoothing the  non-seasonally adjusted data using a monthly average we see a very different  perspective to the data.  The HAPI begins to potentially answer the  questions of why housing remains a low economic contributor and why construction  employment is still mired at very low levels.

 

While housing has improved somewhat from the post-crisis lows it is  far weaker than the majority of headlines actually suggest.  Housing  inventory has declined sharply from its peaks that have primarily been driven by  speculative all-cash investors turning lower priced homes, and buying homes in  bulk from banks, to be turned into rentals.

 

Furthermore, a large portion of the “housing  start” story has been in the multi-family apartment space.   As shown in the chart below the percentage of apartment starts, 5-units or  more, is currently at some of the highest levels on record and has surpassed the  peak seen in the last recession.

 

Currently, there are still more than 25% of homeowners underwater which  limits their ability to move, refinance or sell their homes.  However, as  prices rise, there are two issues that begin to attack the housing story:   1) As prices reach levels where underwater homeowners can sell they will  likely do so out of a psychology need to escape the “trap,” which will bring a  large supply of homes back onto the market, and; 2) rising prices will  eventually erode the profitability of buying homes for rentals which will bring  the speculative frenzy that has been the driver of the recent recovery to a  halt.

The housing recovery is ultimately a story of the “real” unemployment  situation which still shows that roughly a quarter of the home buying  cohort are unemployed and living at home with their parents.  The remaining  members of the home buying, household formation, contingent are employed but at  lower ends of the pay scale and are choosing to rent due to budgetary  considerations.  Also, we should not discount the psychology of home  ownership has dramatically changed since the crash as many of  the “millennials” saw the financial damage their parents  suffered and are opting out of taking such a perceived risk.

As I  stated recently the optimism over the housing recovery has gotten well  ahead of the underlying fundamentals.  The overarching problem is that the  housing market that is almost exclusively dependent on the continued push to  artificially suppress interest rates combined with massive amounts of direct  stimulus, and incentives, to bailout current homeowners and banks.  This  intervention is causing an artificial supply suppression which is likely to  create a backlash in the future as the current supply/demand conditions are  unsustainable.

While the belief was that the Government, and Fed’s, interventions would  ignite the housing market creating an self-perpetuating recovery in the economy  – it did not turn out that way.  Today, these repeated intrusions are  having a diminished rate of return and the risk now is that interest rates rise  shutting potential homebuyers out of the market.  It is likely that in 2013  housing will begin to stabilize at historically low levels and the economic  contribution will remain fairly weak.  The downside risk to that view is  the impact of higher taxes, stagnant wage growth, re-defaults of the 6-million  modifications and workouts, elevated defaults of underwater homeowners and a  slowdown of speculative investment due to reduced profit margins.  While  many hopes have been pinned on the 2012 stimulus fueled, China investing, and  supply deprived housing recovery as “the” driver of  economic growth in 2013 – the data suggest that may be quite a bit of wishful  thinking.

Read more:  http://www.streettalklive.com/daily-x-change/1468-the-real-housing-recovery-story.html#ixzz2IqTJD78P

HOUSING RECOVERY PERSPECTIVE

19 comments

Posted on 11th October 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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MORE GOOD NEWS FOR COLMA

18 comments

Posted on 15th May 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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It seems Governor Moonbeam’s budget is off by a smidge. It’s amazing how reality always interrupts delusional fantasies. California has been in an economic crisis for years, but they continue to fake it. Dr. Housing Bubble addresses the implications of faking the numbers. My budgets never seem to be off by this much. I wonder why. 

California is in a heap of trouble. Stay away. Colma loves these stories. More room to surf. Maybe Gov Moonbeam will create a surfing fee to close the budget deficit.

A brave new economy – California budget implications for real estate

 
drhousingbubble's picture

Submitted by drhousingbubbleon 05/14/2012 23:52 -0400

Over the weekend it was announced that California’s large $9 billion budget deficit was no longer $9 billion but $16 billion.  Whoops.  Last week J.P. Morgan Chase, a darling of the Federal Reserve, reported a $2 billion trading loss on “synthetic derivatives” yet still had the audacity to state no further regulation was needed.  Whoops.  What we have here is a system of phony numbers and massive speculation.  This plays into the giant pool of shadow inventory sitting in bank balance sheets while trillions of dollars went to bailout these banks.  Even accounting standards were frozen for these speculators.  Instead of working to increase transparency and help the overall American taxpayer they instead are using the same leverage to gamble on global stock markets.  The system is interconnected and that is why the California budget figures this weekend came as no surprise.  What is surprising is the cheerleaders narrowly focused on real estate and pretending the economy around them is completely sound.  Do they have ear plugs and blinders on as to what is really transpiring?

 

Employment

California’s unemployment rate is officially back to 11 percent but the underemployment rate is above 20 percent.  If we look at “not seasonally adjusted” numbers the unemployment rate is 11.5 percent:

california employment data

Over 2,000,000+ Californians are out of work.  The participation rate continues to decline similar to trends across the country yet very few even address this.  This is absolutely crucial especially when it comes to housing.  Are all the retiring baby boomers going to be the next segment that will boost the housing market?  The unemployment and underemployment figures are very important because as long as the employment situation is weak, there is little reason to expect higher home prices.

 

Unemployment Insurance

A report this weekend discusses how over 200,000+ people on unemployment insurance will lose their coverage this weekend:

california unemployment insurance

 

Of those losing unemployment insurance coverage 40 percent will be here in California.  I’m sure this is a big plus for the housing market.  There is only so much fudging of numbers that can be done until people start realizing what a giant mess we are in.  Besides this, we now have the government trying to obscure even more numbers to keep their crony financial friends protected.

 

Cutting off Census

I saw this posted last week and found it astonishing.  Many in the non-mainstream financial press use the Census data to crunch numbers and bring a new perspective to what is happening in the market.  I certainly use this data as I’m sure many of you do as well.  Take a look at this:

 
 

“(Census) The Appropriations Bill eliminates the Economic Census, which measures the health of our economy. It terminates the American Community Survey, which produces the social and demographic information that monitors the impact of economic trends on communities throughout the country. It halts crucial development of ways to save money on the next decennial census.”

This is mind boggling but plays into the statistics deception that is being pushed on the public.  Similar to those trying to forewarn about the housing bubble bursting, the system is trying to hide data to keep the illusion moving forward.  This is madness.  Do people realize that good statistical measuring tools came about right after the Great Depression?  You know why?  So analysts, educators, and all citizens can dig in and keep the system honest.  The fact that we spend billions of dollars building streets in other nations and can’t spend a few million to actually audit our own books is nothing more than a purposeful hiding of the obvious.  Those that continue to act under the “business as usual” mindset are largely not open to seeing what is going on.

This is why I find it fascinating what is going down in Greece.  People have been living in austerity for well over two years and now, for lack of a better word, are revolting.  They realize the financial system has them by the scruff of their neck.  They have nothing left to lose with a 25 percent unemployment rate.  Here in the US, it seems like the folks in charge would rather keep the data obscure and feel that as long as you get your steady dose of iPhones, Dancing with the Stars, and double-lattes that things will just keep marching forward.  By the way, we’ve been in recovery since the summer of 2009 so all this data must be imaginary right?

 

Budget Gap

The budget gap announced this weekend was stunning but not surprising.  Just look at the April revenue data:

california budget estimates

Source:  State Controller, CA

 
 

“SACRAMENTO – State Controller John Chiang today released his monthly report covering California’s cash balance, receipts and disbursements in April, showing monthly revenues came in $2.44 billion below (-20.2 percent) the latest projections contained in the Governor’s proposed 2012-13 Budget.”

April is a big month for tax receipts and revenues came in $2.44 billion below expectations.  The California budget is a mess.  So we are now assured that we have two items that will hit in the next year:

-Tax increases

-Service cuts

Both of these are unlikely to boost real estate values.  I hear arguments of people saying they are buying homes near prime schools and colleges like UCLA or UC Berkeley.  These are public colleges with large support from the state!  What do you think this does if prices keep on increasing and put students into deeper debt?  These institutions were built with public funds and those funds are running dry.  So what do they do?  They raise fees.  We have a lot of hidden benefits in California paid for by taxpayers and many in the state suffer from the “I want it all but don’t want to pay for it” mentality.  Well the time is coming when choices will need to be made.  Real estate is no sacred cow like some would think.  Heck, even 30 percent of those that own their home in the state are underwater on their mortgages.  Just looking at all of this in context makes you realize that some of those diving into the housing market today are suffering from cognitive dissonance when it comes to real estate.  The low mortgage rates are a siren call to jump in but just look at the above metrics.  What are we going to do, live in homes and trade them to one another continuously as our major source of economic growth?  We tried that during the housing bubble and look how that turned out.  Beyond artificially low interest rates, why in the world would housing values go up in the state given broader economic conditions?

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