Friday, April 3, 2009

Obama's Speech at G20 Summit

World Leaders Gather in London for Historic Summit


President Obama met with 19 other world leaders In London for the G20 summit. It is good to see the nations of the world working together to remedy the economic crisis instead of isolating themselves and protecting only their own interests.
Stocks: An Upward March
Major indexes posted their best monthly performance in six years, as Wall Street closed the books on a tumultuous first quarter
Investing

U.S. stocks finished solidly higher Tuesday in March's final session, giving the market its best monthly performance in six years. Banks and tech issues led the rally, helping to pare losses suffered by the market earlier in the quarter.
Tuesday's gains came as money managers squared positions on the last trading day of March and the first quarter. The 30-stock Dow Jones industrial average finished higher by 86.90 points, or 1.16%, at 7,608.92.
The broad S&P 500 index gained 10.22 points, or 1.30%, to 797.75.
The Nasdaq composite index added 26.79 points, or 1.78%, to 1,528.59.
On the New York Stock Exchange, 23 stocks finished higher in price for every seven that declined. Breadth on the Nasdaq was 19-9 positive.
Treasury prices rose in a rebound from an early slide. The dollar index was lower. Gold futures were higher. Energy futures were mixed.
Wall Street closed the books on a tumultuous quarter Tuesday. The swings in equities were so great that the quarter "contained its own bear market and bull market", according to an Associated Press report.
The month of March featured gains of 7.7% for the Dow, 8.5% for the S&P 500, and 10.9% for the Nasdaq. But the first quarter numbers were not quite so pleasing, with losses of 13.3% for the Dow, 11.7% for the S&P 500 and 3.1% for the Nasdaq.
The blue-chip Dow and S&P indexes remain over 40% below their record closing levels reached in October, 2007.
Traders Tuesday weighed reports that the S&P Case-Shiller 10-and 20-city home price indexes fell in January, the Conference Board's consumer confidence index rose to 26.0 in March from 25.3 in February, and the March Chicago purchasing managers' index fell to 31.4 from 34.2. The market was bracing for disagreements among the world's economic powers over stimulus and regulatory measures at the G20 meeting in London later this week.
Fritz Henderson, the new CEO of General Motors Corp. (GM) said Tuesday that more of the automaker's plants could close as part of GM's effort to meet new, tougher requirements for government aid. In his first news conference as CEO, Henderson said he expects the company would "need to take further measures" in terms of plant closures. That's beyond the five plants the company said it would shutter when it submitted a restructuring plan to the government last month.
GM also is likely to offer another buyout program to workers as it looks to cut labor costs, Henderson said.
"We continue to see any GM turnaround plan including the significant dilution of existing shareholders' positions, as other stakeholders are likely to accept equity in exchange for obligations due to them," wrote S&P equity analysts in a note Tuesday.
GM shares closed lower by 76 cents to 1.94 Tuesday.
Homebuilder Lennar Corp. (LEN) reported a first-quarter loss of 98 cents per share, vs. a 56 cents loss one year earlier, on a 45% decline in revenue from home sales. Wall Street was looking for loss of about 64 cents. Says revenues were lower primarily due to a 38% decrease in the number of home deliveries and a 12% decrease in the average sales price of homes delivered in 2009.
Lennar shares were down 1.20 to 7.51.

Stocks Rally on Rebound Hopes

http://www.businessweek.com/investor/content/apr2009/pi2009042_653376.htm

Monday, March 9, 2009

Jobs: Another 651,000 Lost in February

http://www.businessweek.com/investor/content/mar2009/pi2009036_402363.htm

Reports Show a Ramped-Up Recession

By BW Staff

O.K., we get it: The economy is bad. The Federal Reserve, in its Beige Book report released Mar. 4, said that "economic conditions deteriorated further" in the period surveyed from January through late February. Other reports released the same day continued the same recessionary drumbeat, with ADP's February survey of U.S. private employment showing a loss of 697,000 jobs on the month, while the Institute for Supply Management's nonmanufacturing index for February showed that the service sector remained firmly in contraction mode.

BusinessWeek compiled selected insights from Wall Street analysts and economists on the downbeat data—and other topics—on Mar. 4:

Action Economics The Fed's Beige Book reiterated that "economic conditions deteriorated further" since the reporting period from January through late February. That's consistent with the summary statements since October. Ten of the twelve Districts reported weaker conditions or declines in activity, with the exception of Philly and Chicago, that said their economies "remained weak." The deterioration was broad-based. And contacts don't look for a significant pickup before later this year or in early 2010. Consumer spending remained sluggish, though many Districts said conditions improved in the first two months of the year compared to the dismal holiday season. There were "pronounced" declines in manufacturing. Conditions also weakened "substantially" for extractors of natural resources due to the decline in global demand. Real estate markets remains largely stagnant with only minimal signs of stabilization in some areas, while demand for commercial real estate weakened "significantly."

There were further declines in business loan demand and a slight deterioration in credit quality for businesses and households. Upward price pressures were "very limited," while upward wage pressures eased in all Districts as a rising incidence of hiring freezes and ongoing job cuts increased the slack in the labor market.

Beth Ann Bovino, Standard & Poor's The U.S. ADP report [showed that] private payrolls plunged 697,000 in February, after a downwardly revised 614,000 drop in January (from -522,000). Jobs in the goods-producing sector fell 338,000, and are down for a 26th straight month. Manufacturing lost 219,000 jobs, a 36th consecutive monthly decline. Service producing jobs fell 359,000 from a 279,000 loss. Construction jobs fell 114,000, and have posted 25 straight monthly declines.

The data are worse than expected, to suggest downside risk to the Friday's payroll. We now expect 625,000 jobs to be lost in February.

Ted Wieseman, Morgan Stanley The composite nonmanufacturing ISM index fell to 41.6 in February from 42.9 in January, remaining deeply in recessionary territory, while continuing to hold somewhat above the all-time low of 37.4 hit in November. The business activity (40.2 vs. 44.2), orders (40.7 vs. 41.6), and supplier deliveries (48.0 vs. 51.5) gauges turned lower, while the employment index (37.3 vs. 34.4) rose but remained at a level consistent with continued severe job losses. Weakness by industry was very broadly based. Only one sector (entertainment) reported growth and 14 contracted. Problems obtaining credit were mentioned in the report as a significant issue in some sectors. The prices paid gauge rose to 48.1 from 42.5, with the recent rebound in gasoline prices noted.

Tony Crescenzi, Miller Tabak The Treasury yield curve continues to steepen, which has both good and bad connotations. The most important positive is that a steep yield curve typically precedes economic recoveries. Today the spread between 3-month T-bills and 10-year T-notes— the key empirical gauge used in forecasting models—is 273 basis points, a level that historically has indicated the chances of recession 12 months hence are very small. For example, in a study by Estrella and Mishkin, a yield spread of more than 121 basis points was associated with just a 5% chance of recession, which makes the current level comforting. Some of the recent steepening reflects the increase in Treasury supply, with the long end of the yield curve bearing the burden. This is the negative side. If the U.S. dollar were to fall, any steepening would take on an even larger negative connotation, but the dollar's decline would have to be significant to have meaningful impact.

The negative implication of a significant dollar drop and sharply steeper curve is the message it sends regarding the global appetite for U.S. assets. Any increase in the cost of capital in the U.S. would complicate efforts to battle the financial and economic crisis.