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Analysis/Comment Last Updated: Dec 21st, 2007 - 10:12:03


Dr. Peter Morici: Business as Usual: the Energy Bill, Subprime Mess, and Recession Watch
By Professor Peter Morici, Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland
Dec 21, 2007, 01:50

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Peter Morici is an economist and professor at the Robert H. Smith School of Business at the University of Maryland. He is a recognized expert on international economics, industrial policy and macroeconomics. Prior to joining the university, he served as director of the Office of Economics at the US International Trade Commission.

The stock market remains unsettled, as the nation’s economic problems grow. Washington from the White House to Capitol Hill to the Federal Reserve gives us lots of bustle but no truly comforting action.

The Democrats pushed through an energy bill that will likely leave the nation in the desperate grasp of Middle East oil exporters. Wall Street banks continue to sell out their shareholders to Chinese and Middle East investors to pay for their big bonuses. The Federal Reserve cracks down on predatory lending on Main Street, when the real crooks work on Wall Street. The recession watch continues. 
 
Working at a university only a subway ride from the seats of political power gives this observer a new appreciation for the apathy that accelerates the decline of empire. Nero was an amateur fiddler compared to the musicians in Washington serenading the nation into complacency.
 
Energy Bill
 
The Democrats in Congress pushed through the first increase in U.S. automobile mileage standards in 32 years. 
 
Don’t cheer loudly. 
 
The 35 mile-per-gallon standard to be achieved by 2020 is far less than what is possible. Along with new light bulb and appliance standards, the nation’s energy use will be cut by 8 percent at some distant moment, likely, beyond my lifetime.
 
The bill also requires the production of about 2.4 million barrels a day of ethanol, and overall the energy bill could reduce U.S. petroleum consumption by 4 million barrels a day by 2030. Over the last 23 years, petroleum consumption has increased by about 5.5 million barrels a day, despite improvements in mileage standards, automobile and appliance technology, and conservation. 
 
Being optimistic, in 2030 we will be just as dependent on imported oil as before. Factor in falling production from U.S. oil fields, the situation gets worse.
 
We could do a lot better. More hybrids, electric vehicles, lighter vehicles, better furnaces, and more nuclear power are attainable, and the Chinese are likely to turn in those directions in greater force than we do. Then we can buy our cars from the Middle Kingdom just like our coffee makers. 
 
Got to love Washington’s unquenchable thirst for breakneck change!

Subprime Mess
 
China’s sovereign investment fund will take a $5 billion stake in Morgan Stanley. Morgan joins Citigroup, UBS and others. Having sold financial alchemy to investors and shareholders in the form of engineered securities, they must now seek foreign funds to restore their capital. 
 
At the most fundamental level, to justify huge compensation packages, Wall Street bankers and private equity gurus have been overvaluing mortgage-backed bonds, auto loans, and other securities that finance private equity acquisitions. 
 
The culpability of bond rating agencies in these shenanigans is revealed by the fact that in just one day Standard & Poor’s was forced to cut its rating of one of the major insurers of bonds, ACA Financial Guaranty Corporation, from “A” to “CCC.” 

One is left to ponder what new data S&P econometricians unearthed to warrant such a dramatic and sudden recalibration? Sadly, more downgrades are likely to follow as the bond insurance industry may fail.
 
The party line on Wall Street is that the subprime mess was a one time lapse. At S&P some adjustments in the econometric models that determine the risk of default will be needed. 
 
If all that is true, why can’t outfits like Cerberus and their bankers unload the bonds that are needed to finance its shrewd takeover of Chrysler? Why do bond investors no longer trust the promises of private equity wizards like John Snow and buy more of their paper?
 
That is the crisis of confidence in America’s capital markets. The meltdown threatening the bond market from a wholesale failure of bond insurers is the modern analog of a 1930s run on the bank. Just much worse.
 
Back in Washington, the Federal Reserve cracked down on predatory lending practices of mortgage writers. That is a necessary exercise, but the real game is on Wall Street. Neither Ben Bernanke nor Henry Paulson seem to grasp that or have the stomach to take on the big, powerful and corrupt that eat cake and drink champagne in the Empire State. 
 
Hence, if Wall Street is to reform, it must reform itself. The man of the hour would have to be new Citigroup CEO Vikram Pandit, who promises a top down clean up where he works. However, have you heard him talking about miscalibrated compensation and perverse incentives on Wall Street? 
 
I also don’t know many alcoholics volunteering to attend their first AA meeting. 
 
By the time Mr. Pandit is finished cleaning up Citigroup, you can be darn sure all the redundant mail room clerks will be gone, but so too will be another big chunk of shareholder equity, sold to Beijing, the Saudi Royal family and other guardians of western capitalism and democratic values.
 
Recession Watch

 
Despite the profound misjudgement of the nation’s bankers and financial regulators, the U.S. economy remains vibrant and has some chance of avoiding a recession. November retail sales and industrial production numbers were encouraging. Although the October and November robust gains in jobs are likely to be revised down, the nation’s payrolls and wage income keep growing.
 
A weaker dollar against the euro has yielded a modest gain in non-petroleum exports equal to about $95 billion or 0.7 percent of GDP. These figures are so small because the dollar remains overvalued against the Chinese yuan. Henry Paulson does not have the stomach to endorse U.S. actions to combat Beijing’s $400 billion subsidies on foreign purchases of yuan that prop up Chinese exports and shutter U.S. factories. 
 
Hence, to avoid recession, Americans are going to have to keep on spending. This will require borrowing at much higher rates on credit cards, now that easy home mortgages are gone. On the face of things, economists would say that is not likely but most economists don’t have much of a life and don’t go out to the malls. The parking lots are filling again, retail sales are up, and cash registers are jingling. 
 
When Visa and Master Card fail under the weight of non payments, the Chinese sovereign debt fund can buy the rest of Citigroup. Given the way Mr. Pandit and his pals behave, they deserve such beneficent employers.
 
The Week Ahead: Forecasts for the Weeks of December 23 and 30
 
 
Forecast Previous
 
Period/Result

 
 
December 21
 Personal Income - Nov 0.5 0.2
 Personal Spending 0.4 0.2
 PCE Index 0.6 0.3
 Core PCE Index 0.2 0.2
 Real Personal Spending -0.2 0.0
 
 Mich Cons Sentiment - Dec (r) 73.5 74.5
 
 
 
Week of December 24
 
 
December 27
 Durable Goods 1.0% -0.4
 Initial Jobless Claims 340k 346
 Consumer Confidence – Dec 86.8 87.3
 
 
December 28
 New Home Sales - Nov .723m .728
 Chicago PMI – Dec 52.0 52.9
 Help Wanted Index – Nov 23 23
 
 
Week of December 31
 
 
December 31
 Existing Home Sales - Nov 5.04m 4.97
 
 
January 2
 Construction Spending – Nov -0.2% -0.8
 
 ISM Index – Dec 50.8 50.8
 ISM Prices 64.8 67.5
 
 
January 3
 Auto Sales - Dec 15.83m 16.20*
 Car Sales 7.80 7.97* Domestic 5.30 5.47* Foreign 2.50 2.50*
 Truck Sales 8.02 8.22* Domestic 6.53 6.73
* 1.49 1.49*
 *SAAR as published by Motor Intelligence

 
 Factory Orders - Nov 1.0% 0.5
 Durable Goods Orders 1.0 -0.2

 Nondurable Goods Orders 1.0 1.3
 
 
January 4

 Nonfarm Payrolls - Dec 75k 94
 Manufacturing Payrolls -15k -11
 Unemployment Rate 4.7% 4.7
 Average Work Week 33.8hrs 33.8
 Hourly Earnings 0.3% 0.5
 
 ISM Services – Dec 54.8 54.1
 ISM Prices 76.5 76.5

Peter Morici,

Professor, Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland,

College Park, MD 20742-1815,

703 549 4338 Phone

703 618 4338 Cell Phone

pmorici@rhsmith.umd.edu

http://www.smith.umd.edu/lbpp/faculty/morici.html

http://www.smith.umd.edu/faculty/pmorici/cv_pmorici.htm


© Copyright 2007 by Finfacts.com

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