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Recessionary trends deepen, sparking gyrations on stock, commodities
markets
By Barry Grey
22 March 2008
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In the wake of the bailout of Bear Stearns, brokered and largely
financed by the US Federal Reserve Board, fears of a deepening
recession and continuing uncertainties over the solvency of major
finance houses fueled a week of wild gyrations on American stock
exchanges.
On Tuesday, one day after the Fed engineered the takeover of
Bear Stearns by JPMorgan Chase and announced that it would extend
unlimited credit for six months to investment banks and brokerage
housesa measure without precedent since the Great Depression
of the 1930sthe Dow Jones Industrial Average soared by 420
points. The jump was led by financial stocks, which benefited
from the Feds agreement to swap Treasury bonds for illiquid
and dubious mortgage-backed securities.
The next day, the Dow plummeted by 293 points, buffeted by
a sudden sell-off of commodities.
On Thursday, the final trading day in a week shortened by the
Good Friday holiday, the Dow shot up again, closing with a gain
of 261 points, despite a continued fall on commodities indexes.
The extreme market volatility was driven in large measure by
growing indications that the US has slid into a recession and
that the slumping American economy is leading to a global slowdown.
On Thursday, the US Labor Department reported that jobless
claims jumped by 22,000 last week over the previous week, reaching
its highest level in nearly two months. The Labor Department said
applications for jobless benefits totaled 378,000 for the week,
far more than had been expected. The four-week average for new
claims rose to 365,250, the highest level since a wave of claims
caused by the 2005 Gulf Coast hurricanes. The number of people
on benefit rolls reached its highest level since August 2004.
The jobless claims report came on the heels of monthly employment
reports for February and January which saw net declines in payroll
jobs of 63,000 and 22,000 respectively.
Citigroup, the largest US commercial bank, announced that it
was laying off 2,000 employees in its markets and banking unit.
The layoffs, to take effect by the end of this month, bring the
total job cuts announced by the bank since the mortgage crisis
began last summer to more than 6,000about 10 percent of
the firms global workforce. Citigroup said the layoffs would
be concentrated in New York and London.
The Wall Street giant has written down the value of its assets
by over $20 billion in the last year, and is expected to report
billions more in losses from subprime and other risky investments
in the coming months.
Since the eruption of the subprime crisis and credit crunch
in mid-2007, US financial services companies had shed over 60,000
jobs.
The Conference Board, a New York research firm, reported that
its index of leading economic indicators declined 0.3 percent
in February, its fifth straight monthly drop, and the Philadelphia
Federal Reserve said its factory index had declined in March,
the fourth consecutive monthly fall in the index. Nationwide,
manufacturing declined last month at the fastest pace in almost
five years, according to a survey by the Institute for Supply
Management.
Auto industry spokesmen projected a sharp decline in vehicle
sales for 2008, foreshadowing more layoffs and plant closures.
J.D. Powers & Associates issued a forecast putting US industrywide
sales of light trucks and cars at 14.95 million, the lowest level
since 1994.
In yet another report pointing to a continuing slump in the
housing market and rise in home loan defaults and foreclosures,
the US Census Bureau said the national homeowner vacancy rate
rose to 2.8 percent in the fourth quarter of 2007. That was up
from 2.7 percent in the previous quarter and equaled the record
set in the first quarter of 2007.
The global impact of the US financial crisis and recession
was indicated by a report showing a virtual standstill in world
trade over the new year. The Bureau for Economic Policy Analysts,
a Dutch research institute, reported that in the three months
to January, world trade in goods rose at an annualized rate of
0.2 percent over the previous three months.
This is a substantial deceleration, the institute
said. World trade volume growth is on a downward trend.
The growing signs of economic slump, combined with the impact
of the credit crunch and investor fears about new bank failures,
sparked the broad sell-off on commodity markets that began on
Wednesday and continued Thursday. Crude oil and gold prices nosedived
from record highs set at the start of the week.
Oil prices fell by 6.9 percent over the two days, while most
other commodities fell by 7 percent. Wheat prices plummeted by
15 percent. Overall, the decline in commodities prices for the
week was the biggest in a half-century.
The sell-off was evidently sparked by the decision of the Fed,
announced Tuesday, to cut its federal funds target interest rate
by 0.75 percent, rather than the 1 percent expected by commodities
speculators. That bolstered the US dollar on world currency markets
and led to a sharp decline in the euro, the yen and the Swiss
franc from record highs recorded earlier in the week. The British
pound, Australian dollar and Canadian dollar also fell sharply.
Big investors, including hedge funds, which had bid down the
value of the US currency and bid up the price of key commodities,
in part to recoup losses on stock, bond and derivative investments,
panicked and began unloading their commodity holdings. But the
commodity sell-off was also fueled by fears of a global recession,
which would deflate commodity prices.
Since the beginning of 2008, demand for oil in the US has fallen
2.4 percent compared with the same period last year.
The commodity plunge is also the result of increasing demands
from hard-pressed creditors for commodity speculators to increase
their margins in collateral and cash.
The Wall Street Journal on Friday described the mechanism
as follows: Investors with losing trades in credit marketsmortgage
bonds or collateralized debt obligations, for exampleare
being required by banks and others to set aside more cash to cover
the money they borrowed to make trades, a process called deleveraging.
To raise the cash, some investors and hedge funds have sold some
of their commodity winners.
The Journal went on to explain that the process is an
expression of the generalized crisis of the financial system,
centered in the big banks and investment houses. It quoted Rich
Feltes, director of commodity research at MF Global Ltd. in Chicago,
as saying, This is all related to the liquidity crisis.
As assets at banks are written down, they need to shore up their
portfolios by bringing in more cash from hedge funds that are
trading in commodities.
Heavily leveraged hedge funds and other investors also dumped
commodity holdings because they were compelled to sell liquid
assets in order to make up for losses from bad bets on other forms
of speculation.
As Mark Wilson, vice president and senior credit officer at
Moodys Investors Service, put it: We are in an environment
where there is uncertainty all around.
In an attempt to fend off a financial meltdown, the Fed has
taken unprecedented measures, including pumping hundreds of billions
of dollars into credit markets and taking onto its own balance
sheet mortgage-backed securities, loans used to finance leveraged
corporate takeovers and other failing assets that are weighing
on commercial banks and investment houses and threatening them
with bankruptcy, a la Bear Stearns.
This can only weaken global confidence in the Feds own
solvency and further undermine the position of the US dollar.
Ultimately, the cost will be born by the US government, either
in the form of curtailed remittances from the Fed to the US Treasury,
as a result of losses suffered by the US central bank, or a direct
government bailout of Wall Street.
The US government took another step in this direction on Wednesday
when the regulatory body that oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac, the government-chartered mortgage finance firms, agreed to
allow the two companies to reduce their capital requirements from
30 percent to 20 percent. This move, reportedly taken under intense
pressure from the Bush administration, will enable the two mortgage
finance companies to pump an additional $200 billion of liquidity
into the US mortgage market. The aim is to bolster the distressed
market for so-called jumbo mortgages greater than
$417,000 and increase the firms capacity to refinance more
subprime home loans.
Since the US government ultimately stands behind Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac, both of which recorded record fourth-quarter
losses, the expansion of their lending facility represents yet
another step toward a direct government rescue of the banking
and mortgage industries.
The loosening of capital requirements for the two firms helped
spark the stock market rally on Thursday, raising hopes that it
will help stanch the fall in home prices and the spread of mortgage
defaults and home foreclosures, thereby shoring up the balance
sheets of the banks and investment houses.
That the fallout from the US housing collapse and failure of
mortgage-linked investments continues was underscored by the announcement
Thursday from Credit Suisse, the Swiss Banking giant, that it
was likely to record a loss for the first quarter of 2008. The
bank also admitted that it had mispriced the value of some of
its securities and said it would write down its assets by $2.83
billion and cut its profit results for 2007 by 6 percent, or $7.8
billion.
Another ominous sign was the announcement from CIT, a major
lender based in New York, that it had drawn down its entire $7.3
billion line of backup credit because it could not get credit
from its usual sources. CIT stock plunged by 17 percent on Thursday.
Its a ripple effect, said Michael Taiano, an
analyst at Sandler ONeill & Partners. CIT gets
squeezed, the people they lend to get squeezed and end up maybe
defaulting on their loans. It kind of goes down the food chain.
Comparing the current crisis to the process that produced the
Great Depression, economist and New York Times columnist
Paul Krugman wrote Friday: The financial crisis currently
underway is basically an updated version of the wave of bank runs
that swept the nation three generations ago. People arent
pulling cash out of banks to put it in their mattressesbut
theyre doing the modern equivalent, pulling their money
out of the shadow banking system and putting it into Treasury
bills. And the result, now as then, is a vicious circle of financial
contraction.
Former Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker suggested
in a television interview that the Fed was taking inordinate risks
and cautioned that its policy of cutting interest rates could
lead to an explosion of inflation. He said on PBSs Charlie
Rose program: We have seen the Federal Reserve take more
extreme measures in some respects than any that have been taken
in the past to deal with the financial crisis.
He went on to say that the Fed was not a place where
you put in bad assets, possibly bad assets, and warned that
the weakening of the dollar begins to raise questions
as to its role as a world currency.
See Also:
Asian economies hit by US financial crisis
and slowdown
[20 March 2008]
In the wake of the Bear Stearns collapse
US Federal Reserve cuts interest rates again
[19 March 2008]
Shades of 1929: Bear Stearns collapse
signals deepest crisis since Great Depression
[18 March 2008]
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