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U.S. Macroeconomic Outlook 2009-10 & Beyond Dr. Edward J. Deak Professor of Economics Fairfield University, and ABA Graduate Banking School Edwardjdeak.com ABA’ Seminar For Presidents March 2, 2009
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U.S. Macro Overview Where we are today? The forces that brought us to the brink The issue of financial structural change A look at the current-historical data Federal fiscal actions – TARP + Obama Monetary policy actions The prospects for 2009-10 There is no Plan B What about 2011-15?
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Where Are We Today? Worst Economic Decline Since 1930’s Not a Traditional Downturn Structural Change in Financial Sector Massive in Size + Asset Value Loss Less Responsive to Traditional Monetary + Fiscal Policy Actions Global in Scope
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The Forces that Brought US to the Brink of Economic Abyss The events of 9/11 -> Fed (i) – Too much, Too Long Excessive stimulus to U.S. housing BOP deficits - Excess global supply of $ Excessive Securitization - Housing assets + others Rating agencies + Credit default swaps Excessive Capital Leverage – Not 12:1 but 34:1 Unsound Lending Practices – Lax underwriting Exotic Mtgages – NINJA, Exploding + Option ARMs Lax Supervision - Allowed Wall St greed Alphabet soup credit instruments – ABS, CDOs, etc Phased collapse of housing 2006-09 Speculators, resets, under water, recession
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Financial Structural Change The Pre-2008 Financial System is Gone –The death of traditional investment banking –The squeeze on insurance companies –The weakening of nationwide + regional commercial banks A list of likely survivors –Community banks –Boutique investment banks: ex: Raymond James –Private equity + hedge funds Intensified federal regulation –Likely to be excessively restrictive Rebirth of financial structure –Financing is a service – Channel $ to opportunity –Requires a new wave of real technological change Entrepreneurship financial intermediation
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Current-Historical Data: Housing + Financial Existing Home Sales Median Sale Price Existing Homes Median Sale Price Case-Shiller Index Housing Affordability Index Loan Delinquency Rates Loan Charge-off Rates Consumer Credit Outstanding Dow Industrial Average
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Existing Home Sales: Single Family + Condo
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Median Sale Price $: Existing Home
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Median Existing Sale Price $: Constant Home – Case/Shiller
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Housing Affordability Index
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U.S. Housing Permits Th: Single family & Condos
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Delinquency Rates %: All Comm Bks (FR: sa)
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Charge-off Rates %: All Comm Bks (FR: sa)
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Consumer Credit: (% Chg - FR: sa)
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Dow Industrial Average: Monthly Range/Close 1/07-1/09
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Current-Historical Data: Main St Economy Initial Claims Unemployment Insurance Net Change in Non-farm Payrolls Unemployment Rate Real Gross Domestic Product Consumer Price Index
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Initial New Claims UE Insurance: U.S. DOL 1 st Week of Month 08-09
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U.S. Net Chg Total Nonfarm Employ: 12:07-12:08 U.S. DOL
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U.S. Unemployment Rate %: 12/07-12/08 U.S. DOL
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U.S. Real GDP: Quarterly % Chg (saar)
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Consumer Price Index: Quarterly % Chg (saar)
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Federal Fiscal Action -1 TARP - $700 Bil. –Original plan – Bank stabilization: Bad assets –Bank capital infusion - $350 Bil. –Housing stabilization - $350 Bil.? Obama Recovery Plan - $825 Bil.+? –Twin goals Macro stabilization Self-sustaining recovery –Social goals? –Plan structure
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Federal Fiscal Action-2 Critique: Recovery Plan Focus (Deak) –Quick aid to distressed households + bus –Short-run & intermediate stimulus - Infrastructure –Long-run support for self-sustaining growth Recovery Plan Problems (Deak) –Too small - $1.2Tril+ needed –Too little for housing market stabilization –Too short – Needed 4 year focus –Too much for tax cuts – Limited bang for buck –Too little for growth stimulus
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Federal Fiscal Action -3 Financial Market Action “Bad Bank” – Distressed asset aggregator –FDIC RTC model from 1980’s –Problem: Pricing of assets from banks Implicit taxpayer subsidy vs. Mark-to-market Asset acquisition method Nationalization – Takeover failing banks –Problems: The $ size of the banks Interim management Ultimate asset disposition Ring fencing bad assets – Federal insurance
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Federal Reserve Policy Actions Traditional Monetary Policy –Federal funds rate – Cut to ZERO –OMO – Infuse reserves = money supply Non-traditional Monetary Actions –Direct loans to investment banks (IB) –Convert IB + insurance co to comm banks –Extend credit directly to bus + households –Purchase agency + mgt backed securities Result – Boost FR bal sheet +$1.25 Tril.
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Economic Outlook 08:Q4-10:Q1 Real Gross Domestic Product Change in Non-farm Payrolls Unemployment Rate Consumer Price Index Average Oil Price (nymex) Housing Starts, Existing home sales, Prices Consumer Spending Business Investment Fed Funds Rate Target 10-year T-Note
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Real GDP % Change: Quarterly (saar)
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Non-farm Payroll Jobs: Ave Monthly Chg (000’s) (sa)
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U.S. Unemployment Rate %: Quarterly 08:4-10:1
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Consumer Price Index: % Chg Quarterly 08:4-10:1
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Average Oil Price Per BL: 08:Q1-10:Q1(nymex)
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Housing Starts (saar)
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Existing Home Sales (mil)
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Existing Home Sale Price: Nominal $
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Real Consumer Spending: % Chg (saar)
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Real Business Investment: % Chg (saar)
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Fed Funds Rate Target %
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10-Year T-Note Yield %
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There is No Plan B The risk of fiscal + monetary failure –Short-run stimulus v. self-sustaining recovery Plan needs domestic cooperation Recovery needs global coordination –Multi-national government action –Global business buy-in –Global financial buy-in There is no going back for round-2
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What About 2011-2015? Real risk of massive global inflation Crush of medicare + social security Financing U.S. budget deficits Correcting U.S. Balance of Payments Constructing a U.S. energy policy Constructing a global environmental policy
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