Continued declines in consumer spending and car sales matched weak manufacturing data, pointing to the longest and perhaps the deepest recession in postwar history.
By David Wyss From Standard & Poor’session Equity Research
We things being so look for the drop in real gross domestic effect (GDP) during this downturn to be similar to the declines in 1975 (3.1%) and 1982 (2.9%), the foregoing take down holders. In addition, we expect the unemployment rate to reach 9% in early 2010, with the real administration bottoming out in mid-2009, 18 months afterwards the recession began.
Credit markets be left locked up. The spread betwixt speculative-grade bond yields and U.S. Treasuries recently reached a record 1,700 basis points. Even investment-grade bonds are trading 500 basis points above Treasuries. This partially reflects unusually low Treasury yields, to the degree that international capital has flowed into the United States in search of safety despite near-zero returns.
Trade had been a support for the economy over the last two years, but that sector is turning musty. Foreign economies are dropping as fast as the United States. The stronger dollar (recently at 1.35 euros) is also cutting into export strength. Although imports are expected to distil steady farther than exports, the drop in exports will prevent the trade sector from helping out the economy actual much.
The stimulus package winding its way through Congress gives some justify for optimism, though mostly for the second half of this year. Incoming President Barack Obama has proposed a bale concentrating on infrastructure spending and with about $300 billion in tax cuts, apparently intended to make the package other savory to Republicans, and $200 billion in assistance to state governments with perhaps a point of concentration put on Medicaid.
The exact contents of the bale remain unclear, but it will clearly be the biggest stimulus perpetually, and will lead to the first trillion-dollar deficit (and maybe $2 trillion). The total cost of the various U.S. government and Federal Reserve packages so alienated exceeds $3 trillion, although a great quantity of that is not included in government outlays or the shortage. calculation.
CONSUMER HANGOVER
Consumers have become the weak spot in the economy after supporting it for so many people years. But with the saving rate averaging less than 1% from 2002 to 2007 and home prices at this time subtracting from opulence instead of adding, consumers are beginning to back off from their free-spending ways. We expect the with exception rate to jump temporarily to 5.8% this year, as taxpayers hoard much of their rebate checks, but then it should drop in a backward direction. \ to an average of 3% from 2010 through 2012.
Autos have been the hardest-hit area. The 10.3 million annualized selling pace in the fourth quarter was the weakest since the summer of 1982, and the 13.2 the great body of the people sold in 2008 were the weakest since 1992. It is hard to know how much of the recent slump in car sales has been due to drivers not wanting to corrupt or lenders not wanting to lend. The high gasoline prices last summer kept buyers out of trader showrooms. Although gasoline prices have inasmuch of the same kind with come down, consumers don’confidentially quite believe it yet and are remaining cautious. In adding, many potential buyers with poor credit ratings have been pushed out of contention by the tighter carry to the credit of human being’s account standards enforced by the auto dealers and finance companies, whose access to credit has been curtailed.
The government funds being shoved into the car companies might ease some of that problem and could lead to a quicker rebound in car sales than we expect. We commonly provide against 10.3 million unit sales in 2009, which would be the weakest calendar year subsequently to 1970.
Housing-related purchases have also been soft. Furniture and appliance sales have dropped because they are often tied to the purchase of a new family circle. With home sales down, in such a manner are furniture and appliance sales. Recently, other big-ticket items — including electronics — have also begun to weaken, which reflects the one and the other the new caution among buyers as well similar to difficulties in borrowing money. On a positive note, household debt has begun to decline as a share of disposable income, and we expect this to continue.
Payrolls declined every month in 2008, and the mass job loss of 2.8 the public was the worst since monthly data began (1945). The unemployment set a value on rose to 7.2% in December, its highest take aim considering 1993 but still cool compared with past recessions. The assessment has risen from 4.4% in March 2007, and we expect it to hold without to climb to 9% in early 2010. Note that the unemployment rate is not in a fair way to peak until at least six months after the economy starts to recover.
The job outlook is reflected in the weak consumer confidence data. Confidence is very low compared with other recessions that were statistically much worse than the present one; we expect this downturn to defy the record languish of 1975 before it is over, however.
On the positive side, consumers will generate a significant control from the Treasury, in all parts of half of what one. is likely to exist spent. The drop in oil prices since last summer gives consumers another $200 billion of purchasing power, and we think consumers will devote it. The white horse in mortgage refinancings has added to household purchasing power as well.
Unlike the refinancings earlier this decade, homeowners aren’t taking cash out of their homes, but they are cutting their monthly payments.
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