Tuesday, June 21, 2011

US Chronic Problems

Optimists argue that the global economy has merely hit a “soft patch.” Firms and consumers reacted to this year’s shocks by “temporarily” slowing consumption, capital spending, and job creation. As long as the shocks don’t worsen (and as some become less acute), confidence and growth will recover in the second half of the year, and stock markets will rally again.

Factors slowing US growth are chronic. These include slow but persistent private and public-sector deleveraging; rising oil prices; weak job creation; another downturn in the housing market; severe fiscal problems at the state and local level; and an unsustainable deficit and debt burden at the federal level.*

The financial crisis was driven by the multi-TRILLION dollar housing bust - until that is resolved (i.e. prices start increasing); this process of de-leveraging cannot complete. Banks must keep taking write downs (I would avoid bank stocks completely); the Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac issue needs to be addressed (billions/qtr in loses, still); and US consumers need to pay off their debts (a problem exacerbated by short sales).

Looking at post-housing bust Japan; the US is looking at the same medium-term issues that caused the Lost Decades. While the US stock market has recovered much more quickly and US banks were forced to write-down loses much, much sooner the comparison is still fair. We cannot rebuild trillions of dollars in lost wealth overnight.

With a $14 trillion GDP and 3% growth, we are adding $420 billion in wealth a year. Estimates vary, but loses from the financial crisis near $4.5 trillion, so even at 3% growth (higher than 1.8% in Q1 2011), it will take 10 years to rebuild the lost wealth.

The US economy is now larger than pre-crisis, which is a positive sign, but factoring in growth in the labour supply and population we are still well away from producing enough wealth to reduce the unemployment rate. We also need to understand that the debt, even at 2.96% rate, is a skim off the economy. Those interest payments (on $14 trillion), essentially wipe out the wealth creation and transfer to the foreign lenders. This is the danger of large deficits - it can turn into a vicious cycle.

*Credit to Nouriel Roubini for the initial insight.




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