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It is Still the Economy, Stupid

Barack Obama and his dud economic team, aided and abetted by a largely clueless media, continue to indulge the fantasy that the so-called stimulus plan “worked” and that recovery is just over the horizon. I wish that was true but other recent developments indicate that the fledgling recovery is going to get smothered in its crib. Not good news.

The next shoe to drop is the collapse of the commercial real estate market bubble. Today’s Washington Post has the story:

A mortgage crisis like the one that has devastated homeowners is enveloping the nation’s office and retail buildings, and few places are likely to be hit as hard as Washington.

The foreclosure wave is likely to swamp many smaller community banks across the country, and many well-known properties, including Washington’s Mayflower Hotel and the Boulevard at the Capital Centre in Largo, are at risk, industry analysts say.

The new round of financial pain, which some had anticipated but hoped to avoid, now seems all but certain. “There’s been an enormous bubble in commercial real estate, and it has to come down,” said Elizabeth Warren, chairman of the Congressional Oversight Panel, the watchdog created by Congress to monitor the financial bailout. “There will be significant bankruptcies among developers and significant failures among community banks.”

Remember, this is happening in Washington, a city normally considered recession proof because you have so many people sucking on Uncle Sam’s tit. What happens when these small banks go under? They’ll be snapped up by larger banks, which means we are back to the business of creating financial monsters that are “too big to fail.” Think this will create more jobs? Nope.

Then we have Ben Bernanke’s move last night to boost the Fed discount rate charged to banks. The Financial Times reports:

The attempt by the 11-month risky asset bull run to navigate an inevitable hurdle got off to an inauspicious start on Friday.

Stocks and commodities stumbled in Asian trading and the dollar found favour after traders were caught off guard by the US Federal Reserve’s announcement that it would raise the discount rate it charged banks.

However, a more stoic response from New York traders saw Wall Street reverse early losses and hit a four week high.

“As the marketplace digests what the real implication of the [Fed’s] move is, it will realise it is less of a negative than people thought last night,” said Craig Peckham, equity trading strategist at Jefferies & Company.

The Fed was at pains to point out that the move did not mean it had changed its outlook for the economy or monetary policy. But some investors remained wary that the decision represented an important step in its exit from the liquidity measures deemed crucial in supporting assets during the past year.

“The fact that this was done not at a scheduled meeting and after the [market] close are likely indications that the Fed does not want this interpreted as a change in the overall policy outlook,” said Don Rissmiller at Strategas.

Check out Larry Doyle’s take at Sense on Cents. Please understand that Bernanke’s move will make it more attractive for investors to buy U.S. dollars. A good thing, right? Not really. This ultimately will make credit more difficult to get, not easier. This also is likely to lead to higher interest rates for folks trying to get a mortgage. That means that even fewer people will be able to get a loan to buy a house. If people are not buying houses and condos then they are not also buying new furnishings, appliances and electronics.

And how about exports? It will cost more to buy US goods (that’s because the dollar has risen in value). That could discourage tourists coming to the U.S. and will likely lead to a higher trade deficit. Because our dollar is up in value we can, in theory, buy more foreign goods. All of this is likely to fuel an inflationary cycle.

Of course why should Barack Obama know anything about how the private sector works? He’s been on the public tit most of his life. With only a brief stint at a law firm, the rest of his life has been spent living off of the public funds in one fashion or another. I understand why he does not understand, but that does not make our nation more secure economically. Still troubled waters ahead.

  • Khan Krum

    BOOOOOSSSHHHHHH!!!

  • creeper

    And he’s going to shove health care deform down our throats any way he can.  That ought to balance the budget nicely.

  • Bronwyn

    I’ve been listening to John Batchelor’s nightly show a lot lately. (It’s so informative and rational, and he gets terrific guests.  Btw, Larry was on last night to talk about that intriguing hit job on the Hamas gun dealer.)

    Batchelor and his guests have been emphasizing the number of businesses who — because they don’t see any clear plans coming from Obama to boost the economy and because they are fearful of his plans for health care, cap & trade, EPA rules, more regulations and higher taxes — are cutting back on costs and not hiring new employees.  

    It is businesses like these that lease new digs for their businesses.  Surely they won’t be “movin’ on up” during a time of anxious uncertainty about the economy.  They’ll stay put and make do with the offices they already have, or even cut back on how much space they’re leasing.

    The effects of Obama’s inability to lead on the economy and jobs are wider than most of us realize.  Batchelor says that the very top law firms, in the last year, have not promoted many associates to full partners because the top law firms depend on revenues from their business clients, who are cutting back on legal costs as well as everything else.  Law firms also lease large amounts of commercial real estate and “making do” with their current site rather than, as they love to do, move into more luxurious spaces because historically they’ve seen larger, nicer office space as a sign of how well the firm is doing.  But not now.

    One more small example of cut-backs.  Batchelor mentioned Walgreens as one of the big corporations that are tightening their belts and choosing not to hire anyone at this time — all because of their anxious uncertainty about Obama.  A neighbor of mine is on Medicaid.  I took her to Walgreens last week to get her prescription filled.  The pharmacist told her that Walgreens will no longer take Medicaid customers.  I don’t know what kind of financial arrangement that Walgreens (and all other pharmacies) have with Medicaid — or if this is nation-wide, or restricted to the state I live in — but servicing Medicaid prescription users is probably a money loser for them, and so they are cutting out customer service to prescription customers from whom they probably aren’t making any money.  

    What this also tells me is that businesses are still worried that Obamacare may pass, in some form, and will cost businesses even more, especially if Obamacare tries to pay for itself by cutting back on reimbursements to physicians, hospitals, pharmacies, etc.  Fewer and fewer medical clinics, hospitals, pharmacies and other medical-related businesses will take patients using government-funded medical services.  ALL of those services also rent commercial office space, and are probably also “making do” at this time.

    Obama makes everybody nervous.  From business owners to average citizens.  We just don’t know if we’re going to make it financially with him because, as Larry points out, Obama is incapable of making “our nation more SECURE economically.”

  • oowawa

    And still, the stock market drifts upwards, like a runaway balloon with a happy face on it.  The high-frequency trading computers at Goldman Sachs and other too-big-to-fail companies are merrily trading back and forth with each other at the speed of light driving equities upward–and everywhere you look–Green Shoots!  People are liable to get so happy and optimistic that they forget  to worry about the expiration of their unemployment benefits or the impending foreclosures on their homes.  Everything is BTE–Better Than Expected–so whoopdy-friggin-doo!!!

  • Timmy

    Stupid is what stupid does…. How many times have NQ readers told you that Obama has no clue.

  • Docelder

    “Too big to fail” does absolutely nothing for people. Too big to fail is candy coated corporate welfare. But, I guess you get what you pay for when it comes to our government.

  • foxyladi14

    roses are red violets are blue i wish i didn’t have this obama tatoo

  • EllenD

    I guess the big banks are looking forward to having the small community banks handed to them on a platter by the Obama team.
    There has been a movement to get people to move deposits to their community banks (you’re still insured to $250,000). Would this help keep them stable when the Commercial Crunch hits? Who knows?
    All I know is that there are a lot of commercial properties that are “upside down” and their mortgages are coming due. For Sale signs are springing up  like weeds but, just like houses, cash is king because the banks aren’t financing.

    The next shoe to drop is the collapse of the commercial real estate market bubble.

    I’m afraid Larry is right.

  • oowawa

    Hey Doc–I’m just the right size to fail–little–as are most of us.  In fact, the whole middle class is just the perfect size to fail!  While we’re falling into ruin, we can console ourselves by remembering that Goldman Sachs and their ilk will be perfectly okay . . .

  • oowawa

    Ooooo–foxyladi14–where is it?  Dang, sure wish I could enlarge that avatar . . .

  • mortuus lark

    I think foxyladi is telling you she is only 14. Okay.

  • Pingback: It is Still the Economy, Stupid : NO QUARTER : PlanetTalk.net - Learn the truth , no more lies

  • Pingback: It is Still the Economy, Stupid : NO QUARTER : PlanetTalk.net - Learn the truth , no more lies

  • sowsear

    OT, but see the Dalai Lama walking out the back door by the garbage…
    http://www.gettyimages.co.nz/detail/96834730/AFP

  • Craig Della Penna

    Wouldn’t help, it’s only 47×47 pixels…

  • mortuus lark

    The Dalai Lama lost most of his credibility with Bush and now Obama is just treating him appropriately.

  • getfitnow

    I like Batchlor too. Up until today he was only on Sunday nights (KSFO). But starting tonight, he’ll be on weekn pm.ights 6-8

  • Docelder

    Everybody would be nervous if for no other reason that nobody knows what is coming next, or even who is really going to cause the next event to happen. The worst thing Obama could have done would be to come in with a crisis and then go about changing everything at once. But this is what happened. He is either inept or malicious. Either way, people are just as nervous and feel just as out of control. Nervous and out of control consumers aren’t going to spend money and a consumer driven economy will fail in these conditions.

  • Obama: Dubya 2 Electric Boogaloo

    Yes! I’m glad Brian Sussman is getting that morning slot. Lee Rodgers sucks IMHO, and always liked that Suss would sit in for him on Mondays. If you can out there in NQ Land, check out the Sussman on KSFO 560AM (on the internet too). A lot of his material seems like he reads NQ.

  • Ferd Berfle

    Spot on, Larry. The boneheads populating this mis-Adminisration merely spew verbally or in printed matter whatever series of disconnected words happen to be bouncing around their empty skulls at the time they are bloviating.

    Rhetoric is one thing; disjointed insanity being presented as reasoned thought is quite another,

  • mortuus lark

    It is the strenght of the U.S. DOS and SOS HC, stupid.

    Judge Bernard Saint-Vil told reporters Friday that he is investigating what the two Meridian, Idaho, women did during a December visit. He said he would visit orphanages where they may have sought children.


    U.S. Embassy officials attended the closed-door hearing but didn’t speak to reporters.

    Finally something good to report from the DOS and SOS HC that makes sense. At least all of those troops helping out in Haiti should mean something to the Haitians other than waiters and waitresses.

  • oowawa

    True, but for every pixel provided, my imagination can contribute 3.

  • oowawa

    Yep Ferd–you can’t trust the words of the economic gurus inhabiting the hallowed halls of this administration.  Elizabeth Warren speaks truth, but she appears to be an outsider watchdog who will soon be muzzled because of her barking . . .

  • oowawa

    Yep Ferd–you can’t trust the words of the economic gurus inhabiting the hallowed halls of this administration.  Elizabeth Warren speaks truth, but she is an outsider watchdog whom I fear will soon be muzzled because of her barking . . .

  • oowawa

    The garbage and all sentient beings are nothing but the one mind, besides which nothing exists.  The back door?  All doors open into everything.

  • PortiaElizabeth

    Our bank funds are insured by the F.D.I.C. How secure is this insurance?

  • Ferd Berfle

    Woof

  • oowawa

    Well, here’s an article on that subject.

    Also according to Wikipedia, which is my mentor on all subjects, the FDIC “provides deposit insurance, which guarantees the safety of deposits in member banks, currently up to $250,000 per depositor per bank.”

  • PortiaElizabeth

    Thank you, oowawa. According to the article it’s just as I feared:

    “We think the FDIC has plenty of protection, including the unlimited support of the federal government. This includes the extension of a line of credit to the US Treasury to $500 billion through 2010 that was approved by Congress in May. ”

    If the govt. and Congress are involved, we’re already screwed.

  • I’m a Linda too

    And now we hear that Obama and Congess are going to Rahm thru their special interest give away on middle income and higher middle income taxpayers yet again, with no kept promises for most of American to open up competition, control rates and bring them down with lowered drug prices, regardless that most Americcans don’t want…that they are going to Rahm it thru anyhow because they already know they’re going to lose their seats.

    And this is what they representing their constituents and doing what is in the best interest of our country?

  • I’m a Linda too

    And now we hear that Obama and Congess are going to Rahm thru their special interest give away on middle income and higher middle income taxpayers yet again, with no kept promises for most of American to open up competition, control rates and bring them down with lowered drug prices, regardless that most Americcans don’t want…that they are going to Rahm thru HI MED anyhow, because they already know they’re going to lose their seats. 

    And this is what they call representing their constituents and doing what is in the best interest of our country?

  • I’m a Linda too

    And lets not forget them dragging out an OLD fresh face to play “intimidate and lie” for Obama, you know, the one who told Canada not worry about the strong words Obama would claim running against Hillary about NAFTA, “it’s all campaign rhetoric”, Austan Goolsbee.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    What caused the catastrophic losses from the residential real estate bubble was not the drop in value per se. The Catastrophic Losses were a result of the after market of bundling bad loans, rating them AAA, and reselling them. And the even greater losses came as a result of the derivative speculation in those investments.

    Commercial Real Estate loans by and large, as pointed out by Larry, have not been repackaged, resold, and reinvested in a derivative market.

    The losses for small and medium banks will be painfull, but it will not be as wide spread and catastrophic as what happened with residential loans.

    Thank God there is no Fannie and Freddie for Commercial Real Estate.

    The losses will hinder a recovery, and may even cause a temporary but slight downturn, but it will be nothing like we saw from ’08-09.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    What do you expect? They are mostly lawyers.

    How many Lawyers does it take to screw in a lightbulb?
    None. If lawyers are involved, the lightbulb is already screwed.

  • lorac

    BH, do you have Walmarts in your state?  They offer many medications in generic form for $4/month, or $10/3 months, no insurance needed.  You can google “walmart prescription list” to see exactly which meds they offer like this; the most recent list I’ve seen is dated January of this year.  I’ve also heard that Target has a program like this. 

    Also, you might check if there is a general resource number in your state – here it’s 211.  You might call them (or have your friend call for herself) to see what’s out there, because often there are agencies or religious groups that will help people with medication vouchers.  They sometimes have limits, like only so many times a year, but that’s something.  A lot of things are being cut back on the government level, but there are some private groups that are still able to help some people with funding for medications.  If you have a number like 211, they’d be able to tell you where they are. 

    If you can’t find a number like that, you might try getting through to the social work department in an agency or hospital and see if someone will tell you about some resources for your friend.

  • lorac

    Oowawa, you are so funny!

  • blue collar hoosier

    more depressing news on the economy…

    i’m not a fan of stimulus – i think they should’ve stuck with ‘tried & true’ methods like dramatically reducing spending, aggressive use of tax deductions & incentives, and downsizing our monsterous government bureaucracy rather than this dubious concept of “spending our way out of debt (?!)”. 

    but if we were gonna go down that road, wouldn’t the most effective thing would’ve been to just put the stimulus directly into the hands that its needed most – specifically, anyone who isn’t a billionaire (which are pretty much the only people who really benefited).  think we’d be doing better if they’d just sent each family $20,000?

  • oowawa

    But lorac, for once I was being serious!

  • TeakWoodKite

    I find it interesting that the Fed gave no real heads up to the markets.

    Any idea why Platnum was up 11.50 on the day? 

    I see near 50% commercial vacancy in my part of Anywhere, USA, so when the financial crunch hits, it will be ironic that many have put there money into smaller institutions in protest against big money and will soon find themselves having not escaped the jugernaut.

  • Cindy

    No Longer banned,
    My hubby’s a lawyer, one of the good ones. He’ll be the first to admit that the bad ones give the profession such a bad name.
     But, he’s a great guy  and he loves the law. (and he actually screws in our lightbulbs all by hisself ;) )

  • elaine

    Look for another 1/4 point increase in the Federal discount rate in March or April. I have a crystal ball.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    Larry, you are right about O’barry & Co. being a disaster, but the Fed rate increase is not going to matter one bit.

    The Fed boosted the discount lending rate to 0.75% from 0.50%. All that is going to do is eat into big bank profit. Interest rates to consumers and businesses will bareley be felt if at all.

    The rate change is entirely symbolic. That rate affects virtually no borrowing at present.

    “Fed policymakers said they expect the rate will stay “exceptionally low” for an “extended period.” It repeated that assurance Thursday.”

    The biggest problem in DC is the out of control deficit.

    China stopped lending to the US because they are about to raise the vaile of the Yuan compared to the dollar. That will make the value of the US debt notes that China holds decline.

    The tiny Fed rate increase just shows China that maybe the US is trying to get it’s act together.

  • AnnieCarmel

    Agree,docelder.  He doesn’t have his fingers on the pulse of the country much less anything in his grip.  Willy-nilly.

  • AnnieCarmel

    This was predicted last year that before the housing crisis was resolved, commercial real estate would follow.

    Frankly, I don’t have a clue as to what to do rather than stay home, don’t spend $$ and watch Nefflix movies about WWII.  It makes me feel better in comparison.

  • AnnieCarmel

    This was predicted last year that before the housing crisis was resolved, commercial real estate would follow. 
     
    Frankly, I don’t have a clue as to what to do rather than stay home, don’t spend $ and watch Netflix movies about WWII.  It makes me feel better in comparison.

  • Senneth

    Hi Ferd,
    glad to see you’re back!  Always like your posts and those of Katmoon’s as well.

  • Glennmcgahee

    Listening to NPR yesterday, there was a caller to the show. He said his wife was a Real Estate Attorney for Chase. According to him, we haven’t seen anything yet. His wife states that they have only processed 1% of the foreclosures yet to come and we haven’t seen anything yet.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    Oh yeah. A caller to NPR who knows someone in the business. That is some real reliable info.

    Maybe he should have had his wife call, and state her title along with the company she worked for or represented.

    If she can’t do that because of Attorney/Client privlige, than he should not be blabbing privliged information.

    Sounds more like a caller with BS.