With regard to the economy, we believe there are faint signs of light at the end of the tunnel. Real consumer spending increased by 0.4 percent in January (and is likely to be revised up) and the decline in February nominal retail sales of 0.1 percent suggests that the decline in real consumer spending that month will not be severe.
For the first quarter as a whole, we now expect a contraction in consumer spending much less severe than last year’s fourth-quarter contraction of 4.3 percent. Although we do not expect to see outright growth in real consumer spending until the fourth quarter of this year, we believe the deepest quarterly contraction is behind us.
With light motor vehicle sales idling just above 9 million units at an annual rate, it appears that for the first time since 1945 there are more used cars and trucks being scrapped than there are new ones getting out on the highways. At some point in the not-too-distant future, the purchases and production of cars and trucks will be stepped up. In fact, production increased by almost 24 percent in February, admittedly from an extremely depressed January seasonally-adjusted annualized base of only 4.6 million units.
When the Fed’s Term Asset-backed securities Liquidity Facility (TALF) kicks into a higher gear, more credit will start flowing again to households for the purchase of motor vehicles. And, of course, we households still need to buy staples, not to mention toothpaste and food. As an aside, the TALF program is now authorized to provide up to $1 trillion of financing for the purchase of newly-issued asset-backed securities. This amount is approximately one-third of the net credit created by the private financial system in 2007; one-half the net credit created in 2008. So, the TALF program is considerably more than chump change.
Aside from TALF’s freeing up some auto and credit card loans, where will we households get the funds to purchase anything? After all, the home ATM has sprung a leak. That is, the equity in our houses that we were borrowing against fell by almost $2.3 trillion in 2008), or by about 21 percent of disposable personal income. We do not yet have fourth-quarter data for mortgage equity withdrawal (MEW), but as of the third quarter of last year, it was zilch. So, MEW most likely is now minus zilch.
Stabilization
But we still have income to fall back on. In fact in January, our disposable personal income jumped by 1.7 percent, thanks in no small part to government unemployment insurance, which accounted for 0.93 percent of disposable personal income, the highest percentage since July 1983. Thank goodness for automatic stabilizers, huh?
Is housing about to turn up? No. But is there any good news on housing? Yes. The National Association of Realtors (NAR) index of housing affordability hit a record high in January, which, if taken literally, means that housing has never been more affordable since the series started in January 1971.
Housing affordability is a function of the median price of a house, median household income and the mortgage rate. Although the NAR makes a monthly estimate of median household income, we do not have that monthly series. So, as a proxy, we will do what New York Times reporter Floyd Norris did recently, we will use per capita disposable personal income and compare the median sales price of a single-family existing home to it. This ratio has fallen to about 481 percent – the lowest since the series started in January 1968 – largely because of the sharp decline in house prices. Although per capita disposable personal income is likely to weaken over the remainder of the year as the unemployment rate heads toward 10 percent, house prices are also likely to fall more in percentage terms, thus pushing this ratio even lower.
What about mortgage rates? At 5.12 percent, the contract mortgage interest rate on the purchase of a single-family existing home was the lowest in January 2009 since the series began in January 1963. We are well aware that there is a record overhang of for-sale residential real estate, but, as we just showed, housing affordability is at a record high.
Builders continue to slash production of non-rental housing units, and the federal government has instituted a program to mitigate foreclosures. In sum, the dynamics to bring the housing market into equilibrium are at work.
More good signs
There is another reason to believe that there is light at the end of the tunnel – the behavior of the money supply. No such light was visible in the early 1930s. Both in nominal and price-adjusted terms, the M2 money supply was contracting in 1932 and 1933. In contrast, both the nominal and price-adjusted M2 money supplies are growing at a fast pace. We concede that the demand to hold that money stock also may be growing as well, but the economy would be in even worse shape if that increased demand for money were not being accommodated by an increased supply.
When the federal government’s fiscal stimulus program is implemented, we expect the money supply to grow even more rapidly and its "velocity" to increase because the increased money supply will be to fund increased government spending.
Staying on the subject of the financial system, there was a sharp slowing in credit creation in 2008 by the private financial sector. However, stepping into the breach was the Federal Reserve. In 2008, the Fed’s net acquisition of financial assets – essentially the new credit created by the Fed – totaled $1.3 trillion or 9.25 percent of nominal GDP – a postwar record both in absolute dollar terms as well as relative terms.
The combination of the TALF program and announced future purchases of Treasury bonds/mortgage-backed securities/agency debt will expand the Fed’s balance sheet by an additional $2 trillion (14 percent of 2008 nominal GDP) in 2009. In effect, the Fed is creating massive amounts of credit in place of the private financial system’s more normal credit creation as banks and other private financial institutions repair their balance sheets. This emergency transfusion of credit by the Federal Reserve will help get economic growth restarted later in the year.
Recovery in second half
Lastly, industrial metals prices appear to have bottomed out. What is more, these prices have bottomed despite the dollar’s appreciation against other major currencies. So, the rise in industrial metals prices is due to something other than a depreciating dollar. The stabilization in industrial metals prices may be due more to declining supply than increasing demand. But this typically is the prelude to increased production down the road. That is, when demand does increase after inventories have been pared, production must be stepped up to accommodate the increased demand.
In sum, although the economy remains mired in a severe recession, we have seen nothing of late to dissuade us from our forecast of recovery getting underway in the fourth quarter of this year. In fact, what we have seen of late increases our confidence in the forecast.
Paul Kasriel is the director of economic research for Chicago-based Northern Trust Corp., which has an office in downtown Milwaukee. Kasriel is the recipient of the Lawrence R. Klein Award for Blue Chip Forecasting Accuracy.