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I HAVE
A LOT OF PROBLEMS WITH YOU PEOPLE!
Northern Trust
by Paul Kasriel
December 17, 2007
Well,
as Festivus is nearly upon us (December 23), it is time for the airing
of grievances with the economy. So here goes.
Households,
you are carrying a record amount of debt and other liabilities relative
to the market value of your assets (Chart 1). What’s more, this record
levered state has come at a time of relatively rapid increases in the
market value of your assets (Chart 2). What will happen to your leverage
ratio if, perchance, the market value of your assets should fall?
Chart 1

Chart 2

Households,
you are at near record levels of illiquidity
(Chart 3). Don’t tell me you needn’t be as liquid today as your
parents were because you have access to more credit. As shown in Chart
1, you already have record high leverage. You also already have borrowed a record amount relative to the value of your
house, just shy of 50% (Chart 4). Moreover, the equity you have in your
house is now falling (Chart 5) and with over 2 million empty houses and condominiums for sale (Chart 6), the value of your
house is likely to fall further. And your bank is a lot less willing to
lend to you now (Chart 7).
Chart 3

Chart 4

Chart 5

Chart 6

Chart 7

To
get some idea how much the price of your house might fall, consider the
implications of how much the price of your house has risen relative to
your income (Chart 8). Between 1980 and 2000, the price of your house
averaged about 337% of your income. Then, according to former Fed
Chairman Greenspan, came the delayed effect of the fall of the Berlin
Wall, and the price of your house soared to 469% of your income – a
record high for the 1968 through 2006 period. Assuming, optimistically, that your income increases by 4.05% in 2007 and
2008, the rate at which your income increased in 2006, by what
percentage would the price of your house have to fall
from its 2006 level to get the price/income ratio back to 337% average
in 2008? The answer is 21.7%.
From 1968 through 2006, the median price of an existing home never fell on a year-to-year basis. So, we are in uncharted waters
here.
Chart 8

Lastly,
you already are devoting a near record high percentage of your take-home
pay to your creditors in order to keep the collection agencies from
calling you at all hours of the day (Chart 9). With employment growth
slowing and your mortgage rate resetting, you will likely have even less
left over next year after paying your monthly P&I.
Chart 9

Households,
your net worth has increased for the 20th consecutive
quarter, but notice that relative to your take-home pay (disposable
personal income), it is leveling off (Chart 10). Now there are two ways
that you can increase your net worth – spend less than you earn or be
fortunate enough to have a Northern Trust investment advisor, i.e.,
experience holding gains on your assets. In a “normal” year,
approximately 61% of a household’s change in net worth derives from
holding gains on previously acquired assets – tangible and financial.
Households, in the past four years you have experienced above-normal
holding gains on assets (Chart 11). But notice that in the third quarter
of 2007, holding gains contributed the smallest percentage to your
increase in net worth, only 68%, in the past four years, primarily
because of the slowdown in the appreciation of residential real estate,
but also because of weaker gains in the stock market. The odds are that
residential real estate will not be generating large holding gains over
the next year – in fact, probably losses as discussed above. Unless
the stock market shows extraordinary gains, and we will talk about why
this is unlikely later when we air some grievances with Corporate
America, you may have to start spending less than you earn if you want
to keep increasing your net worth. Horrors! And although one quarter
does not a trend make, it looks as though households are rediscovering
thrift as means of increasing their net worth. In the third quarter of
this year, households ran a financial surplus – i.e., acquired more
financial assets than they acquired liabilities -- for the first time
since the fourth quarter of 2003 (Chart 12). (As to why a household
financial surplus implies that households are spending less than they
earn, see Gene
Epstein's Great American Savings (sic) Myth).This household
financial surplus was 5.7% of after-tax income, the highest surplus
percentage since the second quarter of 1998. Perhaps this is why
consumer discretionary retailing stocks have fallen on hard times and
why they are likely to be under-performers for some time.
Chart 10

Chart 11

Chart 12

Now
it’s your turn, Corporate America. For starters, the growth in your
“operating” profits has slowed to a crawl – just 1.9%
year-over-year in the third quarter (Chart 13). Moreover, if it were not
for your earnings from overseas operations, which are inflated when
translated into depreciating greenbacks, your profits would be contracting
(Chart 14.) As Merrill Lynch’s chief North American economist, David
Rosenberg, has reminded us, corporate hiring of U.S. domestic residents
and capital spending in the U.S. depend on corporate profits generated
in the U.S.,
not corporate profits generated in Germany or China. And while we still
are on the subject of domestically-generated profits, note that profits
from the nonfinancial sector have contracted four quarters in a row and
the growth of profits from the financial sector have slowed
significantly (Chart 15). With the mortgage cash-cow having run dry, do
you think that financial sector profits will rebound soon?
Chart 13

Chart 14

Chart 15

Despite
this relatively poor corporate profit performance, the prices of
corporate equities are up on the year. We wonder if it has something to
do with the record amount of corporate equities that have been
“retired” via share buyback programs and leveraged buyouts of late
(Chart 16).
Chart 16

Nonfinancial
corporations have stepped up their credit market borrowing of late, both
in absolute terms and relative to their cash flows from operations
(Chart 17). Have nonfinancial corporations increased their borrowing to
fund capital outlays? Apparently not, inasmuch as the ratio of their
borrowing to their capital outlays is rising and now is just a shade
below where it was in the first quarter of 1999 (Chart 18). So, as
corporate profit growth is slowing, it appears that corporate treasurers
are tapping the credit markets more to fund their share repurchases.
With corporate borrowing costs rising absolutely and relative to the
U.S. Treasury’s borrowing costs, how much longer will corporations be
able to levitate the value of their shares via levering the corporation
itself (Chart 19)?
Chart 17

Chart 18

Chart 19

And
lastly, I have some problems with you, commercial banks. You gave the
impression that you were primarily operating as an
originator-distributor during this credit cycle. That is, you originated
credit and then sold it to some other investor. Well, you must have been
retaining some of the credit you originated and were financing the
purchases of the buyers of credit you sold because growth in your loans
and investments (bank credit) since the last recession has generally
been above the median growth rate of 7.6% from the first quarter of 1975
through the third quarter of 2007 (Chart 20). Moreover, you cashed in on
the mortgage boom by increasing mortgages and private-label
mortgage-backed securities from 33.7% of your total earning assets in
the first quarter of 1991 to 47.9% in the third quarter of 2007 (Chart
21). So you have some mortgage credit “challenges,” too. Moreover,
you have some indirect mortgage
challenges as a result of the loans you made to other purchasers of the
“toxic waste” originated during this credit cycle. And your credit
challenges will not be restricted to residential mortgages, but
commercial mortgages and consumer credit card debt, too, as delinquency
rates on these loan categories are rising (Chart 22).
Chart 20

Chart 21

Chart 22

Remember,
Festivus is not over until the economic Pollyannas pin me.
Paul
Kasriel is the recipient of the 2006 Lawrence R. Klein Award for Blue
Chip Forecasting Accuracy

© 2007 Paul Kasriel
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Paul Kasriel | The Northern Trust Company 50 S. LaSalle Street Chicago, IL USA |
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