Thought about reviewing some leading indicators to see if a bearish thesis is still correct
-The biggest of all should be housing. Is housing coming back? I try not to listen to most of the 'green shoots' in housing, because the S&P is up huge, this makes people extremely biased especially if they are long the market, they will hand pick anything that is jumping around to make their case.
The biggest sub leading indicator of foreclosures is Notices of Default and they are surging in CA, other states as well, resets in AltA are set to increase over the course of the next year. Banks are said to have 800K in shadow inventory of homes(And if you consider the fact that in CA 90% of the foreclosed homes don't sell, thats very likely to be true). Rogoff research suggests housing bottoming in real terms in 2011/2012, I cant see many green shoots here
-Credit markets are improving quite a lot in terms of lower interest rates in corporate bonds, CDS spreads, libor, so this is a big green shoot. The problem is that net bank lending is going down every month, loan originations at TARP banks are also going down, securitization(50% of past US lending) is very also anemic with TALF. The Senior Loan Survey is showing less banks are tightening credit but you ought know how to read this survey, thats additional tightening on top of the tight credit from the last survery so there is a second derivative here but not much else
-The biggest of all should be housing. Is housing coming back? I try not to listen to most of the 'green shoots' in housing, because the S&P is up huge, this makes people extremely biased especially if they are long the market, they will hand pick anything that is jumping around to make their case.
The biggest sub leading indicator of foreclosures is Notices of Default and they are surging in CA, other states as well, resets in AltA are set to increase over the course of the next year. Banks are said to have 800K in shadow inventory of homes(And if you consider the fact that in CA 90% of the foreclosed homes don't sell, thats very likely to be true). Rogoff research suggests housing bottoming in real terms in 2011/2012, I cant see many green shoots here
-Credit markets are improving quite a lot in terms of lower interest rates in corporate bonds, CDS spreads, libor, so this is a big green shoot. The problem is that net bank lending is going down every month, loan originations at TARP banks are also going down, securitization(50% of past US lending) is very also anemic with TALF. The Senior Loan Survey is showing less banks are tightening credit but you ought know how to read this survey, thats additional tightening on top of the tight credit from the last survery so there is a second derivative here but not much else
