The enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it’s the illusion of knowledge (Stephen Hawking)

It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so (Mark Twain)

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NEW$ & VIEW$ (25 MAY 2016)

Surprised smile U.S. New-Home Sales Rise at Fastest Pace in Eight Years U.S. new-home sales posted their strongest month in more than eight years while prices jumped to a record level, suggesting healthy demand alongside limited supplies across the housing market.

Purchases of new, single-family homes jumped 16.6% from a month earlier to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 619,000, the Commerce Department said Tuesday. That was the fastest pace since January 2008.

The median price of a new home—the point at which half of homes were sold above and half sold below—rose to $321,100 last month. That was up 9.7% from a year earlier and the highest level on record. Prices aren’t adjusted for seasonal factors. (…)

Highlighting the paucity of available units, the pace of sales on homes not yet started climbed to the highest level since May 2007. (…)

This is a bizarre jump (charts from Bloomberg and CalculatedRisk)

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More Young Adults Living With Parents Than a Romantic Partner For the first time in the modern era, young adults are more likely to live with their parents than with a spouse or partner, according to a new study by Pew Research Center.

(…) The share of young adults living with their parents hit 32.1% in 2014, passing the 31.6% who lived with a spouse or partner in a separate household. The rest lived alone, with roommates or other family members, or as single parents.

In 1960, meanwhile, a peak 62% of 18-34-year-olds lived as part of a romantic couple in their own households, while only 20% lived in their parents’ home, Pew said. (…)

Pew researchers suggest several factors, including declining employment among young men in recent decades and lingering effects of the recession.  But the researchers said that the chief reason is a “dramatic drop in the share of young Americans who are choosing to settle down romantically before age 35” either with a spouse or a partner.

(…) half of those 18 to 24 were sharing a roof with their parents while only 25% of those ages 25-29 were.

(…) The Gallup Daily tracking survey reveals that members of the millennials do in fact differ from other generations in some important ways — ways that millennials’ relative youth alone does not explain. (…)

Contrary to what we would expect, given normal demographic patterns of adolescents’ movement into early adulthood and family formation, the data show that significantly more millennials are currently single/never married than was true for those in older generations, and considerably more are in domestic partnerships. Specifically, more than half of all millennials (59%) have never married, and 9% are in domestic partnerships. Gallup has noted a trend toward fewer young adults being married in recent years. (…)

Millennials are clearly delaying marriage longer than any generation before them, in spite of evidence suggesting that many millennials intend to marry at some point. For example, a 2013 Gallup poll found that 86% of single/never married Americans aged 18 to 34 (roughly equivalent to the millennial generation) wanted to get married someday.

The percentage of single-adult households for millennials (18%) is no different from that of Gen Xers (16%) or baby boomers (19%), while the percentage of single-adult traditionalist households (31%) is larger for obvious mortality reasons. The percentage of current two-adult millennial households (46%) is significantly lower than that of Gen Xers (57%), baby boomers (52%) or traditionalists (55%). Significantly more millennials are currently in multi-adult households of three or more (36%) than is true for any other generation, suggesting that these reflect some form of communal living arrangement (77% of millennials in multi-adult households of three or more are single/never married, while 12% are married).

The key point, however, is this: There doesn’t appear to be any evidence that millennials — both married and single/never married — are putting off having children. Even among the small percentage (2%) of married 18-year-old millennials, less than half (44%) have no children, and the percentage decreases with age to just 17% at age 34. And while few single 18-year-old millennials have children (4%), that percentage rises to almost half by age 34. In other words, almost half of the oldest millennials who have never married nonetheless have children. In 2000, the comparable number for Gen Xers aged 30 to 34 was just 30%. (…)

In a 2013 Gallup poll, 87% of adults between 18 and 40 who did not yet have children said they wanted them someday. The current data suggest that for millennials, “having children someday” does not necessarily depend on being married.

(…) The U.S. economy has been recovering at a slow pace over the past eight years, with young adults’ spending hit hardest by this lethargic progress. Gallup’s latest report, How Millennials Want to Work and Live, reports that in 2008, Americans aged 19 to 35 were spending an average of $98 per day. Among that same age group now, average daily spending has fallen by $13. Among older Americans, spending is close to — if not on par with — 2008 levels. Perhaps because of their lower wages and higher amounts of student debt, millennials have been unable to catch up to 2008 spending levels, while older generations are less likely to have those constraints.

However, there is positive spending momentum among millennials. Across all generations, fewer than four in 10 Americans (37%) say they are spending more than they were a year ago, but a larger proportion of millennials (42%) say they are spending more. It is worth noting, though, that Americans — millennials included — are spending more on things they need than on things they want. More millennials report spending more on nondiscretionary categories such as groceries (52%), utilities (37%) and healthcare (35%), while fewer are spending more on discretionary purchases such as leisure activities (33%), travel (26%) and dining out (26%). (…)

Millennials’ increased spending on leisure activities versus a year ago and versus other generations is intriguing, as it suggests they might be starting to free up their bank accounts and spend more on nonessentials. They are the only generation to do so, and this financial freedom presents a substantial amount of opportunity for brands that can connect with them. (…)

Auto, Mortgage Delinquencies Rise in Energy Regions The New York Fed’s quarterly report on household debt and credit found rising auto and mortgage delinquencies in the U.S. counties that had the highest employment in the oil and gas industry, even as the national picture continues its gradual improvement.

Delinquencies on auto loans have spiked in the U.S. counties that had the highest employment in the oil-and-gas industry, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s quarterly report on household debt and credit. Mortgage delinquencies have also climbed, though not as dramatically. (…)

So far, the increase in delinquencies and deterioration of credit appears to be concentrated only within energy regions of the country.

“These energy counties are 1.7% of total employment, which is small in the national picture,” said Andrew Haughwout, a New York Fed economist who co-wrote the research. “But this report is evidence of real hardship in these counties.”

The national picture remains one of gradual credit improvement. Overall credit increased by $136 billion, to $12.25 trillion, in the first quarter of 2016, driven by an increase of $120 billion in mortgage debt. The amount of debt remains much lower than the peak in 2008, when the housing crisis and recession racked household balance sheets.

Delinquency rates declined nationally—the share of people more than 90 days behind on their mortgage fell to the lowest since 2007. The share of all household debt that is delinquent declined to 3.6% in the first quarter, also the lowest since 2007.

The amount of student loans rose by $29 billion, to $1.26 trillion. The delinquency rate on student loans improved slightly in the first quarter, but remains far higher than all other types of debt. About 11% of student-loan balances are delinquent, compared to 3.6% for loan balances overall and just 2.1% of mortgages. The figures do not include student loan balances that are in grace periods and forbearance, and the New York Fed says student loan delinquencies may be about twice as high for loans that are actually in repayment.

90+ Day Delinquency Rates

As a supplement to this quarter’s report, the New York Fed took stock of the fallout from the decline in oil prices, by comparing oil counties to the rest of the country. It defined oil counties as those in which at least 6% of employees worked in the oil and gas industry at the end of 2014—about 10% of all counties. (…)

MORE ON THE CHINA RISK

Jim Chanos interviewed by Business Insider:

“One other problem people aren’t paying enough attention to — and that is the asset-liability mismatch,” he said. “And if we learned anything … during our crisis, it was you shouldn’t finance hard-to-value long-term esoteric real-estate-related derivatives or securities with overnight money, which is what a lot of the investment banks ended up doing by ’07/’08. They couldn’t move a bunch of the gunk on their balance sheet and increasingly they were financing themselves in the repo market.”

That is now happening in China, Chanos said. Banks are financing uneconomic projects and/or losses with debt carried on the balance sheets of Chinese banks. That debt is then being financed overnight in the repo market.

All of that is swirling around in the country’s $33-trillion-and-growing banking system.

A few more points Chanos hit:

  • Chinese President Xi Jinping has been a more repressive, inward-looking leader than anyone expected. He has taken “steps backward” from the reform the world expected by moving against the army, the media, and the internet (which he sees as an alternate power base) in general.
  • “We’re getting in some pretty scary debt to capital numbers in China,” Chanos reminded listeners. “We’re 300% of GDP as opposed to 100% of GDP the last time they had a big problem.”
  • Countries that depend on China for trade represent 40% of global gross domestic product. “So if China really does go into decline, it’s going to take a lot of countries down with it,” Chanos said.

Check out the full podcast here

Bad loans are rising sharply at the lowest tiers of China’s financial sector, with some small commercial banks reporting delinquency rates of 20 per cent or more on their loan books. (…)

China has several thousand city or rural banks. Several of those banks included in a small survey conducted by the Financial Times had rates of special mention loans between 10 to 15 per cent of total loans. (…)

For a lot more on this: Certain Uncertainties

PBoC sets renminbi fix at 5-year low Central bank declines to fight against global dollar strength

(…) “The PBoC’s FX reserves have been stable and exchange rate depreciation expectations have ebbed. But the yuan’s twin outflows of foreign investors unwinding carry trades and local firms paying FX debts have continued,” Mansoor Mohi-Uddin, senior market strategist at Royal Bank of Scotland in Singapore, wrote on Wednesday. “Both are now set to flare up again as the Fed gets ready to hike rates this summer.” (…)

NEW$ & VIEW$ (14 AUGUST 2015): Consumers Consume; Housing; Emerging Bear

U.S. Economy Slogs Through Global Woes, So Far Consumers step up as job market stays strong and gas prices sag, but the outlook remains murky

The latest sign of resilience came Thursday when the government reported sales at U.S. retailers shot up 0.6% in July as Americans shelled out more for cars, sofas, clothing and bar tabs. A separate report showed the four-week moving average of unemployment claims, a proxy for layoffs, touched a 15-year low, underscoring the labor market’s recent run of stability. (…)

Thursday’s retail-sales report showed that consumer spending at service stations has fallen 15% over the past year. Spending at all other retailers climbed 4.5%, and the biggest beneficiaries have been restaurants and bars, furniture stores and online outlets like Amazon. (…) (Chart and table below from Haver Analytics)

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U.S. Import Prices Fall on Weak Oil Prices, Stronger Dollar

Import prices decreased 0.9% in July from a month earlier, the Labor Department said Thursday. From a year earlier, import prices are down 10.4%.

Outside petroleum, import prices were down 0.3% last month and 2.8% from a year earlier. That is the largest year-over-year decline in the measure since October 2009.

Prices for consumer goods other that autos fell 0.3% last month. The cost of imported cars and food were unchanged. The index for capital goods—machinery, heavy trucks and the like—fell 0.2%. (Chart from Haver Analytics)

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U.S. HOUSING
  • Housing recovery restrained by tight lending standards

The process of re-leveraging continues in the US. Latest data from the New York Fed showed a seventh increase for household debt in eight quarters, with a US$2 billion increase in Q2. Debt relating to credit cards, student loans and autos (the latter hitting US$1 trillion for the first time) all continued to rise. The overall debt increase could have been much higher were it not for mortgage balances which plunged US$55 bn in Q2.  So much so that last quarter the share of mortgages in total debt fell under 68.5% for the first time in a dozen years.

So, why are mortgage balances not soaring despite rising household formation, a hot labour market and record low interest rates?  Perhaps, the trauma of the last housing crash is still fresh in the minds of potential first-time home buyers who end up opting for rentals instead. That partly explains why the rental vacancy rate and the homeownership rate are both at their lowest in at least three decades. Those first-time home buyers who are able to get over that psychological barrier are then confronted by other obstacles such as tighter lending standards which pose a problem especially for those holding student debt. After being burnt by lax lending during the subprime crisis, banks have seemingly gone to the other extreme and giving mortgages mostly to borrowers with the highest scores. As today’s Hot Charts show, about half of new mortgage originations now go to borrowers with scores 780 and above.

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Contrary to popular belief, millennials are not shunning homeownership. According to Fannie Mae’s National Housing Survey™ (NHS), the vast majority of millennial renters plan to buy a home at some point in the future, but seem to be exercising caution from a financial perspective. This caution may support more sustainable housing costs for consumers and a healthy market overall.

While the financial crisis may have stalled wage growth for younger renters, recent improvements seem to be reflected in consumer perceptions, with increasing shares in Fannie Mae’s second quarter survey saying that their household income is significantly higher now than a year ago. The improvements are an encouraging sign for millennial renters aspiring to homeownership and the housing market in general.

Our survey indicates that millennial renters today have as much desire to own a home as the general population of renters. According to the NHS data, a heavy preponderance of renters age 25 to 34 say that owning makes more sense than renting from a financial perspective. A majority also agree that owning makes more sense than renting from a lifestyle perspective. The overwhelming majority of millennial renters tell us they plan to own a home at some point in the future.

Housing and demographics are inextricably linked. Speculating on the preferences of millennials, the largest generation in U.S. history according to some estimates, is a daily occurrence in the media. Some argue that millennials are less interested in homeownership than previous generations, preferring the flexibility of renting.

The NHS responses suggest the real question is if and when millennials will be able to act on their plans to own. Most renters, including those age 25 to 34, think it would be difficult for them to get a mortgage today. Millennials and other renters cite financial hurdles, suggesting that they must see sustained growth in income before they become first-time home buyers.

Top Criteria for Timing a Home Purchase (3Q to 4Q 2014)

Households With Income Up Significantly in Last 12 Months 

They most often consider their personal finances, particularly their income growth,as the primary factor when choosing the right time to buy. Even lifecycle reasons such as marriage and children, often associated with first-time home buying, are less likely than financial factors to determine the right time to buy for millennial and other renters.

Eurozone Economic Growth Slows The eurozone’s modest economic recovery suffered a setback last quarter as France stagnated and Germany posted a tepid expansion, underscoring deep-rooted fragility in the region.

Eurozone Economic Growth SlowsGross domestic product growth in the eurozone slowed to 0.3% from 0.4% in the first quarter, the European Union’s statistical agency said Friday, falling short of economists’ forecasts of a 0.4% gain. GDP grew 1.3% on an annualized basis, Eurostat said.

Germany’s quarterly growth rate quickened to 0.4% in the second quarter from 0.3% in the first, falling short of economists’ forecasts of 0.5% growth. Output in France stagnated after a strong jump in the first three months of the year. The Italian and Dutch economies grew, but just barely. (…)

Germany’s GDP report didn’t include a component breakdown, but statistics agency Destatis said net exports were the main driver of activity in the second quarter, as foreign trade got a boost from a weaker euro exchange rate, which makes eurozone goods more competitive elsewhere. But economic growth was held back by weak investments, particularly in construction, it said. (…)

Spain’s GDP expanded 1% on a quarterly basis, the fastest among the large eurozone economies, suggesting it is recovering from a severe housing collapse that crippled its economy in the wake of the global financial crisis. (…)

Gross domestic product rose 0.2 percent from the first quarter, when it registered a 0.3 percent increase, national statistics institute Istat said in a preliminary report Friday. The second-quarter expansion was lower than the median forecast of 0.3 percent by 18 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. The euro area’s third-largest economy rose 0.5 percent from a year earlier.

ECB signals inflation turning point

In a cautiously optimistic set of accounts for the governing council meeting in mid-July, the ECB pointed to a “growing number of indications that a turning point [on inflation] might well have been reached”. It was premature to draw a firm conclusion, however, and “additional observations would be needed”.

Peter Praet, the central bank’s chief economist, pointed to data from the purchasing managers’ indices, a poll seen as an indicator of economic developments, which showed input prices and expectations about selling prices were up. Mr Praet also flagged a slight rise in inflation expectations.

However, others members of the 25-member council said it was “too early to consider inflation expectations were firmly anchored again” and noted that market measures of expectations were still “well below” historical levels.

From the latest Eurozone Manufacturing PMI report:

(…) selling price inflation remained muted, with only a slight increase in charges reported.

From the latest Eurozone Services PMI report:

(…) average selling prices fell for the forty-fourth straight month, albeit only marginally and to one of the weakest extents during that sequence.

China economy: down in the data mine

Lex China NEW

Emerging-Market Equities Heading Down

The emerging bear.