Another piece of the puzzle fell into place last week as the economy slides into a recession. The manufacturing index fell to 48%, anything below 50 signals an economic contraction. The December jobs report was mixed. 18,000 new jobs were created but the unemployment index rose to 5.0%. Don’t be surprised to see the January or February jobs report turn negative, at which time the last remaining significant economic indicator will have slipped into the red.
The likelihood of further declines in existing home values was reemphasized last week. Housing prices will have to fall 15% to return to their historical relationship with rents – the point at which renters will consider/be able to afford buying a house. Commercial real estate does not suffer from the same speculative excesses of the residential market but some cracks are appearing in commercial properties as well. Unsold houses being rented are impacting apartment owners, weak retail sales are effecting shopping centers and an economic downturn will effect office rents.
Companies are revising their 2008 earnings forecasts downward or issuing cautionary statements, except for the U.S. auto industry. That’s odd since the auto companies biggest sellers are pickup trucks, followed by SUVs, and the demand for trucks is weakening. Oil hitting $100 a barrel last week doesn’t help the auto industry. Although, the $100 mark is a noteworthy psychological level, the different between $92, $95, $98 a barrel oil is immaterial. Rising food prices, driven by crops being planted for biofuel, is a more significant inflationary worry.
It’s no wonder that the Dow and S&P are down 4% for 2008 and the NASDAQ is down 6%. Hopes of a Fed rate cute may temporarily buoy the stock market but a rate cut, or cuts, won’t enable the U.S. to avoid a recession. Financial firms and banks have to loosen credit and the residential housing market has to return to equilibrium before the Fed’s actions will have a lasting effect. Look for the stock market to work its way 15% lower.
