1 / 95

Growth “… Will Guide You Home” … “and Fix You”

Growth “… Will Guide You Home” … “and Fix You”. 1. Everyone is growing again. Real GDP in selected regions (percent change from four quarters earlier) Sources: US Department of Commerce; JPMorgan Chase & Co. 2. The 2011-12 US outlook … gradually speeding up.

reilly
Download Presentation

Growth “… Will Guide You Home” … “and Fix You”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Growth “… Will Guide You Home” … “and Fix You” 1

  2. Everyone is growing again Real GDP in selected regions (percent change from four quarters earlier) Sources: US Department of Commerce; JPMorgan Chase & Co. 2

  3. The 2011-12 US outlook … gradually speeding up US real GDP (annualized percent change) Source: US Department of Commerce 3

  4. A big mistake corrected … Nominal gross income per household and house prices (ratio to 1970 Q1 level) Sources: Loan Performance Corporation; US Department of Commerce 4

  5. … and that’s why house prices are stabilizing Selected surveys of house prices (ratio of price indexes to the 2000 Q1 level) Sources: Loan Performance Corporation; FHFA’; NAR; Standard & Poor’s; Radar Logic 5

  6. “Under water” losses … Mortgage losses by vintage* ($ billions) Cumulative amount of loans under water* ($ billions) Sources: MBA; CoreLogic; JPMorgan Chase & Co. * Assuming that all loans taken out at the time were 100% loan-to-value 6

  7. … mostly “recognized” Mortgage losses by vintage* ($ billions) Cumulative amount of loans under water* ($ billions) Sources: MBA; CoreLogic; JPMorgan Chase & Co. 7

  8. Builders are still hibernating, owing to the glut … Cumulative houses built and new households formed since 1970 (thousands) Source: US Department of Commerce 8

  9. … but current activity is in a work-off range … Stock of housing (thousands) Housing starts and household formation (millions at an annual rate) Source: US Department of Commerce 9

  10. … so builders will help us out eventually Home building and growth (contribution of res construction to % ch in real GDP over 4 qtrs, pct pts) Sources: NBER recession bars; US Department of Commerce 10

  11. Business is positioning for the future again … Business investment for capital goods and software (percent change from a year earlier) Sources: US Department of Commerce; Federal Reserve Board 11

  12. … because it has restored profitability After-tax GDP profits (percent of nominal Gross Domestic Income) Sources: NBER recession bars; US Department of Commerce 12

  13. Consumers are back in the game too … Real consumer spending and income (percent change from 12 months earlier) Source: US Department of Commerce 13

  14. … with hiring starting … Private sector employment (thousands per month) Source: US Department of Labor 14

  15. ... households saving more again ... Personal saving rate (percent of disposable personal income) Sources: NBER recession bars; US Department of Commerce 15

  16. … and the equity market recovering Equity P-E Wilshire 5000 index Sources: Federal Reserve Board; Dow Jones; US Department of Commerce 16

  17. Low inflation gives the Fed a lot of latitude Selected core consumer price indexes (percent change from 12 months earlier) Sources: NBER recession bars; US Department of Commerce; US Department of Labor 17

  18. A vision of the future … US potential and real GDP (chained 2005 dollars) Sources: US Department of Commerce; Macroeconomic Advisers LLC Real GDP associated with 5% unemployment 18

  19. … but there’s lots of work to do … US unemployment rate (percent of the labor force) ¹ Range of FOMC members’ views Sources: NBER recession bars; US Department of Labor; Federal Reserve Board 19

  20. … the damage is greater than we measure … Official and hidden unemployment (thousands) Source: US Department of Labor 20

  21. The employment status of folks … Status of people in the job market (thousands) Source: US Department of Labor Dot.com dropouts Recession 2008 dropouts Frictional unemployment (4%) Long-term unemployment Short-term unemployment Underemployment (part-timers, beyond the norm, for economic reasons) Full-time, part-time by choice, and "normal" part-time for economic reasons 21

  22. … and what it takes Status of people in the job market (thousands) Source: US Department of Labor Dot.com dropouts Recession 2008 dropouts Frictional unemployment (4%) Long-term unemployment Short-term unemployment Underemployment (part-timers, beyond the norm, for economic reasons) Full-time, part-time by choice, and "normal" part-time for economic reasons 22

  23. Ditto for the rest of the world … Actual real GDP in selected regions (chained 2005 dollars) Sources: US Department of Commerce; various international agencies Estimated level of potential global real GDP (US dollars) 23

  24. Conclusion: things to cheer and fear To cheerTo fear Recession shines light on state finances State fiscal sector challenged Private sector in good shape Builders restrained by work-off of housing glut Double-digit cap X spending growth Europe’s sovereign / banking issues Record business profitability Understanding relative prices versus inflation (the Consumers spending again winter commodity pressures) Equities 15% from record Household balance sheets better Private employment growing 1% Global economy booming Risk assets pricing a recovery Layoffs back to normal in half our states Auto industry on the rebound 24

  25. Appendix 1. The Empire State … 25

  26. The pulse of New York … Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 26

  27. Unemployment has crested … Unemployment in New York versus the nation (percent of the labor force) Source: US Department of Labor 27

  28. … employment is rising again … Employment in New York versus the nation (ratio to 2000 Q4) Source: US Department of Labor 28

  29. … and tracking national trends, like it usually does Employment in New York versus the nation (ratio to 2000 Q4) Source: US Department of Labor 29

  30. But real estate is a little pricey … Ratio of New York’s house prices to the US average (1995 Q1 = 1.0) Source: FHFA 30

  31. ... and we’re still working off a glut too New York home building activity (thousands of units at an annualized rate) Source: US Department of Commerce 31

  32. Appendix 2. State of the states … 32

  33. Financial red flags ... State and local debt obligations per capita (dollars) Source: Bureau of the Census 33

  34. Headwinds remain stiff in the Sunshine State, but .... Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 34

  35. A new breeze from the Great Lakes … Illinois … Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 35

  36. … Indiana … Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 36

  37. … Kentucky … Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 37

  38. … Michigan … Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 38

  39. … Minnesota … Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 39

  40. … Ohio … Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 40

  41. … Wisconsin … Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 41

  42. … and from other “auto” states … North Carolina … Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 42

  43. … and South Carolina Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 43

  44. Good news from the Farm Belt too … Arkansas … Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 44

  45. … Iowa … Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 45

  46. … Kansas … Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 46

  47. … Mississippi Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 47

  48. … Missouri … Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 48

  49. … North Dakota Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 49

  50. The Energy Belt too … Oklahoma … Applications for unemployment insurance (ratio to 2007 Q4 level of claims for respective item) Source: US Department of Labor 50

More Related