The U.S. economic outlook for the next two quarters dim

By Timothy R. Homan

Oct. 19 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. economic outlook for the next two
quarters dimmed in September and foreclosure-driven declines in
property values aided sales of existing homes, economists said before
reports this week.

The index of leading indicators fell 0.1 percent last month, according
to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey ahead of a
Conference Board report tomorrow. On Oct. 24, the National Association
of Realtors may say that home resales rose 1 percent to an annual rate
of 4.95 million.

While houses have become more affordable, the boost to sales from
lower prices may be short lived as banks make mortgages more difficult
to get and concern mounts that values will keep plunging. Add rising
unemployment, and Americans are likely to spend less across the board,
deepening the economic slump heading into 2009.

``Mortgage defaults and home prices need to stabilize,'' said Sal
Guatieri, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets in Toronto. ``It
will take time to slow the vicious cycle of declines in credit
markets, housing and the economy.''

The Conference Board's leading index, a gauge of the economy's
direction over the next three to six months, has posted only two
monthly gains this year.

Seven of the 10 components of the leading index are known ahead of
time: jobless claims, stock prices, building permits, consumer
expectations, the yield curve, supplier delivery times and factory
hours.

The Conference Board estimates the remaining three -- new orders for
consumer goods, bookings for capital equipment and the money supply
adjusted for inflation.

Recession Forecast

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg in the first week of October
anticipated the economy contracted at a 0.2 percent annual pace last
quarter and will shrink at a 0.8 percent pace in the last three months
of the year. Declines in consumer spending will tip the economy into a
recession, the survey showed.

Lower stock prices in September contributed to the decline in the
leading index. The Standard & Poor's 500 index averaged 1217 in
September, down from 1281.47 in August. The 500 index averaged 1011.91
during the first half of this month.

The Realtors' existing home sales report may show sales improved in
September after dropping 2.2 percent the previous month, when the
median price declined 9.5 percent from August 2007.

Fewer Closings

A report earlier this month from the agents' group showed 7.4 percent
more Americans signed contracts to purchase previously owned homes in
August. Economists are anticipating that only a small percentage of
those contracts actually closed last month as banks started to shut
off credit on growing concern over defaults and foreclosures.

``Elevated inventories and stubborn long-term rates should contribute
to a third consecutive month of price declines for existing homes,''
said Maxwell Clarke, chief U.S. economist at IDEAglobal in New York.

Resales have averaged a 4.94 million annual pace this year, compared
with a total of 5.65 million in 2007.

The housing slump is showing no indication of abating. Building
permits, a sign of future construction, dropped 8.3 percent in
September, matching the lowest level since 1981, and single-family
home starts fell to a 26-year low, the Commerce Department reported
last week.

``The housing market continues to be a primary source of weakness in
the real economy as well as in the financial markets, and we have seen
marked slowdowns in consumer spending, business investment and the
labor market,'' Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said in a
speech last week. ``Credit markets will take some time to unfreeze.''

Job Losses

U.S. companies have cut 760,000 jobs so far this year. The jobless
rate in September held at a five-year high of 6.1 percent, the Labor
Department said this month.

More firings, particular in the financial field, may be on the way.
Hedge funds could cut as many as 10,000 jobs by the end of the year,
according to estimates by Options Group, a New York-based financial-
recruiting firm.

``It's bad out there,'' Chief Executive Officer Michael Karp, whose
firm has tracked hedge-fund hiring since 1995, said last week in an
interview. ``Generating returns is not easy at the moment, and as the
funds look to cut costs, the best way is to let go of people.''


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