It is clear that 2008 was not a very good year and it is official that
the current U.S. recession started already in December 2007.  So how
far are we into this recession that has already lasted longer than the
previous two (1990 and 2001 recessions lasted 8 months each)?  We
believe the U.S. economy is only half way through a recession that
will be the longest and most severe in the post war period.  U.S. GDP
will continue to contract throughout 2009 for a cumulative output loss
of 5% and a recession that will last close to two years.

One last look at 2008 will reveal a very weak fourth quarter with GDP
growth contracting -6%, in the wake of a sharp fall in personal
consumption and private domestic investments.  We see the real GDP
growth contraction playing out through the year as follows: Q1 2009
-5%; Q2 2009 -4%; Q3 2009. -2.5%; Q4 2009 -1%, adding up to a yearly
real GDP growth of -3.4% for the U.S. in 2009.


Personal Consumption

The resilient U.S. consumer started to give up in the third quarter of
2008, when for the first time in almost two decades, personal
consumption contracted.  With personal consumption making up over two-
thirds of aggregate demand, the outlook for the U.S. consumer is at
the center of the dynamics that will play out in the real economy in
2009.

In our view, personal consumption will continue to contract throughout
2009 quite sharply as a result of negative wealth effects from housing
and equity market losses, the disappearance of home equity withdrawal
from the second half of 2008, mounting job losses, tighter credit
conditions and high debt servicing ratios (the debt to income ratio
went from 70% in the 90s, to 100% in 2000 to 140% now).  This
retrenchment of the U.S. consumer will result in a painful rebalancing
in the economy that will eventually restore the saving rate of a
decade ago.

The wealth losses for households related to the fall in home prices
are roughly $4 trillion so far, and are clearly bound to increase
further as home prices continue to fall –eventually reaching the $6-8
trillion range (compatible with a 30-40% fall in home prices peak to
trough).  With a negative wealth effect of 6 cents on the dollar, the
reduction in personal consumption could amount to a whopping $500bn.
And negative wealth effect from fall in equity prices – on the wake of
a bleak 2009 for corporate profits – will also contribute to the
contraction in personal consumption by an estimated $100bn (compatible
with a 25% contraction in the stock markets).

This adjustment is consistent with a rebalancing of the economy that
will over time bring the saving rate to a positive level of roughly
5-6% where it was a decade ago, for this to happen consumption has to
contract by an amount close to $800bn.


Housing Sector

The 4th year of housing recession is well on course.
Total housing starts have plunged from the 2.3 million seasonally
adjusted annual rate (SAAR) peak of January 2006 all the way to the
625 thousand SAAR of November 2008 (the last data point available), an
all time low for the time series that started in January 1959.  Single-
family starts built for sale are down 75% from their Q4 2005 peak
(seasonally adjusted data are not available, we performed our own
seasonal adjustment).

On the demand side, new single-family home sales are down 65% from
their July 2005 peak.  Both demand and supply of homes are therefore
still falling very sharply which does not bode well for inventories.
Inventories are the mortal enemy of prices for any goods-producing
sector, including housing.

Starts need to fall substantially below sales so that the excess
supply in the housing market is reabsorbed.  Inventories persist at
record highs and the gap between one-family starts (for sale) and one-
family sales (-92K annual rate in Q3 2008 according to our estimates)
is at levels that cannot promote a fast work–off of inventories.  To
put these numbers in perspective, compare this with a measure of
vacant homes for-sale-only.  Vacant homes for-sale-only were at 2.2
million in Q3 2008, an all time high.  In the decade between 1985 and
1995 it oscillated around 1 million units on average and 1.3 million
units between 2001 and 2005.  This implies that we have to deal with
an excess supply that ranges between 0.9 and 1.2 million units, of
which roughly 85% are single-family structures.

The sharp and unprecedented fall of starts might not have reached a
bottom yet.  In this economy-wide recession, weakness on the demand
side is bound to persist and we believe that supply will have to fall
further, given also the great wave of foreclosures that is adding to
the excess of supply in the market.  We see starts falling another 20%
from current levels.

We believe that home prices will not bottom out until the middle of
2010. Our target is a 38% peak to trough (so far prices have fallen
25% from the peak) but given the worsening conditions on the real side
of the economy, we see a meaningful chance for over-correction that
would bring prices down 44% from the peak reached in the first half of
2006 (Case-Shiller is the reference index for these predictions.)


Labor Markets

With continued credit crunch and significant cut down in consumer and
business spending, the monthly job losses will continue in the
400-500k and 300-400k range during the first two quarters of 2009
respectively, bringing the unemployment rate to 8% by mid-2009.  The
severe contraction in private demand until early 2010 will keep lay-
offs high and the unemployment rate elevated over 8%.

Economy wide job cuts are expected, with big corporations and small
enterprises, residential and commercial construction, financial
services and manufacturing continuing to shed jobs at a strong pace.
Moreover with structural shifts in the economy since the last
recession, job losses this time will be more severe in the service
sector, including retail, business and professional services and
leisure and hospitality.  Unless the fiscal stimulus addresses the
deficit problem for state and local government, job losses at the
government level will also gain pace.  In turn, income and job losses
will further push up default and delinquency rates on mortgages,
consumer loans and credit cards.  Moreover, the loss of high paying
corporate and financial sector jobs will be a big negative for tax
revenues over the next two years.

Lay-offs are bound to continue thereafter as cost-cutting gains pace
with the beginning of the (sluggish) recovery period in early 2010.
Even as consumer demand might show some signs of recovery, firms, like
in the past, will begin by hiring only part-time and temporary workers
initially.   The unemployment rate might peak at close to 9% in Q1
2010, almost two years after the recession began.  However, the hiring
freeze across industries that began in late 2007 will continue at
least until 2010 causing discouraged workers to leave the work force
and containing the extent of the spike in the unemployment rate.
Further, the decline in labor utilization will add to the deflationary
pressure in the economy.  An aging labor force, lower capital spending
and potential growth over the next few years might also result in
lower productivity growth and an increase in the natural rate of
unemployment (NAIRU).


Capital Expenditure

Firms have been drawing down inventories beginning in Q4 2008.  As the
slump in domestic and foreign demand and difficulty in accessing short-
term credit persist over the next four quarters, business investment
is bound to contract in double-digits throughout 2009.  Industrial
production, spending on equipment and durable goods will also remain
in red through 2009.  Moreover with a sluggish recovery in private
demand even during 2010, firms will start building inventories and
contemplate capex plans only at a slower pace.

Trade

Exports contraction that began in late 2008 will gain pace in 2009 as
more and more emerging economies slip into slowdown following the G-7
countries.  On the other hand, easing oil prices and secular downward
trend in consumer spending and business investment will help imports
to shrink.  In fact, this might cause the trade deficit to contract in
1H 2009 since the contraction in imports might well exceed the decline
in exports, thus containing any negative contribution of trade to GDP
growth.

Dollar Outlook

The fate of the U.S. dollar in 2009 rests on the global growth
outlook.  After profit-taking on long USD positions ends and trading
volumes pick up as investors return from their holidays, the dollar
may temporarily recover its relative safe haven status in H1 2009.
Since markets have yet to fully appreciate the impact of the commodity
slump and financial crisis on the rest of the world, risk appetite may
collapse again on signs of a deeper- or longer-than-expected recession
outside the U.S..  Further de-leveraging of USD-denominated
liabilities could provide an additional boost to the dollar as a
funding currency.  The bond yield outlook could be a further source of
strength: while the Fed is already at ZIRP, other central banks will
cut rates further to stimulate growth, putting downward pressure on
currencies like the Euro.  Alternating with these upside risks to the
dollar may be downside risks from 1) a supply crunch in commodities
that lifts commodity prices and producers' economies, 2) inability of
the market to absorb increased Treasury supply at low yields.


Downside risks to the dollar seem more likely to outweigh upside risks
in the latter half of 2009 and in 2010.  Yet at the same time, similar
downside risks exist for other currencies – growing fiscal deficits
will weaken a range of currencies.  With emerging markets continuing
to have trouble attracting capital and Asian economies, hammered by
export contractions, will be reluctant to allow their currencies to
appreciate against or with the dollar – China allowed some
depreciation of the RMB at the recent euro-dollar peak.

Once crucial support from deleveraging wanes, however, the dollar may
be left with only foreign central bank reserve accumulation, which has
already waned on the reversal of capital flows, to finance the large
U.S. current account deficit.  Continued repatriation of assets and
higher enforced domestic savings rates will at least reduce pressure
on the dollar in the short-term.

Inflation/Deflation

Annual U.S. inflation, as measured by official producer and consumer
price indices, is likely to slow in 2009 and even fall into technical
deflation despite increases in the monetary base and fiscal measures
to boost spending power. Slumping commodity prices may drag down the
average annual headline CPI inflation rate to around -2% - a technical
deflation which may morph into genuine deflation if falling prices
generate expectations that they will continue to fall. Meanwhile, the
growing slack in product and labor markets will keep core consumer
inflation subdued at an average year-over-year rate of 1-2%. Steep
discounts to get rid of unsold retail inventory, rising job losses and
lower wage growth will reinforce the trend of stagnant or falling
prices. Loose labor markets and weak demand for commodities and goods/
services will keep producer prices at bay. Risks to the outlook
include 1) a commodity supply crunch or geopolitical shock that leads
to a sustained rise in commodity prices and 2) an earlier than
expected global economic recovery.


Credit Losses Still Ahead

Back in February 2008, Nouriel Roubini warned that that the credit
losses of this financial crisis would amount to at least $1 trillion
and most likely closer to $2 trillion.  As of mid-November 2008, the
threshold of $1 trillion in global financial writedowns was finally
reached.  Given that national house prices expected to drop another
20%, we expect credit losses of $1.6 trillion.

An in-depth analysis of current and expected loan losses per asset
class and separately of mark-to-market writedowns per securities class
based on current prices indeed confirms RGE’s initial loss range
estimates (outstanding loan and securities amounts as in IMF GFSR,
Table 1.1)  For our calculations we assume a further 20% fall in house
prices, and an unemployment rate of 9%.  With respect to credit losses
on unsecuritized loans, recent research by the Fed Board using
comparable assumptions (but assuming high oil prices) concludes that
over half of 2006-2007 subprime mortgage originations are going to
default (i.e. $150bn out of $300bn).  The loss trajectories for Alt-A
loans are similar resulting in a 25% default rate ($144bn out of
$600bn).  Even prime mortgage delinquencies display a very high
correlation with subprime loan delinquencies, implying an approximate
7% default rate when the potential for ‘jingle mail’ is taken into
account ($105bn out of $3,800bn).

The cycle has also turned in the commercial real estate (CRE) arena
with the traditional lag of around 2 years.  Current serious
delinquency plus default rates of 5.9% of CRE loans (net recovery, via
Fed data) are projected to increase to up to 17% by Fitch assuming a
25% fall in prices ($142bn out of $2.4 trillion.)  In the consumer
loan area, we estimate credit card charge-off rate could increase to
13% in the worst case scenario.  Adding a typical 5% delinquency rate
during recessions, the total loan losses on unsecuritized consumer
loans are projected to increase to $252bn out of $1.4 trillion (see
The U.S. Credit Card Industry in 2009, by RGE’s Mathias Kruettli.)

The IMF warned that commercial and industrial loans (C&I) charge-off
and delinquency rates are likely to climb to historical peaks and
potentially beyond in this cycle. Compared to past C&I loan loss
rates, we project charge-off and serious delinquencies to reach 10% or
$370bn out of $3.7 trillion of unsecuritized C&I loans.  With regard
to leveraged loans, the latest research by Boston Consulting/IESE
Business School based on the 100 largest PE firms engaged in LBOs
calculates an expected book loss from default of about 30%.  This
translates into $51bn out of $170bn unsecuritized leverage loans.

Based on these calculations, RGE expects total loan losses to reach
about $1.6 trillion out of $12.4 trillion of unsecuritized loans
alone, implying an aggregate default rate of over 13%.  The IMF
assumes that the U.S. banking system carries about 60-70% of
unsecuritized loan losses (and about 30% of mark-to-market losses on
securitizations).  Even assuming that future loan losses are fully
discounted at current market prices, deploying the remaining TARP
funds towards recapitalizing the banking system would still be
warranted.


The Disconnect Between Bond and Equity Markets

U.S. government bonds were on a tear in 2008, while equities plummeted
in a nasty bear market.  Bond yields at the long end hit all-time
record lows, while the short end even dipped into negative territory.
Only TIPS suffered as deflation risks rose.  Stocks, on the other
hand, had their worst year since the Great Depressions: DJIA lost 34%,
S&P 500 -38.5%.  At its 2008 low on November 20, the S&P 500 was down
49% for the year and 52% from its October 2007 peak.  Stocks rallied
in December though, resulting in an apparent disagreement between the
stock and bond markets over the outlook for the U.S. economy.  Bond
markets seemed to be discounting a recession in 2009 while stock
markets have been gaining since late November.  This disconnect may
vanish in 2009 though if the stock market rally was really just a bear
market rally due to portfolio re-balancing and thin year-end trade
volumes.

However, there have been intimations that the bond market is in a
bubble about to burst in 2009.  Indeed, with ultra low bond yields,
investors may be tempted to switch into higher-yielding equities -
which are now considered by many to be undervalued.  Valuation,
however, is not the be-all and end-all of asset performance.  The
credit freeze needs to end before equities can see the end of the bear
market.   However, considering the likely economic stagnation ahead,
bonds should be a better bet than equities for some time.  We see
meaningful downside risks to stock prices as bad macro news – worse
than expected – continues to dominate in 2009.  Using the S&P 500 as
benchmark, earnings per share will stay in the $50-60 range – and
earnings will fall further.  If, and it is not unusual during
recessions, P/E ratio falls in the 12-14 range, we could see another
25% slide in stock prices.


Fiscal and Monetary Policy

Fiscal Policy
A lot of hope is being placed on the expected fiscal stimulus package
of around $750 bn spread over 2009-10 including 40% of the stimulus in
tax cuts for households and firms.  Around half of the stimulus is
expected to kick-in starting Q2 2009 and through 2010.  But this will
fall short of the pull-back in private demand of close to $1 trillion
during this period.
Infrastructure spending, in spite of being highly effective, might not
be timely, stimulating the economy only in late-2009 and 2010 when it
has well passed the severe recession phase only to exacerbate the
ballooning fiscal deficit.  Nonetheless, around $100bn of
infrastructure investment might be able to kick-in during 2009.
Moreover, job creation in infrastructure might be overestimated given
limitations in moving laid-off workers from other sectors to the
infrastructure projects. As such, any job creation via government
spending and tax incentives for firms will significantly fall short of
the ongoing lay-offs.


Given the drawback of the ‘spending’ component of the stimulus, the
government may be
enticed to implement more tax cuts.  While tax incentives for
households like payroll and child tax credit might be well-targeted at
the group with high propensity to spend, tax cuts in general will be
less effective in stimulating demand given a secular rise in the
saving rate expected over the next few years.  Likewise, tax breaks
for firms hiring new workers or investing in new equipment will be
rather ineffective since businesses see little viability in doing so
during a slump in domestic and export demand. At the most, tax
stimulus in spite of being timely and well-targeted will cause only a
temporary rebound in the economy for a month or a quarter merely
shifting the spending decision period just like tax rebates did in 2Q
2008.
Expansion of unemployment benefits, food stamps and other incentives
will have a high bang-for-buck effect in 2009 and will only assuage
the impact of the recession.  The stimulus will also include up to
$100 bn for state and local governments to meet their severe budget
shortfalls including grants, Medicaid and unemployment insurance
funds, preventing cutbacks in public services, investment and jobs in
several recession-hit states.  But again, fiscal aid for states often
suffers from time lags.


 Fiscal stimulus, TARP spending, GSEs-related expenditure along with
further slowdown in corporate and individual income tax revenues will
push the fiscal deficit to around $1.3 trillion in FY2009.

Monetary Policy
The Fed has enacted a wide and unprecedented range of measures to
mitigate the credit crisis and stimulate the economy.  It has already
cut its target range for the Fed funds rate down to 0-0.25%
(essentially ZIRP) but, more importantly, it has created currency swap
lines and an alphabet soup of programs to provide liquidity to the
financial system and clean out toxic financial assets.  The Fed
experimented with different forms of financing itself in order to
enable a sharp expansion of its balance sheet to accommodate these
liquidity facilities.  In addition to rate cuts and quantitative
easing, the Fed has directly aided failing financial institutions.
Now, the Fed is considering issuing its own debt and/or purchasing
long-dated Treasuries and Agency debt.  Will the monetary easing
work?  So far, the increase in money supply has not been accompanied
by an increase in the velocity of money.  In other words, credit
growth remains stagnant as banks are reluctant to lend back out the
money provided by the Fed and, at the same time, borrower demand has
fallen.


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