Thursday, 27 November 2008
TURKEYS ON THANKSGIVING
AAA predicts 1.4% fewer Americans will travel 50 miles or more this Thanksgiving. If the prediction proves correct, it will be the first decline in Thanksgiving holiday travel since 2002. The biggest percentage decrease will be in airline travel, a possible 7.2% drop. One exception are only Americans without easy access to a full Turkey spread this Thanksgiving, yet who have travelled furthest - to dine on the Space Station where the inmates there are eating early tonight at the same time as I could see them from my farmhouse at 6:38pm at 12 degrees SSW just above the horizon and clearly visible to the naked eye on a cold stormy night in Scotland! The astronauts normally drink their meals through straws, but like hundreds of millions of Americans, the 7 Endeavour astronauts and 3 permanent crew members are enjoying at least something of a traditional Thanksgiving even if it is only liquidised turkey, cornbread stuffing and green beans. But, unlike earthbound families and colleagues, they're floating while feasting (through straws from plastic sachets, in the shuttle-international space station complex about 220 miles above my head - something of a metaphor for the earth's financial problems. The astronauts, at no expense spared, took delivery of a bathroom, kitchenette, two bedrooms, exercise equipment, but then experienced problems with the system for recycling liquid waste. It purifies sub-prime ingredients, urine, sweat and condensation into just about paletable drinking water. Flight controllers had considered returning the urine-recycling special purpose entity, a $154 million water system, back to Earth. But after 5 days of tinkering, astronauts got it working, and it's now churned out 7 litres of recycled urine & condensation. But NASA wants to test the samples and run the equipment in orbit for at least 3 months (classic 90 days overdue default test) before allowing anyone human to drink the stuff. Meanwhile, what are the turkeynomics back in the real world on Earth USA? Over 46 million USA turkeys get roasted this Thanksgiving! That's 675m pounds weight of turkey (or $1.7bn at $1 for frozen to $4 fresh per pound, up 9 cents or 2%) and full Thanksgiving dinners are costing US celebrants 5.5% more than last year,$44.61, up from $42.26. Many families will not be thanking the turkeys for the credit crunch and recession this year, but most may be thanking their lucky stars they've elected Barack Obama and his team. Like the Obama Government's first budget, however, turkey prices are up 8%. Rolls, cranberries, sweet potatoes and even pumpkin pie are also more expensive. Though if I had turkeys on my farm looking like this they could have the run of the garden and I'd never eat it, valuing its decorative value more.But, as in any recession, the higher prices are not showing up in corporate profit statements, and in the case of many banks the turkeys are not even showing up for work at all this Thanksgiving, a finance sector non-sequitor? What happened is that commodity costs like home prices rose faster than consumers are willing to pay, resulting in lower gross margins all round that threatens the solvency of turkey wholesalers and retailers. President Bush in time-honoured fashion will be using his Presidential Pardon to pardon several turkeys connected to his outgoing amionistration. But, first he gets to pardon a feathered turkey, pardoned. As usual in recent years, the lucky henbird is some luckless variety from some Guantanamo style white battery cage, looking cowed and fearful; wouldn't squawk at a goose or a Bush, very unlike the more traditional image of an organic bird in colourful plumage and bonnet-style headress. Financial turkeys of 2008 must include all the banks that lost most of their share price since August and those that faile doutright especially Lehman Brothers' bankruptcy, Paulson's Troubled Asset Relief Program which didn't exactly do what it said on the label, Merrill-Lynch spending $5.27bn buying its own stock at $84.88 per share (now $11.53), TPG (Texas Pacific Group) putting $7bn into WAMU 5 months before regulators wiped out shareholders, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and AIG, and in Europe, the hapless demise of Fortis, Hyporeal, Dresdner, HBoS's botched share-sale and subsequent collapse followed by RBS and now Bank of Ireland looking like it might sell 2/3 of itself for even less good value than Barclays is getting for 1/3, and others too nauseating to recall, except for two recent bank closures. Regulators shut down Houston-based Franklin Bank and Security Pacific Bank in Los Angeles on Friday, bringing the number of failures of federally insured banks this year to 19. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. was appointed receiver of Franklin Bank, which had $5.1 billion in assets and $3.7 billion in deposits as of Sept. 30, and of Security Pacific Bank, with $561.1 million in assets and $450.1 million in deposits as of Oct. 17. The turkey here has to be co-founder and chairman of parent Franklin Bank Corp, Californian, Lewis Ranieri, who invented mortgage-backed securities two decades ago, but was unable to save his own company from getting ensnared in the home-loan bust.Today's economic news from Thanksgiving USA include the following: Not good news that new unemployment claims fell this week to 529,000 from 543,000 last week! US unemployment is now at its highest since 1983. Personal Income rose at an annual rate 0.3% in October, up from 0.1% in September, while personal pending fell 1% month on month, a big drop, largest fall since 9/11. But it tells us household savings are increasing. New Home Sales fell, confirming a 40.1% annual fall, lowest since 1982. Inventories are now 3 times that of good years (4 months worth of new sales). Orders for durable goods of all kinds fell 4-7%. There is however sign of a little recovery in consumer confidence, but it is likely to be temporary as rising unemployment has still some way to go. There are reasons to think that stock markets have become so cheap it may be profitable, very profitable to buy equities again. This is a global business. My personal view is that a 5-6 months bull run is possible, after which the markets should sag and fall again. The most important investor sentiment with global impact is that of the USA and it is showing a mixed picture with only a possible shading in favour of bullishness. My personal view is that this cannot begin to become solid until real estate prices bottom out and begin rising, at least look as if the fall-off is slowing and the market turning. If home prices are to fall to the long run trend they have to fall half as much again from the 20% fall to date. To end on a more festive note the following image was sent to me as a celebratory greeting for Thanksgiving, which I pass onto all my American friends.
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