Observations from a modestly elevated perspective on economics, global politics, finance and a few other issues, delivered as quick commentaries (prefaced with"AOK") on selected items posted elsewhere by those wiser, or at least more diligent, than myself.

Friday, November 5, 2010

Employment cycle chart for post-war recessions

AOK -  I've seen this graphic around a few places, it is probably the single most powerful image that scales the depth of this economic downturn and the associated issues. Some comments on today's jobs report follow:

05 Nov 2010 10:41 am

Ryan Avent is cheered by the October employment report:
I think the most plausible explanation is that private-sector employment had begun a decent recovery earlier this year, then lost steam because of the European debt crisis, the BP oil spill, and the fading contribution of fiscal stimulus. Those restraints have begun to lift. Data on factory orders, retail sales and car sales suggest a modest rebound began in the last few months. Indeed, retail employment rose 28,000 in October. The odds favour a continuation of decent job growth, though not as briskly as in October. And hazards remain. Bank credit continues to contract, although more slowly than earlier this year. Political gridlock could trigger a premature shift to fiscal tightening. But for now, optimists should celebrate, and Mr. Obama can rue the injustice of the economic data calendar.




Felix Salmon says that the report continues "the same story we’ve been seeing for a while: good news for the employed, bad news for the unemployed":
Overall, the private sector has now added more than a million new jobs over the past year — a good start, in the wake of the 8 million job losses we saw over the course of the recession. And 400,000 of those new jobs have come in the past three months. For people with jobs, wages and hours are rising, too. Over the past 12 months, average hourly earnings are up 1.7%, while average hours worked are up 1.8%, resulting in a rise in average weekly earnings from $753.20 to $779.64. That’s a raise of $1,375 per year — pretty healthy, given the state of the economy and the large number of people out of work.
But government employment is down, and the extra hiring simply isn’t making any kind of a dent on the unemployment figures. 

Krugman is still dour:

At this rate we’ll return to full employment around 2030 or so."
 

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Financial Advisor Sentiment - Highest since July 2007

Financial Adviser Sentiment: Highest Since July 2007 by Babak
This week the Investors Intelligence survey of newsletter editors is 46.7% bullish. That is the highest level of bullishness since May 2010. Another sentiment measure, much less known is the Rydex SGI Advisor Confidence Index (ACI).

Rare Earths - a detailed look forward

The Post-China Price: What Beijing's Green Revolution Means for Rest of Us  by Sean Daly

"Living in a liquidity-driven economy for the past decade, US pundits can be excused for seeing yet another mania in “rare earths” miner start-ups like Molycorp (MCP), Ucore Rare Minerals (UURAF.PK), and Rare Element Resources (REE), all of which now sport rich valuations and skeletal operations. But when you really look deeply into the historical pricing circumstances of the rare earth elements (REE) industry, you don’t see a bubble. You see the exact opposite.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

On the Value of High Yield

AOK - Read through for a great graph on high yield spreads, note signifcant & fast compression from earlier in the crisis.

China tight on Farmland

China Running Out of Farmland: What This Means for U.S. Stocks
by: Greyson S. Colvin October 27, 2010

As the Chinese growth engine continues to propel forward, the government is faced with the dilemma: How do we feed our growing and developing population? China’s middle class is expected to double over the next 10 years and will demand a higher protein diet. China has roughly 20% of the world’s population although only 7% of the world’s arable land.

Goldman follows through on test 50-yr bond issuance to take in $1.3B

"As we noted yesterday, Goldman was in the market for a 50 year bond at a token amount of $250 million. We speculated this was merely a test to gauge market interest in the space.

Commercial real estate split into three different markets ...

More on the 'Trifurcated' Commercial Real Estate Market by Brad Case
"I commented on a post last week about commercial property values that Moody’s had reported a “trifurcated” market in which the values of “trophy” properties are already going up while the values of properties from distressed sellers are continuing to sink. David Geltner, a professor at MIT’s Center for Real Estate, fleshed out this interesting market situation in a separate commentary published on the Moody’s web site.