Showing posts with label Recession. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Recession. Show all posts

Monday, March 27, 2023

Economists expect US recession, above-target inflation this year

WASHINGTON — The United States will likely enter a recession this year and face high inflation well into 2024, a majority of economists predicted in their response to a semiannual survey.

More than two-thirds of respondents to the National Association for Business Economics (NABE) Policy Survey also see inflation remaining above four percent at the end of this year.

The survey summarized the responses of 217 NABE members, and was conducted between March 2 and March 10, the organization said in a statement.

The US Federal Reserve has raised rates 4.75 percentage points in a bid to tackle rising inflation, which reached its highest level in decades last year.

Price rises slowed slightly to an annual level of 6.0 percent in February, which is well above the Fed's long-term target of two percent.

Amid the gloomy economic forecast, there was also some good news, with just five percent of respondents believing the US is currently in the midst of a recession, "far fewer" than the 19 percent in its previous economic survey, the NABE president Julia Coronado said in a statement.

Economists also slightly raised the chances of the Fed achieving a so-called "soft landing" -- bringing down inflation while avoiding a recession -- from 27 percent in August to 30 percent in March this year.

Agence France-Presse

Thursday, January 19, 2023

Asian markets mixed after Wall St tumble as recession fears return

HONG KONG - Markets were mixed Thursday while oil prices fell and the dollar weakened after disappointing US data renewed worries about a recession in the world's biggest economy.

The optimism that has flowed through trading floors since the start of the year took a knock this week as concern about inflation and rising interest rates are replaced by growth fears and their impact on company profits.

The downbeat mood offset hopes that China's economy will enjoy a strong recovery this year -- having suffered its worst annual growth in 46 years in 2022 -- as it moves away from its zero-Covid policy.

All three main indexes on Wall Street sank more than one percent Wednesday in response to figures showing retail sales, and shrank at the quickest pace in more than a year, while producer prices fell the most since the beginning of the pandemic. 

Industrial production also came in worse than forecast.

While data indicating the economy was struggling has in recent months spurred equities on hopes it will allow the Federal Reserve to slow down its pace of rate hikes, analysts said traders are now concerned about the economic outlook.

"'Bad news is bad news' once again for markets, with weak retail sales and industrial production seeing risk assets sell-off," said National Australia Bank's Tapas Strickland.

The data "adds to the theme of the economy slowing and heading into recession in 2023, and pushes back on the soft landing narrative dominating markets since January".

Tokyo, Hong Kong, Singapore, Mumbai and Manila all fell, though Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul, Bangkok and Jakarta edged up.

Wellington's NZX 50 and the New Zealand dollar suffered only small losses despite Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern's shock announcement that she will step down next month, saying she no longer has "enough in the tank".

Expectations that US interest rates will not rise as much as previously feared weighed on the dollar, with the yen bouncing back strongly after Wednesday's Bank of Japan decision not to further tweak monetary policy.

However, several Federal Reserve officials have pushed back against such speculation, warning they will continue to tighten policy until they have brought inflation down from its multi-decade highs.

Worries about recession were also weighing on oil prices, despite hopes for a spike in demand as China reopens to the world. Both main contracts dropped around one percent in afternoon exchanges.

But SPI Asset Management's Stephen Innes said Asian investors could be in for a positive year.

"The clear message to start 2023 has been clear as a whistle: while last year was about Fed and ECB normalization, this year will be about China and Japan normalization, which should continue to drive Asia’s fortunes higher in 2023," he said in a note. 

Key figures around 0710 GMT 

Tokyo - Nikkei 225: DOWN 1.4 percent at 26,405.23 (close)

Hong Kong - Hang Seng Index: DOWN 0.1 percent at 21,656.55

Shanghai - Composite: UP 0.5 percent at 3,240.28 (close)

Dollar/yen: DOWN at 127.84 yen from 128.80 yen on Wednesday

Euro/dollar: UP at $1.0805 from $1.0797 

Pound/dollar: DOWN at $1.2341 from $1.2344

Euro/pound: UP at 87.53 pence from 87.43 pence

West Texas Intermediate: DOWN 1.2 percent at $78.51 a barrel

Brent North Sea crude: DOWN 1.0 percent at $84.13 a barrel

New York - Dow: DOWN 1.8 percent at 33,296.96 (close)

London - FTSE 100: DOWN 0.3 percent at 7,830.70 (close) 

Agence France-Presse

Wednesday, October 12, 2022

Biden admits 'very slight' US recession possibility

WASHINGTON - US President Joe Biden conceded Tuesday that a "slight" recession was a possibility following a downcast IMF economic forecast, amid rising inflation and uncertainty after the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

"I don't think there will be a recession," Biden told CNN. "If it is, it'll be a very slight recession. That is, we’ll move down slightly."

Agence France-Presse

Thursday, January 21, 2016

Cheap oil, good for consumers, is slamming stocks. Why?


NEW YORK — Wall Street is drowning in oil.

Stocks are having their worst start to a year in history in part because of a rapid plunge in the price of oil. The price of crude is down 28 percent this year already, which in turn has dragged down energy company shares in the Standard & Poor’s 500 index by 13 percent, which has helped pull the overall index down 9 percent.

This even though low oil prices — and the cheap prices for gasoline and other fuels that result — are wonderful for consumers and many companies.

“It seems ironic that in the run-up to the global financial crisis we were worried about oil prices being too high in 2007 and 2008. Now we’re worried about them being too low,” said Julian Jessop, head of commodities research with London-based researchers Capital Economics Ltd.

The drastic drop in oil and stock prices stands in contrast with a US economy that, on the whole, is doing pretty well. US employers created 292,000 jobs in December, and few economists see the economy sliding into recession.

Here’s what experts think is going on.

Why is oil so low?

Because there is so much of it.

A long run of high oil prices inspired drillers to develop new techniques and to go to new places to find more oil, and they succeeded. In the US improved oil drilling technologies known generally as fracking have added more oil to the global market than the total production of any other nation in OPEC other than Saudi Arabia.

Producers in the US and abroad haven’t cut back production very much, despite the low prices, and now the lifting of international sanctions against Iran could send more oil flowing into markets that are already awash in crude.

US stockpiles are at their highest level in at least 80 years, and the International Energy Agency predicts that during the first half of this year global oil supply could outstrip demand by 1.5 million barrels per day.

Demand for crude has been growing steadily, but that may not last because economic growth in China, the world’s second-largest oil consumer after the US, is slowing.

Why do low oil prices hurt the stock market?

Oil company profits are plummeting, so oil company shares are plummeting, and that is dragging down the whole market.

Analysts estimate that profit for all S&P 500 companies in total are on track to be down a recession-like 5.8 percent for 2015. But if energy companies were removed from that figure, S&P 500 profits would be up a very healthy 5.7 percent for the full year.

That profit drop directly leads to lower share prices that drag down entire indexes. Two of the biggest oil companies in the world, Exxon and Chevron, are part of the 30-member Dow Jones industrial average. Of the 20 biggest share price losers in the S&P 500 this year, 13 are energy companies.

Investors are also selling shares of companies that may have exposure to the oil industry, like certain banks. And the price of oil has now fallen so low that investors are also worried that it could mean global economic growth is much weaker than expected, which could hurt all companies.

Aren’t lower oil prices a good thing for the economy?

It depends on why prices are lower.

If they fall because new supplies have been found, it usually helps the broader economy, and markets held up fairly well during oil’s big slide from over $100 a barrel in 2014 to under $50 a barrel last year.

“In the long run, lower oil prices should be positive or at worst neutral for the world economy because all they’re really doing is transferring income from oil producers to oil consumers,” Jessop says.

But this latest plunge in prices to under $30 a barrel has investors worried that oil prices are falling because global growth is slowing, as businesses and consumers in many developing countries, particularly China, cut back on spending. Bruce Kasman, chief economist at JPMorgan Chase, says that steep drops in oil prices have historically been a sign of a weakening global economy.

Also, US consumers have remained cautious about spending the money they aren’t putting into their gas tanks, which limits the benefit to the broader economy. Americans saved 5.5 percent of their incomes in November, up nearly a full percentage point from a year earlier.

Kasman estimates that US spending grew at a tepid pace of just 1.5 percent in the final three months of last year. “There’s no doubt that the consumer spending growth figures for the US, Europe and Japan have disappointed,” he said.

Some of that likely reflected a temporary drag from warm weather, as Americans spent less on winter clothing and utilities. That could turn around in the first quarter, giving the economy a lift, Kasman said.

Delta Air Lines told investors this week that bookings for this spring are ahead of last year’s pace because cheaper gasoline means consumers have more money.

Could this lead to broader turmoil, the way the subprime mortgage crisis did?

It is already having some ripple effects, but the energy market isn’t nearly as big or far-reaching as the housing market.

When oil prices were high, lots of banks, including some of the biggest on Wall Street, made loans to energy companies to finance drilling in North Dakota, Texas and elsewhere. Dealogic estimates that the oil and gas industry has roughly $500 billion in outstanding debt. According to the Federal Reserve, there is $11 trillion in outstanding residential mortgage debt.

Still, some are feeling it. Oil company cash flow is slowing, and companies are finding it harder to repay their loans. Oil and gas company bankruptcies are rising, and the entire market for so-called junk bonds has been shaken as a result of energy company defaults.

JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Bank of America all had to write down the value of energy loans or set aside more money to cover losses. BofA executives told investors this week that energy loans were roughly 2 percent of its total loans. Smaller regional banks could to be more exposed relatively than the big Wall Street banks.

Is there an oil price that would be good for the market and consumers?

Jessop thinks that a price of about $60 a barrel would do the trick. “High enough to keep the main producers in business but low enough to provide a real boost to the incomes of consumers,” he says. He expects prices to return to that level by the end of next year as oil companies pare back exploration and the glut is worked off.

source: business.inquirer.net

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

US stocks fall for a 4th day


NEW YORK—Wall Street couldn’t shrug off doubts about the US economy and government gridlock on Tuesday.

Mixed economic reports and concern about a government shutdown dragged stocks lower in the final half-hour of trading. They had been positive most of the day.

The modest losses extended the losing streak for the Standard & Poor’s 500 index to four days. It was the longest run of declines in a month. The Dow Jones industrial average also dropped for a fourth straight day.

Investors struggled with conflicting news about the economy on Tuesday. One report showed that home prices in July rose the most in more than seven years. Another showed that Americans’ confidence in the economy slipped in September.

Investors are searching for direction after the Federal Reserve’s surprise decision last Wednesday to keep its stimulus program intact. They had expected a reduction in the Fed’s $85 billion in monthly bond purchases. Investors are now parsing economic reports and comments from Fed officials to gauge the central bank’s next move.

Some are also nervous about political gridlock in Washington. They were concerned that the federal government could shut down because Washington lawmakers appear to be making little progress in budget talks.

“A government shutdown starting next week is looking increasingly likely,” said Jim Russell, a regional investment director at US Bank. “That will not be welcomed by the capital markets.”

But Brad Sorensen, director of market and sector research at Charles Schwab, thought that worries about a government shutdown would ultimately be short-lived.

“Investors are becoming a little bit immune to the games that Washington has started to play,” Sorensen said. “Investors with a stronger stomach should probably buy the dip.”

Stocks, for example, plummeted in the summer of 2011 as lawmakers wrangled about raising the debt ceiling. The market also sagged in October last year before the Presidential elections, on concerns that a divided government would be unable to agree on tax reform. Each time though, backed by the Fed’s economic stimulus, the market came back stronger.

After falling 2 percent in October of last year, the Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose for seven straight months, gaining 15 percent.

On Tuesday, the Dow closed down 66 points, 0.4 percent, to 15,334. The S&P 500 index fell four points, or 0.3 percent, to 1,697. The Nasdaq composite, however, edged up three points, or 0.1 percent, to 3,768.

Stocks edged lower in early trading before moving modestly higher in the late morning and afternoon. Those gains then fizzled out at the end of trading.

Phone company stocks were the biggest decliners among the 10 industry groups that form the S&P 500. Industrial stocks were the biggest gainers.

Before the market opened, a survey showed that home prices rose the most since February 2006. A revival in housing has been one of the bright spots for the economy.

In another key economic gauge, the Conference Board, a New York-based private research group, said that its consumer confidence index dropped to 79.7 in September, down from August’s 81.8.

Consumers’ confidence is closely watched because their spending accounts for 70 percent of US economic activity. Confidence has grown since the Great Recession, but it hasn’t hit a reading of 90, which typically accompanies a healthy economy.

They S&P 500 index is just 28 points below its all-time high reached last Wednesday, when investors were initially thrilled that the Fed extended its economic stimulus. Since then, the market has fallen each day as doubts emerge about the outlook for the economy, and budget negotiations.

In government bond trading, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose fell as investors bought bonds. The yield dropped from 2.70 percent late Monday to 2.66 percent, its lowest level in six weeks. The yield on the note is a benchmark for rates of consumer loans.

Among stocks making big moves:

— Software company Red Hat fell $6.20, or 12 percent, to $46.73 after it reported lower-than-expected quarterly billings and issued disappointing revenue forecasts.

—Carnival fell $2.86, or 8 percent, to $34.54 after the cruise ship operator warned revenue could drop more than its prior forecast.

— Applied Materials, a manufacturer of chip-making equipment, rose $1.45, or 9 percent, to $17.45 after it agreed to acquire a rival.

— Facebook rose $1.26, or 3 percent, to $48.45 after Citigroup upgraded the company’s stock to a “buy” recommendation from “neutral.” Facebook should continue to grow, helped by increasing advertising revenue contributions from its mobile website, Citigroup said.—Steve Rothwell

source: business.inquirer.net

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Ireland officially exits recession


DUBLIN — Bailed-out eurozone nation Ireland exited recession in the second quarter with economic growth of 0.4 percent thanks to solid expansion of its construction sector, official data showed on Thursday.

Ireland fell into recession in late 2012 but returned to growth in the three months to June of this year, the Central Statistics Office (CSO) said in a statement.

Ireland’s economy had contracted during the previous three quarters, the CSO confirmed. A recession refers to two or more consecutive quarters of negative growth.

“Preliminary estimates for the second quarter of 2013 indicate that GDP increased by 0.4 percent in volume terms on a seasonally adjusted basis compared with the first quarter of 2013,” the CSO said.

Ireland’s economy shrank by 0.6 percent in the first quarter.

A breakdown of the latest data showed that Ireland’s construction sector grew by 4.2 percent in the second quarter compared with the first three months of the year.

Ireland’s economy meanwhile contracted by 1.2 percent in the second quarter compared with the equivalent period in 2012.

Ireland was rescued with an 85-billion-euro ($115-billion) bailout from the International Monetary Fund and the European Union in late 2010.

Its economy had been through a period of turmoil in the run-up to the 2008 global financial crisis and after, amid soaring government debt, a property market meltdown, banking crisis and surging unemployment.

Thursday’s data precede what is set to be another painful austerity budget due in a few weeks, with many commentators suggesting a return to growth may offset extra spending cuts or tax hikes.

source: business.inquirer.net

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

France enters recession in first quarter


PARIS — France entered a recession in the first quarter this year with gross domestic product contracting 0.2 percent, after shrinking the same amount in the last quarter of 2012, the official INSEE statistics office said Wednesday.

A recession corresponds to a drop in growth over two quarters.

The news is further trouble for President Francois Hollande after unemployment hit a 16-year high earlier this year.

Hollande’s government is struggling to tackle the country’s economic woes, with the president recording the lowest approval ratings of any modern French president.

Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici said a tiny expansion of 0.1 percent was still expected for 2013 and maintained the government’s promise of reversing the rise in unemployment by the end of the year.

He said the recession was “not a surprise” and was “largely due to the environment in the Eurozone.”

A government source told AFP a return to moderate growth was expected in the second quarter thanks to “the European context and measures taken by France.”

INSEE also revised lower the fall in household consumption in 2012 to 0.9 percent instead of a 0.4 percent fall forecast in March — the most significant drop in the last 30 years.

The fall was mainly linked to a seven percent drop in automobile purchases and a 1.5 percent drop in spending on hotels and restaurants.

Household consumption, a key driver of the economy, was down 0.1 percent in the first quarter after stagnating in the last quarter of 2012.

Exports were also down 0.5 percent the first quarter, another reason cited by INSEE for the slide into recession.

The recession was not however on the scale the one in 2009, when France’s economy contracted by 3.1 percent.

Hollande is due to meet European Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso later Wednesday to seek more time to meet EU public deficit targets that have been undermined by the stalling economy.

In a report on 2012 as a whole, INSEE confirmed its estimate of zero growth overall for the year.

It also said inflation stood at 1.9 percent in 2012, compared with 2.1 percent in 2011.

source: business.inquirer.net

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Greek leaders ready to back austerity deal

(Financial Times) -- A dispute over pension cuts stalled talks last night between leaders of Greece's fractious national unity government on tough new austerity measures, one of the last hurdles to be cleared before eurozone officials can sign off on a €130B ($172B) bailout and save Athens from a messy default. However, officials said they were still confident of reaching a deal by the morning.

A statement by Lucas Papademos, the technocrat prime minister, said there was "broad agreement on all the issue except for one which demands further elaboration".

The talks between Papademos and the heads of the three Greek political parties in his cabinet included €3B ($4B) in new spending cuts contained in a 50-page document distributed to political leaders in the morning. The full cabinet is due to rubber-stamp the deal today.

After seven hours, Papademos called in the troika -- mission chiefs from the European Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund who drafted the new medium-term fiscal programme with the Greek finance ministry -- to help break the deadlock. Greece still needs to find about €300m of savings to close a €3bn program of spending cuts to keep this year's budget on track.

Papademos earlier held separate telephone consultations with Christine Lagarde, IMF managing director; Olli Rehn, the EU monetary commissioner; and Jean-Claude Juncker, chairman of the eurozone finance ministers, who are due to discuss the Greek program this evening.

People familiar with the negotiations said Antonis Samaras, the conservative leader, had raised objections to cuts in supplementary state pensions, while former premier George Papandreou refused to discuss the alternative of cutting primary pensions. The pensions issue is seen as critical as elderly, low-income Greeks have been hit hardest by the deeper than expected recession.

George Karatzaferis, the rightwing leader and junior coalition partner, left the talks. It was not clear whether he would return to join the negotiations.



There has been mounting frustration in other European capitals, including Brussels, where officials had hoped to get a deal agreed last weekend so that they could quickly execute the central pillar of the deal -- a €200bn bond swap that will see private Greek debt holders lose half their holdings, wiping €100bn off Athens' €350bn debt pile.

Once the deal is agreed, the focus of the Greek drama will turn to Paris, where the lead negotiators for private bondholders were to meet with investors to begin preparations for the debt restructuring, and to Brussels, where eurozone finance officials will meet on Thursday to cobble together enough money to keep Greece afloat for the foreseeable future.

Debate over the structure of the new bail-out package continued to intensify behind closed doors as eurozone leaders attempted to construct a programme that would both keep the total in new rescue funds at €130bn and reduce Greek debt levels to 120 per cent of economic output by 2020.

Both those goals were signed off at a summit in October, but Greece's worsening budget outlook has forced finance ministry officials to rework the package to stay within those parameters.

There was growing consensus that sufficiently reducing Greece's debt level, which is now at about 160 per cent of economic output, would require more than the agreed €100bn cut in private debt, with leaders' focus increasingly turning to the €40bn in Greek bonds held by the European Central Bank -- the largest of any single investor.

According to several senior eurozone officials, the ECB has not yet agreed to help a revised bailout plan, but it was studying whether it could forgo profits on the €40B ($53B) portfolio -- which would pay out about €55B ($73B) if taken to maturity -- by transferring the bonds to the eurozone's bailout fund, the European Financial Stability Facility, at the price it originally paid for them.

Another plan being considered would have Greece buying the bonds directly from the ECB at the depressed price, using EFSF funds or bonds to pay for them. Either scheme would require eurozone governments ensuring more EFSF funds to buy the Greek bonds -- which may prove politically impossible.

While senior officials at EU institutions and eurozone member states were hoping the ECB would agree to forgo its profits, which would knock as much as €15B ($20B) off of Greece's debt load, four officials with direct knowledge of the talks said such a deal had not yet been agreed.

Without ECB accession, officials worry it will be impossible to get Greece's debt down to levels approved by the International Monetary Fund, which has estimated that the private debt restructuring alone will only get Athens' debt to just under 130% of economic output by 2020. Without IMF approval, the €130bn in new bail-out funds cannot be approved.

Standard & Poor's, the debt rating agency, weighed in on the side of the IMF on Wednesday, saying the restructuring of privately held debt was not enough to make Greece's debt load sustainable.

"Because only a small subcomponent of investors are actually taking the haircut and the official sector [ECB] is not, or only partially, then the reduction . . . is probably not sufficient debt relief to make debt sustainable," said Frank Gill, an S&P analyst.

article source: http://edition.cnn.com/2012/02/08/business/greece-talks/index.html?hpt=hp_t2