AN INCOMPLETE RECESSION by Raymond Devoe
In my opinion, the "postwar period" ended on March 10, 2000 ("The Crazy Day") when the Nasdaq Composite hit its all-time high of 5048. Although the recession officially began a year later, I delineate March 10, 2000 as the end of the 18-year bull market. I put asterisks next to October 19, 1987 and the second and third quarters of 1990. The former was more of a systemic mechanical breakdown associated with "portfolio insurance," and the latter I attribute to the temporary dislocations from the Gulf War.
Thus, in my view, the "post-postwar period" began on March 10, 2000 with the popping of the Nasdaq bubble. The index is now down 73.7% from that peak - and the first recession of "the information age" started in March 2001. Originally only the first quarter of 2001 showed a decline in Gross Domestic Product (GDP), and many economists asked, "Where is the recession?" when the following quarters had positive growth in GDP. Subsequent revisions brought the second and third quarters of 2001 into declines in GDP. The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) uses other measurements, including the "3-D's," Depth - how severe it was; Duration - how long it lasted; and Diffusion - how widespread it was throughout the economy.
The Commerce Department's release on October 31, 2002 showed that GDP grew at a 3.1% annual rate in the third quarter, vs. 1.3% in 2Q02. Roughly half of the increase in the last quarter was attributable to auto sales - which are weakening for a variety of reasons. The chart accompanying the release shows four consecutive quarters of GDP growth, beginning in 4Q01-and it still shows three consecutive quarters of GDP declines last year. So, I guess the recession is official, and it's officially over. Or, is it?
It's been a weird one - and again, unlike any other recession since 1945. Two of the normal causes of declines in GDP, housing and autos, remained strong throughout the recession and subsequent recovery. Inventories, which fell to their lowest level on record relative to sales during 3Q02, was one factor. The other would be business investment, which fell for seven consecutive quarters before turning in the last quarter, with an anemic 0.6% growth (annualized). I don't know where the strength is, since virtually every company report I see mentions that they are cutting capital spending. The GDP release also showed that the trade deficit grew to a new record of $437 billion, at annual rates unadjusted for price changes. That's closing in on a half a trillion dollars - but doesn't seem to disturb many people.
The recession may be over, but it is incomplete, in my opinion, in that it did not accomplish what recessions traditionally do. Similarly, the bear market could be over, but that also has not done what bear markets have done - bring about "capitulation," among investors, more reasonable stock valuations, and a widespread suspicion leading to contempt for stocks. Perhaps, in the information age, recessions and bear markets will not behave as in the past, and correct the excesses leading up to them. Thus, I have gone into why I believe both are incomplete at this point. Perhaps they will remain that way, but I am sceptical.
This "recession" began as a bust following the boom in business-fixed investment, particularly in technology, telecommunications and information technology. But it was not confined to those sectors. Virtually every significant area indulged in over-expansion, fueled by low interest rates, that in real terms were near zero and occasionally negative. This led to extensive overcapacity that will take time to work off.
Much has been made of the bursting of the technology stock bubble - but in retrospect, the economy was a bubble itself. That is the main reason why the recovery has not responded the way it traditionally has done to eleven interest rate cuts last year. How will business investment respond to the Fed's decision to cut 50 more basis points to 1.25%? About the same way as the reaction to last year's cuts, in my opinion. 25 basis points was widely expected - but 50 might be interpreted as an indication of panic at the Fed. Business investment, with extensive excess capacity, is not particularly responsive to interest rate cuts.
Prior to the last normal postwar recession (1982-83) housing was extremely depressed due to 20% and higher mortgage interest rates (if you could obtain one) - as then-Fed Chairman Paul Volcker was fighting double- digit (CPI) inflation. When interest rates were cut then, housing surged, providing a strong stimulant to the recovery. Now, twelve interest rate cuts by the Fed have brought about a continuing boom in housing that in my opinion, has become another bubble.
Interest rates recently hit a 31-year low of 5.98% - for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage - the lowest since Freddie Mac started tracking them in 1971. The associated refinancing boom, along with the "cash out" feature, where homeowners take out increasing amounts of the equity in their homes, has been a significant prop for the economic recovery.
How much lower can mortgage rates go? The simple answer: not much lower. The Federal Funds rate is now 1.25%, or 125 basis points above zero after Wednesday's cut. However, a comparable decline in mortgage rates is unlikely. The reasons have to do with fixed-income investors' balance in portfolios and average maturity. It is really a question of how much 30-year paper at 31-year low rates an investor wants to own.
Auto sales have also behaved in a non-traditional way, and the Fed has had little to do with them this time. Normally, when the Fed raises interest rates to combat inflation, consumer durables go into the tank - and revive quickly when the Fed lowers interest rates to fight the recession they brought about. This time, auto sales have been in boom, perhaps even bubble mode by zero-interest rate financings offered by the manufacturers. Today's headline in The New York Times is: "Sales Drop 30% In October At Big Three Automakers," and subtitled "Big Incentives For Buyers Worry Analysts."
The overhang from high sales volume in previous months was one factor - but essentially the Big Three (really the Big 2« - one is German controlled) are buying sales from the future. They are also wrecking their credit ratings (Ford-[F-$8.43] most obviously) and drastically cutting prices by as much as $3,500 per car. That's the amount that analysts in The Times article estimate that it costs General Motors (GM-$34.02) per vehicle sold with zero-interest financing.
That's a rather severe price cut to move a car - but the incentives have had another side-effect, wrecking the used car market. Since almost all new vehicle sales involve a trade-in, the used car market is glutted, and prices are down significantly. When current new car buyers turn in those cars in the future, the trade-in value is likely to be well below levels that would have otherwise prevailed. That's another cost, and another story - including the cost in gasoline consumption - since the best-selling items are gas-guzzling sports utility vehicles (SUVs). The same question as above: how long can auto sales remain above trendline?
The short answer, briefly, is based on incentives, but eventually sales over time will revert to trendline. Prior to the zero-rate financing gimmick, which costs GM $3,500 per vehicle, the auto makers, their finance companies and banks featured very attractive promotions for car leases, rather than sales. Both schemes moved the merchandise, but the leases are expiring rapidly and cars/vehicles are coming off-lease. Combined with a stagnant economy this has also contributed to used car prices plunging. But it gets worse. "Residual value" is the key in leasing, the educated guess of what the goods will be worth when the lease expires and the merchandise comes back into the market. In order to make the lease deals more attractive two to three years ago, the auto companies pumped up their assumptions on residual values, so that the car lessee would have to finance less, with consequently lower monthly payments.
Thus, the car makers will have 3.3 million cars coming off-lease this year, into a market already glutted with trade-ins from the zero-interest financing gimmick. The fall in used car prices (already down 4% this year - to the 1999 levels), combined with the overoptimistic residual value assumptions to facilitate lease deals - and the inability to find buyers, means that they are being forced to auction off these vehicles for much less than expected.
According to the November 11, 2002 'Boxed-In On The Car Lot,' issue of Business Week, "Art Spinella, President of CNW Marketing Research in Bandon, Oregon, an auto industry consulting firm, says that auto makers are losing an average of $2,400 on every off-lease vehicle that they sell." But the good news - they had moved the merchandise two to three years earlier. I consider the former leasing program and the current zero-interest promotions by the auto industry as the financial equivalent of slitting your wrists and sitting up to your neck in a bathtub of warm water.
Rereading Charles Kindleberger's book Manias, Panics and Crashes - A History of Financial Crises (Third Edition 1996), I was struck by another similarity with what is happening in many sectors of the present economy - deflationary pressures and the lack of pricing power. This has occurred in virtually every pre-1945 recession/recovery where the Fed has not strangled expansion in its attempts to control inflation. The $3,500 cost to GM in order to finance a zero-interest sale amounts to a back-door price cut.
The October 21, 2002 issue of Business Week documents this widespread price cutting in their article "Prices Just Keep Plunging" and subtitled "Fears of deflation are growing as a profits squeeze prompts more cuts." They cite year-over-year declines of 20.9% for personal computers (prices almost always decline-but never that much), -4.0% for telephone services, -3.8% for air fares - and a half dozen others in the accompanying illustration. There are also major articles about deflation in recent issues of The Economist and The Wall Street Journal.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) for September 2002 showed an increase of 1.5% (CPI-U) from September 2001. The four largest gainers for the year, growing faster than that +1.5% CPI increase are, Housing (+2.3%), Medical Care (+4.6%), Education and Communication (+2.7%) and Other goods and services (+3.2%-tobacco, smoking products, personal care, miscellaneous personal services). These sectors comprise over half (56.8%) of the CPI. If these generally service areas were removed, the CPI would be around break-even year-over-year - perhaps slightly lower. During September, the Producer Price Index (PPI) was definitely in deflationary mode, with the PPI for finished goods declining 1.8% Y-O-Y.
The very significant and much-watched GDP chain- weighted price index, the broadest indicator of price levels has been trending lower, but is still in positive territory. For the third quarter 2002, it was up 0.8% down from the first half average of +1.3%. This third quarter reading is the lowest since 1950. However, the breakdown is not as reassuring - for goods, the third quarter 2002 showed a decline of 0.8%. It must be assumed now that deflation is no longer a theoretical risk - and could become a problem, as it did in the descriptions in Mr. Kindleberger's book of pre-1945 experiences.
Two other factors that were not around in time to be included in Mr. Kindleberger's book have also exerted significant downward pressure on prices: the Internet and globalization. Two of the significant advantages that retailers have had over consumers in the past would be consumer ignorance and lethargy.
The Internet can significantly lower these frictional costs - since a consumer can go online and get an array of prices for the merchandise desired. Used car prices for trade-ins are also available online now, for example. This forces the retailers to compete online for the best price. It reverses the "advantage- retailer" factor that existed previously. Lethargy existed when the consumer negotiated with the retailer, and when deciding whether or not to buy, considered that he would have to get everyone back in the car and drive 5-10 miles to another vendor - only to repeat the process. The tendency was to avoid the hassle and buy the merchandise. This is eliminated with Internet shopping.
The New York Times reported recently that consumers are increasingly haggling with retailers - even after the merchandise has been reduced in price, sometimes after two to three cuts. All these are significant deflationary pressures that did not exist when Mr. Kindleberger wrote his book. Globalization would be another significant deflationary pressure. In the early postwar period, the U.S. economy was essentially a closed-loop business, since imports were not a significant factor. I blamed the auto industry for wrecking this system after doing a book review of The Whiz Kids. It described how Mr. Robert McNamara used the cost-effective methods developed for the Army Air Corps in World War II to cut costs at Ford drastically and produce a generation of lemons.
Since the other producers (there were more than three then) were doing the same thing, the prevalent attitude was that they had a captive market and the consumer would have no choice but to take what they produced- shoddy merchandise. Shortly, the consumer discovered quality imports - particularly Japanese cars. That was the beginning of "globalization"...and the pressure has been intensifying ever since.
China, for example, must export for reasons of political tranquility. The cost structures of Chinese manufacturers are not divulged - but most state-run producers are either marginally profitable or operate at a loss. They must produce the goods to be exported and sold. The price is not the primary consideration - since the alternative is having 10, 20 or 30 million unemployed workers. That could be an unendurable political cost. So, they move the merchandise, and bring about strong deflationary pressures in this country.
This recession was the first of the post-postwar period and also the first of the "Information Age." Consumers are following the economy, not leading it - as was the case in the past. Instead of a consumer-led recession/recovery/slump business, investment has led this one - the way it was done prior to World War II - as described in Mr. Kindleberger's book. As he points out, strong deflationary pressures arise after the economic bubble has popped - and that is taking place now.
Regards,
Raymond F. DeVoe, Jr. For The Daily Reckoning
P.S. It is a rather eerie economic picture - and my way of looking at it is that the three-quarter recession of last year is incomplete. Traditionally, housing and consumer durables go negative - but they remained strong this time. Housing and autos never corrected - but are looking increasingly shaky now. Consumer spending never went negative. The trade deficit is soaring.
Stock market valuations never fell to median historic levels - much less the compressed values and higher yields seen at other bear market bottoms. And, significantly, consumer balance sheets never were cleaned up. If anything, they are far more leveraged than ever, unless refinanced mortgages, frequently for much larger loans, are considered "off-balance sheet."
I am not forecasting deflation, just citing the pressures existing in this eerie bust of the post- postwar period. The widespread lack of pricing power will make it a difficult period for profits, forcing further cost cutting and particularly layoffs. Because of the incomplete recession, I don't think there will be robust growth until the excesses of the past have been worked out of the system. And that is why the recessions described in Mr. Kindleberger's book have lasted longer than those in the 1945-2001 period, and why recoveries were slower and more labored than the traditional "V-shaped" ones of that postwar period. |