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Strategies & Market Trends : John Pitera's Market Laboratory -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John Pitera who wrote (5131)11/21/2001 12:14:32 AM
From: Jon Koplik  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 33421
 
WSJ article -- Auto Industry / Price Pressure / Economists Debate Deflation

November 21, 2001

Auto Industry Faces Effects of Price Pressure
As Economists Debate Possibility of Deflation

By NORIHIKO SHIROUZU and JON E. HILSENRATH
Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

DETROIT -- Economists are debating whether the U.S. is headed for deflation --
broadly declining prices that, if they got out of hand, could worsen into a spiral of
vanishing profit margins and postponed purchases.

There's nothing academic about this debate for Beth Ardisana. She runs a firm
called ASG Renaissance that provides contract labor to Ford Motor Co. Ms.
Ardisana and her managers have had to inform about 150 workers that their wages
will drop 7% across the board. The cut is a response to a mandate from Ford that
all firms providing it with contract labor reduce their billing rates by 7%, to help the
money-losing auto maker conserve cash.

It is the first outright wage cut Ms. Ardisana has had to resort to in her 14 years in
business. Her Dearborn, Mich., company's profit margins sank to "dismal points"
even though the firm also cut executives' pay, she says.

Deflation or no, the auto industry is facing intense price pressure, and this has
begun to ripple out to related firms and workers. For now, the ripples seem
confined to certain sectors of the economy. But the repercussions of lower prices in
the auto industry illustrate the economic dangers that can arise when a hugely
important business must operate with an acute lack of pricing power.

Figuring in the zero-percent financing that U.S. auto
makers offered to move vehicles after the terror
attack, the companies faced an effective 4.7% drop
in the prices they got for their cars in October. For
light trucks, it was a 1.3% slide. That helped push
the U.S. producer price index, which measures the
prices charged by manufacturers, down 1.6% in
October, for its biggest monthly drop on record. The
consumer price index, which measures the prices
paid by individuals, also declined in October, by
0.3%.

It's trends like this that raise the deflation specter.
Industrial-commodity prices have sunk to their
lowest levels in more than 15 years. Prices of
imported clothing have been falling consistently for
nearly a decade, and TV sets for two decades. "I've
spent my whole career looking under every rock for the next wave of inflation, and
I've run out of rocks," says Stephen Roach, an economist with Morgan Stanley.
"We're going to get a lot closer to deflation than people think."


The price weakness, however, has been concentrated in manufactured goods, such
as cars and computers, that are fully exposed to the intensifying competitive winds
of the global economy. Prices for services -- a much bigger part of the U.S.
economy -- are still rising. Partly for that reason, many economists are far from
ready to declare that the entire $10 trillion U.S. economy is heading for a
deflationary spiral, a pernicious decline in prices that policy-makers would have a
hard time bringing to a halt.

To become a real worry, economists say,
price declines would have to extend to
assets that are the underpinnings of family
wealth, such as homes and stocks. Home
prices have continued to rise, albeit more
slowly, this year. Stocks are down from the
spring of 2000 but have rebounded in
recent weeks.

Another comfort is that consumers don't
appear to be taking on a deflationary
mindset. Instead of postponing purchases,
on the logic that things will keep getting
cheaper, they have splurged on low-cost
cars and kept shopping at discount stores.

The kind of deflationary quagmire an
economy can tumble into is illustrated by
Japan. There, productivity gains don't play
a key role in driving prices lower. Instead, prolonged recession does. In this virulent
version of deflation, price declines become widespread and entrenched, squeezing
profit margins. Companies with large debts find them harder to pay off, because
their debts are fixed, but their revenues are falling. Financial institutions become
stuck with mounting levels of bad loans. And consumers hold on to their cash,
concerned about their outlook for their own incomes and waiting for prices to fall
even further.

The U.S. had its own spell of this in the Great Depression. Between 1929 and 1933,
consumer prices collapsed by an average of 7% per year.

But not all deflation is so troublesome. The U.S. has also had spells of deflation that
never held back economic growth. Prices fell through much of the 1920s, for
example, even as the economy boomed. It has had other periods, in 1949 and again
in 1955, when prices fell briefly but then recovered as the economy gathered
momentum. And in some industries, such as microchips, technology drove such
consistent cost improvements during the 1990s that companies like Intel Corp.
were able to push prices lower and still make record profits.

As the chip case shows, price declines can be beneficial for many, especially
consumers. In oil, every dollar decline in the price of crude has the effect of a $9
billion tax cut, says Edward Yardeni, a Deutsche Bank economist.

Price weakness so far has been "a net benefit to the economy," contends Mark
Zandi, an economist with Economy.com. "It has allowed consumers to remain in
the game."

But the auto industry shows how, if price declines go too far, they can begin to
ripple through the economy in ways that hurt some consumers as well as
producers.

Falling prices aren't new to auto executives. They've grappled for nearly five years
with declining prices for most vehicles, when these prices are adjusted for the
content and quality of the vehicles.

Until recently, the industry could cope. It saved money with measures such as
trimming travel budgets, streamlining assembly lines and squeezing suppliers for
discounts. Productivity improvements, rising volumes, technology and innovations
such as sport-utility vehicles also helped Detroit to stay ahead of the curve. As
sticker prices stagnated, consumers got better products for the same money. Sales
volumes rose in part because cars were more affordable, and manufacturers could
make profits, sometimes even record profits.

Now this virtuous circle is showing signs of breaking down. The combination of a
softening general economy, rising unemployment and problems like overcapacity
and price wars is outstripping auto makers' traditional responses.

Costlier Services

Meanwhile, the prices for many services auto makers buy keep moving up. Ford's
health-care expenses in North America for current employees and retirees have risen
an average 9% a year in the past decade, to about $704 a vehicle, estimates
Goldman Sachs analyst Gary Lapidus. He expects them to rise another 6% annually
over the next 10 years. Todd Nissen, a Ford spokesman, calls Mr. Lapidus's
projection "conservative." Ford projects a "double-digit" increase in health-care
expenses annually over the next few years, he says.

Adding to the burden are recalls for quality problems such as the Firestone-Ford
Explorer tire debacle, discounts, research into clean technology such as fuel cells,
payouts to dismissed executives and contractual raises for hourly workers
negotiated during the boom years.

The result: Even though overall sales in 2001 could match the second- or third-best
year ever, Ford and DaimlerChrysler AG are losing money, and General Motors
Corp.'s North American profit margins are razor-thin. A few years ago, U.S. auto
makers and suppliers considered sales of 15 million vehicles a good year. Now, "we
can't sustain the industry as we know it on 15 million," says Peter J. Pestillo,
chairman of Visteon Corp., a Ford supplier.

Mr. Pestillo, a former Ford vice chairman, says Visteon has told contractors who
supply it with workers that their payments will be cut by 7%. It's also looking at
possible compensation cuts for its own staff, he says.

Ford -- which had the most efficient car and truck plants in North America in 1999,
according to the consultants Harbour & Associates -- now is running in the red. Its
North American productivity, measured in labor hours per vehicle, declined in 2000,
according to Harbour, although it was still slightly better than GM's. Profits from
Ford's once-lucrative SUV franchise have taken a hit as GM, Toyota and Honda,
among others, have matched or bettered Ford's models.

At some Ford offices, lights now are being shut off automatically to conserve
electricity. Ford said earlier this year it would eliminate 4,000 to 5,000, or about
10%, of its white-collar workers in North America by year's end. It has eliminated
bonuses for top executives, halved its dividend and taken 230,000 vehicles out of its
production capacity by eliminating shifts and slowing assembly lines. That's the
equivalent of a full-sized assembly plant.

These are most likely just a prelude to much bigger restructuring moves Ford is
expected to announce in January. The plan is said to include plans to shutter some
assembly plants permanently and lay off tens of thousands of white-collar and
blue-collar workers.

Revenue Shortfall

At GM, worsening price competition in the U.S. has been on track to chop about
$600 million off the beginning-of-the-year revenue forecast. Since the terrorist
attacks, estimates of the revenue shortfall have widened by a further $300 million.
So GM is aiming to cut its $60 billion annual bill for parts in North America. After
several years of trimming those costs by 2% to 3%, GM says it now is aiming for
4% to 5% annual savings, primarily by working more closely with suppliers to find
cheaper ways of making parts. It also is thinning its white-collar ranks.

For most of the late 1990s, Detroit offset stagnant pricing mainly by leaning on
suppliers of seats, steel, rubber, electronics and brakes to drop prices for their
goods every year. According to a recent study by IRN Inc., the annual price cut
requested by major auto makers and the largest suppliers averaged 3.8% in 1997
and 5.4% in 2001.

But as price pressures have intensified, the ability of many suppliers to comply
diminished, and, according to many industry executives, now is virtually gone.
Visteon's Mr. Pestillo predicts that some of his competitors will be forced to find
merger partners or dismember themselves. Many smaller suppliers, unable to cope
with price-cutting pressures, are just folding.

Meanwhile, car buyers keep applying their own pressure. Armed with detailed
dealer-invoice data -- and well aware there are multiple vehicles and brands in nearly
every segment and price range -- shoppers have more power than ever to force
down prices on all but the most desirable vehicles.

The price pressure is starting to cause a chill even for workers at auto factories that
had been generating enormous profits. At Ford's massive Michigan Truck plant, not
long ago billed as the world's most profitable car plant, some workers are still
putting in overtime building Ford Expedition and Lincoln Navigator SUVs. Not
because of soaring demand, though. The reason is that Ford has eliminated one of
three production shifts and cut 850 jobs through attrition, as sales of the current
vehicles have slid. Now, a reduced work force is building the current models and
readying a new generation for launch.

Some workers here are concerned enough to have begun tightening their belts.
"Knowing that possibly six months from now we may hit a little bump on the road,
I don't shop like I used to," says Darryl Nolen, a 35-year-old worker at the plant. He
no longer goes out and spends $700 on a pair of "gators," sleek alligator-skin shoes,
as he used to a few years ago. He and his wife used to eat out at favorite places like
Benihana and Outback Steak House three times a week or more. Now they stay
home much more often.

A Need to Adjust

And workers are racking up as much overtime as they can in order to salt money
away. Lionel Reeves, a 43-year-old single parent with two boys, says he sometimes
grabs the chance to work two shifts a day, filling in for people taking time off for
deer hunting. "I tell my boys that a lot of things we need, we are gonna get, but a lot
of things that you want, we are gonna hold off," he says. "The way the economy is
right now, some of those wants and needs gonna have to adjust."

That goes double for small subcontractors like ASG, the company run by Ms.
Ardisana. Even before the latest 7% cut, ASG, which also does business with
Chrysler, had two billing rate cuts that amounted to an about 3.5% hit on ASG
revenue over two years. To absorb them, she laid off a handful of administrative
staffers, froze merit raises this summer and asked employees to make a co-payment
on health insurance. The moves still weren't enough. "We had no buffer to absorb
more cuts" when Ford hit her with another demand, she says.

So now the blow falls more heavily on ASG employee Ellen Silverberg, who works
as a contract employee for the Ford recycling division. Ms. Silverberg, 43, has
already taken two big hits to her income this year. Indeed, she almost lost her job in
August. Her Ford bosses saved it, but she suffered a 33% wage cut as her hours
were reduced to two days a week from three. She won't starve even after the
additional 7% pay cut because her husband has a decent-paying job.

Yet, worried about the future, she now brings lunch to work and eats at a cafeteria
only once a month, if at all. She also has cut down her "impulsive spending" and will
go easy on buying gifts for this holiday season. "I'm trying to come up with more
creative gifts," she says, "that are lower in cost."

Write to Norihiko Shirouzu at norihiko.shirouzu@wsj.com and Jon E. Hilsenrath
at jon.hilsenrath@wsj.com

Copyright © 2001 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.



To: John Pitera who wrote (5131)11/22/2001 12:48:43 AM
From: Jon Koplik  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 33421
 
Weird weak economy indicator (from U.S. Mint).

November 21, 2001

U.S. Mint Lays Off Hundreds

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 6:40 p.m. ET

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- A surplus of coins attributed to the softening economy
has prompted the U.S. Mint to begin layoffs.

Instead of 23 billion new pennies, nickels, dimes and quarters next year, mint
officials now believe they'll need only 15 billion.

The mint had already made too many coins during the past year.

The mint has begun laying off 357 workers nationwide, including major
coin-production plants in Philadelphia and Denver, U.S. Mint spokesman Michael
White said Wednesday.

``When people are spending less money, there's less transactions out there,''
White said.

The drop in demand for new coins is staggering, said James Benfield, executive
director of the Coin Coalition, a Washington lobbying group that supports the
dollar coin.

Benfield and others speculate the coin glut is being compounded by many coins
coming back into circulation after months or years on dresser tops and in shoe
boxes.

But a spokeswoman for Coinstar, a company that operates 9,300 coin-changing
machines in supermarkets, said the company is not seeing an increase in usage of
its machines.

The machines count a shopper's coins and exchange them -- minus a service
charge -- for cash or groceries. Coinstar estimated that Americans have $7.7
billion in spare change at their homes.

For the mint, lower production means lower profits because it charges the
Federal Reserve for the full face value of a coin, though it costs less to
manufacture.

For example, it costs 4 1/2 cents to make a quarter, but the mint charges 25
cents. The mint sends the balance to the U.S. Treasury to pay for other
government operations. But when demand drops, the mint has to cut costs just
like a private company, leading to layoffs.

The agency -- which also has operations in San Francisco, West Point, N.Y., and
Washington, D.C. -- plans to get rid of about 12 percent of its 2,861 employees.
Coins for Eastern states are made in Philadelphia; coins for the West are made in
Denver.

------

On the Net:

U.S. Mint: usmint.gov

Copyright 2001 The Associated Press