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Showing posts with label U.S. economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label U.S. economy. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

How Obamanomics is Working

Business Week
Polls say the economy is heading in the wrong direction. Markets say it's back on track. This time, the markets are right

It's never easy to separate politics from policy, and the past 18 months have only increased the degree of difficulty. The U.S. has been through a historic financial crisis followed by a historic election and a series of historic federal gambles—from bailing out AIG and GM to passing a $787 billion stimulus and a $940 billion health-care reform bill. All that risk has made policy more complicated and politics more fraught ("You lie," "Babykiller").

A Bloomberg national poll in March found that Americans, by an almost 2-to-1 margin, believe the economy has gotten worse rather than better during the past year. The Market begs to differ. While President Obama's overall job approval rating has fallen to a new low of 44%, according to a CBS News Poll, down five points from late March, the judgment of the financial indexes has turned resoundingly positive. The Standard & Poor's 500-stock index is up more than 74% from its recessionary low in March 2009. Corporate bonds have been rallying for a year. Commodity prices have surged. International currency markets have been bullish on the dollar for months, raising it by almost 10% since Nov. 25 against a basket of six major currencies. Housing prices have stabilized. Mortgage rates are low. "We've had a phenomenal run in asset classes across the board," says Dan Greenhaus, chief economic strategist for Miller Tabak + Co., an institutional trading firm in New York. "If Obama was a Republican, we would hear a never-ending drumbeat of news stories about markets voting in favor of the President."

Little more than a year ago, financial markets were in turmoil, major auto companies were on the verge of collapse and economists such as Paul Krugman were worried about the U.S. slumbering through a Japan-like Lost Decade. While no one would claim that all the pain is past or the danger gone, the economy is growing again, jumping to a 5.6% annualized growth rate in the fourth quarter of 2009 as businesses finally restocked their inventories. The consensus view now calls for 3% growth this year, significantly higher than the 2.1 % estimate for 2010 that economists surveyed by Bloomberg News saw coming when Obama first moved into the Oval Office. The U.S. manufacturing sector has expanded for eight straight months, the Business Roundtable's measure of CEO optimism reached its highest level since early 2006, and in March the economy added 162,000 jobs—more than it had during any month in the past three years. "There is more business confidence out there," says Boeing (BA) CEO Jim McNerney. "This Administration deserves significant credit."

It is worth stepping back to consider, in cool-headed policy terms, how all of this came to be—and whether the Obama team's approach amounts to a set of successful emergency measures or a new economic philosophy: Obamanomics.

For most of the past two decades, the reigning economic approach in Democratic circles has been Rubinomics, a set of priorities fashioned in the 1990s by Bill Clinton's Treasury Secretary, Robert E. Rubin, the former co-chairman of Goldman Sachs (GS). Broadly, Rubinomics was a three-legged stool consisting of restrained government spending, lower budget deficits, and open trade, which were meant in combination to reassure financial markets, keep capital flowing, and thus put the country on a path to prosperity.

On the surface, Obamanomics couldn't be more different. The Administration racked up record deficits as it pursued a $787 billion fiscal stimulus on top of the $700 billion bailout fund for banks and carmakers. Obama has done close to nothing to expand free trade. And while Clinton pleased the markets with a moderate, probusiness image, Obama has riled Wall Street with occasional bursts of populist rhetoric, such as his slamming of "fat cat bankers" on 60 Minutes last December.

The rallying markets haven't been bothered by these differences, largely because of their context. Martin Baily, who was a chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers during the Clinton Administration, says he suspects Rubin and the rest of the Clinton economic team would have made similar decisions—on bailouts, fiscal stimulus, and deficit spending—had they faced a crisis of similar magnitude. "I think we would have gone the same way," he says. The Obama team, he continues, navigated the financial crisis while never losing sight of the importance of private enterprise and private markets (a point Obama stressed in his Feb. 9 interview with Bloomberg BusinessWeek). "A lot of people on the left were urging them to nationalize banks. Instead they injected capital, and now they're pulling capital out. That looks more like Rubinomics than a set of socialist or left-wing economic policies." The Obama economic team looks a lot like Rubin's, too; three of its most prominent members—Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, National Economic Council Chairman Larry Summers, and White House budget director Peter Orszag—are Rubin protégés.

While the Administration's call for a consumer financial protection agency has aroused opposition from banks, Obama's regulatory reform plan largely leaves the financial industry's structure intact and ignores proposals to break up large financial institutions, unlike the reforms pursued after the Crash of 1929. Amid an uproar over bonuses at government-assisted banks, Obama for the most part chose to respect private employment contracts.

In short, Obama's instincts during the crisis were exceedingly Rubin-esque. Even the $787 billion stimulus package, while large by historical standards, didn't reach the scale called for by many liberal economists, including the chairman of his own Council of Economic Advisers, Christina Romer, who initially advocated spending more than $1 trillion. Today, Romer doesn't shy away from comparisons to the last Democratic Administration, but she also makes no grand claims about a new economic philosophy. What unites Rubinomics and Obamanomics, she says, "is the focus on results, the pragmatism of what's right for the economy. We each took the policy that was appropriate at the time."

The similarities go deeper. Like Clinton, Obama has tried to reduce income inequality. Clinton's 1993 deficit-reduction plan raised income tax rates for high-income families to 39.6%; Obama plans to return the top rate to the Clinton-era level. He also raised Medicare taxes for individuals earning over $200,000 to finance his health plan. Clinton aided the working poor with the Earned Income Tax Credit; Obama is doing the same with insurance subsidies in his health plan. A national health plan was an aspiration of both Presidents. Baily argues that the Obama approach is "at least in principle closer to Rubinomics than was the Clinton plan. [Obama's team] is trying to use market incentives to raise the quality and lower the cost, and that looks like Rubinomics."

Any comparison must take into account the vastly different circumstances each Administration confronted. Clinton entered office as the end of the Cold War generated a peace dividend, then rode the tech boom—and the tax-revenue-generating stock options that came with the runup in tech stock prices— to a balanced budget. Obama inherited two wars and the scariest financial crisis since the Great Depression. Clinton's deference to the bond market was necessary because long-term interest rates were high—above 7% on 30-year Treasury bonds—when he took office. Interest rates have been the least of Obama's concerns, with yields below 3% when he took office and the Fed effectively keeping short-term rates at zero.

Despite a budget deficit that is projected at $1.5 trillion this year, Obama wants to move the country toward the kind of fiscal balance it enjoyed fleetingly in the Clinton era, though his budget plans falls short of that. He recognizes that the federal debt load is unsupportable. Alan Greenspan—the tacit ally of Clinton and Rubin in the 1990s—warned last month that a recent uptick in yields on 10-year Treasury notes might signal a surge in long-term interest rates driven by investor anxiety over the budget shortfall.

Economic stabilization has not been Obama's handiwork alone. In the months before he took office, President George W. Bush and Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson halted a market free fall with the bank bailout. Obama's stimulus complemented the Federal Reserve's aggressive monetary easing. To build a floor for housing prices, the Fed intervened to support mortgage markets and the White House pledged unlimited financial backing for mortgage giants Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE), and rolled out tax credits for home buyers and mortgage modification programs to stave off foreclosures. It's the entire package that has made the difference.

"When you take it all together, the response was massive, unprecedented, and ultimately successful," says Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com (MCO). Even Obama critics like Phil Swagel, assistant Treasury secretary for economic policy under George W. Bush, acknowledge that White House policies have been successful. "They could have done a better job" by spending more of the stimulus on corporate tax cuts to boost hiring and investment, says Swagel, now an economics professor at Georgetown University's McDonough School of Business. "But their economic policies, including the stimulus, have helped move the economy in the right direction."

While jobs have been slow to return, the country has experienced "an incredible productivity boom" that strengthens the economy for an expansion, says Greenhaus of Miller Tabak. Labor productivity, or worker output per hour, grew at a 6.9% annual pace in the fourth quarter, capping the biggest one-year gain since 2002. Over the long run, productivity growth is what raises living standards. Corporate profits also have been rising, up 8% in the fourth quarter, putting businesses on a sounder financial foundation to invest and hire as customers return.

The public, alas, does not see the signs of life that economists do, as the downbeat views in the Bloomberg poll demonstrate. And as long as job security remains a concern, it's easy to understand why psychology may trump data. Among those who own stocks, bonds, or mutual funds, only 3 out of 10 say the value of their portfolio has risen since a year ago, according to the poll—a near-impossibility given the size and breadth of the market gains.

The early stages of an economic rebound do not bring political safe haven for Presidents. (Just ask George H.W. Bush, who won a war against Iraq only to lose reelection a year after the 1990-91 recession ended.) Obama, however, may now have reached a pivot point with the economy finally beginning to add jobs. "He can make great strides in short order," says Steven Jarding, a former Democratic campaign strategist who is now a lecturer at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. "Any indicator he can build on is a good thing. He'll be able to focus all his energy and attention to say, 'Here's what happened this year in the economy.'"

With seven months to go before midterm elections, and more than two years before Obama reaches his own reelection day, there's still time for the President's policies to swing to his political advantage. Again, follow the money: Consumer spending has been rising for five straight months. That may not last, but it suggests Obama is already on the right track with voters' wallets. If the Clinton Administration is a trustworthy precedent—and job growth continues—their hearts and minds could follow.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

AP Economic Stress Index

20 Most Stressed, Least Stressed U.S. Counties

Here are the 20 most economically stressed counties with populations of at least 25,000 and their January 2010 Stress scores, according to The Associated Press Economic Stress Index:

1. Imperial County, Calif., 31.34

2. Merced County, Calif., 28.09

3. Lyon County, Nev., 27.91

4. San Benito County, Calif., 26.58

5. Yuba County, Calif., 25.47

6. Stanislaus County, Calif., 25.07

7. Sutter County, Calif., 24.92

8. San Joaquin County, Calif., 24.68

9. Boone County, Ill., 24.64

10. Marion County, S.C., 24.60

11. Lapeer County, Mich. 24.44

12. Iosco County, Mich., 24.13

13. Nye County, Nev., 24

14. Cheboygan County, Mich., 23.81

15. Lake County, Calif., 23.72 [see: California health insurance quotes]

16. Taney County, Mo., 23.12

17. Clark County, Nev., 22.97

18. Marshall County, Tenn., 22.89

19. Chester County, S.C., 22.69

20. Union County, S.C., 22.64

A list of the 20 least economically stressed counties with populations of at least 25,000 and their January 2010 Stress scores, according to The Associated Press Economic Stress Index:


1. Ford County, Kan., 4.17

2. Ellis County, Kan., 4.31

3. Brookings County, S.D., 4.59

4. Brown County, S.D., 4.84

5. Finney County, Kan., 4.86

6. Burleigh County, N.D.,5.13

7. Grand Forks County, N.D., 5.23

8. Buffalo County, Neb., 5.27

9. Ward County, N.D.,5.32

10. Arlington County, Va., 5.34

11. Sioux County, Iowa, 5.49

12. Riley County, Kan., 5.53

13. Johnson County, Iowa, 5.55

14. Lincoln County, S.D., 5.64

15. Platte County, Neb., 5.69

16. Cass County, N.D., 5.71

17. Madison County, Neb., 5.92

18. Story County, Iowa, 6.04

19. Albany County, Wyo., 6.08

20. Lincoln County, Neb., 6.09

Monday, February 1, 2010

U.S. Economy Grows at Fastest Rate in 6 Years

The Washington Post

The U.S. economy grew at a breakneck rate of 5.7 percent at the end of 2009, the government said Friday, providing the strongest evidence yet that the nation will avoid a dip back into recession.
The growth spurt in gross domestic product, the broadest measure of economic activity, was the largest in six years. But economists cautioned that such a pace will probably not persist and that the economy will grow at a more measured rate in the coming months.

"We can now say that this is a sustainable recovery," said John Silvia, chief economist at Wells Fargo. "It's certainly not a boom, but it is a slow, steady recovery."

The fine print of the Commerce Department report did offer several pieces of promising news: Businesses invested more in equipment and software, exports rose at a healthy clip and consumer spending was stable. The recession, it is increasingly certain, ended over the summer.

But the biggest factor contributing to growth was that businesses, which remain slow to hire, were cutting back their inventories much slower than before. For two years, companies have aggressively reduced the goods on store and warehouse shelves, therefore producing less. After all those cuts, businesses now need to restock, which will spur more production.

The slower inventory drawdown accounted for more than half of the growth in GDP in the fourth quarter. GDP aims to capture the value of all goods and services produced within U.S. borders.

"Up until recently, whenever there was a pickup in demand, companies would go back to the stockroom and satisfy those orders by depleting warehouse shelves," said Bernard Baumohl, chief global economist at the Economic Outlook Group. "But at some point . . . you run out of things in the stockroom, so you have to start producing again, and that will increase GDP growth and lead to more hiring."

But the inventory bounce is temporary. So in months ahead, growth looks to be less spectacular.

Overall, growth came in a full percentage point higher than analysts' expectations, reflecting signs of strength beyond inventories.

The big question now is how long it will take the growth in output, which began over the summer, to lead to significant job creation. Forecasters are expecting job growth to begin this spring, perhaps by February or March. The employment numbers early in the year will get a boost from temporary hiring for the once-a-decade census.

So far, employers have fulfilled higher demand for their products by squeezing more work out of existing employees, leading to a productivity boom. But there are signs that they may not be able to do so any longer. Employment at temporary services, for example, has risen in recent months, a sign that companies, if not confident enough to hire permanent workers yet, are at least adding temps.
The largest component of GDP -- and of overall economic activity -- is consumer spending, and the data released Friday showed that consumption by Americans is clawing back to more typical levels. Spending for personal consumption rose at a solid 2 percent annual rate, with a particularly steep rise in purchases of nondurable goods -- items such as groceries and clothes that are expected to last fewer than three years.

The consumption data are consistent with reports from retailers, who say that Americans are no longer holding their wallets quite so tightly even if they've yet to revert to 2007 buying levels. The Conference Board said Friday that consumer confidence rose to a two-year high this month.

"Consumers are doing their part in this economic recovery," said Sung Won Sohn, an economist at California State University. "The employment market is the main problem facing consumers and the economy. However, the job market is in the process of stabilizing."

Businesses also are becoming more confident. After two years of dramatic reductions in investment, spending on equipment and software rose at a 13.3 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter, the second straight quarter of increase. Companies can cut back on equipment spending only so much before new spending becomes a necessity, as software becomes obsolete and machines break down. The moment when companies have no choice but to make new investments may have arrived. This heightened confidence may also inspire more hiring.

The exception is in real estate, where investment spending on structures such as office buildings and warehouses fell at a 15.4 percent rate, reflecting a vast oversupply of commercial buildings.

Housing investment continued contributing to growth, rising at a 5.7 percent rate, the second quarter of gains after 14 consecutive quarters of decline.

And exports rose at a healthy 18.1 percent annual rate, reflecting in part the lower value of the dollar.

Massive government spending to support the economy provided no net boost to overall growth. While non-defense federal spending rose at an 8.1 percent rate, spending on defense and by state and local governments was down sharply.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Amercans Still Wary Of Economy

AP


The housing market and stocks may be looking up, but Americans just can't shake their job worries.

In a sign that talk of an economic recovery has yet to soothe a recession-battered nation, consumer confidence fell in October and came in well below what analysts were expecting.

For stores, the reading is reason to worry that holiday sales might be even worse than they feared.

In a separate reading, the Conference Board reported shoppers' sentiments about the state of the economy are the gloomiest in nearly three decades. Americans reported they plan to cut back on spending, in large part because they don't trust the job market.

The unemployment rate is just under 10 percent, and economists say it could hit 10.5 percent next year.

"It's hard to get a job, and the ones that are out there don't pay enough," said Mitch Hicks, a 33-year-old from Hillsboro, Ore., who lost his job at a cabinet company a year ago and is still struggling to find work.

The board's index of consumer confidence fell to 47.7 in October from 53.4 in September. Economists were expecting only a small decline, to 53.1. It takes a reading of 90 to indicate an economy on solid footing, 100 or more to indicate growth.

Nearly half the 5,000 households surveyed by the board said jobs were hard to come by, and about one in four said they expected fewer available jobs in the coming months.

"We've gone down so far that it's kind of like when you fall into a deep hole and you're down 20 feet and you climb up by three feet," said Brian Bethune, an economist at IHS Global Insight. "You're better off than you were before, but you've still got a long way to go to get out."

There have been signs of recovery elsewhere: Corporate earnings are getting stronger, the stock market has regained much of its lost ground and figures due out Thursday are expected to show the recession officially ended in June or July.

And there was another indication Tuesday that the housing market is stabilizing. The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller price index showed home prices in August climbed for the third consecutive month, helped by a popular tax credit for first-time homebuyers.

But all the improvements haven't translated to economic security.

Sharon Jerndt, 47, is trimming her holiday gift list because she's scared of racking up credit card debt. She's also eating at home and skipping other indulgences.

"I'm trying to only pay with cash," said Jerndt, who works as a court reporter in Chicago.

Economists pay close attention to consumer confidence because it's a good barometer of the attitude of shoppers, whose spending on goods and services ultimately fuels 70 percent of the U.S. economy.

At best, economists expect holiday sales to be flat from a year ago, when businesses recorded their biggest declines in at least four decades.

Americans are "quite pessimistic about their future earnings, a sentiment that will likely constrain spending during the holidays," said Lynn Franco, director of The Conference Board's Consumer Research Center.

The confidence index sank to a historic low of 25.3 in February. It's still well below the reading of 61.4 last fall just before Lehman Brothers collapsed, the beginning of the financial crisis.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

One in Five Baby Boomers Cuts Retirement Saving

One in Five Baby Boomers Cuts Retirement SavingAARP Survey Shows U.S. Economy's Woes, Stock Declines Cloud Outlook for Big Demographic Group

One in five middle-aged workers stopped contributing to their retirement plans in the last year, and one in three has considered delaying retirement, according to a new survey by AARP, an advocacy group for older Americans.

The numbers, from an AARP survey conducted last month, provide the latest evidence that the deteriorating economy and stock market are creating a less-than-golden outlook for the huge tide of baby-boom Americans surging into retirement age. This demographic, born between 1946 and 1964, numbers around 78 million.

About 60% of U.S. workers in the private sector have 401(k) accounts, holding about $3 trillion in assets. Earlier surveys have shown workers don't put enough into 401(k)s to support their retirements, even as such plans have become the main source of retirement support, surpassing traditional fixed-benefit pensions. Labor Department statistics also show more Americans over 55 years old are staying in the work force, a sign that many can't afford to stop working.

Jean Setzfand, who directs AARP's financial-education efforts and oversaw the survey, said most respondents believe they need to contribute more to their retirement accounts, but those who have stopped are "having trouble making ends meet for basic expenses like food, gas and utilities."

The survey, which covered 1,628 employed people over 45 years old, found that 20% had stopped participating in their retirement accounts in the past year, and 34% contemplated putting off retirement. Twenty-seven percent said they were having trouble making rent or mortgage payments.

More people have been pulling money out of their nest eggs before age 59-1/2, even though such withdrawals bring a tax penalty. The AARP survey found that 13% "prematurely withdrew funds" from investments such as individual retirement accounts and 401(k) plans.

The AARP, which invites people to join when they turn 50, has some 40 million members. Its poll was conducted during a three-week period ending Sept. 21 -- before the worst of the stock market's recent swoon, when retirement accounts were heavily weighted toward stock mutual funds. The turmoil since then might have caused many investors to question the wisdom of plowing funds into investments.

Of the people who stopped making retirement-plan contributions, 83% said they didn't have enough money left over after current expenses. "People are trying to get through the day, and worry about the future later," Ms. Setzfand said.

The survey found that people who have a high-school degree or less were more likely to have stopped saving -- 24% compared with 16% of others surveyed. People with incomes less than $30,000 a year, Hispanics, and women were also more likely to stop retirement saving.

By: William Bulkeley
Wall Street Journal; October 7, 2008

Credit Crisis Hits Technology Budgets

Credit Crisis Hits Technology BudgetsHere's another sign that the tech sector is getting caught up in the current crisis: The events of the past couple of weeks have convinced many chief information officers that even forecasts calling for slowing tech-spending growth are overly optimistic.

Late last week, the CIO Executive Board, a group made up of over 1,000 corporate chief information officers, polled its members to find out how the credit crisis was affecting their IT departments. The results are bleak. In past downturns CIOs felt as though they could nip away at their budgets, but this time they're looking at an overhaul.

Not only are they under pressure to shrink their budgets for 2009, but they're trying to cut costs before the end of 2008, says Joel Whitaker, senior director for the CIO Executive Board. "The turmoil on the Street is hitting home," he says. Now, 61% of CIOs are currently re-evaluating their 2009 budgets. Fifty-nine percent are trying to save money by renegotiating contracts with their vendors, and the same percentage are putting all nonessential projects on hold. Forty-nine percent are cutting the amount they spend on consultants and have restricted travel. (There aren't any historical comparisons, but Mr. Whitaker says that all of these are high.)

Almost a quarter of the CIOs surveyed say that they've introduced a hiring freeze, which Mr. Whitaker says is a particularly bad sign because it means that businesses may not have enough staffers on hand to finish already started projects on time. "Things are finding a new level," says Mr. Whitaker.

By: Ben Worthen
Wall Street Journal; October 7, 2008

Monday, October 13, 2008

Opinion: Nothing's the Matter With Kansas

The Problem is still falling housing prices

My bank is still making loans. We have none in default.

Here in the heart of Kansas, the sky isn't falling and Chicken Little isn't running around without a head. Community banks like mine are still making loans and serving the needs of customers.

I used to worry about competing in the world of mega "too-big-to-fail" banks. But now I know community banks offer something the monsters can never offer -- real personal service. Many financial-type businesses say they offer the same thing, but they usually don't list personal numbers in the phone book and probably aren't driving the volunteer fire truck. My father always told me that character repaid many more debts than collateral ever would. Community banks form long-term relationships with customers.

During the farm crisis of the 1980s the over-line credits we had placed with the city correspondent banks were called. A community bank used to rely on participating loans with large metro banks. For example, if my bank had a regulatory loan limit of a million dollars and I made a two million dollar loan, I would "sell" the over-line to a large bank. These large banks suddenly suspended and called all rural credits. This is probably similar to what is happening to borrowers who use super-large banks in today's panic environment. There was nothing wrong with these loans but every small bank suffered from this irrational wrath.

A group of fellow bankers formed an ad hoc loan-pooling arrangement and we traded loans. Not a dime was lost, no borrowers were sold out and we didn't need a government bailout. It did instill a fierce sense of independence and self reliance.

Today we are reacting to a crisis that absolutely everyone knew was going to happen. Can you tell me that the entire congressional delegation from California didn't read a newspaper or watch any TV when unregulated brokers were offering 100% loans and allowing borrowers to make up their income?

Appraisal rules were established after the savings-and-loan debacle. The brokers and packagers weren't regulated so some appraisers really had a field day being creative. And now the government thinks we need new rules? They didn't enforce the existing ones.

Community bankers get really ticked off when Treasury can, with the stroke of a pen, guarantee $50 billion in money-market mutual funds, including the tax exempt funds. These funds didn't participate in generating the guarantee dollars, weren't regulated, and aren't subject to Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) rules. Why does that not surprise me? The CRA was passed in 1977 to ensure that banks meet the credit needs of their local communities but in effect practically compelled some regulated lenders to make loans to people and projects that have limited ability to repay them. Billions of these loans have been made, with a large percentage of the housing loans ending up at Fannie Mae. Community banks feel that if we must follow these CRA rules to comply with deposit insurance regulators, then anyone else receiving government guarantees should as well. Banks paid for all of the FDIC fund dollars as well as the operating costs of their regulators. We have been competing with these money-market funds for years, they mess up and now are handed a "get out of jail free" card.

All of the media pressure about this terrible crisis has really worried people. We community bankers must spend time reassuring folks that everything will be fine. The best way I have found to do that is to make more loans this September than we made a year ago, offer new products, and serve a fantastic group of customers with home loans at our bank where all is well and none are facing foreclosure.

If the government really wanted to help banks stimulate this economy, all that would be needed is a bonfire eliminating redundant red tape. While starter homes may cost a half-million dollars in some parts of this country, they are one-tenth of that here. So why does the borrower sign but three pieces of paper to process a $50,000 auto loan but needs two dozen-plus documents (which are never read) for a home purchase of the same amount? All that extra paperwork sure didn't protect anyone in this crisis.

Can anyone tell me why my small bank headquartered in a town of 1,100 is subject to the onerous rules of CRA, HMDA, CIP, FACTA, Red Flag and others? We have no red-lined areas or stop lights and everyone is making a low or moderate income. We were probably at the hospital when the borrower was born.

I am really concerned about my grandchildren's future being mortgaged by a $1 trillion porked-up bailout. But our small bank, along with many others, is alive and well and still making loans. To paraphrase the late great Kansas newspaperman William Allen White: What's right with Kansas are the more than 300 local banks taking care of Main Street.

By: Bill Wyckoff
Mr. Wyckoff is president of Labette Bank in southeast Kansas.
Wall Street Journal; October 8, 2008

Friday, October 10, 2008

Luxury Stores Brace for Slowdown

Luxury Stores Brace for SlowdownThe luxury-goods industry is bracing for fallout from the global financial crisis.

Some companies, including jewelers' Tiffany & Co. and Bulgari SpA, are considering a brake on future store openings to reduce costs ahead of a likely sluggish holiday season. French fashion house Dior SA may close some boutiques in smaller U.S. cities.

Until recently, the world of luxury perfumes, leather goods, designer wedding jewelry and designer clothing seemed impervious to the retail slowdown affecting apparel and home furnishings. Their resilience was due largely to growing business in emerging markets, such as China and Russia, which offset a slowdown in the U.S., Europe and Japan.

Now, the Chinese and Russian stock markets are faltering, putting pressure on their wealthy consumers and tugging on the luxury-goods sector's safety net.

"I'm not sure [emerging markets] are able to offset the weakness in other markets," Bulgari Chief Executive Francesco Trapani said in an interview. "Everyone is going to be affected." He estimated only 10% of new Bulgari store projects now would be approved, compared with about 50% earlier.

Polo Ralph Lauren Corp. inaugurated its largest women's store in the world, in Paris, last week and is still planning new boutique openings. But Charles Fagan, the executive vice-president of the company's global retail brand, said: "We're being prudent. We're very aware of our inventory and expenses."

High-end fashion houses such as Louis Vuitton, Gucci and Polo Ralph Lauren aggressively expanded into China, Southeast Asia, Russia and India as a response to the last downturn, between 2001 and 2003. At the time, they started emphasizing very highest-priced products -- such as customized bags and jewelry -- in order to attract the wealthiest consumers.

All told, emerging markets make up about 15% of the luxury goods sector's overall sales. However, executives had counted on double-digit gains in countries such as China and Russia to buffer declining or flat business elsewhere.

At LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton SA, the world's largest luxury-goods group and owner of fashion house Louis Vuitton and Hennessy cognac, sales in Asia, excluding Japan, account for 21% of sales in the first half of the year. Those sales grew 13% -- a much faster rate than the group's 5% average sales increase.

Luxury goods companies now fear those sky-high growth rates could decelerate as stock markets plunge. Stock and property markets have tumbled in China with the country's benchmark stock index off about 65% from its peak last October.

The effect on consumer spending will be heavy because a large swath of the population plays on the stock market "like in Las Vegas," says François-Henri Pinault, chief executive of PPR SA. As in other countries, investors' dwindling portfolios could change their "mindset," says Mr. Pinault, whose PPR group owns the Gucci and Bottega Veneta luxury houses.

Don Hanna, chief emerging markets economist at Citigroup Inc., says Chinese sales of big-ticket items such as automobiles and electronics have decelerated in the second half of the year at a faster rate than sales of mass consumption goods, like food and basic clothing.

"There is more pressure on wealthier households because those are the people who hold the assets," says Mr. Hanna.

It's a similar story in Russia. Russian retailers' orders for the collections shown on the Milan catwalk two weeks ago were flat compared with last year -- the first time in five years that they haven't increased, according to Sanford Bernstein luxury goods analyst Luca Solca.

It remains unclear how sales at some of the biggest luxury-goods companies fared over the summer. Third-quarter sales results begin trickling out this week.

However, there are some bright spots. French luxury-goods house Hermès International SA last year opened its first men's-only store on Wall Street. Chief Executive Officer Patrick Thomas said sales at the boutique were especially strong during the last two weeks of September, just as some of the store's banking neighbors were collapsing.

"Over time," says Todd Slater, an analyst at Lazard Capital Markets LLC. "There's a lot of upside."

Still, several companies are predicting softer revenue growth. HSBC analyst Antoine Belge expects sales gains at LVMH to slow to 1.6% in the third quarter, down from 5% growth in the first half. LVMH is due to report revenue on Thursday.

Compagnie Financière Richemont SA, the parent of jeweler Cartier, said last month that sales through the end of August in the U.S. were "beginning to show some signs of a slowdown." Bulgari's Mr. Trapani said July and August sales held up well globally, but that September was rockier. The company tracks sales on a daily basis.

The immediate fallout of the credit crisis on the sector will be more hesitant store expansion. Italian fashion house Prada SpA postponed an initial public offering intended, in part, to bankroll new stores in emerging markets. Tiffany, which has said it would open 12 to 15 stores overseas annually beginning next year, "would consider modestly adjusting our rate of store expansion" if conditions remain soft, Chief Executive Officer Michael J. Kowalski said in an email.

By: Christina Passariello and Rachel Dodes
Wall Street Journal; October 8, 2008

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Rescue May Not Revive Economy

Recession Is Likely as Pillars of Growth Continue Erosion

The plan to bail out the U.S. financial system Congress hammered out over the weekend offers a much-needed salve to ailing credit markets, but it is unlikely to prevent the economy from sliding into recession.

"There will be some benefits of this plan, but we think the economy's already gone too far to prevent enough damage," said J.P. Morgan chief economist Bruce Kasman.

Recent news on the economy has been bleak. In a sign that the housing market continues to deteriorate, sales of new homes dropped sharply last month, the Commerce Department reported last week. Another report showed sales of big-ticket items also fell in August, pointing to deterioration in the factory sector and a drop in business spending.

"The business sector has been probably the most important source of resilience through the last year," Mr. Kasman said, and as companies slash spending layoffs could worsen. His firm now says a U.S. recession began during the second half of this year.

Economists polled by Dow Jones Newswires expect that this Friday's employment report will show the economy shed 105,000 jobs in September. Meanwhile, consumer confidence is weak and weekly readings on retail sales show that shoppers are cutting back on spending.

Consumer spending is also under serious strain, and is poised to decline during the third and possibly fourth quarter of this year, which would mark the first quarterly spending drop since the 1990-91 recession. Americans are grappling with rising unemployment and higher prices on fuel and food. In the midst of a financial crisis centered on falling home prices and fractured mortgage markets, a 2001-style mortgage refinancing boom isn't in the cards.

"The plan cannot prevent a recession," said Brookings Institution senior fellow Douglas Elmendorf. "What matters for people is how long and deep any economic slowdown is."

Until this point, the government response to the crisis has been ad hoc rescues of financial institutions that didn't do enough to prevent fears in the credit market from spreading, Mr. Elmendorf said. Without a more comprehensive move from the government, credit market participants would have been absorbed with worrying over which institution was going to fail next, leading to a sharp slowdown in lending that could cause a prolonged recession. The rescue is aimed at restoring confidence to the market.

While the plan may help heal the financial markets, it may not be a direct boon to the ailing U.S. economy. The major pillars of economic growth -- consumer and business spending, government spending, and exports -- are already crumbling. Foreign demand for U.S. goods, which has helped the factory sector avoid a deeper downturn this year, is expected to dry up as the world's major economies flirt with recession and fast-growing nations like China and India lose momentum.

The bailout includes a plan for the government to facilitate loan modifications and lower the number of foreclosures next year. That could help slow the swelling inventory of unsold homes that continue to depress the housing market. But it does not resolve the more fundamental problem of home prices that, relative to rents, still appear too high.

"The housing market still has further to fall, regardless of what we do with credit-default swaps and mortgage securities," said University of California, Berkeley economist Barry Eichengreen.

Further home price declines could bring more trouble to the financial markets as more loans go sour. Even under the best circumstances, Mr. Eichengreen expects a recession that will bring the unemployment rate to 8% from the current 6.1%.

Still, the bailout could act as a defibrillator, jolting activity in financial markets back to life and hopefully preventing a deeper exacerbation of the economy's woes. It could give would-be investors a sense that they should buy now, said Wrightson ICAP economist Lou Crandall.

Under the plan, hundreds of billions of dollars-worth of mortgage-related assets that were being sold at fire-sale prices are going to be drained out of the system by the Treasury. Buyers who were on the sidelines, opportunistically waiting for undervalued securities to get even cheaper will now have to act.

"This may restart the market for these kinds of assets," Mr. Crandall said.

By: Justin Lahart and Kelly Evans
Wall Street Journal; September 29, 2008

Friday, September 26, 2008

Banker Bonuses Come Under Fire

London could be affected by US financial crisisAs Regulator Considers Options, Some Analysts Warn of Talent Drain

As the financial crisis unleashes a debate about bankers' compensation, the idea of limiting bonuses has taken an added twist in London: Will it hurt the U.K. capital's competitiveness as a place to do business?

Some regulatory consultants say the U.K.'s Financial Services Authority risks harming the country's financial-services industry if it restricts the way banks structure bonus packages.

Some warn that banks could leave London if bonus limits hurt their ability to attract talent. Any compensation limits would need to be global "because of the competitive power of the market," said Neville Bramwell, a partner at consultancy firm Deloitte & Touche LLP. "If people are subject to a salary cap at institution A, they will leave and join the institution that is not subject to that cap."

An actor in a bowler hat is silhouetted in front of the Bank of England during the filming of a television program.

Government officials turned up the heat on the issue at the Labour Party's annual conference this week by declaring that the culture of huge bank bonuses needs to be addressed. They blamed excessive bonuses, in part, for promoting the risky behavior that helped contribute to the global financial crisis. "Bonuses should encourage good long-term decisions, not short-term reckless ones," Treasury chief Alistair Darling said at the Labour Party conference in Manchester.

While the FSA has said it doesn't want to regulate pay, it does plan to look at whether compensation plans take into account long-term risks for financial firms.

"We are clear this is a global issue rather than a U.K. issue," said FSA spokeswoman Heidi Ashley. "We want to ensure that U.K. views on remuneration are properly represented in international discussions."

In the U.S., Congress is debating tying compensation limits to the $700 billion plan to rescue troubled financial firms. U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has argued that pay limits shouldn't be part of this plan because they could discourage firms from participating.

The U.K. has been held up as a model for compensation watchdogs who note that many companies give shareholders the ability to vote on compensation plans for senior executives at annual meetings.

In Switzerland, shareholder activist Ethos, which directly and indirectly controls funds valued at about 1.4 billion Swiss francs ($1.3 billion), called Tuesday for large Swiss companies to give shareholders a say on executive compensation. Ethos said the current financial-market crisis necessitates increased transparency and a bigger say for shareholders.

"The obvious driver of the subprime crisis...is simply greed," said Stephane Gregoire, product management director at FRSGlobal, a regulatory consultancy. "A risk-based bonus policy must be driven by the regulators."

By: Adam Bradbery
Wall Street Journal; September 24, 2008

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Economic Woes Seen Greeting President

The dollar is our biggest concernThe next U.S. president will be confronted with slow growth, high unemployment and an economy teetering toward recession, say 51 private economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal.

If they are correct, pumping up the economy will the first challenge facing either Democrat Barack Obama or Republican John McCain. That is likely to place tax cuts and government spending high on Washington's agenda, and push back costly measures such as reforming health care and fighting global warming.

The Wall Street Journal's latest monthly survey paints a gloomy picture of the outlook through the first half of 2009. The economy is on course to post four straight quarters of annualized economic growth below 2%, the longest stretch of subpar growth since the 2001 recession.

The respondents saw a 60% chance of an outright recession, expect the economy to shed 19,000 jobs a month for a year, and say the jobless rate, which jumped in August to 6.1%, will keep rising, to 6.4% by midyear, passing the 6.3% seen after the last recession.

The worst stretch will be the next few months, the economists say, coming as elections shift into high gear. Annualized growth in the gross domestic product is projected at 0.7% in the fourth quarter. A few months ago, forecasters thought the economy would be growing at a much faster clip by then.

By inauguration day, Jan. 20, the situation won't have improved much, they say. Growth in the first quarter is projected at a 1.3% annual rate.
Charts and Full Results

See and download forecasts for growth, unemployment, housing and more. Plus, views on another stimulus package, a consumption slowdown, where the economy will be on election day. Survey conducted Sept. 5-8.

"Rapidly rising unemployment, rebates behind us, falling house prices, falling stock prices, general loss of confidence and much tighter credit conditions. None of it looks good," said Paul Ashworth of Capital Economics.

Not all the news is bad. Inflation is expected to moderate. Economists forecast oil prices to be down to about $102 a barrel by the end of this year, and below $100 a barrel by June, potentially helping to take pressure off stretched households.

Even so, consumers are likely to be hurting. They have been stung not only by rising food and energy prices, but also by a deteriorating job market, tighter credit and falling home prices.

Yvette Perera, 39 years old, of Vallejo, Calif., was laid off in January from her job handling help-wanted ads for a small local paper, and has since been unable to find work. Her unemployment benefits end Nov. 1. "I'm looking for anything," she said. "Anything." On supermarket runs, she tries to limit herself to spending $40.

Sen. McCain has proposed cutting corporate taxes to 25% from 35%, and retaining all the Bush tax cuts on individuals, figuring that would give a boost to business. Sen. Obama would increase tax rates for those making more than $250,000 and use the proceeds for tax cuts aimed at moderate-income workers. Helping them would pump up the economy through consumer spending, his advisers argue.
About the Survey

The Wall Street Journal surveys a group of 56 economists throughout the year. Broad surveys on more than 10 major economic indicators are conducted every month. Once a year, economists are ranked on how well their forecasts have fared. For prior installments of the surveys, see: WSJ.com/Economists.

On average, the survey respondents expect a 0.1% contraction in consumer spending during the third quarter. It would mark the first such retrenchment by consumers in 17 years. Consumers kept spending during the last recession, to the surprise of many economists. The respondents expect 0.1% growth in consumer spending in the fourth quarter as the holiday shopping season kicks into gear.

Retailers posted weak August same-store sales -- sales at stores open at least a year -- amid a disappointing back-to-school season. On Friday, the Commerce Department is set to release official retail sales numbers for August. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires expect an anemic monthly advance.

Nearly one-third of economists surveyed said the consumer retrenchment may not be reversed for years, a problem that could quickly rise to the top of the next president's agenda.

The Federal Reserve already has cut interest rates sharply, meaning any future stimulus might need to be driven by the White House. But choosing a fiscal-policy course will be tricky. A rising budget deficit could constrain the next administration. Meantime, tax rebates proved to be only a fleeting help.

Two-thirds of economists said a second stimulus package, currently being debated in Congress and supported by Sen. Obama, isn't the right move. Most support extending or making permanent President George W. Bush's tax cuts, as does Sen. McCain.

Among the economists who support a new stimulus, none said it should primarily be based on rebates to individuals, as Sen. Obama would do. His $115 billion plan includes $65 billion in rebates and $50 billion split between aid to state and local governments, and infrastructure spending. He would pay for the rebates by taxing oil-company profits. Sen. McCain has said he is open to a stimulus plan, but hasn't committed to any specific proposal.

Thirteen percent of the economists who support a stimulus plan said it should include infrastructure spending, which some argue carries more bang for the buck, while 2% said it should focus on extending unemployment insurance and food stamps. Nineteen percent said it should include some mix of rebates, infrastructure spending and benefits.

"You can't afford to bail out the financial system and the real economy at the same time," said Mr. Ashworth.

By: Phil Izzo and Kelly Evans
Wall Street Journal; September 12, 2008

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Automakers Hurting in New Economy

Being in the auto-parts business these days has a bit of a gerbil-on-a-treadmill quality to it. Companies are tasked with keeping up with the altered needs of consumers and the drastic production changes from the big auto makers, as well as the need to reduce costs.

Investors are pessimistic about the future of a number of these companies, particularly after Tuesday's report on consumer confidence from the Conference Board showed that consumers who plan to buy cars in the next six months fell to 4.8 percent, one of its lowest readings in history.

The news was the latest in a series of factors causing investors to revalue the debt issued by some of the auto-parts makers. American Axle & Manufacturing Holdings Inc., which recently settled a labor dispute, has struggled mightily, as it is one of General Motors Corp.'s biggest suppliers of parts related to light trucks -- where GM and others are scaling back.

In the past month, American Axle's bonds, which carry a coupon of 7.875 percent and are due in 2017, have fallen by 11 cents to trade at 75 cents on the dollar, according to KDP Investment Advisors of Montpelier, Vt. They trade with a yield of 12.65 percent, or about 8.6 percentage points above comparable Treasurys.

The bonds have become quite expensive to insure, as well. The cost of insuring $10 million in bonds against default for five years rose to $900,000 Wednesday, compared with $730,000 on June 20, according to Phoenix Partners Group. The consumer-confidence data were responsible for part of the repricing of such risk.

Similarly, TRW Automotive Holdings Corp.'s credit-default swaps reflect a cost of $583,000 to insure a similar amount of debt, compared with $342,000 a month ago, according to Markit Group in London. That company's bonds trade at about 90 cents on the dollar, but the company's geographic diversity and its main product, automotive safety systems, "continue to enjoy favorable trends in demand and content per vehicle," according to KDP.

American Axle shares hit their lowest level since 2001 earlier in the week, but Wednesday, they ended up 42 cents, or 4.4 percent, at $10.08 after the company said it will be cutting white-collar jobs as well as blue-collar jobs.

"We're reaching a point with the price of oil where you are really changing the structure of industries," said Bruce McCain, chief investment strategist at Key Private Bank. "The automotive industry is under that sort of threat: a major shift in terms of what buyers of those products or services are going to do longer-term, and shrinkage in capacity and profitability."

By: David Gaffen
Wall Street Journal

Friday, May 2, 2008

Home Sales Fall, but Signs of Stability Emerge

Typical scene involving the housing market
U.S. sales of previously owned homes declined in March as the housing-market slump continued, but two gauges of home prices provided a glimmer of hope that the downturn might be easing a bit.
Home sales in San Francisco may be down but competition is hot. Stacey Delo reports on how some homes are seeing 10 or more bidders, and in one case 22.

Existing-home sales fell 2% last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.93 million, the National Association of Realtors said. The drop followed an increase of 2.9% in February, the first monthly gain since July. Home sales were down 19.3% from the 6.11-million-unit pace recorded in March 2007.

The languid sales pace has pushed inventories of unsold homes to a 9.9 months' supply at current sales rates. That large overhang has put downward pressure on prices for months, especially in areas hit hardest by the housing crisis.

Now, however, there are signs that prices might be starting to stabilize. The median U.S. home price rose to $200,700 last month from a revised $195,600 in February, the Realtors' report said. And the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight's home-price index showed prices rising a seasonally adjusted 0.6% in February from January, the first monthly gain since June.

Both gauges have their limitations. The Realtors' data reflect a changing mix of homes. The Ofheo index tracks homes purchased with government-backed mortgages, which excludes homes purchased with substandard loans more susceptible to the housing market's swoon.

Still, the data suggest that the declines in sales and prices may be slowing. "While it remains too early to definitively call a bottom, we continue to argue that home sales will stabilize [albeit at very low levels] by midyear," said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at RBS Greenwich Capital, in a note to clients.

Existing-home sales dropped 6.5% in the Midwest last month and 3.5% in the South; they rose 2.2% in the West and Northeast. Single-family home sales fell 2.7%, while sales of condominiums and co-ops rose 3.6%, for a second consecutive increase.

The fate of the nation's housing market could determine the shape and length of the current economic downturn. In an interview, Richard Fisher, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, warned that the U.S. may be in for a long period of "anemic growth -- longer than two quarters." But, Mr. Fisher said, "I don't think it needs to be all that deep. We've really weathered a hell of a setback.

"This strikes deep at the heart of the ordinary, hard-working consumer," he said. "They're getting multiple whammies -- slow economic growth, job insecurity, their homes are perceived to be worth less. And they're paying more at the pump and more for food. So the consumer is really getting hammered. And yet they've held up fairly well so far. I would expect them to change their behavioral patterns."

He also said, in the Monday interview, that slower economic growth may not resolve mounting concerns about inflation because he expects only a mild slowdown in world demand. "We've been weakening and we haven't seen the price responses," he said.

By: Kelly Evans & Sudeep Reddy
Wall Street Journal; April 23, 2008

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Hit a Bottom? Yes and No


As Economic Leaders Meet, Subprime Woes Look Done But Not So Other Crises

Is the worst over? That will be a big talking point when finance ministers, bankers and central bankers gather in Washington this weekend for meetings of the International Monetary Fund and Group of Seven industrial nations.

The answer to the question depends on which crisis one is talking about. If it is risky subprime mortgages, the answer probably is yes. If it is the broader economy, the damage has barely started. As for the turmoil in the banking sector, we may be over the hump but it would be foolish to count on it.

Look, first, at the U.S. subprime crisis. The IMF calculates banks have recognized roughly two-thirds of their expected losses from U.S. residential mortgage lending to risky borrowers, and a somewhat smaller portion of expected losses from commercial real estate and loans for leveraged buyouts.

Getting this far has been painful. It has forced several financial institutions to the brink, notably Bear Stearns. But the
U.S. Federal Reserve stepped in to prevent a catastrophe, in the process throwing its protective mantle around pretty much the whole investment-banking industry.

What is more, banks are coming. to terms with their problems. The writedowns haven't come as fast as a purist would like. Still, they have come a lot faster than, say, in Japan in the 1990s. Banks also have started to repair their tattered balance sheets, most recently Washington Mutual with its $7 billion of new capital.

So the subprime crisis probably is about halfway over. Still, this chapter won't be closed until dodgy assets start trading smoothly-and that isn't happening yet. Wall Street no longer is churning out new, trashy paper; but the old inventory is still semi-stuck. Even headline-grabbing deals like Citigroup's proposed sale of $12 billion in leveraged loans aren't quite what they seem. In a round-robin deal, the bank is set to lend the buyers three-quarters of the cash they need to buy the assets.

Although some assets now appear cheap, nobody wants to call the bottom. Morgan Stanley boss John Mack this week said he was keeping his powder dry. Another Wall Street titan was even blunter in private: He still is looking to cut debt. No wonder banks and brokers seem to be falling over themselves to tap central-bank lending facilities on both sides of the Atlantic and that the gap between interbank interest rates and base rates still is exceptionally high.

Now look at the broader economy. Many observers think the U.S. already is in a recession and that the pace of European economic growth is slowing rapidly. But financial pain from the higher unemployment and increase in bankruptcies that typically mark recessions has yet to be felt.

Much of the focus, again, will be housing-albeit no longer loans that started out as subprime. House prices already have fallen sharply in the U.S. and'have started to decline in other markets, such as Britain. But they could fall a lot more. The sharp rise in defaults in the past few months presages a further decline of 14% in average house prices, according to a Goldman Sachs Group analysis of historical patterns.

Further declines in house prices will cause consumers to tighten their belts, creating more of a drag on the economy. That, in turn, will provoke a new rash of loan losses for banks. Given the wounds they already have suffered, they may not be well placed to take much more pain.

Would the losses be enough to provoke a new chapter in the banking crisis? The central bankers converging on Washington this weekend will certainly hope not. Still, they should realize that they, especially the 'Fed, have exhausted a lot of their firepower by slashing rates and pumping cash into the markets in recent months.

The authorities should use the current breathing space to redouble their pressure on banks to raise more capital. That way, if another tsunami hits, there is less risk of everybody being swept away.

By: Hugo Dixon and Edward Hadas
Wall Street Journal; April 11, 2008

Friday, March 21, 2008

Congress Delves Into Bear Rescue

House's Waxman Focuses On Deal-Setting Precedent, Senate's'Baucus on Costs

The bones of Bear Stearns Cos. are going to be picked over on Capitol Hill as lawmakers begin examining details of the government-backed deal that rescued the investment bank from failure.

Leading members of the House and Sen­ate were kept apprised of efforts to shore up Bear Stearns last weekend as the White House and Federal Reserve scrambled to pre­vent further financial-market turmoil. But the deal is beginning to attract wider interest.

Rep, Henry Waxman, the California Democrat who leads the House Oversight and Govern­ment Reform Commit­tee, has begun making inquiries. One focus for Mr. Waxman is deter­mining whether the move sets any prece­dents for future federal Henry Waxman interventions. ------

On the other side of the Capitol, the Sen­ate Finance Committee, which has broad ju­risdiction over the U.S. economy, is ramping up for its own examination.

Among other things, the committee wants to look at the terms of the transac­tion, in which Bear Stearns is being taken over by J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. with the backing of the Fed, and the potential risk to the American taxpayers.

The inquiries underscore the strengths and weaknesses of how Congress responds to crises of the sort now roiling the financial world.

With so many members, the House and Senate are ill-prepared for rapid action. Ear­lier this year, it took weeks for Congress to approve an economic-stimulus package, even with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the California Democrat, and President Bush working in concert. And lawmakers have been spending months on legislation that would overhaul regulation of the housing in­dustry and help to calm the turmoil created by the meltdown in the mortgage market.

But in exerting their authority to con­duct oversight of the government, lawmak­ers can hold the White House publicly ac­countable for its handling of the mortgage crisis, and provide a forum for critics of the Bear Stearns deal to air grievances.

The inquiries will likely help to lay the groundwork for future legislation and bol­ster the case for action on Democratic ­backed measures that would more aggres­sively help troubled borrowers-a step the White House has so far resisted .

"Ultimately, Congress has a duty to re­spond appropriately to increasing bad news in the economy," said Montana Democrat Max Baucus, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee.

Aides in the House and Senate stressed that the inquiries are still at an early stage and are likely to ramp up slowly. Lawmakers are on recess for the rest of the month. Neither committee has yet decided to hold hearings.

What is attracting attention is the maneu­vering by the Bush administration and the Fed to prevent the collapse of Bear Stearns. As part of the transaction, the Fed agreed to lend $30 billion to help fund illiquid assets at Bear Stearns.

Among the questions of interest to law­makers: What should be the tax treatment of losses associated with such a deal? And what is the potential taxpayer exposure? Did the Fed's rescue ensure a better deal for Bear Stearns insiders than bankruptcy? "In­siders shouldn't be treated better than if they'd gone into bankruptcy," said Iowa Sen. Charles Grassley, the senior Republican on the Finance Committee.

A Waxman spokesman confirmed the congressman's "interest" in the deal. A Bau­cus aide said the Finance Committee is in the "examination and fact-finding stage," and plans to conduct a thorough review of the deal and the larger aspects of the admin­istration's efforts to shore up financial mar­kets. "We want to put a marker down," the aide said.