![]() ![]() |
|
|
Feb. 27, 2008 CONTACT: Rate Cuts Imperfect Cure for Credit Market
Blockage; ATLANTA – The subprime fueled credit
crisis combined with record high oil and falling home prices has ignited
the recession debate. In an attempt to combat the fallout, the FED has
finally taken aggressive rate cut measures. “The FED has done what it can and now the ball is
in the lenders’ court, more precisely their mindset. That mindset
is directly a function of a deteriorated balance sheet and the expectation
of what’s to come,” said Dhawan in his Forecast of the Nation,
released today. Meanwhile, the outstanding debt in asset-backed commercial paper market is down by almost 40 percent since the credit crisis began last August. In addition, the spread between AA and A2 bonds in this market has risen sharply too. Since then, each time the spread appears to shrink back to normalcy following Fed cuts, it shoots back up on the announcement of bad financial news, especially the write-downs at major Wall Street banks. “This spread is my best indicator for how much stress exists in the credit markets,” said Dhawan. “I need this spread below 10 basis points for a sustained period of time before I can pronounce this problem to be over for good.” But even after the credit crisis subsides, Dhawan warns of other potential pitfalls. “Consumer confidence has been holding up better than expected despite falling home and rising gas prices,” said Dhawan. “However, as it falls further it will affect an already weakening CEO confidence, resulting in a pull back on investment growth and job creation in the economy.” Despite the gloom, Dhawan remains cautiously optimistic that the nation will begin to see the light at the end of the tunnel by mid-2009. “Bad debt will get written down and work its way through
the balance sheet of the system, and Fed rate cuts will help in this process
by providing liquidity to undertake the write-downs,” he said. “For
now, the only solution is time.” Georgia and Atlanta – National Credit Storm
Blurs Georgia’s Growth Picture: “Georgia’s payroll growth rate of 1.6 percent in December 2007 was higher than the 0.8 percent national rate. However Georgia’s job growth in the last quarter of 2007 was half of what was experienced in the third quarter,” said Dhawan. “Hospitality, which performed better than expected, will not be able to maintain the momentum due to the national slowdown. In addition, growth in the health care sector which is experiencing some uncertainty due to the pressures of the presidential race, will be unable to make up for the shortfalls in the rest of the economy.” The uncertainty at Delta, announced cutbacks and hiring freezes at Home Depot and UPS add to Georgia’s woes and make it difficult for the area to combat the national headwinds. Just like the national picture, Georgia will have to wait for the smoke to clear before seeing positive signs in mid-2009. The jobs outlook weighs particularly heavy on the outlook for premium job growth. “For the 2008 calendar year, Georgia’s job creation pace will be only 27,900 jobs. Of these jobs only 6 percent or 1,600 will be in the premium category. In 2009, that number will jump to 13,300 but we will have to wait until 2010 to see numbers any where close to what we experienced during the go-go 90s,” he said. Highlights from the Economic Forecasting Center's
local report: |
|
||