Slowdown! ADP Jobs Added Slows To +89k As Credit Card Delinquencies At Small Banks Hit Highest Level Even Recorded (7.51%)

The US is experencing a slow down.

The massive Federal government and Federal Reserve Covid stimulus has worn out and we are left with a sagging jobs report and soaring credit card delinquencies.

After ADP’s reports printed almost perfectly in line with BLS last month (+177k vs +187k), all eyes are on today’s print, which was expected to decline to +150k. Instead it plunged to just +89k – that is the lowest jobs addition since Jan 2021.

Credit Card Delinquency rates at small banks have reached 7.51%, the highest level ever recorded.

Bidenomics is taking the 10Y rate higher.

Boom shaka laka.

17 Days Later? Mortgage Demand Decreased -6% WoW In Weekly Survey, Purchase Apps Lowest Since 1995 (Only 17 Days Left For Strategic Petroleum Reserve)

Another week under Biden, another economic disaster. This time, its the mortgage market with mortgage demand (applications) down 6% from one week earlier, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending September 29, 2023.

The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, decreased 6.0 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier. On an unadjusted basis, the Index decreased 6 percent compared with the previous week. The Refinance Index decreased 7 percent from the previous week and was 11 percent lower than the same week one year ago. The seasonally adjusted Purchase Index decreased 6 percent from one week earlier. The unadjusted Purchase Index decreased 6 percent compared with the previous week and was 22 percent lower than the same week one year ago.

The purchase market slowed to the lowest level of activity since 1995, as the rapid rise in rates pushed an increasing number of potential homebuyers out of the market. ARM loan applications picked up over the week and the ARM share increased to 8 percent, as some borrowers searched for ways to lower their payments.

The US 30-Year Mortgage Rate Tops 7.5% for First Time Since 2000.

On the energy front, where we are represented by former Michigan governnor Jennifer Granholm and former South Bend Indiana mayor Pete Buttigieg, we see that the Strategic Petroleum Reserve is down to only 17 days left.

Fear The Talking Fed! Treasury Rates Keep Climbing To Multiyear Highs As Fear Of More Rate Hikes Surfaces (Treasury Yields Decouple From Sinking Manufacturing Numbers)

Fear the talking Fed! Various Fed Presidents are talking this week and when they do. WATCH OUT!

The latest fear mongering will be … inflation is persistent and they might have to keeep raising rates.

The two-year Treasury remains above 5% and the 10Y-2Y T-Curve remains inverted.

Treasury 30-year yield rose to 4.856%, HIGHEST SINCE 2007.

The likelhood of another Fed rate hike is growing.

While inflation is cooling (but still elevated), The Fed could choose to rate hikes again.

Treaury yields have decoupled from US manufacturing data.

Best picture of Lael Brainard, Director of the National Economic Council of the United States and former Federal Reserve member and talking head. Or screaming head.

US Excess Savings Depleted For Bottom 80% Of Households To Cope With Bidenomics (Home Affordability Hits All-time Low!)

Wasting away again with Bidenomics, code for massive Federal subsidies to green energy donors. And incentives to buy impractical EVs. Imagine in an emergency and your car only goes 200 miles (and then you have to wait for an available charger to come open). Well, the top 1% are doing fine. But the bottom 80% of households by income are seeing rapid deplection of savings to cope with the rising costs of Bidenomics.

And then we have shrinking home affordability, now at a record low.

Bidenomics/Covid Increased Federal Outlays By 30% From January 2020, M2 Money UP 36% (US Debt Tops $33 Trillion With $194 Trillion In Unfunded Liabilities)

Well, it looks like Ukraine’s army is surrending in droves to Russian forces. Maybe this will end Biden’s obsession with doling billions of dollars to Ukraine. Nah, Biden will continue doling out billions to Ukraine, but this time it will be to rebuild Ukraine (while major US cities continue to rot). But in any case, Biden and Democrats refused to return to pre-Covid levels of spending.

Federal outlays (spending) has increased by 30% from January 2020, just prior to Covid. Yet, Republicans are unable (or unwilling) to get the Biden Administration and Democrats to cut Federal spending back to pre-Covid spending levels. M2 Money is up a whopping 36%.

But never fear. US Federal debt is now above $33 trillion with $194+ TRILLION in unfunded liabilities. I feel dread after California governor “Gruesome” Newsom appointed The Fonz (a Democrat millionaire living in Maryland?) to replace Diane Feintstein in the US Senate.

S&P Global’s PMI Manufacturing jumped from 47.9 in August to 49.8 in September (and up from 48.9 in the flash September print). That is the highest print for US manufacturing since April but remains in contraction (below 5). That is the 5th straight month in contraction and 10th month in the last 11 in contraction (sub 50).

The ISM Manufacturing print also rose (to 49.0), up from 47.6 and better than the 47.9 exp (but still below 50 for the 10th straight month).

No, not Henry Winkler. But Laphonza Butler, a friend of VP Kamala Harris and the CEO of Emily’s List. And lauughably a resident of Maryland representing California.

Bidenomics And The BIG Corporate Bias! Smaller Companies Paying Record Interest Without Boost From Interest Income (US Treasury Yield Curve Remains Inverted With Massive Fed Stimulus Outstanding)

We know that the horribly-flawed Bidenomics doesn’t work, unless you are a large corporate donor in green energy. For the rest, particulary small companies, Bidenomics is a total bust.

Under Bidenomics (the Soviet-style command economy), small companies are paying reconrd interest expense WITHOUT a major boost from interest income. Well, ain’t that a kick in the head … to most companies.

Pension funds that invested in “safe” MBS are finding that MBS isn’t so safe under inflation.

Look at the 10Y-2Y yield curve since Covid. I had a slight surge by March 2021, then has flattened then inverted as The Fed’s balance sheet still remains above $8 trillion.

Face it. The Biden Administration and Congress are owned by BIG corporate interests. BIG defense, BIG tech. BIG Pharma, BIG banking, BIG auto, BIG Union, BIG anything.

No wonder the Obamas were seen snorkeling in The Med with Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg. BIG Hollywood!

Biden’s Idiocracy! Bank Credit Growth Slows To -0.5% YoY, Every Monthly Payrolls Print In 2023 Has Been Revised Lower (Bidenomics Is The Economic Mutilator!)

Mike Judge wrote and directed a masterpiece of cinema called “Idiocracy” where large corporations convince a progressive government to use Brawndo (a Gatorade clone) to grow vegetables resulting in a Dust Bowl. Why? Because the Progressive leadership determine that plants crave … electrolytes.

But the electrolytes in Bidenomics has resulted in bank credit growth of -0.5% YoY.

On the data front, it has become a running joke: the “strong” Bidenomics economy comes with an expiration date, as it is only “strong” for about a month, at which point the initial “strength” is downgraded, and the data is revised sharply lower.

That has certainly been the case with US labor data, where as we first reported last monthevery single monthly payrolls print in 2023 has been revised lower (see chart below), a 12-sigma probability and virtually impossible unless there was political pressure to massage the data higher initially and then revise it lower when nobody is looking.

But the BLS is not done: as we reported last week, besides the now traditional one-month lookback revisions the ridiculously high monthly payrolls prints accumulated over the past year will also be slowly but surely revised gradually lower at annual benchmark revisions for years to come. As Morgan Stanley chief US economist Ellen Zentner explained (full note available to pro subscribers)…

Payrolls get revised too, and we expect a downward revision. Payrolls have an annual benchmark revision that is published in February each year. The revision adjusts the level of payrolls through March of the prior year. For example, a new revision will be published in Feb-24, adjusting payroll levels from April-22 to Mar-23. And a preliminary estimation of the upcoming revision points to a decrease in payroll YoY% growth rates of -0.2pp.

But while downward payroll revisions under Bidenomics are as certain as death and taxes, what we wanted to discuss here are the just as striking downward revisions to US consumption which hit this morning alongside the comprehensive once every-five-years historical revisions to GDP. As a reminder:

Today’s release presents results from the comprehensive update of the National Economic Accounts (NEAs), which include the National Income and Product Accounts (NIPAs) and the Industry Economic Accounts (IEAs). The update includes revised statistics for GDP, GDP by industry, GDI, and their major components. Current-dollar measures of GDP and related components are revised from the first quarter of 2013 through the first quarter of 2023. GDI and selected income components are revised from the first quarter of 1979 through the first quarter of 2023.

Earlier today we already noted the disaster that was Q2 Personal Consumption: instead of the 1.7% unchanged print from the second estimate of Q2 GDP, the final number was a dire 0.8%, a 9-sigma miss to estimates…

… and the worst quarterly increase since the Covid collapse in Q2 2020.

But what about other historical data? After all today’s revision impacted all data from Q1 2013?  Therein, as the bard says, lies the rub.

Let’s start with personal consumption, and compare the latest post-revision current data (link) with the most comprehensive pre-revision data as of last month (link). It should come as no surprise to anyone that with the (slight) exception of just Q4 2022, personal consumption in every single quarter since the start of 2022 – when the Fed aggressively started tightening and hiked rates by the most since Volcker – has been revised lower, and in some cases dramatically so.

Bloomberg also picks up on the GDP revision and looking at revisions to the historical data, writes that “the pandemic contraction is seen as being a bit less severe than previously thought: GDP is now reckoned to have dropped at a 28% annual clip in the second quarter of 2020, instead by 29.9%, as the government shut down swathes of the economy to fight the spread of the virus. But the recovery since then has been somewhat slower, according to the update. Growth last year was revised to 1.9% from 2.1%.” And of all GDP components, consumption was the weakest.

So not only was the Fed hiking at a time when personal consumption would grow much less period to period than previously expected, but the US economy was generally weaker than previously expected (as discussed here).

There’s more.

When looking at the composition of the US household’s income statement – the summary of economic accounts – we find just what we had expected: US savings were in fact far lower than previously expected.

In the latest negative revision, US households saved $1.1 trillion less than previously thought over the past six years…

… and indeed as the BEA chart below showsAmericans stashed away an average 8.3% of their disposable income annually from 2017 through 2022, down from a previously estimated 9.4%.

The reduction stems from an accounting adjustment that lowered personal income from mutual funds and real estate investment trusts. Additionally, as Bloomberg notes, much of the reduction in personal savings seen in the revised data occurred prior to the pandemic, so its implications for how much extra cash Americans may feel they still have now is not clear cut.

Whatever the reason for the statistical adjustment, however, one can say goodbye to even the faintest speculation that US households have any excess savings left… why they don’t, of course, because even when using the previous methodology which artificially inflated total savings, JPM calculated that excess savings had already run out…

… which means that if Q3 GDP was bad and consumption was “revised” sharply lower (odd how economic data is never revised higher under Joe BIden), Q4 – when savings are virtually non-existant – and where we also get the i) return of student loan payments; ii) the UAW strike; iii) the government shutdown and iv) oil at almost $100 and gasoline at one year highs, is about to fall off a cliff.

Yes, Bidenomics is a form of Brawdo, the economic mutilator!

Freddie Mac’s 30Y Rate Rises To 7.31%, Highest Since Dec 2000, 10-year Treasury Yield Up To 4.67% (Mortgage Rate Up 69% Under Biden)

Freddie Mac’s mortgage rate is up to 7.31%, the highest level since December 2000. That means that mortgage rates are up 69% under Biden.

That is in spite of $2.5 TRILLION in agency MBS being held on The Fed’s balance sheet.

As the 10-year Treasury yield is up to 4.67%.

Slippin’ Into Darkness Under Bidenomics! US Pending Home Sales Nosedive -18.80% Since Last Year As Mortgage Rates Hit 20 Year Highs

The US housing market is slippin’ into darkness under Bidenomics.

With existing home sales at their lowest since 2010 and new home sales finally hitting the wall, pending home sales were expected to decline MoM in August after an uptick in July (amid soaring mortgage rates and plunging affordability) and they did…hugely.

Pending home sales plunged 7.1% MoM in August (dramatically worse than the -1.0% expected) dragging sales down 18.8% YoY.

Mortgage rates are now at a 20 year high. As existing home sales tank.

Bidenomics In Action! US New Home Sales Crashed -8.7% MoM In August As Mortgage Rates Surge

Biden’s press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said that Biden was laser focused on reducing inflation. At least he isn’t laser focused on little girls … for the moment. But he still does seem laser focused on providing Ukraine with billions of dollars.

After months of soaring in the face of higher mortgage rates (and higher prices), new home sales hit a wall in August, crashing 8.7% MoM – the biggest drop since Sept 2022 (and four times worse than the -2.2% MoM expected)…

But at least new home sales were up on a YoY basis.

hat is the lowest SAAR since March…

The median sales price of a new home edged lower to $430,300 (average home price rose), according to the Commerce Department’s report.

Despite the decline, that’s still well above pre-pandemic levels.

As a reminder, according to a report released Friday by Redfin Corp, nearly 60,000 deals to purchase homes fell through in August (roughly 16% of homes that went under contract last month, the biggest share of cancellations since October).

“I’ve seen more homebuyers cancel deals in the last six months than I’ve seen at any point during my 24 years of working in real estate,” Jaime Moore, a Redfin agent, said in the report.

“They’re getting cold feet.”

A potential silver lining is the rising in supply (but now much that is driven by a decline in the denominator – homes sold – vs numerator – homes available; is unclear)…

Is the catch-down to reality about to begin?

Source: Bloomberg

They should, given that homebuilders can’t be filling this gap – between the current 30Y mortgage rate and the effective rates that borrowers are currently paying on their home loans – (i.e. subsidizing new home sales) forever…

Source: Bloomberg

And investors are starting to wake up too…

Is Jay Powell about to get the ‘affordability’ compression he was hoping for?