April 18, 2024

Economix Blog: A Chat With Eric Rosengren of the Boston Fed

Eric S. Rosengren, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Eric S. Rosengren, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.

Eric S. Rosengren, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, said in an interview that he wanted to see the economy adding at least 200,000 jobs a month in addition to a declining unemployment rate before he would be ready to consider scaling back the Fed’s efforts to stimulate the economy.

Other Fed officials have made similar statements in recent weeks, reflecting concern that the unemployment rate is declining because fewer people are looking for work, and not because faster growth is creating opportunities.

But Mr. Rosengren also expressed optimism that the economic recovery was gaining strength, and that growth could reach 3 percent this year.

We spoke during a Boston Fed conference focused on the Fed’s commitment to reducing unemployment. The transcript is edited for clarity.

Do you believe in spring swoons? Are we swooning now?

I wouldn’t put too much weight on any one data point. February, things seemed unusually strong. The unemployment report and some of the things we’ve gotten this week have been a little bit weaker. We’ll have to see which of those two ends up being a more accurate projection of what’s going to be happening.

It’s been a little bit of a surprise that it looks like we’re going to get roughly 3 percent G.D.P. growth in the first quarter. That’s certainly stronger than I think most people were expecting. It looks like we are going to be getting a little bit of a weakening in the second quarter. I’m expecting closer to 1.5 [percent growth]. Average those two and you get 2.25 [percent growth over the first half of the year]. I do think there’s enough underlying strength in the economy that as we get into the second half of the year we’re going to get much closer to 3 percent.

We do have to get through this period where fiscal policy is removing some of the accommodation that we’re trying to put into the market. Assuming we don’t get any negative shocks, I think there’s enough underlying strength that this won’t look like a spring swoon. It will look like a little bit of a lull. I hope that I’m right.

Consumer spending has been strong despite the higher payroll taxes that took effect in January. Do you think the predicted impacts were overstated? It is possible that the impact of the sequestration cuts also will fall short of expectations?

I think it was a little surprising how strong consumption was in the first quarter. I do think it had some impact. If you talk to retailers, people that have restaurants, particularly that were more focused on low- and medium-income customers, they were seeing an impact from the payroll tax. But there was stronger underlying strength in the economy at that time. In the absence of fiscal austerity we would have seen some pretty good momentum in the first half of the year. Some things also don’t happen immediately; people sometimes take time to respond. I’m reasonably confident that despite what’s happening with government spending, we’re getting modest growth. Otherwise, we’d be getting strong growth.

Unemployment remains higher than you’d like –

That’s an understatement.

So why aren’t you advocating for the Fed to do even more?

I think ideally it would actually come from the fiscal side. My own forecast is we’ll get to roughly 7.25 percent unemployment by the end of the year. I would continue our program and if we get to 7.25 and we’re starting to see payroll growth that is north of 200,000, and it looks like we’re getting a real self-sustaining recovery then I think you can make an argument [that it’s time to curtail asset purchases].

I think we need to be careful about what kind of side effects we’re having. My own sense is that the economy is picking up, the unemployment rate will be coming down. This is a fairly significant degree of accommodation. Long-term rates are quite low. We are seeing an impact from our policies. I think we’re pushing the interest-sensitive sector about as far as we’re going to be able to push it at this time.

The sectors that we can’t control — federal, state and local spending — have been a drag on the economy. We’ve been having fiscal austerity, we have more now than we had before, so monetary policy is trying to offset some of the fiscal austerity.

Are you concerned that the Fed’s efforts to drive down borrowing costs, and to increase risk-taking, are reinflating speculative bubbles?

I talked about this in a recent speech. If you look at prices, we’re nowhere close to where we were at the peak. I think we’re getting the economy more quickly to where it should be. I don’t think in any way that the actions we’ve taken to date are creating the kind of financial instability that would offset the advantages of trying to push the unemployment rate down a little more quickly.

If the unemployment rate falls to 6.5 percent, but only – or mostly — because fewer people are looking for work, is that good enough, or at least as good as it gets? Would the Fed declare victory and start to raise short-term interest rates?

We do not want to get to 6.5 percent just by having people pull out of the labor force. We want to get to 6.5 because employment is expanding and we’re adding jobs faster than labor force growth. If we end up at 6.5 percent and it was only because people pulled out of the labor force, that would not be substantial improvement in labor markets, that would mean that I would not be seeing the evidence that I would want to be seeing that we should be moving short-term rates.

You spoke Friday about the importance of the Fed’s dual mandate. But the Fed historically has behaved pretty much like every other major central bank. It seeks to control inflation and then it seeks to stimulate growth as much as possible, so long as inflation remains low. Where’s the evidence that the dual mandate matters?

Look at the March statement. You would not see that kind of statement out of the Bank of England, the Riksbank or the European Central Bank because they do have only a single mandate. It’s hard enough to explain monetary policy, but fairly unsophisticated people can understand that we’re going to keep interest rates low until unemployment hits 6.5 percent. In terms of a communication device, that’s a very clear difference. It’s observable, it’s credible, it’s easy to see whether we’re doing it or not doing it.

And you see the difference when you’re tracking closer to 2 percent inflation and still willing to take accommodative policy. We haven’t been near 2 percent in the last few years, but our willingness to maintain a pretty accommodative policy will be in some sense the test that we’re actually putting weight on how high the unemployment rate is.

Are you concerned about increased income inequality? Is there anything the Fed can do to address what appear to be increasingly entrenched inequalities?

One of the biggest things that causes your wealth to go down is a spell of unemployment. You go through a spell of unemployment, it dramatically affects a variety of things: your earnings not only immediately but over the next 10 years. And the longer the duration of the unemployment, the bigger the effect. So I think the most direct way we can have a difference is to try to bring the unemployment rate down as quickly as we can.

(Mr. Rosengren also noted that the Boston Fed is sponsoring a grant competition, the Working Cities Challenge, to improve economic conditions in the former factory towns that dot Massachusetts. The grants build on Boston Fed research showing that “industry mix, demographic makeup, and geographic location made less difference to success than the presence of a community leader and collaboration around a vision for the future.”)

Article source: http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/04/15/a-chat-with-the-boston-feds-chief/?partner=rss&emc=rss

U.S. Treasury Chief Talks of Growth in Europe

At the outset of a joint press interview with Mr. Lew, Mr. Van Rompuy stressed the difficult climate both economies face. “We continue to rebalance and rebuild our economic potential to ensure strong, sustainable and inclusive growth and jobs going forward,” Mr. Van Rompuy said. “It is a long and difficult process, but one we stick to with determination on both sides of the Atlantic.”

But ultimately both also gestured to the deep divisions in the U.S. and European approaches to the crisis, and to the divergent paths their economies have taken in its wake.

“Our economic recovery is gathering strength,” Mr. Lew said. “The U.S. economy has expanded for 14 consecutive quarters, and although the pace of job creation is not as fast as we would like, the private sector has added jobs for 37 straight months.”

In contrast, the euro zone continues to struggle with shrinking economies and rising unemployment, with Germany, France and Spain all contracting in the fourth quarter of 2012. That has made the challenge of fiscal consolidation yet harder.

The question that Mr. Lew came to Europe to raise is how to strengthen the European economy — for the Continent’s own sake, as well as for the good of the global economy. The Obama administration has an investment in Europe’s growth, U.S. officials have stressed repeatedly, because of the deep financial and trade ties between the countries.

“We have an immense stake in Europe’s health and stability,” Mr. Lew said. “I was particularly interested in our European partners’ plans to strengthen sources of demand at a time of rising unemployment.”

Mr. Lew has urged countries with stronger economies, like Germany, to slow their pace of fiscal consolidation in order to benefit the entire euro zone. But in the past few years, such advice has often fallen on deaf ears, given the political constraints in Europe and many officials’ deep belief in budget balance as a prerequisite to growth.

Mr. Van Rompuy mentioned the “vivid debate” over “fiscal policy and the pace of fiscal consolidation” in his remarks.

The trip is Mr. Lew’s first to Europe as Treasury secretary. Earlier this year, he visited Beijing in his first trip abroad in the post. Though he worked for a time in the State Department in the Obama administration, Mr. Lew is primarily known as a domestic budget expert.

In contrast, his predecessor, Timothy F. Geithner, was an international finance expert who had previously worked at the International Monetary Fund and as Treasury under secretary for international affairs.

The Treasury said Monday that Pierre Moscovici, the French finance minister, pulled out of a meeting and joint news conference with Mr. Lew that was scheduled for Tuesday. The French government is facing a scandal after its budget chief admitted holding secret offshore accounts.

Mr. Lew is also traveling to Frankfurt to meet with Mario Draghi of the European Central Bank, and to Berlin to meet with Wolfgang Schäuble, the German finance minister.

Earlier on Monday, Mr. Lew met with other European officials, including José Manuel Barroso, the president of the European Commission, executive arm of the European Union. A Treasury official said they, too, discussed the need for Europe to generate demand, as well as the situation in Cyprus, a cross-border banking union and a prospective free-trade agreement.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/09/business/global/us-treasury-chief-talks-of-growth-in-europe.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Attorneys General Press White House to Fire F.H.F.A. Chief

WASHINGTON — Prominent state attorneys general are calling on President Obama to fire the acting director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency and name a new permanent director, arguing that current policies are impeding the economic recovery.

Under its current leader, Edward J. DeMarco, the F.H.F.A., which oversees the bailed-out mortgage financiers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, has refused to put in place a White House proposal to reduce the principal on so-called underwater mortgages — a move that might prevent foreclosures and thus save the mortgage giants money, but also might expose taxpayers to additional losses.

Led by Eric T. Schneiderman of New York and Martha Coakley of Massachusetts, the attorneys general argue that writing down the principal on underwater mortgages — those where the outstanding mortgage is greater than the current value of the home — would aid the recovery. They note that write-downs were a central part of a multibillion-dollar mortgage settlement that 49 state attorneys general negotiated with five major banks a year ago. And they say the White House should name a director to take that action.

“Our nation’s economy will never fully recover until we address this foreclosure crisis,” Ms. Coakley said in a statement. “Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have been an obstacle to progress for far too long, and it is time for new leadership and a new direction to ensure that homeowners receive this important relief.”

Mr. DeMarco has held the position at the head of the F.H.F.A for more than three years. In the last year, especially, he has clashed with the administration over the issue of write-downs, also called principal forgiveness.

The Treasury Department has argued that write-downs would save money by reducing the chances homeowners would default. An F.H.F.A. analysis released last year seemed to show that a carefully directed program could save Fannie and Freddie money. But Mr. DeMarco has rejected the idea on the grounds that it would expose taxpayers to more losses. Fannie and Freddie have already required tens of billions of dollars of taxpayer aid.

The administration has frequently criticized Mr. DeMarco’s decision. “F.H.F.A. is an independent federal agency, and I recognize that, as its acting director, you have the sole legal authority to make this decision,” Timothy F. Geithner, who stepped down as Treasury secretary in January, wrote Mr. DeMarco last year. “However, I do not believe it is the best decision for the country.”

Yet the White House has failed to replace Mr. DeMarco.

That decision has troubled some members of Congress. “Ensuring that F.H.F.A. implements Congressional directives to support the most liquid, efficient, competitive and resilient housing finance markets is a matter of national urgency,” said a letter to Mr. Obama signed by 45 members of the House last month. “We strongly urge you to nominate an F.H.F.A. director who is ready to fulfill this mission and address the many challenges still facing the nation’s housing finance markets.”

Some housing advocates suggest the White House has not named a new director in order to keep Mr. DeMarco as a scapegoat for what they perceive as a failed housing policy.

The administration has struggled to find a qualified person to take the job. There is speculation that the White House may finally be close to naming a director. The Wall Street Journal reported that officials were considering nominating Representative Mel Watt, Democrat of North Carolina, perhaps next month.

The White House declined to comment on personnel policy.

Any director would probably be named as a recess appointment because he or she would be unlikely to win Congressional approval. Many Republicans concerned about the cost of Fannie and Freddie to the taxpayer have said the two agencies should not adopt principal-reduction policies. In 2010, the White House nominated Joseph A. Smith Jr., a North Carolina banking commissioner, for the position, but his nomination died in the Senate.

Attorneys general who have signed the letter also include Kamala D. Harris of California, Beau Biden of Delaware, Lisa Madigan of Illinois, Douglas F. Gansler of Maryland, Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada and Bob Ferguson of Washington.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/18/business/economy/attorneys-general-press-white-house-to-fire-fhfa-chief.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Stocks Spurred on by Job Growth

Stocks ended higher Friday, with the Dow Jones industrial average closing over 14,000 points for the first time since 2007, propelled by a strong upward revision of job growth in the United States for the fourth quarter.

The Standard Poor’s 500-stock index added 1 percent by the end of trading, and the Nasdaq composite index was up 1.2 percent. The Dow, adding 149 points, or 1.1 percent, ended at 14,009.79.

Employment grew modestly in January, with 157,000 new jobs, slightly below expectations for 160,000. Still, the December report was revised upward to 196,000 from 155,000, supporting views that the American economic recovery remained on track despite a surprise contraction in fourth-quarter gross domestic product.

“Nice revision upward, and this month came in right at the sweet spot where job growth is picking up,” said Mark Luschini, chief investment strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott in Philadelphia.

“The market may be at something of a top here, but we are rising on improved economic fundamentals so the rally has been rational,” said Mr. Luschini, who helps oversee $55 billion in assets.

Corporate earnings were also a focus for investors, with some Dow components reporting profits that beat expectations.

Exxon Mobil was flat after its results, and the drug maker Merck fell 3.1 percent. While Merck’s profit was ahead of forecasts, it gave a cautious outlook on 2013.

The S.P. 500 advanced 5.1 percent in January, with gains driven by a sturdy start to the earnings season and a compromise in Washington that postponed the impact of automatic spending cuts and tax increases that were due to take effect early this year.

Wall Street stocks closed lower on Thursday amid investor caution ahead of the payroll report.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/02/business/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Canon Forecast Falls Short of Expectations

TOKYO — Canon expects a 26.6 percent increase in operating profit this year as it cuts costs and increases revenue — but the projection Wednesday still fell short of analysts’ expectations.

Canon, a camera and printer maker considered a leader in profitability in corporate Japan with its aggressive cost-cutting, is angling for a foothold in the growing market for mirrorless cameras with interchangeable lenses, where it faces stiff competition from Sony, Olympus and Nikon.

Canon’s operating profit for the three months that ended Dec. 31 fell 17.9 percent, to ¥77.7 billion, or $853 million, below the average estimate of ¥100.9 billion among seven analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

“Both its full-year earnings and forecast are below market consensus, so the results were seen as negative,” said Makoto Kikuchi, the chief executive of Myojo Asset Management. “Investors have bought Canon on overly high expectations that a weaker yen will lift its bottom line, but such excitement should recede.”

Demand for compact cameras is shrinking as consumers shift to smartphones, while stretched budgets among customers in Europe have eroded sales of Canon’s office printers. And the company, which derives 80 percent of its revenue from overseas, was badly hit by the firmness of the Japanese currency last year. Canon officials said Wednesday that economic recovery in India and China, as well as aggressive economic stimulus policies in Japan, were likely to support the company’s earnings.

The company set its exchange rate assumptions for the business year ending in December at ¥85 to the dollar and ¥115 to the euro, weaker than the average last year of ¥79.96 per dollar and ¥102.8 per euro.

As one of the first blue-chip Japanese companies to report quarterly results, Canon is often seen as a barometer for technology sector earnings.

The company forecast a full-year operating profit of ¥410 billion for the current year through December, compared with the average expectation of a ¥443.3 billion profit among 21 analysts, according to Thomson Reuters StarMine.

Canon’s shares have fallen about 1 percent since the start of last year, underperforming the Nikkei average’s gain of 31 percent. The shares slipped to a three-year low in July, when Canon cut its outlook on fears of shrinking demand in China.

The stock ended nearly 3 percent higher Wednesday before the earnings announcement.

Xerox, with which Canon competes for a share of the global printer market, overshot expectations with its quarterly earnings and maintained its full-year targets as it restructures parts of its business and commits to further cost cuts.

Nikon is due to report its results next Wednesday, with Sony following the next day.

 

 

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/31/technology/canon-forecast-falls-short-of-expectations.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Mortgage Crisis Presents a New Reckoning to Banks

Regulators, prosecutors, investors and insurers have filed dozens of new claims against Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and others, related to more than $1 trillion worth of securities backed by residential mortgages.

Estimates of potential costs from these cases vary widely, but some in the banking industry fear they could reach $300 billion if the institutions lose all of the litigation. Depending on the final price tag, the costs could lower profits and slow the economic recovery by weakening the banks’ ability to lend just as the housing market is showing signs of life.

The banks are battling on three fronts: with prosecutors who accuse them of fraud, with regulators who claim that they duped investors into buying bad mortgage securities, and with investors seeking to force them to buy back the soured loans.

“We are at an all-time high for this mortgage litigation,” said Christopher J. Willis, a lawyer with Ballard Spahr, which handles securities and consumer litigation.

Efforts by the banks to limit their losses could depend on the outcome of one of the highest-stakes lawsuits to date — the $200 billion case that the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which oversees the housing twins Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, filed against 17 banks last year, claiming that they duped the mortgage finance giants into buying shaky securities.

Last month, lawyers for some of the nation’s largest banks descended on a federal appeals court in Manhattan to make their case that the agency had waited too long to sue. A favorable ruling could overturn a decision by Judge Denise L. Cote, who is presiding over the litigation and has so far rejected virtually every defense raised by the banks, and would be cheered in bank boardrooms. It could also allow the banks to avoid federal housing regulators’ claims.

At the same time, though, some major banks are hoping to reach a broad settlement with housing agency officials, according to several people with knowledge of the talks. Although the negotiations are at a very tentative stage, the banks are broaching a potential cease-fire.

As the housing market and the nation’s economy slowly recover from the 2008 financial crisis, Wall Street is vulnerable on several fronts, including tighter regulations assembled in the aftermath of the crisis and continuing investigations into possible rigging of a major international interest rate. But the mortgage lawsuits could be the most devastating and expensive threat, bank analysts say.

“All of Wall Street has essentially refused to deal with the real costs of the litigation that they are up against,” said Christopher Whalen, a senior managing director at Tangent Capital Partners. “The real price tag is terrifying.”

Anticipating painful costs from mortgage litigation, the five major sellers of mortgage-backed securities set aside $22.5 billion as of June 30 just to cushion themselves against demands that they repurchase soured loans from trusts, according to an analysis by Natoma Partners.

But in the most extreme situation, the litigation could empty even more well-stocked reserves and weigh down profits as the banks are forced to pay penance for the subprime housing crisis, according to several senior officials in the industry.

There is no industrywide tally of how much banks have paid since the financial crisis to put the mortgage litigation behind them, but analysts say that future settlements will dwarf the payouts so far. That is because banks, for the most part, have settled only a small fraction of the lawsuits against them.

JPMorgan Chase and Credit Suisse, for example, agreed last month to settle mortgage securities cases with the Securities and Exchange Commission for $417 million, but still face billions of dollars in outstanding claims.

Bank of America is in the most precarious position, analysts say, in part because of its acquisition of the troubled subprime lender Countrywide Financial.

Last year, Bank of America paid $2.5 billion to repurchase troubled mortgages from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and $1.6 billion to Assured Guaranty, which insured the shaky mortgage bonds.

But in October, federal prosecutors in New York accused the bank of perpetrating a fraud through Countrywide by churning out loans at such a fast pace that controls were largely ignored. A settlement in that case could reach well beyond $1 billion because the Justice Department sued the bank under a law that could allow roughly triple the damages incurred by taxpayers.

Bank of America’s attempts to resolve some mortgage litigation with an umbrella settlement have stalled. In June 2011, the bank agreed to pay $8.5 billion to appease investors, including the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Pimco, that lost billions of dollars when the mortgage securities assembled by the bank went bad. But the settlement is in limbo after being challenged by investors. Kathy D. Patrick, the lawyer representing investors, has said she will set her sights on Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo next.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/10/business/banks-face-a-huge-reckoning-in-the-mortgage-mess.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

As Recovery Inches Ahead, Banks Face a New Reckoning

The nation’s largest banks are facing a fresh torrent of lawsuits asserting that they sold shoddy mortgage securities that imploded during the financial crisis, potentially adding significantly to the tens of billions of dollars the banks have already paid to settle other cases.

Regulators, prosecutors, investors and insurers have filed dozens of new claims against Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and others, related to more than $1 trillion worth of securities backed by residential mortgages.

Estimates of potential costs from these cases vary widely, but some in the banking industry fear they could reach $300 billion if the institutions lose all of the litigation. Depending on the final price tag, the costs could lower profits and slow the economic recovery by weakening the banks’ ability to lend just as the housing market is showing signs of life.

The banks are battling on three fronts: with prosecutors who accuse them of fraud, with regulators who claim that they duped investors into buying bad mortgage securities, and with investors seeking to force them to buy back the soured loans.

“We are at an all-time high for this mortgage litigation,” said Christopher J. Willis, a lawyer with Ballard Spahr.

Efforts by the banks to limit their losses could depend on the outcome of one of the highest-stakes lawsuits to date — the $200 billion case that the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which oversees the housing twins Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, filed against 17 banks last year, claiming that they duped the mortgage finance giants into buying shaky securities.

Last month, lawyers for some of the nation’s largest banks descended on a federal appeals court in Manhattan to make their case that the agency had waited too long to sue. A favorable ruling could overturn a decision by Judge Denise L. Cote, who is presiding over the litigation and has so far rejected virtually every defense raised by the banks, and would be cheered in bank boardrooms. It could also allow the banks to avoid federal housing regulators’ claims.

At the same time, though, some major banks are hoping to reach a broad settlement with housing agency officials, according to several people with knowledge of the talks. Although the negotiations are at a very tentative stage, the banks are broaching a potential cease-fire.

As the housing market and the nation’s economy slowly recover from the 2008 financial crisis, Wall Street is vulnerable on several fronts, including tighter regulations assembled in the aftermath of the crisis and continuing investigations into possible rigging of a major international interest rate. But the mortgage lawsuits could be the most devastating and expensive, bank analysts say.

“All of Wall Street has essentially refused to deal with the real costs of the litigation that they are up against,” said Christopher Whalen, a senior managing director at Tangent Capital Partners. “The real price tag is terrifying.”

Anticipating painful costs from mortgage litigation, the five major sellers of mortgage-backed securities set aside $22.5 billion as of June 30 just to cushion themselves against demands that they repurchase soured loans from trusts, according to an analysis by Natoma Partners.

But in the most extreme situation, the litigation could empty even more well-stocked reserves and weigh down profits as the banks are forced to pay penance for the subprime housing crisis, according to several senior officials in the industry.

There is no industrywide tally of how much banks have paid since the financial crisis to put the mortgage litigation behind them, but analysts say that future settlements will dwarf the payouts so far. That is because banks, for the most part, have settled only a small fraction of the lawsuits against them.

JPMorgan Chase and Credit Suisse, for example, agreed last month to settle mortgage securities cases with the Securities and Exchange Commission for $417 million, but still face billions of dollars in outstanding claims.

Bank of America is in the most precarious position, analysts say, in part because of its acquisition of the troubled subprime lender Countrywide Financial.

Last year, Bank of America paid $2.5 billion to repurchase troubled mortgages from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and $1.6 billion to Assured Guaranty, which insured the shaky mortgage bonds.

But in October, federal prosecutors in New York accused the bank of perpetrating a fraud through Countrywide by churning out loans at such a fast pace that controls were largely ignored. A settlement in that case could reach well beyond $1 billion because the Justice Department sued the bank under a law that could allow roughly triple the damages incurred by taxpayers.

Bank of America’s attempts to resolve some mortgage litigation with an umbrella settlement have stalled. In June 2011, the bank agreed to pay $8.5 billion to appease investors, including the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Pimco, that lost billions of dollars when the mortgage securities assembled by the bank went bad. But the settlement is in limbo after being challenged by investors. Kathy D. Patrick, the lawyer representing investors, has said she will set her sights on Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo next.

Of the more than $1 trillion in troubled mortgage-backed securities remaining, Bank of America has more than $417 billion from Countrywide alone, according to an analysis of lawsuits and company filings. The bank does not disclose the volume of its mortgage litigation reserves.

“We have resolved many Countrywide mortgage-related matters, established large reserves to address these issues and identified a range of possible losses beyond those reserves, which we believe adequately addresses our exposures,” said Lawrence Grayson, a spokesman for Bank of America.

Adding to the legal fracas, the New York attorney general, Eric T. Schneiderman, accused Credit Suisse last month of perpetrating an $11.2 billion fraud by deceiving investors into buying shoddy mortgage-backed securities. According to the complaint, the bank dismissed flaws in the loans packaged into securities even while assuring investors that the quality was sound. The bank disputes the claims.

It is the second time that Mr. Schneiderman — who is also co-chairman of the Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities Working Group, created by President Obama in January — has taken aim at Wall Street for problems related to the subprime mortgage morass. In October, he filed a civil suit in New York State Supreme Court against Bear Stearns Company, which JPMorgan Chase bought in 2008. The complaint claims that Bear Stearns and its lending unit harmed investors who bought mortgage securities put together from 2005 through 2007. JPMorgan denies the allegations.

Another potentially costly headache for the banks are the demands from a number of private investors who want the banks to buy back securities that violated representations and warranties vouching for the loans.

JPMorgan Chase told investors that as of the second quarter of this year, it was contending with more than $3.5 billion in repurchase demands. In the same quarter, it received more than $1.5 billion in fresh demands. Bank of America reported that as of the second quarter, it was dealing with more than $22 billion in unresolved demands, more than $8 billion of which were received during that quarter.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/10/business/banks-face-a-huge-reckoning-in-the-mortgage-mess.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

California Shows Signs of Resurgence

California reported a 10.1 percent unemployment rate last month, down from 11.5 percent in October 2011 and the lowest since February 2009. In September, California had its biggest month-to-month drop in unemployment in the 36 years the state has collected statistics, from 10.6 percent to 10.2 percent, though the state still has the third-highest jobless rate in the nation.

The housing market, whose collapse in a storm of foreclosures helped worsen the economic decline, has snapped back in many, though not all, parts of the state. Houses are sitting on the market for a shorter time and selling at higher prices, and new home construction is rising. Home sales rose 25 percent in Southern California in October compared with a year earlier.

After years of spending cuts and annual state budget deficits larger than the entire budgets of some states, this month the independent California Legislative Analyst’s Office projected a deficit for next year of $1.9 billion — down from $25 billion at one point — and said California might post a $1 billion surplus in 2014, even accounting for the tendency of these projections to vary markedly from year to year.

A reason for the change, in addition to a series of deep budget cuts in recent years, was voter approval of Proposition 30, promoted by Gov. Jerry Brown to raise taxes temporarily to avoid up to $6 billion in education cuts.

“The state’s economic recovery, prior budget cuts and the additional, temporary taxes provided by Proposition 30 have combined to bring California to a promising moment: the possible end of a decade of acute state budget challenges,” the report said. “Our economic and budgetary forecast indicates that California’s leaders face a dramatically smaller budget problem in 2013-14.”

And 38 percent of Californians say the state is heading in the right direction, according to a survey this month by U.S.C. Dornsife/Los Angeles Times. For most places, that figure would seem dismal. But it is double what it was 13 months ago.

California’s recovery echoes a rebound across much of the country; the state suffered not only one of the longest downturns but also one of the most severe. Economists say the turnaround, should it continue, is a positive harbinger for the nation, given the size and diversity of the state’s economy.

Democrats here have been quick to argue that the improvements in fiscal conditions that the state is now projecting after voters approved the temporary tax increase may embolden other states, and Congress, to raise some taxes rather than turn to a new round of cuts.

Yet California still faces major problems. The economic recovery is hardly uniform. Central California and the Inland Empire — the suburban sprawl east of Los Angeles — continue to stagger under the collapse of the construction market, and some economists wonder if they will ever join the coastal cities on the prosperity train. Cities, most recently San Bernardino, are facing bankruptcy, and public employee pension costs loom as a major threat to the state budget and those of many municipalities, including Los Angeles.

A federal report this month said that by some measures, California has the worst poverty in the nation. The river of people coming west in search of the economic dream, traditionally an economic and creative driver, has slowed to a crawl.

Still, the fear among many Californians that the bottom had fallen out appears to be fading. Economists said they were spotting many signs of incipient growth, including a surge in rental costs in the Bay Area, which suggests an influx of people looking for jobs.

“I think the state is turning a corner,” said Enrico Moretti, a professor of economics at the University of California, Berkeley. He said that the recovery was creating regional lines of economic demarcation — “We are going to see a more and more polarized state,” he said — but that over all, California was emerging from the recession.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/28/us/california-shows-signs-of-resurgence.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Letters: Letters: Quickening the Pace of Economic Recovery

Opinion »

Letters: The Role of the Military

Readers respond to an Op-Ed about the unquestioning support of the military-industrial complex and its spending.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/11/business/letters-quickening-the-pace-of-economic-recovery.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Today’s Economist: Casey B. Mulligan: The Baby Boom and Economic Recovery

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Casey B. Mulligan is an economics professor at the University of Chicago. He is the author of “The Redistribution Recession: How Labor Market Distortions Contracted the Economy.”

Thanks in part to the baby boom, the employment-population ratio understates the amount that the economy has recovered.

Today’s Economist

Perspectives from expert contributors.

Before the recession began, 63 of every 100 people age 16 and over were employed. The percentage plummeted to 58.4 by the fourth quarter of 2009 and hasn’t moved far from there since.

A variety of economists have used the ratio and its dynamics to indicate that the economy has hardly recovered. Some say the employment-population ratio’s lack of recovery is because of insufficient government spending; others suggest that it might reflect policy failures of the Obama administration.

But the employment-population ratio is influenced by important factors beyond the control of the president. One of them is the aging of the baby boomers. The employment-population ratio was expected to fall as baby boomers reached retirement ages between 2008 and 2015, even without a recession. For this reason alone, a full recovery would mean an employment-population percentage of about 61.

Although much attention last week was given to the August-to-September increase in part-time employment, the average hours worked among private-sector employees have increased sharply since 2009 and are now about the same as they were before the recession began.

The chart below shows a recovery when the quantity of labor is measured in terms of hours worked per capita (gray) or age-adjusted hours worked per capita (red). Both indexes are set to 100 in December 2007; the age adjustment is taken from my book on the labor market since 2007.

The red series hits bottom at 90.8 and now stands at 94.4. Unlike the employment-population ratio’s negligible recovery, the age-adjusted hours series has recovered about 40 percent — four points — in three years.

To be sure, an additional six points of the recovery still remain, and the labor market continues to be depressed by public policies enacted over the last four to eight years. But some of these policies, such as mortgage assistance, the three increases in the federal minimum wage and the federal rules giving states more flexibility to expand food-stamp participation were begun before President Obama took office and probably would not have been overturned if John McCain had won the 2008 election. Some of those policies had broad political support.

Thanks to demographic and political changes, a full labor market recovery may be beyond any president’s reach.

Article source: http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/10/10/the-baby-boom-and-economic-recovery/?partner=rss&emc=rss