Meanwhile, retailers all trimmed earnings forecasts after an extremely disappointing holiday season. Even the great discounter Wal-Mart announced its profit would miss earlier forecasts after sales rose a meager 1.7% last month. Sales at the Gap, the largest US clothing retailer fell 14%, while revenues at Macy's dropped 4%. Although a dismal holiday season at most retailers was not necessarily unexpected, the announcement from Wal-Malt was a shock and the stock is getting pummeled this morning.
Speaking of shopping and malls, REITs are having a lousy day, more than likely thanks to the dismal retailing update coupled with a fairly bearish article in the Wall Street Journal that reports on a sharp rise in delinquencies in commercial mortgages in the fourth quarter. The article makes three important points in my opinion:
- The commercial real estate market is $3.4 trillion dollars, larger than the $2.6 trillion market for consumer credit. Rising delinquencies in this market is no small matter for the market.
- Many of the loans made in the past three years were based on unrealistic cash flow estimates and may default as cash flows fail to adequately cover debt service.
- Banks and thrifts own nearly 50% of all commercial mortgage outstanding. In particular some 1,400 commercial banks and savings institutions had more than 300% of their Tier 1 capital in commercial mortgages. This implies that if and when the delinquencies really hit a fever pitch, there will be many more bank failures.
Tomorrow will bring the big Kahuna of economic numbers: the employment report. If you aren't quivering in your boots yet, you should plan on starting right about now.
2 comments:
The payroll loss tomorrow is going to be staggering but I wonder how much of a psychological effect it would have if they just announced the unemployment rate. All other major data (CPI, GDP, etc) is based as a % number. In a labor force of more than 100mm people the loss of an extra 300k jobs shouldn't push people over the edge into the Armageddon camp. All the other data we've been seeing probably should though...
I think a lot of what determines if you're in the Armageddon camp or not depends on whether or not you're part of the 1.5 million job losses in q4. Tough to care about the big picture if your best alternative is going back to business school right now.
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