Monday, June 22, 2009

California collapsing. US Economy Next


California Collapsing

by Martin D. Weiss, Ph.D. 06-22-09

Washington and Wall Street seem to be treating California as if it were a sideshow in the financial circus of these turbulent times.

It’s not.

California is home to the largest manufacturing belt in the United States and to Silicon Valley, the nation’s largest high-tech center.

California is America’s most populous state with 38 million people. Its GDP of $1.8 trillion is the largest in the U.S. Its economy is bigger than those of Russia, Brazil, Canada, or India.

And it’s collapsing.

Major California counties are ground zero in the continuing mortgage meltdown:

Los Angeles County with 5.32 percent of mortgages 90 days past due … Monterrey County, 8.02 percent … Imperial, 8.13 … San Bernadino, 8.66 … Madeira, 9.21 … San Joaquin, 9.53 … Riverside, 10.2 … Merced, 10.57 … and more!

California’s inventory of foreclosed homes is skyrocketing. Home prices are plunging. And the impact of surging unemployment is just beginning to show up in the data …

Worst Unemployment in 64 Years

The state’s unemployment rate has surged to 11.5 percent, the worst since World War II.


Last month, California lost 68,900 jobs. And since July 2007, it has lost 859,000 jobs, including 739,500 just in the past 12 months.

Even if the economy recovers, an unlikely scenario in my view, economists agree that California will continue to be slammed by layoffs, at least through the end of this year and probably well into 2010.

And even assuming a national recovery, UCLA’s Anderson Forecast projects an average unemployment rate of 12.1 percent from this fall through next spring.
What about without a national recovery? California’s jobless could go beyond 15 percent.

Worse, if you include part-time workers seeking full-time work plus workers who have given up looking entirely, it could reach 25 percent, exceeding the worst national unemployment levels of the Great Depression.


“Our wallet is empty.
Our bank is closed. And
our credit is dried up.”

These are not the words of a Dr. Doom in New York or a forlorn banker in Georgia. They represent the confession of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger before a rare joint session of the California legislature … and with no exaggeration!

The state faces a stunning $24.3 billion budget deficit, even assuming no significant deterioration in the economy from this point onward. And the state has lost virtually all hope of President Obama declaring, “California is too big to fail.”

California State Treasurer Bill Lockyer tried to make that argument to Washington, and did so with great vigor. But he was rejected. After the long line-up of failed companies with hat in hand in recent months — on the steps of Congress or the White House lawn — some folks in government finally appear to have learned how to just say “no.”

“You’re on your own,” is the message from the president to the governor. “Beyond your share of the stimulus package, that’s it! No more!”

Result: The inevitability of massive state cutbacks, including large numbers of state jobs getting axed — all while the California jobless rate is already 11.5 percent.

How many state jobs are in jeopardy? Right now, Schwarzenegger is proposing laying off 5,000 state employees, as well as slashing education and social welfare programs. But the Anderson Forecast projects that Schwarzenegger’s budget cuts will eventually result in 64,000 job cuts from state government plus countless private-sector and local government jobs.

Massive Downgrades Coming

California’s credit rating is already the lowest among all U.S. states.

But with Moody’s, S&P, and Fitch still greatly influenced by massive conflicts of interest, it’s not nearly low enough.

And sure enough, on Friday, Moody’s tacitly admitted as much, announcing that it may have to cut California’s rating by several notches in one fell swoop!

Standard & Poor’s put California on watch for a possible downgrade a few days earlier. Fitch did the same May 29.

The big problem: Once downgraded, California’s rating is likely to fall below the minimal level legally required for most money market funds, forcing these funds to dump California paper posthaste.

Moody’s wrote:
“If the Legislature does not take action quickly, the state’s cash situation will deteriorate to the point where the controller will have to delay most non-priority payments in July. … Lack of action could result in a multi-notch downgrade.”

But lack of action is precisely what Sacramento is now becoming most famous for. In fact, in their latest scuffle, Democrats proposed a budget that would raise $2 billion from cigarette taxes and oil companies. But the governor promptly vetoed the plan. So now Sacramento is in a new, escalating battle over the deficit just weeks before the state is expected to run out of cash to meet payroll and other bills.

State officials continue to insist that a state default is unthinkable … much like GM executives said their bankruptcy could never happen.

In my view, there is a very HIGH probability that California will default.
It’s obvious its debt merits a junk bond rating from every Wall Street rating agency.

And it’s equally obvious that the ratings agencies are artificially inflating the rating, stalling downgrades, and grossly understating the risk to investors.

My recommendations:

1. If you wait for Moody’s or S&P to act, it could be too late. Even if you can’t get what you might consider a good price, sell all California paper now!

2. Seriously consider dumping all tax-exempt bonds. I know the income is better than equivalent Treasuries. But if California defaults, it could set off a chain reaction of bond price plunges and defaults throughout the municipal bond market.

3. Don’t underestimate the impact California’s depression is having — and will continue to have — on the rest of the U.S. economy. At $1.8 trillion, the state’s GDP is so large, any further deterioration could wipe out every so-called “green shoot” in the national economy seen to date.

4. Stay safe, with a big portion of your nest egg in cash, tucked away in short-term Treasury bills … and with a very modest portion in gold, as an insurance policy against a dollar decline.

Good luck and God bless!
Martin

Link

36 comments:

  1. Another collapse is imminent article...How refreshing after 6 months of these arrticles...collapse already..

    ReplyDelete
  2. Yeah! Crash.

    The last note is ignorant. T-bills? Cash? + a little bit of gold. No, get out of the dollar as much as possible and get anything REAL outside of cash.

    T-bills and cash - still laughing. That shit is going to be wiped out.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I guess a Ph.D means you are dumb enough to hold cash as a hedge against a declining dollar. As an insurance policy of sorts. Funny. That is like saying you expect the stock market to crash, so buy stocks.

    No folks. Take any cash you can spare and buy commodities you need to survive - food, water. Then silver; better than gold.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Well #3, my theory is that Doctor Weiss (PhD) read Bob Chapmans most recent International Forecaster and subconsciously registed the part about the rumours of an upcoming bank holiday in the latter part of this year.
    He may not know _why_ he's recommending you hold cash on a conscious level, but subconsciously the old 'cash is king' revelation of the last great Depression is leaking to the surface.

    If you do hold gold or precious metals, don't put it in a safety deposit box , or your deposit will be safe even from you if they declare martial law.

    Rumour has it that a US nationwide unemployment rate (U3, not U6, of course) of 14% was discussed at the last Bilderbergers.
    That sounds about right. That also works out to something like 28% real unemployment , if we go by the same standards they used in the great depression.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Stating the obvious here but cash was king in the great depression because it was rare. We now have the private banking cartel aka the Federal Reserve printing trillions of it, nonstop, 24/7 with aux ink tanks and battery backup generators.

    We have foreigners finally understanding that we are trading worthless paper for actual goods.

    Hyperinflation and the destruction of the dollar is coming. When not if.

    This Weiss guy (get it?) is like so many economists now. They will write long volumes about what is happening but when you are starving for some words of advice you get wrong advice. The kind that means you will lose it all and starve to death.

    "Dr" Weiss PHd- and I do hate titles - they won't mean shit down the road - try to be more careful with your recommendations please. Unless you really want people to start saving in dollars. If that is the case, you're an idiot.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I still remember when my vietnamese friend had, literally, trashbags of dollars of various denominations stored in his house left over from vietnam. it was so worthless we used it for playing poker but it carried no real cash value. So it was like monopoly money, which is the same way the dollar is being played with right now, unbeknownst to many of the people it is changing hands with now. But when people start getting a clue - time to get out the trash bags.

    ReplyDelete
  7. It's gonna get worse.
    Much worse.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Oh the system has already crashed my friends do not worry about that . It's with the complicity of the FED , treasury and your Abominable Obama that is delaying the present massive correction . The longer they postpone the inevitable , the bigger this BAILOUT bubble will pop , and then my friends is when the SWHTF . The system crashed back in September remember ? In september was our Black October 1929 , dont forget that it took til 1933 for the market to bottom and until 1954 for the markets to come back to healthyness

    ReplyDelete
  9. wtf is ...e... i posted that message and e isnt my name , it's trex

    ReplyDelete
  10. Well Trex, maybe you where ROLLING at the time!
    HEH

    but seriously, I mark July 14th, 2007 as the beginning of the end. That's the day the Bear Stearns Hedge fund blew up (mainly due to a margin call by JP Morgan).

    Yeahp.

    That's the day they blew it all up, those stinkin' humans.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Blue Collar and ProudJune 23, 2009 at 6:23 PM

    California is always the bellwether for the rest of the country. The situation there is the worst in the US right now. Unemployment is not as high as it was in the 1930s, but the deficits are much, much higher - and the spending goes one.

    ReplyDelete
  12. by dDmx
    Hi all. I`m from Russia.
    Are you need real advices "how to live without economics and without money"? We had it since `91 till `00.
    IMHO in yours case it would be much worse: folks have much more guns; much more complexity national (forget right word) picture; peoples not so near to earth (means that we can grew up vegetables, meat, - you can`t).
    If you wont, you can get to www.avanturist.org (Russian`s forum were world crisis are discussed), we will make specal thread for eanglish discussion.
    I'll be back. (Just like California's governor - Arnold Terminator :)

    ReplyDelete
  13. The value of dollars versus anything else rests in the minds of those who use and accept it. Keep in mind other countries are currently debasing their currencies too.
    For the time being (despite its flaws) folks still seem to regard the USD as a major player in world markets (rumors of its demise are greatly exaggerated).

    Now many of you are calling for its imminent demise, however I don't see that happening suddenly (operative word "Suddenly") unless there's a significant event to trigger it ... e.g. US debt default, U.S. "Bank Holiday", Hositilies in a stragetic area that goes against U.S. interests, Comex can't deliver.

    Barring something such as those, it appears a slow "devolution" will occur in the U.S.
    Charles Hugh Smith had an insightful blog post on this the other day.

    Sadly, it stuck a chord in me as the way things just might be the way things. The U.S. won't go out in a blaze, rather just fade away.

    ReplyDelete
  14. There was a writer named Mabus Rising on the Yahoo boards.
    She wrote weird stuff 18 months ago....before anyone else was....and all the weird stuff she wrote, like WAMU and Lehman going under...happened
    Like she saw it all before ..
    Crazy chick man....

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