2009
Jun 19

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Amid the nervous chatter about green shoots and imminent recovery, it is difficult for anyone outside the deluded and lavishly subsidized financial sector or its laptop-wielding lapdogs in the business media to get too optimistic, as they are buffeted by reports of record foreclosures, record commercial bankruptcies, and, today, record unemployment.

The latest figures from the federal government put the national U3 rate at 9.4 percent, with the U6 at 16.4 percent. According to the Associated Press :

“The unemployment rate in the West jumped over 10 percent last month, the first time that regional threshold has been broken in about 25 years. On the state level, eight set record-highs and only two — Nebraska and Vermont — did not report increases.

The Labor Department reported Friday that 48 states and the District of Columbia saw employment conditions deteriorate last month. The fallout from the longest recession since World War II, was the worst in Michigan as automakers cut tens of thousands of jobs. Its unemployment rate rose to 14.1 percent.

The West region reported the highest jobless rate at 10.1 percent. The last time any region had a rate of at least 10 percent was September 1983, when the country was emerging from a severe recession.

The region is home to California, where the jobless rate jumped to a record 11.5 percent last month, Nevada, where it’s a record 11.3 percent, and other states that have been slammed when the housing boom went bust — snatching jobs and wealth.

The other six states that set new highs on records dating to 1976 were: North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Florida and Georgia.”

The situation is no longer confined to the Western region, or to the worst of the residential bubble states, as deteriorating fundamentals undermine the US economy in more serious and lasting ways than even during the 1930’s. CNN reports that thirteen states now have official unemployment rates above 10 percent :

“Several states and regions posted their highest unemployment rate since the report debuted in 1976.

Over the year, jobless rates were higher in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

Michigan once again led the nation with a 14.1% jobless rate, up from 12.9% a month earlier, followed again by Oregon at 12.4%, up from 12% in April. Thirteen states have rates above 10%.”

Associated Press : Jobless rate in Western US tops 10 percent

CNN Money : Jobless rate rises in nearly all states

Bureau of Labor Statistics : The Employment Situation : May 2009

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2009
Jun 19

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Just as the some of the nation’s largest and most coddled banks step up to ostentatiously “repay” a tiny fraction of the money that the Treasury and Federal Reserve have funneled to them through a purposely bewildering variety of mechanisms since August 2007, the ratings agencies have discovered similar widespread insolvency at the regional and super regional level. According to Reuters :

“Standard & Poor’s on Wednesday cut its ratings on 18 banks citing expectations of more difficult operating conditions due to volatile financial markets and tighter regulation.

Among the rating changes, S&P cut the counterparty credit ratings of Wells Fargo & Co by one notch to AA-minus, U.S. Bancorp by two notches to A-plus and Fifth Third Bancorp by two notches to BBB.

S&P also downgraded the counterparty credit ratings of Huntington Bancshares and Carolina First Bank by two notches to junk-status BB-plus with a negative outlook. It also cut Citizens Republic Bancorp counterparty credit rating by three notches to BB-minus with a negative outlook.”

The Associated Press reports that S&P analysts predict “permanent repercussions” still to come from the banking crisis that so many believe is over :

“Widescale changes to the industry because of the credit crisis and ongoing recession will dramatically alter the banking landscape, S&P credit analyst Rodrigo Quintanilla said in a release.

‘We believe the banking industry is undergoing a structural transformation that may include radical changes with permanent repercussions,’ Quintanilla said. ‘Financial institutions are now shedding balance-sheet risk and altering funding profiles and strategies for the marketplace’s new reality. Such a transition period justifies lower ratings as industry players implement changes.’”

Reuters : S&P cuts credit ratings on 18 US banks

Associated Press : Standard & Poor’s cuts ratings on 18 banks

Bloomberg : U.S. Stocks Fall, Led by Banks on Downgrade; Health Shares Gain

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