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August 2007
Going
With The Flow?
Going With The Flow?…You
probably saw that the 2Q GDP report came in relatively strong, as
was absolutely no surprise at all.
Inventories were rebuilt relative to the contraction in 1Q,
which is academically additive to the GDP calculation.
Government spending was also quite strong, especially
defense spending. No
surprise at all. Non-residential real estate
construction also added to the strength in the headline number.
But what stood out quite strongly is that personal
consumption expenditures slowed dramatically, up a whopping 1.3%
on an annualized basis. For
those who have read our work over the years, you know that one of
our primary macro themes is that the US economy is not running on
a traditional business cycle, but rather on a credit cycle.
These days that thought can in a sense be extended to the
global economy in that the growth rate in monetary aggregates
among the major industrialized countries across the planet has
been running double digits.
If indeed we are anywhere near
correct in this thematic view of life, data in the 1Q Fed Flow of
Funds statement demands attention and monitoring as we move
forward. Getting
right to the point, the issue that stood out to us like a sore
thumb in reviewing this material was what sure as heck appears to
be change at the margin in terms of the character of household
leverage. Who knows, maybe we’re making a big deal out of
nothing, but what we are seeing are the very first signs of change
in the direction of household leverage acceleration that until now
has been consistent and intact for many years, if not decades in a
good number of cases.
A while back now, we penned a
discussion questioning just what the baby boom generation was
going to do for money/liquidity as they entered retirement years.
Our observation at the time in reviewing household balance sheets
was that households held plenty of real estate and qualified plan
assets (profit sharing, IRA, 401(k)), but very little in the way
of cash. We questioned for how much longer would households,
and especially the baby boomers, be able to continue leveraging up
as retirement years for the boomers were fast approaching.
And lastly, we pointed to the fact that throughout a good portion
of their adult lives, the boomers had learned to embrace asset
inflation for their “savings” activity, evidenced by
appreciation in stocks and real estate, and the lack of
traditional savings as would be calculated by the savings rate.
So let’s start with a very
brief review of household asset inflation circumstances as perhaps
being the genesis responsible for this change at the margin that
we are seeing in recent quarterly numbers. As always, the
charts tell a big story, so we’ll try our best to keep the
commentary short. First, the big overview of asset
inflation. What we’ve done in the chart below is to
calculate the percentage of real estate and equity price
appreciation responsible for household net worth growth by decade
over the last half century plus. As you can see,
increasingly gains in real estate and stock prices have accounted
for ever greater amounts of total household net worth growth since
the 1970’s. And importantly we need to remember that the
baby boomers as a group really began to come of age in the late
1970’s/early 1980’s. In essence, what they’ve known in
their adult life and have thoroughly enjoyed is household asset
class inflation. Of course as a group they drove this very
phenomenon in purchasing ever more residential real estate and
common stocks (in IRA’s, etc.). You get the picture.

But within the current decade itself, and
especially over the last few years, this is starting to diminish
directly due to residential real estate softening. Of
course, directly from Hank Paulson’s mouth in the Fortune
article we cited to you earlier this year, he hopes “stock price
appreciation has more than made up for the decline in residential
real estate values”. (We continue to suggest you not
forget his exact words as we move forward.) Nonetheless, in
1Q of this year, increases in household real estate values and equity
holdings accounted for the smallest amount of total household net
worth expansion in eight years at least.

So
the big question now becomes, how is this impacting household
financial management choices? Let’s get right to what we
believe are the early anecdotes of what may ultimately become very
important change. Change that if it becomes a trend will
most definitely influence domestic economic outcomes ahead.
Very simplistically, let’s start with the character of household
debt. The following chart could not be more basic in
character. It’s the year over year change in household
debt outstanding. What we’ve done is mark the periods in
red of official US recessionary occurrences.

The conceptual message seems
pretty darn clear. When the rate of change in household debt
growth decelerates meaningfully, the US has experienced recession.
You don’t need us to tell you that this makes all the sense in
the world. We’re a consumption based domestic economy that
has been heavily debt financed. When the rate of change in
debt slows, so does the economy. Simple enough?
And what we see in the current period is a very sharp slowdown in
household debt growth as of now. In our minds, this demands
monitoring as we move forward.
Certainly the key area where
household leverage growth has slowed is in mortgage debt
assumption. For now, the following chart is showing us a
relationship we’ve historically seen turn down maybe once a
decade. It’s household mortgage debt as a percentage of
GDP. Now of course the ever growing financing of residential
real estate is a phenomenon we’ve seen play out over sixty years
at least. But you can see the long-term growth channel
we’ve drawn in that has clearly been meaningfully breached to
the upside this decade. As of now, we’re still far above
that long-term channel and just beginning to correct downwards.
Is this the beginning of a meaningful change in trend? For
now it’s too early to call, but this is indeed change after
almost a straight up decade of acceleration. Looking ahead,
we'd suggest it's far from a stretch of the imagination to believe
this trend could revisit the long term up channel.
Personally, it's what we expect. And if so, total household
leverage growth is set to decelerate meaningfully ahead. A
key secular question at this point has to be, as the boomers push
ever closer toward and into retirement years, just how much more
debt will they be willing (or able) to shoulder?

Okay, here’s where we believe the charts and
trends start to get interesting and force us to wake up and take
notice of potentially very meaningful change at the margin just
beginning to develop. The following are all simply updates
of charts we’ve used in the past, but the current period change
will be self-evident. The first in this series is the very
simple relationship between household cash and household
liabilities. You may remember that our definition of
household cash is as broad as can be. We include all
household “banking products”, per se, but also include all
household holdings of bonds, inclusive of Treasuries, Agencies,
corporates, muni’s and mortgage backed paper. Implicitly,
we are assuming bond holdings could be converted to cash at a
moments notice. So what follows is simply total household
cash less total household liabilities over the last six decades.

For now the change is minor in
the current period in that this measure has stopped expanding ever
further into negative territory, but what we believe is important
is that this is the first trend break we’ve seen after sixteen
years of literally consistent deterioration in this relationship.
Again, for now the trend change is minor, but we need to watch in
the periods ahead for corroboration of potential long-term trend
change. And why is this important? A change in trend
as we are now seeing suggests one of two things, or both –
households are borrowing less and/or saving more. And if
indeed that’s the case, we have to believe there is less
household liquidity then available for consumption moving forward.
A corollary to what you see
above are these same numbers presented in a ratio format.
Again, keeping it very simple, below we are looking at household
cash (liquidity) as a percentage of liabilities. As you can
see, this ratio has been in consistent and continual decline since
1989…until the current period. Prior periods of upward
reconciliation in this ratio has been seen in or around official
US recessions - 1970, 1974, early 1980's.

Like the chart of nominal
dollar cash less liabilities, the uptick in the chart above as we
are seeing tells us households are either saving more and/or
paying down debt.
Next
in the hit parade is this same household liability number now set
against disposable personal income. In one sense, it’s a
measure of how much debt households have been able to support
relative to their income at any point in time. And quite
understandably, as interest rates in general have fallen since the
early 1980’s, households have been able to support ever larger
total debt relative to their ongoing and growing income streams.

As you can see, we’ve marked
in the chart with red dots each occurrence whereby this ratio
contracted over the last sixty years. As we’ve noted,
every single time in the last six decades where this ratio has
declined, we’ve seen an official US recession. Again, this
speaks volumes about a debt financed consumer based economy.
Of course in the current period we are once again faced with a
contracting ratio. For now, it’s a one period occurrence.
Too early to sound the alarm bells. But history is telling
us to sit up and take notice.
Even we’ll be the first to
admit that the next chart here is a bit graphically dramatic, but
again very simple in terms of design. What this chart
documents for each period is the relationship between growth in
household liabilities and growth in disposable personal income.
Without sounding outlandish, this ratio has simply collapsed over
the last few quarters after reaching what were unprecedented
heights. As with prior charts, we’ve marked
with red dots the periods where we’ve experienced official US
recessions. Each one of these recessionary periods is
characterized as having happened with a decline in this ratio.
Of course absolutely nothing over the last half century even comes
close to what has occurred over the last five+ years in terms of
the magnitude of expansion and contraction.

As
we promised, trying to keep it short, there you have it.
Although we believe each individual chart tells its own story, our
main point in this discussion is that collectively, these
relationships represent multi-year or multi-decade trend breaks
for now. They are now occurring in simultaneous fashion.
Just a coincidence? We
think not. Moreover, we suggest an important need for continual
monitoring as these trends quite similarly hug trends in powerful
demographic changes. Could it really be that as the boomers
push near and into retirement, what has been their dramatic impact
on asset inflation through continual expansion in household
leverage is changing? We believe this is indeed the primary
question and message to continue to monitor in these
relationships. As we’ve suggested many a time, the credit
cycle is the key. And this is a slice of the broader credit
cycle as it applies to households. Households key to
longer-term consumption trends important to both the US domestic
and many a foreign exporting economy. You know we’ll be
checking back in on a quarterly basis to monitor whether these
initial trend changes remain intact, or are simply blips on the
ever-growing leverage expansion screen.
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