Global economic data signal trouble. Headlines reflect worsening conditions.
The Financial Times said America's dismal jobs report and world economic
weakness raise "fears of a sharp global slowdown" or worse.
According to the London Guardian, Britain and Euroland face a "deeper
recession after figures showed manufacturing output slumped at its
fastest" rate in three years.
The Daily Telegraph said oil hit a 16th month low below $100 a barrel.
At Friday's close, WTI crude stood at $83.26. Brent slumped to $98.63.
Declining prices signal weakness.
The London Independent worried about "worldwide panic" as Dow prices
plunged 275 points. It was the worst single day's performance since last
year.
The Daily Mail commented on the "appalling state" of the world economy.
The Wall Street Journal groaned about the "grim jobs data." It wasn't
the only sign of weakness. Separate Friday reports showed other
troublesome signs. Expect economic conditions to keep heading south.
New York Times columnist Floyd Norris said Friday's jobs report "was worse than almost anyone expected."
"There is absolutely no prospect" for positive change soon. With
Europe's recession deepening, America won't escape the fallout. When
either area sneezes, the other catches cold, and it spreads.
Europe faces serious economic trouble. Plunging euro valuations reflect it. A crisis of confidence exists.
Bankia's insolvency was Spain's largest ever bank collapse. Other
Spanish banks are troubled. So are Italian ones. Intesa Sanpaolo shares
slumped to a 15-year low. UniCredit fell to almost generation ago
valuations.
Europe's entire banking system risks collapse. Greek and Spanish banks
face panic withdrawals. In April, Spanish retail sales plunged 9.8%. It
was the sharpest monthly drop on record.
Chinese manufacturing declined for the tenth time in eleven months. Bank
lending missed government targets by about $200 billion.
Brazil shows increasing weakness. Q I figures barely eked out a +0.2
print. India's doing no better. Its year-over-year Q I GDP growth hit a
nine-year low. Q I, in fact, contracted.
South Korea's heading south. So is Australia. A front page Wall Street
Journal article headlined "Asia Strains under Euro Crisis." Another back
page one discussed African nations feeling the pinch.
UK manufacturing hit its lowest level since May 2009. In May, its PMI
slumped 4.3 points to 45.9. It showed contraction. It was the sharpest
single month decline since November 2008.
In May, commodity prices had their worst decline in four years. Their
five consecutive week slump was the worst performance in five yeas.
US and Europe face rising unemployment. Official Greek and Spanish rates
approach 25%. For youths, it's about 50%. Across Euroland it's 11% and
rising.
Shadowstats has US unemployment at nearly 23%, inflation at 6%, GDP at minus 2%, and money supply growth declining.
The IMF is considering bailing out Spain. At issue is how given its
deepening trouble. Its impossible math shows a 9% fiscal deficit, no
nominal growth, and 6.67% 10-year rates at Friday's closing prices.
A June 1 AP report asked how Spain's "government can pay for a
bailout...?" Conditions across Europe are so troubled that the Wall
Street Journal said "multinational companies are rehearsing for any
number of contingencies," and they all look bad.
Independent economists call the euro a failed experiment. Some admitted
it years ago. Eventual dissolution looks certain. The longer the can's
kicked down the road, the harder breaking up will be.
America's May jobs report was awful. Headline U-3 numbers reported +69K.
Shadowstats reported 20K. Consensus predicted +150K. March and April
downward revisions totaled 49K. Expect future reports to drop them
further. Full-time jobs are evaporating like water in summer heat.
The sensitive goods-producing sector dropped 15K. It was the first
decline in nine months. More ahead looks certain. Long-term unemployment
reached 5.4 million. It rose 300,000 over April. Duration approaches 40
weeks.
These numbers and others reflect Depression conditions. Policies aren't
addressing them. Obama talks but doesn't act. In an election year, it's
unprecedented. If conditions worsen as looks likely, he may be another
one-term president. Current polls show him either even with Romney or
behind.
His so-called growth package includes corporate handouts, more benefits
for rich elites, and deregulation when opposite measures are needed.
His jobs program is smoke and mirrors duplicity combined with more for
corporate giants at the expense of troubled households. Trickle down
failed years ago.
Nonetheless, Obamanomics feature it. Since taking office, he's done
virtually nothing to create jobs and improve living standards for
millions of Americans needing help.
He waged ruthless class war from day one. Wealth extremes are
unprecedented. Corporate profits come at the expense of public pain.
Expect much worse ahead.
Voter sentiment mostly reflects pocket book issues. Given current dire
conditions, it's certainly true now. Declining consumer confidence
reflects it. So do unemployment and poverty levels.
Economic activity is clearly heading south. In May, incomes dropped
0.2%. They've fallen for two of the past three months. Chicago's PMI
plunged from April's 56.2 to 52.7. Consensus expected 56.8. It was the
worse read since September 2009. It matched December 2007 when recession
conditions began.
PMI components were also abysmal. Order backlogs fell from 56.8 to 46.3.
In the past 30 years, only three declines matched May. Other regional
manufacturing indexes also showed softness.
Unprecedented low Treasury yields signal trouble. TIPs sunk below 0%. So
did German 2-year notes. Its 10-year bunds yield 1.1641%. Inflation
adjusted shows negative returns. Ten-year US Treasuries stand at 1.46%.
They're also negative when inflation adjusted.
Five months remain until America's election. Hope springs eternal every
time. After Obama won in November 2008, Chicago erupted like New Year's
eve. Hangover conditions followed. Despair deepened them.
Nothing ahead shows promise. Wrongheaded policies assure it. As 2013
approaches, grim conditions are worsening. Relief is nowhere in sight.
Whichever party wins in November, things won't change. It's hard
imagining how much longer suffering millions will tolerate it. Sooner or
later they're bound to erupt. It's their only chance.
A Final Comment
Economist Jack Rasmus provides incisive economic analysis. He appears regularly on the Progressive Radio News Hour (PRNH).
He called last winter's jobs numbers "grossly overestimated."
Statistical adjustments were manipulated and questionable. Eventually
truths come out. Today's reality shows "stagnant jobs growth" and
"economic relapse."
Housing remains in Depression. So is overall construction. Obama's
efforts to stimulate exports "produced a mere dribble of new jobs." Most
are part-time/low pay/low benefit ones.
State and local governments keep laying off thousands of employees
monthly. Hundreds of thousands of workers exit the labor force monthly
for want of job opportunities.
Bank lending to small businesses is moribund. Median household incomes
are declining while food, healthcare, energy, education, and other costs
rise.
Personal consumption is "stumbling along" at best. Rasmus comments often
on air how mainstream economists virtually always get it wrong.
They're behind the curve. They're sanguine when caution and concerns are
warranted. They promote illusory economic growth and prosperity. They
ignore reality independent analysts stress.
Last fall, Rasmus predicted a sharply slowing global economy in 2012, a
troubled Eurozone, and hard landing prospects for China, Brazil and
elsewhere. America will feel the fallout, he said.
Expect worse conditions ahead. Before yearend, Democrat and Republican
leaders will implement $2 - 4 trillion spending cuts plus another $2.2
trillion scheduled to begin in January.
They'll call it deficit reduction, not austerity. It'll hit America's
economy like a hammer when conditions can least tolerate it. The effect
on GDP will be dramatic.
If all agreed on cuts kick in, it will have up to a 4% negative impact
on national output. Imagine how much more intense today's crisis will
become.
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