Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Nation's economic mood darkens as more jobs vanish

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Tuesday January 27, 5:51 pm ET
By Anne D'Innocenzio, AP Retail Writer

Consumer confidence hits record low as Americans worry about withering job and housing markets

NEW YORK (AP) -- This is one recession Americans aren't going to spend their way out of.
Americans are in no mood to spend their way out of this recession.

The Conference Board said Tuesday its Consumer Confidence Index edged down to 37.7 this month, a record low, from a revised 38.6 in December. It stood at about 87 just a year ago.

Americans are battered by headlines about massive job cuts, including thousands at Home Depot, Corning, General Motors and Caterpillar in just the past two days, and are still watching the values of their homes and retirement funds dwindle.

"Virtually, there is no confidence out there," said Bernard Baumohl, chief global economist at The Economic Outlook Group LLC. "Household anxiety has reached a point that we can count them out to get us out of the recession."

Economists believe Americans will remain in a financial funk until they start seeing fundamental improvements in the economy, including a turnaround in the housing and job markets. And two other reports Tuesday suggested that's unlikely to come soon.

The Labor Department announced that state unemployment rates shot up nationwide in December, with Indiana and South Carolina racking up the largest monthly increases. South Carolina's jobless rate bolted to 9.5 percent, more than 2 percentage points above the national rate.

And the Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller 20-city housing index dropped by a record 18.2 percent in November from the same month a year earlier -- the sharpest annual rate since the index's inception in 2000.

The gloomy news initially sent the Dow Jones industrial average lower, but by mid-afternoon it took heart from some positive earnings reports, finishing up about 58 points at 8,174.

President Barack Obama and Congress are scrambling to enact a $825 billion package of increased federal spending, including money for big public works projects and for states, as well as tax cuts to revive the economy.

That could encourage Americans to spend more, but Baumohl believes the relief would be only temporary unless financial institutions become healthy enough to revive lending. Tighter credit has been a challenge for shoppers and businesses alike.

Federal Reserve policymakers are gathering this week to examine what other tools they can use to help ease a recession that started in December 2007. They are all but certain to leave the benchmark interest rate at its current record low.

But without the help of consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of economic activity, the economy faces a slow recovery. In past recessions, consumers had helped the economy dig itself out of its funk.

Americans "are feeling extremely bad about jobs -- both current and expected," said Lynn Franco, director of The Conference Board Consumer Research Center.

The Conference Board survey showed fewer people expect to get raises over the next few months, or for jobs to be plentiful.

Nationally, the unemployment rate, which stands at a 16-year high of 7.2 percent, could hit 10 percent or more later this year or early next year, according to some analysts' estimates. Michigan and Rhode Island already had unemployment rates in double digits last month. And the pink slips keep coming.

Corning Inc. said Tuesday it is cutting 3,500 jobs, or 13 percent of its payroll, as demand slumps for the glass used in flat-screen televisions and computers. A day earlier, tens of thousands of layoffs were announced by Pfizer, GM, Caterpillar, Texas Instruments and Home Depot.

The consumer confidence survey, which sampled 5,000 U.S. households through Jan. 21, showed Americans remain pessimistic. Nearly 48 percent now say business conditions are "bad," while less than 7 percent say conditions are "good."

Shoppers' splurges on everything from sweaters to pillows in recent years have kept factories humming in China and have fueled store expansions and hiring in the United States.

Now the most severe spending pullback in decades is sending a number of stores into liquidation, with Circuit City and discount clothing chain Goody's Family Clothing among the biggest names. The merchants that manage to survive are slashing inventories and closing stores, sending pain to all corners of the economy.

Stores limped through the weakest holiday period in four decades by one measure, and retail sales appear to be only deteriorating in January. The National Retail Federation, the world's largest retail trade group, predicts that retail sales will fall 0.5 percent this year, well below the meager 1.4 percent gain last year.

AP Real Estate Reporter J.W. Elphinstone in New York and AP Economics reporter Jeannine Aversa in Washington contributed to this report.

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Creative Ways to Make Ends Meet

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Check out this video that we found on "Creative Ways to Make Ends Meet" during this recession:




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Thursday, January 8, 2009

Citi reaches deal with lawmakers on home loans

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Citigroup reaches agreement with key senators on mortgage bankruptcy compromise

Alan Zibel, AP Real Estate Writer
Thursday January 8, 2009, 4:32 pm EST

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Democratic lawmakers have reached a deal with Citigroup Inc. on a plan to let bankruptcy judges alter home loans in an effort to prevent foreclosures and urged other lenders to follow suit.

The lawmakers aim to attach the plan to President-elect Barack Obama's economic stimulus legislation, and said Thursday the change in bankruptcy law could ease the foreclosure crisis that has dragged the economy into the worst recession in decades.

The compromise between Citigroup and Sens. Richard Durbin of Illinois, Charles Schumer and Christopher Dodd of Connecticut, would be limited to loans made before the bill is signed. Obama has said he backs the concept.

Schumer said he received calls Thursday from several banks -- which he did not name -- indicating their potential interest in supporting the idea.

"This is a breakthrough day," the senior senator from New York said in a news conference on Capitol Hill. "We've been stymied because the banking industry opposed this simple provision, which is key to getting a floor to the housing market."

New York-based Citi did not immediately comment on the announcement.

The so-called "cramdown" proposal has been backed by Democrats over the past year as a potential solution to the foreclosure crisis. Consumer advocates and Democrats say it would prod the lending industry to be more aggressive about modifying loans because of the looming threat of having a bankruptcy judge involved.

But the lending industry has battled fiercely against the idea, arguing it would force lenders to hike mortgage rates because they would have to charge more for loans that could be altered later by a judge.

"This would hurt the housing market at the exact time we're trying to stimulate it," said Scott Talbott, chief lobbyist at the Financial Services Roundtable, which represents large banks and insurance companies.

To qualify, borrowers would need to demonstrate that they have asked their lender for a loan modification before filing for bankruptcy.

Currently, a 1993 Supreme Court decision bars judges from altering first mortgages on primary homes, though such changes are allowed on loans for vacation homes, motorcycles, boats and other kinds of property.

Consumer advocates say that is unfair, while mortgage lenders contend it benefits the vast majority of borrowers who don't fall into bankruptcy because it keeps mortgage credit for primary residences cheap.

Other attempts by the government to deal with the surge in foreclosures over the past two years haven't made much of a dent in the problem.

A federal program, dubbed Hope for Homeowners, was intended to let 400,000 troubled homeowners swap risky loans for conventional 30-year fixed-rate loans with lower rates. But the early results have been disappointing, with fewer than 400 applications since the program's launch on Oct. 1.

In an interview earlier this week, a lobbyist for the mortgage industry vowed to keep the bankruptcy judge plan out of the economic recovery bill.

"We think that's an unwise move that could delay the stimulus package," said Francis Creighton, the Mortgage Bankers Association's chief lobbyist.

In a speech Thursday at George Mason University outside Washington, Obama asked Congress to work with him "day and night, on weekends if necessary" to pass an economic revival plan within the next few weeks so that it can be ready for his signature shortly after he takes office on Jan. 20

Obama promised to rewrite financial regulations and pledged to launch "a sweeping effort to address the foreclosure crisis so that we can keep responsible families in their homes."

Associated Press Writers Stephen Bernard and Jennifer Loven contributed to this report.

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