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Corporate debt saps nation: Credit stress hits Depression level
Denver Post ^ | August 18, 2002 | Jennifer Beauprez

Posted on 08/18/2002 4:26:37 AM PDT by sarcasm

Sunday, August 18, 2002 - U.S. corporate debt nearly doubled in the past five years - to $3.9 trillion by the month of May.

U.S. consumers spent that same amount on all services - from haircuts to dog grooming - during 2001.

The burden, already buckling many companies under the load, threatens to send the nation into a prolonged recession.

"We're looking at an economic heart attack in front of us," said John Riley, president of Cornerstone Investment Services, a money management firm in Providence, R.I. "We're faced with owning up to the excesses of the late 1990s."

In 1997, U.S. corporate debt - which includes bonds issued by companies to finance their activities as well as bank loans - was $2 trillion, according to the Bond Market Association.

Moody's Investor Research now says the nation is in the worst credit stress since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

The result, thus far: Forty-two companies defaulted on $46 billion in loans during the second quarter, breaking the record in dollars, according to a July report by Moody's.

The tally was double the volume during the same time last year. For the first half of this year, companies failed to pay $76.6 billion in loans, a 64 percent increase over the first half of 2001.

Moody's expects the defaults will keep rolling in through next summer but predicts the trend has already reached its peak.

Yet as those defaults keep coming, the economy will continue to feel the pain, quashing investor and lender confidence and slowing hiring, expansion and new investment elsewhere.

The fallout could even lead to higher monthly premiums on the average person's life, car or home insurance policy, said Mac Clouse, director of the University of Denver's Reiman School of Finance.

Why? Because life insurance companies, pension funds and investors buy bonds - which historically are safer than stocks - with the intent of earning interest on that debt. Insurance companies put 90 percent of their investments into the bond markets, which will inevitably suffer when companies can't make their payments.

"If there are a lot of claims and fewer dollars to pay the claims, the only way they can make that up is with higher premiums," Clouse said.

The companies that don't default and struggle to pay down their debt may still do harm to the economy with cutbacks. Experts say more layoffs, fewer services and little new hiring will result as companies preserve cash for debt payments.

"It's a bunch of dominoes that could collapse," said Mike Gasior, president of American Financial Service, which trains and consults for institutional investors. "All that money is going to have to be paid back."

But that wasn't the logic back in the heyday of the late 1990s.

Companies borrowed billions to grow as quickly as possible. Cable TV and telecommunications companies were the biggest borrowers in their pursuit of building the world's high-speed Internet and phone connections. Those plans collapsed with the economy.

Telecom companies accounted for 61 percent of loan defaults during the second quarter of this year, according to Moody's. Last year, pundits compared the telecom meltdown to the savings-and-loan crisis that cost U.S. taxpayers $150 billion a decade ago.

"There was a lot of momentum, and you had to keep up," said Clouse of DU. "Your stock price said you were a growth firm. That's what the market was expecting. So, well, you had to grow."

That growth was even more attractive because of low interest rates, tax-deductible interest and the wide availability of money.

Just as investors chased dot-coms, they also jumped at the chance to lend to growth companies, Gasior said.

"You could bring any debt deal to the market, and there was money to back it up," Gasior said. "It was the same hubris of the Internet stocks."

The 29 most indebted U.S. companies, not counting financial companies, piled on $446 billion in debt over the past five years, Denver Post research shows.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
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1 posted on 08/18/2002 4:26:37 AM PDT by sarcasm
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To: sarcasm
Special.
2 posted on 08/18/2002 4:31:31 AM PDT by DB
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To: sarcasm
Does anyone know if some big banks are receiving secret bailouts from the federal reserve that we don't know about? I know I could use a bailout.
3 posted on 08/18/2002 4:41:07 AM PDT by Red Jones
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To: Red Jones
The loan extended to Brazil was a bank bailout.
4 posted on 08/18/2002 4:44:46 AM PDT by sarcasm
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To: sarcasm
Depression coming?
5 posted on 08/18/2002 4:52:51 AM PDT by BlackJack
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To: BlackJack
Don't know but this economy scares the hell out of me.
6 posted on 08/18/2002 4:56:52 AM PDT by sarcasm
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To: sarcasm
Looks like local/state gubermints will be screaming for MORE money..i.e. taxes.
7 posted on 08/18/2002 5:03:59 AM PDT by GailA
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To: sarcasm
So what does a person do??
8 posted on 08/18/2002 5:09:58 AM PDT by Ann Archy
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To: GailA
As I've been saying for months, state and local taxes are going to skyrocket after the November elections.
9 posted on 08/18/2002 5:16:48 AM PDT by sarcasm
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To: sarcasm
You mean the Clinton bubble was paid for with credit?
10 posted on 08/18/2002 5:21:59 AM PDT by The Raven
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To: BlackJack
Depression coming?

I sure hope not. We are not a country like we were before the 1930s when we could handle a depression. The minute people don't get their government checks, we can expect riots. Things could get out of hand quite quickly.

11 posted on 08/18/2002 6:07:24 AM PDT by FITZ
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To: GailA
Looks like local/state gubermints will be screaming for MORE money..i.e. taxes.

The one here is because the local taxpayers are leaving in large numbers and those remaining absolutely cannot keep paying. Even with very high taxes, we're losing jobs, our schools are in financial trouble, our county hospital will go bankrupt without federal grants coming in. One out of three people already receives some kind of government check or services. I didn't ever believe the 90s economy was good because it certainly wasn't where I live.

12 posted on 08/18/2002 6:11:07 AM PDT by FITZ
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To: sarcasm
Hysteria on a Sunday morning!
13 posted on 08/18/2002 6:12:13 AM PDT by verity
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To: FITZ
The minute people don't get their government checks, we can expect riots. Things could get out of hand quite quickly.

Turn on the printing presses!

14 posted on 08/18/2002 6:14:46 AM PDT by Beenliedto
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To: verity
Wish I could find the article, but there were some compelling comparisons of 1929-1931 to 2000-2002.
15 posted on 08/18/2002 6:19:33 AM PDT by catfish1957
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Comment #16 Removed by Moderator

To: Beenliedto
Yup. If it gets real bad we will have stagflation. I LIKE my new 15 year fixed.
17 posted on 08/18/2002 6:51:03 AM PDT by eno_
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To: Beenliedto
Turn on the printing presses!

That's what they've been doing ---I don't know how long it can hold up. We have millions of people who never work, never will, they're living a life that appears to be affluent with free housing, cable television, cell phones, cars, and all the food they can eat. They're still really impoverished since they earn 0.

18 posted on 08/18/2002 6:52:08 AM PDT by FITZ
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To: sarcasm
Frankly, I don't think an article that uses a University of Denver professor and two household names like Cornerstone Investment Services and American Financial Services is cause for screaming nightmares.
19 posted on 08/18/2002 7:22:50 AM PDT by gaspar
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To: catfish1957
Wish I could find the article, but there were some compelling comparisons of 1929-1931 to 2000-2002.

History always repeats itself, but never in quite the same way.

20 posted on 08/18/2002 4:50:36 PM PDT by Dec31,1999
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