Posted on 12/02/2007 5:27:41 PM PST by DeaconBenjamin
The credit crunch is hammering the US, which now faces a likely recession. Things dont look great for the UK either; here growth could plunge to 1 per cent next year. # News and analysis on the credit crisis
There is a near-consensus among economists, in fact, that the Anglo-Saxon world created this credit crunch and will likely bear the most pain. advertisement
The eurozone, it is widely assumed, has been less affected by sub-prime. Most investment banks predict the 13-country region will out-perform the UK in 2008.
A slew of recent data tells me we should now question that assumption. If Im right, and the eurozone does a face serious drop, us Brits would be foolish to grin. We like to revel in Continental misfortunes, but the single currency area matters hugely accounting for three-fifths of UK trade, more than four times as much as the States.
The reason the eurozone now worries me is the emerging picture of sharply rising consumer prices on the one hand, and falling output on the other. Just like the Bank of England, the European Central Bank will on Thursday try to set monetary policy not only to deal with inflation, but also bolster growth.
Eurozone base rates are likely to be held at 4 per cent for the sixth month in a row. Most observers think if they do shift this week, the only possible move is up.
Thats because, despite the credit crunch, the ECBs rhetoric has remained very hawkish. But, in reality, eurozone policy makers now face a classic growth-inflation dilemma one they share with other Western central banks.
The ECBs predicament is made worse, though, by the euro/dollar exchange rate, and the single currencys structural flaws. These two unique aspects of the regions quandary are why its prospects are more gloomy than assumed.
Evidence that eurozone growth is souring is now coming thick and fast. In Germany, the regions powerhouse, retail sales fell 3.3 per cent between September and October we learnt last week with consumer spending frail in many other member states too. Europes bellwether Economic Sentiment Indicator also fell for the sixth consecutive month.
With weakening global demand slowing industrial growth, the eurozones crucial manufacturing sector is starting to suffer as well. The closely-watched IFO index of German business sentiment is well below its December peak. Europes PMI industrial index has also dropped close to 50 a value which, in previous years, has provoked interest rate cuts.
But the ECB will have a big problem lowering rates this Thursday or anytime soon because eurozone inflation jumped to 3 per cent in November, up from 2.6 per cent the month before. Inflation has almost doubled since the summer with rising oil and food costs causing consumer prices to balloon.
Germanys CPI grew 3.3 per cent last month a 13-year high. And price pressures elsewhere mean eurozone inflation will stay above the ECBs 2 per cent target for months to come.
Then, of course, theres the US currency that is, the impact of the feeble greenback on the euro. Over the last year, the single currency has risen more than 15 per cent against the dollar, which has seen investors dump US assets. This makes European leaders see red, of course, as a rising currency undermines exports and jobs.
Some say such protests are overdone. After all, a stronger euro dulls the impact of more expensive oil. Dollar oil prices have risen 90 per cent since January, compared with 60 per cent in euros.
The eurozone also sends less than a tenth of its exports to the US. So, on a trade-weighted basis, the euro is up only 7 per cent against the dollar since January less than half the straight euro-dollar rise.
Not worth reading past the first sentence.
Correct. Blah,blah,blah,blah,yada,yada,yada!
Talked to a real estate agent the other day who said the credit market in Atlanta has dried up. House sales are dropping. Care to recompute?
My barber said it hasn’t. My barber is right about a lot more things than most realtors.
What a joke - look at the Shanghai index.
This author thinks we’re going to be the only ones feeling pain ?
Not likely.
I talk to my barber about fishing and local goings on. I wouldn’t trust him as an expert on the credit market though.
Shanghai is down 22% from it’s peak and with a 55 P/E ratio still, it’s probably got a lot more to fall.
No Joke, Atlanta could be a disaster zone in a few months.
No water means you must exit to survive. It is that bleak, and that simple. What bank would make a loan in Atlanta now? A crazy one. Why are house prices dropping there? You may not be able to flush a toilet there in May or June.
You are right but I don’t think that’s the reason for the credit market drying up.
Same where I’m at (western NC) and we’re in the same drought status as Atlanta. That’s one of the reasons I think the credit crunch isn’t related to the weather but instead to over building and speculation.
I swear, everything from the other side of the pond which involved either economics or politics is so insidiously lopsided and wrong its beyond random probability and borders on criminality.
At least he has a job.
Taxes are low?> LOW?!? In PA? Are yo nuts? I lived there for a few years. I got a tax bill for my wife. Her occupation tax as a HouseWife! Sales tax, school tax, Borough tax, Sinking tax, Income tax, County tax. Bah, I moved to TN. Now theres some low taxes.
The ECB will do what they always do, lie.
They will make up the numbers to do whatever they want.
Nah, just jealousy.
They will make up the numbers to do whatever they want.
Sticking their heads in the sand will not solve the problem.
(sarcasm on)
LA LA LALLALALALALALALA
I CAN”T HEAR YOU
LALALALALALALALALALAAA
(sarcasm off)
Ping!
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