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Latest economic data suggests recession
is easing
May 4, 2009 7:17 PM ET
WASHINGTON (AP) - Evidence that housing
is poised to improve and optimism about the
results of banking "stress tests"
raised hopes Monday that the recession is
easing in the United States and helped lift
a key stock market measure into the black
for the year.
Construction spending and pending home
sales both fared better than expected in
March, and private economists saw the
reports as further evidence that the overall
economy is stabilizing after its bleakest
stretch in a half-century. If so, the
economy might be able to mount a recovery in
the second half of 2009.
Wall Street took the same view. All the
major stock indexes jumped more than 2
percent. The Standard & Poor's 500 rose
3.39 percent, showing a gain for 2009.
"Investors believe the worst of the
downturn is behind us," said Mark Zandi,
chief economist at Moody's Economy.com.
"The economy is still in a recession.
But the rate of decline is moderating, and a
bottom for the housing market and the
overall economy are coming into view."
Bolstering that picture were rising
expectations that the government-run stress
tests, showing how the nation's 19 largest
banks would fare in a severe recession, have
found most of them in reasonably good shape.
The test results are expected to be released
Thursday after markets close.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has
said none of the 19 banks will be allowed to
fail and that any institution that needs to
raise more capital will be given six months
to do so.
If the bank cannot raise the needed
capital as a cushion against future loan
losses, the government will supply the
needed resources, Bernanke has said.
The Fed chairman is scheduled to testify
to Congress on Tuesday about the state of
the economy.
The Commerce Department reported that
construction spending rose 0.3 percent in
March. It was the first increase after five
straight months of declines. And it was far
better than the 1.5 percent drop analysts
had expected.
Meanwhile, the National Association of
Realtors said its index of pending home
sales rose 3.2 percent to 84.6 in March.
That was the second monthly increase after
the index hit a record low in January. The
pending sales index is now 1.1 percent above
last year's levels.
Typically, there's a one- to two-month
lag between a contract being signed and a
final deal being sealed. So the index is a
good barometer for future home sales.
Economists saw both reports as good news.
"Things certainly look a bit less
bad than in the dark days at the turn of the
year," Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S.
economist at High Frequency Economics, wrote
in a research note.
Some analysts cautioned that the economy
still faces threats from waves of layoffs
and rising mortgage defaults, which are
causing more banks to tighten lending
standards.
The Fed reported Monday that about 50
percent of U.S. banks had tightened their
lending standards on prime mortgages and
that 65 percent had tightened standards on
nontraditional mortgages. Both percentages
were higher than in the last survey in early
February.
Many builders also are finding it harder
to get lending for their projects because of
rising defaults on commercial real estate.
Because of such problems, the overall
economy, as measured by the gross domestic
product, is expected to keep shrinking in
the current quarter.
But Zandi said he expects a GDP decline
in the current quarter of just 2.4 percent
before GDP turns slightly positive in the
second half of this year. That would be far
milder than the 6.1 percent decline for the
first three months of this year and the 6.3
percent drop in the final three months of
last year — the worst six-month
contraction in overall economic output in a
half-century.
The initial stress test results showed
that Wells Fargo & Co., Citigroup Inc.
and Bank of America Corp. would need to
raise more capital, sources have told The
Associated Press, though the banks are
disputing those findings. Investors also
have grown concerned about regional banks
that carry risky loans on their books in
such areas as mortgages, credit cards and
commercial real estate.
The government will brief banks Tuesday
on its final decisions about their appeals.
The construction report showed that
spending on private residential projects
fell 4.2 percent in March. It was the latest
in a series of declines that began three
years ago, when the housing bubble burst
with disastrous effects for the home
industry and the overall economy.
Nonresidential construction rose 2.7
percent in March, the biggest advance in
nine months and the second straight
increase. It was led by gains in office
construction, hotels and power plants.
Government building activity also showed
strength in March, rising 1.1 percent. A 1.3
percent gain in state and local activity
offset a 1.7 percent drop in spending on
federal projects.
The rise in state and local activity was
viewed as an early sign of the impact of the
$787 billion economic stimulus bill Congress
passed in February to try to get money to
the states for building projects.
Some analysts fear that the commercial
real estate market could topple into the
worst crisis since the last great property
bust of the early 1990s. Delinquency rates
on loans for hotels, offices, retail and
industrial buildings have risen sharply in
recent months and are likely to soar through
the end of 2010 as companies lay off
workers, downsize or close.
Economists are more hopeful, though, that
the three-year slide in housing could be
nearing a bottom, although they do not
expect prices to stop falling until early
next year.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All
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