Wednesday, November 26, 2008

"downturns of the current magnitude in the LCrI have never occurred except before recessions."

From BusinessCycle the following chart:

"
Credit Woes Ahead(Full report received by Pro clients on 15-Jul-08)

Since the epicenter of this recession continues to be the housing-related credit crisis, it is worth examining the outlook for credit growth in the context of the Fed easing that has already occurred. For this purpose, we look at the Leading Credit Index which is designed to anticipate cyclical turns in Nonfinancial Corporate Debt growth.

As the chart shows, downturns of the current magnitude in the LCrI have never occurred except before recessions. However, the downturn in corporate debt growth has only recently begun, suggesting that it has some way to go since, typically, corporate debt growth bottoms out shortly after the recovery begins.

ECRI Excerpt Image

I take this to mean that corporations ( non-financial ) are borrowing less money. Given the rates of interest on corporate bonds, this makes sense. This is one reason I've advocated cutting taxes on corporations. We need to give them incentives to fight against the fear and aversion to risk that is a major problem today.

No comments: