Friday, January 9, 2009

"lending support to the notion that the consumer is deleveraging"

From the Big Picture:

"Yesterday, the Federal Reserve reported that outstanding consumer credit for November fell a worse-than-expected $7.9 billion, lending support to the notion that the consumer is deleveraging.( I HAD SEEN NO SIGNS OF A SAVINGS SPREE BY CONSUMERS, ONLY THE BEGINNING OF SOME PRUDENT SAVING. THIS MIGHT BE IT. NOTICE THAT IT COINCIDES WITH THE PROACTIVITY RUN, AND IS SIMPLY THE CONSUMER'S VERSION OF THE PROACTIVITY RUN OF EMPLOYERS. BOTH OF THESE LAGGED THE CALLING RUN BY AT LEAST A MONTH, AND MAYBE TWO. )

However, based on the accompanying graph of year-over-year changes in consumer credit and mortgage debt relative to GDP, it seems like deleveraging has hardly begun.( I, OF COURSE, HAVE MY DOUBTS ABOUT HOW FAR IT WILL GO. LET'S SEE. )

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