But first off, lets start with the news of the moment, Spain's falling industrial output.
Spain's Composite PMI Registers Another Record Contraction In December
Now, as I noted in my last post, according to the JPMorgan Global Manufacturing PMI report for December the weakest manufacturing performance was registered by Japan, whose output and new orders indexes fell to levels which were unprecedented in the history of any of the national manufacturing surveys included in the global manufacturing PMI. But at the end of the day this must have been a pretty close call, since while the composite reading for Japan was only 30.8, for Spain it was 28.5. Thus, on aggregate, Spain's manufacturing sector was still leading the global charge down. Of course, if we are only talking about industry the situation in Japan is more critical, since the economy there in general is more dependent on manufacturing industry than the Spanish one is. The thing is - we will know on Monday - the services reading for Spain in December may not be much better.
Thus Spain's manufacturing sector shrank at a record pace for the fourth month running in December, according to the Markit Purchasing Managers Index. The indicator fell to 28.5 from a previous low of 29.4 in November and marked the lowest level for any country in the near 11-year history of the survey. Around 43 percent of Spanish manufacturers in the PMI survey said they cut jobs in December to compensate for falling production, marking the highest level of layoffs in the series history and taking the employment indicator to a world series low of 29.4. Jobs have now been cut in the Spanish manufacturing sector for 16 consecutive months.
"The truly horrendous PMI data for December mean that Spanish manufacturing heads into the new year with little reason for optimism - 2009 is all set to be a very difficult year," said Markit economist Andrew Harker.December PMI data also showed the second steepest contraction on record for both new domestic and foreign orders, with cancellations from the United Kingdom, France and Germany
Retail Sales Continue To Fall In November
Spanish retail sales (at constant prices) were down by 9.6% year on year in November, according to data from the national statistics office.
This was the twelfth consecutive month of year on year declines, and retail sales hit a seasonally adjusted monthly high in November 2007 (see chart below), since which time they have continued to fall, and will continue to fall for some considerable time to come. Quite frankly I have no idea at all about when they will get back to those "heady" levels of late 2007, certainly not in 2009, and most probably not in 2010. And after that we will see.
Producer Prices Fall Back Dramatically
Spain's factory gate prices fell sharply between October and November - by 2.6% month on month, bringing the annual rate of producer price inflation down from 5.9% in October to 2.9% in November.
Now falls like this are certainly not "normal", and are an indication of massive underlying structural forces. Let us remember what JP Morgan said in their December report:
"The Global Manufacturing Input Prices Index posted 31.3, its lowest ever reading. The rate of deflation was especially marked in the US, were purchase prices fell to the greatest extent since June 1949. Rates of decrease in costs hit series records in the Eurozone, Russia, Switzerland, the Czech Republic and Denmark."
So basically, if the PMI readout is anything to go by we could well hit negative year on year prices in December, and if not then certainly in January. As can be seen in the index chart below, prices have already been falling since July. All of this is quite important since producer prices give us an early indicator of the likely path of consumer prices in the coming months, which means, I think, that the deflation threat in Spain is a very serious one indeed.
Another Wave Of Credit Downgrades In The Works
Hardly surprisingly in this environment, Spanish financial organisations are now seeing quite frequent downgrades in their credit ratings. The latest here - as Jaime Pozuelo-Monfort reminds us on RGE Europe Monitor - Caja Mediterraneo (CAM) and Bancaja who have been downgraded by Standard and Poor’s from A- to BBB+ with negative outlook. At this point CAM and Bancaja still maintain their investment grade status, which is held for ratings of BBB- and above. Prior to the Standard & Poor’s downgrade, CAM and Bancaja were also downgraded by Moody’s (who use a different classification system) in August 2008 from A2 to A1.
Standard & Poor's rebajó hoy la calificación crediticia a largo plazo de Caja de Ahorros del Mediterráneo (CAM) y Caja de Ahorros de Valencia, Castellón y Alicante (Bancaja) a 'BBB+' desde 'A-', y seguidamente procedió a retirar todos sus ratings a petición de ambas entidades, informó hoy S&P. La agencia de calificación, que afirmó el rating a corto plazo 'A-2' para las dos cajas valencianas, indicó que la perspectiva de la calificación era 'negativa' en ambos casos. En el caso de la CAM, Standard & Poor's justificó su decisión en las expectativas de "un significativo debilitamiento" en el perfil financiero de la caja en los próximos trimestres debido a una mayor vulnerabilidad que sus rivales a la desaceleración económica. Respecto a Bancaja, indicó que su calificación refleja su previsión de un significativo debilitamiento del perfil financiero de la entidad en los próximos trimestres, "en el contexto de un cada vez más difícil entorno económico". Además, S&P señaló que la perspectiva negativa refleja la posibilidad de un nuevo descenso del rating si percibe que el perfil financiero de Bancaja del perfil financiero "se va a deteriorar más allá de sus actuales expectativas".
Bancaja is Spain’s third largest savings bank, with total assets of EUR 102.1 billion as of end-March 2008 and a market share of 8.26% in Spain’s financial system. CAM had total assets of EUR 69.8 billion as of end-March 2008 and a market share of 5.65%. Bancaja also have the misfortune to be bankers to crisis ridden Valencia football club, who are rumoured to be prepared to sell their international "crack" striker David Vila if the offer is good enough, after Bancaja denied them further credit (watch out for the football casualties to this crisis I think).
This little extract from Europa Press, which explains how Banco Pastor have decided to "dispense with the services of" Standard and Poor's is also interesting for those of you who can read Spanish, as is their explanation for why they have done it (which, naturally, has nothing whatsoever to do with their October downgrade from A to A-) , which is basically that since the wholesale money markets are closed to Spanish banks then they can live without getting rated anyway. What's more, they say, the guarantee they are sure to receive from the Spanish Treasury for their forthcoming issues (watch out Spanish taxpayers) makes the ratings agencies unecessary. Amazing! I couldn't have believed it if it hadn't actually happened.
Banco Pastor decidió hoy rescindir el contrato que tenía con la agencia de calificación crediticia Standard & Poor's, informaron a Europa Press en fuentes de la entidad. El banco presidido por José María Arias adoptó está decisión debido a las actuales circunstancias del mercado, ya que los mercados financieros siguen cerrados, con lo que no hay apenas posibilidad de colocar deuda. Además, el aval del Tesoro es quien refrenda las próximas emisiones, por lo que la entidad considera que no es necesario la calificación de las agencias de rating. Banco Pastor, que no tiene vencimientos hasta 2010, mantiene una holgada posición de liquidez con un ratio de cobertura del crédito de los depósitos del 68%. La entidad gallega, que mantendrá su contrato con la agencia Moody's, tenía actualmente un rating de 'A-' de Standard & Poor's, tras ser rebajado el pasado mes de octubre por la agencia desde 'A'. A finales del pasado mes de noviembre, las cajas valencianas Caja de Ahorros del Mediterráneo (CAM) y Caja de Ahorros de Valencia, Castellón y Alicante (Bancaja) también solicitaron su baja del servicio de Standard & Poor's.
The article also informs us that the Caja de Ahorros del Mediterráneo (CAM) and Caja de Ahorros de Valencia, Castellón y Alicante (Bancaja) also asked to end their contracts with S&P's following their respective downgrades. Petlulence will get you nowhere my child!
Property Prices Down Too
Spanish Property Buff Mark Stucklin reports that even on the rather questionable official House Price Index, published by the National Institute of Statistics (INE) average Spanish property prices fell by 3% over 12 months to the end of the third quarter. Mark comments that:
He also informs us here that Catalonia is suffering more than other parts of Spain. Taking data from reports published by webportal Idealista.com, he explains that sales have fallen by around half, new housing starts are down by 80%, and prices are falling significantly. In Barcelona city, prices are down 8.6% over 12 months, pushing resale prices back to where they were in 2005. Prices are falling more in Barcelona than in Madrid, Valencia or Seville.The index, which has only been published for 2 quarters, needs to be treated with scepticism, as its figures are simply not credible in the current market. In reality, prices are sharply down, though nobody knows by exactly how much. And as I have pointed out here before, new build prices in the official statistics do not reflect the prices developers are offering today to make sales. With a glut of around 1 million new properties, and developers falling like flies, industry sources report that new build prices are falling fast.
According to the latest data from idealista.com, a leading Spanish property portal, nominal prices in Barcelona capital have fallen 10.6% in the last 2 years, which translates into a fall of 16% in real terms (after adjusting for inflation). A typical flat of 70m2 is now 30,000 Euros cheaper than it was 12 months ago.And finally, for this batch, Mark also draws attention to the way in which Spanish banks are increasingly turning themselves into property companies.
Over 12 months the asking prices tracked by idealista.com have fallen by 14.7% in Sants-Montjuïc, 12.9% in Sant Andreu, 12.7% in Horta-Guinardó, and 11.7% in the Ciutat Vella, Barcelona’s famous old town Gothic Quarter. Coastal resorts around Barcelona popular with second home buyers are also in trouble. Asking prices have fallen by 15% in Malgrat, Pineda y Premià de Mar, 13.3% in Roses (Costa Brava), and 13.5% in Segur de Calafell (Costa Dorada).
Spanish banks are turning into some of the biggest real estate companies in Spain, just as they did during the last property crash of the late 80s and early 90s. To a greater or lesser extent, banks are running some of Spain’s biggest listed developers, companies like Colonial and Metrovacesa, who were forced to throw themselves at their bankers’ feet when they couldn’t cope with their billions of Euros of debt.
It’s not just the big developers with billions of Euros of debt that the banks are having to take over to prevent their loan default rates from going through the roof. All around Spain many small regional banks and savings banks have been quietly taking over small local developers for the same reason. Having taken over developers or their assets in return for cancelling debts, many banks and savings banks, known as cajas, now find they own a wide variety of real estate assets from land and flats under construction to finished developments and business parks.
As Mark also points out the banks seem to be taking some consolation from the fact that on both previous occasions this move turned out to be extremely profitable to the banks as boom followed slump, and prices rebounded. But what if this time it is different. What if this time - following the trail blazed by Japan in 1992, and Germany in 1995 - prices come down and stay down; for decades.
Oh yes, but don't worry, not everything in Spain is going down. Unemployment, for example, is surely going up, and strongly so, as we will more than likely find out on Monday. So, in true Goethean spirit, ready yourselves, since onwards and upwards they will undoubtedly lead us.
Another thing that isn't falling (at least not a much as it will) is house prices. People are holding out right now, we're seeing some price reductions but nothing compared to what's going to happen when people finally give up and "price" their units to sell.
ReplyDeleteVery good news if you're like us and hoping to buy a house next year.
Rob in Madrid
Hi Rob,
ReplyDelete"Very good news if you're like us and hoping to buy a house next year."
Well, don't jump the gun. 2010 may still be a bit early. It depends how far and how fast they fall in the next 12 months. This is still unclear, though there is obviously a long way to go. The thing is the market will - as markets do - overcorrect, so the bottom really could be very low in this case. Definitely worth waiting for if you can.
We have seen the same reaction in every single country. In the beginning, people always think house prices will recover. In the end, they will be dumping their assets on the market, overcorrecting house prices, as Edward mentions.
ReplyDeletewhat should have had to be done with the spanish policy makers -politicastros- is to lean them back on the wall and shoot them all.
ReplyDeleteOne could easily foresee to the detail what indeed has finally happened. Dangerous couple, we have nowadays the worst goverment ever existed in the history of spain, and the biggest economical crisis ever pictured. Hard times for investors who had their assets in the spanish trap.
Hello,
ReplyDelete"what should have had to be done with the spanish policy makers -politicastros- is to lean them back on the wall and shoot them all."
Whoops, I hope that isn't a reference to the sort of thing Don Francisco Franco used to do when he was running the show here. I don't think that is the way to go, either in Spain or anywhere else.
Of course, maybe you are just being metaphorical, as in "these guys need sending to Siberia"... although I'd be careful about saying that in Russia too.
"One could easily foresee to the detail what indeed has finally happened."
I'm not sure you can go that far. Personally - while I think the big picture story wasn't that hard - there were lots of details I didn't spot from the start, and I still think that there are plenty of details - important details -about what happens over the next three to five years which I can't see clearly at this point.
Even outside Spain a lot of people were hoping Spain would have a soft landing. I always felt that was going to be impossible, and we are now into the difficult question of how hard is "hard".
Appreciate your answer and congratulations for your outstanding and superb blog!
ReplyDeleteNo, the odd question in Spain has to do whether this country has a truly democracy. The political system in Spain is a partitocracy where the chiefs of the political parties rule over the country without the control of separated political powers. The parliament is a laughable place whose members follow blindly the commands of their chiefs. It is then easily to come up with the conclusion that a vast main amount of those politicians are enrolled up, recruited among the scum of the society, guys who could hardly have a chance to follow up a profitable career out of the political arena. On the contrary, by doing all what they are told by the mafia who drive these political parties, they got blatantly rich.
Nonetheless, these despicable people arise since the death of the dictator franco, as the masters of the spaniards, without them the real state bubble would have not reached the size finally has. Likewise, the bribery, slush fund affairs, corruption in a nutshell have been wide spread all over the country by the sake of their greedy for easy money despite bringing the bankrupcy and ruin for the millions of spaniards.
Shame on them all! the less they deserve is the death penalty, what else?
In regards to whether the slumping shrinkable course of the spanish course was foreseable, just take a look at, for instance, an issue of Wall Street Journal published two years ago: http://www.elconfidencial.com/noticias/noticia.asp?id=20006&edicion=19/12/2006&pass=
By that time, it was a triffle to figure out what would happen if the policy makers had gone on further without cutting back the reward to fuel and boost the real state speculation, but we were the "champion league" country, that is my friend! who wanted to let wake up of a such enjoyable dream!
Spain now is facing the same fate that any third developing southamerica country, perhaps Argentina?
greetings.