In This Issue

UCLA Anderson Forecast Affirms No Recession But a Very Subprime Outlook

Commodities Report: Daily Debt Futures

Economic Reports and Expiration Notices

June 18th, 2008 — Issue #433

We recommend the following article as it provides an overview of the current economic climate.

UCLA Anderson Forecast Affirms No Recession But a Very Subprime Outlook

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--In its second quarterly report of 2008, the UCLA Anderson Forecast cautiously affirms the "no recession" prognostication it has been advocating over the past several quarters, while acknowledging that the most recent employment data — an increase in the unemployment rate from 5.0% to 5.5% — falls within "recession range." Recession or not, the Forecast acknowledges that Gross Domestic Product (GDP) could dip into the negative range over the next six to nine months, as the housing bust continues to wreak havoc on the national economy.

In California, the question is whether or not hard times in the real estate (and ancillary) sector(s) have had significant impact on other areas of the state's economy. As in the Forecast's first quarterly report of the year (released in March), the conclusion is that, "What happened in housing, stayed in housing." The California report states, "There is no generalized spread of contraction to the rest of the economy, then when the [housing, construction and finance] sectors do hit bottom, California will be posed to take off once again."

The National Forecast

In the first of a pair of essays on the national economy, UCLA Anderson Senior Economist David Shulman says, "Although the economy will likely avoid falling into a formal recession, the economic outlook through the end of 2009 is decidedly subprime." The UCLA Anderson Forecast asserts that real GDP growth from the third quarter of 2007 through the end of 2009 will average "a very tepid" 1.2%, adding that "we expect that the current quarter real GDP growth will come in at a minus 0.7% and the first quarter of 2009 could be negative as well." Additionally, unemployment will reach 6% by the end of 2009, with a caveat that states if the May 5.5% unemployment rate is duplicated in June, a 6.0% unemployment rate would come much sooner.

The Forecast report also says that the Federal Reserve Bank is beginning to shift its attention from the financial system, which has been negatively impacted by the housing bust, to its more traditional concern about inflation. As a result, the Forecast does not believe that tepid economic growth will prevent the Fed from raising interest rates in the middle of 2009.

In an accompanying essay, UCLA Anderson Forecast Director Edward Leamer addresses the most recent unemployment data and reveals his economic bottom line: "I am holding to what is now a shaky view: no recession this year." Among Leamer's arguments is that the rising unemployment rate is more of a "hiring freeze" than the massive layoffs associated with an actual recession. This one month's unemployment figure stands alone and, therefore, does not indicate a negative trend.

The California Forecast

In California, UCLA Anderson Forecast Economist Jerry Nickelsburg concludes that California's service sectors, the state's traditional economic engines of growth, are still sidestepping the turbulence in the financial, construction and real estate sectors, keeping California's employment growth positive. He also notes that exports and agriculture, which had not shown much growth recently, are now providing enough additional positive data to also offset the sharp declines in home construction and real estate.

The Forecast predicts a very weak California economy throughout 2008. The strength in exports of both goods and services in the Bay Area and Los Angeles, along with the strength of agriculture in the Central and Salinas Valleys, will keep California employment flat the first half of the year, with the unemployment rate topping out at about 6.1% by year end. Two principal negatives in the state economy will persist into 2009. Residential construction will remain at a very low level throughout next year, while the now permanent job losses in the finance sector must be offset by growth in other areas. As for talk of a recession in the state, Nickelsburg writes, "It does not appear that California will exhibit the kind of loss that typically goes with a national recession ... for California, this is primarily a housing related adjustment to an overheated speculative market. The carnage is palpable, but contained as California benefits from some very traditional industries and its position in the sun on the edge of the Pacific Rim."

About UCLA Anderson Forecast

UCLA Anderson Forecast is one of the most widely watched and often-cited economic outlooks for California and the nation and was unique in predicting both the seriousness of the early-1990s downturn in California and the strength of the state's rebound since 1993. More recently, the Forecast was credited as the first major U.S. economic forecasting group to declare the recession of 2001. Visit UCLA Anderson Forecast on the Web at http://uclaforecast.com.

E-Futures International futures trading demo

E-Futures International
Introducing our new futures trading software. Trade futures from anywhere in the world. Free live quotes and charts included.

Commodities Report: Daily Debt Futures

by MF Global Research

PRICE PERSPECTIVE

TYU8 is expected to find support on breaks. 111-22 and 111-08 are support levels. Resistance rests at 112-05. Prices need to rotate above 113-00 to confirm a bottom. Sticky inflation as seen in a high PPI along with ongoing credit stress and signs of weaker growth will put the 2/10 curve into position to test 139 bps. Additionally, the spread between the fed funds target and 2 year is wide and may allow yields to fall at the short end of the curve. Treasury bullish factors include: 1) Recent economic numbers have surprised on the downside — the NAHB survey, housing starts, the Empire survey, and IP have been weak. 2) Press reports suggest the Fed is not willing to tighten monetary policy near term. 3) Credit stress is on going given trends in the consumer and banking sectors. Treasury bearish factors include: 1) Inflation remains dynamic in food and energy 2) Overseas rate hikes under cut the attractiveness of treasury yields. 3) Corporate debt issuance seems healthy.

Today's Focus

MBA Purchase Index vs. 30-year rate

MBA Mortgage Data: The market will focus on...

Read the rest of Commodities Report: Daily Debt Futures for free. Topics include: MBA Mortgage Data, Fed Policy, 2 Year in the EZ, EU 2-yr — ECB benchmark: Daily 2000-2008, and First month 2-yr Schatz Future: Daily 10/07 - 6/08.

Fill out the following form and receive instant access.

Name

Phone number

Email address


Cannon Trading respects your privacy and will never give this information to a 3rd party.

Economic Reports and Expiration Notices

Source: Moore Research Center, Inc.

Date Reports Expiration & Notice Dates
06/19
Thu
7:30 AM CDT - USDA Weekly Export Sales
7:30 AM CDT - Initial Claims-Weekly
9:00 AM CDT - Leading Indicators(May)
9:00 AM CDT - Philadelphia Fed(Jun)
9:35 AM CDT - EIA Gas Storage
3:30 PM CDT - Money Supply
LT: Jun 10 Year T-Notes(CBT)
Jun DJIA(CBT)
Jun Valueline(KCBT)
Jun NASDAQ 100(CME)
Jun S&P 500(CME)
Jun US Bonds(CBT)
LT: Jun S&P 500 Options(CME)
Jun Nasdaq 100 Options(CME)
Jun Russell 2000 Options(CME)
Jun Valueline Options(KCBT)
Jun DJIA Options(CBT)
06/20
Fri
7:30 AM CDT - Dairy Products Prices
7:30 AM CDT - Livestock Slaughter
2:00 PM CDT - Cattle On Feed
2:00 PM CDT - Cold Storage
FN: Jul Coffee(ICE)
Jul Sugar(ICE)
LT: Jun E-Mini S&P 500(CME)
Jun E-mini S&P 500 Options(CME)
Jun E-mini Nasdaq 100 Options(CME)
Jun E-mini Russell 2000 Options(CME)
Jul Crude Oil(NYM)
Jul Wheat Options(CBT)
Jul Orange Juice Options(ICE)
Jul US Bonds Options(CBT)
Jul Corn Options(CBT)
Jul Oats Options(CBT)
Jul Rough Rice Options(CBT)
Jul Soybeans Options(CBT)
06/23
Mon

 
 
 

 
 
 
06/24
Tue
9:00 AM CDT - Consumer Confidence(Jun)
 
 
 
FN: Jul Crude Oil(NYM)
Jul Cotton(ICE)
 
 
06/25
Wed
7:30 AM CDT - Durable Orders(May)
9:00 AM CDT - New Home Sales(May)
9:35 AM CDT - API & DOE Energy Stats
1:15 PM CDT - FOMC Policy Statement
LT: Jul Heating Oil Options(NYM)
Jul Silver Options(CMX)
Jul Gold Options(CMX)
Jul Copper Options(CMX)
Jul Natural Gas Options(NYM)
Jul RB Gasoline Options(NYM)
06/26
Thu
7:30 AM CDT - USDA Weekly Export Sales
7:30 AM CDT - Initial Claims-Weekly
7:30 AM CDT - Chain Deflator-Final(Q1)
7:30 AM CDT - GDP-Final(Q1)
9:00 AM CDT - Existing Home Sales(May)
9:35 AM CDT - EIA Gas Storage
3:30 PM CDT - Money Supply
LT: Jun Copper(CMX)
Jun Platinum(NYM)
Jun Palladium(NYM)
Jun Silver(CMX)
Jun Gold(CMX)
Jul Natural Gas(NYM)

* Please note that the information contained in this letter is intended for clients, prospective clients, and audiences who have a basic understanding, familiarity, and interest in the futures markets.

** The material contained in this letter is of opinion only and does not guarantee any profits. These are risky markets and only risk capital should be used. Past performances are not necessarily indicative of future results.

*** This is not a solicitation of any order to buy or sell, but a current market view provided by Cannon Trading Inc. Any statement of facts herein contained are derived from sources believed to be reliable, but are not guaranteed as to accuracy, nor they purport to be complete. No responsibility is assumed with respect to any such statement or with respect to any expression of opinion herein contained. Readers are urged to exercise their own judgment in trading!