30 January 2006

Rainy days, be damned!

Americans' Savings Rate at Lowest Level Since 1933

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: January 30, 2006
Filed at 1:13 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Americans' personal savings rate dipped into negative territory in 2005, something that hasn't happened since the Great Depression. Consumers depleted their savings to finance the purchases of cars and other big-ticket items.

The Commerce Department reported Monday that the savings rate fell into negative territory at minus 0.5 percent, meaning that Americans not only spent all of their after-tax income last year but had to dip into previous savings or increase borrowing.

The savings rate has been negative for an entire year only twice before -- in 1932 and 1933 -- two years when the country was struggling to cope with the Great Depression, a time of massive business failures and job layoffs.

With employment growth strong now, analysts said that different factors are at play. Americans feel they can spend more, given that the value of their homes, the biggest asset for most families, has been rising sharply in recent years.

But analysts cautioned that this behavior was risky at a time when 78 million Americans are on the verge of retirement.

''Americans seem to have the feeling that it is wimpish to save,'' said David Wyss, chief economist at Standard & Poor's in New York. ''The idea is to put away money for old age and we are just not doing that.''

The Commerce report said that consumer spending for December rose by 0.9 percent, more than double the 0.4 percent increase in incomes last month.

A price gauge that excludes food and energy rose by a tiny 0.1 percent in December, down from a 0.2 percent rise in November. This inflation index linked to consumer spending is closely watched by officials at the Federal Reserve.

The central bank meets on Tuesday, when it is expected it will boost interest rates for a 14th time. However, many economists believe those rate hikes are drawing to a close with perhaps another quarter-point hike at the March 28 meeting as the central bank is starting to see the impact of the previous rate hikes in a slowing economy.

The government reported on Friday that overall economic growth slowed to a 1.1 percent rate in the final three months of the year, the most sluggish pace in three years.

That slowdown was heavily influenced by a big drop for the quarter in spending on new cars, which had surged in the summer as automakers offered attractive sales incentives.

A negative savings rate means that Americans spent all their disposable income, the amount left over after paying taxes, and dipped into their past savings to finance their purchases. For the month, the savings rate fell to 0.7 percent, the largest one-month decline since a 3.4 percent drop in August.

The 0.5 percent negative savings rate for 2005 followed a 1.8 percent rate of savings in 2004. The last negative rates occurred in 1932, a drop of 0.9 percent, and a record 1.5 percent decline in 1933. In those years Americans exhausted their savings to try to meet expenses in the wake of the worst economic crisis in U.S. history.

One major reason that consumers felt confident in spending all of their disposable incomes and dipping into savings last year was that a booming housing market made them feel more wealthy. As their home prices surged at double-digit rates, that created what economists call a ''wealth effect'' that supported greater spending.

The concern, however, is that the housing boom of the past five years is beginning to quiet down with the rise in mortgage rates. Analysts are closing watching to see whether consumer spending, which accounts for two-thirds of total economic activity, falters in 2006 as Americans, already carrying heavy debt loads, don't feel as wealthy as the price appreciation of their homes would seem to indicate.

For December, the 0.4 percent rise in incomes was in line with Wall Street expectations. It followed a similar 0.4 percent increase in November, with both months lower than the 0.6 percent rise in October.

The 0.9 percent rise in spending with slightly above the expectation for a 0.8 percent increase and was almost double the 0.5 percent increase in November.

Holy crap. This can NOT be a good sign.

This simply means that millions and millions of Americans are a pink slip, an accident, or a bout of illness away from utter and irretrievable financial disaster.

The disconnect between financial reality and people's behavior is astounding. This goes beyond anything I've read, including the recent pieces of the neurobiology of denial. The 'lottery' mentality is out there, money for nothing.

Begs the question (from Diamond's book Collapse): what were the Easter Islanders thinking when they chopped down the last tree? What are 21st Century Americans thinking when they spend money they don't have under conditions that virtually ensure they will never be able to repay? What are 21st Century American companies thinking when they loan money to these people? Can anybody tell me that the ATM-cum-McMansion economy of the last three years is going to persist into the foreseeable future? Why is everything crazy?

3 comments:

MB said...

That's scary reasoning. I think everyone senses a humungous collapse or end days coming down the pipe, so they're simply spending without abandon because they believe there will be no chance of them having to pay it back!

The Experience said...

Interesting point Reid, I think we all know that the American economy is on the verge of collapse and then we're all screwed anyway. Will having savings mean anything in ten years when the currency no longer exists? Think back to Germany post WWI and the horrible collapse that happened there. Rampant inflation, high unemployment, etc... It took decades for the economy to recover and the whole world didn't depend on it like we all do with the US economy.

We're doomed so we might as well enjoy the flight before we plow into the side of the mountain. Pour me another martini.

MB said...

Just imagine what's going to happen when the Boomers start pulling out all of their investments in the stock markets and financial institutions when they retire. By 2015, the entire financial system will be collapsing under its own weight. A big deck of cards, I tells ya....