An economist with the leading trade credit insurer in the country says that the current housing market situation, combined with soaring energy prices, will have strong consequences for the U.S. economy well into 2009.

Daniel North, chief economist with Euler Hermes ACI said in an interview on Bloomberg Television yesterday that the current housing slump shows no signs of immediate relief. "I think that we could see the deflating housing market bubble hurting the economy into 2009," he said.

On top of that, North says that spiking oil prices will continue to be a drag on consumer spending. On Thursday, oil futures reached a record price of $80.20 per barrel.
According to a report by the Commerce Department Friday, consumer spending slowed in August. “This report confirms what we’ve been thinking for a while,” North told insideARM.com this morning. Specifically, retail sales expanded by 0.3 percent in August, an amount economists consider to be “healthy.” But all of the gains were for car and truck sales. Without vehicle sales included, retail sales actually dropped 0.4 percent in the month. Economists surveyed by MarketWatch were expecting a 0.2 percent increase excluding auto sales.
 
North says that his prognostication is based on three current major drags on the economy: a decimated housing market, spiking energy costs, and an inverted yield curve in 2006 and 2007.

An inverted yield curve occurs in an interest rate environment in which long-term debt instruments have a lower yield than short-term debt instruments of the same credit quality. This type of yield curve is fairly rare and is considered to be a predictor of economic recession.

“You cannot get away with all three negative factors working without a significant economic slowdown or even a recession,” said North.

North said that weakness at the consumer level could result in difficult times for ARM companies. “Broadly speaking, we see a weakness that will go down the credit chain to include the consumer,” North said. “Lenders will be less willing to grant credit on the consumer level and consumers could have a harder time paying on accounts, whether current or in collections.”


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