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Old 12-13-2008, 01:52 PM
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I thought this was interesting article, check it out and comment.
Interesting that a lot of used trucks are going oversees thereby slowing the amount available to put back into service.

Link: http://www.landlinemag.com/Archives/...r_daylight.htm

Article:

Quote:
Looking for daylight

The economic storm of 2008 leaves truckers wondering when it is going to end



By Jami Jones
senior editor



Many feel as though the economic storm of 2008 has left them dripping wet and hoping that someday soon the sun will surely break through the clouds.

What started with financial forecasters calling for rough economic conditions through only the first part of 2008 turned into a torrential downpour that still hadn’t let up heading into the end of the year.

Banks closed up shop. The “Big Three” automakers cut their work force and cut it again and again. Wall Street’s fickle bunch couldn’t seem to decide day to day which way the market would go, but opted for down more than up. Even OPEC was whining because fuel and oil prices were, in terms of recent history, unexpected record lows.

We’ll remember 2008 as a year where buzzwords like bailout, short sells, record lows, housing crunch, and credit meltdown invaded our language.

Many of us who didn’t know a bull from a bear found ourselves watching the daily data paint a grim picture of the financial crisis that started on Wall Street and entangled the rest of the economy.

On Main Street, fears are similar to that of the recession of the early 1980s, when the jobless rate hit 10.8 percent. It’s been speculated that unemployment could hit 8.5 percent before things start getting better.

As with any storm that won’t let up, most people are looking for signs that the clouds are going to break and there will be better times ahead, and soon.

Banks will loan again
Trucking has always been a barometer of the overall health of the economy. When consumers start buying less and the economy starts slowing down, trucking takes the hit first.

The upside is that when the economy starts to rebound and climb out of the depths, truckers lead the way.

The start of the upswing may not be that far off into the future either, according to Steve Freidell, senior vice president of DeWaay Financial Network.

“We already started to see some positive change occurring out there with the ... bailout program the Fed got passed through Congress,” Freidell said.

Banks started getting some of the bailout cash in early November. That was expected to give the economy a boost in a couple of different ways, he said.

First, while even asking for a loan through a chunk of 2008 was a joke in and of itself, that was likely to change because of the bailout money.

Banks make money a couple of different ways, by either investing in securities or loaning money. With the markets down and securities at a 50-year low, the one surefire way for banks to turn some profit is to start loaning money again.

So the days of holding onto money and not loaning it to anyone are numbered.

How loose credit will become remains to be seen. The “loose and wild” lending habits of banks in early the early 2000s have been blamed for the crash in the home and lending markets.

Freidell said hopefully banks will learn from those mistakes and avoid making them again. Nonetheless, as credit loosens up qualified lenders will be able to get their hands on loans again – sooner rather than later.

A stock market rebound will follow because businesses will be able to get loans for expansion and productivity.

The November general election is also certain to have an impact on the economy.

“Elections create a euphoric attitude. Regardless of who you voted for, you have to (acknowledge) that Obama has captured the country’s attention,” Freidell said. “There’s a perception, be it right or wrong, that he will be able to turn things around quickly.”

Psychology plays a huge roll in economic conditions. To oversimplify, if people think it’s good, they’ll spend. If they think it’s bad, they’ll hold on to their money.

“It’s just the psychology alone that, many times, will (boost economic growth), regardless of what actions the president might take,” Freidell said.

A sharp rebound in stocks could happen in the first quarter, maybe even sooner, because of that optimistic psychology. If that does happen, the optimism will build on itself and things will improve in our economic situation.

Psychology alone won’t bring the economy around. While the markets could experience a boost in the next few months, in order for full-blown economic growth to take a strong foothold, consumers will have to be willing to spend. Until that happens, economic news will continue to report on a down economy through the end of 2008 and into early 2009.

Wall Street will see times of volatility with the markets up and down at least through the first three quarters of 2009, according to Freidell.

Economically it will take a while for the U.S. to be out of the woods completely.

When might retirement funds dependent on the market recover?

Freidell said it could be three years, admitting he may be optimistic in his prediction.

While the recovery is ongoing, Freidell said that the injection of money into the banking system and business will more than likely drive the value of the dollar down.

With the dollar weaker than foreign currency, it makes U.S. goods cheaper. This could actually make the economy grow. There isn’t the incentive to import goods from other countries.

That helps U.S. manufacturing businesses grow because not only are their products being bought in the U.S., but they are also more attractive for export.

That will lead to more U.S. businesses beefing up their operations and even bringing production back to the states. Add that to President-elect Obama’s plan to give a tax benefit to companies that bring jobs back and domestic manufacturing could more than likely see a lot of growth in the future.

That seems all well and good, but what does that mean – specifically – for truckers. It will be growth led by truckers.

Truckers will lead
It is a virtual impossibility for the economy to recover without trucks.

With a shift from importing everything we seem to need, to manufacturing it again, that will mean freight, and a lot more of it, for truckers.

“When you import a car, you pick it up at the dock and deliver it to the dealership,” said Donald Broughton, a long-time trucking analyst with Avondale Partners.

“When you’re making those goods domestically, that’s a lot more ton miles.”

In other words, it’s going to take a heck of a lot more than just one truck ride from the port to the dealership for a car to hit the showroom floor.

Expanding on his car example, Broughton anecdotally pointed out that trucks will have to haul the ore to the steel plant, the steel to the parts plants, the parts to the manufacturing facilities. Finally, in the end, the cars to the dealerships. And that’s just scratching the surface.

In addition to building goods for U.S. consumers to buy rather than ship them in, the weak dollar means more U.S. manufactured goods will be exported. So exporting freight lanes to the ports and train yards are certain to get a lot busier through the course of this economic recovery.

Freight, and a lot of it, is coming. And truckers who have found shelter in the economic storm of 2008 are in prime position to reap some huge rewards. A lot of those will be owner-operators, too.

Owner-operators: no strangers to the rain
Through a big chunk of 2008, more trucks were shut down because of companies closing than at any other time in history, according to Broughton. Although it was about the same number of companies that failed in the downturn of 2000 to 2001, the size of the companies failing in 2008 was much larger.

“The bulk of the market remains owner-operators and small companies, and it’s clear that the small guys will be the most impacted,” said Jon Starks, transportation analyst for FTR Associates. “The larger fleets continue to show strong asset sheets, although it may cost them more to get less.”

Starks stressed the resilience of owner-operators. “The owner-operator, in theory, has been in demise for the past 20 years or so,” Starks said, “but they’re still kicking.”

And they will continue to. “All of the large fleets have been downsizing … and these owner-operators will be that swing capacity when freight comes back,” he said.

As the fleets have downsized, there really wasn’t much of a market for used equipment, so a lot of it went overseas. There isn’t a glut on the used truck market the way there was in the early 2000s.

The return of freight
Fact: the freight will come back. The math is pretty simple from there. With fewer trucks hauling more freight, shippers will be competing for truckers to haul their freight by paying better rates – really good rates if capacity is very tight.

Owner-operators will be the most nimble in the recovering market. It’s easier for a one-man, one-truck operation to maneuver into new or expanding freight lanes and pick up new business.

With a potential shortage of used trucks on the horizon and the downsizing in manufacturing many of the heavy-duty truck manufacturers have gone through, it’s not likely fleets will be able to buy trucks and trailers to accommodate the inevitable deluge of freight.

That will put owner-operators who took care of business during the downturn of ’08 in the enviable position of being able not only to pick and choose from high-paying freight if they continue under their own authority, but also to pick and choose a company to lease on with. In either case, rates will be good.

When will those rates hit? Obviously, it remains to be seen.

The moves being made by the federal government will put the floor in, but those things take time.

Estimates vary on the recovery of freight volume, with some estimates saying truckers may have to wait until 2010 for healthy freight levels return.

Broughton and Freidell think some economic health should return sometime in the second quarter of 2009. That could very well mark the start of a much-needed infusion of freight.

“In terms of freight levels, we could get back to where we were at the end of the first quarter through the second quarter of 2008,” Broughton said. “It’s very possible the second quarter of ’09 will be a ‘lather, rinse, repeat’ of the second quarter of ’08.”

In February 2008, freight levels had pretty much bottomed out and the trucking industry started to enjoy a bounce back in freight levels. Then skyrocketing fuel costs hit the scene slowing the economy and ending the uptick in freight.

In predicting economic growth that will lead to more freight for truckers, both Broughton and Freidell cautioned that a repeat of record fuel prices in 2009 could most certainly put a damper on any growth.

“As long as commodities don’t spike through the roof like they did (in 2008), then the rebound in demand should indeed help pull us out,” Broughton said.LL



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Old 12-13-2008, 05:18 PM
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I see this as a positive for those of us in business already. When the economy rebounds there will be fewer trucks and rates should rebound. Additionally I believe we are going to see a long term tightening of the credit markets and that will in turn make it more difficult for many new O/O to purchase trucks. This might help keep demand and thus rates higher. Or I could be completely wrong.

I know in my area I am already seeing a significant drop in available trucks and competition.
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Old 12-13-2008, 05:57 PM
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Originally Posted by marylandkw View Post
I see this as a positive for those of us in business already. When the economy rebounds there will be fewer trucks and rates should rebound. Additionally I believe we are going to see a long term tightening of the credit markets and that will in turn make it more difficult for many new O/O to purchase trucks. This might help keep demand and thus rates higher. Or I could be completely wrong.

I know in my area I am already seeing a significant drop in available trucks and competition.
I've noticed some loads posted for January already, and the rates are much higher than the stuff posted for December. Eventually the capacity will dwindle enough where demand exceeds supply, and rates will climb. I hope you're correct that the credit markets will stay tight. It seems that the government is doing everything in their power to make them looser. However, that is a double edged sword. With tight credit markets, people tend to spend less, and the economy becomes stagnant (like it is now). There has to be a happy medium somewhere.
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Old 12-13-2008, 08:55 PM
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In the short term it would be better if credit markets were more fluid. In the long term it would be much better for the economy if we continued to have tight credit so we could reduce and get out of debt. People would need to start living within their means. Rather than financing a lifestyle that they cannot afford they would instead need to start paying cash. True wealth is not what you purchase with credit but what you actually own. There are thousands of paper millionaires. Most are mortgaged so high that if all of their assets were sold off they would not be able to buy a decent meal with cash. That is a slight exaggeration, but you get the point. The people of this country as well as our government have lived on borrowed time for decades. It is time to pay the piper. Many people who are in business today will not be so in a few months. Some may not make it until the end of the year. I think the economy will continue to slide, but rates will need to come up before long to keep trucks that are still on the road moving.
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Old 12-13-2008, 09:05 PM
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seems overly optimistic if you ask me,check out some of these other projections from people in the buisness world.

Quote:
Nouriel Roubini

Known as Dr. Doom, the NYU economics professor saw the mortgage-related meltdown coming.

We are in the middle of a very severe recession that's going to continue through all of 2009 - the worst U.S. recession in the past 50 years. It's the bursting of a huge leveraged-up credit bubble. There's no going back, and there is no bottom to it. It was excessive in everything from subprime to prime, from credit cards to student loans, from corporate bonds to muni bonds. You name it. And it's all reversing right now in a very, very massive way. At this point it's not just a U.S. recession. All of the advanced economies are at the beginning of a hard landing. And emerging markets, beginning with China, are in a severe slowdown. So we're having a global recession and it's becoming worse.

Things are going to be awful for everyday people. U.S. GDP growth is going to be negative through the end of 2009. And the recovery in 2010 and 2011, if there is one, is going to be so weak - with a growth rate of 1% to 1.5% - that it's going to feel like a recession. I see the unemployment rate peaking at around 9% by 2010. The value of homes has already fallen 25%. In my view, home prices are going to fall by another 15% before bottoming out in 2010.


Bill Gross

The founder of bond giant Pimco warned of a subprime contagion back in July 2007.

While 2008 will probably be best known as the year that global stock markets had their values cut in half, it was really much, much more. It was a year in which every major asset class - stocks, real estate, commodities, even high-yield bonds - suffered significant double-digit percentage losses, resulting in the destruction of over $30 trillion of paper wealth. To blame this on subprime mortgages alone would be to dismiss an era of leveraging that encompassed derivative structures of all types, embodying a belief that economic growth was always and everywhere a certainty and that asset prices never go down. As 2008 nears its conclusion, we as an investor nation have been forced to face a new reality. Wall Street and Main Street are fearful that a recession may be replaced by a near depression.

The outcome essentially depends on the ability of the Obama administration to rejuvenate capitalism's "animal spirits" by substituting the benevolent fist of government for the now invisible hand of Adam Smith. Federal spending and guarantees in the trillions of dollars will be required to fill the gap created by the deleveraging of private balance sheets. In turn, lenders and investors alike must begin to assume risk as opposed to stuffing money in modern-day investment mattresses. The process will take time. Twelve months of the Obama Nation will not be sufficient to heal the damage of a half-century's excessive leverage. The downsizing of private risk positions - replaced by government credit - will also result in reduced profit margins and a slower rate of earnings growth after the bottom is reached.

Investors need to recognize these titanic shifts in market and public policies and be content with single-digit returns in future years. Perhaps the most lucrative pockets of value are in high-quality corporate bonds and preferred stocks of banks and financial institutions that have partnered with the government in programs such as the Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP). While their profitability may be restricted, their ability to pay interest and preferred dividends should be unhampered. Above all, stick to high-quality companies and asset classes. The road to recovery will be treacherous.



Robert Shiller


The Yale professor and co-founder of MacroMarkets called both the dot-com and housing bubbles.

We don't currently have anywhere near the level of unemployment that we had in the 1930s, but otherwise there are many similarities between today's environment and the Great Depression, with things happening today that we haven't seen since then. First of all, there's the magnitude of the stock market's move up and down. The real (inflation-corrected) value of the S&P 500 nearly tripled from 1995 to 2000, and by November 2008 was down nearly 60% from its 2000 peak. The only other comparable event was the one in the 1920s where real stock prices more than tripled from 1924 to 1929 and then fell 80% from 1929 to 1932. Second, we've had the biggest housing bust since the Depression. Third, we've seen 0% interest rates. We've actually seen briefly negative short-term interest rates. That hasn't happened since 1941. There was a period from 1938 to 1941 when we were bouncing around at zero and sometimes negative, but that hasn't happened since.


Sheila Bair

The FDIC chairman has been pushing to get mortgage relief for borrowers

The private-label mortgage-backed securitization markets are a prime example. Trillions of dollars of investor money funded millions of mortgages that borrowers had little chance of repaying. Investors relied heavily on ratings agencies, which in turn relied too heavily on mathematical models instead of analyzing the underlying loans. To be sure, borrowers, brokers, lenders, securitizers, as well as state and federal regulators, all bear responsibility for the widespread deterioration in lending standards. But the problem was compounded by the fact that those ultimately holding the risk - the investors - did not look behind their investments at the quality of the mortgages themselves. If they had, they would have seen high loan-to-value ratios, little income documentation, burdensome fees, and steep payment resets. They would have seen mortgages unaffordable from the beginning, originated based on the assumption that home prices would continue to rise and borrowers would refinance. Of course, we now know that as home prices began to depreciate, borrowers were unable to refinance, leading to massive foreclosures and further price declines. This self-reinforcing downward spiral is at the core of the economic problems we face today.

We will dig out of this. And when we do, I hope for a back-to-basics society - where banks and other lending institutions promote real growth and long-term value for the economy, and where American families have rediscovered the peace of mind of financial security achieved through saving and investing wisely. We need to return to the culture of thrift that my mother and her generation learned the hard way through years of hardship and deprivation. Those are lessons learned that the current crisis is teaching us again.
plenty of other's here

8 really, really scary predictions - Nouriel Roubini (1) - FORTUNE
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Old 12-14-2008, 02:47 AM
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Originally Posted by mike3fan View Post


We will dig out of this. And when we do, I hope for a back-to-basics society - where banks and other lending institutions promote real growth and long-term value for the economy, and where American families have rediscovered the peace of mind of financial security achieved through saving and investing wisely. We need to return to the culture of thrift that my mother and her generation learned the hard way through years of hardship and deprivation. Those are lessons learned that the current crisis is teaching us again.

My wife and I drove around town earlier this evening looking at Christmas lights. It is an annual ritual that we do. It brought back a lot of memories, especially this year with the down economy. I started thinking how things were when I grew up. We didn't throw things away when they broke. We fixed them until the could no longer be repaired. Products were built much better back then. They were built to last. Today we buy a product and throw it away when it breaks rather than trying to repair it. My parents grew up during the last depression. It was a difficult time. Those who survived were stronger because of what they had to endure. I don't know if things will get as bad as then, but we are in for some really challenging times.
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Old 12-14-2008, 04:38 AM
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9/08 is now recognized as the time that the detonator exploded.
We have entered the Very Great Depression.
It should last from 3 to 10 years.

We are going to have to re-learn hard times.

The president and president-select, and all their cohorts, are responsible for the problems. Their efforts to fix the problems are misguided, as they focus on only the symptoms, and not the root cause.

The president-select has laid out a plan that is exactly opposite of what is needed. This not only will not help, it will make things worse.

There is probably a book or several, in the works, to chronicle the "Rise and Fall of the Great American Experiment".
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Old 12-14-2008, 05:11 AM
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Originally Posted by 2 View Post
9/08 is now recognized as the time that the detonator exploded.
We have entered the Very Great Depression.
It should last from 3 to 10 years.
ok I have seen you post this a couple times now.

I freely admit I'm not too smart,but could you explain why we are in a "very great depression"?

Any real facts to back this up? from multiple sources? other than blogs or conspirator websites.

What constitutes a "very great depressiopn"?
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Old 12-14-2008, 02:09 PM
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I always believe it's never as bad as they say and never as good as they say. It's usually somewhere in the middle.
I really used to get into some of the talking head shows then it dawned on me, they're never right so I stopped listening for the most part and limit my reading as well. Fuel did the exact opposite of what they were predicting. I think you'll see food prices start to flatten as well, that will help out a lot towards recovery.
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Old 12-14-2008, 02:10 PM
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I am not sure the difference between a depression, great depression or very great depression.
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