The author must of performed a gut check when GE shocked the market on Friday. Not only did GE's earnings debacle create concern regarding the health of the US economy (given GE's product diversification), but the write-downs in GE Capital and other Real Estate business lines reminded many that the credit crisis was still around. After deep thought the author published the article on Monday, perhaps I would have done the same.
On Monday, it was announced that Wachovia needed a $7 billion capital infusion due to write-downs and an unexpectedly worse US economy. This announcement came on the heels of Washington Mutual's $7 billion capital infusion by a private equity firm.
Wachovia's announcement peaked my interests because much of the capital infusion went to build capital reserves against a failing US economy. While the US economy was heading towards little to no growth projections prior to the credit crisis hitting the financial markets, the almost collapse of the banking system could mark the next phase of the credit turmoil: The Credit Crunch Phase.
Financial institutions can shore up capital ratios by injecting capital to the business and/or restricting lending. Withholding credit pinches the checkbooks of many main street businesses. Business owners then look to pare payrolls, shelve capital expenditures plans, and reduce other employee benefits (higher health care deductibles. This circular equation puts the economy in a precarious situation and could ultimately lead to a prolonged recession.
The point is with many financial stocks reporting earnings this week, we should get a glimpse into the health of the US financial system. J.P Morgan, Merril Lynch and Citigroup all report earnings this week with more to follow next week. Watch and read carefully the earnings reports and watch for signs of credit restrictions and dire predictions for the US economy. Pay close attention to the smaller regional banks that so far have been hidding behind the headlines.
So only after this and next week will we know if it's the beginning of the end or the end of the beginning.
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