Friday, August 28, 2009

Economic Stress Report for August 2009

Once again we've gathered sufficient data to provide an update on the Economic Stress Report. According to our analysis method, the following are the top ten States on our list of economically stressed states. We present them here in order of highest to lowest severity:

South Dakota
Vermont
Ohio
Arizona
Kansas
Montana
Washington
West Virginia
New York
Indiana

Of those States on our watch list, the following have suffered bank closures - another sign of economic stress - since December 2007:

South Dakota (1 closure)
Ohio (1 closure)
Arizona (2 closures)
Kansas (3 closures)
Washington (2 closures)
West Virginia (1 closure)
New York (1 closure)

The past month or so saw two big surprises for us: first was the very rapid fall of Maryland from stressed to 'troubled.' We're not completely convinced that Maryland's situation has suddenly improved for some reason, The State is still on our watch list, but it is no longer stressed, according to our analysis. Even so, we suspect that things will be getting quite a bit worse in Maryland, especially when the Federal Government is forced to commence personnel cutbacks (whenever than might occur), or when large numbers of bank failures finally take place.

The second surprise was Vermont's meteoric rise to runner-up basket case of the Union. We can only assume that Vermonters were somehow heavily over-extended, which quickly came back to haunt the economy in general, but that's just hand-waving. Frankly, we're not exactly sure why Vermont is apparently in such bad shape, so if any of you, Dear Readers, have thoughts, please share.

At this point we're hopping onto our old horse and ranting about South Dakota, still the worst-off State in the Union, according to our analysis. Simply put, we suspect that some political shenanigans are going down to prevent South Dakota from suffering the effects of its zomboid banking system. We have some thoughts on that, which we'll touch on in a future post, but suffice it to say that South Dakota should have had so many bank closures by now, it's not even funny.

Moving on, Ohio continues to hold third place for another month, so we take this as a sign that the State is in bad shape. Presumably the collapse of the American car industry continues to hit the State hard, and we expect that this condition will continue to worsen (perhaps by the eventual failure of Ford, or the re-failure of Chrysler or General Motors). Whatever the case, though, we feel it is a sign that Ohio is experiencing a relatively stable rate of economic contraction, as evidenced by its stable place as #3.

As a final note, we're very pleased to see that an increasing number of those States on our top ten list have suffered bank failures. This we take to be a good sign, perhaps indicating that our stress analysis will have a strong correlation with future bank failures. Time will tell, at any rate; the next report can likely be expected around the end of September.

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