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2010 and Beyond – Navigating the New Economy FPPA Presentation February 23, 2010 1 Disclaimers BB&T Capital Markets is a division of Scott & Stringfellow, LLC, member NYSE/SIPC. Scott & Stringfellow, LLC, is a separate, non-bank subsidiary of BB&T Corporation. Securities and insurance products or annuities sold, offered or recommended are not a deposit, not FDIC insured, not bank guaranteed, not insured by any federal government agency and may lose value. The information contained herein, while not guaranteed by BB&T Capital Markets, has been obtained from sources which we believe to be reliable and accurate. This material is not to be considered an offer or solicitation regarding the sale of any security. Discussions of past performance do not imply a guarantee of future results. 2 What happened? The Panic of 1907 by Robert F. Bruner and Sean D. Carr 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. System Complexity – interconnectivity Buoyant Growth – insatiable demand for capital and liquidity Inadequate Safety Buffers – capital and regulatory Adverse Leadership – conflicting goals Cognitive Bias – that can’t happen Real Economic Shock – asset devaluation Failure of Collective Action “History may not repeat itself, but it rhymes.” -Mark Twain 3 Where are we? 5. Increased Leverage Asset Inflation Asset Deflation 1. Rising Asset Prices 1. Declining Asset Prices Low Core Inflation Strong Growth Low Unemployment 4. Greater Risk Taking 2. Declining Risk Premium 2. Increasing Risk Premium 3. Reach for More Yield Large Write Downs Declining Growth Higher Unemployment 3. Need for Liquidity 5. Reduced Leverage 4. Flight to Safety Federal Funds Rate 6.0% 5.0% 4.0% 3.0% 2.0% 1.0% 0.0% Jan. '03 Source: Bloomberg. Jul. '03 Jan. '04 Jul. '04 Jan. '05 Jul. '05 Jan. '06 Jul. '06 Jan. '07 Jul. '07 Jan. '08 Jul. '08 Jan. '09 4 Who’s to blame? 5 Who’s to blame? • Chronic Budget Shortfalls – 46 of the last 50 years • Freddie Mac / FNMA – Affordable Housing • Regulators – SarbOx, SEC, FDIC • Wall Street / Banks – – Uncontrolled Greed or Political Scapegoats Rating Agencies • Consumers – over-leveraged – Why not part of the discussion? 6 Who’s to blame? U.S. Household Debt as a Percent of GDP 100% ? 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% 1918 The Great Depression 1923 1928 1933 1938 1943 1948 1953 1958 Household debt / GDP 1963 1968 1973 1978 1983 1988 1993 1998 2003 2008 Non-corporate Net Private Debt to GDP Source: U.S. Census, U.S. Federal Reserve Flow of Funds. Please note non-corporate net private debt is used as a proxy for household debt (going back to 1918) as the Federal Reserve did not begin 7 tracking U.S. household debt until 1950 Who’s to blame? The 2009 Gross Federal Debt is $11.9 trillion, which represents a 29.9% increase since 2007 $40,000 per person - $5,000 increase this fiscal year Gross ~7.5% Federal Debt of Total U.S. Gross Federal Debt ($ billions) $25,000 $20,000 $20,639 $19,097 $17,456 $15,000 $15,856 $14,341 $11,876 $10,000 $5,000 $5,696 $5,883 $6,947 $8,115 $9,145 ~85% of Total $0 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009P 2011P 2013P 2015P 2017P 2019P Source: Congressional Budget Office; U.S. Department of the Treasury. These figures represent federal debt that is subject to limitations only. 8 Government’s role? 1. Financial System “Bailout”: if we all agree financial system stability is the goal, did we market the solution effectively and did we take the correct steps? • Bear Stearns / Washington Mutual / AIG / Lehman / Money Markets / Merrill Lynch / Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac / Wachovia 9 Government’s role? 2. But did the government’s role in preserving the financial system give them the “opportunity” to take a larger role in the economy? • Stimulus I and II • Additional Regulation – FDIC Bankruptcy • Chrysler, General Motors, GMAC, AIG2 • Federal Reserve involvement in the debt markets • Tax Policy – Job Creation 10 What lies ahead – is September 2007 a policy initiative? Are we bucking reality – has the world economy changed and our efforts to date are pretending that change did not occur? 11 What lies ahead – is September 2007 a policy initiative? The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported an unemployment rate of 10.2% for October 2009 – how did jobs get lost and the unemployment rate go down? The total number of unemployed was approximately 15.7 million. Over $20 million people received unemployment benefits in 2009. 10.0% 16.0 9.0% 14.0 8.0% 12.0 7.0% 10.0 6.0% 8.0 5.0% 6.0 4.0% 4.0 3.0% 2.0 2.0% 1990 0.0 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 Unemployment Rate Source: U.S. Department of Labor; Bureau of Labor Statistics 2002 2004 2006 Number Unemployed (millions) Unemployment Rate U.S. Unemployment Rate and Number of Workers Unemployed 2008 Number Unemployed 12 What lies ahead – is September 2007 a policy initiative? Historical Index Performance 120% 120% 100% 100% 80% 80% 60% 60% 40% 09/2007 02/2008 08/2008 S&P 500 Russell 2000 02/2009 NASDAQ 08/2009 40% 02/2010 DJIA % Appreciation Since 9/1/2007 Source: FactSet, data as of 2/15/10 Russell 2000 (23.0%) DJIA (24.4%) NASDAQ (15.9%) S&P 500 (27.0%) 13 What lies ahead – is September 2007 a policy initiative? Housing Prices New – down 17.2% from March 2007 peak Existing – down 25.6% from July 2006 peak Median Price of Single-family Home Sales $275,000 $250,000 $225,000 $200,000 $175,000 Existing Homes Dec-09 Jun-09 Dec-08 Jun-08 Dec-07 Jun-07 Dec-06 Jun-06 Dec-05 Jun-05 Dec-04 Jun-04 Dec-03 $150,000 New Homes YOY Change 30% 20% 10% 0% -10% Source: U.S. Census Bureau, National Association of Realtors Dec-09 Jun-09 Dec-08 Jun-08 Dec-07 Jun-07 Dec-06 Jun-06 Dec-05 Jun-05 Dec-04 -20% 14 Source: U.S. Census Bureau, National Association of Realtors Jan-10 Jan-09 Jan-08 Jan-07 Jan-06 Existing Jan-05 Jan-04 Jan-03 Jan-02 Jan-01 Jan-00 Jan-99 Jan-98 Jan-97 Jan-96 Jan-95 Jan-94 Jan-93 Jan-92 Jan-91 Jan-90 YOY Change Ja n9 Ja 0 nJa 9 1 n9 Ja 2 nJa 9 3 n9 Ja 4 nJa 9 5 n9 Ja 6 nJa 9 7 nJa 9 8 n9 Ja 9 n0 Ja 0 nJa 0 1 nJa 0 2 n0 Ja 3 n0 Ja 4 nJa 0 5 nJa 0 6 n0 Ja 7 nJa 0 8 n0 Ja 9 n10 SAAR (M) What lies ahead – is September 2007 a policy initiative? Home Sales New – down 74.4% from July 2005 peak Existing – down 10.0% from June 2005 peak Home Sales 8.0 7.0 6.0 5.0 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 0.0 New 75% 50% 25% -25% 0% -50% -75% 15 What lies ahead – is September 2007 a policy initiative? •$1.3 Trillion to be refinanced by 2012 – How? •U.S. office vacancies rose to the highest level in four years in the second quarter; 15.9 percent from 13.2 percent a year earlier. [Bloomberg – 7/7/2009] Commercial Office Vacancy Rates & Office Asking Rents 25% $35 $30 20% Vacancy Rates % (gray line) 15% $20 $15 10% $10 Asking Rents $ (BB&T maroon line) $25 5% $5 Sources: REIS 2013E 2012E 2011E 2010E 2009E 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 $1990 0% 16 Ancillary musings 1. Can we pay our bills – municipal, state, federal? 2. Will any of our economy work in a deflationary environment – who has the most to lose from deflation? 3. Have we put the fiscal stimulus in place to create runaway inflation – who has the most to gain from inflation? 4. Have we saved the financial system or is there work to be done? 17 Ancillary musings 5. Can the government function as a profit center, and if so how do they get out (and what about Freddie and Fannie)? 6. Can we long-term de-lever the economy, and do we want to de-lever the economy? 7. Can we structure and regulate the banking system in a manner which minimizes risk but maximizes growth and opportunity – or does it remain a whipping boy? 18 Final thoughts 8. Course of Action • This has happened before, and it will happen again - if the financial system is sound and the capitalist system is allowed to work we will recover. • We have to avoid the inclination to overregulate and to over-manage and to overtax – very hard for the politicians. • The folks who react rationally to the new circumstances are already the winners. 19 Final Thoughts 5. Increased Leverage 4. Greater Risk Taking Asset Inflation Asset Deflation 1. Rising Asset Prices 1. Declining Asset Prices Low Core Inflation Strong Growth Low Unemployment 2. Declining Risk Premium 3. Reach for More Yield 2. Increasing Risk Premium Large Write Downs Declining Growth Higher Unemployment 3. Need for Liquidity 5. Reduced Leverage 4. Flight to Safety 1. Consumer Leverage / Government Leverage 2. Economic Growth – Tax Increases 3. Unemployment – Job Creation Source: Bloomberg. 4. Asset Bubble – all assets or just stocks and housing 20