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Central Bank forecasts further drop in house prices
 The Central Bank's (CBI) macroeconomic forecast, published yesterday, projects that house prices will continue to fall in 2010 and 2011, in line with its previous forecast from November. In November, the CBI projected that real property values would drop by nearly 50% in this recession and that nominal prices would decline by over 27%, hitting bottom in Q1/2011. The CBI assumes that house prices will be nearly 14% below long-term equilibrium, which means that the ensuing correction could overshoot expected long-term values.
As is well known, the current economic recession has played havoc with the real estate market. This is consistent with other countries' experience, which has shown that financial crises are usually accompanied by plunging house prices, particularly if the crisis follows a housing bubble like that in Iceland.
House prices can be expected to fall still further, reflecting expectations on both the supply side and the demand side of the market. Because of the upsurge in residential housing market activity in the past few years, a large supply of unsold property has accumulated on the market, exerting further downward pressure on prices. This is exacerbated by high - and growing - unemployment and dwindling real disposable income, which the CBI forecasts to contract by 9.7% in 2010 and another 1.6% in 2011.
The CBI's real estate market forecast has remained broadly unchanged for quite a while and has been borne out by market developments. At present, house prices in the greater Reykjavík area have declined by 15.5% in nominal terms, and by 37.2% in real terms, since peaking in early 2008. For the country as a whole, the decline is 13.4% in nominal terms and 35.1% in real terms. These figures suggest that a significant price drop is still in the wings.
First LSS bond auction in 2010
 Municipality Credit Iceland Plc (LSS) will hold its first bond auction of 2010 tomorrow afternoon, Friday, 29 January. LSS intends to sell bonds in the series LSS150224 for up to ISK 500 bn nominal value but reserves the right to raise or lower the amount of the auction as circumstances dictate. All those submitting accepted bids will receive the highest accepted yield.
Indexed bond yields up LSS plans to issue bonds for a total of ISK 7-9 bn this year, which is similar to last year's issuance of ISK 8.8 bn. Presumably, LSS is kicking itself for having missed out on the trough in indexed yields a few days ago, for as is well known, indexed bond yields have shot upwards since, in the wake of Tuesday's unexpected drop in the CPI. However, yields on HFF24, which resembles LSS24 in structure, are still very low compared to the past few years, and the final yield in the auction could well prove advantageous for LSS.
Premia on LSS bonds have declined Market yields on LSS24 have always been rather higher than yields on HFF24 bonds, ever since the former were first issued in the fall of 2008. The spread peaked at 170 last summer and now stands at 100 points, as LSS24s currently yield 4.79% while HFF24s yield 3.78%. Presumably, LSS bonds have benefited from the sparseness of Housing Financing Fund issuance, but now there are more players issuing indexed bonds. At the beginning of the year, the Treasury announced its intention to issue indexed bonds for up to ISK 50 bn in 2010. Added to that are ISK 34-42 bn in HFF bonds, according to the Housing Financing Fund's issuance calendar, and then, of course, the bonds from LSS. However, LSS bonds have become steadily more liquid as the series has grown, which should, other things being equal, lead to narrower spread over HFF bonds.
Surge in new company registrations in 2009
 According to figures published by Statistics Iceland (SI) this morning, 2,642 new limited liability companies were established in 2009, nearly 3% more than in 2008, which is a rather substantial increase in the current economic situation. As in recent years, most of the new registrations were in holding company operations, commercial property leasing, and residential and commercial property construction. Over 300 new holding companies, 230 commercial property leasing companies, and about 150 construction firms were established during the year. These companies constitute some 26% of new registrations in 2009, slightly less than in 2008, when one-third of new firms were in these sectors.
In this context, it is worth noting that corporate bankruptcies in 2009 were considerably fewer than new registrations, even though the number of bankruptcies was the highest in SI records, which stretch back some two decades. A total of 823 firms were declared bankrupt in the first 11 months of 2009, which is 23% more than over the same period in 2008. Over one-fourth of all firms declaring bankruptcy in 2009 were in building and construction, the sector with the largest number of new registrations during the year. The sector saw 229 firms declare bankruptcy in the first 11 months of 2009, while 275 new companies were registered during the same period. SI will publish its corporate bankruptcy figures for December 2009 tomorrow.
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OMX ICEX, 1/27/2010
|
| Category |
Volume |
| Bonds |
950,944 |
| Equities |
57 |
|
356,471 |
| Total |
1,307,472 |
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REIBOR Market, 1/27/2010
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| Term |
REIBID |
REIBOR |
| O/N |
8.00% |
8.50% |
| SW |
8.00% |
8.50% |
| 1M |
8.00% |
8.50% |
| 3M |
7.80% |
8.25% |
| 6M |
7.30% |
7.80% |
| 12M |
6.75% |
7.00% |
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Exchange Rates, 1/27/2010
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| |
pr.ISK |
3m.Libor |
3m.fwd. |
| USD |
128.36 |
0.25% |
2.5 |
| GBP |
208.60 |
0.62% |
3.9 |
| JPY |
1.43 |
0.25% |
0.0 |
| EUR |
179.50 |
0.61% |
3.4 |
| Vt. ISK |
235.68 |
0.67% |
4.4 |
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Currency Crosses, 1/28/2010
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| |
EUR |
GBP |
USD |
| GBP |
0.860 |
|
|
| USD |
1.398 |
1.625 |
|
| CHF |
1.472 |
1.711 |
1.053 |
| JPY |
125.894 |
146.304 |
90.027 |
| NOK |
8.195 |
9.524 |
5.860 |
| SEK |
10.224 |
11.882 |
7.311 |
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Icelandic Equities, 1/27/2010 |
| ID |
Vol. |
Yield |
Day.ch. |
| MARL |
31 |
62.00 |
-0.64% |
| OSSR |
26 |
158.50 |
0.00% |
| BAKK |
0 |
1.30 |
-3.70% |
| FO-EIK |
0 |
81.00 |
-1.22% |
| NYHR |
0 |
11.00 |
0.00% |
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