In "Americans
Agree: There Is No Recovery," I highlighted
a recent Washington Post-ABC News poll, noting that
no
matter how you break it down -- whether by party/ideology, household income,
age, or any other category -- the majority of Americans agree on one thing:
there is no recovery.
But the fact
that things haven't returned to normal isn't just a matter of (public)
opinion. As the Globe and
Mail's Market Blog reveals in "These
Are Bad Days for Garbage," the volume of
waste being created nowadays essentially means that, despite persistent talk
(from Wall Street, among others) of a renaissance in consumer spending,
people are continuing to consume less and recycle more than they used to.
You might think
that the business of hauling garbage is a stable industry that can thrive
regardless of how the economy is performing. But although the solid waste
industry is decidedly unglamorous – and unglamorous can be synonymous
with defensive – waste is surprisingly exposed to the economy, making
it as vulnerable to setbacks as swishy retailers and gold-plated banks.
And right now,
Moody’s Investors Service is arguing that waste operators are in a
tough spot. In a report, the credit rating agency cut the industry’s
outlook to “stable” from “positive” and warned that
low demand from consumers is colliding with weaker pricing from operators.
That’s a sign that stocks could be stuck in (wait for it ... ) the trash heap.
...
“The slow
economic improvement has failed to generate meaningful growth in waste
volumes, and the pricing discipline maintained by waste operators during the
recession is beginning to fade,” said Bruce Herskovics,
a Moody’s analyst, in a note. “We’re hearing that
customers, particularly cash-strapped municipalities, are pushing back when
contracts come up for renewal and we believe that operators are bidding more
defensively to maintain accounts.”
Garbage gets
tossed in good times and bad, of course, but the bad times generate
considerably less of it. For example, Moody’s points out that waste
volumes from U.S. construction and demolition sectors remain weak and are
unlikely to rebound this year, offsetting some improvements in industrial
waste.
And then there
are the dreaded R-words. No, not recession – but rather reducing,
reusing and recycling. Can you believe it? Mr. Herskovics
points out that there has been a long-developing trend among consumers to
avoid sending old junk to landfills, and that has played havoc with
residential waste volumes.
Sounds like the
"new frugality" of the Great Recession has become the new normal of
today's non-recovery.
Michael J. Panzner
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