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Wall Street Weekly | 02/06/2009 11:00 am

Botox Sales Down in the Recession? Stop the Madness!

Bears, Bulls, Chickens and Pigs: wOw’s Wall Street Weekly with Liz Peek (Week of 2/2)
By Liz Peek
© iStock

Editor’s Note: Liz Peek is a financial columnist and the author of wOw’s SHEconomics

I want a Valentine’s present! Chocolates, roses, bling – I don’t care; consider it therapy. I am tired of this downturn, tired of winter, tired of all the squabbling in Washington – I need a little pick-me-up!

This spoiled rant is good news. For the past several months I have been on a strict spending diet, reacting to the beating my portfolio has taken and the panicky feeling that the economy was on the verge of collapse. Everyone I know has cut back – even seriously wealthy people who don’t need to. Saks Fifth Avenue reported a 24% plunge in January sales. Other high-end vendors are in the same boat. Consider this: Allergan reported Wednesday that Botox sales in the fourth quarter were down 3%. I mean come on! Can this continue? I don’t think so. Suddenly, I want something, and I doubt that I’m alone.

While there are millions of Americans in deep financial trouble, there are many more millions that still have jobs and income, and have been, like me, paralyzed by all the gloom. All they need is a little confidence that the world is not coming to an end, and spending will flatten. There are indeed some reasons for optimism.

wOw women – you heard it here first – like a faint breeze that riffles the grass and that signals a front coming through, there are tiny signs that a bottom is forming.

For months I have told you that we needed to see housing stabilize before the economy could sort itself out. Recent reports are encouraging. Existing home sales were up 6.7% in December compared to November, beating expectations, and inventories declined to 9.3 months from 11.2 months. Also, the rate of decline in housing prices has dropped. In November, the most recent data available, prices were off a hefty 18% year-over-year, but the slide is decelerating. Programs announced by Citigroup and other institutions to help homeowners avoid foreclosure combined with lower house prices are finally having some impact.

Moreover, credit conditions are definitely improving. Institutions are beginning to buy highly rated corporate debt, and indeed new issue activity has picked up. Even speculative-grade issuers are seeing some action, after nearly five months of being shut out of the markets altogether. Of more importance to you and me is that banks are loosening their purse strings, and indicating a greater willingness to lend. The rate of decline in unemployment claims is slowing, and the most recent indicators of manufacturing activity show a slight uptick compared to December. The yield curve is becoming steeper, usually a good sign, and commodity prices appear to be stabilizing.

Wall Street’s top-rated economists at ISI publish something called the Economic Diffusion Index (which sounds like something served in a tall glass with ice); it incorporates all the economic and market indicators they follow and, they say, “looks a little better.” Further, they say “the rate of decline in economic activity is moderating.” They ascribe the slight improvement to the huge number of stimulus efforts being undertaken worldwide – every country in the world is handing out tax rebates or pumping up government spending or underwriting the banking sector. Even China, which has suffered a major blow to export demand, is seeing a marginal increase in demand. Perhaps that’s why the Chinese market is up 23% from the November lows.

Certainly it is too early to celebrate. Car and home sales are still drastically low, and more than half a million people will probably lose their jobs this month alone. That is cause for mourning, not elation. The news over the next several quarters will sound awful. But at least there are signs that a base for recovery is beginning to build.

26 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Mommy Dearest
Ah, Liz, my dear, were it only that we realized that a significant part of this crisis is one of confidence, as stated by President Obama himself. I am alarmed to read the opinions of many who supported his administration with baseless predictions that unemployment will inch up to Depression levels. That only serves to exacerbate an already difficult problem, doesn’t it?
By Mommy Dearest on 02/06/2009 11:15 am
Diana T
Liz, I envy you. Your world is very different, I guess, from what I’m seeing out here in the heartland. http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aLqmR5ZB_RYI
By Diana T on 02/06/2009 11:41 am
Mark Rowe
Hi Liz, I feel that we are in a depression and anyone who thinks otherwise is blind or part of the problem! Giving money away to the very low-lifes who put us here is stupid, and just making the end result worse. This depression is like a shot in the arm. If we just get it over with it will be done soon and we can go on with our lives. But I do feel we need to hold thoes responsable for this and put them in jail! Or shoot them.
By Mark Rowe on 02/06/2009 12:04 pm
kermie b
You know what would be a fantastic Valentine’s Day present? A damn job. An opportunity to work. No botox, no chocolates, no pricey shoes. I just want to be employed. Maybe next Valentine’s Day.
By kermie b on 02/06/2009 2:05 pm
Tinka Parker
I’m with you, kb. Where is the silver lining? Where? I need new glasses.
By Tinka Parker on 02/09/2009 7:14 pm
DeBúrca obj
This could be the best bi-product of this depression! I hate the way botox makes people’s face look and it seems to have a side effect to the brain because somehow these people think they look good. Sort of like the way an anorexic looks in the mirror and sees a fat person. Garry Shandling was on Craig Ferguson last night and his face was so pumped full of botox he looked like a plastic talking head (botox and whatever other god-awful thing he had done to his face). It was disturbing.
By DeBúrca obj on 02/06/2009 4:35 pm
Diana T
DeB, I thought Shandling looked odd when I saw him on Tavis Smiley. He never was a Mr. America before he did the botox thing. I was just on Robert Reich’s blog site and I’m dropping this link to you because if you just keep scrolling, you will see several blogs that are very informative. http://robertreich.blogspot.com/
By Diana T on 02/06/2009 6:45 pm
DeBúrca obj
I love Robert Reich, thanks!
By DeBúrca obj on 02/06/2009 7:13 pm
Dab-a- do
Diana, I don’t know why I didn’t know about Robert Reich’s blog site…now I wish I hadn’t found it. I feel sick after reading his Feb. 6 blog. Please let him be wrong. I can’t imagine what will happen if he is right. This couldn’t have happened without criminal activity. Maybe I just want to blame someone but this is too terrible to believe it just happened because some people were greedy. There has to be more to the story. Wonder if we will ever know? Or have I been too blind to see the rest of the story?
By Dab-a- do on 02/07/2009 7:35 pm
Diana T
Dabney, How are you doing down there? Ice has finally melted here in Central Kentucky. Robert Reich? One of our great economists. Yes, everything I read agrees with his assessments. That is why I’m trying to check in his blogsite at least once a week. If you go to the unemployment section of this site, you will find a lot of background links I sent over to Debra Grande. It took so very long to find them because I had to read every little bit, that I hope you will just save me some time and peruse the links over there. Yes, it’s an unequaled crisis of unparelled dimensions and there is no simple answer and no simple fix. As so many speakers said at the Davos conference last week, it will take an international effort to get everyone back on the right track. No simple answers in 30 second sound bytes by pundits that try to convince us they know everything, but they don’t.
By Diana T on 02/07/2009 8:23 pm
Dab-a- do
We are warming up, a lot of freezing days and roads closed from the mountain. We stayed in the city so hubby could go to work. I thought about you often when I saw the weather reports. Hard to believe the devastation in some sites from the ice. Thanks for the heads up for the links. No, there are obviously no simple solutions. I understand the situation is grim but one thing that has stuck in my mind is that less than 3% of the unemployed by this economic meltdown are college educated or technical school graduates. I wish I could find the source for that because I am sure I read it somewhere and later saw it on the evening news. Glad the temperature has taken an upswing for you. I know that when it is cold I tend to stay in and hybernate too much. I hope you have had an opportunity to do something fun even with the bad weather.
By Dab-a- do on 02/07/2009 9:24 pm
Diana T
I think Mugsy is worried about her brother because he is in Western Ky. and they received the brunt of the storm. Last Sunday, I had to go to Danville, Ky. to a funeral visitation, and I must say, Dab, that it reminded me of a toronado going through.
By Diana T on 02/07/2009 9:41 pm
Dab-a- do
I hope Mugsy’s brother is all right. I had a friend whose husband worked on the lines for the electric power board and I’m sure they, in Ky, are working around the clock to get electricity to everyone. When there are rough times people really seem to come through don’t they? The guys would work here in the terrible cold days and nights the few times I can remember such bad weather in the winter. The pictures on the TV didn’t seem real or that it could be possible the weather was so bad in Kentucky. I have always thought of “us” in the southern states as being exempt of such weather. Then, it happens again. Today felt like a spring day to us.
By Dab-a- do on 02/07/2009 10:04 pm
Diana T
Back when my doctor went into Eastern Ky. doing our medical clinic (I was his office manager), we would see people who hadn’t been out of their hollers for 6 weeks at a time, if there was a bad winter. Holler, not hollow—that’s what they’re called.
By Diana T on 02/08/2009 9:38 am
Alley Mitchell
botox is not only used for “beauty” benifits It is also used for treatment of Migraine Headaches, so not all botox users are in it for the “looks”
By Alley Mitchell on 02/07/2009 2:45 am