Friday, March 28, 2008

"...since the Great Depression."




Maybe it's just me, but I've been seeing this comparison more and more in the media when it comes to our economy.


Here's some examples:


"Savings Rate Lowest Since Great Depression"




"Lawrence Yun, the Realtor's chief economist, said it was likely the country has not experienced a decline in home prices for an entire year since the Great Depression."


http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/080124/economy.html



"Fed takes boldest action since the Depression to rescue US mortgage industry"


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2008/03/12/cnfed112.xml



In fact, if you Google the words "...since the Great Depression" you get 2.1 million hits! Apparently this is becoming a popular phrase.



I'm pretty sure that it's going to get even more popular as we move forward.


Monday, March 24, 2008

Bill Fleckenstein is my hero! FJ Quote of the Day

"Congress and the White House are now attempting to right past wrongs with bailout schemes -- some aimed at lenders and others at borrowers. And of course, the Fed is being called on -- and has willingly obliged -- to provide more easy money in the hope that more of what created the problem can solve it.

The latest example by the Fed: Handing JPMorgan Chase a $30 billion credit guarantee to get it to buy Bear Stearns.

The insidious and dangerous unspoken corollary to all this: Financial pain is now unacceptable. Those in trouble demand to be rescued, and the government seems to agree that the "creative destruction" component of capitalism must not be allowed to do its work. It's a sad irony that as former communist countries embrace capitalism, we seem to be headed in the other direction."

- Bill Fleckenstein, "Contrarian Chronicles"

March 21, 2008

Here's the link to the article:

http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/Investing/ContrarianChronicles/CateringToTheBailoutNation.aspx?page=1

Sunday, March 16, 2008

FJ Challenges the Conventional Wisdom: High Housing Prices are BAD for the economy and consumers!


Are high housing prices a good thing?

If you listen to the media, the politicians and the financial industry when asked about the housing crisis - overall you'd come away with the impression that this is true. And all of their "solutions" come down to finding a way to maintain those high prices no matter what!

However, if we delve into the pre-bubble mentality. High housing prices are often seen as a liability for a community.

I live in Santa Fe, NM, which has always had a certain cache - it's considered a highly desirable place to live (and retire to). Because of this, it's always had high housing prices. There are other places like this including Aspen, Colorado and Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

1. The biggest problem with high housing prices is that it makes it very difficult to attract businesses and develop the local economy. Employers aren't that eager to have to pay above market wages to compensate for the high cost of living. In Santa Fe's case, we are the state capital, so there are lots of government jobs. Likewise, we have a large tourist economy that is highly dependent upon the economy. Housing is the third biggest employer in the city (and we know how that's going right now). We have no major employers outside of these sectors (Thornburg Investments and Thornburg Mortgage are probably the single largest private employers in the city, but Thornburg Mortgage is on the verge of going bankrupt because of margin calls and that could result in 400+ high paying jobs evaporating and further damage a struggling housing market).

Because we have no industry, wages in Santa Fe are not good. We often have a problem with teachers, policemen and firemen being able to afford houses in the city where they work. If you want to find "affordable housing" in Santa Fe you have to go to the ghetto-like southwest side (where, according to an article in the paper today, affordable is $250,000+), buy a mobile home and live in a trailer park, or buy an affordable house in Albuquerque and commute 60 miles each way to work.

Likewise, we have a brain drain where the smartest kids in our city can't wait to leave because the opportunities in this city are so limited. We are also saddled with a high dropout rate amongst the disenfranchised kids and minorities.

2. Another big negative for high housing prices is high property taxes. One good thing about New Mexico is that we have very, very low property taxes (most of our school funding is paid for by our "gross receipts tax" which is like a sales tax on everything except medical care and food). On the house I owned until last year, my annual taxes were only about $1,200 on a home that I eventually sold for $345,000. However, in most parts of the country, property taxes come to about 1% of assessed value. That means that over the past 5 years the average person's tax burden on their home doubled or more, even if they didn't do anything to the property. When you talk about someone paying $3,000/year in property taxes on their home when a few years ago their taxes were only $1,500/year - that creates financial pressure on homeowners, especially when wages have been stagnant like they have been this past decade.

3. Then there's the whole maintenance issue. If you have all your money going toward a high house payment with high property taxes, how are you going to be able to afford to pay for the upkeep of your property? When it comes to budgeting for the purchase of a home, they say that you will spend about 1% of the cost of your house on maintenance and upkeep each year. Then, every 10-15 years expect a major repair, like a new roof or the house needs to be restuccoed. Major repairs can set you back $10,000 or more. High housing prices hurt the homeowner's ability to properly maintain their property.

So, that's what you get with inflated housing prices:
Communities can't attract businesses
Brain Drain and high dropout rates
People who work in the community can't afford to live in the community.
Depressed wage base
High property taxes

On the flip side, lower housing prices aren't the end of the world. People will be able to afford houses again without having to take on a toxic mortgage. Property taxes will come down. People won't have to commute hundreds of miles a week to their job. Maintenance issues will be a minor nuisance as opposed to a financial crisis. Finally, you and your partner won't have to work 80 hours a week at multiple jobs in order to afford a home.

That doesn't seem so bad to me.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Banks ask Congress to fill a $3 Trillion Hole














"Watch that first step, Doc. It's a lu-lu!" - Bugs Bunny

How much trouble are the banks and financial companies in relation to this housing bust?

In my previous post I demonstrated how they essentially milked out all of the equity Americans have in their homes through their fruadulent and corrupt lending practices.

In summary, back in the 90s Americans had $10 trillion in housing wealth against $5 trillion in mortgage debt. During the height of the bubble both numbers swelled to $20 trillion and $10 trillion respectively. We are now on the downslope and it will end with $10 trillion in housing wealth being backed with $10 trillion in mortgage debt.

However, it's even worse for the banks. Because 30% of the houses in this country are owned outright. This means that the endgame, is that there is $10 trillion in debt held against $7 trillion in housing wealth. The fact that the mortgaged housing stock is still "valued" at $14 trillion doesn't matter because it's shrinking every day (last month national housing prices fell almost 2%, that's $400 billion in housing wealth up in smoke).

This is what is making the banks and financial companies crap their pants. They know that $3 trillion of what they are holding is almost certain to default. Once people have lost all their equity, they'll have very little incentive to stay in the house (especially if rents are cheaper). When you also throw in the fact that we have millions of "homeowners" who never put a penny down on their homes and the debt slaves who HELOCed and Refied all of the equity out of their house these past 5 years, you have a very, very big problem.

But wait! The problem is even bigger. You see many of these banks and financial institutions went out and used this debt as collateral to leverage up their portfolio by 20 or 30 times! So one bank could have $100 million in mortgage debt receivables on their books, but they could have used that to borrow $20 - $30 BILLION more. What did they do with that money? Well they bought more debt instruments: like CDOs or US Treasuries, or Agency debt.

It was all supposed to be very safe. But when you have leveraged yourself to the hilt, a tiny move in the wrong direction (if you're leveraged up 20 to 1, it only takes a 5% move to WIPE YOU OUT!) can send you to bankruptcy very quickly.

If you want an example, look at the Carlyle group and Thornburg Mortgage. They both overleveraged their positions, the value of their collateral dropped by a small amount and generated huge margin calls. Both of these companies have been unable to sell their debt securities (because the debt markets have been frozen for months and they continue to deteriorate), so both of these companies are both going to evaporate.

Poof! Like magic, they will disappear forever.


So now these big and powerful financial firms, who made hundreds of billions of dollars on the way up are now begging the government to fix this.

The only problem is, the hole is too big!

Both the Government and the Federal Reserve are doing everything they can to try to fix and unfixable situation. In the entire history of our country (that's 232 years) we've only now been able to accumulate $9.4 trillion in debt. Now the bankers and financiers are looking for a $3 trillion handout to bail them out of their own greedy stupid mess that THEY CREATED! Shoot, the annual Federal Budget is $3 trillion!

Look at some of the crazy proposals out there right now:



  • Ben Bernake wants lenders to REDUCE THE PRINCIPAL of mortgage balances for people that are underwater. I talked about this in a previous post on Debt Negotiation - THEY WOULD NEVER EVEN CONSIDER THIS UNLESS THE SITUATION WAS BEYOND GRAVE AND THE ALTERNATIVE (MEANING LET THE HOMES GET FORECLOSED ON AND TRY TO RESELL THEM IN THE OPEN MARKET) WOULD END UP COSTING MUCH, MUCH MORE!

  • Congress is proposing tax credits of $5,000 to $15,000 for people to buy a home. Personally, I'm waiting for a bigger tax credit before I would buy.

  • The Federal Funds rate has been reduced from 5.25% to 3% in less than 6 months and it will probably be dropped another 0.75% next week, even with inflation and commodity prices soaring and the dollar depreciating more than 10% since they started cutting interest rates!

  • Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the FHLB have all had the limits raised on conforming mortgages. So now a conforming mortgage can be up to $729,000 in some parts of the country (so much for helping the poor afford homes).

Sorry, banks. You created a problem that's too big to fix. Everyone sees that all of these proposals don't help homeowners, they help the banks and financial institutions that created this mess.

Just look at how Agency debt from Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae have been tanking since they raised the loan limits. Everyone knows that this is just a ploy to allow companies like Merrill Lynch and Citibank to pawn off their toxic debt onto the government (meaning, us taxpayers). No one wants to come within 100 yards of this toxic debt! In the meantime we have to suffer with higher gas and food prices (along with everything else) just so they can keep their game going until at least after the election in November.

It won't work, and I don't think they can hold this thing together for another 9 months, but that's just my opinion.

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Pump and Dump


Here's the Headline on Yahoo today:

Homeowner Equity Is Lowest Since 1945
Thursday March 6, 2:15 pm ET By J.W. Elphinstone, AP Business Writer
Federal Reserve Report Shows Homeowner Equity Dipping Below 50 Percent, the Lowest on Record

http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/080306/home_equity.html

How is this possible? Haven't we just experienced the greatest decade ever
for housing appreciation? Didn't the average price of a home in the United
States double during this time?


But wait, the news is actually worse than what's reported. Right now the value of housing in America is about $20 trillion. There is a total of about $10 trillion in mortgage debt held against this equity.
Everything looks pretty good so far, right?



However, about 30% of the housing stock is owned outright ($6
trillion). So that leaves only $14 trillion in housing equity against $10 trillion in debt
- all of a sudden that cushion doesn't look as big as
it did.


In the past year, the Case-Shiller Home Price Index has said that
housing values across the country have plunged by almost 10%!
Take away 10% from $14 trillion and you're down to $12.6 trillion in equity. Uh oh, all it's going to take is another 20% drop to WIPE OUT ALL OF THE HOME EQUITY IN 70% OF THE HOUSES IN THIS COUNTRY!


This, my friends, is a classic pump and dump of the housing
market.
If you understand economics you will know that all pricing
power happens at the margins. Housing is a product that has very small margins. At any given time, only about 1%-2% of the existing housing stock is for sale (there is about 100 million housing units in this country).

Because of easy financing (no down payment, no documentation, liar loans, option ARMs, etc., etc.) you had a large number of people enter the housing market. Anyone knows that when you increase demand without a corresponding increase of supply (housing supply takes about 2-3 years to catch up) the price goes up. In this case, the price went up substantially.

Now we have about 4% of the homes in America for sale and you would think it was the end of the world! However, at the margin prices need to come down substantially in order to clear out this excess inventory. The fact that sales are also slowing substantially is another problem because it puts even more pressure on prices to come down.

So where are house prices going? To answer this question I want to take you back to the last bubble, the tech bubble. From 1996 to 2000 the Nasdaq went from 1052 to 5048. Then the bubble burst and the Nasdaq fell all the way to 1142 in October of 2002.


ALL OF THE GAINS OF THE BUBBLE WERE WASHED AWAY ONCE IT POPPED!


Even today, 8 years after the Nasdaq reached that lofty high, the
Nasdaq closed at 2220. That's almost 60% off it's all time high. If you add in inflation (3%/year), the Nasdaq is still down OVER 80%.



In my opinion, the same thing is going to happen to the housing
market. ALL OF THE GAINS IN THE PAST 10 YEARS WILL BE LOST!
That means the average price of a home in America is going back to around $100,000. Also, because the housing market is not nearly as liquid as the stock market, it will take longer to deflate than the Nasdaq did. The peak of the housing market was in the fall of 2005, so we're 2.5 years in right now and prices are only down 10% (and all of that loss occured in 2007).


Equity is a phantom, but Debt is permanent!


In the end we'll have $10 trillion in housing stock backed by $10
trillion in debt. That means Americans will have, on average, NO EQUITY in their homes when this is all done!



That means the end result is that we, as a nation, have become poorer due
to the housing bubble. Not to mention we now have to live through the massive housing led recession that we are entering right now.


We've been played, America! We were the Mark and we fell for it, and now we have to suffer the consequences. The scam artists are laughing all the way to the bank!

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Oh My God!
















Thank you "Mess Greenspan Made" blog for finding this. Feel free to check out this excellent website.

There is a closed gas station that I pass by on the way to work that still has prices listed on its sign. There it is, frozen in time: $1.37/gallon for unleaded.

Ahh, the good old days!

Monday, March 3, 2008

Be Careful of What You Wish For


I remember back in High School I had a conversation with this girl, Kelly (who was my date to the Prom). We were talking about what time period we would like to have lived in. We both agreed that the 1920s would have been awesome. This was really against the grain because most of the kids my age would have said the sixties.

Why did I say the twenties? Well, it was a really exciting time in America. It was a decade long party filled with jazz music and flappers (hubba, hubba). It was an incredible time for artists, architecture(Art Deco), design, and pop culture (movies like “Metropolis”). It was a time of exciting technological innovation like the automobile, radio and flight. There was an economic boom and a stock market boom. Everyone was getting rich, and it just looked so classy!

My younger self always thought how cool it would have been to have lived in such a time. Of course, I wasn’t that concerned about what happened in the decade after the roaring 20s – the Depression.

It’s interesting because the more I learn about the roaring twenties, I see eerie similarities to what has transpired in our country over the past dozen years. The beautiful and popular spent their time and money at clubs where you could pay $1,000 for a private table and spend $400 on a bottle of liquor (with a 2 bottle minimum). Women salivated at $1,000 Jimmy Choo shoes and $5,000 Christain Dior handbags. Not to be outdone, men bought things like $3,000 Plasma Televisions and $50,000 Hummers and Escalades. We also had the internet revolution during this time - think about how much that changed your life. Finally we were blessed with twin bubbles, first in technology and then in housing to power all this excess.

The dark side of the 20s was that it was all fueled by debt. Consumers and Businesses took on massive amounts of debt in order to live “the good life”. Unfortunately, it was all a house of cards. Once the debt reached a certain level, people couldn’t service it anymore. People started to default on their obligations and the economy collapsed in a deflationary spiral. The banking system seized up and there was no more credit or liquidity that people could use to fuel the economy. In order to service the high debt loads, people had to sell their assets (including stocks, bonds and houses) at greater and greater losses. As an example, by 1933 home prices across the country fell 90%! That's a fact that the NAR will never tell you about.

So, I guess I got my wish. Near as I can figure, the past decade has been as close to the 20s as I could have experienced. Did I enjoy it? Yes I did, but I could never embrace the debtor lifestyle. It would have been so easy for me to have pulled hundreds of thousands of dollars out of my house and gone on exotic trips, bought overpriced foreign cars and lots of techno gizmos to impress my friends and relatives. I could have gotten myself a dozen credit cards and maxed them all out on shopping trips, expensive restaurants and entertainment.

But that’s not me. I knew that would be a dead end that would only end in tears. I can only imagine what is happening across this country with people who owe more on their home than what it is worth, who are in danger of losing everything because they took on too much debt. The stress and fear must be overwhelming, and it is something that – hopefully – I will never have to experience myself.

The plus side is that if we do hit a deflationary spiral like what occurred in the 30s, I will be waiting with baited breath and cold, hard cash to buy those assets at pennies on the dollar!

Saturday, March 1, 2008

FJ Quote of the Day

"Many Americans are now realizing that being tied to material items comes at a heavy costs. If you have beaucoup debt you are unable to do other things. When you ask Americans to imagine a wealthy individual, they will tell you that they drive in a foreign luxury car, wear a $5,000 watch, and live in an uber
McMansion. Yet the reality is very different. As highlighted in the Millionaire Next Door, many of the day to day millionaires drive nice but not super expensive cars, live in modest homes, and don’t spend ridiculous amounts
on artifacts of wealth.
The book was written before the housing bubble but the fact remains, wealth is not possession of expensive items. Wealth is having the freedom to do what you want. Having massive amounts of debt hanging over your head is not wealth, it is a financial albatross that will take your freedom away."

Thank you Dr. Housing Bubble for such an eloquent quote! I also recommend you read "The Millionaire Next Door", it is a fascinating book about what it takes to become wealthy in this country!

I've also added a link to Dr. Housing Bubble's website on the right. Please check him out. His "Real Homes of Genius" are awesome!