Give me 5 minutes and I’ll convince you that you should sell your house immediately and invest yourlife-savings in gold or a Swiss bank-account.For some time now we’ve been hearing about the so-called housing bubble and what effect it could have on your net worth and future. Well, the numbers are finally in and you can decide for yourself whether its time to sell now or try to ride out the storm.
In 2000 the total value of homes in the US was $11.4 trillion. Today that number has shot up to $20.3 trillion; nearly double.
At the same time, mortgage-debt in 2000 was a trifling $4.8 trillion (about half) while in 2006 it skyrocketed to a whopping $9.3 trillion.
So, how do we explain these enormous increases in value? After all, wasn’t the housing boom just the natural outcome of “supply and demand”?
No it wasn’t. That’s an unfortunate myth that should be interred with the withered remains of Milton “free-market” Friedman.
If we really want to know what’s going on, we need to look back at the
machinations at the Federal Reserve in 2001, that’s when Greenspan
lowered interest rates to 1.5% to soften the blow from the stock market
meltdown. Rather than tighten interest rates and let the country to go
through a period of recession, Greenspan lowered rates and ramped up
the printing presses to “full-throttle”.
Voila; the housing bubble! Or what the conservative “Economist” magazine calls “the largest equity bubble” in history.
The housing bubble has nothing to do with supply and demand or with the
fictional increase in workers salaries. (which have actually gone down
since Bush took office) Rather, it is the predictable result of
dramatically increasing the money supply while expanding personal debt
via home-mortgages.
Remember, the central banks are not in the mortgage business; they are
in the “money-pedaling” business. And the way you sell more money is by
making it as cheap as possible. The Fed intentionally inflated the
bubble with cheap money so they could keep the printing presses
whirring-along. They worked in concert with the banks to lower the
requirements for mortgages so they could attract an endless swarm of
“unqualified” customers who wanted tojointhe feeding-frenzy.
Isn’t that what happened?
And, didn't that make it possible for every Tom, Dick and Harry to
borrow hundreds of thousands of dollars on “no-down payment”, “interest
only”, ARMs or other equally risky mortgage-packages?
Of course it did.
There are some who will argue that the Federal Reserve just made an
honest mistake and were merely trying to steer the country away from
impending recession.
That may be true,but let’s consider the facts before we draw any hasty conclusions.
Did the Federal Reserve double the money supply in the last 7 years?
Yes.
Did they know what they were doing?
Yes.
Did they know that printing more money creates inflationary pressures and reduces the value of money already in circulation?
Yes.
Did they realize that the money was going directly into the real estate
market where it was creating an “unsustainable” equity bubble that
would eventually crash and destroy thelives' of hundreds of thousands
of Americans whose greatest asset is their home?
Of course, because it's the Federal Reservewhichproduces all the
relevant facts and figures, charts and graphs, about increases (and
trends) in the housing market. How could they NOT know?!?
In other words, they doubled the money supply and then sat back and
watched while $4.5 trillion went directly into the real estate market
via mortgage loans to people who were “under-qualified”.(knowing that
these same people would eventually fail to meet their payments and
adversely effect the entire market)
The Federal Reserve knew all of this. In fact, they knew where every
dime was going, but decided to persist in their swindle to the bitter
end.
Have the real effects of this monster-bubble been softened by the huge trade deficit?
Yes, because America currently borrows $800 billion a year from China,
Japan etc. which keeps the economy sputtering along while our
manufacturing sector continues to be ransacked.
The $800 billion account deficit is like a sedative which lulls us to
sleep while the country is looted right in front of our eyes. For
example, in the last 12 years, foreign ownership of US assets has
soared from $3 trillion to over $12 trillion.(400%) At the same time,
over 13,000 major US companies have been sold to foreign corporations
since 1980. Nevertheless, Americans are only-too-happy to ignore these
unpleasant facts as long as they can totter off to Wal-Mart to buy
little Johnny his new video-game. It’s only a matter of time before the
scattered, bleached bones of American industry appear everywhere across
the American heartland.
And, does the Fed realize that Americans borrowed another $825 billion
from their home equity in the last 12 months (to spend on house
repairs, shopping, boats etc) and that without that consumer spending
the nation’s growth rate (GDP) will shrivel to nothing?
Yes, because they provide all that data, too.
So, what does this mean for the homeowner whose future depends onthe steady increase in his home equity? What can he expect?
Well, first of all, you can ignore all the gibberish you hear on the
business channel about “soft landings” and a “temporary downturn”.
There’ll be no soft landings. This is the Big One; Real Estate Armageddon followed by a plague of locusts.
JUST LOOK AT THE NUMBERS! There’s a $10 trillion difference between the
aggregate in 2000 and 2006! $4.5 trillion of that is new mortgage-debt!
That’s more than a little “froth” as Greenspan likes to say. In an
economy that’s currently growing at a feeble 1.6%, a plummeting housing
market could pave the way for another (dare I say it) Great Depression.
$10 trillion!?! Some things are worth repeating.
First of all, (if we compare our situation to what happened in Japan
during the 1990s) we can expect that prices will continue to fall for
years to come, perhaps, a decade or more. Many of the slower markets
are already showing a decline of 10% to 20%. This is a trend that is
likely to speed up dramatically in 2007 when $1 trillion in ARMs reset.
That’s when we’ll begin to see a truly new phenomenon in the US, that
is, people who’ve always been solid members of the middle class sliding
downwards into the ranks of the working poor.
By 2008, if the present trend-lines persist, housing prices will
probably drop to 25% to 30% of their 2005 value; diminishing equity
value by approximately 45% to 50% for most homeowners.
If you own your home outright; you can sweat it out, but if you got
into the market late; you’re toast. You’ll be joining the throng of
mortgage-slaves who are shackled to loans that are significantly higher
than the current value of their house.
Imagine paying off a loan for $400,000 when your house has been
reassessed at $250,000 or $300,000; that’ll be the reality for an
estimated 30 million Americans. Meanwhile, inventory will continue to
grow (already at an 8 month backlog) the economy will continue to
contract, and the dollar will continue to weaken. (Many of the major
home builders; Centex, Beazer and Toll Bros, are reporting that profits
are down by nearly 65%.)
At the same time the Fed just issued another $10 billion in Treasury
Bonds last week raising the national debt to a mind-boggling $8.6
trillion. This loosey-goosey approach to printing fiat money and
creating debt explains the recent surge in the markets. As “The Daily
Reckoning’s” Richard Daughty says, the “bull market is manufactured
from rampant government deficit-spending and financed by the Federal
Reserve creating the money.”
Amen. Its all fluff and there's nothing to it. It'sjust loose money
finding a temporary perch before the approaching squall. Don’t trust
the smoke and mirrors. Behind the merriment and gusto, Wall Street
analysts are expecting a collapse…and soon.
How soon, you ask?
Well, Daughty also notes that “revolving credit like credit card loans
grew by $2.85 billion, or at an annual rate of 4.00%, to $857 billion.”
So, credit card debt is going up, which is an indication that the
people who were siphoning money from their home equity have switched
over to plastic. That’s sure sign the writhing consumer-beast is in its
last throes. The end is near.
Why should I care about Net Long-term Capital Inflows?
In another bit of disheartening news the net long-term capital inflows
fell short of what the US needs to cover the current account deficit.
The inflows were only $65 billion when we need $70 billion to make ends
meet. This is another way of saying that foreigners are no longer
mopping up our red ink. Interestingly, foreign central banks are buying
considerably fewer Treasurys; $9 billion in US securities and a paltry
$8 billion in Treasury bonds.
What does it mean? It means that no is dim-witted enough to buy our debt anymore because we’re no longer a good risk.
That’s a very bad sign. Under different stewardship the "full faith and
credit" of the US Treasury meant something. That's no longer true.
Also, according to Marketwatch, “US residents purchased a net $22.9
billion in foreign securities, up from $2.7 billion in August. Foreign
holdings of dollar-denominated short-term securities, including
Treasury bills, fell by $10.8 billion.”
Foreign investments are up $20 billion in one month?!? Are you kidding me?
So, the smart money is getting out of Dodge pronto; leaving the rest of us behind in a leaky canoe.
Thanks, Greenspan.
Some of you may have seen Alexander Cockburn’s shocking article “Lame
Duck” last week on Counterpunch. Cockburn refers to a report published
by the Financial Services Authority (FSA) “a body set up under the
purview of the British Treasury to monitor financial markets and
protect the public interest by raising the alarm about shady practices
and any dangerous slides towards instability.”
The report “Private Equity: A Discussion of Risk and Regulatory Engagement” states clearly:
“Excessive leverage: The amount of credit that lenders are willing to
extend on private equity transactions has risen substantially. This
lending may not, in some circumstances, be entirely prudent. Given
current levels and recent developments in the economic/credit cycle,
the default of a large private equity backed company or a cluster of
smaller private equity backed companies seems inevitable. This has
negative implications for lenders, purchasers of the debt, orderly
markets and conceivably, in extreme circumstances, financial stability
and elements of the UK economy.”
The problem is even greater in the US where unregulated fractional
lending has allowed banks to loan unlimited amounts of money on measly
reserves. Hence, “the default of a large private equity company is
inevitable”. The whole deregulated banking scam has turned the system
into a Vegas-style “crap shoot” with no guarantees that you’ll ever see
your money again. The same is true with the new-fangled investment
“instruments” like hedge funds which contain few tangible assets and
more and more “collateralized debt”. That means that they depend
heavily on the “worker bees” at the bottom of the economic Totem Pole,
who are expected to continue making their payments even while the
economy begins to swoon.
The present system is fraught with peril and likely to come crashing
down in a heap. As Cockburn sagely notes, “The world’s credit system is
a vast recycling bin of untraceable transactions of wildly inflated
value.”
“Market transparency” has gone the way of the Dodo. The new
“deregulated” markets are intentionally opaque so the medicine men and
hucksters who designed them could fleece the public from the comfort of
their Wall Street enclaves. No one should be too surprised that the
whole rickety contraption is tilting towards the dumpster.
Happy Days in the Weimar Republic
So, what was the “Grand Plan” the Fed had in mind when they
decided to anesthetize the American public with low interest rates and
flood the planet with worthless green scrip?
Did they think that Bush would corner the oil market and, thus, force
the rest of the world to take our anemic greenbacks? Or were they just
planning to steal every last farthing from the American people before
they loaded the boats and fled to more promising markets in Asia?
Or perhaps they were delusional enough to believe that really wonderful
things would happen if they just kept tossing banknotes into the
Jet-stream like New Year’s confetti?
Whatever the madcap rationale might have been, the country is now
facing an agonizing wake-up call as the full-effects of Greenspan’s
tenure materializes and the stronghold of global consumerism
deteriorates into Weimar USA.
In the long run, Greenspan’s treachery will loom larger then that of
his “would-be” understudy, Bin Laden. He put the country on the
fast-track to disaster.
Just watch as the“For Sale” signs go up on lawns across America in Dear Alan’s honor.
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Monday, 20 November 2006

Jim
said:
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Milton Friedman? Not sure I follow the reference to Milton Friedman. I agree with your premise here about the causes of the housing bubble, and if any economist would agree, Friedman certainly would. The notion that economies are moved by monetary phenomenon was basically everything Friedman believed. You're right about the housing bubble, but your leftist politics keep you from creating the more coherent argument, i think. |
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Michael Limberg
said:
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The Bankruptcy Net is Gone,,,, Does America understand that they could pay for a house they can not live in for the next 20+ years? Last October our Govenment changed the Bankruptcy laws... you will pay that mortgage and someone else will live in the house. I lived thru the "Farming" event in the 80's. Farmers paying too much for farmland. It took that sector of the economy years to recover. How many years will the "Housing" event take to clear? I agree, a very long time. |
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frank zak
said:
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Excellent article I have been a real estate broker in Southern California for 30 years. The real estate market is dropping like a rock. No buyers. Sellers think they only have to hold a long time to sell. But, no more. That tactic is not working. Prices are droppping fast since June of 2006. Forget Dataquick, look at the MLS. The crash is here now. The USA dollar will crash some day. Call options on gold will hedge you. Even gold stocks. |
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