Long-time readers will know that I made my deflation argument as a distinct possibility some time ago, and that the crashing housing market was both a symptom and cause of deflation.  Within the last year, I have become a true believer of short-term deflation.  Follow me if you will and I’ll lay out my theory simply about current deflationary movements.

I’ll start at the beginning. Adam Smith wrote a book called “Wealth of Nations”. At the heart of this book was the concept that individuals attempt to maximize their own personal profit. A lengthy discussion of capital, labor, and revenue conceded that individuals seek to minimize the cost of production and maximize their own personal intakes. This is the reason that we stand today at the brink of quick and painful deflation. (Unless our leaders force us to long, deep, and painful deflation.) However, it is important to remember that Smith was not concerned with money or the use of money. His analysis was only ex post facto considered the defining text for a field of study, economics. Up until that point, trade was only infrequently international and the costs of trade were quite excessive and time-consuming. Modern economists have become so entrenched in the day-to-day predictions of economic output that they often forget to look at the big picture of economics and what it means. Even the most popular “economist” bloggers of today largely ignore basic economic theory and tend to focus more on policy and politics (Paul Krugman comes to mind as a perfect example of this dichotomy as an “economist” but opining almost singularly on political rants and ignoring the motivations of individuals and how the present environment changes them). The only blogger or writer I have found that engages in a realistic discussion of economics is Mish (Mike Shedlock) of Global Economic Analysis. His insights have largely influenced my ideas of the last few years and its application in investing. I applaud his most recent discussion of how Peter Schiff got his hyperinflation call all wrong.

Adam Smith wrote:

What is the species of domestic industry which his capital can employ, and of which the produce is likely to be of the greatest value, every individual, it is evident, can, in his local situation, judge much better than any statesman or lawgiver can do for him. The statesman who should attempt to direct private people in what manner they ought to employ their capitals would not only load himself with a most unnecessary attention, but assume an authority which could safely be trusted, not only to no single person, but to no council or senate whatever, and which would nowhere be so dangerous as in the hands of a man who had folly and presumption enough to fancy himself fit to exercise it.

This predisposition leads us down the road of what competitive advantage each country has at its disposal.  In the natural progression of industries, whatever component of production is in greatest shortage will grow in cost.  This is considered a shortage.  Everything has a point at which it becomes the bottleneck of production and therefore to employ more of it in production, the price of it will rise to bring additional resources that were engaged in lower-value activities.  In the most recent past, labor within established economies was the choking point and wages increased strongly for many years.  It seemed that these gains were not only here to stay, but would increase in infinity.  Under normal circumstances, these pressures are offset by automation.  By investing capital into additional production machinery, the cost of production can held in check.  In Adam Smith’s world, the “invisible hand” of profit maximization motivation means that this transition is seamless.  In periods of major labor dislocations, investment is “lumpy” meaning that spurts and stops of investment cause labor to be temporarily in shortage or in tight supply.

For the decade of the 90′s, despite a recession, labor demand grew quite steadily.  At the same time, an entirely new labor force for America was being trained on the other side of the world.  Several types of labor were created in India and China; production and information workers.  With India’s long history of British influence and control, they were largely positioned as an alternative to information workers in the United States.  Until the infrastructure was created in the 1990′s to provide real-time support and analysis, the use of place-shifted information workers was largely unheard of.  After the late 90′s, it was a matter of general business in the US.  While the Tech bubble drove up IT costs to insane levels, most companies were planning to offshore as much of the information workers world as they could.  India had done an incredible job of attacking this part of Corporate America, both here (through H1B lobbying) and abroad(through direct outsourcing).  Meanwhile, China was feeding off of the wealth of the West by siphoning off manufacturing jobs.  First, it was manual menial labor, and later, skilled labor of all kinds from jewelry manufacturing to circuit boards.  American’s often now lament that nearly nothing is produced in America.  We, it seems, have priced ourselves out of the labor market.

Which leads us to the outcome.   America has lost the orignal source of its wealth: innovation and manufacturing.  Luckily for us, we own some quite valuable assets; Intellectual Property and real estate. (okay, we’ve got more, but that’s not really what this is about)

While the cost of labor was rapidly declining, and in an environment of tight labor supply (much of the 90′s and this decade), most Americans found high paying jobs such as consulting, sales, and management.  While these are often high paying jobs, they can be quite transitory. Meanwhile, the cost of everything was getting relatively cheaper compared to incomes; food, housing, computers, cars, etc.  Indeed, the loose monetary policies were in a sense combatting this dramatically increased productivity and lower cost labor.  We were digesting it quite well; however right around the corner was indigestion.  This indigestion was where monetary policy was letting us go.  We overheated and the engine of growth stalled.  There was nothing more to milk out when our housing bubble hit.  When  prices of the #1 asset owned by most Americans began to defy logic, reason, and prudence, most took it in stride.  To make up for diminishing household income in real terms, most just extracted the equity of their homes.  Because lending on real assets had proven so effective in the past, investors, cheered on by a FED determined to keep money flowing freely accepted lower and lower restriction on limit, chasing yield.  This chase of yield ended in multiples of leverage beyond human comprehension.  Meanwhile, average Americans could get a piece of their own leverage with low-down or even zero down (and frighteningly negative down 120% loans in some cases).  When prices were normal, this worked as there was little stress on incomes and savings could account for some losses.  Once prices began rising, consumers found little need for savings when their homes were provding them for us.

Which is what led us to the housing bubble popping when noone could afford their own home and noone could continue to pay their mortgage (more or less nearly everyone who “owned a home fit into one of these, if not both in Southern California in 2006-2007).

While we are deleveraging, deflation is setting in.  There is no way to combat this without creating massive amounts of money.  Where that money ends up is no matter when you’re in the storm of deflation.  Right now, 0 interest rates are all that are keeping us from a deflationary depression.  We’ll see what wins out.  Adam Smith’s invisible hand dragged jobs out of America.  Perhaps one of our own “economists” can provide us a way to bring them back.

Which brings me back to a statement I made back in November of 2006:

Historically, strongly inverted yield curves have historically preceded economic depressions… and normal inversions have preceded recessions.

I also agree that we have a “normal inversion” signalling a potential economic recession.

One of the questions that is somewhat debateable is still what makes this time different:
1. There is a lot of liquidity still in the system. China, for instance, has waaaaay too much currency reserves, and heavily weighted towards USD… depressing our rates in treasuries, likely setting off our really low mortgage rates as well. Mortgage rates could snap back due to a variety of situations, not the least of which would be higher defaults. Of course, the cows have already left the barn, the question only remains how fast will lenders close the gates?
2. Lending standards in the mortgage area are likely the lowest they have been in history. Lenders are offering neg-am option-arm, no-doc, teaser rate loans to people one day out of bankruptcy. Best Funding here in L.A. even advertises to this kind of people. I don’t know how you can get any lower than that.
3. Bank reserves are frighteningly low. Why the FED has not yet stepped in to raise reserve rq’s is beyond me. It’s like a drunk asleep at the wheel. I just don’t know when it crashes, but it’s going to. I wonder how much the FDIC designation is going to mean then… I wouldn’t recommend to anyone to exceed those amounts… open more accounts at more banks if you have to, but you dont’ want to take a haircut on cash.
4. The stock market is surprisingly bullish (might be a sucker rally, but I can’t say for sure). Either way, I can sense the tenseness on Wall Street. I am tempted to liquidate everything and hold cash for a while, just because spooked investors can pack the exits at any time.

Some time ago, someone was mentioning stagflation… something which is absolutely garbage. There is no comparison of now to the late 70’s. Still, i might be led to see the uncanny similarities to the ‘72-’73 market.

By your statement, you and I are both asset deflationists, however, the FED can (under pressure) jam the ZIRP pedal and go to infinity with debt monetization to stimulate the economy. It would tank the dollar, but we might actually start producing stuff again. If that doesn’t save us from price deflation, then there is no hope for Keynsian monetary policy in the future.

We’ll see if Keynsian Monetary policy can rescue us here.

 

$400,000 And Falling

We’ve passed through the $400,000 threshold for the second time.  The first time was better for property owners (like myself) and probably the economy in general.  I’m seeing bulk bank owned packages on the market at 18 cents on the dollar.  You can pick up second TD’s for less than two cents for every dollar of the unpaid balance. $10,000,000 in loans for under $200,000.   Of course, those seconds are mostly worthless now.

Data quick shows the median at $397,000 for December sales but the median for homes sold on the MLS is $380,000.  MLS figures do not include new home sales which tend to sell for higher amounts.  In fact there were 207 new home sales with a median price of $498,000.

Pending sales seem to have slowed a bit with only 3734 homes listed as pending sales as of 1/15/09.  The median list price of those pending sales is $365,000 so it seems a lock that we’ll have at least another 10% decline. 

The low end of the market is still falling fastest.  Every day I see more single family properties listed for under $300,000.   We’re back to 2003.

Brad Davidson
We Help-U-Buy Realty

 

I think the video speaks for itself:

While he’s not a policy maker, having more media outlets understanding why high housing prices are putting a brake on our economy is critical to getting past the downturn.

 

Some of you who are long time readers of this blog and other bubble blogs remember the zeitgest of mid-2006.  There was a lot of angst in the air about what was happening with the residential housing market, and quite a few financial idiots posting on and on ad nauseum about how housing was a fantastic investment and how you should leverage yourself up to the hilt just to get in.  One of my favorite examples was Darren Mead of Victory Lending.  Yes, the homeless boy turned bodybuilder, turned finance expert.  Perhaps it would be best to turn to one of his gems of wisdom, quoted on Yahoo’s answer site in response to a user question posted in July 2006.  Yes, the height of the bubble:

Is now a good time to buy a new home? i would be a first time home buyer and i have heard the market is bad.?

Darren gave a long-winded answer:

Congratulations of thinking of buying a new home.

Is there a “bubble”? The simple answer is “no”. Even if interest rates move a bit higher, it won’t be enough to cause a nationwide slide in home prices. The key to a healthy housing market is the job market. If the payment on a new home might be slightly higher due to increased interest rates, it generally won’t stop someone from purchasing the home of their dreams…but if they feel their job is in jeopardy, it might be enough to stop them from making a move. So with the currently low levels of unemployment and the beefy gains in job creations, it looks like the housing market will remain vibrant. Although it will be difficult to sustain the double-digit gains that much of the country has seen, price declines are highly unlikely. Expect a more moderate rate of appreciation, perhaps closer to the historical 6-7% range, which is still very good.

The post goes on for nearly 2 more pages of bubblespeak.  It’s an interesting read on what was going on at the time.   The most choice example:

Don’t be victimized by the bubble hype. Buying a home is a big step, but it is almost always one in the right direction.

Darren was also quoted on housing doom and felt required to issue a long-winded discussion of the merits of buying a house, leveraging it to the hilt and other such nonsense.  I also at the time replied (when I was writing under the pseudonym John Doe) to his crazy thoughts:

Hello Everyone -

My name is Darren Meade, and I’ve noted you have chosen to comment on a few artciles I’ve written.

First the advice is that the great appreciation in Real Estate has cooled. Given a moderate decline of appreciation across the country, now might be the time to reposition your equity.

There’s an excellent book on some repositioning strategies called ‘Missed Fortune 101′ by Doug Andrews.

I believe that everyone should benefit and earn money in the same manner the banks operate on the principleof arbitrage.

This of course depends on your overall financial plan. Often people do not realize or think about the simple fact that the largest financial asset they have is their home.

It is my belief that you should manage this asset in an overall financial plan. In regards to Home Equity Lines of Credit, I actually do not favor those as I believe the cost is to high.

Additionally, most HELOC’s can be canceled by the Bank at anytime. Many of my clients in
New Orleans found this out after Katrina. Many thought they planned ahead, but the notes were canceled and they had to borrower at an even higher interest rate.

I note John Doe said :

“When I sold my L.A. home in 04, an acquaintance of mine was adamant that I should not sell it, just leverage every last penny of it (basically the same strategy). [separated quote for clarity, JM]Darren: Actually this is not the same strategy. I’m advising people who have made a good amount of appreciation in their home, to take that money out since home prices declined Nationally. I suggest this because as a country we have the worst savings rate. Housing Inventory has also increased, some people like yourself cannot afford to pay the mortgage on their home if they try to rent it. They may then try to sell, but in many markets home sit for 4-6 months. The Realtors often do not disclose such. Desperate, I then receive calls where people now want to try and refinance. However because the home is listed for sale, many of the lenders will not allow them to refinance. Then these poor people wind up having to get a hard money loan.

When I told him that housing prices might go down, he told me not to worry, that would be the bank’s problem. [small fix, JM] I observed that I couldn’t cover the monthly nut with the rent on the place if I rented it. He said, no worry, just let the bank take it back, you now have your “equity”.”

Darren: Between 04-06 even with the decline, in my local market you would have made a 38% appreciation on your home. I am sorry you could not afford to hold on long enough to make that profit. I’d ask though, what other investment do you feel will provide a safer yield than Real Estate?

Also, you gain that appreciation figure based on the value of the home. Often you have secured this investment with 10-20% of the value of the home.

Best Regards,
Darren Meade

I kinda wish we had a behind the music rendition of where is he now?

Anything worth saying to Darren after the bubble popped?