The bidding of the leaders…

If you remember rightly, the financial crisis of 2008 created a lot of people drawing parallels between that and a war, indeed, even Warren Buffett called it the “economic Pearl Harbor“.

I said it then, that this was fear-mongering and disingenous.  The crises of 2009 and 2010 and 2011 will be products of those decisions.  The decisions made then by the Banking Cabal (whose long fingers include Paulson, Geithner, Bernanke, Summers, Blankfein and others) will eventually lead to financial indenture.  For those who saw this coming, let me share with an excellent quote:

“Naturally the common people don’t want war; neither in Russia, nor in England, nor in America, nor in Germany. That is understood. But after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine policy, and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is to tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country.”

Ten points for anyone who can tell me who wrote that.  Or at least which decade it was written in.

We were lied to.  Plain and simple.

 

“Substantial” Bank Losses are Needed

USA-FED/BERNANKE

Let me state right now that I couldn’t care less one way or another about debt forgiveness, but many who propose to just “forgive” debt forget 2 main arguments for not doing it.

1.  Banks can’t stay solvent and still do it.  Our entire banking system will probably collapse if wholesale write offs take place too quickly.

2. If you let one person do it, you gotta let ‘em all do it.  Foreclosures are still the best way to liquidate debt.

Bloomberg’s all over it.

Dec. 14 (Bloomberg) — Banks will need to take “substantial” writedowns on home-equity loans to enable loan modifications that will allow the U.S. housing market to recover, according to Amherst Securities Group LP.

The government’s mortgage-modification program will fail to avert many of the 9 million to 10 million looming foreclosures because it doesn’t reduce principal for borrowers, about a quarter of whom owe more than the current values of their houses, Laurie Goodman, a New York-based mortgage-bond analyst at Amherst, said today in a Bloomberg Radio interview.

“It’s important to realize the largest second-lien holders are the largest banks, and there’s going to have to be some very substantial writedowns if you go to a principal-reduction program,” Goodman said. “And this is going to have to be addressed head-on.”

 

Houston, we’ve got a disconnect.

Housing to the moon!

 

Dubai bubble bursts

Desert with nothing going for it.  No oil, no natural resources besides sand and salt water.  Massive overbuilding.

Who woulda thunk it?

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Seriously?  Bad nation-state.  No bailouts for you!

 

Consider the above video in light of Chris Whalen’s post today at The Big Picture: Q2 2009 Bank Stress Test Results: The Zombie Dance Party Rocks On

There are some thoughts that Chris presents that are of utmost interest here:

Plain fact is that the Fed and Treasury spent all the available liquidity propping up Wall Street’s toxic asset waste pile and the banks that created it, so now Main Street employers and private investors, and the relatively smaller banks that support them both, must go begging for capital and liquidity in a market where government is the only player left. The notion that the Fed can even contemplate reversing the massive bailout for the OTC markets, this to restore normalcy to the monetary models that supposedly inform the central bank’s deliberations, is ridiculous in view of the capital shortfall in the banking sector and the private sector economy more generally.

Perhaps there is revisionist thinking at the Fed at long last, but not nearly soon enough to do anything about the impending implosion of the US banking sector in 2010. The significant point to us is not the cost to the FDIC insurance fund implied by the rising Bank Stress Index score, a cost which the banking industry will absorb and repay. But the real point is the permanent diminution of economic activity in local communities caused when good community and regional banks die due to the end-result of bad fiscal and regulatory policies in Washington.

There are a boat load of smaller banks that are being put into crisis through the crowding out effect of government influence with heavy-handed intervention.  Sooner or later, either the propped up banks be allowed to fail, or they will cause many more smaller banks to fail.  Which would you rather have?

 

Why all the negativity?

From Ritholtz:
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I enjoy helping people out, especially those who need it.

But, to bail out the very same bankers why prevented me from buying a reasonably priced home for the past 5 years after they hundreds of billions in salaries, bonuses, and perks?  Yeah, I have a problem with that.

 

Financial Crisis and Magical Thinking

What is magical thinking?  It is a detachment of causality from the source of an action.  It is simply, to believe that if certain conditions are met, a natural outcome is to be expected.

Magical thinking comes in many flavors, but isn’t entirely unuseful.  It helps when systems are so complex that it would take so much time to simply understand the system of events required that it would be impractical to act before a rational decision could no longer be effective.  Much of what we see today in public economic forums is massive amounts of magical thinking.  That somehow, if we meet certain conditions of yesteryear, we will “put a floor” in on home prices, the stock market, and the economy as a whole.  Unfortunately, we are in some cases only delaying the inevitable, and in many cases worsening the outcome of the housing bubble.

In a rational, efficient market, participants act in a personally beneficial way.  Often, when participants act in a personally beneficial way, this benefits society as a whole.  However, because the system of decisions needed is inherently complex, a bit of the system sometimes needs to be mentally “fudged” to make the whole issue work.  This is often what people mean when they refer to the “50,000 foot view”.  In centralized organizations, a leader with this type of view depend on their underlings being able to translate this kind of vision with on-the-ground experience to execute the plan.

Some examples that have recently come to the forefront:
1.    Provide a tax credit to homebuyers

2.    Banks failures cause more hardship than paying to save them

3.    Large industrial producers cannot be reduced because they will crash our economy

Tax Credit to Homebuyers:

Unfortunately, it appears that we have more turned into a Cargo Cult that focuses not on the productive activities, but to somehow hearken back the golden days of yore through repeating the same stupid rituals that brought the original cargo planes and our former riches.  This is a complete erosion of the American fabric; a lie to western peoples that economists know the way out better than prudent business people.

Many in the government have noted that in the last 20 years, rising home prices produced a large benefit to homeowners.  They were able to borrow against their houses to fund growth in the economy.  The solution to our ailing consumption, it must mean, that houses are undervalued and need to be propped up.  Never mind that the last 20 years has been an historical aberration, a flyspeck on the overvalued of all overvalues.  In our current policy, “reversion to trend” means an upward reversion of the home price appreciation to +10% per year.  No matter that in many locales in the US, our incomes have not kept pace with the cost of homes and therefore we are already dedicating too much of our income to housing.  We all need a REDUCTION in home prices for consumer spending to increase.  Anything else (such as increased incomes) would put us as a country even further behind in competitiveness with respect to global wage arbitrage.  I’m not a purist in the sense that I feel that we need to have a large manufacturing base, but our economy has got to consist of more than trading houses and debt amongst ourselves.  The longer we wait to realize this and return incentives to work, risk, and honest reward, the more we as a country suffer.  There should never be a return to leisurely earning above the rest of the world because there is no such thing as barriers to entry in the long run.  Eventually, our wealth will be eroded if we do not continue to maintain a global competitive advantage (and I don’t mean in financial engineering).

People are currently rational.  They’d love nothing more than to return the heady days of 2007 where they spent willy-nilly on consumer goods.  They really would, but they also realize that the only way to do that is to reduce their consumption of something else.  Something that doesn’t produce much satisfaction in their lives: housing.

Bank Failures

This is perhaps one of the most prevalent of magical thinking.  In the participants mind, the bank failures of the 1930’s created a fear of banks when they failed.  At that time, this had 2 effects:  1.  People would have rather stuffed the money in their mattresses, collapsing monetary velocity and trade.  2.  This collapse of bank deposits put otherwise healthy banks in a more precarious positions since they could not maintain adequate reserve ratios and were then insolvent.  I believe that we do not have this type of environment, partially because of the lessons learned over the past 80 years.  The FDIC creates a kind of buffer that assures accountholders that their money is safe (within limits)  Most can ensure all of their money is safe by maintaining multiple accounts at multiple banks.  People do not want money stuffed in their mattresses, and will only do so if they believe the government will begin to confiscate it.  Harebrained ideas such as an asset tax or cash taxes will assuredly collapse velocity and many banks along with it as depositors choose to stuff Ben Franklins in their pillow cases.

Today’s problem has little to do with the same problems as the 1930s.  Today, the mark-to-market accounting rules have substantially decreased the value of assets that depositors’ money was attached to while bank deposits have not done much.  However, most of those assets should never have been purchased because they were junk to begin with.  Most were a Ponzi Scheme where the greater fool needed to come along before their next balance sheet review or FDIC stress test.  In the past, the FDIC would sieze the bank and sell off the parts, making the secured creditors partially whole and making the equity holders eat dirt.  The shortcomings on depositors would be made whole by the FDIC before anyone else.

Circumventing normal market clearing practices for these liabilities and assets will ensure that the required write-downs necessary to produce never happen and that the remaining “Zombie Banks” will continue in perpetuity with damaged assets; unable to lend due to the need to recapitalize.  More importantly, (or at least as important), the current leadership fails to be deposed; ensuring the problems of yesteryear are never allowed to become discovered and the organization can never move on from prior mistakes.  The leadership is every bit as damaged as the assets the banks hold.  To keep them in place is to reward bad behavior and ensure that we do not have a return to long-term profitable business practices.

Our current populace is engaging in magical thinking to believe that if we just keep the banks alive for a little while longer that they will be able to return from the dead.  The only result will inevitably be zombies; having the appearance of life, but dead and hungry for brains.

Large Industrial Producers

This one is about GM.  I believe this one to be a very different animal than banks and requires a more sophisticated resolution; but let’s be clear: allowing GM to continue to operate without destroying the unions as they now exist is in effect transferring taxpayer money directly to GM union workers.

At the present time, bankruptcy for GM holds 2 major obstacles that are not related to the above
1.    No sufficient Debtor In Posession (DIP) financing exists in the private sector.  Without government intervention, GM could only progress directly to Ch7, which would be a shock to the economy.
2.    Even progressing to a Ch11 bankruptcy protection shows that consumers would likely boycott GM products as a safety measure.

Therefore, you can see that a traditional bankruptcy for GM is not an option if we do not want to add several hundred thousand directly to the dole and probably reach several million before all is said and done.

In the 80’s Chrysler was bailed out with a loan from the government.  It is simply magical thinking to believe that we can make a loan with attractive terms and the whole problem will go away.  The issue is that with each infusion, the company becomes more dependent on the donor.  We are raising a vegetable company.  Therefore, the problem must be attacked with swiftness and exactness.  Most importantly, the 30 and done has to be removed and made retroactive.  Sorry, you shouldn’t be able to retire until 70, and if that sucks, it sucks; get a job lowlife.  None of the rest of America has a cush job with secure retirement; you won’t be getting it either.  Sorry.

However, doing nothing while making large loans that go directly to pension beneficiaries is inherently unfair to workers everywhere and distorts normal competitive markets.  With the kind of money that GM is getting, many skilled could come forward and rebuild a competitive auto company.  The failed leadership that has complained about the problem yet done thing for the last 30 years while foreign competitors ate our lunch cannot be rewarded, nor should bondholders who are essentially being treated like Treasury holders be either.

In conclusion:

I believe our country’s leadership is unable to see how the magical thinking of today will translate into actionable items of tomorrow either because they fail to see personal motivations of participants, or because they have failed to see the solution and worked their way back putting into place contingency plans.  Until we have a workable solution, we will continue to pour money down the drain and extend the recover further.

 

Running on Hope

It seems like our country (and state) aren’t able to run on much more at this point.

Of course, I wonder how much is right now buyer’s remorse… not that the options were all that great to begin with.  I oscillate between extreme optimism and pessimism.  Perhaps I need to stop reading so much.  Just bums me out.

Isn’t that what puntcuates market bottoms?

Mr. Obama… that housing thing.  Let housing prices fall to market clearing levels.  All this messing around only lengthens the recovery and makes it deeper than it otherwise should have been.  Be a leader.

 

Count De Monet

Periodically, I look at homes in the area that have been on the market for an extended period of time in my Happy Birthday Socal posts.  This one is similar in that it hearkens back almost 2 years from its original listing date, and exactly shows the greed, stupidity, and laziness of the last 5 years on Socal.

Many of you remember the Mel Brooks’ production of “History of the World Part II” that dissects several historical well-known stories and presents them in a humorous fashion.  One of the best known sections is from France’s pre-revolutionary period where the king takes what he wants when he wants it while his ruling elite rape the country.   One of the funnier characters is a count (Count De Monet) whose name is routinely mispronounced to sound something like “Count The Money”.  To which he repeats the proper pronunciation, “Day Monay, Day Monay!”

countdemonet

The history of the bubble in SoCal can be summed up by several trends indicated by this home.

1.  The Oh Shit! I phase.  This is when people realize their house is going up in value fast enough to make them feel good.

2.  The Oh Shit! II phase.  This is when people realize they can actually take free money out of their house and pay for shit.

3.  The Oh Shit! III phase.  This is when people realize they can barely afford all of the free money they just got.

4.  The Oh Shit! IV phase.  This is when people realize all they have to do is just sell it, pay off debts and they make more.

5.  The Oh Shit! V phase.  This is when people realize that while selling and making money is all and good, they need to actually get it moved, so they lower the price to the point they break even.

6.  The OH Shit! VI phase.  This is when people realize that they can’t even break even after taking money out, so they might as well offload it at a ridiculous price just to be rid of the albatross.

7.  The Oh Shit! VII phase.  This is when people realize that even that ridiculous  price is not low enough to get attention.

It seems we are precisely at this point with a house in Laguna Niguel on Rue De Monet, or perhaps could be renamed Rue the Money.  Of course, Rue is french for avenue, so it can mean several things, but I doubt this “owner” has ever hated the money he got out of his home.

countthemoney

This money has come via a cash-out refi, which is why the house is listed as a “short sale” more than $200K above the owner’s purchase price some 6 years earlier.

What has infuriated most of the mainstream media and bloggers alike is the lack of outrage on this kind of blatant manipulation.  During 2008, these kinds of gains were deemed nontaxable when you walk away from your property; by foreclosure or short sale.  So, the owner walks away with $200K of free cash money.  Meanwhile, normal people who work for a living would need to make nearly $350K before taxes to equal the amount of money siphoned off of this house.  If I weren’t so outraged, I’d find that funny.

But, this isn’t cherry picking; if you can show me a short sale listed, I can show you greed and stupidity.  The surprise is how stupid our lawmakers are that they think that somehow “saving” this kind of homeowner is worthwhile.  The only thing that it does is encourage the next person to do the same.  And, by penalizing the bank by allowing the homeowner to walk away unscathed, they’re making it more difficult for credit to be had by those who are more deserving.  Indeed, the only thing current legislation does is to make it more difficult for everyone except for the financially irresponsible.

The only thing left for lawmakers to stupidly do is to write down mortgages and have taxpayers foot the bill, or is that already happening?  I lose track with the level of stupidity.  Once it goes beyond “moronic” I lose track.

Meanwhile, homeowners who bought before 2003 in Orange County are able to “count de money” at prudent taxpayer’s expense.

Until homeowners can afford the homes they buy, prices will be falling; and by current measures, we’re still nowhere near the bottom in most areas.

 

Going down in flames

Thank god we have some sane representatives in Congress.

I have a lot of money invested in the stock market, but I have a lot more invested in mine and my children’s future.

See how the 228 voted against the bailout from the New York Times.

We’ve got a full-blown taxpayer revolt on Congress’ hands.  There has been enormous amounts of scaremongering going on today with everything from ranting congresspersons to talking head reporters, and man-on-the-street info from traders on the NYSE floor.

The stock market took one on the chin, and could erode further if bailout proposals are blocked.  My hope is that until some seriously different legislation gets proposed, I will personally oppose this on the SCREBC blog.

And, for today’s reflection, we’ve got to give kudos to Dr. Ron Paul for opposing the bailout: