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While I don't agree with all of this writer's conclusions (I don't believe that subprime default rates will be as high as 20%), I think this is the one of the best explanations of the housing bubble I've read so far.

Editor's note: This weekend's essay, excerpted from the August 14 S&A Digest, is a bit longer than we typically publish... but we think it's one of the most important things you'll read this month...

What Caused the Housing Bust
By Porter Stansberry
August 18, 2007

Today, we take a break from our normal format to answer in detail a question regarding the current housing problem that must be on the minds of nearly all of our readers, as expressed by paid-up subscriber David Walker:

What is so unusual about the current times that so many smart people could be so catastrophically wrong?

Porter comment: What happened (and what is still happening) is simply leverage in reverse, or what people used to call a "run on the bank."

For nearly 10 years, as interest rates fell from 1995 to 2005, the mortgage and housing business boomed as more and more capital found its way into housing. With lower rates, more people could afford to buy houses. That was good. Unfortunately, it didn't take long for some people to figure out that with rates so low, they could buy more than one. Or even nine or 10. As more money made its way into housing, prices for real estate went up – 20% a year for several years in some places. The higher prices created more equity... that could then be used as collateral for still more debt. This is what leads to a bubble.

Banks, hedge funds, and insurance companies were happy to fund the madness because they believed new "financial engineering" could take lower-quality home loans (like the kind with zero down payment) and transform these very risky loans, made at the top of the market, into AAA-rated securities. Let me go into some detail about how this worked.

Wall Street's biggest banks (Goldman Sachs, Lehman Bros., Bear Stearns) would buy, say, $500 million worth of low-quality mortgages, underwritten by a mortgage broker, like NovaStar Financial. The individual mortgages – thousands of them at a time – were organized by type and geographic location into a new security, called a residential mortgage-backed security (RMBS).

Unlike a regular bond, whose coupon is paid by a single corporation and organized by maturity date, RMBS securities were organized into risk levels, or "tranches." Thousands of homeowners paid the interest and principal for each tranche. Rating agencies (like Moody's) and other financial analysts, believed these large bundles of mortgages would be safer to own because the obligation was spread among thousands of separate borrowers and organized into different risk categories that, in theory, would protect the buyers. For example, the broker (like NovaStar) that originated the mortgages would be on the hook for any early defaults, which typically only occurred in fraudulently written mortgages. After that risk padding, the next 3%-5% of the defaults would be taken out of the "equity slice" of the RMBS.

The "equity slice" was the riskiest part of the RMBS. It was typically sold at a wide discount to the total value of the loans in this category, meaning that if defaults were less than expected, the buyer of this part of the package could make a capital gain in addition to a very high yield. Even if defaults were average, the buyer would still earn a nice yield.

Hedge funds loved this kind of security because the yield on it would cover the interest on the money the fund would borrow to buy it. Hedge funds could make double-digit capital gains annually, cost-free and risk-free... or so they thought. As long as home prices kept rising and interest rates kept falling, almost every RMBS was safe. Even if a buyer got into trouble, he could still sell his home for more than he paid or find a way to restructure the debt. On the way up, from 1995-2005, there were very few defaults. Everyone made money, which attracted still more money into the market.

After the equity tranche, typically one or two more risk levels offered higher yields at a lower-than-AAA rating. After those few, thin slices, the vast majority of the RMBS – usually 92% of the loan package – would be rated AAA. With an AAA rating, banks, brokerage firms, and insurance companies could own these mortgages – even the exotic mortgages with changing interest rates or no down payments. With the magic of financial engineering and by ordering the perceived risk, financial firms from all over the world could fill their balance sheets with higher-yielding mortgage debt that would pass muster with the regulators charged with making sure they held only the safest assets in reserve.

For a long time, this arrangement worked well for everyone. Wall Street's banks made a fortune packaging these securities. They even added more layers of packaging – creating CDOs (collateralized debt obligation) and ABSs (asset-backed security) – which are like mutual funds that hold RMBS.

Buyers of these securities did well, too. Hedge funds made what looked like risk-free profits in the equity tranche for years and years.

Insurance companies, banks, and brokers were able to earn higher returns on assets by buying RMBS, CDOs, or ABSs instead of Treasury bonds or AAA-rated corporate debt. And because the collateral was considered AAA, financial institutions of all stripes were able to increase the size of their balance sheets by continuing to borrow against their RMBS inventory. This, in turn, supplied still more money to the mortgage market, which kept the mortgage brokers busy. Remember all the TV ads to refinance your mortgage and the teaser rate loans?

The cycle kept going – more mortgage securities, more leverage, more loans, more housing – until one day the marginal borrower blinked. We'll never know whom or why... but somewhere out there, the "greater fool" failed to close on that next home or condo. Beginning in about the summer of 2005, the momentum began to slow... and then slowly... imperceptibly... it began to shift.

All the things the cycle had going for it from 1995 to 2005 began to turn the other way. Leverage, in reverse, is devastating.

The first sign of trouble was an unexpectedly high default rate in subprime mortgages. Beginning in early 2007, studies of 20-month-old subprime mortgages showed a default rate greater than 5%, much higher than expected. According to Countrywide Mortgage, the default rates on the riskiest loans made in 2005 and 2006 are expected to grow to as high as 20% – a new all-time record. The big jump in subprime defaults led to the first hedge-fund blowups, such as the May 2007 shutdown of Dillon Reed Capital Management, which lost $150 million in subprime investments in the first quarter of 2007.

Since Dillon Reed Capital, dozens of more funds have blown up as the "equity slice" in mortgage securities collapsed. Remember, these equity tranches were supposed to be the "speed bumps" that protected the rest of the buyers. With the safety net of the equity tranche removed, these huge securities will have to be downgraded by the rating agencies. For example, on July 10, Moody's and Standard and Poor's downgraded $12 billion of subprime-backed securities. On August 7, the same agencies warned that another $1 billion of "Alt-A" mortgage securities would also likely be downgraded.

Now... these downgrades and hedge-fund liquidations have hugely important consequences. Why? Because as hedge funds have to liquidate, they must sell their RMBSs, CDOs, and ABSs. This pushes prices for these securities down, which results in margin calls on other hedge funds that own the same troubled instruments. That, in turn, pushes them to sell, too.

Very quickly the "liquidity" – the amount of willing buyers for these types of mortgage-backed securities – disappeared. There are literally no bids for much of this paper. That's why the subprime mortgage brokers – the Novastars and Fremonts – went out of business so quickly. Not only did they take a huge hit paying off the early defaults of their 2005 and 2006 mortgages, but the loans they held on their books were marked down, with no buyers available and their creditors demanding greater margin cover on their lines of credit... poof... The assets they owned were marked down, they couldn't be readily sold, and they had no access to additional capital.

The failure of the subprime-mortgage structure – which started with higher-than-expected defaults, led to hedge fund wipeouts, and then to mortgage broker bankruptcies – might have been contained to only the subprime segment of the market. But... the risk spread because of the financial engineering.

With Wall Street wrapping together thousands of mortgages from different underwriters, it's likely that hundreds of financial institutions around the world have traces of bad subprime and Alt-A mortgage debt on their books. Parts of these CDOs were rated AAA. Almost any financial institution could own them – especially hedge funds. Hedge fund investors quickly figured this out – and asked for their money back.

And so, in July, liquidity fears began to creep through the entire mortgage complex. Not because the mortgages themselves were all bad or even because the mortgage securities were all bad – but because all the market players knew a wave of selling, led by hedge funds, was on the way. Nobody wants to be the first buyer when they know thousands of sellers are lined up behind them.

The market "locked up." Nobody would buy mortgage bonds. And everyone needed to sell. Suddenly even Wall Street's biggest banks – the very firms that created these mortgage securities – were suffering huge losses, as the bonds kept getting marked down as hedge funds and other leveraged speculators had to sell into a panicked market.

It's a classic "run on the bank," except today the function of the traditional bank has been spread out among several institutions: mortgage brokers, Wall Street security firms, hedge-fund investors, and banks. The real problem is that the long-dated liabilities (a 30-year mortgage) were matched not by reliable depositors, but by fly-by-night hedge funds, which were themselves highly leveraged and subject to redemptions.

That's why even as the top executives in these firms believed their mortgages were safe and sound, they can't get the funding they need to hold onto them through the crisis. As Keynes predicted, the lives of every higher-leveraged financial institution is precarious: " The market can be irrational longer than you can remain solvent."

The hedge funds have no solution. Redemptions will force them to sell. They'll continue to pressure the market, resulting in huge losses. Hundreds of funds will likely be liquidated.

Wall Street's investment firms, if they can find additional capital to meet margin calls, might weather the storm... depending on how far it spreads. We saw a move in this direction this week when Goldman announced $3 billion in additional funding for its big hedge funds.

For most mortgage brokers, the party is over – goodnight. Something like 90% of them will be out of business by the end of the year.

Regards,

Porter Stansberry

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I think that there is a over 20% hell to pay on this.

1. I actually know people that were flipping properties. The musical chairs of that business have happened and they are getting hosed. Gee there are even TV shows that are about folks flipping houses like that is a normal and common thing to do to get fast money.

2. Due to hard financial times, a lot of my friends took out second mortgages to cover expenses. These mortgages were for the new estimated value of the property taking out the new profit over what they owed. Some folks I know did this severial times in the last few years.

3. In Florida which now has the highest default rate in the country (a state that lets you keep your primary residency in bankruptcy so this means that people are unloading the property's). Where my dad lives the apartments were selling for $250 thousand his neighbor is now selling his and can't move it for $100 thousand. Those people who are paid the higher prices now are holding a $150 loss.

4. As much as derivatives are used to avert risk companies also buy more traditional insurance that risk is then sold and resold in packages. This insurance was probably sold at a low rate due to the highly A rated loan packages. The S&L crisis of the 80's and a few hurricanes led to Lloyds of London going into default in the early 90's

5. Presently new building are trying to keep the prices up with no sales. In NYC severial new condo buildings in my area have been changed to rentals. Another is being opened as a hotel. (Allows for it later to be turned into condos). In both Florida and New York projects that take years to get approved will be built no matter what. Like the big one with the Nets stadium in Brooklyn. Bringing more new housing into a over saturated high end market.

Here in New York the housing situation is always way manipulated and over priced. But I have many friends that have purchased $600K to $1million plus places in the last few years. They are not from rich families or make big salaries so I think they felt that the properties would immediately increase in value and allow easy resale. I have another friend in Danbury who is selling his house and is having problems not due to his price but that the people who want it are not able to unload their homes.

Did I mention the numerous folks I know who have used credit card checks and low interest credit cards to get through the depression of 2002 and owe $10 or more on their cards. The companies that give payday loans and credit cards to people in that pay bracket.

Things are very bad, it is a wider problem than just the housing market. The extremely liquid credit market simulated (not stimulated) a better economy the fact that the fed has to lower interest rates again is a indication of the simulation factor they should in a normal economy shift back up to higher rates without such problems happening as there is enough inertia in the country to pull through raising the rates to something normal much less a level that would make our tresury notes attractive on the world market.

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Rick Reuben wrote:
matthew wrote: Just ask my brother-in-law...

This brother-in-law?
matthew wauck, reporting on the economy in November, 2006 wrote:My sister is an associate VP of institutional sales at FBR and my brother-in-law is a senior analyst at a hedge fund which spun off of SAC (he was at SAC before he went over to the fund he's at now). I've had numerous discussions about the whole housing bubble thing with them and have done my own homework on it. My sister deals with mortgages all day long.......that's pretty much all she does......and she says that there's no bubble.


Rather than reporting upon the economy I was actually addressing Mr. clocker_bob's enduring foolishness, if one cares to read the post of mine you excerpted and place it in context.

The bottom line with the subprime thing is this........there was too much easy lending out there until fairly recently, and whenever such is the case there will be alot people who renege upon their debts. This fact coupled with the fact that such debts have been, I suppose one might say, transmuted and transferred into financial instruments does complicate matters. Things are rocky now, and may be for some time. But I see no general financial meltdown or Yeatsian apocalypse which Mr. Clocker Bob so desperately yearns for, even though he does not entirely realize the fact that he does.

The market- in the very, very seldom instances it is allowed to function properly- compensates for imbalance, evens the playing field, and eliminates avarice, need and want.......always.

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In the 1980's during the S&L crisis people created banks using $100,000 getting a official looking storefront and filing papers to the state. They then began offering CDs to retirees at higher rates and much higher rates over longer terms. The money began to pour in and the whole thing was run like a Ponzi scheme. Eventually the money was loaned out to either the cronies of the bank or to people who were politically connected and would not be prosecuted. Then they collapsed. The government cannot collect money from people that are criminally prosecuted from the insurance companies. Therefore most of the people who did this made a fortune and walked away leaving the fed to cover the problems. The fed enabled this behavior by massively reducing the number of bank inspectors leaving the entire south with 3 inspectors so they could only inspect banks books every 5 - 10 years if that (as opposed to once or more a year) and then in a cursory manner.

This scheme seems very similar to what is going on with hedge funds who are taking in more new capital and can use it to pay out returns to the original investors. Now apparently colleges are putting their endowments into hedge funds.

The present problem comes from the fact that housing costs have been inflating at a very rapid rate. probably at arround 25% a year for the last 5 years. So people who were selling and buying felt that they were making massive profits and relative to the rest of the economy they were.

But consumer goods and such are under priced so that China can use the value difference to move manufacturing to China. Why does Bush and others want China to stop linking its value to the dropping dollar and float their own currency, if China links to the Euro or goes on its own the prices of consumer goods will then begin to inflate to actual rates.

So we are either in a situation where the valuation of properties will come down to the present economy or the present economy will inflate to reduce the value. This may be why certain guitars and Travis Beans are going for 5K this might be their value in real dollars. For any American who is in doubt of how little our money is worth other than china just order breakfast in Paris.

Many of the mortgage instruments like balloon mortgages have not been used since the 1930's. I was shocked when I heard people were getting them but they would get a balloon mortgage then wait and the valuation of the house would go up and they would renegotiate a different mortgage with the bank at balloon time. Not any more.

Hedge funds are running outside the monitored economy and are private - secret from it. What we do know is that they are doing big plays on derivatives on margin to bring 50% returns on the dollar. This margin playing is what trashed the markets in the 1930's now the big boys have found a way to bring it back.

I know a lot of people in the financial industries none of them even folks making big bucks with payday loans will admitted to themselves or others that they are essentially loan sharking legally. They like to think of themselves as providing credit to the poor and offering them a way to build up a good credit history. No one in that business thinks of themselves as a bad person. In many cases they are people who think of themselves as above the common man and more well educated and informed, living in a echo chamber of like minded people who read the wall street journal and The Economist like the sports page. Answer any questions relating to the obvious problems with "we are living in a new paradigm" and obsess about what is the best stroller for under 5K.

Even the people at Enron who used derivatives to cause a false shortage of power to Cali and extorted money out of the state after blackouts that caused elderly to die in the heat. Is that corporate terrorism if not what would qualify. Does this not indicate that our markets are manipulated at will by these companies for profit for which they will not face any legal repercussions.

What I am getting at is that this behavior if done by a individual would be illegal and considered criminal behavior. But is done by people who can't see themselves as loan sharks, or extortionists but in fact they are but they don't have to worry about criminal prosecution.

Speaking of credit history's what about that scam where one person sells his good credit to someone who has bad so they can get credit card. Sounds like more manipulation.

So at some point - probably as close to after the presidential election as possible the shoe will drop.

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Rick Reuben wrote:Countrywide Financial just reportedly pink-slipped 12,000...


Of course*. No one should be surprised by this move. Countrywide is a mess. They would have been a mess even if the subprime market didn't go south. They, along with Washington Mutual, grew way to fast. They were much to free with their money. They've been trying downsize on their lease/land obligations for their processing centers and retail stores for over a year.






*sorry for anyone who may have lost their job

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Rick Reuben wrote:From the central bankers' meeting at the BIS:
The crisis in the US housing market risks spreading to the whole of the nation's economy, European Central Bank chief Jean-Claude Trichet said Monday on behalf of world central bankers.

"There is a probability of fallout on the real economy in the USA," Trichet said. "We will have to follow very carefully what happens particularly in the USA. We will remain ... alert, (there is) no time for complacency," he added.

"People had been saying that as long as employment holds up, the consumer will be OK" and the economy will keep growing, said Nigel Gault, an economist at Global Insight. "Now that job growth has stopped, we have to question that," he said.

We are being psychologically conditioned for a global recession and a severe devaluation of the dollar. The central bankers don't have to remain 'alert' for approaching economic events- they make approaching economic events.


I don't understand how you've drawn the conclusion that we are being "psychologically conditioned for a global recession" from the above comments. Nothing in Gault's statement is earth-shattering if you've been paying attention at all to macro-economic trends/conditions. Maybe I can understand your conclusion if somebody said it on American Idol, but who reads this stuff besides a relatively small handful of "policy-nerds"?

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.......taking a flyer.

why is it that all of these conspiracy buffs, tho they met be correct on many points, never actually make the fundamental leap to questioning the capitalist system as a whole?

do they honestly believe that seeking accountability for these crimes within the context of the sytem will bear any fruit at all?

that the election of another shithead politician will change anything?

:roll:

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no, pet ideologue, i advocate revolution.

i advocate a classless, moneyless society, based on working class solidarity.

yes those crimes should be punished, the perpetrators should have their brains blown out the back of their heads.

you dont pussy up and beg politicians and capitalists to punish each other, their position in society has to be redounded by the will of the people.

keep protesting.....sending yr cards and letters to the oppressor of yr choice...meanwhile they laugh and keep counting.

:roll: :roll: :roll:

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