Global Economic Scorecard and Outlook

» Posted by Samuel Tay  » Posted on 09-30-2008  » 0 Comments

Hi all,

It has been another interesting week that will make history in the global financial markets where the US markets lost a total of $1 Trillion on the market bourse, as Dow was down 777 points closing 10,365.45, Nasdaq down 199 points closing the day at 1983.73, S&P 500 down by 106points closing the day at 1106.39, in the US market trading.
Asian bourses was pretty weak gaining what was lost from the opening at mid-day with STI closing down 2.43 points at 2358.91, Nikkei 225 closed down 483.75 points at 11259.86, Hang Seng closed up 135.53 at 18016.21 (where tomorrow will be a public holiday), and Chinese stock exchanges closing for the week for National Day.
The selling in the earlier session was sparked by a rejection of the bailout plan that was proposed by Henry Paulson, and his Fed aides, as many market participants held high hopes of the implementation of the proposed rescue package. In my opinion, a veto on the proposed bailout plan may not exactly be a wrong move for the US economy on the long term. I may not be a US taxpayer, but to be transferred an obligation, and to ‘foot the bill’ for mistakes made by others, would make me feel upset about it as well. 
These troubled institutions have, for the past decade adopted a loose system in assessing the credit-worthiness of their borrowers, and thus, lent out billions of dollars to NINJAs (No Income No Job or Assets Individuals). As a result, causing a vacuum in the credit system. With fear of further failure with banks, the Federal Reserve has, since March, spent on these items:
  1. JP Morgan’s takeover of Bear Stearns, brokered by the government ($29B)
  2. Liquidity Injections such as Term Lending Facility and Term Auction Facility ($200B)
  3. Economic Stimulus Package ($168B)
  4. Refinancing of failing mortgages into new and reduced principal loans with a guarantee ($300B)
  5. AIG’s bailout ($85B), can be up to $400B due to AIG’s CDS on CDOs, CMOs, MBS, and etc…
  6. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac $200B, can be up to $800B
  7. Money market insurance (likely another $50B)
  8. MBS purchases ($10B), up to $800B.
  9. Global credit market injection $300B just last Friday.
  10. Repayment to JP Morgan for providing liquidity to Lehman’s bankruptcy ($300B)
  11. What if the 2nd attempt of the bailout proposal succeeds this Thursday? ($700B)
  12. Taken from an article in Reuters, US banks and money managers had to borrow $188B a day to keep afloat.
Do you think the Fed has been successful with such spending and injections? What is it about another $700B of injection, will the system stabilise because of these injections? 
              tgt O/N 1mo 2mo 3mo 3m chg
US 2.00% 6.875 3.926 3.966 4.053 17.0
UK 5.00% 6.781 6.075 6.156 6.300 3.9
EUR 4.00% 4.449 5.050 5.130 5.277 4.0
JPY 0.50% 1.031 0.926 0.950 1.015 5.4
CHF 2.75% 3.333 2.800 2.860 2.955 2.5
CAD 3.00% 4.500 3.997 4.100 4.208 0.8
AUD 7.25% 6.938 7.775 7.725 7.800 3.7
Taking a look at LIBOR (London Interbank Rate) which is a rate for interbank lending, is at a nervous state, as banks begin to lose confidence with one another, loans offered by banks to retail customers are also shorter, and do you think bulk cargoes that are shipped long distance by ship easily get their financing as well?  
Next, let’s take a look at European banks, are they any better off than us? Here are some numbers:
  • More than $300B of credit insurance were written by AIG to the European banks.
  • Deutsche Bank leverage ratio is 50x, 80% of Germany’s GDP.
  • Barclay’s leverage ratio is 60x,  100% of UK GDP
  • Fortis’s leverage ratio is 30x, 300% of Begium’s GDP.

Scorecard: Avg Leverage Ratio (US Banks) 20x Vs Avg Leverage Ratio (EU Banks) 35x


The numbers speaks for itself. If you have read the contents that was written above, you would derive that we are currently in the phase of a global slowdown, also called a recession. Let’s not deny that. 
As for my personal opinion as to where funds could be invested, for the moment, even though stock valuations are already at one of its lowest levels, I still believe cash is king, for those who are not involved in the forex markets. But if you are into trading forex, crude oil and gold for the week, I would suggest everyone to only try holding on to short term positions, as news of intervention and further injections from central banks may come anytime, causing the markets to be a little volatile at times. 

Observations on a Crisis

» Posted by Admin  » Posted on 09-23-2008  » 0 Comments

The Absolute Return Letter

September 2008

“If a loose monetary policy and rapid asset price inflation were the route to economic prosperity, Argentina would be the richest country in the world by now.”

Albert Edwards
Co-Head, Global Cross Asset Strategy
Societe Generale

August is my month off. Every year I go to Mallorca where my favourite pastime is the occasional glance at the sea whilst reading a good book. This year Peter Bernstein’s ‘Against the Gods’ was top of the pile. Not that I hadn’t read it before. But my last encounter goes back about ten years and I decided that it deserved a re-read. After all, the book is about risk management and few books deal with the subject of risk management better than this one.

I didn’t spend many days on the island before I realised that Mallorca was not in its usual ebullient mood. Clearly the credit crunch had started to bite here as well. My friends on the island, most of whom are in the property business, confirmed my casual observation. The banks are tightening they said. Loans which could easily be obtained only six months ago were no longer available.

A few days later I ran into an article in the Daily Telegraph which illustrates the magnitude of the problem (see chart 1 below). Although this chart is based on U.S. data, the behaviour of banks around the world is broadly similar. It is clear that tightening lending standards are no longer a phenomenon exclusively linked to property loans. Consumer loans in general, and credit card loans in particular, are now subject to much closer scrutiny.

Chart 1: U.S. Lending Standards
US Lending Standards 
Source: The Daily Telegraph

From my vantage point in the Serra de Tramuntana, I started to philosophise about the roots of the current predicament. How could it possibly go so wrong? Is the end in sight yet? What can we learn from this mess? These are obviously big questions, although the answer to the first question is pretty straightforward, the way I look at things. It all went so terribly wrong because of hubris combined with excessive use of leverage. It is funny how we always think that this time it is different. This time we really figured it out, or so we thought. However, the ever present invisible hand had other ideas.

In short, not just the United States but the entire world is dealing with the implications of a near perfect storm which has created havoc on three fronts - falling asset prices, a weakening capital base amongst financial institutions and high inflation. It is the interaction of these dynamics which explains the mess we are currently in, but it is also here we are likely to find the answers to our questions, so let’s jump straight into things:

Observation # 1

It all began with housing and it will end with housing.

When U.S. home prices began to skid, the damage inflicted was swift and devastating. We know now that that the quality of many loans was poor, causing large write-offs across the industry. With house prices in the US and the UK still well above their long-term averages relative to disposable income (see chart 2 below), there is no reason to believe that they will not continue to fall for quite some time yet. The write-offs will spread from sub-prime to prime and to many other countries as well, a process which has, in fact, already begun. Two criteria must be met before property will start to appreciate in value again - house prices must reach (or fall below) their long term equilibrium values and the current overhang (see chart 1) must be dramatically reduced. All this will take time - years rather than months.

Chart 2: Current overvaluation of U.S. and U.K. homes
US Median House Price - Median Family Income  UK House Price Multiple of Family Income 
Source: GMO Quarterly Letter, July 2008

Observation# 2

Don’t trust central banks to always do the right thing.

The Financial Times ran an interesting piece back in early August which pointed to the “collective action problem” - i.e. the fact that the right policy for each and every country does not necessarily add up to the right policy for the world1. As is evident from chart 3 below, although most countries are currently challenged with significant inflationary pressures, the problem is much bigger in emerging economies than in the ‘old world’.

Chart 3: Inflation - Targets and Actual
Inflation - Targets and Actual  
Source: Financial Times

There is no question that it would be good for the world, should Asian central banks revalue their currencies against both the dollar and the euro. And a great deal of inflationary pressure in Asia could be eliminated through rising exchange rates. Asian countries, on the other hand, insist on using their currencies to grow the economy at an accelerated pace by allowing local exchange rates to be perpetually undervalued. The Europeans and Americans call it cheating. The Asian say mind your own business.  Until this attitude is changed, there is little chance of a globally coordinated exchange rate policy which would be to the benefit of everybody.

Observation # 3

Policy mistakes are likely to be repeated.

Talking about policy makers, back in 1991, when the Japanese property bubble finally burst, few investors imagined that it would take at least a couple of decades to work off the excesses which had accumulated after years of rising property prices. Some commentators have made the point that the overheating in the Japanese property market was much more severe than anything we have witnessed in the U.S. in recent years, but that is factually incorrect. As pointed out in The Economist last week (see chart 4), residential property prices have actually risen more in the U.S. during the boom years 2000-06 than Japanese property prices did during their boom years in the late 1980s.

Chart 4: The American versus the Japanese bubble
The American versus the Japanese bubble 
Source: The Economist

Likewise, as far as the monetary policy response is concerned, a case cannot be made that the Japanese were slow to respond to the crisis. If anything, the Bank of Japan reduced the cost of money more quickly than the Fed has done (see chart 4).

What worries me the most, though, is that the Americans, who were extremely critical of the Japanese approach back in the 1990s (”Let the weak banks go out of business” was the advice given by the libertarian Americans) are now at risk of making exactly the same mistake as the Japanese. A number of U.S. banks have capitulated over the past year, and both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are in pretty serious trouble at the moment. What do the Americans do? They spend tax payers’ money to try and fix something which is unfixable, not at all dissimilar to the policy mistakes made in Japan 10-15 years ago. This could have quite severe implications for U.S. GDP growth for years to come.

I believe this book is one of the most important new books out this year. Few investors understand risk better than Pümpin and Pedergnana. Unfortunately, the first edition is published only in German. However, the authors are keen to get it translated into English as quickly as possible. I will keep you posted.

Conclusion

With the global banking industry bleeding, with galloping inflation limiting the options of monetary authorities, with house prices showing no signs of recovery and with policy makers set to repeat the mistakes of the past, it is hardly surprising that we find it difficult to be bullish about the economic outlook.

The first stage of the credit crunch is now all but over. Forced liquidations are no longer an everyday occurrence and hence some sort of normality has returned to global markets. The big question going forward is how much damage has been inflicted on the real economy?

Over the summer, the world has gone from being quite sanguine about economic prospects to being very negative. However, the economic data points are all over the place: In Denmark, the leading financial newspaper ran with the following header yesterday: “The economy grows again - the recession has been cancelled.”

You’d better get used to this sort of story. There will be several false dawns before we finally come through this crisis. And the recovery is still quite some way away. The consumer is in for another shock in a few months’ time when the heating season kicks off again. We find it hard to believe in any sort of recovery until the spring of 2009 at the earliest.

On the other hand, if the economy does recover next spring, then the turnaround in global stock markets is not far away, as it usually leads the real economy by 6-9 months. Having said that, what would you rather own? Equities which currently trade at 15-20 times earnings or credit instruments trading at a fraction of that cost? Deutsche Bank has calculated that senior secured loans are now trading at an implied price earnings ratio of about 5 - less than a third of the cost of equities. There is no question that the real value is to be found in credit instruments. This is where most of the damage has been inflicted and it is where the big bargains are in today’s market.


[1] “Shifting down the gears”, The Financial Times, 6th August 2008.

[2] “How to build a US recovery”, The Financial Times, 7th August, 2008.

[3] “Less than meets the eye”, Morgan Stanley Global Economic Forum, 22nd August, 2008.

[4] “Strategisches Investment Management - Wie Investoren nachhaltige Wertsteigerungen erzielen”

John Mauldin, Best-Selling author and recognized financial expert, is also editor of the free Thoughts From the Frontline that goes to over 1 million readers each week. For more information on John or his FREE weekly economics letter, go to: http://www.frontlinethoughts.com/learnmore

 

Disclaimer

John Mauldin is president of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC, a registered investment advisor. All material presented herein is believed to be reliable but we cannot attest to its accuracy. Investment recommendations may change and readers are urged to check with their investment counselors before making any investment decisions.

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When can we buy Bank Stocks?

» Posted by Samuel Tay  » Posted on 09-15-2008  » 0 Comments
Today’s events have indeed been a thrilling experience experience for the international markets. As I am writing this, the China Central Banks has just cut its key interest rate again by 27 basis points to spur growth, Lehman (est. 1844) has filed for Chapter 11 (Bankruptcy) , there are rounds of ECB having an emergency rate cut, UBS sneaking in to declare another $5B of writedowns, AIG seeking help from the Fed with a request of a $40B bridge loan after rejecting an offer by Flower to prevent themselves from joining the slaughterhouse where their CDs are currently gapping outwards, and it seems that the only few pieces of good news are probably that Merril had a merger with BOA, as well as a consortium of global banks have put together a $70B fund to facilitate liduidity and an orderly resolution between Lehman and their counterparties. ECB also joined in with $30B to curb liquidity woes as well. 

In my opinion, it seems like an obvious trend that all Fed Governors are challenged by the markets whenever the Chairman gets hot on the seat, where the Federal Reserve at this time in history chose to avoid providing support to Lehman as it could gravely cost the federal government to be in a financial position, after nationalising Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. If the Federal Reserve is to continue taking on more liabilities from the private sector and turning them into a public sector, it may be worth want to rethink about the credit rating of the US Treasuries, as many investors may consider the risk of default. With reference to the article written by Morgan Stanley, where they quoted from Japan and Germany back in the 90s, that the explosion of both governments’ debt was followed by a peak out and then a decline of private housedholds’ indebtedness, and with the expansion of the public sector’s balance sheet was mirrored by a contraction in the private sector balance sheet (always relative to GDP).
The consortium of events have really challenged the belief of many affluent investors and central banks today as to rethink about the safety of their funds with their investment banks (where Lehman is larger than Bear Stearns), and the use of leverage for their creative business models. These institutions tend to face more vulnerabilities as they depend heavily on short and medium term money market instruments to maintain operations, as compared to commercial banks such as JPM and BOA, where they are more dependent on deposits made by their customers to operate. In my opinion, if the economy is to reinvent the banking system, it may also also seem that huge bonuses awarded to CEOs of investment banks may be forgotten for a little while, till people can forget about what happened in 2008.
In my opinion, the effect of liquidation of these troubled institutions may also slowly creep into the US consumers, businesses and net exporters to the US in the coming months, where it may continue to hurt smaller institutions, home owners, other governments, pension/ welfare/ education funds, and corporations who have collaborated in business with these companies. 
So in-lieu with the current jittery sentiment, where consumption and the labour market takes a hit in the slowdown, the availability of credit remaining low,  Europe and Japan in a recession, and the emerging markets having difficulties coping with inflated prices of goods over the past few months, where are the opportunities at?
Considering the events and gloom of the current market condition, we are inevitably experiencing one of the most interesting challenges of human history, that is an asset bubble that rippled into a credit crisis that will remain to challenge the monetary ‘pipeline’ for awhile. 
First, as a personal preference, I will be staying away from stocks in general, even though Asia may seem like a safer haven for equities investing, but no matter how, so long as there is uncertainty, these instruments should be left alone. Second, keep a close watch on central banks and currencies in both UK and the European region, where logic says we should be hearing some countercyclical monetary policies (rate cut) from them soon. Lastly, we may also begin to see lower prices in general commodities as the world’s largest consumer may have to take a cut back on their general expenditure on goods and services, as well as their gross net worth. 
In my next post, I will be looking at which specific markets I would be trading on, and where would be my preferred entry levels.
Please understand that these are only my personal views, and is not intended for the purpose of providing financial advise. If you find the article interesting and would hope to dicuss further on your views on trading and investing, come join me at http://momentum-trading.blogspot.com (Momentum Trading) and http://systematic-trading.blogpot.com (Systematic Approach Trading).

 See you soon!  

 

Housing: Are We Near the Bottom?

» Posted by Admin  » Posted on 09-14-2008  » 0 Comments

Thoughts from the Frontline Weekly Newsletter - www.frontlinethoughts.com/learnmore

Housing: Are We Near the Bottom?

by John Mauldin
September 12, 2008

In this issue: 

The Headwinds to Growing Your Wealth
The Wealth of Nations
Housing: Are We at the Bottom? 
Alt-A is the New Subprime
3.5 Million Unemployed and Counting
La Jolla, South Africa and London

This week we look at the housing market in some detail. When can we expect it to turn around? Part of the problem is that a new wave of foreclosures is coming due, and this time it is not subprime. And that means more problems for the large financial companies. Also, as predicted here, consumer spending is taking a hit as consumers are finding it increasingly difficult to get credit and a deteriorating labor market is dragging down total spending. There are some very interesting details in the data that was released this week. And we take a quick peek at the outlook for inflation. What is in the pipeline, so to speak? It should make for an interesting letter.       But first, it is finally time to make a very special announcement. Readers are aware that we have been asking you to take a survey on your financial and personality profiles. We are grateful for your response. Tiffani said that she has that nervous/excited feeling you get right before a long-anticipated moment that makes your heart race a little faster. In early summer of next year, we will be releasing our first book written together, to be called Eavesdropping on Millionaires.The data we are getting is simply amazing. I have seen nothing like it. And to make it more than just a book of numbers, over the next few months Tiffani and I will spend countless hours interviewing millionaires about their personal journeys, philosophies, investments, business successes and woes, lessons learned, families and lifestyles. So far, we have had over 1,000 millionaires (net of their homes) volunteer for the interview. This is the fun part! Listening and exchanging life stories with other people has to be one of the most satisfying and connecting joys of our lives. We plan on doing a series of books, so these interviews will go on for the next year, at the very least.As you know, I consider my readers to be above par in their insightful feedback (supportive or critical) and intelligence. Tiffani agrees; and we want to know, if you could sit in a room with these millionaires and ask anything, what would you would want to ask? Please send any and all suggestions to us at EU@2000wave.com. And I mean anything; no question is too generic or outlandish for us to consider.Not only have we had over 1,000 requests for interviews, we have had over 7,000 millionaires (so far) take our extensive survey, out of a total of 16,342, with over 25% coming from outside the US. We have not been able to find a survey done in the past ten years with even half that number! (If you know of any surveys or articles that you think we might have missed, send those along to the above email as well.)Let me tell you how fascinating it is to start digging into this data. We are comparing our data with other books, surveys, and articles we are researching, not only confirming things we already know but, now, we are finding new and important information.

If you haven’t taken the survey yet and want to participate in this research (and we want everyone to take it, as you don’t have to be a millionaire – if you are reading this you can take it), please visit: http://survey.frontlinethoughts.com/index.php?sid=12431&lang=en

The Headwinds to Growing Your Wealth

One thing that I find interesting in our research will help me illustrate a very important point I have made in the past few months, and that is the difficult headwinds that people are going to have in their efforts to grow their investment portfolios.

In The Millionaire Next Door, written in 1996, it was stated that 3.5 million households in America (out of a total 100 million households) had a net worth of $1 million or more. Millionaire households accounted for nearly half of all the private wealth in America.

During the ten-year period from 1996 through 2005, the authors projected the wealth held by American households to grow nearly six times faster than the household population. Quoting: “By the year 2005 the total net worth of American households will be $27.7 trillion or more than 20 percent higher than in 1996.”

As it turns out, the numbers are far better. Today there are 9.2 million households worth more than $1 million, not including the value of their primary residence. The net worth is almost double their estimate. However, the numbers of new millionaires grew by 21% in 2004, 11% in 2005, 8% in 2006 and 2% in 2007. Can you see a trend here?

In fact, this year it may even reverse. If you go the Federal Reserve data, you find that US national net worth has dropped by over $2 trillion in the two quarters ended last March (that is the latest data). Given the continued drop in home prices and the stock market, it is likely those losses will mount. (http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/z1/Current/z1r-5.pdf)

Now, it is not all bad news. We still have total assets of $70 trillion against liabilities of $14.5 trillion. However, much of that wealth is concentrated in the hands of the wealthy, and the real imbalance is in lower-income households. And cash savings are rising at a healthy pace for a change.

The Wealth of Nations

Now, let’s review a few factors as to why I think it is going to be harder to get that millionaire status over the next decade than it has been in the past. From 1981 to 2006, our national wealth in terms of the houses we own, stocks we own, real estate, bonds, businesses – everything – our net national wealth (or maybe it’s better to say, the prices we put on our assets) grew from $10 trillion to $57 trillion. Over very long periods of time, national wealth is by definition a mean-reversion machine. Over 40 or 50 years, national wealth has to revert to the growth in nominal GDP. That’s just the way the economics and the math work out.

Basically, the principle is that trees cannot grow to the sky. Just as total corporate profits cannot grow faster than the overall economy over long periods of time, neither can national wealth. Think of Japan. At one point in 1989, relatively small areas of Tokyo were worth more than the total real estate of California. And then the bubble burst and Japanese national wealth decreased and grew much less than GDP and is now in line with the long-term nominal growth of GDP.

In the US, long-term growth of nominal GDP is about 5.5 percent. We’ve actually grown by 7.2 percent for the last 25 years. To revert to the mean means that over the next 15 years, maybe more, we’re going to see nominal wealth grow between 2.5 and 3 percent. That’s a major headwind and a major dislocation from the experience that we’ve had. Investors have been expecting to get the past 25 years to repeat themselves. The laws of economics suggest that cannot be the case.

We have seen a monster growth in equities in terms of total market cap, even given the flat growth of the last ten years. We all know about the housing market.

I have written extensively about how stock market valuations are mean reverting. We have a long way to go for valuations in terms of Price to Earnings Ratio to get to the mean, and typically (as in almost always) we see P/E ratios drop far below the mean. It is hard to see portfolio increases in such a mean reversion period. We are also watching housing values come down (see more below). What we are going to see is a very difficult period for asset growth in precisely the two areas where investors tend to concentrate their portfolios: US stocks and housing. Using history as our guide, that period could last for another 5-7 years. That is why I keep suggesting you look for alternatives to traditional stock market allocations.

Housing: Are We at the Bottom?

The short answer is no, but let’s look at the data from one of the most knowledgeable sources on that topic. John Burns of John Burns Real Estate Consulting consults with over 2000 of the largest banks and homebuilders in the country (his client list is a who’s who of banks, builders, and hedge funds). He has a reputation for solid research and pulling no punches. Some of his hedge fund clients were the ones you read about who made billions. (He wishes he had negotiated a percentage!) He is deeply involved in analyzing trends in the housing market. His web site is www.realestateconsulting.com. He has graciously sent me the executive summary of his latest posting (a 27-page executive summary) that we will be looking at for the next few pages.

Let’s start with a quote from John at the beginning of his report: “The prospects for the U.S. housing market have changed for the worse. It has become increasingly clear that the U.S. economy is on the brink of recession, as overall job growth has slowed to zero and retailers are reporting abysmal results. New home sales, traffic and pricing are all heading down according to the results of our survey of over 300 builder executives. Resale [existing home] sales are starting to plateau in some markets, but pricing continues to fall as distressed sales dominate the market. The new housing bill will help in some ways, but will first serve a devastating blow to homebuilders, with the elimination of seller-funded down payment assistance, which accounts for 17% of new home demand by one estimate.”

How far along are we? Burns thinks that home prices will drop by 22%, 12% of which has already occurred. His analysis differs from that of the Case-Shiller Indices, which suggests a much steeper decline. Note in the graph below that the Case-Shiller Index shows home prices rising more than does Burns’ work. Part of it is different methodology and part of it is that the CS index focuses on major markets and Burns’ work is more broadly based.

US National Home Price Indices

However you slice it, there has been a lot of pain. Shiller’s work shows home prices in the areas he measures to be down about 17%. He said last week that he does not think it unlikely that we sill see home prices drop by as much as 30%, or about the same as during the Depression of the ’30s. Burns sees less of a drop, but from not as high a point, so they both end up close to the same end point.

The graph above shows Burns’ projection for the next few years. He thinks it will be 2011 before housing prices begin to turn back up on a nationwide basis, with national prices continuing to fall into 2010. That will not sit well with the pundits who keep telling us each month that we have seen the bottom.

US National Home Prices Year-over-Year Change

For the difference in his numbers with Case-Shiller, he offers the following explanation: “The Case-Shiller national number, which is a “paired sales” analysis, showed much more price appreciation than other indices based on median prices. We suspect that there was a shift in the mix of homes sold to lower priced homes in 2006 due to subprime lending, which depressed the median value and showed large % increases in the paired sales index.”

Sales volumes are suffering. “We believe sales volumes have already fallen back to 1995 levels and will hit 1992 levels sometime next year, when they will begin to slowly rebound later in the year. We are already seeing rebounds in some of the hardest hit markets, such as Southern California, where sales fell to below the levels of the early 1990s. The rebound in sales will be driven by foreclosure buying activity and demand from real households that need to move for personal reasons and have been delaying their purchase for fear of further price corrections. Our 8% per year projected [starting in 2010] increase doesn’t get us back to normal sales volumes until after 2012, and that is because the tremendous excesses of this cycle moved many renters into homeownership earlier than usual, and allowed existing homeowners to ‘move up’ to their dream home earlier than usual. Conservative mortgage lending will also prevent a sharp turnaround.”

US Home Sales Year-over-Year Change

On a more optimistic note, he thinks new home prices, which started to correct much earlier than existing home prices, should bottom out in 2009, although some particularly overbuilt areas will suffer longer. We are actually close to a bottom in new home construction, and he thinks we will be back to 900,000 new homes by 2012. That is a far cry from the 1.68 million in 2005, but it is also a sustainable number.

There is a problem though, and that is the recently enacted housing bill eliminated seller-funded down payments, and this was 17% of new home sales. Watch for a rise in the number of new homes sold in September, as the new law does not take effect until October. Home builders will be telling people to buy now before this ability to help with the down payment goes away. But cheerleaders on TV will be telling us the market has turned. They won’t be saying that in November.

Alt-A is the New Subprime

By now, everyone in the world is aware of how bad the subprime mortgage business was. But now it is time to get ready to hear the same tale, told again, about Alt-A mortgages. These are mortgages made to borrowers with better credit scores than subprime borrowers, but who could not or decided not to document their income. One estimate is that 70% of Alt-A borrowers may have exaggerated their incomes (Wholesale Access). More than half of those were people who exaggerated their incomes by 50% or more! (Mortgage Asset Research Institute)

How much are we talking about? Around 3 million US borrowers have Alt-A mortgages totaling $1 trillion, compared with $855 billion of subprime loans outstanding. $400 billion of that was sold in 2006. Almost 16% of securitized Alt-A loans issued since January 2006 are at least 60 days late. Many of these loans (around $270 billion) were interest-only or with a low teaser rate, and the resets were at 3- and 5-year lengths. These are called Option ARMs. That means starting next year we are going to see a wave of mortgages resetting to new rates. And it is no modest increase. Rates can jump 4-8% or more from teaser rates. Some Option ARMs are resetting at 12.25%. That can double a payment.

Wachovia and Washington Mutual were big sellers of Alt-A loans, and had $122 billion and $53 billion, respectively, on their books at the end of the second quarter. Is it any wonder their stocks are under pressure? That is why it is so hard to quantify how many more write-offs there will be. You don’t write down a mortgage until it starts to develop problems. These problems may not show up for a few years. I continue to stress I do not want to own a financial stock that has exposure to mortgage paper. Write-downs are going to continue to come for a long time.

This means there will be a steady wave of foreclosures for the next two years in communities all over the US. As long as these homes keep coming onto the market, they are going to exert downward pressure on prices. Foreclosure sales are up by 109 from this time last year.

3.5 Million Unemployed and Counting

The number of people receiving unemployment benefits jumped to 3.525 million, the highest level since 2003. My friend, Chief Economist John Silvia at Wachovia forecasts that unemployment will rise to 6.7% in 2009 (from 5.5% today) and above 7% in 2010. Given the inability of US consumers to borrow against their homes, and with rising unemployment, is it any wonder that consumer spending data released this morning showed retail sales dropping 0.3% in August, for the second month in a row (July was down 0.5%)? Excluding automobiles, sales dropped 0.7% in August, the most this year.

Look at this chart from Greg Weldon (www.weldononline.com). As he notes, retail sales are posting their worst reading since the last recession.

12-Month Average Monthly Change in Retail Sales

Prices at the wholesale level actually fell. Silvia thinks the Consumer Price Index will be in the neighborhood of 2%. Right now, a lot of people think that sounds crazy; but I agree. First, remember that CPI measures changes over the last 12 months. As an example, look at the oil price chart below. Starting next spring, unless energy prices rise a lot, we are going to see year-over-year comparisons for energy prices that will be negative. If oil drops to $80, which it very well could, that would have the affect of decreasing inflation next summer, by a significant amount. And given that Europe and Japan are in a recession, and emerging markets have reduced demand because of high prices, thinking that oil in the short term could be lower is not unreasonable. (Long-term I think oil will go MUCH higher, but that is another story.) A 40% reduction in gas prices from their peak is not out of the question. That would impact inflation by pulling it down.

NYMEX Crude Oil Futures

You can make the same case for a lot of commodities and some of the food complex as well. Year-over-year comparisons are going to start to look good in a few quarters. In absolute terms, looking back a few years, it will still feel like inflation, but the numbers don’t have feelings.

With Europe and Great Britain central banks likely to cut rates, the dollar is going to get stronger (as predicted here long ago). That will also help hold inflation down. Consumer spending is going to continue to be under pressure, which will not be good for stocks, which means that those facing retirement are going to have to save more and spend less. I think this time next year we will start to see stories about deflation. I know, call me crazy, but given that we have seen two major bubbles burst in the last year (housing and credit), it is not out of the realm of reason. It is what SHOULD happen. Bursting bubbles are by definition deflationary events.

Within a few quarters the Fed will not be under pressure to raise rates, especially with rising unemployment and what is clearly an economy on the ropes. Further, banks need lower rates in order to re-liquify. Home buyers will need lower rates as well. I think, as I have written for a long time, that the Fed is on hold for a very long time. And I am not sanguine that the next move will be a rate hike. This time next year when inflation is seen as yesterday’s problem and unemployment is rising, the drums may be pounding for a rate cut. We live in interesting times.

La Jolla, South Africa, and London

Next Monday Tiffani and I get on a plane, assuming the hurricane is out of town by then, and fly to La Jolla to be with Jon Sundt and the team at my US partner, Altegris Investments, coming back Tuesday. Then next Friday Chuck Butler from Everbank, Thomas Fischer from Jyske Bank, and a crew from the Sovereign Wealth Society are going to show up at my office to watch a Texas Rangers game. Chuck is a huge baseball fan and he is always fun to be around.

Then Saturday morning I fly to South Africa for a speech the next Tuesday. I will be speaking at the ABSIP (Association for Black Securities & Investment Professionals) Annual Conference in Cape Town on September 23. To obtain more information, contact my South African partner, Prieur du Plessis, through the contact facility on the Investment Postcards from Cape Town blog.

That night I fly to London and spend the day there with my friend Niels Jensen and his team at my London partners, Absolute Return Partners. We will be meeting with clients, and I have some time available there. Contact me and I will put you in touch with them.

There are a lot of things happening in the alternative investment world, and I try and stay on top of them. If you are interested in looking at hedge funds, commodity funds, and other alternative funds, go to www.accreditedinvestor.ws and sign up, and I will have one of my partners contact you and show you what is “behind curtain #3″. (I am president and a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC., member FINRA.)

My travel and writing schedule is pretty rough right now. When I get back I have a trip to Europe in mid-October (Sweden, Malta, London, maybe the Mideast) and then I am coming home for a while to catch up and finish the book with Tiffani and try to get my own book, way past due, finished as well.

I am going to hit the send button a little early so I can make sure everything is ready for Ike to show up tomorrow. We are 250 miles inland (Dallas), but they are expecting some bad weather, and the real problem here will be that the conditions will be perfect for tornadoes. It should be an interesting weekend. Right now the weather is perfect, but in 24 hours it will be very wet. The real problems will be in Houston and Galveston. I wish my fellow Texans well.

I see some time to stay home and read science fiction in my near future. Enjoy your weekend, wherever you are.

Your hoping it does not get that bad analyst, 

John Mauldin
John@FrontLineThoughts.com

Copyright 2008 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved 

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