Homeowners
Can’t Catch Up
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Recently by Bill Bonner:
The Calm
Before the Financial Storm?
Now the summer
days are dwindling down to a precious few. This morning, it is overcast
and chilly here in central France. The leaves on the aspen and linden
trees have turned yellow already and whenever the wind blows, they
flutter to the ground as if they were trying to get away from something.
This afternoon,
we have been invited for a private tour of a grotto not far away.
According to our information, hundreds of years ago, the grotto
was sealed off by falling rock. Thus it was protected and preserved
remains of human habitation from 30,000 years ago.
Yes,
there is a span of about 10,000 years in which there is little evidence
of human habitation in Europe, said the owner. Maybe
humans almost died out during that period; we dont know what
happened. But when this cave was opened, we found some remains that
were dated from that era. Its a remarkable find. A group of
20 scientists has been working there all summer. They told me they
found 1,000 artifacts a day. Of course, were not talking about
statues and battle axes. Most of these discoveries are bone fragments
maybe
even grains of cereal
Well
find out more this afternoon
Meanwhile,
we turn our attention to the world of money. And we begin by asking:
Just what are
we trying to figure out?
Well, we want
to understand what is going on
dont we?
And we want
to try to guess about what is likely to happen next, dont
we?
Wed like
to know, for example, whether stocks were going up or down
and
whether this is a good time to buy property
or gold
or
Treasury bonds. Wed like to know, wouldnt we?
Of course we
would. Unfortunately, “it is not given to man to know his fate,”
as the ancients put it. All we know is what happened in the past
and
the fate of men who came before us
Even that we known only
in a wispy, uncertain kind way. All we have are stories
Back to that
in a moment
Here are the
facts from yesterday:
The Dow rose
30 points. Oil closed down to $72. Gold remained where it
was.
Ben Bernanke
was put up for another term as head of the Federal Reserve. And
the Obama administration said the downturn was a little worse than
it had thought, so its estimate for the 2010 budget deficit
had to be updated increased by 19% to $1.5 trillion.
The Congressional Budget Office did its own count and came up with
$1.4 trillion. Either way, its a lot of money.
We have wondered
where the money would come from. Yesterday, Goldmans top economist,
Jan Hatzius, said he thought much of it would be “monetized” by
the Fed
with the Feds balance sheet increasing as much
as $2 trillion.
The
Feds balance sheet is the monetary ballast for the whole economy.
As it increases, so does the amount of sail the economy can put
up. In theory, the potential for inflation increases geometrically;
one dollar on the Feds balance sheet could be multiplied into
$10 in the economy. Bernanke has already doubled the Feds
balance sheet buying up and additional $1 trillion worth
of Wall Streets failures and the feds debt. He might
have to buy another $2 trillion worth bringing the total
to $4 trillion before this crisis is behind us, said the
Goldman fellow.
Home prices
are still going down, says the latest report, but “less than forecast.”
Is that good news? Well, it could be worse.
The latest
sales figures show an uptick. But careful analysis shows that homes
sales figures are still terrible. People are buying $250,000 houses
but
theyre the houses that sold for $500,000 in 2005. And the
poor folks with $500,000 houses
and jumbo mortgages
are
sinking. Almost half of them will be underwater by 2011, according
to one estimate.
The feds now
say that 10% unemployment is unavoidable. Naturally, when people
lose their jobs they have a hard time keeping up with mortgage payments.
Bay Area
Delinquency Rates Soar, says a headline.
Two years ago,
when a homeowner was late on his mortgage payments, there was a
45% chance that hed catch up. This is known as the cure
rate. Well, now the cure rate is down to 6.6%. Homeowners
never catch up
they fall further and further behind until the
house is foreclosed.
Want some more
news? In past recessions, the United States emerged first and pulled
the rest of the world out of its funk. This time, the United States
is still on its way down
so analysts look to China. The Peoples
Republic says it is growing fast. It also says it will have an inflation
rate of 2% this year. Currently, prices are falling at a 1.8% rate.
China is in deflation, not inflation. Whats up in China? We
wont know for a while
but dont count on it to pull
the world out of a correction. China needs a correction as much
as anyone.
Weve
been alerting readers to a special announcement that Strategic Short
Reports Dan Amoss was set to make this past Monday: the next
major bank headed for collapse.
Not only did
this report create a major buzz at the Agora Financial headquarters
in Baltimore, but on Monday, national media outlets began digging
around for more details on Dans financial short play.
Out of respect
for those who took us up on the Strategic Short Report offer,
we arent going to release the name of the bank yet.
But we can tell you this: this bank not only didnt reduce
their dividend, they dropped their loan provisions.
Day traders
may be cheering, but for the long haul, this spells disaster. Says
Dan: I still expect a big surge in provision expenses, likely
as soon as the quarter ending in October. If you dont believe
that the Canadian and US economies are going to come roaring back,
which I dont, this is still an attractive short sale.
For 40,000
years maybe longer our ancestors have walked the very
earth where your editor puts his feet. They lived. They died. What
did they know? Scientists say they were as smart as we are. What
did they talk about? What did they think about?
Every
time something is given, something is taken away, we suggested
over dinner last night.
No, thats
not right. Youre saying that life is a zero-sum game
that
it can never get better
that it can never really improve
that
there can be no real progress
Elizabeth replied.
Well,
not exactly
Im saying that there are no free lunches
in nature. That if a man is smarter, he is not likely to be faster
too. But Im not saying anything particular
or scientific
Im
just announcing a general principle
more like a vague intuition
about the way things work. According to one theory, for example,
mankind migrated from Africa to Europe. In Europe, during the Ice
Age, he encountered a great challenge: cold weather. Most humans
and pre-humans probably couldnt survive it. But some did.
And they did by evolving into maybe smarter
maybe slower
people
with bigger heads. According to the latest thinking on the subject,
the bigger brains were a disadvantage in warmer climates
because
they got too hot. I guess they took up too much energy too.
But they
were an evolutionary necessity in colder climates
where the
cold weather not only made possible a hotter head, but also made
it a necessity. People needed bigger brains to anticipate the change
of seasons and save winter, for example. They had to see what was
coming. They had to look at what was coming
and prepare for
it. They had to work together too
to hunt large game
and
to fight off competitors. Those who couldnt do so died out.
Well
thats the theory.
Every day,
here at The Daily Reckoning, we give you information on the latest
trends and events in financial markets. But everybody has access
to the same information. And what is information, anyway? What is
it worth? What does it mean?
For thousands
of years, people exchanged information. Then, it must have been
a different kind of information
things we can barely imagine
about
where animals were getting their water
about where to find
seeds and how to avoid sickness
how to prepare for winter
and
how to fend off wild animals. Then, the dominion of the human species
was not so sure. There were saber-toothed tigers, lions, wolves,
even mastodons
giant sloths
Early man was probably as
often prey as hunter. He had to be on his toes to survive.
Information
was one thing. But there was more. He needed wisdom
and technology
as well as facts. He had to learn to store food for winter as well
as beat back attacks by wild beasts. He had to know how to make
cloaks out of animal skins
and how to stock firewood for a
rainy, snowy winter
and how to find shelter.
We imagine
tribes sat around the campfire and told stories. The stories reported
victories and defeats
disasters and triumphs
heroes and
enemies. But the stories were more than just information: they carried
lessons
moral lessons
about what to do and what not to
do.
That is the
tradition to which we are heirs. We pass along information: but
without a story, the information is just noise.
Our story is
the story of the seasons. Its the story of heroes and villains
of
fatal flaws and inevitable disasters.
The common
flaw is an old one. The Greeks couldnt seem to tell a story
without mentioning it. “Hubris”
the kind of pride that goeth
before a fall
the arrogance that leads people to think they
can get away with something
that they not only can know their
fates
but that they can control them.
Today, Ben
Bernanke is our tragic hero. His flaw is as obvious as his challenge.
He thinks he can stop the world from turning
. stop the seasons
avoid
the hard, correcting winter by tempting the sun with bailouts, stimulus
and cheap credit. His arrogance is an affront to the gods.
The old tales
tell us what will happen. He will fail. But when
how? That
is a different story. It is the story future generations must tell.
We must live it.
August
28,
2009
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis and
the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007).
Copyright
© 2009 Bill Bonner
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